St. Louis Palladium
Saturday, April 16, 1904
St. Louis, Missouri
Page text (machine-generated)
ST.LOUIS PALLADIUM
Circulated Among 170,000 Colored People in the City of St. Louis and the State of Missouri. The Best Advertising Medium in the West. We Exchange with 125 Negro Newspapers in the United States.
Vol. XX. No. 18.
P.
LECTURE ON THE "STRAIGHT GOODS,"
By Bishop A. Mack, D. D.,
of Kansas City, Mo.
The National General Evangelical Missionary Workers of the United States of America and Canada,
by Bishop A. Mack, D. D.
He delivered a lecture subject "THE STRAIGHT GOODS." He says there are many ways to come to St. Louis to the World's fair. Some can come by the Burlington route, some by the C. & A., some by the M. K. & T., Missouri Pacific or the Wabash, or the Iron Mountain, or the Rock Island. Then some can come by the steam vessels. In all of these ways they must bring forth greenbacks and silver to come, which may be termed as the "STRAIGHT GOODS." If an individual starts a journey for Heaven there is nothing that will carry him through the gates into the City, except regeneration, or born again. This is the pure wheat which may be termed as the "STRAIGHT GOODS," which will carry you through the gates into the City of that goodly land. It is a grand thing to carry out the Lord's commission. His commission is to raise the fallen and instill in the hearts of men and women the characteristics of Christ. In all nations and nationalities it should be the primary movement to elevate and better the condition of mankind. This is one of the primary movements of the gospel. We find in the United States 70,900,387 people, and a great many of this great number are unsaved. There is no greater work under the sun than to save men and women from that awful destruction that awaits them. Happy is the man who has been called and chosen to preach the Gospel to every creature and tell the people to bring forth fruit, meat for repentance and to know God in the pardon of their sins. This is the evidence of the "STRAIGHT GOODS."
The Lord has made a decree to individuals who will help support this great work in giving freely as God has blessed them. He tells us in His words to the individual who will contribute in His great work, "He shall have corn and wine, and shall be blessed in this world, and his barn house shall be filled, and he shall have a home in His Kingdom if he will repent and be converted." This is the only way to bring up the "STRAIGHT GOODS."
What we need in our cities and towns is good judges with earnest hearts, and governors who have got the people to heart. And to this great nation the United States should make every effort to elect for president of this great nation such men as President Roosevelt and Ex-President Grover Cleveland. These two great men have shown no partiality in presiding over this great nation. This is the way for all men to do. Treat all men alike. By this you will bring forth "ROYAL GOODS." We, the great Baptist church, believe in nothing else but regeneration, or born again, and after these qualifications, the candidate is a fit subject for baptism in emersion. We believe before a candidate is baptized he has got to be baptized with water, but not baptized until he goes under the water. The woman who washer clothes washes them with water, but can not wash the clothes until she puts them under the water. When an individual dyes a garment he dyes them with ink, but can not complete the job until he puts it under the ink. This expresses the true baptism, and the only way to bring up the "STRAIGHT GOODS."
There are some men in this world that have even organized societies to down the Lord's church and to impede the progress of the Lord's ministers. But yet, they go forward and proclaim His gospel into all the world. There is no law in this country that will try to stop them.
I see blasphemers and murderers of the Gospel almost ground up into powder. It goes to show you that the Lord is the head of His church and
the General of His ministers. And one Lord has demanded His church and ministers to pray. This is one of the ways to bring forth the "STRAIGHT GOODS." Baptist associations and executive boards would me to rufe over this noble church, and would like to say that the church belonged to them, but God has always got a man to show the rats of their mischief. But God has put the power in the church; the church handles all ministers and members. The church denounces all disorderly ministers and members. That power is invested in the church. The church recommends all of her good ministers. There is no throne higher than the church. The church lives when the minister is lying beneath the sod. One Lord has fixed it; so let the minister and the member be subjected to the Lord's church, and this will be one of the chief ways to bring forth the "STRAIGHT GOODS."
God always has men in this world who will contribute to good works. He brings to their store houses double folds and one of these great charitable men is John D. Rockefeller, of New York, who is a Baptist, dyed in the wool. This great charitable man never fails to help the churches and the ministers. He is one of the millionaires that always hands down the "STRAIGHT GOODS."
The next great and noble man is Mr. Andrew Bush, of St. Louis, Mo., who is another millionaire and. Oh how wonderful God blesses this man in double folds. No one knows but God what Mr. Bush does in a year for the ministers and churches. God will reward this good man for bringing forth the "STRAIGHT GOODS."
The evangelical preachers who are called and chosen to preach the gospel from city to city must be helped, for they are under no salary whatever. But when they obey the Lord's commission and keep His commandments, there is some one that will hand down to him the "STRAIGHT GOODS," for the Bible declares that he who preaches the gospel must live off of the gospel. Bishop C. C. Cole of the First Baptist Church of St. Louis and Bishop Stevens of the Central Baptist church of St. Louis are sure teaching their flock the principles of Baptists. They are teaching the church its rights as a church and its general authority and showing the church how to carry out the policy and authority in a nut shell. This is the principle of the "STRAIGHT GOODS."
There is one thing that the Negro Baptists' preachers should learn and the churches, that is, to teach the real object of Baptist Associations and Executive Boards. No Baptist Association should use the word delegate. According to Baptist polity the word messenger should be used. The meaning of this is to report the work. This is the way to give the understanding of the "STRAIGHT GOODS." This way of messengers sent from each independent body or church to meet at a certain place and then have gall to say to the churches that the church belongs to their association when the church is a Divine institution and cannot belong to anything except itself. But the messengers must belong to the church. Now here is the point that I want to make. No messenger can make a compellment of taxes for churches to go by. This is assuming authority that does not belong to messengers and the churches should not stoop down to such actions. The way to get missionary money is to let every church or independent body set a day to take up collections for the associations. If it is $100.00 or $500.00 let it be sent by the messengers to the association and be used for what it is taken up for. By doing this you will get more money and will give greater satisfaction.
This is the way to bring forth the "STRAIGHT GOODS" of Peace. It is very easy for messengers to go to the associations and say what churches SHALL do. It makes a general kick throughout the country. It is better to insert the word advice. This is the only way to bring forth the "STRAIGHT GOODS." Two messengers sent from each independent body or church when they are met together and organized into a Baptist Association—remember—they cannot make laws for the independent bodies or churches to go by. This would not be bringing forth the "STRAIGHT GOODS."
Has Returned Home
Mrs. C. W. Lee, of 456 North Sarah street, has returned home from Tipton, Mo., where she has been for several months. We sent The Palladium to her while she was in Tipton. She came home to take up her work. She is indeed a good artist. See her ad. in The Palladium. The Palladium man accompanied her to the Vandeventer bank, where she drew a check for our benefit, and paid us. Oh she is one of our best advertisers.
ST. LOUIS, MO., SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1904.
VARIED INDUSTRIES BUILDING. The Varied Industries building is a magnificent structure on the outer perimeter of the main picture of the fair. The building presents a facade all on the ground floor. In the center space for electrical display and illumination, the north facade is a low dome, of the north facade is a low dome, of the north facade is a low dome, Numerous entrances are on flanked by towers about 200 feet high. The facades exclusive of the main entrance in the center. These towering features afford ample giving 656,250 feet of exhibition space.
3
CAPT. C. H. TANDY Departed last Saturday for Washing ton, D. C., on business of importance
Antioch Church Notes.
Mrs. Georgia A. Reed has recovered from a severe attack of toothache.
Manv thanks to many of the Colored employees of the Hydraulic Press Brick Co. for the patronage of The Paladium.
Subscriber—Is dis am de agunt fur dat Paladum?
Agent—Yes, sir.
Sub—Ise get no paper when Ise gone to work dis morning.
Agent—What time do you rise?
Sub—Four clock, sar.
Agent—What time do you go to work?
Sub—Five clock, sar.
Agent—Why, my dear sir, mail is not delivered so early. When you return home, you will find your paper there.
Mrs. Mary Hamilton, of Fairmount,
St. Louis county, departed this life
last Saturday.
Our good morals will not give us
recognition among the white race, for
the simple fact the color line can not
be erased.
The missionary sisters of the First
Baptist church, Bridgeton, will give
an entertainment Saturday night,
April 23.
BRIDGETON ITEMS
Rev. J. M. Smallie preached an able sermon last Sunday at the First Baptist church, Bridgeton. His discourse tended to the warning of sinners of the danger and horrid state that awaits them "where the worm dieth not and the fire is not quenched."
Is Now Permanent.
Miss Annie Segar, of 2634 Lawton avenue, has been appointed as a permanent teacher in Carondelet, under Mr. James L. Usher. We wish her success.
NOTICE.
We would like to know the whereabouts of Mrs. Charity Mitchell. We have in our care an important letter for her. It is from the United States senate. Call.
4-Clover Leaf.
Will give their grand opening, April
23. Don't fail to come out, 2339 Market st. Mr. Arthur E. Jones represents the young Negroes in the buffet business. We trust that the young men will turn out, and make this a success.
BVILDING OF
LOVISIANA FY
1803 ST. LOV
VAN BRVNT & HOWE AR
A GREAT EVENT.
World's Fair Ball of Caterer Waiters.
Last Monday night one of the most select of gatherings met at Douglass hall, in attendance upon the annual ball of the caterer waiters.
Mr. Henry Taylor made the address of the evening, after which those present enjoyed themselves dancing.
Among the large number present were: Mrs. Franklin, of 2812 Sheridan; Messrs. W. H. Parker and Rogers, post office employes; Mrs. Ophelia Morgan, of 2646 Randolph; Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Holt, and brother; Mr. Tom Evans, of 3652 Evans avenue; Mrs. Henry R. Taylor and two sons and daughter.
We were struck with astonishment when our eyes fell on the most attractive and beautiful costume that was worn by Miss Fannie Strothers, of $326½ Franklin avenue. Her figure was that of a venus; her dress fitted as if it had been molded on her. It showed a beautiful form. Indeed, she was the center of attraction. Her movement s, graceful and dignified, complete y bewitched everyone. Our eyes would pass from her, but cre long we would be looking at that same angle on earth. Oh, Aunt Hager has some very, very beautiful children.
Mrs. Mattie Monday, who is the guest of Mrs. ampbell, of 2635 Lucas avenue, was at the Douglass hall, last Monday night. he was one of the most conspicuous persons present, as the gown that sh. wore was imported from Paris. It was exceedingly grand. Her movements were as perfect as clock work. Her dancing was perfect, and the admiration of all. Really the completion of that magnificent ball could not have excelled, if she had not been present.
Mrs. Fannie Cooper was the next bewitching lady our eyes fell on. She was very attractive, and her dress was costly. Her diamonds were the center of attraction. Mrs. Cooper is indeed a lovely mortal.
Then we noticed another beauty, Mrs. Ida Goodrich, of Nashville, Tenn. She was quite attractive.
The two daughters of Mrs. Richardson, of 324 Montrose avenue, were there.
Mrs. Emma Murphy, the littlest wife in St. Louis, was there, accompanied by Mrs. Bernard, the sister of Mrs. W. T. Curtis.
We notice that a certain young lady can never go out unless Mr. W. Cole is near by. We think this has been going on long enough. If he is too bashful to pop the question, just remind the young lady that this is leap year. She will assist him.
Mr. J. L. Hopson, of 3908 Fairfax avenue, is a very clever young gentleman. Would there were more like him.
Mrs. Franklin, whose nusband conducts a very successful business at 4000 Papin street, was at the ball looking quite pleasing.
Mr. J. T. Cole worked hard to make the ball a success. Capt. Bergey Phillips and Hyatt also did good work.
Mrs. V. Dondley, Mrs. M. Nixon and Miss Hattie Johnson enjoyed themselves. They were dressed nicely, and their escort evidently enjoyed their company.
Mrs. Julia Shipton, of 2520 North Taylor avenue, Mr. and Mrs. W. Sprin-
Advertising Medium in the
ger, of 4010 Finney avenue, and the Misses Nellle and Viola Hyatt, were among the many others.
The monthly meeting of the City Federation of Colored Women's clubs, at St Paul's A. M. E. church, last Monday evening, the 11th, was very interesting, and was well attended. Mrs. M. L. Harrison is president of the federation. Reports from various committees showed that the work is being systematically perfected in every detail. The ways and means committee is preparing to give a grand entertainment at the Central Baptist church, April 21. Home committee is vigorously canvassing home accommodations at $1 per day rate. The New Douglass hall will be secured for the grand banquet for the national convention, July 14, while the informal reception will be tendered the national delegates and visitors at Central Baptist church, Monday, July 11. Enthusiasm is now at high pitch in club circles, and the grandest conclave in the annals of the N. A. C. W. is already forecasted.
For the Most Popular Lady in the Western States.
Winner to Receive a Gold Watch and Chain.
Mr. Jas. W. Grant, "The Old Campaigner," received an ovation from a large crowd on his reappearance at the Orpheus Dancing Academy last Friday evening. While he looked pale and showed every evidence of his late illness, still, he went cheerfully into his work with his usual vim and attention to detail.
The introduction of his "New Parisiennes," was the recipient of an encore, and "The Orpheus Gillie" grows more popular every week. Both are beautiful dances.
Walter Farrington and James Wright, at 307 Channing avenue, and 308 Leonard, veterinary dentists, clipping, breaking and styling horses. He is an expert at his business. Mr. James Wright is a coal dealer, a most polite gentleman. He takes delight in sending coal to Aunt Hager's children. Yet he has more white customers than our children. Don't fail to call on him. The firm of Farrington & Wright, 307 North Channing avenue.
A CARD. MISS ESTELLE HAMILTON,
Typewriting, Copying, Manuscripts, Briefs, Documents, Etc., QUICK Y ND ACCURATELY.
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Colored Women's Clubs.
ARSANIA M. WILLIAMS, Pub. Com.
THE PALLADIUM'S CONTEST.
GRANT OUT AGAIN.
A New Company.
Twenty-nine new subscribers since the 1st of April. The Palladium is like hot cake--everybody wants it. We have plenty of room on our mailing books.
ECHOES FROM BROOKLYN.
Well, I ain't much on talkin' about people, or about what they adoin', but it don't speak well for us collud people for any respectable man or woman among us to go away back and set down to dive business. What I'm tryin' to get at is: Now, look at Dr. Arthur. He could be an honor to our people. He has studied to be a doctor. He praised hisse' he only nigger doctor in St. Lo knowned 'nough to cut pe rgary—they call it. But over here in Brooklyn and company that nobody in Bro was the best. He needed cation. He starts a poolin' his did not raise the standard of sociation; but fully educates him fur the dive "biz" he's adoin'. I am low down myseT, but feels sor he doctor. He is disgracin' us ay he runs that saloon-dance-ha
Dese old BREWERS WILL UP
ten thousand dollars any day to
INCOURAGE NIGGERS T U N
DIVES THAT'S AGETTIN' EM
LYNCHED; THAT'S AGETTI. O D
COLLUD PEOPLE'S HOUSES N E D
AND THEM RUN OUT O' Y N.
Yet these same BREWERS we not
put up TEN CENTS to start a set-
table nigger in a respectable ness
among us. It is jest another way to
make a slave of niggers, and jee ch
men as Dr. Arthur jumps at an ch
chance, jee' so he makes a little ley.
Doctor, you ought to be ash a t o' y
oelfess, and go away back and set wn.
And stay down.
SNAKE SOOSA.
MANSFIELD
PROF. HIGHGATE,
Of St. Charles, Mo. He is one of the leading instructors in the state.
Every person prepared to accommodate in home or hotel, visitors to "The Fair" are requested to register their name and address with "The World's Fair Information Bureau." Address H. S. Ferguson, Mgr., care of "The Palladium."
Mr. James A. Jones, of 331 Thirty-seventh street, New York city, was in St. Louis a few days ago. He is a jolly, good fellow.
Pickett's Headache Powders give instant relief. 2601 Lawton avenue.
Formerly with the Douglas Printing Co.
has opened her office in the
DOUGLASS HOTEL.
Corporate and hotel,
and in now prepared to do
J. W. WHEELER. Editor and Manager
ST. LOUIS. MISSOURL
CURRENT COMMENT.
It makes us a lot of hard work this keeping the Russians out of China and the Chinese out of the United States.
Diamonds, according to a London dispatch, are increasing in price. This is a good time for newspaper men to unload.
Gen. Kuropatkin is said to have a gorgeous uniform in his suit case. The Japs are disposed to give him a new base to fit it on.
The people of the United States eat $150,000,000 worth of candy in a year, and there are nearly 5,000 factories making it., with a capital of $38,000,000.
Sinking hulks at Port Arthur is holiday sport compared with the work of raising them later, if the experience of the United States with the Maine is any criterion.
It takes 338,500,000 world's fair stamps to stock the post offices of the United States, and that is only four stamps a piece in Uncle Sam's family. There is nothing small about a national celebration.
China and Korea are an illustration of the fact that to be without an adequate army and navy means that outsiders will force their way into your house and do their fighting there. Peace societies, please notice.
The attempt of a Kansas City man, during a fight, to bite off a piece of the cheek of a Kansas City woman cost him several sound teeth and $10 and trimmings in court. Some people cannot appreciate a hard proposition until they are shown.
It is asserted that Eugene F. Ware, pension commissoirer, will be the speaker at the convention of American press humorists to be held at St. Louis on May 29. A feature of the occasion will be a pilgrimage to Hannibal, M., the old home of Mark Twain.
A Philadelphia belle who was caught in the street and hugged by a negro said after her escape she supposed at first that one of her friends was trying to surprise her. Is that the way the friends of Philadelphia belles usually surprise them in the streets?
