St. Louis Palladium
Saturday, May 27, 1905
St. Louis, Missouri
Page text (machine-generated)
STLOUIS PALLADIUM
Vol. XXI. No. 24.
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M. H.
REV. E. C. COLE Rev. E. C. Cole, will soon spend several months in Europe. We wish him success.
A NOTABLE EVENT.
The Grand Opening of the Masonic Temple at Jefferson City, Mo.
On May 11, 1905, Capital City Lodge No. 9, A. F. and A. M., entered its new quarters in its magnificent new building under very auspicious circumstances attended by brilliant ceremonies.
This event marks a new era in the history of Capital City Lodge.
The site once occupied by an old and dilapidated building is now graced by a beautiful three-story brick structure, modern in all of its appointments.
Aside from the three stories above the building has a commodious well-lighted and well-ventilated basement eight feet in the clear, making virtually four stories.
The building is 64 by 24 feet well finished and furnished with both gas and electricity, with water works and toilet conveniences. The new structure with its fittings cost something over $5,000, which, together with the lot, from the state of things in Jefferson City, makes the property easily worth $7,000. For a number of years Capital City Lodge had desired to replace the old with a new building, but the undertaking seemed too hazardous. Unstinted praise and great credit are due the present worshipful master, Dr. J. H. Garnett for his undaunted courage and zeal in urging and pushing this most commendable yet doubtful undertaking and for his wide-awake and business-like tact in steering the undertaking to success.
The building committee consisting of Messrs. G. W. Dupee, chairman; J. S. Moten, secretary; J. W. Damel, treasurer; C. B. Lane, John Carter and J. H. Garnett, worked hard and deserve commendation for the faithful discharge of its duty.
This building is not only a credit to the Masonic Fraternity and the race but to Jefferson City.
At the opening the following programme was rendered: Music by the mandolin club. Introductory remarks by J. H. Garnett, W. M., who reviewed the history of the efforts leading up to the undertaking.
"A Retrospect of the Committee's Work," by J. S. Moten.
"Our Business Interests," by J. W. Damel.
"General Remarks," by G. W. Dupee.
"Race Enterprises," by President B. F. Allen.
"The Progress of Masonry," by
Grand Lecturer E. J. Cooper.
"Free Masonry Its Influence," by
Grand Master C. G. Williams, whose
address was eloquent.
Meals were served night and day by
a committee from the ladies court, who
LYONS
OPEN ALL NIGHT.
LYONS' CAFE OPEN ALL NIGHT. 319 JEFFERSON AVE.
GEO. J. LYONS, Proprietor.
Ten Reasons Why You Should Patronize Lyons' Cafe.
1. Because his motto is promptness and cleanliness.
2. Because it is strictly an up-to-date place in every respect.
3. Because he personally supervises the culinary department.
4. Because you are served by polite and attentive waiters.
5. Because he will sell you a better cup of coffee with two rolls or two doughnuts for 5 cents than any other place in the city.
6. Because it is the only restaurant in the city owned and operated by a Colored man and for the Colored p where you can have your steaks chops broiled over charcoal fire.
7. Because he will sell you a commutation ticket for $2.
8. Because you can be served w good hot dinner from 11:30 a. m. o'clock p. m.
9. Because he keeps fruits and vegetables o hand always, also finest ice cream at 5 and 10 cent dish.
10. Because you can get fresh f all times. Don't forget the number North Jefferson avenue.
worked willingly, faithfully and hard
and that too without price. The committee richly deserves and has the sincere thanks of the lodge.
Following are the names of the committee:
MRS. A. MOORE.
MRS. C. COLEMAN.
MRS. F. BRANHAM.
MRS. T. C. CAPELTON.
MRS. E. DORTON.
MRS. A. JACKSON.
MRS. M. THOMAS.
THE CRAFTSMEN AND PRINCESS.
The Craftsmen and Princesses.
The annual installation and conserational exercises of the Richard Allen Lodge No. 1 and Carter's Pride Chamber No. 1, that took place at the Mt. Zion Baptist church last Tuesday night, was a grand success in every particular. The following persons were installed: Richard Allen Lodge No. 1—Rev. John W. Abram, W. M.; Rev. Olive W. Harris, S. W.; Mr. William Murphy, J. W.; Mr. James R. Walker, secretary; Mr. Sewood Harvey, treasurer; Wm. Rueben Pope, S. D. Carter's Pride Chamber No. 1—Mrs. Agnes Bryant, W. P. E.; Mrs. Emma Walker, P. D.; Mrs. Lizzie Budgetd, P. S.; Mrs. Tessie Hubbard, P. H.; Mrs. Annie Bryant, P. R'r; Mrs. Eliza Cates, P. R.; Mrs. Mattie Anderson, P. E.; Mrs. Maggie Black, P. M'm; Mrs. Mary Abram, P. M'a; Miss Clara Bryant, P. M. At the close of the installation ceremonies, Rev. John W. Abram, Rev. Olive W. Harris, Mrs. Lucy J. Harvey and Mrs. Agnes Bryant were sacredly consecrated into the following offices: Rev. John W. Abram, deputy supreme grand master for Missouri and jurisdiction, in exclusive control of the Improved Craftsmen throughout the state; Mrs. Lucy J. Harvey, deputy supreme grand princess for Missouri and jurisdiction, in exclusive control of the Honorable Princesses throughout the state; Rev. Olive W. Harris, deputy grand master, and Mrs. Agnes Bryant as worthy Princess Eshtaul. The installation and conserational ceremonies were performed by Rev. Wm. M. Patton, supreme grand master. At the close of the said exercises, he addressed the two bodies and congregation in brief, relative to the order, its origin and present standing throughout the United States and foreign islands. At the close of the programme the congregation partook freely of the refreshments the committees on arrangement and refreshments had previously prepared for their enjoyment.
Stop that Cough Pickett's Cough Syrup. CAFE, 319 JEFFERSON AVE.
ored man and for the Colored people
where you can have your steaks and
chops broiled over charcoal fire.
7. Because he will sell you a $2.15
commutation ticket for $2.
8. Because you can be served with a
good hot dinner from 11:30 a. m. to 11
o'clock p. m.
9. Because he keeps fruits and green
vegetables on hand always, also the
finest ice cream at 5 and 10 cents per
dish.
10. Because you can get fresh fish at
all times. Don't forget the number, 319
North Jefferson avenue,
ST. LOUIS, MO., SATURDAY, MAY 27, 1905.
THE ORPHANS' HOME.
4216 Natural Bridge Road.
The celebration of the fifth anniversary of the Orphans' home Sunday, May 21, was quite a success, and the citizens readily responded to the call of charity.
The Masons were out in full bloom to pay tribute to the anniversary of the dedication to the home. To enliven the immense crowd which longed the grounds, the Great Western band paedal forth strains of melodious music.
The people enjoyed strolling through the grounds and looking at the different departments of the home, until a late hour, when the glowing sun began to sink and remind them that it was nearing the time for all to retrace their steps homeward, having spent a pleasant day with the orphans.
We noticed that Dr. J. W. McDowell and others were present.
Mrs. Mamie O. Trice (nee Smith) was the most sociable, in our eyes, of all.
Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Robinson, of 3408 Lasalle street, were the center of attraction.
The choir of St. James' church, composed of the flowers of Edwardsville, rendered sweet music.
Miss Ray, of 3520 Lucas avenue, was all smiles, and the young men looked on with admiration.
Mrs. Bettie Armstrong was, as usual, looking like the Goddess of Liberty—4447 Washington avenue.
Mrs. Dupree, better known as Caesar, is just the picture of health. She lives at 1547 South Second street.
Mrs. Lewis, of 4026 Lucky street, seems to be one of nature's ladies. Her sister, V. Hyatt, was with her.
Miss Estell Hamilton, one of the most amiable young ladies on Fairfax avenue, is all O. K. She lives at 4137.
Mrs. Hampton, of 1422 Michigan avenue, has Miss Jessie Hondis visiting her. She will remain several weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Gant, of 2829 Adams street, were together, looking as if they were the only two mortals on earth.
Dr. Cook's daughter, Alby Simms, Nannie Whitman and other young ladies were out, and carried themselves as becomes ladies.
The lady at 116 South Leonard avenue was all smiles. Of course she is one of the best persons in the world, outside of the other.
We saw the dashing Miss Foster, of Boonville, Mo. She is cashier at the Lyon, 319 North Jefferson avenue. She wilts the hearts of the young men.
Mr. Graham was on hand. John Mather, 106 South Fourteenth street; H. Hopson, John G. Pettiford, of Central Baptist church, were all looking wise.
The young daughter of P. H. Harris, of 5719 Prescott avenue, is a perfect rose. Mr. Rodgers, of 2609 Lawton avenue, was throwing sheep's eyes in every direction.
We also noticed the three loving daughters of Mrs. J. T. Richardson, of 324 Montrose avenue. They were ladylike in every particular; also Miss Pearl Carter was with them.
Rev. R. H. Cole and his amiable wife were doing all they could to make the occasion a success. Mrs. Cole's black hair, mixed with gray, sets her off as one of Europe's queens.
We noticed Mr. Knight, the jeweler, 211 Jefferson avenue, but we failed to see the loving and amiable young lady who is his office lady. Oh, well, there is more than one pebble on the beach.
Mrs. Laura Wheeler, of 2901 Manchester avenue, was a dream. Mrs. Alexander the dashing daughter of Rev. West and Mrs. Pleasant, of 4164 Lexington avenue, seemed to be dead in it.
Mr. Charles Pitman, one of the most famous young Negroes in St. Louis, was treating the young ladies, and they in turn smiled on Pretty Charles. Oh! you should have seen him and the girls.
Rich. Williams, the boy whose brother died a few days ago, was in company with a very sweet-looking young lady, but when he saw the reporter of The Palladium he looked like a sheep-killing dog.
The secretary of The Palladium was there, looking as fine and sweet as a peach. Oh, just wait, and soon, with her pen, she will turn The Palladium office into a candy store. When, Where? Oh, you know. The girls will get something sweet.
THE LADY OF THE CITY
MADAME KATIE L. BOSWELL
The Vice-Princess of Sinia Temple No.
of her race. Residence 4222A Maffitt
ALLEN A. M. E. MISSION
1111 Wash Street.
Sermon 11 p. m., by James R. Walker. The prayer was offered by the pastor, Rev. O. W. Harris. Brother James Walker selected for his text the second chapter of Matthew, hymn No. 189. "We notice that the wise men from the east, went to Jerusalem, saying, Where is He that was born King of the Jews? The subject, 15th verse, "Out of Egypt have I called my son, and Herod sought the young child, Jesus, because he did not want anyone to be king over him." It had been predicted that there would be one born King of the Jews. Collections at 11 p. m. $1.25.
Sermon at 3 o'clock by Rev. J. W. Abram. Prayer by Rev. Wm. Patton. He selected for his text the first chapter of Ecclesiastes, fourth verse. "One generation passeth away, another generation cometh, but the earth abideth forever." We have been taught that the earth has passed away and another cometh, gathering as we do our accumulated thoughts of the hereafter. As we are unable to gather in the past conditions of the people, we find the hereafter brings peace and happiness and joy, and Jesus said if 'you tear down this temple in three days I will rear it up again.' He being the chief corner stone, the honor was performed. Collection, $1.20.