Harbin, Manchuria, is but three years old. But it is one of the greatest cities of Asia, and has the largest European population of any Asiatic city, containing 60,000 Russians, besides the soldiers, and 40,000 Chinese. It will be the great flour milling city of that region.
An eastern banker, who had business dealings with the dethroned cotton king, testified that he loaned Sully $700,000 the first time he ever saw him. The wonder is that "the talent" should waste time and energy cracking safes and things while bankers are so dead easy.
The Kansas supreme court says the Bible may be read in the public schools in the state, notwithstanding the fact that the Nebraska supreme court has ruled the Bible out of the public schools in that state. But then there would be no ginger in the law if the decisions were all alike.
Radium will have to do a good many things to keep up with the doctors' expectations of it. It is to cure cancer, baldness, insomnia and stuttering, turn negroes white, destroy injurious germs and foster begignant ones, and is constantly disclosing new potencies of the most diverse and unexpected character.
Paul Morton, second vice president of the Atchison, Tosseka & Santa Fe railway, and one of the strongest railroad men in the west, declares a belief that pooling will soon be legalized and that eventually all the lines of the country will be under one management, leading to final ownership and operation by the government.
A Tokio correspondent of the London Post says Japan will be able to fight a year and a half without borrowing, on a basis of 530,000,000 yen yearly for war expenses. As the Japanase first private gets about 75 cents a month, and a second about 40 cents, and their food is a handful of rice and some dried fish, the above estimate seems adequate.
Thomas A. Edison, though working 18 to 20 hours a day and seldom getting a "day off," is said to retain the youthful appearance the public is familiar with in his photographs, which have a remarkably boyish look. Edison is not an old man, but he is 57 and from the time he sold papers on the streets as a newsboy he has put in more hours of hard, exacting mind-wearing work than most men who live to be 90. Moreover he has never made it a practice to take physical exercise or to seek fresh air.
The fate of London, in the event of war, rests in the hands of five men. A cottage situated on the Thames marshes is the key to the situation of the submarine mines which would protect the metropolis in the event of a naval reverse. By means of an electric switchboard, the workings or which is only known to these men, a powerful fleet could be sunk in ten minutes. The Russian government tried to bribe one of the men with $500,000 some years back to give them the secret, but without effect. And these men are day laborers.
TARGET PRACTICE COSTS MANY LIVES
Horrible Accident in After Turret
of Battleship Missouri
FOUR OFFICERS ARE DEAD
Son of Capt. Gridley of the Olympics Included in List of Casualties —Missouri Was at Target Practice.
Washington, April 14.—The most serious accident that has occurred in the American navy since the blowing up of the Maine in Havana harbor, in 1898, happened Wednesday on the magnificent battleship Missouri, while she was engaged in target practice at a range about 15 miles distant from the naval station at Pensacola. News of the disaster was conveyed to the commandant at Pensacola by wireless telegraph from the Missouri, and thence by him transmitted to Washington, while the big ship was creeping back to port with the dead lying on her deck. The account which reached Washington of the accident was contained in the following official dispatch:
"Pensacola, Fla., April 13. "Secretary Navy, Washington: "The following wireless message just received: 'Accident in after turret of Missouri at 10:50 this morning caused death of nine men and Lieut. W. C. Davidson, Ensign E. A. Weichart, Second Lieut. J. P. V. Gridley, Midshipmen W. E. T. Newman and T. T. Ward, Jr. The Missouri is coming in.' (Signed.) "BARKER." The receipt of this message caused consternation at the department. Secretary Moody conveyed it to the President at the White House, and officers and clerks at the department were soon engaged in making out dispatches to the relatives and friends of the officers who were killed, so that they might not have to receive their first news from the morning newspapers.
The Missouri is the very latest of the big battleships to go in commission. The flag was hoisted on her in December last at Norfolk by Capt. Cowles, brother-in-law of President Roosevelt.
She collided with the Illinois off Pen-sacola a few weeks ago, and has had very little firing with her big guns, in fact, that nine or ten rounds which had been fired from each big gun was in the course of official trials, and she is now going through her first regular target practice.
TWENTY-NINE WERE KILLED.
Later Reports Increases Number of Dend Seamen.
Pensacola, Fla., April 14.—By the explosion of 2,000 pounds of powder in the after 12-inch turret and the handling room of the battleship Missouri, Capt. William S. Cowles commanding, 29 men were instantly killed and five injured, two of whom will die. The Missouri was on the target range with the Texas and Brooklyn at practice about noon, when a charge of powder in the 12-inch left-hand gun ignited from gases, exploded, and dropping below ignited four charges of powder in the handling room, and all exploded. Only one man of the entire turret and handling crew survives. But for the prompt and efficient action of Capt. Cowles in flooding the handling room and magazine with water, one of the magazines would have exploded, and the ship would have been destroyed.
The navy department Wednesday night furnished the following statement, giving a more complete list of dead:
Harry W. Franks, coxswain, Buffalo, N. Y.
John W. Cole, ordinary seaman, Dakota, Tex.
Joseph Gedris, ordinary seaman,
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Ralph H. Allison, seaman, Philadelphia, Pa.
James C. Nunn, ordinary seaman, Bryan, Tex.
J. Carlton Hardy, apprentice second class, Palmyra, N. Y.
Paul R. Oastler, apprentice second class, Hope, Ark.
Frank T. Rowlands, electrician second class, St. Louis, Mo.
John M. Roche, landsman, New York.
Robert C. Tobin, ordinary seaman,
Roscoe, Pa.
Kearney J. Kivlen, ordinary seaman,
Dallas, Tex.
Jersemos Bloxopoulos, coxswain, Newport News, Va.
Peter Jos. Braun, chief gun captain, New York.
Charles Henry Meyer, ordinary seaman, Oshkosh, Wis.
August Smith, gunner's mate, second class, New York.
Charles Rice, ordinary seamen, Boston. Mass.
Weston Soder, seaman, New York.
Ware Asks for $1,500,000.
Washington, April 14—Commissioner Ware of the pension bureau was before the sub-committee on appropriations, asking for $1,500,000 to meet the amount required for pensions under order No. 68, the age-pension order.
Kansas Populists Lie Low.
Topeka, Kas, April 14—The populist state convention adjourned without making any nominations. The delegates will meet in Topeka again on August 3, at which time an effort will be made to fuse with the democrats.
BE NOT DECEIVED TO THE COLORED PEOPLE OF AMERICA King of all Hair Tonics, "OZONO."
BEFORE. AFTER. TRADE-MARK.
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 of the late 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 number 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.
which is sold with an iron-clad glove we will forfeit $50.00. Now, we are lately agree to forfeit $50.00 if you if they were not true to all we owe several years under this guarantee who has used Ozono has been sainted 20,000 people are to-day using recommends Ozono as the King of take the Kinks out of Knotty, Knot some Hair. It will make short, hair your head of all itching, worrying and Scurf can not live after Ozono from falling out. It will restore g hair long and soft. Now, right here, let us make remedies to straighten hair, but you to use hot irons. Friends, do life of the hair, and cause it to do outside assistance. Nothing but straight forever. You can stop the hair are seen in a day or two o' the price of Ozono is 50c. a this liberal offer, which is good at us, enclosing with it the sum of four large bones of Ozono and one which makes black skin bright, r skin diseases. Also removes all small-pox pits. We will also include Food—Nature's great beautifier—and all facial blemishes; makes younger. We will also include one pack absolutely CHEMICALLY PURE.
iron-clad guarantee to do all that. Now, we ask you a plain quest for $50.00 if you are dissatisfied with to all we claim for them? We wish this guarantee, and we are glad it has been satisfied in every respect to-day using our preparations, and the King of all Hair Tonices. O is Knotty, Kinky, Harsh, Curly, shake short, harsh hair long and a worry, worrying scalp diseases. The after Ozono has been applied. It will restore gray hair to its nature. Let us make a statement. Many in hair, but when they send the Friends, do not use hot irons; they cause it to drop out. Ozono sthng Nothing but Ozono is necessary, you can stop the use at any time. Day or two after the first application, a bottle—4 boxes do this is good at any time: Cut out it at the sum of One Dollar, and we zono and one large bottle of Elm skin bright, rough skin soft and removes all facial imperfections, we will also include one fancy jar of beautifier—removes wrinkles, mehes; makes the old look young. We make one package of our celebrated ALLY PURE, and no soap but a
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 Ozono has been satisfied in every respect.
20,000 people are to-day using our preparations, and every purchaser recommends Ozono as the King of all Hair Tonics. Ozono 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 Ozono 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. Ozono straightens without any outside assistance. Nothing but Ozono 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 Ozoon 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 Ozoon 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 Scalp Soap, which is absolutely CHEMICALJY PURE, and no soap but a pure soap should ever
2336 WASH ST.---Furnished rooms for rent to men; rooms comfortably furnished; on second and third floors; with or without board. T. T. Thompson.
Mrs. Susan Gross,
2609 Pine Street.
Millinery.
Up-to-date Hats.
ross,
met.
ery.
Preaching,
Sunday Sch.
Preaching,
Central Baptist Chu
Preaching,
Sunday Sch.
Preaching,
Metropolitan A.M.J.
Preaching,
Sunday Sch.
Preaching,
Trimmings and all material in that line.
MR. A. L. LEE,
Representing the
PALACE LAUNDRY.
Preaching,
Sunday Se
Preaching,
E.
Centennial M. E. C
Preaching,
the
Sunday Se
DRY.
guarantees satisfaction and prompt service. The best Collar and Cuff work in the city. Please address all communications to 2825 St. Louis avenue.
RAILWAY
KNOWN AS THE
GREAT
SOUTHWEST
SYSTEM.
Connecting the Commercial Centers and Rich
Parms of
MISSOURI,
The Broad Corn and Wheat Fields and Thriving
tities of
KANSAS,
The Fertile River Valleys, Trade Centers and
Rolling Prairies of
NEBRASKA,
The Grand, Picturesque and Enchanting Scenery,
and its characteristic
COLORADO,
The Agricultural, Fruit, Mineral and Timber
Lands, and Famous Hot Springs of
ARKANSAS,
Spring and S
Made to order.
204 North
EXICO,
the Popular
pamphlets of
the Companies
SEXTON &
EXTRA
Art S
2605 La
---
MISSOURI
PACIFIC
RAILWAY
Wednesday evening, Prayer Meeting.
Friday evening, Young, People's
Prayer Meeting.
Rev. Fred. McKinney, Pastor.
J. A. Smith, Clerk.
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.
Sam, the Tailor
Is the Place to Get Your
Spring and Summer Suits.
Made to order. One of the Best
204 North 14th Street.
SEXTON & MITCHELL'S
EXTRA FINISH
Art School,
2605 Lawton Ave.
Now Open for Pupils.
Terms Rasonnable.
Fine Oil Paintings for sale, Portraits
Enlarged in Crayen, Pastel, Oil.
BEFORE.
AFTER.
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 Washin gton: 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.
MAGGIE B. PROCTOR,
Box 114, Fairfield, Texas.
Here is another:
Gentlemen,—After using OZONO a short while only, I am glad to say that my hair is already straight and growing finely.
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. 310 E. Broad St., Richmond, Va.
Boston Chemical Co.,
310 East Broad Street, RICHMOND, VA.
I enclose you $1.00, for which please send at once
the following goods:
4 Boxes of Ozono, worth $2.00.
worth 50c. 1 Bottle Electrical f
(1 pint) Anti-Odor, worth 50c.
Total, $4.00.
Name.
Street.....
County.....
If you want 4 lots like above, send $
no coupon, let her write her name on a
when you send your order.
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.
RAMSEY'S
THE STRICTLY MODERN
ROOMING HOUSE
Of the city for Gentlemen and the general traveling public.
Every convenience desired by patrons of high class rooms at moderate cost.
MRS. HATTIE J. RAMSEY, Proprietress.
Louis Deppe,
Importer and Dealer in
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
Wines, Whiskies, Brandies,
ETC., ETC.
Southeast Corner of
Market St. & Jefferson Av. St. Louis, Mo.
1409 Market Street
B. MUNCHWEILER
Dealer in
LADIES' and GENTS' SHOES
DON'T FORGET THE NUMBER
B. BELKER,
Dealarin
Groceries, Wines,
Liquors, Cigars and Tobacco.
Meat and Vegetable Market.
1119 and 1121 Morgan Street,
St. Louis, Mo.
DR. S. B. BELL,
Barber Shop and Bath,
In the True Reform Hall.
First-class Barbers.
S. W. Corner Pine Street and J.fer
son Avenue.
SOCIAL DEMOCRATIC
REPUBLIC OF
CARIBU
CAPTION
1409 Market Street
NEW LOCATION
NEW LOCATION.
Wm. Knight, formerly of 2217 Washington avenue. Watchmaker and Jeweler, is now located at 211 North Jefferson avenue, between Olive and Pine streets, where I shall be pleased to see all of my friends and patrons. Will carry a full line of Watches, Clocks and Jewelry. Watches at all prices. Jewelry cleaned free with each order of work. Rings of all style made to order. Your watch cleaned and repaired in 24 to 48 hours, and guaranteed for one year.
CRAVENS & HEAD Prods
Pink Coat Bar.
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
POOL ROOM.
S. E. Cor. 22d and Market Streets.
ST. LOUIS, MO.
G. W. ROBINSON,
Second-Hand Furniture
BOUGHT AND SOLD.
Moving and Expressing, General Jobbing
and Repairing of Ranges, Stoves, Etc.
a Specialty.
4025 Easton Avenue
ST. LOUIS, MO.
Duke Cyril, who was on boart, was
saved. He was slightly injured. The
whole squadron then re-entered port.
‘The Japanese are now off Cape Liao
Shan. No reports had been received
from the acting commander of the fleet
up to the time this dispatch was sent.”
CRUISER BAYAN DAMAGED.
Fire.
London, April 14—The Daily Tele-
graph’s correspondent at Wei-Hai-Wel.
telegraphing under date of April 13,
says:
“The British cruiser Espiegle reports
that at 5:45 o'clock Wednesday morn-
ing she sighted five Japanese war-
ships engaging the Russian cruiser
Bayan, making for Port Arthur from
the direction of the Yalu. ‘The Russian
erniser Askold and another cruiser is-
sued from Port Arthur to assist the
Bayan,
“At 6:45 o'clock the Russias got
under the shelter of the forts, but the
Bayan was evidently damaged, as
ayantities of steam were seen escaping.
“At eight o'clock the Japanese ships
opened a heavy gun fire on the forts,
which did not reply, and after 15 min-
utes’ bombardment the Japanese re
tired to the eastward.”
THE NEWS IN WASHINGTON.
Causes Pretount Season ta. here
. Circles.
‘Washington, April 14—The news ot
‘the death of Admiral Makaroff caused
‘a profound sensation in naval and mil-
tary circles, for he was probably bet-
ter known than any other Russian na-
val officer. This was because of the
fact that he had visited the United
States in 1896-97, and also commanded
‘the Russian north Pacifle squadron,
SMe tenoennme A Nt J
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in “f ee <f ile SEA OF
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; GUER OF EEN = APAN
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WAP OF THE FIELD OF WAR.
which brought him into frequent con-
tact with American naval officers in
those waters, and sometimes into
American ports on the west coast. The
general opinion is that Makaroff was
an officer of sigular ability as a sailor,
being thoroughly scientific in his meth-
ods, of more than usual intelligence,
and of physical presence which gave
him a splendid power of command. In
the matter of personal bravery he had
no superior.
CREATES PROFOUND IMPRESSION,
Officers Speak of Catastrophe With
Deepest Emotion.
St. Petersburg, April 14—The Pe-
tropavlovsk disaster has created a pro-
found impression in official, naval ané
military circles, where the feeling is
one of consternation. The officers speah
of the catastrophe with the deepest
emotion. The imperial family an¢
court were also deeply moved. The
news has only been circulated among
the high and middle classes, and as yet
has not reached the populace. Conse-
quently there were no scenes in the
streets this evening, and no special edi-
tions of the newspapers were issued.
HAS BEEN A TERRIBLE BLOW.
Succession of Tragedies Creates Con-
aternation in St. Petersburs.
St. Petersburg, April 14—The awful
disaster to the battleship Petropavlovsk
at Port Arthur, with the loss of al-
most her entire crew of over 600 mer
and the death of Vice-Admiral Maka-
roff, has been a terrible blow. tr
would have fallen less heavily if the
ship and the commander-in-chief of the
fleet had been lost in battle, but to be
the result of another accident, follow-
ing upon the heels of a succession of
tragedies, of which the Port Arthur
fleet had been victim, has created some-
thing’ like consternation.
“Reverses we can endure,” said &
prominent Russian, “but to have the
Petropavlovsk meet the fate of the
Yenesei and the Boyarin is heartbreak-
ing.”
Besides, it has just become known
that the battleship Poltava several
weeks ago had a hole rammed in her
by the battleship Sevastopol, while the
latter was maneuvering in the harbor
of Port Arthur.
‘The day has been one of intense ex-
citement in St. Petersburg. The first
inkling of the catastrophe leaked out
on the receipt of a telegram by Grand
Duke Viadimir from his son, Grand
Duke Boris, announcing the loss of the
Petropavlovsk and the wounding of
Grand Duke Cyril, who was first. off
cer. The Grand:Duchess Viadimir was
‘almost frantic on the receipt of the
telegram, being convinced that the
message was only 2 precurser of worse
news, as {twas signed by Grand Duke
Boris, instead of by the aide to Grané
Duke Cyril. Lieut. Von Kube.
Battleship Petropavlovsk, With
Nearly All on Board, Sunk.