The sermon at 7:30 p. m. was preached by Rev. Foster (hymn 213). Collection, $1.30. The opening lesson was read by the pastor, O. W. Harris. He selected for his text the fourteenth chapter and second verse of John: "In my Father's house are many mansions. If it was not so, I would have told you." Mansions are houses that are beautified with great gifts. These mansions are not in the elements, but it is you who are these beautiful mansions. They are not natural people, but they are spiritual followers of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, and He said to His disciples: "Follow me," and they followed the star. They said, "We have found the great Messiah, Thou art the Son of God, and we bring these beautiful gifts by the lives we live to beautify God's house." EMMA WALKER
Y. M. C. A. NOTES.
Tuesday evening, May 20, will be the last "social round-up" of the Literary society in the old hall.
Our hall was crowded last Tuesday evening with our friends, who came to hear Postmaster Wyman. Much credit is due to Mr. Newsome, of the educational committee, for the success of the meeting.
Sunday afternoon, May 28, will be the last Sunday service for men held in the building. It will be a reunion and fellowship meeting for old and new members. Come early and bring a friend; 4 p. m. is the time; 2633 Lucas avenue the place.
Because of unwholesome conditions which now surround us, and the fact that our building is not adapted for association work, we were forced to sell our building for the sum of $5,000. We have already secured an option on a larger piece of property on Lawton avenue, which will place us in a position to do effective association work.
Help a Worthy Lady
Miss Arsana M. Williams should be supported by our race in the contest of the Star. Don't forget the coupons to her. 295$ Atlantic street.
$2.00 Per Annum, Single Copy 5 cents:
BOSWELL
the most wonderful, self-made, cultured women
124, of the S. M. T's. One of the most avenue.
TO THE FRONT.
H. S. Ferguson, Proprietor of the New Century, Always to the Front.
We notice that the above firm is pushing its way to the front. He has three restaurants, one on Chestnut street, near Fourteenth street, known as the "Blue Front." Another on Market street, between Thirteenth and Fourteenth and the third at 2315 Market street. We see the push on the part of this young man and we believe that success will crown his efforts. This young man has been in St. Louis one year, and from his work and square dealing with all, we look forward to better things. He says that he is here to stay. Go in and you will get a first-class meal. Just like eating at home.
That is a consolation for every one to think that his home is the best, and if this young man can satisfy everybody and make them think that they are eating at home, he must be a most wonderful young man, so go and try. See and judge what this most wonderful Chicagoan has to say—it is just like eating at home.
PETER H. HARRIS
W. A. GAINS.
W. A. Gains, national grand master of the U. B. F. and S. M. T., has requested that the order meet May 28 in their different churches in devotional service to God, our Father. The order in St. Louis will meet at the above church. All hall to our order and its officers. W. A. GAINS, N. G. M.
NOTICE
To the Citizens of Mexico and Moberly and Also Rolla, Mo.
We understand that there was a number of persons who subscribed for the Palladium through our agent, one, M. J. Madison. He has never reported to this office, however, all that will send their names and receipts, we will send them the paper for the time designat-ed. MANAGER.
Death of Richard Hughes
Richard Hughes son of Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel Hughes, of 2009 Goode avenue, departed this life Monday, May 15, at 5:45 a. m., in Chicago, Ill. He went to Chicago last fall, but during the severe winter contracted a heavy cold, which resulted in pneumonia. He was buried from his home, 2009 Goode avenue, Sunday, May 21, at 2:00 p. m.
All aboard for the Forum club excursion Monday night. You will have a delightful time on the river. There will be the best of music, and five hours for dancing on the glassy deck of the Spencer. You must be there.
GRAND RECEPTION.
Reception by the Mother's Circle of East St. Louis.
The club women of East St. Louis have come to the front in a reception held at the pretty home of Prof. F. Bowles, at 2121 St. Louis avenue, on the 17th inst., given by the "Mother's Circle" an organization of twenty club women, with Mrs. Carrie K. Bowles as its most efficient president and leader. The guests of honor who were entertained by the club on this occasion were: Mrs. Susan P. Vashon, superintendent of Mother's Club under the N. A. C. W.; Mrs. Emma V. Gossin and Mrs. M. V. Cannon, the talented elocutionist. The brief business routine was succeeded by an address by the leader, Mrs. Bowles, who, in a succint and entertaining manner gave a sketch of the "Origin, Rise and Progress" of the club and of its encouraging prospects for future usefulness. Then followed an address of welcome to the guests by Mrs. F. J. Lucas, which though brief, was in excellent taste and expressive language. Mrs. Vashon then followed in an address to mothers. After expressing pleasure at meeting them she congratulated the members that the loving All-Father had been pleased to adorn their brows with the crown of motherhood which if worthily worn excelled all other ornaments. Touching briefly upon the home-life, its responsibilities, its pleasures, its teachings, she pronounced it as being emphatically the most important agency in the solution of the race problem. Her address was listened to with marked attention, and a rising vote of thanks, and the presentation of a beautiful bouquet of carnations, testified the appreciation of the club. Mrs. M. V. Cannon then recited, in her acknowledged eloquent style, a pathetic poem entitled, "Motherhood holding the listeners in spell-bound attention to the close. Brief remarks by Mrs. E. V. Gossin attesting her objections to race-suicide as evidenced in her married life, etc., an exquisite solo by Mrs. Fitzgerald (which was heartily encored) and several brilliant piano selections by Mrs. Stokes, closed a most enjoyable programme. A dainty menu was served, and after a brief season of social converse the assemblage retired to their several homes, well pleased with each other and with themselves.