ADMIRAL MAKAROFF DROWNED
yhe Vessel Strack a Russian Mine
and Turned ‘Turtle, Going to
the Bottom Almost Im-
usdlbtein..
ST. PETERSBURG, APRIL 13—39
P. M—WHILE GOING OUT TO MEET
vB JAPANESE FLEET OFF PORT
ARTHUR THE BATTLESHIP PETRO-
PAVLOVSK STRUCK A MINE IN THE
OUTER ROADSTEAD, HEELED ov-
ER, TURNED TURTLE AND SANK.
PRACTICALLY:THE WHOLE OF HER
CREW WERE LOST. ONLY FOUR
OFFICERS WERE SAVED, AMONG
THEM WAS THE GRAND DUKE
©YRIL, THE , PETROPAVLOVSK
ISHED WHEN THR “PETROPAY-
LOVSK SANK.
If 18 ESTIMATED THAT FROW Sx
70 SEVEN HUNDRED MEN PRK
4SHED WHEN THE PETROPAS
VEOVSIC SANK.
ANOTHER ACCOUNT SAYS 20 MEN
ESCAPED FROM THE DISASTER 'To
THE PETROPAVLOVSK.
GRAND DUKE CYRIL WAS ONLY
‘SAVED FROM DEATH BY A MIRA-
CUE, HIS BROTHER, GRAND DUKE
RORIS, WITNESSED THE CATAS-
UGH A MARINE
‘TROPHE THROUGH A MARINE
GLASS.
It is ponsible that fuller detatis
will add to the news of the disaster
avhich resulted from a: battle be-
tween the Russian squadron under
Makaroff and the Japanese fleet un-
ater Togo, off the harbor of Port Ar-
thur, about daylight Wednesday
morning.
‘The news of what transpired is
very meager, but the killing of Ad-
aniral Makaroff and the loss of the
‘Dattleship with nearly all of its of-
ficers and men is confirmed offl-
cially.
After the receipt of the news of
Makaroft’s death the military censor
committee ealled an extraordinary
session to pass upon the official
dispatches, which will probably be
given out soon.
‘A requiem mass for the repose of
the souls of Vice-Admiral Makaroff
cand the officers and the crew of the
Petropavlovsk has been announced
to take place im the Admiralty
chureh ‘Thursday.
PRTROPAVLOVSK STRUCK A MINE.
The Doomed hi Oe se
the Bottom,
St. Petersburg, April 14.—The follow-
ing official dispateh has been received
hore from Rear-Admiral Grigoroviteh,
the commandant at Port Arthur, ad-
dressed to the emperor:
“Port Arthur, April 13—The Petro-
pavlovsk struck a mine, which blew
her up and she turned turtle. Our
squadron was under Golden Hill. The
Japanese squadron was approaching.
Vice-Admiral Makaroff evidently was
Jost. Grand Duke Cyril was saved. He
1s slightly injured. Capt, Jakovleff was
saved, though severely injured, as were
five officers and 32 men, all more or less
injured,
‘phe enemy's fleét has disappeared.
Rear-Admiral Prince Ouktomsky has
assumed command of the fleet.”
‘The following dispatch to the czar
bas been received from Viceroy Alex-
feff:
“Mukden, April 13.—A telegram has
just been ‘received from Lieut,-Gen.
Stoessel, commander of the military
forces at Port Arthur. I regret to re-
port to your majesty that the Pacific
fiect lias suffered irreparable loss by
the death of its brave and capable com-
mander, who was lost, together with
the Petropavloysk.”
_ Another dispatch from Viceroy Alex-
left to the evar says:
“According to reports from the com-
mandant at Port Arthur, the battle
ships and cruisers went out to meet the
enemy, but in consequence of the ene-
my receiving reinforments, making his
total strength 30 vessels, our squad-
ron returned to the roadstead, where-
upon the Petropavloysk struck a mine,
‘resulting in ber destruction, Grand
| Missouri State Gleanings:
eorsenasnnssensscassaccsanssensseassanssenssatens Stestresstsssescenseseassristesscresstessessst
GEN. CRONJE IN ST. LOUIS.|MISSOURI CROP BULLE
is Accumpanied by 450 Soldiers and | Severe Weather Has Greatly Re
Gen. Cronje, hero of the Boer war,
nas arrived in St. Louis, in company
with 450 soldiers who saw much hard
Service in the recent South African
war. Gen. Cronje and his soldiers will
take part in the reproduction of the
Boer war, to be given on the Pike at
the World’s fair. After the fair they
will go to Mexico, where they will set-
‘lo and take up homesteads.
Gen. Gronje is the hero of Magers-
fontaine and Paardeburg. At the lat-
ter place he surrendered himself and
force to the British after an extended
siege'and a constant bombardment
lasting from, February 20 to February
27, 1900. When his force marched out
of the fortifications it was learned that
he had been for months evading and
Jeploying an army of 25,000 men with
a force of less than 5,000. At no time
during the campaign were the odds
less than five to one against his army.
He is regarded by many as the most
finished exponent of the Boer war
methods.
THEY WILL EAT DOG
es Are Fattening Canines for
| m Feant, to Which the Humane
‘Seutuey th iNet Pavited,
Joy—savage, unrestrained — joy—
reigns supreme at the Igorrote reserva-
tion at the St. Louis World’s fair
A stranger would be at a loss to ac-
count for all this merriment, but not
so the Igorrotes. They are happy, and
they know why. After weeks of en-
forced fasting from puppy steaks and
dog soup, the famished barbarians are
to be regaled with their cherished
ylands. Six dogs have been obtained
(where or how is not known), and
their demise is contingent upon how
soon the unfortunate canines shall have
deen sufficiently fattened for the feast.
‘When the Igorrotes first came to St.
Loujs, they requested dogs from the
oundmaster. That gentleman was
willing that they should have their fa-
vorite meat, but the humane society
was not; so there was weeping and
waiing at the Igorrote reservation, the
Inhabitants of which considered it al-
most impossible to maintain good
health without dog, and, being igno-
rant of the sausage that every butcher
keeps, they were indeed in a dilemma.
However, the Igorrotes discovered that
they were outside the city limits, and,
therefore, beyond reach of the humane
society. So they will eat dog.
olik gs ciaae ae Saewes
| Perhaps less than a dozen of the
great throng which attended the Louis-
iana Purchase ball at the Jefferson ho-
tel by the Daughters of the Confed-
eracy, in St. Louis, recently, were
aware that a magnificent diamond
necklace worn by Mrs. David R. Fran-
cis, wife of the president of the ex-
position, was lost. The proprietor of
the hotel, Mr. Lyman T. Hay, was
hastily summoned as soon as the logs
was known. .A moment later a ser-
geent of police appeared on the scene.
‘There was an immediate and secretive
search, and just as it was finally de-
termined that the necklace had been
stolen, it was found lying on the floor,
where Mrs, Francis had dropped it. The
necklace was worth $10,000.
Southern Methodists at Kirkwood.
Members of the St. Louis district
conference, M. B. church, south, con-
vened at Kirkwood under the presi-
dency of Rev. Dr. T. E. Sharp, started
‘@ movement which in the near future
may result in establishing a school in
St. Loujs similar in character to the
Moody institute in Chicago for dea-
conesses and other missionary work-
ers. At the same time it was an-
nounced that there is a. sentiment pre-
vailing among the ministers in the sev-
eral conferences of that church to re-
move the headquarters of the mission-
ary board, now located in Nashville,
‘Tenn., to St. Louis.
Sotham’s Holdings Sold.
‘The bankrupt sale of the real es-
tate of T. F. B. Sotham, the Hereford
cattle *breeder, was held at Chilli-
cothe. Sheriff Day, acting under an
order from Judge Phillips of the
United States circuit court of Kansas
City, sold Sotham’s fine Chillicothe res-
idence to J. H. Barclay for $7,500, and
Weavergrase farm went to Thomas
Kirby for $22,600, Inasmuch as the
farm consists of 400 acres of finely-
improved land, it is the opinion of
Daniel F. Blake, the referee, that the
court will not approve its sale. Land
not so well improved sells in that com-
munity for $75 an acre and more.
! Actor Defends the Drania.
Frederick Warde, the actor, in an
address from @ St. Louis pulpit, took
the ground that the drama should rank
with the church as a moral mental
and spiritual edygational institution.
Charged With Forgery.
‘William Harrison, a young farmer
living in the western part of Marion
county, has been arrested, charged
with forging a check on John Durrett.
Death of @ Veteran.
‘Andrew S. Todd, who had been con-
nected with the William Barr Dry
Goods Co. for 42 years, died in St
Louis. He was a civil war veteran.
<pncinie. Sealia Jiiuasell.
George Vade, a farmer, committed
micide at his home near Minden by
shooting himself through the heart. No
eause is known for the rash deed.
$l. PICKETT.
Fresh DRUGS Daily
2601 LAWTON AVENUE,
N. W. Cor. Jefferson and Lawton Aves.
Open Day and Night. 22 nenes.
‘MISSOURI GROP BULLETIN
Severe Weather Has Greatly Retard:
fee ee eee
R. J. RAYMOND,
Attorney - at - Law,
; Columbia, Mo., April 18.—The United
States department of agricultuge, ell
mate and crop bulletin of the weather
bureau, Missourl, for the week end:
ing April 11, 1904, issued yesterday,
eays:
‘The past week averaged decidedly
colder than usual throughout the state
freezing temperatures occurring it
nearly all sections, and there has beer
more than the normal amount of pre
cipitation, except in the southeasterr
counties, Snow fell over much the
greater portion of the state on the Sth
and in. portions of the northern sec:
tions the ground was covered to depth:
ranging from 2 to 9 inches. ‘The storm
was accompanied by high westerly
winds, making {t severe on stock. The
total precipitation for the week gen
erally ranged from 1 to 2 inches, ex
cept in portions of the southeast sec:
tion, where there was less than 1 inch
In portions of the northern sections
and also in somié of the extreme south:
eastern counties, the conditions wer
favorable for farm work during the
fore part of the week, but over muck
the greater portion of the state th
ground has been too wet, and little o
no progress hés been made.
Oats are about all sown in the south:
western counties, and are coming {1
the central and eastern sections. In.
majority of the northern, central ani
eastern counties, however, only a fev
fields have been sown, and in most sec
tions it Will be several days befor
seeding can be resumed.
In some of the southwestern coun
ties considerable ground has been pre
pared for corn and some corn has beet
planted, but it is feared the seed wil
rot, as the soil is now cold and wet
A little cotton has been planted i
New Madrid county.
Some early potatoes have been plant
ed in most sections, and a few gar
dens made, but the soil. is general
too cold and wet for this work.
‘Wheat is improving in all section’
‘and looks well, as a rule, except i
some of the southern counties, wher
it 1s very small and thin on the ground
Rye {s ir good condition.
The damage to young clover by th
severe frosts of the last decade o
‘March seems not to have been a
great as was at first supposed, and i
is generally reported as doing well.
Pastures and meadows have made!
good start, but the growth of al
grasses has been retarded by the lov
temperature,
Peaches, plums and cherries are {t
bloom as far north as St. Clair an
Maries counties, and apples are i
bloom in some of the extreme south
ern counties.
Peaches promise a good crop in mos
of the extreme southern counties, an¢
there will be'a fair crop of seedlings i
some Tocalities in) the central ant
northern sections.
‘The ouflook for other fruits {s gen
erally promising in all sections. It {
feared, howover, that much damage
may have been done to fruit in th
southern counties by the freezing
weather of the Sth and 9th.
We are the only thoroughly experienced and tho only prace
cally competent Colored Undertakers in the city,
A. RUSSELL,
Livery. Boarding ani UNDERTAKING
nd 0.0.9.0
eee ree r
I is ee, aS
| ‘We have our own conveyances and do all our own work.
Carriages furnished for all occasions.
2118-20-22 Market St., ST. LOUIS, Mo, Telephene, O-390,
Porters and Waiters Headquarters:
HUGH B. WHITE, Proprietor oH
.. SALOON...
At 1911 Market St.
(Opposite Union Station)
Choice Wines, Liquors, Cigars, aud the best upto-fals,
«CAFE IN CONNECTION..
eats: See ee
FURNISHED ROOMS FOR MEN ONLY.
BILLIARD ROOMS IN CONNECTION.
EVERYTHING STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS.
The Brunswick Saloon
CK dion,
G. W. HOLT, Proprietor.
1925 Market Street, crear vnion station),
Fine Wines, Liquors, Cigars and Tobaccos. ST. LOUIS.
Fine Wines Imported and
and Liquors. Domestic Cigars.
DYE’S
Buffet and Pool Room,
= WM. P. DYE, Proprietor.
2801-3 Manchester Ave., St. Louis, Mos
Telephone—Kinloch B-1812. Es
Coroner's Jury in Doubt.
‘The coroner's jury at Sedalia failed
to reach a verdict as to the cause of
the death of C. J. Carner, of Black
Jack, Ark. who died in the former
city under mysterious circumstances
‘The jury was unable to determine
whether the morphine was taken ‘with
suicidal intent or administered by uni-
dentified persons. No trace of the $8¢
and a gold watch which Carner had
on hie Gaon hke Geen found:
TELEPHONE: KINLOCH A, 1275+
James H. Harrison, Phar. D. Gro. W. McKors.
HARRISON & McKOIN,
Funeral Directors 0 0.8 6:
AND EMBALMERS, \. @ieaearyinn
2743 Wash Street, ‘Qa uae
‘All Work First Class. ‘Terms Most Reasonable,
Successful Embalming Guaranteed.
Calls Answered Promptly, Day or Night.
Negro Given Heavy Sentence.
Henry McNeely, colored, charged
with assaulting and murdering Sallie
Kenyon, aged 13, near Centerview, waz
sentenced to 99 years in the peniten-
tiary in the Johnson county circuit
court.
Ewald Again Honored.
Raymond Ewald, a student of the
. architectural department of the Wash-
ington university at St. Louis, has
‘again captured first place in the com-
petitions of the Society of Beaux Arts
Architects of New York.
Death of Mrs. Thomas E. Tootle.
‘Mrs. Homar B. Tootle, widow ot
‘Thomas Tootle, who, with his brother,
‘Milton, founded the present Tootle es~
tate, one of the wealthiest im the west,
died in St, Louis, aged 73.
sea
Maurer Meat and Provision Co.
CASH MARKETS:
1402 MARKET STXEET.
Na, 3S. Feurieenth Street. Branch: 3204 Laclede Ave.
TELEPHONES: TELEPHONES:
@ELL. Main ZIONA KINLOCH, D-25 BELL, Lindell 1004-4 KINLOCH D-1038
2606 FRANKLIN AVENUE. xintocn c 720.
8 and 10 South Jefferson Ave.
Caught in Iowa. «
L, M. King, who escaped from the
Polk county jail while awaiting trial
on the charge of forgery, has been re-
turned from Council Bluffs, Ia., where
he was captured.
A New Insurance Company.
St. Louis business men are organ-
izing a new insurance company, which
‘will be capitalized at $500,00. The
company, it is said, will do a strictly
local business.
THE JOCKEY SALOON,
3924 SOPHIE AVENUE.
CHOICE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS,
One Block West of Fair Grounds.
WILLIAM DOVER, Proprietor
Sullivan Gets Beciston.
“Twin” Sullivan was given the de
cision over Hugo Kelly in a 2¢-round
bout in Kansas City. The Boston man
had all the better of the encounter.
Nicholas #1. Griffin Dead.
Justice of the Peace Nicholas H.
Griffin, well known in connection with
St.Louis polities, died at the Baptist
hospital from # complete collapse.
‘Teamster Killed.
John Stevenson, 50 years old, a
teamster, was killed by a street car in
St. Louis. "The car struck -his wagon,
which was wrecked.
St. Loui
Louis Palladium,
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
Entered at the postoffice at St. Louis,
‘Mo., as second-class matter.
————
te Published Weekly by
J. W. WHEELER,
Manager and Proprieter.
2617 Lawton Avenue.
MISS KATE JOHNSON........Editor.
C. H. Tandy.......--General Reporter
C. H. Wheeler, collector and solicitor
Miss Beatrice Ross, secretary.
John W. Wheeler, Jr., solicitor.
Boeinees 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.........8 50
For one inch each subsequent
TMBETLION. «00.0 cseeeeeee eeeeneeererees, 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
Srandiag and transient notices
PEF TiMCseseecesessenesseeernrneerttnee + 10
RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION. |
Per ORT aseseseccsesesaneesesrenerensssnes sen 2,00
Six wonthierccscssceseseweerereenser 1000
Whree monthe..cccsseyeceeneessseeenee 60
Biagle CopYsr..ssssceseesevssesssnsensesenes on
aie ae eee
No Excuse for Non-Payment.
From the preeent time on, all who
hive south of -eo t avenue, will please
settle their St. Los Pallaciam bills
with Miss Kate Johnson, 2627 Papin
street.
ARIE Sade SSS ES
Mrs. M, A. Lawrence, of 3944 St,
Ferdinand avenue, is tue Reporter and
General Solicitor for the +t. Lous
Palladiam.
The St. Louis Paltadium is soid at tie
following places:
2617 Lawton avenue.
209 South 15th street.
2614 Stoddard avenue.
SEVEN POINTERS FOR THE READ-
ING AND ADVERTISING
PUBLIC.
41) THE ST. LOUIS PALLADIUM IS
in ite 2¢th year of regular pubil-
cation.
(2) Never has missed an Issue.
(8) No fake subscription list to “catch”
houest advertisers.
(4) More bona fine eubseribers than any
otier Negro paper in St. Louis or
State.
(6) The ONLY Negro newspaper pub-
lished ia St. Louis as the organ
of the Repubiican party.