All honor to the Mother's Circle and to its worthy and energetic leader.
The Bulletin Publishing Co.
Is putting forth an effort to publish a city directory of all business operated by Colored people throughout the city, from a shoe-shining parlor up, so all Colored people in the city of Greater St. Louis will be on a continual lookout for the Bulletin representatives. Prepared to give such information relative to your business as may be required, and in case our representatives fail to reach your place of business by June 12, you will kindly call on or write the general manager, Prof. Wm. M. Patton, 916 South Thirteenth street, Lock Box 1140, or the assistant manager, Rev. John W. Abram, 1617 Linden street.
There is a Magazine
Being published in this city known as The Bulletin. It is published monthly by The Bulletin Publishing Co., which is managed by Rev. Wm. M. Patton and Rev. John W. Abram. The magazine will take a prominent stand as the race's informer and defender, from an intellectual, moral, religious, enterprising, racial and fraternal standpoint. It will be issued each month after the 20th.
THE ONLY
DRESSMAKER In St. Louis with store and general seamstress. Readp-Made Clothes and Shirt-Making. Children's Clothes a Specialty.
2320 WASH ST.
MRS. V. BURNES, Prop.
J. STROUD'S
CAFE
At 3996 PAPIN ST.,
ON THE EUROPEAN PLAN.
OPEN FROM 6:30 A. M. to 12 P. M.
All That Can Be Desired.
Lunch House
At 1521 LUCAS AVE.
All that you need in
FIRST-CLASS STYLE.
Call and Be Convinced.
G. W. MOORE.
Telephone—Kinloch C-397.
THEO. H. TEMPEL,
Dealer in
Staple and Fancy
GROCERIES,
2601 Market Street,
ST. LOUIS, MO.
California Canned Goods a Specialty.
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
Restaurant At 4111 PAPIN STREET.
Mrs. M. ARNOLD.
FIRST-CLASS
Ice Cream & Soda Water
MEALS, 20 and 25c.
Open from 5 a. m. till 12 p. m.
Don't Forget the Number.
4111 PAPIN ST.
"Follow the Flag."
Banner
Route
To the Great Gateways Kansas City, Chicago, Omaha.
Through sleepers to New York and the East. Magnificent Equipment and Train Service. Ticket Office, Eigth and Olive streets
PALACE LAUNDRY, guarantees satisfaction and prompt service. The best Collar and Cuff work in the city. Please address all communications to 2825 st. Louis avenue.
Mrs. J. W. Wheeler,
Mrs. J. W. Wheeler,
MODISTE.
Dreesmaking.
Designing.
Cutting.
Fitting.
Purchasing.
3004 LAWTON AVENUE.
ELIZABETH TEMPLE NO. 12
OF THE
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, 200 Pine Street.
MRS. HATTIE WILLIAMS, W. P.
Address 703 N. Garrison Avenue
MRS. LULA BRUNER, Secretary,
2:38 Easton Avenue
Queen Esther Temple, of the S. M. T., meets the first and third Wednesday in each month at K. of P. hall.
Mrs. Carrie Stevenson, W. P.; Mrs. Mahalia Macklin, secretary.
Ruth Temple No. 163, of S. M. T., meets the fourth Friday in each month at the True Reformer's Hall.
Mrs. Jennie Irving, W. P.; Ada B. Dardy, secretary. All are invited.
ST. ARENA TEMPLE NO. 48.
Meet the Second Monday night in each month at Pythian Hall, Lucas and Jefferson Ave.
MARY E. WILSON, W. P.
1431 MORGAN ST.
JULIA TYLER Secretary,
914 N. 11th Street.
Sexton & Maxwell, First-class Photographers 1407 Market St.
50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE
PATENTS
TRADE MARKS DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS & C.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is patentable, permissible, commensurate strictly confidential, HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. Ouest agecy for securing patents. Patents taken with & no. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest circulation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a year; four months, $1. Sold by all news dealers.
MUNN & Co. 361 Broadway, New York
Branch Office, 525 F St. Washington, D.C.
IF YOU BUY
FURNITURE.
AT Thuner's
ITS GOOD.
2122-24-26 South Broadway
GEO. W. F. BULLOCK,
Ladies' Barber
AND TONSORIALIST
3220 Franklin Avenue, St. Louis.
Mrs. W. E. Mack.
26 S. 14th Street.
NEATLY FURNISHED ROOMS. St. Louis, Mo.
VIOLET DUDLEY, Prop.
THE PALACE HOTEL,
2103 CLARK AVENUE.
Board and Rooms
by Day or Week.
ST. LOUIS.
THE IRON MOUNTAIN ROUTE
IS THE MOST
DIRECT LINE FROM
ST. LOUIS
TO-
HOT SPRINGS, ARK.
TEXAS,
MEXICO
and CALIFORNIA.
Elegant Through Service.
OVER 19 HOURS
SAVED TO MEXICO.
DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE.
DINING CARS, "Meals a la Carte."
H. C. TOWNSEND,
G. P. and T. Agent, ST. LOUIS, MO.
NEWSPAPER LAW.
Let some of our subscribers read and wonder. We hope this will get you to see clear:
1. Subscribers who do not give express notice to the contrary are considered as wishing to continue subscriptions.
2. If subscribers order the discontinuance of their periodicals, the publisher may continue to send them until all arrearages are paid.
3. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take their periodicals from post office to which they are directed, they are responsible until they have settled their bills and ordered them discontinued.
4. If the subscriber moves to another place without informing the publisher, and the papers are sent to the former directions, they are held responsible.
5. The courts have decided that the refusing to take periodicals from post office, or removing and leaving them uncalled for, is prima facie evidence of intentional fraud.
6. If subscribers pay in advance they are bound to give notice to the publishers, at the end of their time, if they do not wish to continue it, otherwise the publisher is authorized to send it, the subscriber will be responsible until an express notice with payment of arrearage is sent to the publisher.
7. The latest postal laws are such that newspaper publishers can arrest anyone for fraud who takes a paper and refuses to pay for it. Under this law the man who allows his subscription to run along for some time, unpaid, and then orders the postmaster to mark it "refused," and has a card sent notifying the publishers, lays himself liable to arrest and fine, the same as for theft, etc.
Annuity Festival.
Active preparations are going on for the grand May festival to be given by the public schools, at the old Fair Grounds, Saturday, May 27.
Participants from all of the district schools will compete in the "dashes" and "relay races," and pupils from the several high schools will give a very interesting exhibition in pole vaulting, broad jumping and shot putting. These events will take place in the arena, from 8 to 12 o'clock, in the morning.
At 11 o'clock, in the grand stand, at the race track, will be given the grand choruses of six thousand voices, with orchestral accompaniment.
The callisthenic in the arena will occur at 2:30 o'clock, in the afternoon.
Each school will contribute its quota of boys and girls. The girls in white dresses, the boys with white waists, and ALL wearing red, white or blue caps, will present an animated and pleasing picture as they perform the calisthenic evolutions to the strains of popular airs, discoursed by the band.
Warning.
When you go to the drug store to buy a bottle of Ozonized Ox Marrow be sure that you get the "Ozonized." See that "Ozonized Ox Marrow Co., Chicago, U. S. A." is printed on the package. Remember that the "Ozonized" it put up only in fifty-cent size and is made only in Chicago and by us. We have no branch offices. Refuse all substitutes. The Ozonized Ox Marrow never fails to straighten kinky hair. For further particulars, see advertisement, "Wonderful Discovery," in this paper.
Announcement.
The Palace bathhouse will from now on be under the management of Will Tonsail, formerly manager of the Newport hotel, and one of our well-known young men, who will endeavor to please his friends, both ladies and gentlemen, as he has an apartment for ladies, also a lady attendant, the partnership between Lewis & Tonsail having been dissolved. Charles Tonsail, proprietor. Will Tonsail, manager.
THE OLD FOLKS HOME.
The Old Folks' home, in Carondelet, on Ivory street, will give their third anniversary on Jun 11. This is a worthy cause, and the citizens of St. Louis should turn out and help them. It will be given under the auspices of the U. B. F. and S. M. T. Mrs. Rebecca Butler, president; Mrs. Missouri Williams, secretary.
WE LEAD OTHERS FOLLOW.
The St. Louis Palladium has more subscribers than any other two Negro papers in the state of Missouri. We have more business men and women that advertise in The Palladium than any four Negro papers in the west.
For Sale.
We keep on hand several wonderful remedies. Call and see—the best in the market to remove smallpox pits if applied as directed. Pits that have been standing for years can be removed. 2617 Lawton avenue.
FOLLOW THE FLAG
Four daily trains between St. Louis and Chicago, consisting of Pullman Palace sleeping cars, observation parlor cars, dining and buffet cars, reclining chair cars, day coaches and smoking car.
Subscribe for The Palladium.
The conference that was held in Poplar Bluff, Mo., October 5. Below are the appointments made by our beloved Bishop A. Grant:
St. Louis district, Rev. J. D. Barkesdale, presiding elder. St. Paul, Rev. W. D. Cook; Lexington, Rev. A. A. Gilbert; Higginsville, Rev. W. B. Brooks; Boonville, Rev. W. H. Spurloch; Sedalia, Rev. Wm. Alexander; Jefferson City, Rev. L. P. Duke; Washington, Rev. S. L. Bean; Marshall, Rev. A. O. D. Steele; Holden, Rev. M. McFerrin; Union, Rev. J. H. Randells; Pacific, Rev. W. F. Hamilton; Osage, Rev. H. McTassell; Chamois, L. S. Salon; Miami, Rev. P. W. Weaver; Pleasant Green, Rev. E. Thomas; Speed, Rev. J. E. S. Reed; Allen Mission, Rev. O. W. Harris; Black Water Mission, Rev. Chas. O. Jackson; evangelist, Mrs. Sarah V. Bean.
Kansas City district, Rev. F. G. Snelson, presiding elder. Allen Chapel, Rev. F. Jesse Peck; Ebenezar, Rev. J. F. McDonald; St. John, Rev. Edw. R. Vaughan; Independence, Rev. J. H. Allen, Westport, Rev. J. T. Smith; Pleasant Hill, Rev. B. W. Stewart; Springfield, Rev. M. Collins; Wellington and Dover, Rev. J. Y. Meadows; Odessa, Rev. H. B. Triplett; Butler, Rev. J. E. Christopher; Carthage and Neoho, Rev. W. B. Long; Lebanon, Rev. Henry Green; Waverly, Rev. P. W. Chester; Rev. S. S. Pitcher; Ash Grove, Rev. Henry Mitchell; Névada, Rev. D. J. Malta Bend, Rev. J. B. Wallace; Joplin, Gordon; Ward Mission, Kansas City, Rev. Wem. Hawkins. Evangelist, Mrs. Rosetta Binklev.