(8) Bezance it is the official organ of
Wright Caney Political Club.
(7) Because 1t 1s feariees in denounc-
ing crime regardless of conse-
quences.
Kansas City is in line. ‘So will St.
Louis be next November.
Watch out for our special issue of
April 30. Every; business Negro should
have his name and place of business
in that issue.
Negro girls and women, men and
boys, who expect to get. through this
world without work, will soon fill an
‘<iticenitn on iat:
Thanks to the many friends of The
Palladium,in the month of March we
received 47 new subscribers. Thanks
to all, and we look for still. greater
success this month.
At The Palladium office we have se-
cured a globe, which is in the front
yard, at 2617 Lawton avenue. We will
‘engage sofe professor to find out where
the Egyptian clyb and Dr. Arthur are
located. SNOOKS.
Full account of the same will be
sent to Washington, D. C., when the
location is found,
Last Tuesday night we visited the
joint meeting of the St. Louis and
Hamilton clubs. We anticipated a gen-
eral union, but did not see it, as it was
‘only a joint meeting of the two clubs.
‘We heard some pointed sarcasm by
several of the speakers. Gentlemen,
‘you can not win. It is easy to talk,
but it takes votes to win, and that ev-
ery republican vote in the state. We
thought that the Messrs. Chauncey I.
Filley, Charles Nagle, C. P. Walbridge,
Judge Spencer, Thomas J. Akin and
all the elements of the party would
be there, But not so. We say again,
gentlemen, you must get together. The
Good Government club, the 50,000 Ne-
gro voters—13,000 in St. Louis—must
stand side by side in this contest. Let
us meet the democrats with a reunited
republican front, and we will win.
_ K. of P. Annual, Sermon.
Last Sunday the K. of P.’s annual
sermon was held at Central Baptist
church. They met at Douglass hall.
‘The general demeanor in their march
from there to the church was one of
knightly courtesy. The order is ad-
vancing rapidly. We wish them much
prosperity.
K. of P.
‘The annual sermon of the K. of P.
was preached by Rev. George B. Stev-
ens, pastor of Central Baptist church.
Tt was admitted by all that it was in-
deed a sermon that will long be re-
membered. by the order. We congrat-
ulate the reverend gentleman, and we
shall speak more about hig in the
near future.
_ THE SMART SET.
Service first class; electric and gas.
European hotel, -buffet and palm gar-
den, 1209 Chestnut street, St. Louis.
Centrasiy located, four blocks from
depot and theaters, Information of
every description. Billy McClain, pro-
-prietor. Phone: Kinloch D 887.
CITY NEWS.
Notex and News Concerning
Our People--Weekly Record
of Socint Events, Deaths,
Marriages and Births
Written Expecially for
St. Bouin Palladium.
Mr. Lewis P. Nash is very sick, at
his sister’s home, 3024 Cagoline street.
He is one of the oldest citizens in St,
‘Louis, and a prominent member of the
U. BF.
The Douglass hotel is now open for
the accommodation of the public. It
is conducted on the European plan.
At present the rates are 75 cents per
ay and from $3 to $5 per week.
Mrs. J. W. Russell, who formerly
lived at 2730 Hermitage avenue, has
moved to 2620 North Taylor avenue,
at the residence of Mrs. Julia Shipton.
She has a fine bouncing baby boy.
Mr. and Mrs. Grose, of Pleasant Hill
‘Mo., have arrived in our city to spend
the summer, They are stopping with
the former's sister, Mrs. Stennis, ai
4538 Cottage avenue, wife of Rev. Dr
L. R. Stennis.
Mrs. Mason, wife of Mr. Mason, the
restaurant man, 2321 Market street
left a few days ago to visit her sick
mother at Ft. Worth, Tex. She ar.
rived safely, and found her mother
‘very sick.
Mr, C. W. Williams, of 1241 Linden
street, is quite sick, and for the past
few days his friends thought that he
would pass in and have his check
cashed. He is a member of several
benevolent societies. He is better now.
Mr.and Mrs. L. H. Patterson, who
recide at 146 Belt avenue, and while
away from home Sunday, attending
church, had their house and contents
partly ‘destroyed by fire. The young
people have our sympathy. Mrs. Pat-
terson is a daughter of Rev. F. Me-
Kinney.
Mr. S. W. Williams, of 2636 Randolph
street, has just returned from Texar-
kana, Tex., where his wife is conduct-
ing a sugcessful millinery store. They
will add to their business a very good
store this summer. Mrs. Williams was
in St. Louis a few weeks ago, buying
stock for her store.
Sunday, the 17th, at 3 p. m,, Rey.
Dr. George B. Stevens, D. D., pastor
of Central Baptist church Twenty-third
and Morgan streets, will preach the
annual missionary sermon at Antioch
church, 4250 Kennerly avenue, for the
missionary circle. Come one, come all,
and help in the good and grand work.
Prof. J. McHenry Jones, of West
Virginia, national grand master of the
Odd Fellows, will join in'the thanks-
giving service of the order the second
Sunday in May. An address will be de-
livered by Hon. John C. Dancy, re-
corder of deeds, of Washington, D. C.
‘The sermon will be preached by Rev.
J. C. Temple, ex-pastor of Big Zion.
The davghter and sons of Mrs.
Hynes, of 4024 Finney avenue, who
died, after a short illness, wish to ex-
tend thanks to their many friends for
the kindness shown them during their
mother's illness, and for the beautiful
flowers given at her death. Mrs. J. N.
Richie, of 2606 Stoddard, the eldest
daughter, was ill at the time of her
mother’s death. :
Miss N. Underwood and brother, of
New York city, Mr. W. M. Underwood,
were the guests of Mrs, Campbell, of
2635 Lucas avenue. Mrs. S. Thompson
surprised Mrs. Campbell and her guests
by @ noonday lunch. Many good things
were spread before them. They will
remain until after the World's fair.
‘All New Yorkers call upon Mrs. Camp-
ell, as she is very popular in the east-
ern cities. . ‘
€. W. Williams, of 1300 Morgan
street, is looking for better times. Go
and see him.
E. L. Arnett is still doing business
‘at the same old place, 2301 Morgan
street. Give him a call.
‘What has become of Mr. H. R. Reece,
of 3116 LaSalle street, Chicago, Ill. We
have not seen him for some time.
The Marble Heart, 1911 Market
street, is crowded every night. They
have @ general good time.
Parquette and dress circle seats are
being secured rapidly for the 18th.
No one can afford to miss the grand
social event and benefit on that date.
Now that the spring fs open, natural
es can be obtained at Miss Teresa,
1308 Olive street. When you go to the
Newport, get your flowers at 1308 Olive
street
If you have not the prices of the New-
port restaurant, then go to Philips, at
2807 Manchester avenue. There you
can gat 5, 10, 15 and 25 cents’ worth of
good victuals that will stick to your
vibe:
Remember if you do not take The
Palladium by the month, you can get
one every Saturday or Sunday from
Mr. Henry Hamilton, 2613 North Pen-
didi apa.
A Successfnl Stenographer.
Miss Helen Walner, of Los Angeles,
Cal., is meeting with success as 2
stenographer. She is located at 417
Ballard building, Los Angeles, Cal. She
writes her brother of her success.
Deep in the mine—a thousand
leagues under the sea—will be one of
the striking features in the third
scene, first act, at the Odeon. Mr. Wm.
De Acklenrich’s deep bass voice will
be heard singing to the Duchess of
Nairne in her chateau.
THE AMERICAN EAGLE
Wall Paper Company.
R. H.C. SYDNOR,
SAM JAMES and RICHARD SYDNOR, JR.,
Interior Decorators,
fayers of Hard Wood Floors, Frescoing,
Window Shades and Painting,
PICTURE MOULDING a £pecialty.
Phone 3961 FINNEY AVE,
With its Star Furnished Rooms
705-707-109 N. Fourteenth St.
BRANCHES
1406 and 14289-1420 Linden St.
H.C. CURTIS, Proprietor
ALFRED HALE, Gen'l Mgr.
Monroe Motley. Clerk
Geo. Taylor, Nicht Clepk
Chas. Hall, Private Watehman
ST.LOUIS, - - - MISSOURI
&. Warriaup. Prop. S.J. Lana Jn, Mar
Waffield & Lane
BARBER SHOP
(ies E\
*FIRST CLASS WORK-
Guaranteed.
2310 MORGAN ST.
; World's Fair Barber Shop.
, e
“A ;
4 S
Beautiful World’s fair bond invita-
tions are out for the $1,000 Thirty-
fifth anniversary of Onward Lodge No.
17, A. F. and A. M., at Masonic Tem-
ple on Monday evening, April 25, 1904.
‘The celebration will be the grand-
est and most brilliant historical fune-
tion ever given in St. Louis.
‘The parade will be reviewed and in-
spected by Grand Master Chinn, Grand
Commander Prentice, Grand Matron
Mrs, Elizabeth Smith, H. of J. Grand
Matron Mrs. M. B. Carruthers, O. E. Ss.
Sse thes Rue. pipes
CALL OR WRITE FOR PRICES.
FIELDS & CAMPBELL, ~
Rooming House,
2635 LUCAS AVE.
Everything First-Class. Ai) Modern Impreve-
mets
ROOMS AT MODERATE PRICES.
‘FIELDS & CAMPBELL,
Propri-tors:
“Follow the Flag.”
(\ Banner
Route
To the Great Gateways
Kensas City,
Chicago,
Omaha.
Toledo &
Buffalo.
Through sleepers to New
York and the East. Mag-
nificent Equipment and
Train Service.
‘Ticket Office,
Eigth and Olive _ streets
Mr. and Hrs, Henderson's
CAHE
27 South Twentieth St.
Opposite West Entrance of Union Station.
Board and Lodging by Day or Week.
H. E. HOFER,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
3004 Manchester Ave.
Special attention given to both
Civil and Criminal Cases.
FANNIE LEE
World’s Fair Artist
Pictures of all kinds called for and
Grete A gee cate pee
erate, Al cae ss Lael
eT ES Fine frames aa sats
She eee ee
Call or write to
456 NORTH SARAH ST.
The Ingram House
FIRST-CLASS ROOMING HOUSE AT
1507 Pine Street
Ths vous has bead ites Abe
BATH
And all Improvements that make a house com-
See tate
Coal, Kindling, Woed.
HAULING AND EXPRESS WAGONS.
TRUNKS ae Seo
Office: 4017 Easton Avenue,
MR.-C. YOUNG.
A GRAND BENEFIT CONCERT
Welfare Association Hall,
MONDAY, APRIL 25, 1904,
St. Louis Colored Orphans’ Home.
Telophone—Kinloch C-397.
_ THEO. H. TEMPEL,
Dea‘erin
Staple and Fancy
“
GROCERIES,
2601 Market Strcet,
| 8ST. LOUIS, MO,
Cptiturnth Onsned cade c Specialty,
a)
“Driftwood”
and Most Puissant Sovereign Grand
Commander Fields 330.
"The executive committee is composed
of Past Masters Willis Barnett, ‘Thos.
A. Jordan, William Harrison, Guls B.
Walker, Wm. H. Butler, Robert A.
James. Daniel Jones, Wm. H. Jenkins,
Philip A. Key, Henry Moore, Wm. H.
Mosby and Jas. W. Grant.
‘The music will be furnished by the
Great Western Band. Prof. W. D.
Flowers, leader. Fifteen pieces of
music will constitute the band cx that
occasion. .
ieee et aes a 8
(eas
World’s Fair Lunch Room
2807 Menchester Ave.
MEALS AT ALL HOURS
Home Cooking. Quick Service
Give us a call. S. P. PHILLIPS, Prop.
J. M. UL. Dorsey
Wood, Coal & Ice,
EXFRESS WAGON
Hauling to all Parts of the City
2629 Morgan St.
GEO, W. F. BULLOGK,
Ladies’ Barber
AND TONSORIALIST
$320 Franklin Avenue, St. Louis.
Wm. A. Overton,
ANO GAS FITTING.
Furnaces, Stcves and Ranges
Repaired and put up.
‘Expressing and Moving.
Phone Kin. D-2137. 1124 N. Sarah St.
: ee
pos
acre
; pa ore
US. aa ae
BEFORE “YAFTER =
A Wonderful Face Bleach.
AND HAIR STRAIGHTENER,
both ina box fort, orthree bore for #2. Guaran=
tetas phar wensy ano bo the Stearn the
tworlts? ue box is al that i nyuired fused as
Hrcotea.
‘A WONDERFUL FACE BLEACH.
peach sed
sh ype he tte rat
Porson perfectiy white infofiy-eightosrse shade
Seem wil Se notloable Ttdogy nok tor tho
SER aera pecan. heey
Rnore Ingct lon acreeyoin! pimples or
Bunps or Bleck heads, making the ski ‘very cof
Eedmoothe Sal plaster Erte te
moved without harm to the skin. When you get
‘the color you wish, stop using the preparation.
‘THE HAIR STRAIGHTENER.
‘tut goosin everyone dollar box is enough to
Sateen 3
Pest ped oes
‘the hair and easy to comb. aa
of our customers say one of onr dollar boxes
for iennirg Ure sel ter one daa
box. THE NO-SMELL thrown in free.
ae ‘sending us one dollar in a letter or
Post Olice money order, expremmouey order oF
‘registered letter, we will send it through the mail
eae perpen tere. ‘want it sent©. O. D.,
it will come by express, 25¢. extra.
iy cao Who lls io do what wo clam
aaah
Yeni xcept receter. oe
OBANE AND Co.,
122 west Broad street,
ger aeENG
3 Curly Hair Made Straight By ‘
> LATA ah Mas
Eien ame
3 mnronsanparrin fucazuest, §
; ORIGINAL
2 OZONIZED OX MARROW ;
ile pitprsttait toeeas tetna gen
Bree nee aeeiecy evan perce
p ieee dente si crease at
B Revreann aay cedtrremasieyyiaere
B rife rackien tt coe tae beat
B iaiacou true Samant oun
Beet oS ae eee ore
frareter nats Coeanerarinet
Renee bene ienceaneeaeanars,
pages Sea hacs Pest alee
Eierutter canon!
mere fc areas Serer tee
Bilger Ortroone aris
Segitaataend es Sosa fe, sea
ere eae ee crate
Beericeesaces Was gtr
OZONIZED OX MARROW CO., §
76 Wabash Ave., Chicago, Tlinois.
1904
“Banner.”
t v es
NOW. OPEN.
NEWPORT HOTEi.
/ BuRoYrran.
2321-2323 TIARKET ST.
CAFE AND BUFFET
, 'N CONNECTION.
Posttively the Dent and mont complete a:tet
OPEN FOR INSPECTION.
A few more weatis furnished rooms, «ne or
tn suite, or rent. Prices xiven en ap lies joa
Rooos’ MARION A. BROOKS, Masaver,
EMPLOYMENT and INFORMATION
FOR KVERYRODY
THIS SHOULD INTEREST vou.
‘The very highest wages puld :0 + :
aikinieot work sehen megur tiie TH
CHRISTIAN EMPLOYMENT Coxoau.
anfursisbed rooms, We Guarentee Sits.
faction,
CHRISTIAN EXPLOYMENT = BUREAU,
2603 Lucas Ave. Plone: 5800
DR, J. B. COLBERT, Mien. sor,
3
Pp,
oo Ah
L. W. VINEGAR
: : PALER 18 bc
Sorond Hand FURNI t URE
CARPETS, STOVES,
and a General Assor:ment of
KITCHEN UTENSILS
BOUGHT AND SOLD FOR CASH.
Also Moving and Expressing a Specialty.
806 N. 14th St.
Telephone: Kinloch D-2125.
Sexton & Maxwell,
First-elass Photog repters
1407 Market St.
MRS. L. A. GORMAN
NICELY
Furnished Rooms
. BY THE DAY OR WEEK i
1222 Pine Street, St. Louis, Mo.
S. P. PERKINS,
Tennessee Shavig Par.or
Everything Neat, Clean ae ere
1226 Morgan Street,
s.
Mr. Andrew J. Smith
of I31S CLARK AVE.
GROCERY
~ Ew
teat
Meat: Marikct,
and a Department tat wl
Invigorate the inner man
DON’T FAIL TO PATRONIZ® HI"
First Baptist Church of Bridgeton,
Mo., has services as follows: Preach-
ing 11 A. M.; Sabbath school 2 P. M.
Preaching 7:30 P. M. Rev. W. W-
Perry, Pastor.
Large, “zacely furnished room for
rent, at 2636 Lucas avenue. ‘Mr. Baker.
Stop that cough. Go and get Pick-
ett’s Cough Drops.
1
The Douglass Social Club,
First-class accommodations in every respect. The members will be gladto welcome you at this cozy resort.
PHONE KINLOCH D 2127 CHAS. NARCISE, President.
J. MILES, Secretary
NEWPORT CAFE.
SHORT ORDERS A SPECIALTY. 2321 Market Street, St. Louis, Mo. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. QUICK SERVICE MEALS AT ALL HOURS LOWERY & MASON, OF DALLAS, OF FORT WORTH,
ODD FELLOWS' HALL ASSOCIATION
27th AND FRANKLIN AVE. VACANT NIGHTS for RI
VACANT NIGHTS for RENT for all Secret and Benevolent Societies.
Apply to W. L. CO
Grand Musical Enter
Give
The St. Louis Post Off
AT DOUGLASS HALL, 7th an
ton A
AT 8
The best talent of the city ha
DANCING will follow prog
being engaged. GENER
COMM
Thos. A. Jefferson, Wm. Owens, Jr. Jas
Apply to W. L. COX, 1426 Morgan St.