Cape Girardeau district, Rev. N. C. Buren, presiding elder. Cape Girardeau, Rev. J. L. Williams; Poplar Bluff, Rev. C. N. Douglass; St. James, Rev. W. C. Williams; Jackson and Alenville, Rev. R. L. Phillips; Charleston, Rev. J. A. Chandley; St. Peters, Rev. T. L. Watson; Bonne Terre and Valley Mines, Rev. J. W. Wiley; Kirkwood, Rev. P. S. Cheatham; Festus and Herculaneum, Rev. F. E. Clark; Belmont, Rev. P. Thurmon; Commerce, Rev. F. L. Scott; Fredericktown, Rev. J. R. Hopkins; Oakridge, Rev. W. P. McAlister; Quinn Chapel, Rev. C. A. Williams; De Soto and Caledonia, Rev. L. H. Harris; La Forge, Rev. Chas. Cummings; Tyler and Cottonwood, Rev. J. D. Rice; Farmington and New Tennessee, Rev. J. E. Edwards; Carruthersville, Rev. B. G. Dawson; St. John and St. Luke Mission, Rev. J. W. Wheeler. Evangelists, Mrs. Lulu E. Cheatham, Katie P. Yates, Dora Russell, GeorgeAnn Hyde, Jane Johnson, Edw. R. Vaughan, secretary Missouri annual conference.
EPISCOPAL ADDRESSES.
Bishops of the A. M. E. Church and Post Office Addresses.
RT.REV. B. W. ARNETT, D. D. Wilberforce, O.
RT. REV. WESLEY J. GAINES, D. D. Atlanta, Ga.
RT. REV. WM. B. DERRICK, D. D. Flushing, Greater New York, N. Y.
RT. REV. C. T. SHAFFER, D. D. M. D., Chicago, Ill.
RT. REV. ABRAHAM GRANT, D. D. 3349 Pennsylvania avenue, Indianapolis, Ind.
RT. REV. H. M. TURNER, D. D. LL. D. 30 Young, Atlanta, Ga.
RT. REV. L. J. COPPIN,
738 South Twelfth street,
Philadelphia, Pa.
RT. REV. MOSES B. SALTER, D. D.,
30 Van lerhorst street,
Charleston, S. C.
RT. REV. B. F. LEE, D. D.,
Wilberforce, O.
RT. REV. B. T. TANNER. D. D.,
2908 Diamond street,
Philadelphia, Pa.
RT. REV. C. S. SMITH, D. D., M. D.,
39 East Columbia street,
Detroit, Mich.
RT. REV. JAMES A. HANDY, D. D.,
1341 North Carey street,
Baltimore, Md.
BETHEL INSTITUTE,
110 Hanover street,
Cape Town, South Africa.
Is now open under the management of Dr. C. F. Crews and his brother, at 2645 Lawton avenue. Dr. Crews has been in our city for a number of years, and by his gentlemanly bearing, and being a skillful surgeon, he has made many friends, who will stand by him in this undertaking. His brother, who has been with the Taylor drug store since it was opened, will be in business with him. He has proved himself a first-class drugist, and has made many friends that will be lasting. Really this will be the most complete drug store in the city—fresh drugs daily. This, together with courteous treatment, will make this store the center of attraction. We bespeak for them a successful business.
NOTICE TO ALL-In sending matter for publication, please send something with it, as the printer must be paid. We can not publish a paper on wind. J. W. WHEELER.
2601 LAWTON AVENUE. N.W. Cor. Jefferson and Lawton Aves. Open Day and Night. Both Telephones.
Attorney - at - Law, IIII Clark Ave.. St. Louis, Mo. We are the only thoroughly experienced and the only practic tically competent Colored Undertakers in the city.
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We have our own conveyance
Carriages furnished for
8118-20-22 Market St., ST. LOUIS
Porters and Waiters
THE G
HUGH B. WHITE
...SALO
At 1911 M
(Opposite Union
Choice Wines, Liquors, Cigars
..CAFE IN CON
Remember the Ge
TELEPHONE K
FURNISHED ROOMS FOR MEN ONLY
SILK
EVERYTHING STRICT
The Brunswil
G. W. HOLT,
1925 Market St
Fine Wines, Liquors, Cigars and Toba
have our own conveyances and do all our own work
Carriages furnished for all occasions.
Market St., ST. LOUIS, MO. Telephone
Waters and Waiters Headquarters
THE GEMS
THUGH B. WHITE, Proprietor of
..SALOON...
At 1911 Market St.
(Opposite Union Station)
Lines, Liquors, Cigars, and the best
SAFE IN CONNECTION
Remember the Gem. 1911 Market
TELEPHONE K 1386A.
ROOMS FOR MEN ONLY.
SILLIARD ROOMS IN CO
EVERYTHING STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS.
Brunswick Sal
G. W. HOLT, Proprietor.
5 Market Street, (Near Union
Liquors, Cigars and Tobacco.
We have our own conveyances and do all our own work.
Carriages furnished for all occasions.
$118-20-22 Market St., ST. LOUIS, MO. Telephone, 0-300-
Porters and Waiters Headquarters.
THE GEM. HUGH B. WHITE, Proprietor of ...SALOON...
(Opposite Union Station)
Choice Wines, Liquors, Cigars, and the best up-to-date
..CAFE IN CONNECTION..
Remember the Gem, 1911 Market.
TELEPHONE K 1386A.
FURNISHED ROOMS FOR MEN ONLY.
BILLIARD ROOMS IN CONNECTION
EVERYTHING STRICTLY FIRST-CLASS.
The Brunswick Saloon.
1925 Market Street, (Near Union Station),
Fine Wines, Liquors, Cigars and Tobaccos. ST. LOUIS.
Fine Wines
and Liquors.
Imported and
Domestic Cigars.
DYE'S
Jet and Pool Ro-
WM. P. DYE, Proprietor.
Manchester Ave., St. L.
Telephone—Kinloch B-1812.
TELEPHONE: KINLOCH A. 1275.
HARRISON, Phar. D.