Grand Musical Entertainment and Hop
The St. Louis Post Office Clerks' Association,
AT DOUGLASS HALL, FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1904,
AT 8 P. M.
The best talent of the city has been engaged for this occasion.
DANCING will follow programme, the World's Fair Band being engaged.
GENERAL ADMISSION 50 Cents.
COMMITTEE.
Thos. A. Jefferson, Wm. Owens, Jr. Jas. Wilkinson, Jas. B. Huston, J. McWhoeter.
ARTHUR E. JONES, Manager
JAS. MASSENGALE, Assistant
FOUR LEA BUF 2339 Ma
FOUR LEAF CLOVER BUFFET
2339 Market Street
HELP FIND HIM!
Elijah or William Hamilton's Mother,
of Indianapolis, Wants to Know
Where He Is.
Indianapolis, Ind., March 16, 1904.
To Whom It May Concern:
The Douglas Social Club—2106 W
nut Street.
One of the finest social clubs in the
city is the Douglass clup. We w
astonished to find such a club for t
accommodation of our people. We
I, Mrs. E. Hamilton, would like to know if you could inquire and give me any information as to the whereabouts of Mr. Elijah or William Hamilton. He used to be a member of the Methodist church, but perhaps he has changed his denation, and belongs to the Baptist or some other church. He was a porter on a train running from St. Louis to Texas. His address was 2629 Lucas avenue. His wife's name was Emma Hamilton. I would like for you to do your best in trying to find him, as I am his mother, and have not heard from him for a year or two, and would like to hear from him. Please assist me in finding him, and the Lord will reward you. Before he left Indianapolis he belonged to Couburn Street Baptist church, and a brother to Rev. John Preston.
Please let me know as soon as possible
ble. Very respectfully,
MRS. E. HAMILTON,
1010 Hamilton Avenue,
Indianapolis, Ind.
NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC.
We hope every subscriber of The Palladium will settle up for their paper. We will see every person in the next two weeks. So get your money ready. J. W. WHEELER,
We take pleasure in presenting the add of Mr. and Mrs. Henderson, late of Muskogee, I. T. They are in business at 27 South Twentieth, where they will be pleased to accommodate the public. See their add. All Muskogee must go there and bring their friends.
for RENT
EX, 1426 Morgan St.
Entertainment and Hop
on by —
Force Clerks' Association,
Law-
e. on
FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1904,
P. M.
has been engaged for this occasion.
Programme, the World's Fair Band
RAL ADMISSION 50 Cents.
ITTEE.
Wilkinson. Jas. B. Huston. J. McWhoeter.
JAS. MASSENGALE, Assistan
F CLOVER
FFET
Market Street
The Douglas Social Club—2106 Wal-
nut Street.
One of the finest social clubs in the city is the Douglass clup. We were astonished to find such a club for the accommodation of our people. We examined the house and all the accommodations, and sound it complete. Mr. Charles N. Cose, president; Mr. T. H. Miles, secretary. If you wish to spend a delightful time and enjoy yourself, go to the Douglass club, 2106 Walnut street, for the members of this club will receive you and entertain you in the most royal manner. Don't forget the place, and the names of those who are managing the clubhouse for its members.
MR. CHARLES NARICSE, Pres.
MR. T. H. MILES, Sec.
At the Newport, 2321 Market street,
Easter Sunday being quite cold, the young ladies could not show off their pretty hats and Easter fronts in the different churches, but they knew everybody would be at the Newport restaurant. The restaurant was filled from 8 o'clock p. m. to 1 o'clock a. m. They made a grand appearance, that was necessary to make our people look as lovely as angels, could be seen at 2321 Market street, the Newport.
MANAGER WANTED.
Trustworthy lady or gentleman to manage business in this county and adjoining territory for well and favorably known house of solid financial standing. Twenty dollars straight cash salary and expenses paid each Monday by check direct from headquarters. Expense money advanced. Position permanent. Address Manager, 810 Como Bock, Chicago Ill.
Furniture Repairing Co.
Second-Hand Furniture of all Kinds.
Highest Price Paid for Old Feathers.
Gasoline Stoves Repaired.
Express and Light Hauling.
804 N. 14th Street.
Phone Kinloch D-969.
W. DAVIS, Manager.
Mrs. W. E. Mack,
26 S. 14th Street,
NEATLY FURNISHED ROOMS. St. Louis, Mo.
CATHRELL-HYATT
Printing Company
UP-TO-DATE
BOOK AND JOB PRINTING,
3957A Finney Avenue, St. Louis.
DRESSMAKER.
Mrs. Georgia Smith,
First-Class Dressmaking.
LADIES' WRAPPERS
A SPECIALTY.
3221 Rutger Street.
ARNETT'S
NETT'S PLACE
M. B.
ARNETT'S PLACE
E. L. ARNETT, Proprietor. Wines, Liquors and Chinese Restaurant in Connection. Duck Nu
ines, Liquors and Cigars. Restaurant in Connection. Duck Nudles and Chop Suey
Chinese Restaurant in Connection. Duck Nudles and Chop Suey AT ALL HOURS. 2801 MORGAN STREET, HEADQUARTERS OF BANNER BASE BALL CLUB.
2801 MORGAN STREET, HEADQUARTERS OF BANNER BASE BALL CLUB.
The Best is always the Cheapest!
You should be just as careful and particular in selecting preparations for your Hair, as you are in selecting food to eat and clothing to wear. You should endeavor to buy the Best, as you know the Best is always the cheapest, because it gives the Best satisfaction.
JOHNSON Hair and Scalp Preparations are in great demand, because they are the August cut oil we can afford because they are backed by, our guarantee of if not satisfied." They are guaranteed to cure Dandruff, Itching of the Hair, Tatter, Scurf and all disgraceful Scalp and Hair Diseases, also to stop fall caused it to grow long, soft and glossy. These are not the so-called hair goods, but preparations scientifically and carefully prepared for the proper treatment with our wonderful Hair Preparation Your Scalp will in a healthy Hair is bound to grow. Our Preparations are as follows and can be purer, better and more convenient than any address by mail on receipt of price in letter, P. O. Money Order or Postage Stamp.
NWS HAIR FOOD 25c JOHNSON'S HAIR GROWER 50c
ANDRUFF CURE 25c ITCH CURE 25c
ECZEMA CURE 25c SHAMPOO PASTE 25c
AL OFFER. Send us one dollar, [$1.00] and we will send you at once by treatment below: a boxed Johnson's Hair Food, I bottle Johnson's Hair Food, a boxed Johnson's Dandruff Food, a boxed Johnson's Scalp Food. The retail presentation, but we will send it to you for only $1.00 for a few weeks. Order at once, as we are likely to withdraw this offer at any time.
SAMPLE. If you have not tested our Preparations and would like to do so, and to send you a free trial box of Johnson's Hair Food on receipt of no cents pay postage, packing, etc. When writing us, please mention this paper.
JOHNSON MFC. COMPANY,
WASHINGTON ST., BOSTON, MASS.
You should be just as careful and particular in selecting preparations for your Hair, as you are in selecting food to eat and clothing to wear. You should endeavor to buy the Best, as you know the Best is always the cheapest, because it gives the Best satisfaction.
The Johnson Hair and Scalp Preparations are Best, will do all that is claimed for them and be "Money back if not satisfied." They are great Scalp, Kezema, Tetter, Scurl and all disagreeable hair and care. It is long, soft and lightning good, but Preparations scientific treatment of the Scalp and Hair.
After a treatment with and wonderful Hair condition and the Hair is bound to grow. Our Purchased from our Agents or we will send them to Registered Letter, P.O. Money Order or Postage
JOHNSON'S HAIR FOOD 25c JOHN
DANDRUFF CURE 25c
ECZEMA CURE 25c
SPECIAL OFFER. If you send one dollar mail the $1.50 treatment below: a boxes John Grower, John Curtis' and J. Price of this treatment is $1.50, but we will send You should order at once, as we are likely to win FREE SAMPLE. If you have not testified we shall be glad to send you a free trial box of J. in stamps to pay postage, packing etc. When we
Address JOHNSON MIL
699 WASHINGTON ST.,
W. T. Curtis' New
The Johnson Hair and Scalp Preparations are in great demand, because they are the Best, will do all that is claimed for them and because they are backed by our guarantee of "Money back if not satisfied." They are guaranteed to cure Dandruff, Itching of the Scalp, Eczema, Tetter, Scurf and all disagreeable Scalp and Hair Diseases, also called ling hair and cause it to grow long, soft and glossy. These are also prepared hair straightening goods; they are scientifically and carefully prepared for the proper Johnson Hair and Scalp.
treats
After a treatment with our wonderful Hair Preparation your Scalp is in a healthy condition and the Hair is bound to grow. Your preparations are as follows and can be purified to them to any address by mail on receipt of price in Registered Letter, P, O, Money Order or Postage Stamp.
IOHNSON'S HAIR FOOD 25c IOHNSON'S HAIR GROWER 50c
JOHNSON'S HAIR FOOD 25c JOHNSON'S HAIR GROWER 50c
" DANDRUFF CURE 25c " ITCH CURE 25c
" ECZEMA CURE 25c " SHAMPOO PASTE 25c
SPECIAL OFFER. Send us one dollar, $1.00 and we will send you at once by mail the first one. Send us one bottle, 1 bottle Johnson's Hair
of Johnson's Dandruff Cure and a box Johnson's Shampoo Paste. The retail price of this treatment is $1.50, but we will send it to you for only $1.00 for a few weeks.
You should order at once, as we will not accept returns. We will test our Preparations and would like to do so.
You should order at once, as we are likely to have FREE SAMPLE. If you have not tested our Preparations and would like to do so, we shall be glad to send you a free trial box of Johnson's Hair Food on receipt of 10 cents in stamps to pay postage, packing, etc. When writing us, please mention this paper.
Address JOHNSON MFC. COMPANY,
699 WASHINGTON ST., BOSTON, MASS.
W. T. Curtis' Newport Buffet,
2323 MARKET STREET. Wines, Liquors and C
nes, Liquors and Cigars.
Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
RESTAURANT IN CONNECTION
Meals can be Ordered by Telephone, Kinloch C 1199
Also the Famous Anheuser Beer. 2323
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P
Anheuser-Busch Beer on Tap
Douglass Buffet and Pool Room
IS NOW OPEN
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars
J. P. WATKINS, Prop.
LAWTON AVE. and BEAUMONT
ST. LOUIS, MO.
A FIRST-CLASS
Has been opened by J. L. MAYS,
of Chattanooga, Teen, who also
worked at the Chicago, MAINSER, of Poplar, Bluff, is employed by Mr. Mays, and they are considered two of the best barbers in our city. They have removed from 1535 Clark Ave. to
1331 POPLAR STREET
GIVE THEM A CALL
EDWARD A. NEAL,
Carpenter and Builder,
and General Repair Work.
All work promptly attended to. Call
and see me.
1100 S. Compton Ave.
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.
2323 Market St.
Headquarters for Colored Pr
The Rosebud
Bar,
TOM TURPIN, Prop.
Pool Room
in connection.
ers for Colored Professionals.
Market St., St. Louis, Mo.
PHONE: Kinloch D-855.
The Rosebud Bar,
TOM TURPIN, Prop.
Pool Room
in connection.
Also a first-class cafe in rear. Open all night and day. All Prices Private Dining-room.
2220=22 Market St., St. Louis, Mo.
PHONE: Kinloch D-855.
GEO. COX, Vice-Pres. BUD GATEWOOD, Captain.
GEO. WASHINGTON, Nec. IRWIN WHEELER, Bus. Agt
The 400 Base Ball Club
C. W. WILLIAMS,
Proprietor 400 Bar,
And President 400 BASE BALL CLUB.
Headquarters the 400 Bar,
1300 MORGAN STREET.
The "Owl" Saloon
33 South 20th Street
Choice Wines, Liquors, Cigars
and Bottled Beer
Everything Genuine Remember the Place
Phone: Kinloch B 1817.
WILLIAM JAMES and EH. R. SAUNDERS, Managers
CHARLEY HARRIS, Proprietor
The Greeley Saloon.
The Greeley Saloon.
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.
Jas. Williams, MIXERS Chas. St. Clair.
GEO. FOUNTAIN, M gr.
PLEASE YOU NO ONE CAN.
THAT IS APPROPRIATE SERVED HERE.
E SMITH, Manager.
REELY RESORT.
LIQUID REFRESHMENTS TO BE HAD.
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.
Jas. Williams, MIXERS Chas. St. Clair.
GEO. FOUNTAIN, M gr
IF WE CAN'T PLEASE YOU
EVERYTHING THAT IS APPROPRIATE
STEVE SMITH, M
THE GREELY
CHOICEST OF LIQUID REFRESHMENT
S. E. Cor. Twelfth and Wash Streets,
THE ODEON.
THE ODEON.
The sons and daughters of Rebecca No. 3 meet the second Wednesday if each month at Eleventh and Franklin avenue, at 8 p. m. Mrs. Sadie Harris, president, 1529 Gratiot street; May Wilson, vice-president, 1431 Morgan street; Mrs. Annie Henry, 2614 Mills street, secretary; Lizzie Robinson, assistant secretary.
The Colored Young Men's Christian Association World's Fair Entertainment—Monday, April 18, 1904.
This is possibly the last time the building can be secured by Colored people and the opportunity should not be missed. Most of the eminent Negroes of the country will be in the city at that time and will patronize the event of Colored society. Secure seats early and come out and witness. The Great Four Act Drama, the best of its kind. LOVES REVENGE.
And baths is the neatest, warmest baths and shop in the city. Clean towels used in every case, for the coal man as well as the clerk in the office. Four barbers who can shave any person with case and satisfaction. Try them.
A true picture of life in the two greatest of life-moving passions, Love and Revenge. Who has not felt that grand soul inspiring principle, love; or experienced that other characteristic of the human race, revenge.
The World's fair will open April 30; 1904; close, December 1, 1904. The officers of the fair association are determined to surpass all other World's fairs.
The Lyceum -Dramatic club, composed of well-known actors, will be at its best and the play will be the event of the year. Remember this is the last time the building can be had by Colored people, so don't miss the affair when the world will be here to see St. Louis Colored society in full.
Anderson Russell, successor to Russell & Gordon, undertaker and embalmer, livery and boarding, carriages furnished for all occasions. 18-20-22 Market street, St. Louis, Phone, Kinloch C, 390, Branah, 609 East Missouri avenue, East N Louis, Ill, Phone.
Admission 35 cents, 50 cents and 75
cents. No fees $1 and 1.25.
cents. Box seats $1 and 12.5.
Business Manger, Thos. A. Marshall;
stage manager, Frank J. Brown; arrangement committee, Nelson Pryor, S. B. Bell, Chas. Anderson.
St. Louis Mutual Burial Association.
OFFICERS.
The Kink that Won't Come Back
You can make your hair just as
straight and smooth as you want to
by using the Original Ozonized Ox
Marrow, and the kink that was there
before will not come back. The Ozonized Ox Marrow also keeps the hair
from falling out, cures dandruff and
makes the hair grow. It never falls.
One bottle does it. Sold over forty
years to ladies of refinement all over
the country, giving perfect satisfaction.
Send us 50 cents and we will ship you
a bottle express paid. Address Ozonized Ox Marrow Co., 76 Wabash avenue,
Chicago, Ill.
L. S. Williams, president; R. H. Owens, vice-president; Annie K. Russell, secretary; A. Russell, funeral director. Main office 2120 Market street, St. Louis, Mo Phone, C390. We shall in our weekly issue speak more of the good work of this institution. We believe it is a good organization.
ROOMS FOR RENT-716 N. Jefferson avenue. Mrs. Emma Murphy.
FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT, at 4008 Finney avenue. Room heated by furnace.
THE PALLADIUM WANTS ADS
IF OUR TRUE FRIENDS WISH TO
ASSIST US, THEY WILL SECURE
ADS.
FOR RENT—A furnished room, for gentlemen only, at 1920 Wash strow Mrs. Permelia Hynes.
Stop that cough. Pickett's Cough Syrup.
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DAVE YOUNG.
Night.
Also a first-class cake in
rear. Open six night and
day. All Prices Private
Dining-room.
A. B.
JEFF. SMITH. Propr.
A. B. C.
True Reformers' Barber Shop.
JOHN W. ALPHRAN, Mgr.
STOP AND READ.
JOHN H. CLARK
Day.
ST. LOUIS, MO.
NOTICE.
YOUTHS' DEPARTMENT
We're having a lovely time to day! We'll all of us up in the garret at play! We have three houses under the enches—Not real, you know, but make-believes. Two we live in, and one is a store. When we a little old screen makes a truly Warren keeps store, and Joe is his clerk, And Betty and I stay at home and work. Joe comes around and knocks or rings, and we order potatoes and steak and
things;
And sometimes we go to the store and buy,
or send the children for ribbons or pie.
It's lots of fun--just try it some day.
When it rains too hard to go out and play.
-Emma C. Dowd, in Youth's Companion.
TWO VERY SMART PARROTS
One, Called Polly, Chews Tobacco and the Other Is Afraid of Old Glory When It Waves.
Within a birdseye view of the Eagle office at Brooklyn, N. Y., are two as remarkable parrots as could be found in years of wandering. One chews tobacco, but does not swear. She is owned by Henry Eberhardt, who runs a hair dressing establishment in the savings bank block at the corner of Atlantic avenue and Clinton street. She rejoices in the simple name of "Polly" and never occupies a cage, except at night. All day long Polly can be seen on an open perch through the big plate glass window on Clinton street. In the summer time Polly flies just outside the window when a thunder storm comes up and greatly enjoys a shower bath. Polly, although nine years old, has never made an attempt to escape, and probably never will. Whenever she sees a man in the shop eating she follows him around and teases him to the best of her ability. She likes candy, is fond of coffee and will pick a meat bone clean. If she sees a man take a chew of tobacco, she wants a little, too, turning a bit of plug around in her bill as she would a nut.
"Polly" is a pugnacious bird if an animal seeks close acquaintance. Mr. Eberhardt once owned a bull terrier who attempted too great familiarity one day. Polly made a rush and slit the dog's nose from top to bottom with her beai.: His dogship never ventured near her again. This parrot whistles and talks and slings a little in Spanish. She imitates the crying and laughing of children. In addition she has a sizable vocabulary, saying "Hello Henry!" (her owner's name) and "Hello Doctor!" with startling distinctness. She rolls on her back and does such odd stunts as picking among the hairs of Mr. Eberhardt's head, as if they
THIS PARROT CHEWS TOBACCO.
were her own feathers. Polly has never seen a slick coat.
Another parrot, equally remarkable in its way is "Hopkins," owned by Mr. Williams, who keeps a furnishing goods store at 100 Court street. He is called "Hoppy" for short and is 17 years old. He eats potatoes, bread and butter and sunflower seeds regularly and has walnuts and cranberries for delicacies. He does not like the water to drink, and bathes only under compulsion. Some years ago he was fill, but was brought around with a mixture of whisky and paragoric. The whisky, by the way, made him so slippy that he kept falling off his perch. "Hopkins" does not like small boys and if he sees them coming will hustle into his cage as if it was a cyclone cellar. While liking his wire prison he looks forward to the hour when the gas is lighted, for then he is allowed to walk along one of the glass showcases. If the clerks delay in taking him out he will yell "Hurry up, be quick." "Peek-a-boo," "Pussy cat" and "Good-bye" are among the plainest words he repeats. Whenever he hears the fire engines tearing by he will cock up his head and inquire "What's that?" He also repeats the words "bad, naughty boy" occasionally, particularly when he has done some piece of mischief. A knocking or any strange noise causes him to screech "pussy cat." It takes him about a year to learn a new word. He does not hesitate to attack a cat or dog coming near his cage, but is rather afraid of a United States flag; if waved in close proximity, although there is red silk on the screen around his cage.—Brooklyn Eagle.
Caught at It.
Tommy—Smokin' cigarettes is dead
sure to hurt her.
Jimmy—G'on! Where did yer git dat
notion?
"From pop."
"Ah! he wuz jist stringin' yer."
"No. he wuzn't stringin' me; he wuz
strapin' me. Dat's how I know it hurts."
~ Catholic Standard.
KOREA'S LITTLE EMPEROR.
He Has But Little to Say About the Government or the Future of His Country.
The little emperor of Korea is neither so powerful as the czar, on one side of him, nor so wise as the mikado of Japan, on the other side. His country is little, so when his big and powerful neighbors on either begin to fight each other, as they are doing now, he is like a grain of wheat between milestones.
A look at the map will show how easy it is for the soldiers of his neighbors to tramp across his small country. And this is what they are doing, without feeling badly about doing it. Surely the little emperor is in a peek of trouble. He might as well be a plain, everyday American as an emperor, because as an emperor he is no more able to stop them than if he were an American. When we think of an empire we think of a great, powerful nation like Germany, and not a little, weak land like Korea, but Li Hi, Li Hsi, Li Houl, Yi Hieung, Ti Houl, or whatever the emperor's real name is, likes to think of his little country as an empire. No one needs to bother about learning to pronounce any of these names, because so little is known about his true name in this country that all of them might be wrong. According to the New York Tribune there are many queer things about this ruler, who is said to those who have seen him to be short and stout and to look as if he were not well. They say he always looks good natured, but does not look as if he knew a great deal. When persons are allowed to see him they always see him alone, in the midst of a big room, and that makes him seem smaller still.
Like the midako, he asks many questions and knows a great deal for a man
THE EMPEROR OF KOREA.
who has never been further than 15 miles beyond the walls of his capital, Seoul. In those eastern countries, like China and Korea, to be ruler means to be shut up in a palace, seidom leaving it, and when a ruler does go outside it is only on some great and important journey, when all the business in the streets must stop and everybody get out of the way. Only once has the emperor of Korea traveled beyond the walls of Seoul. That time he visited the graves of some ancestors 15 miles away. One would think that a ruler could leave his palace whenever he wished to, but it is not always so, as we have seen. Only five times a year does the ruler of Korea go outside his palace prison. Then he goes through the main street of Seoul to visit the temple.
The emperor does not even know the streets of his capital. He thinks he does. On the days he goes through the main street it looks like a nice wide street. That is because it has been cleaned up for his coming. On other days it is crowded on either side with street pedlers and their goods. He does not know that all the other streets are narrow and dirty.
As one would think, being emperor of Korea is not all fun. He became ruler when he was 12 years old. Then, however, he became only a king, for that was what the rulers of Korea were called at that time, which was 1864. He was not the son of the king who had died and whose place he was taking. The old king had no sons, so they took this boy, who was his nephew. Now, boys, of course, are not able to rule countries themselves, so they did just as they did in Spain when the present king was a small boy—chose some one to rule for him until he should be old enough to do it for himself. In Spain, it will be remembered, the boy's mother was what is called the regent. In Korea it was the boy's father. Tai Wen Kin was his name. He was said to be a wicked old regent. He tried to drive the foreigners out of the country, and would not stop until some other nations made him. Little can be told about the king as a boy because little is known about him.
In course of time he became really king, but he had to pay money to China now and then, as China claimed to have charge of Korea. Afraid that bad men might want to hunt him as they did his wife, whom they killed, he sleeps in the daytime and is awake at night. Once he was obliged to run away from the palace and hide for safety. It was partly about Korga that Japan went to war with China in 1895, and beat her. Then the little king would no longer pay money to China, and he told the other countries of the world that his country was an empire and he an emperor. It is clear that the proverb "Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown" would tell how the emperor of Korea feels.
The Tattooers of Samoa. Tattooing is largely practiced by the natives of Samoa. Those who follow the art as a trade have an effective way of securing their pay. The decoration extends from the waist to the knees, no other part of the body being marked. In the small of the back the design shades off to a point which is never finished by the tattooer till his bill has been paid. As the incomplete design is public evidence of the wearer's indebtedness, the artist seldom has to wait long for his money.
HOUSEHOLD
THE BEST BEAUTY DOCTOR
What a Mother Can Do to Make Her Children Attractive in the Highest Sense.
Every mother is the best beauty-doctor to her own child. We have met mothers who spent a great deal of time beautifying their children's garments, to the detriment of what is real beautifying—the beautifying of the soul—forgetting that "the eyes are the windows of the soul," and beauty is as beauty does.
It is as natural for a little child to wish to be beautiful as it is for a flower to turn to the sun. Watch your wee daughter some time, when she is unconscious of your presence, before a mirror. See how she turns this way and that, smooths out a crease, or pats a ribbon, all the while smiling at the reflection, as she stands there, and finally turning away with the smile lingering in her eyes and at the corners of her mouth—for she has learned that a smiling face is more beautiful that one that trowns. And your boy? Have you ever watched him unobserved as he adjusts his collar and tie before the mirror? At first there are grimaces reflected in the glass, for the little lad finds it as difficult as does his father at times to adjust the refractory collar button. But when it is adjusted and the collar and tie are in place, watch your boy straighten and throw back his head fearlessly, as though he felt it a fine thing to turn and face the world with shoulders back and face erect.
"I want to be beautiful like mamma," cried a seven-year-old girl in our hearing.
"And what makes your mother beautiful—her fine clothes?" we asked, as our eyes wandered to the perfectly-gowned young mother in the next room.
"Why, no. She looks just as nice in her old dress as she does in her new one. It's 'cause she's always so kind and sweet to everybody, and it shows right in her face," was the answer.
The little maid had put the matter in a nutshell. Teach your children that beautiful thoughts and beautiful deeds stand for the highest and best in the art of real beautifying, remembering always that example is better than precept, and that children are apt imitators—Dew Drops.
A FAD WORTHY OF PRAISE.
The Dowry Chest, Filled with Many Useful Things, a New Idea for Engaged Girls.
Quite the newest idea for engaged girls is the wedding chest, says a writer in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, and even girls who are not engaged are the secret possessors of this sentimental and, at the same time, sensible article. The wedding chest may be a fine new trunk, of the latest style, or, it may be a plain wooden affair, prettily covered and lined with flowered chintz. The idea is to fill the chest with pretty things to wear, or for the furnishing and decoration of a home. One girl is
A DOWRY CHEST.
lilling hers with dainty clothing, which she is making herself; another is buying ornaments and nicknacks from time to time, and filling her chest with them. Not only things to wear, such as gloves, lingerie and dainty hosiery, but pieces of lace, tapestry squares for covering sofa pillows, handsome table covers, are receiving the attention of a bonnie Scotch maiden.
Another is making a fine collection of table linen—napkins, mats, centerpieces and so on. Pretty bits of china and bric-a-brac go in the chest of another maiden.
Thus the girls are slowly collecting pretty things, and saving them for use in their homes. As a rule, their friends know of the chests, and take pleasure in helping to fill them, although some of the girls like to feel that everything was bought with their own money.
Sun Bath for Rheumatism.
Try a sun bath for rheumatism. Try a wet towel to the back of the neck when sleepless. Try swallowing saliva when troubled with sour stomach. Try buttermilk for removal of freckles, tan and butternut stains. Try taking your cod liver oil in tomato sauce, if you want to make it palatable. Try a hot flannel over the seat of neuralgic pain, and reaw it frequently. Try a cloth wrung out from cold water put about the neck at night for some throat. Try walking with your hands behind you, if you find yourself becoming bent forward. Try planting sunflowers in your garden if compelled to live in a malarial neighborhood.
A Hint for the Cook.
A cucumber sliced into tomato soup while boiling will add a delicious flavor. It should be skimmed out just before serving.
2. And after six days Jesus taketh with Him Peter, and James, and John, and leadeth them up into an high mountain apart by themselves; and He was transigued before them.
3. And His仁膋 became shining exceeding white as snow; so as no fuller on earth can white them.
4. And there appeared unto them Elijah with Moses; and they were talking with Jesus.
5. And Peter answered and said to Jesus: Master, it is good for us to be here; and us make three tabernacles: one for Thee, and one for Moses, and one for Elias. And not what to say; for they were sore afraid.
7. And there was a cloud that overshadowed them; and a voice came out of the cloud, saying: This is my beloved Son; hear . . . Him.
8. And suddenly, when they had looked round about, they saw no man any more, save Jesus only with themselves.
9. And as they came down from the mountain, they should tell no man what things they had seen, till the Son of Man were risen from the dead.
10. And they kept that saying . . . with themselves, questioning one with another what the tiring from the dead should mean.
11. And they asked Him, saying: Why say the scribes that Elias must first come? Elias verily cometh first, and restore all things that he is written of the Son of Man, that he Must suffer many things, and be set at nought.
13. But I say unto you: That Elias is indeed come, and they have done unto him whatsoever they listed, as it is written of him.
14. GOLDEN TEXT—A voice came out of the cloud, saying: This is my beloved Son; hear Him.—Mark 9:7.
THE SCRIPTURE SECTION.
Jesus' Transfiguration.....Matt. 17:1-11
Jesus' Transfiguration.....Mark 9:2-13
Jesus' Transfiguration.....Luke 9:28-36
TIME.—A week later than the last lesson
Late summer. A. D. 29. Part of the
year of Jesus' life, the "Year of Opposition."
PLACE.—A wild and lonely spot far up
the side of Mount Hermon.
NOTES AND COMMENTS.
"After six days:" Luke says "about eight days." He perhaps counts fractions of a day; in any case the meaning is plain—about a week after the plain talk Jesus had with his disciples about his death. "Peter, and James, and John." The three who were nearest to Him in heart and purpose. "A high mountain:" Some eminence in the foothills of Mt. Hermon. "He was transfigured before them:" Changed in appearance. What the change was we can gather only from the impression made upon the disciples. Matthew speaks of the marvelous radiance of Jesus' face. It is something which cannot be explained. We may think of it as the Divine nature shining out through the human body at one of the crises of the Saviour's life. "Elijah with Moses:" The latter representing the law and the former the prophets. "They were talking with Jesus;" Luke says they were talking "of his decease which he was about to accomplish at Jerusalem.
Luke tells us that He went up into the mountain to pray. "And as He was praying, the fashion of His countenance was altered." We shall not do the situation justice unless we realize what the last few weeks had meant to Jesus. He was in a sense an exile; He had given up hope of being able to win men in any numbers by the "good tidings" He had come to bring. He saw that unless He gave up the work and kept away from His people, they would not rest till they had taken His life. It was a time of mental struggle for Jesus, and of the deepest perplexity for the disciples.
"Rabbi, it is good for us to be here; and let us," etc. It was a most wonderful experience: was it to last? Were the heavenly visitors to stay? At any rate here it was, night upon the mountainside, with no shelter. Without stopping to think, Peter suggested the booths. "For he knew not what to answer:" This is Mark's apology for or explanation of Peter's ill-considered words. "A voice . . . . This is my beloved Son: hear ye Him:" The whole scene, ending with this voice gave the faith of the poor trusting yet perplexed disciples the confirmation it needed. One of their great puzzles was that Jesus said one thing about the Messiah and the prophets seemed to say another. From this time on there was to them but one authority—Jesus himself. The voice said, "Hear ye Him."
"Should tell no man:" Till after the resurrection when it would not be misunderstood. Jesus was constantly on his guard against popular misunderstanding.
"Is it written of the Son of Man:" Jesus reminded the disciples that not all the prophets had thought of the coming Delliverer as the sort of Messiah popularly expected; some of them had said "that He should suffer many things and be set at naught." Read the fifty-third chapter of Isaiah, "Even as it is written of him (Elijah);" Not prediction but history (I. Kings 19). Jesus' interpretation of the Elijah prophecy was not the same as that of the disciples, who thought it was fulfilled in the vision they had just seen. He wanted to show them that suffering and persecution had been the lot of the world's prophets, so points out likenesses between the treatment of Elijah, John and himself.
Figs and Thistles.
The biggest interest comes from what we give away.
You cannot do God's work with the devil's wages.
There are many kinds of Christians, but only one Christ.
There can be no living Christianity without a living Christ.
The man who is winking at iniquity to-day will be working with it to-morrow.
Good works is not the price of a ticket to Heaven, but the proof of the right to enter there. -Ram's Horn.
A Bad Fix
When one wakes up aching from head to foot, and with the flesh tender to the touch, when
Soreness and Stiffness
makes every motion of the body painful, the surest and quickest way out of the trouble is to use
St. Jacobs Oil
promptly. It warms, relaxes, cures. Price, 25c. and 50c.
by keeping your bowels open. CASCARETS will do it without grip or gripe and drive the cold right out of you. Just as soon as you "feel like taking cold" take a CASCARET—there is NOTHING SO GOOD.
CANDY CATHARTIC
Cascarets
WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP
A sweet bit of candy medicine, purely vegetable, absolutely harmless, never grip nor gripe. A sale of over TEN MILLION boxes a year—10c, 25c, 50c—proves their great merit. Be sure you get CASCARETS, the only original, genuine Candy Cathartic.
SKIN PURIFICATION.
Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills
Cleanne the Skin and Blood of
Torturing Humors—Complete Treatment $1.00.
The agonizing itching and burning of
the skin as in eczema, the frightful scaling,
in psoriasis; the loss of hair and
crusting of scalp, as in scaled head; the
facial disfigurement, as in pimples and
ringworm; the awful suffering of infants,
and anxiety of worn-out parents, as in
milk crust, tetter and salt rheum—all demand a remedy of almost superhuman
virtues to successfully cope with them.
That Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills
are such stands proven by the testimony
of the civilized world.
"07 (after slapping the wrong man
familiarly on the back)—'Oh, pardon me,
sir, I thought you were some one else."
"04—'You are quite correct. I am.'—
Harvard Lampoon.
The two greatest fodder plants on earth, one good for 14 tons fodder and the other 80 tons green fodder per acre. Grows everywhere, so does Victoria Rape, yielding 60,000 lbs. sheep and swine food per acre. [K. L.]
JUST SEND 10c IN STAMPS TO THE John A. Salzer Seed Co., LaCrosse, Wis., and receive in return their big catalog and lots of farm seed samples.
"I received a coob but satisfactory letter from home." "How's that?" "It contained a dratt." "Yale Record.
June Tint Butter Color makes top of the market butter.
Getting up in the world is better than getting on—Ram's Horn.
A Bake
When one wakes up aching,
the flesh tender to the touch.
Soreness and
makes every motion of it
and quickest way out of
St. Jace
promptly. It warms, relaxes, co
Cure Gold
by keeping your bowels open,
grip or gripe and drive the c
as you "feel like taking co
NOTHING SO GOOD.
CANDY
WORK WHILE
A sweet bit of candy medicine
less, never grip nor gripe. A
a year—10c, 25c, 50c—proves
CASCARETS, the only origi
Best for t
50,000 Americans
Were Welcomed to
160 ACHIE
FARMS IN
WESTERN
CANADA
FREE
Western Canada
during last Year
They are settled and settling on the
Grain and Grazing Lands, and are pro-
personals assisted.