GEO. V
HARRISON & McKOIN
DYE
Buffet and P
WM. P. DYE, H
2801-3 Manchester Ave.,
Telephone—Kin
TELEPHONE: KINL
JAMES H. HARRISON, Phar. D.
HARRISON &
2801-3 Manchester Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
Telephone—Kinloch B-1812.
TELEPHONE: KINLOCH A. 1273.
JAMES H. HARRISON, Phar. D. GEO. W. McKOIN.
HARRISON & McKOIN.
Funeral Directors AND EMBALMERS,
2743 Wash Street,
ST. LOUIS, MO.
All Work First Class.
Successful Embalm
Calls Answered Prompt
SEE T
Maurer Meat and
CASH MARKET
1402 MARKET
No. 8 N. Fourteenth Street.
TELEPHONES:
BELL, Main 2103-A KINLOCH, D-25 B
2606 FRANKLIN AVENUE
8 and 10 South J
THE JOCKEY
First Class. Terms Most F
Successful Embalming Guaranteed.
Answered Promptly, Day or
SEE
Purer Meat and Provision
CASH MARKETS:
1402 MARKET STKEET.
Fourteenth Street. Branch: 8204 La
TELEPHONES:
3-A KINLOCH, D-25 BBLL, Lindell 1004-A KI
FRANKLIN AVENUE, KINLOCH C
8 and 10 South Jefferson Ave.
JOCKEY SALO
Calls Answered Promptly, Day or Night.
Maurer Meat and Provision Co.
CASH MARKETS:
1402 MARKET STREET.
No. 8 8. Fourteenth Street. Branch: 3204 Laclede Ave.
TELEPHONES:
BELL, Main 2103-A KINLOCH, D-25 BBLL, Lindell 1004-A KINLOCH D-1028
2606 FRANKLIN AVENUE. KINLOCH C 720.
8 and 10 South Jefferson Ave.
THE JOCKEY SALOON.
3924 SOPHIE AVENUE. CHOICE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS, One Block West of Fair Grounds. WILLIAM DOVER, Proprietor
IAM DOVER, Prop
and do all our own work.
for all occasions.
S, MO. Telephone, C-390.
Headquarters.
GEM.
Proprietor of
LON...
Market St.
(On Station)
Tars, and the best up-to-date
CONNECTION.
m. 1911 Market.
1386A.
HARD ROOMS IN CONNECTION
LY FIRST-CLASS.
Rock Saloon,
Proprietor.
Street, (Near Union Station),
COCOB. ST. LOUIS.
Imported and
Domestic Cigars.
E'S
Pool Room,
proprietor.
St. Louis, Mo.
och B-1812.
OCH A. 1275.
GEO. W. McKOIN.
R. McKOIN,
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Terms Most Reasonable.
ing Guaranteed.
Notly, Day or Night.
Provision Co.
MARKETS:
ST STREET.
Branch: 8204 Laclede Ave.
TELEPHONES;
BILL, Lindell 1004-A KINLOCH D-1085
NUE, KINLOCH C 720.
Jefferson Ave.
Y SALOON,
ER, Proprietor
; xy 7
hen Old Clor¥ QoesBy
Peay B ‘
RAS Y Ps L csittle
Be : Sy
oe da di ‘ ey
CLL iolal hI shal dbo
OTS oes Bagockelion THR Mle nisi TP
CS Proudly Jes ies) yal eroded sttect ee
VAS dh tise he a indrching fegp Ny
Sa HM ef i | ine thed. forvard'step! >
SY Ghildre out i od women wept, 3B -
\A\) “When Old Glory” went by, Aids
v ‘ \ » Like a glimpse of the sky, Sree
Ce Ont live for or he AX : SS
ft Jone the /battle-wave Suet EGAN
& pThricd its Bearers werd equi Sebi Ne
SS Thrice) twas snatched from ‘yi,
ZN Dowl gaped tines cheers theirToud [sing
AX. (gai Cheerings eehoed by dying mene ea (URRY
A i gs y dying mene Hae Mae"
BAG Living bravely faced death again eet Ee
S EW 77" When “Old Glory” waved by, ©
—S, EEE™ Like a glimpse of the sD
© To live for or to die.
Still -unsullied by deed (Atay,
iN Freedom sfeadlis wflt-wide to-day}
RAN) Grayzbeard “Vets.” 4 Yast-thinning band iy)
vibe g ;
Sy) lofi’ ranks, ‘neath this“baaner stand; [//
ioe ian ‘ile hallowed, dear Yolds Ri .
EAP PARE Chiiles, women and men, SI chee, \°3
WIL Ve “HOld Glory Shore by\ 4
iy A\'9 Like a glimpse of the si ep.
HUNG WU : : 1 NAA
To live for or to die. Mt
POOL ROOM
ar
8&10 S. [4th St.
This is a new building
that was erected for
that purpose also a
large room for rent
‘over pool room.
J. H. KENT, Mgr.
W. T. Curtis’ Newport Buffet,
2323 MARKET STREET.
Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
RESTAURANT IN CONNECTION
Also the eae jae ee a St
» HAS_BEEN OPENED AT
2216 Chestnut Street,
Under the Management of
Mr. Charles Narcise and Henry.
nr ger ——
“ OPEN ALL NIGHT we :
Fine Wines, Sons and Cigars.
POOL ROOM In Connection.
STARTED IN DIXIE
The White Lillie Bar,
1501 Gratiot Street,
Choice WINES, LIQUORS
AND CIGARS.
SAMUEL H. LEONARD, - - = Proprietor.
THE SOUTH SAID TO HAVE OR-
- IGINATED MEMORIAL DAY.
A Georgia Lady First Suggested the
Idea—Has Been Observed in
the Northern States
Since 1868.