Sir Wilfred Laurier recently said: "A
new state has just torn the hori-
zon and is toward it that every immigrant
who leaves the land of his ancestors to
come and seek a home for himself now
turns his gaze"—Canada. There is
ROOM FOR MILLIONS
FREE Homesteads given
away. Schools, Churches, Railway
Network, Canada, or authori-
zed Canadian Government Agent-
J. S. CRAWFORD, 125 West North Street, Kansas City, Mo.
C. J. BROUGHTON, 420 Quail Building, Chicago, IL.
StomachTrouble
is no respecter of persons. It
comes to rich and poor, old or
young, weak or strong. There
is a cure for it.
Dr. Caldwell's
(LAXATIVE)
Syrup
Pepsin
Read the Booklet; send for
sample; try it.
PEPSIN SYRUP CO., Monticello, IL.
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MEXICAN Mustang Liniment heals Old Sores quickly.
WOMEN BREAK DOWN.
women drift into a condition of "half invalid." Continual languor—all tired out, run down, backache, nerves shattered, headache, terrible pain, no appetite, poor digestion. In nine cases out of ten it's because the kidneys fail to do their work of filtering the poisonous system waste from the blood. The kidneys are weak and need the strengthening help of Doan's Kidney Pills. Read how these pills repair a weakened condition when this condition
edition of "half invalid." Continual languor—all tired out, run down, backache, nerves shattered, headache, terrible pain, no appetite, poor digestion. In nine cases out of ten it's because the kidneys fail to do their work of filtering the poisonous system waste from the blood. The kidneys are weak and need the strengthening help of Doan's Kidney Pills. Read how these pills repair a weakened physical condition when this condition is caused by sick kidneys:
Mrs. Sadie Mettles of 894 W. 8th Ave., Columbus, Ohio, says: "Prior to the year 1898 I suffered considerably from backache, pain in the head, languor and depression and weakness of the action of the kidneys. The pain was always worse in the morning and I felt miserable. I was induced to procure a box of Doan's Kidney Pills and I began their use. They proved prompt and effective. They cured me and there has been no return of the trouble since taking them. I owe all the credit to Doan's Kidney Pills."
A FREE TRIAL of this great kidney medicine which cured Mrs. Mettles will be mailed on application to any part of the United States. Address Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by all drugstores, price 50 cents per box.
and Fix
from head to foot, and with
hush, when
and Stiffness
the body painful, the surest
the trouble is to use
Jobs Oil
res. Price, 25c. and 50c.
CASCARETS will do it without
old right out of you. Just as soon
d" take a CASCARET—there is
CATHARTIC
arets
YOU SLEEP
purely vegetable, absolutely harm-
sale of over TEN MILLION boxes
the great merit. Be sure you get
final, genuine Candy Cathartic.
the Bowels
408
PISO'S TABLETS
The New Boon for Woman's Ills.
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SILENT suffering from any form of female disorder is no longer necessary. Many modestwomen would rather die by inches than consult anyone, even by letter, about their private troubles. PISO'S TABLETS attack the source of the disease and give relief from the start. Whatever form of illness afflicts you, our interesting treatise, Causes Diseases in Women, will explain your trouble and our method of cure. A copy will be mailed free with a Generous Sample of the Tablets, to any woman addressing
THE PISO COMPANY
Clark and Liberty Streets, WARREN, PA.
BRIDGE WHIST RULES IN RHYME
BY H. C. DU VAL,
EASY TO LEARN AND TO REMEMBER
THE SOFT WAY TO ENJOY THE THOROUGH KNOWLEDGE OF THE GAME.
FOR SALE BY ALL NEWS DEALERS.
PAFRAETS BOOK CO., TROY, N.Y.
PRICE 25 CENTS.
MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN,
A Curtain Grey for Feverjahnes,
Constipation, Headache,
Stomach Troubles,
Diarrhea, Destroy
Worms. They Break Up Colds
Sample made FREE. Address
A. S. OLMSTED, Lo Roy, N Y.
MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN.
A Certain Ours for Fowlershaw, Camphor Hill, Headache, Stomach Troubles, Teething Disorder, Uganda. They Break up Golds Mother Gray, Nurse in Child-ren's Home, New York City.
A. S. OLMSTED, La Roy, N.Y.
Saw Mills
The DoLonch Patent Variable Friction Food Saw Mill with 4, p. cuts 2,000 feet per day. All sizes and prices are valid. Saw Mill, Water Wheels, Lath Mills, Wood Saw and Hay Frosters. Our handsome new catalog will interest you.
DeLoseh Willi Mfg. Co., Box 837, Milwaukee, 114 Liberty St., New York, N. Y.
Live Stock and ELECTROTYPES
Miscellaneous
In great variety for sale at the lowest prices by
A. R. Kellogg Newspaper Co., 224 Walnut St., St. Louis.
MEXICAN
Mustang Liniment
cures Sprains and Strains.
-1.4
Occasion for a Story.
A man had a story about a gun which he delivered himself of upon all occasions. At a dinner party one evening he writened in his chair for over an hour waiting for a chance to introduce his story, but no opportunity presented itself. Finally he slipped a coin into the hand of a waiter and whispered: "When you leave the room, you am from the door." The waiter slammed the door as directed, and the man sprang to his feet, with the exclamation: "What's that noise—a gun?"
"Oh, no," returned his host, "it was only the door."
"Ah, I see. Well, speaking of guns
minds me of a little story."—Tit Bits.
Not as Other Women.
Mrs. Brown—You don't seem to like
Mrs. White?
Mrs. Black—Oh, I like her well enough,
but then sase so eccentric. She actually
thinks one should dress for comfort and
not for looks.—Boston Transcript.
Mabel—"Why didn't you scream when
he put his arms around you?" Ethel—
"I wanted to, but couldn't, and when
I could I didn't want to."—Butte inter-
mountain.
B
The case of Miss Frankie Orser, of Boston, Mass., is interesting to all women.
"DEAR MRS. PINKHAM: — I suffered misery for several years. My back ached and I had bearing-down pains, and frequent headaches. I would often wake from a restful sleep in such pain and misery that it would be hours before I could close my eyes again. I dreaded the long nights and weary days. I could do no work. I consulted different physicians hoping to get relief, but, finding that their medicines did not cure me, I tried Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, as it was highly recommended to me. I am glad that I did so, for I soon found that it was the medicine for my case. Very soon I was rid of every ache and pain and restored to perfect health. I feel splendid, have a fine appetite, and have gained in weight a lot." —MISS FRANKIE ORBER, 14 Warrenton St., Boston, Mass. — $5000 forfeit if originals of above letter proving genuineness cannot be produced.
Surely you cannot wish to remain weak,sick and discouraged, and exhausted with each day's work. Some derangement of the feminine organs is responsible for this exhaustion, following any kind of work or effort. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will help you just as it has thousands of other women.
RHEUMATISM
TO PROVE IT, B.B.B. SENT FREE
We want every reader of this paper who has rheumatism to send us a blood sample and send them a wonderful blood remedy, of Botanic Balm wonderful blood remedy, which has cured, to stay cured, more old deep-seated, obstinate cases of rheumatism than all other remedies, doctors, hot springs or warm baths, and the wonderful uric acid poison in the blood, in its place giving pure red, nourishing blood, sending a rich, tingling blood, and giving warm and strength just where it is needed, and in this way making a perfect cure. B.B.B. has cured hundreds of cases where the joints have been doubled and joints have been broken, while they were almost bristle and perfectly rigid and stiff, yet B.B.B. unlimbered the joints, straightened out the bent back and made a perfect, lasting cure after all other remedies had failed.
Lending Symptoms.
Bone pain, swelling up and down the leg, aching back or shoulder blades, swollen joints or swollen muscles, difficulty in moving around you have to use crutches; blood thin or skin thin, and swelling in the breast, breath, etc. Botanic Blood Balm [B.B.B. B.B.] will remove every symptom, give quick relief from the first dose and permanently cure in a few weeks' time.
Weak, Inactive Kidneys.
One of the kidneys in the palms and a feeling of a dull, heavy weight in lower pars of the Bowels, urinary taste in mouth or disagreeable odor of the urine are some of the leading symptoms of B. B. B. It stimulates all the nerves of the Kidneys into action, opens up every channel, resulting in healthy natural flow of urine, the passing of urine, and the feeling of a lasting cure made by B. B. makes the kidneys and bladder strong and the thy.
OUR GUARANTEE—Take a large bottle of Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B., as directed on label, and when the right quantity is taken a cure is certain, sure and lasting. If not cured your money will promptly be refunded without argument.
Botanic Blood Balm [B.B.B.] is
Pleasant and safe to take. Thoroughly tested for 30
years. Composed of Pure Botanic Ingredients.
Strengthen Weak Kidneys and Stomachs, cures
Dyspepsia. Sold by all Druggists, $r Per Large
Bottle, with complete direction for home cure. Sample
Sent Free by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga.
Describe your trouble, and special free medical advice,
to suit your case, will be sent in sealed letter.
DO YOU COUGH
DON'T DELAY
TAKE
KEMP'S
BALSAM
THE BEST COUGH CURE
I Cures Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Croup, Influenza, Whoooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages, and a nurre cure in advanced stages. Use at once. Give the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Give the excellent effect everywhere. Large bottles 25 cents and 50 cents.
It Cures Colds, Congs, Sore Throat, Group, Influenza, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma. It treats the most common ailments and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once. You will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Large bottles 25 cents and 60 cents.
PISO'S CURE FOR
CURSES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
For Adults and Children. Use in time. Sold by drugstores.
CONSUMPTION
RELIGIOUS MATIERS
I LAY ME DOWN TO SLEEP.
Oh, my Father; hear my prayer—
Only Thou canst comfort me
When life trembles helpless where
Jordan's stormy tide I see.
Thou, my Father, hold my hand.
Father, I, Thy wandering child,
Naught of merit can display;
Still, oh, Father, safely keep—
Bring me back when I would stray.
Love Thou art, and by that love
Purge the sins that make me weep;
Comfort send me from above
When I lay me down to sleep.
That these hands perchance have done;
But because of Him who dies,
To whose cross I fain would creep,
Save me in the crucified
When I lay me down to sleep.
May my closing eyes then see
Him who is the Truth, the Way;
May He ope the door for me
Into that eternal day.
Jesus, Saviour, be my Gulde,
Lead me through the waters deep;
In Thy bosom let me hide
When I lay me down to sleep.
-E. H. Foss, in United Presleyan.
LIFE'S LITTLE LEAKAGES.
Men Do Well to Look Out for the Small Drains on Their Moral Capital.
How soon a leakage shows in a building, a ship, or a bank account! Recently, writes A. A. Benfield, in the Baptist Union, I was in a building which but a few months ago was a model of beauty, but now its beauty is marred by a leakage. I have looked upon the hull of a ship rising above the water's edge. That once majestic vessel is a useless wreck; it has sprung a leak. That man who but a short time ago had a good business and a large bank account is now a failure. There has been a leakage. He trusted his business to clerks. He failed to invoice his stock and balance his accounts, and during that time there has been a constant leakage, and a consequent failure.
Now the foregoing is only preliminary to what I wish to say. There is often a leakage in character. That young man who began life with such promise, such a stock of life's capital, character, honor, honesty and manhood, is now a failure. He began well, what did hinder him? There has been a leakage in character. Almost imperceptibly, he has become less honest, and less truthful. He has covered up many things which the light would have destroyed. They have smouldered in the life until they have caused ruin and failure. He did not lose all his life's capital in a day, but by a steady leakage all has gone.
A boy begins by deceiving his mother and ends by robbing a bank. At first he may only cheat a companion, but in the end he cheats himself and God. At the beginning he loses honor, at last he loses his soul. There are many ways in which this leakage is started. He may read a bad book, associate with an evil companion, spend his days in leniness, form a useless habit, have a greed for money and notoriety, or mock at sacred things. Each and any of these will begin the downward course and finally plunge the life into disaster. Life is a serious business and men do well to look out for the leaks in its capital. Ruin comes slowly but surely when the leakage is allowed to commence and continue. Never allow the leak to start, but if it has started, stop it before it gets beyond remedy.
JUDGED BY THEIR FRUITS.
The Test of Christianity Is That It Makes Men and Women Better and Purer.
There was a chief of a tribe in South Africa who, heathen as he was, proved to be a good friend of Christianity, for he used to say to those of the tribe who professed to be converted to the new faith: "If you become better men and women by becoming Christians, you may remain so; if not, I won't let you be Christians at all." That is the test, after all is said, and it is the test Christianity itself seeks, says the Northwestern Christian Advocate. It wants to be judged by its fruits. Not only its converts but the institutions it creates and fosters, as well as the civilization it develops, are to be judged by their respective fruits. It is true, of course, that the real fruit is not always at once apparent. Christianity takes a man in the midst of his sin. It does not change the inner life in a moment. The ideals, the purposes and aims are all changed. A new heart is given to the man who is truly converted. But it takes time to disclose the new fruit of that life in all its perfection and beauty. So it is with a civilization. It may be Christian in its spirit, but there is much to strive against, by reason of the old ideals and the men and women who will not yield to the new life. But, when all is said, Christianity has its distinctive fruit, and where that is not revealed within a reasonable time it may be accepted as the truth that the real thing is wanting. "By their fruits ye shall know them."
Every Christian family ought to be, as it were, a little church, consecrated to Christ, and wholly influenced and governed by His rules. And family education and order are some of the chief means of grace. If these fall, all other means are likely to prove ineffectual.—Jonathan Edwards.
"We are indebted to John Adams for our national motto, "E Pluribus Urum." While he was minister to England, Sir John Prestwick suggested it to Mr. Adams as a good motto to indicate the union of the colonies. It was submitted to congress, and adopted by act of congress, June, 1782. The eagle in its beak bears a ribbon on which is the motto. In the early days of its use the eagle bore also in its talons a bundle of 13 arrows; but when, in 1841, a new seal was made to take the place of the old one, which had become worn, only six arrows were placed in the talons. Whether this change was ordered by law or not is not known. The old Latin motto was in use in England as far back as 1730 on the Gentleman's Magazine.-St. Nicholas.
Marriage in India.
The result of Mrs. F. A. Steel's personal observation is that marriages in India are singularly happy. There are fewer cases of unkindness and violence than in Great Britain. The dowry system, she avers, is a great protection to the wife. Every bride takes her husband a dowry, which is a kind of marriage settlement against unkindness. If she is badly treated and thus compelled to go back to her father's house, the husband has to return her dowry; probably he has spent it, and, as it is not often convenient for him to refund the money, he takes care to treat his wife well. "I think that a similar system here would be a good thing," says the lady, frankly.—Chicago Inter Ocean.
The Venus de Medici.
The Venus de Medicis has long ranked as a canon of female beauty; but from a physiological standpoint she is not "a perfect type of perfect womanhood." At any rate, Prof. Chadwick does not think that she is, for he points out that the narrow chest indicates unrobust lungs, that the shoulders are not well braced up, that the cranium and face show no trace of mental vigor, that her limbs show want of muscular training, and that, as a type of what a mother and mistress of a home should be, she is contemptible. After all, the Greek conception was not of womanhood, but rather, to them, the good enough one of a goddess.—Cincinnati Enquirer.
Desperate.
"What," asked the druggist, "do you intend to do with this chloroform?" "Oh," said the tired-looking man, "I want to get a little sleep to-night. That baby of ours has kept me awake for nearly a week now." "But surely you don't intend to risk that child's life by giving it—" "No," he interrupted, "I'm going to take the stuff myself, and then let the kid do its worst."—Chicago Record.
A Good Guess.
"I'm opposed to horse racing. I think the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals should step in and put a stop to it."
"Well, old man, I'm sorry for you. That's all I can say."
"Sorry for me? What do you mean?"
"Oh, of course you had your money on the wrong horse."—Cleveland Leader.
The Mexican government sent a commission of archaeologists to investigate certain alleged Chinese characters recently discovered on a monument near Hermosillo, and they have announced that there can be no question that the characters are Chinese and that they must have been there many centuries.-Chicago Chronicle.
She Was Startled.
Daughter—Mr. Goodman asked me to marry him last night.
Mamma—And what did you tell him?
"I told him to ask you."
"Ask me! Why, you wouldn't have your dear old mother commit bigamy would you?"-Up-to-Date.
A Crisis on Hand.
Kusciusko Jinks — If I remember right, your wife and her mother didn't get along very well together.
"That was so at that time, but now there is actual danger of harmony breaking out between them"—N. Y. World.
Yukon Bigger Than Mississippi
The volume of water issuing from the Yukon is greater than that discharged by the Mississippi. The Yukon discharges every hour one-third more water than the father of waters.—Chicago Chronicle.
THE MARKETS.
And Annabel Googan's Face Bore Evidence Convincing and Condemning.
"Annabel!" called a Manchester mother over the banisters, as she heard the front door close. Yes, mmaana," replied a sweet, girlish smile. Annabel Googan slowly framed herself in the darkness of the staircase, relates London Tit-Bits.
"Was that Mr. Tinberry, Annabel?" "It was, mamma." "Do you know it is 20 minutes past 11?" came in cold tones from the wrapper figure in the upper hall. Mamma, we hadn't the slightest idea it was so hard, and the young girl, earnestly "You see," she continued, "Mr. Tinberry has been telling me about China and Japan. He said everybody ought to know about them, and it was so interesting, we never thought how late it was getting. Do you know, mamma," added the sweet girl, as she reached the landing, "that in China they—" "Did Mr. Tinberry draw a map of China on your face, Annabel?" asked Mrs. Googan, sternly. "What mamma?" asked the girl in startled tones.
The young girl rushed to a mirror and saw with horror-stricken glance that the left side of her face was streaked and stained with ink.
"Heaven and earth!" she screamed; "mountain and earth" must he laughed in his wild pocket!" and with a shriek of horror the beautiful girl fell fainting to the floor.
NOT SUPERLATIVELY POOR.
Land That a Poverty-Stricken Man Was Not Bad Enough Off to Want.
Bourke Cockran was condemning a certain popular novel, relates the New York Tribune.
"This novel," he said, "is as poor and barren as Elmo county land."
"Is Elmo county land very poor and barren?" asked one of Mr. Cockran's interlocutors.
"Is it?" said he. "Well, I should say it is. Once two strangers rode on horseback through Elmo county, and the barrenness of the land amazed them. Nothing but weeds and rocks everywhere. As they passed a farmhouse they saw an animal in the garden, and they said: "Poor chap! Poor, poverty stricken old fellow!"
"The old man overheard them, and called out in a shell-voice
called out in a safari voice:
"Gents, I hain't so poor an' poverty,
stricken as ye think. I don't own none o'
this land."
A Grateful Young Lady
Sullivan, Ark, April 11—Miss Fay Clover, one of our brightest young ladies, is receiving the congratulations of her many friends on her restoration to good health. For a long time she has been ailing and her gratitude for her complete recovery has prompted her to explain how it was accomplished. "Some months ago I found myself in a very serious condition," says Miss Clover. "I had neglected myself till I was forced to give my condition immediate attention. I could not sleep at night, my appetite failed and my kidneys were affected, causing a severe backache and a dull pain in my head. "A friend advised me to give Dodd's Kidney Pills a trial and I bought a box to please her, not thinking that they were ill. I used them and was surprised at the improvement they made in my case. In a short time I was permanently cured. They are a splendid remedy."
It Cures While You Walk.
Allen's Foot-Ease is a certain cure for hot, sweating, callus, and swollen, aching feet. Sold by all Druggists. Price 25c. Don't accepty substitute. Trial package FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
Club Wag—"Well, good night, admiral." Warrior—"There's a stupid joke. 'Admiral!' Can't you see my spurs?" Wag—"Oh, I thought they, were your twin screws."—Punch.
Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as a cough cure—J. W. O'Brien, 322 Third Ave., N. Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900.
No man is so insignificant as to be sure his example can do no hurt. Lord Clarandon.
900 DROPS
CASTORIA
A Vegetable Preparation for Assimilating the Food and Regulating the Stomachs and Bowels of
INFANTS & CHILDREN
Promotes Digestion, Cheerfulness and Rest. Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral.
NOT NARCOTIC.
Recipes of Old Dr. SAMUEL PITCHER
Pumpkin Seed -
Aix Stone -
Rochelle Salt -
Aime Seed -
Treponema -
El Carcino Salts -
White Steel -
Clarified Sugar
Milkgren Former.
Aperfect Remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Worms, Convulsions, Feverishness and Loss of SLEEP.
Fac Simile Signature of
Charles Pitcher
NEW YORK.
A MONTHS OLD
35 DOSSES - 35 CENTS
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
"PE-RU-NA TONES UP THE SYSTEM IF TAKEN IN THE SPRING."
SAYS THIS BEAUTIFUL YOUNG GIRL.
A.
Miss Marjory Hampton, 2016 Third Avenue, New York City, writes: "Peruna is a fine medicine to take any season of the year. Taken in the spring it tones up the system and acts as a tonic, strengthening me more than a vacation. In the fall and winter I have found that it cures colds and catarrh and also find that it is invaluable to keep the bowels regular, acting as a gentle stimulant on the system. In fact, I consider it a whole medicine chest."—Miss Marjory Hampton.
Blood Impurities of Springtime- Cause, Prevention and Cure.
Dr. Hartman's medical lectures are eagerly scanned by many thousand readers. One of the most timely and interesting lectures he ever delivered was his recent lecture on the blood impurities of spring. The doctor said in substance that every spring the blood is loaded with the efface accumulations of winter, deranging the digestion, producing sluggishness of the liver, overtaxing the kidneys, interfering with the action of the bowels and the proper circulation of the blood.
This condition of things produces what is popularly known as spring fever, spring malaria, nervous exhuxation, and good thickening and many other names.
Sometimes the victim is billions, dyspeptic and constricted; sometimes he is
$500 Given Away
Write us or ask an
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Oyster deodorizer and cleaner
rubber or sealant. You can apply 4-1-mix with
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of date hot water glue preparation. Buy
Alabastine in 15 lb. packages, properly
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pr 105 Water St., I, L, K.
PILES
AMAKESIS gives insistent repair
by CUBES PILES.
For free sample address
"ANAKESIS", Tribune building, New York.
PATENTS
48-page book free
highest references.
FITZGERALD & CO., Box K, Washington, D.C.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
Chat. H. Hitchter.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
1.
weak, nervous and depressed; and again he may have eruptions, swellings and other blood humors. Whichever it is, the cause is the same—effect accumulations in the blood.
Nothing is more certain within the whole range of medical science than that a course of Peruna in early springtime will perfectly and effectually prevent or cure this almost universal affection. Everybody feels it in some degree.
A great majority are disturbed considerably, while a large percent of the human family are made very misrable by this condition every spring.
Peruna will prevent it if taken in time.
Peruna will cure it if taken as directed.
Peruna is the ideal spring medicine of the medical profession.
If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory results from the use of Peruna write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case, and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of
The Hartman Sandiarium, Columbus,
POPE MANUFACTURING COMPANY
Hill Climbing Made Easy
by the TWO-SPEED GEAR
A new equipment of Chainless Bicycles
Low Gear for up-hill High Gear for level stretches
Any catalogue mailed on receipt of a 2-cent stamp.
Western Department, CHICAGO, ILL. Eastern Department, FARTFORD, CONN.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$4.00, $3.50, $3.00, $2.50
UNION MADE SHOES BEST IN THE WORLD.
W. L. Douglas shoes are worn by more men than any other make. The reason is, they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and have greater intrinsic value than any other shoes.
Sold Everywhere.
Look for name and price on bottom. Dress large, comfy Cotton, which is everywhere conceded to be the finest Patent Leather yet produced. Fast Color Eyelids used. Shoes by mail, 25 cents extra. Write for Catalog. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
107
THE ORIGINAL
WATERPROOF
OILED CLOTHING
TOWER'S
FISH BRAND
Made in black or yellow for all kinds
of wet work. On sale everywhere.
Look for the Sign of the Fish and
the name TOWER on the buttons.
TOWER COLTON MESS, U.S.A.
TOWER CAMPUS CO., LONDON, ENGLAND, G.B.
A. N. K.--B 2017
WHEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS please state that you saw the Advertisement in this paper.
C
Said the republican party is the Old city of St. Louis and state get to Ship of Zion. All outside is sea. gether, we will win. Let all elements When the republican party in the get together.
M.
THE MUSEUM OF THE HISTORY OF THE UNION OF THE STATES OF AMERICA
THE RACE QUESTION.
The Relation of Colored Y. M. C. A. to the Public and the Public to the Association.
Mr. Editor—Every man of Negro blood, even the most depraved, is painfully aware of the unfortunate condition of his race in the United States; nay, in the world even.
Every man of Negro blood desires to do something to improve the condition of his race.
What shall that something be?
"There's the rub." Some say the salvation of the race depends on getting wealth. Some say it depends on getting intelligence. Some say it depends on getting improved industrial conditions.
I say it depends on improved moral conditions. The moral Negro has the combined morality of the world at his back. The immoral Negro has the world against him.
The charge that we are immoral is the strong point made against us by our enemies.
This charge of immorality justifies, in the minds of a majority of the white people of the country, and of the world, the lynchings, the murders, the denials of civil rights, the denials of political rights, the obhorrence and detestation in which the race is held.
I do not say the charges are true; but I do say they are made, are believed, and are efficacious in the work of our degradation.
Here then is a point upon which all Colored men can agree, and upon which all can work.
Each individual can, by taking thought, improve his own morals, and can work for the improvement of the morals of others.
One of the most powerful instruments used in modern times for improving the morals of a people is the Young Men's Christian association.
The mere existence of such an association is a protest against vice. It seeks to keep young men and women from entering upon a career of vice.
It seeks to win those back who have already been upon such a career. It seeks to replace the saloon, the gambling hell, the brothel with innocent places of resort, where the young and the old can be entertained without being degraded.
The young men who have established themselves at 2633 Lucas avenue, deserve not commendation only, but the active, social, mental, moral and pecuniary support of every well wisher of the Negro race.
On the 18th of this month they give an entertainment for the benefit of the association, at the Odeon.
They need funds with which to employ a secretary. They need a gymnasium, they need a library, and etc.
All these and more are needed to make the room attractive to the young Colored men and women of the city. You can help them. Will you do it?
T. H.
See cupon for voting contest on first page.
PULLMAN BOYS.
Mr. Wheeler says the "Only Way" run is better than down in Bingam. He isn't Mountaineering any more.
First Baptist Church Items.
Rev. E. C. Cole preached an excellent sermon, last Sunday, 11 a. m., at the First Baptist church, to a large audience, which was well received. At 1:30 p. m. he baptized the remaining converts who were not ready at the close of the protracted meeting.
The different clubs met to transact regular weekly business directly after the baptizing at First Baptist church—namely, Mary Church Terrell and the Pleasant Workers. The former is a charitable organization, while the purpose of the later is to raise money to pay on the debt of the church.
Rev. J. W. Muse preached a very able sermon for Dr. E. C. Cole last Sunday, 7:30, at the First Baptist church. He held the audience spell-bound.
The entertainment that was given by the Pleasant Workers' club, last Tuesday night, 12th inst., at the palatial home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Richardson, was indeed a success. Mr. and Mrs. Richardson spared no pains in arranging everything so very neatly and giving special care to the wants of everyone present. The fun and festal lasted until 12 o'clock, and everyone returned home happy. These are the names of some of those who were present: Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Richardson and daughter, Drs. E. C. Cole and J. W. Muse, Madame E. C. Cole, Madame M. A. Giltee, president of club; Mesdames Sada Byrd, E. Jones, Leatha Newcomb, Anna Hammons, Lizzie Harris, L. Smith, Sallie F. Jones, B. C. Slaughter, A. Turner, M. McNarry, M. Merchant, Ward J. Harris, Misses Annie Brodie, Emma Cummings, Bertha Smith, Ollie Craven, Minnie Anderson and Miss Childs. The gentlemen: A. W. Washington, Garfield Craven, J. W. Valentine, A. P. Brown, Fred Craven, Omer Magee, H. J. Wells, George Better, E. W. Postal, Louis Webb and B. C. Slaughter.
Chopz
Hon. J. D. Miller has at last found his level. A janitor. He has gone to work. Their is a Divinity that shapes cur end rough hew them as we may.
Our whole foreign trade last year, exports and imports, was close to $2,500,000,000, the largest ever known. December showed the highest record of monthly exports; cotton sailed away in the air, and stayed there, like Gilroy's kite, its exports during the year amounting to $378,000,000, a figure never reached before, or anything like it. This huge aggregate was not in consequence of more cotton going out, but higher prices for it coming in. In shipments of grain the falling off was quite heavy at the Atlantic and Pacific ports, aggregating in the total 55,000,000 bushels. But in the face of this shipments from the gulf ports increased, not very much, but enough to point a significant moral. In the matter of the export of provisions, cattle, hogs, sheep, etc., New York still holds its own and sends out more than half the total export. The tendency of wheat seems to go more and more to the gulf and through Canada, but the equipment of ships and railway arrangements so far hold the bulk of the provision export trade to this port. The natural current of this traffic is eastward from the plains through certain established centers, and it is not easily shifted. The import of the whole showing is that eternal vigilance is the price of New York's commercial primacy, and if she relaxes at any time it is at her peril—N. Y. Tribune.
2601 Lawton Avenue.
It is no use to complain about good medicine, for S. P. Peckett has the best in the market. He keeps open all night. Don't fail to get a good cigar while you wait for a street car on Jefferson avenue, for Pickett has them. 2601 Lawton avenue.
ARE YOU A MAN?
ARE YOU SICK, LOW SPIRITED, DISCOURAGED?
HAVE YOU LOST YOUR COURAGE AND AMBITION?
ARE YOU ENFEEBLED, WEAK, DISPONDENT, IMPOTENT?
HAVE YOU BURNT THE CANDLE AT BOTH ENDS?
We cure Lost Manhood, Failing Powers and Impotency; Syphilis in its Primary, secondary or tertiary stages; Gonorrhea, Stirure, Gleet, Hydrocele, Varicocele, Spermatorrhœen, Kidney and Bladder Diseases, and all diseases of a secret nature. We cure all.
Venereal Diseases of Men and Women
no matter how malignant the disease may
living you may have been sick; No matter if
never get well again. We can cure and resis-
t not despair, while there is life there is
vigorous, and give you lasting, robust heal-
feelings. If you want your blood to run p
your system, re-invigorated and strengthen
perfect health; if you want your share of the
us immediately, describing the nature of you
you the way to health, hope and happiness.
ADDRESS
SALT OF LIFE
RICHMOND, - -
no matter how malignant the disease may be; no matter how old you are, or how long you may have been sick; No matter if your doctor has told you that you can never get well again. We can cure and restore you to perfect, lasting health. Do not presure, and give you lasting, robust health. Brace up. Be a man with a man's feelings. If you want your blood to run pure and uncontaminated; if you want your system re-invigorated and strengthened with those elements so essential to perfect health, you want your blood to run pure and uncontaminated, describing the nature of your disease, and we will write and show you the way to health, hope and happiness. Write to day—a postal will do.
COAL AND EXPRESS
Trunks Checked to Union Station and all parts of the city
Residence, 110 S. Leonard Ave.
Office, 12 N. Channing Avenue
MR. J. G. GARDNER & CO.,
Restaurant
AND LUNCH COUNTER.
MEALS AT ALL HOURS and on Short Notice.
Give Them a Call.
Best Tennessee Cooking at
1317 CLARK AVENUE,
Across the Street from the
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH.
MRS. GARDNER & SON assist
MR. GARDNER & CO.
DON'T FORGET THE New Douglass Hall
FOR ENTERTAINMENTS.
$35.00 PER NIGHT.
"A Negro Enterprise."
Best Appointments.
Best Location in City.
LAWTON & BEAUMONT
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 St. Ferdinand; Rev. W. C. Williams, pastor.
Quinn's Chapel, A. M. E., Carondelet; Rev. J. A. Christoper, pastor.
Metropolitan A. M. E. Zion, 2028
Morgan; Rev. E. D. W. Jones, pastor.
St. John's A. M. E. Zion, 113 Eiler
St.; Rev. R. P. Christian, pastor.
Colored Methodist 3906 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; Rev. Gilliam, pastor.
BAPTIST.
Central Baptist, Twenty-third and Morgan St.
First Baptist. Fourteenth and Clark Ave.; Rev. E. C. Cole, pastor.
Fifth Baptist. 4117 Papin St.
Pilgrim Baptist, Kossuth and Pans St.; Rev. Brown, supply.
Antioch Baptist, 4223 Kennerly Ave.; Rev. F. McKinney, pastor.
Mt. Pleasant Baptist, foot Dock 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.; Rev. C. M. C. Mason, pastor.
Missionary Baptist True Reformers; Rev. J. L. Cohen, pastor.
S. L. Pickett. Drugs fresh dally. Don't pass his door—2601 Lawton Av.
ARE YOU SICK, LOW SPIRITED,
DISCOURAGED?
HAVE YOU LOST YOUR COURAGE
AND AMBITION?
ARE YOU ENFEEBLED, WEAK, DISPONDENT, IMPOTENT?
HAVE YOU BURNT THE CANDLE AT
BOTH ENDS?
may be; no matter how old you are, or how
or if your doctor has told you that you can
restore you to perfect, lasting health. Do
so hope. We can make you strong and
health. Brace up. Be a man with a man's
pure and uncontaminated! If you want
nerved with those elements so essential to
if the joys that life should bring, write to
the life and disease, and we will write and show
less. Write to day—a postal will do.
RESS
E COMPANY,
- - VIRGINIA.
IF YOU BUY
FURNITURE.
AT Thuner's
ITS GOOD.
9122-24-20 Sg. Broadway
Rooming House
FOR GENTLEMEN ONLY
Gas and Fuel Furnished in Winter
Hot and Cold Baths
Board if Required Strictly First-Class
4008 Finney Avenue
The Palace Hotel
1424 Morgan St.
Mrs. Sarah Sprague is conducting a rooming house.
Call and get lodging.
True Reformers' Hall
MADAM IRVING'S
Hair Dressing Parlor
Shampooing, Straightening, Scalp
Massaging a Specialty
Braids and Bangs to Match in Color and
Quality
CALL AND SEE HER WORK
Electa Temple,
No. 31.
S. M. T.
Meets Second Thursday of each month
at 8:00 p. m., Knights of Pythias
Hall, Lucas and Jefferson Aves.
Mrs. Annie D. Hyatt, M. W. P.
Lulu O. Dell, See'y.
Mrs. J. W. Wheeler.
Dressmaking
Designing,
Cutting,
Fitting,
Purchasing.
ELIZABETH TEMPLE NO. 12
S. M. T.
Meets the Seddon Monday in the afternoon at
2:30 p. m. and the Fourth Friday night at
8:00 p. m. in each month. True Reformer's
Hall, 3000 Pine Street
MRS. HATTIE WILLIAMS, W. P.
Address 703 N. Garrison Avenue
MRS. LULA BRINER. Secretary
Queen Esther Temple, of the S. M. T., meets the first and third Wednesday in each month at K. of P. hall. Mrs. Ophelia Benton, W. P.; Mrs. Mahalia Macklin, secretary.
Ruth Temple No. 163, of S. M. T., meets the fourth Friday in each month at the True Reformers' Hall. Mrs. Jennie Irving, W. P.; Ala B. Dardy, secretary. All are invited.