At this season we read not a few
newspaper stories of some new find
concerning the beginning of Memorial
fay tribute of flowers. The south has
gotten out a little book telling how
the custom had its start in a Georgia
town,
In January, 1886, Miss Lizzie Ruth-
erford, of Columbus, Ga., who had la-
bored zealously during the war as a
member of the Soldiers’ Aid society,
asked Mrs. Jane Martin to go with her
to the cemetery to look after the sol-
diers’ graves there, On the way home
the ladies talked of the men that had
given up their lives for their cause, and
Miss Rutherford suggested that the
Soldiers’ Aid form itself into a memor-
ial association, and that a day every
year be set aside for caring for and
Gecorating the soldiers’ graves. Her
companion received the suggestion
with enthusiasm; thought it would be
an easy matter to interest other wom-
en in the memorial idea.
At the next meeting of the Soldiers’
Aid society there was organized the
Ladies’ Memorial association, which
should provide for annual decoration
of the graves. The date chosen for the
flower-strewing was April 26. So-
cieties all over the south sprang up in
response to an appeal from the Colum-
bus Memorial association, and the an-
nual custom was established, g
‘The north sympathized with this
tribute, but found the date chosen by
the south too early. A southerner
writes thus of the adoption of the cus-
tom by the northerners: “The north
looked on, thought the custom good,
took it to herself and has hallowed it
as she does her Thanksgiving obliga-
tion. April was too early for her flow-
ers, hence she set apart May 30,”
The first general observance of the
day in the north was in 1868. Gen.
John A. Logan, commander-in-chiet of
the Grand Army of the Republic, sent
out a long order, which contained these
words: “The 30th of May is designated
for the purpose of strewing with flow-
ers or otherwise decorating the graves
of comrades who died in defense of
their country. No form of ceremony
4s prescribed, but posts and comrades
will in their own way arrange fitting
services and testimonials of respect.”
And it was added: “If other eyes grow
dull, and other hearts cold in the trust,
ours shall keep it well as long as the
warmth and light of life remains to
us.”
It is said that a veteran living in
Cincinnati had made the suggestion to
the adjutant general of the grand
army, and he in turn drafted a general
order to the Grand Army posts to set
aside a decoration day. “Gen. Logan
enlarged the order and sent it out of.
ficially. In 1968, on a special day, sol-
diers’ graves were decorated in’ 183
cemeteries of 27 states; the next year
836 citles and towns in 31 states ob-
served Memorial day. It is now one of
our great national holidays.
Miss Rutherford said she got her in-
spiration for Memorial day from
story called “Initials,” in which was
described a custom among Germans of
decorating the graves of friends on a
special day.
eS oD
The Douglass Buffet and Pool Room
Fis-las R ESTA U RA NT oars
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars,
ard the best of service offered.
ons 12093 LewtonyAvenus io.
THE DOUGLASS PHARMACY
FRESH DRUGS a TOILET ARTICLES
Prescriptions Carefully and Acurately Compeunded
CREWS joes = aapiace
IS NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS
2321 MARKET STREET.
EVERYTHING IN FIRST-CLASS STYLE, AND PLENTY OF THINGS G0Ou
FOR YOU TO EAT. GOOD SERVICE AND MOST ACCOMMODATING
PEOPLE YOU EVER MET. UNDER THE MANAGEMENT OF
RAMBO. Proprietor
WHO 2 IS 2 YOUR 2 FRIEND?
OF COURSE
SAM, THE TAILOR,
At 204 N. FOURTEENTH ST.
HE HAS PROVEN THAT. GO AND SEE HIM AND GET YOUR SUMMER
SUITS MADE TO ORDER.
204 North Fourteenth Street.
FOR RENT.
From May 22 to September 1,
MASONIC TEMPLE,
18 S. Tenth Street,
$20 P=R NIGHT. Apply at hall or Telephone Jordan 1120
Fullerton Building, Phone: Main 2602.
ie ne Waa icine ste a ee A
IF LAME, STIFF, OR SORE, USE
————— MEXICAN =
Sxoe
Mustang Liniment.
rr SIXTY YEARS
The Best Remedy Known for Man or Beast. ?
~ Due Clara Barton.
Much credit is due to Clara Barton,
founder of the American National Red
Cross, for the identification of northern
dead in southern graves,
CIVIL WAR MEMORIES.
In Reviewing Past One Realizes Both
Sides Were Impelled in a Great
Movement of Sentiment.
To-day this nation honors the mem
ory of those who died for their coun
try and pays homage to their surviv.
ing comrades who risked their lives iz
the same noble cause. And when we
haye placed flowers on the graves of
the dead heroes and stood uncovered
as the thinning line of veterans winds
slowly past, let us turn fron contem:
plating the heroism of dying for one’s
country to considering the greater he
roism of living for it.
What the country needs most to-day
is the patriot whose highest purpose
is to maintain in all its glory and
honor the nation for which the patriot
of the early 60's freely offered and
gave his life. Our chief duty is ta
preserye in peace and unity what was
won in war.
Sometimes it is much easier to dic
for one's country than to live for it
‘There is no glamour, no dash, no spec.
tacle or enthusiasm in winning the
moral victories of peace. They come
chiefly as the result of battles of the
mind, moral conflicts, to the heroes of
which the nation gives neither honors,
pensions nor medals.
‘The man who lives for his country {s
just as jealous for her honor as the
man who dies for it. He does not place
a wreath of flowers on the grave of 2
veteran and then betray the nation for
which that veteran gave his life. He
is among the first to honor the heroee
of the war because he is himself a he
ro—a hero of peace.
| This country paid a heavy price for
‘liberty and national union. It cannot
maintain these things without further
sacrifices. But the price the living
have to pay is not in blood and treas.
ure, but in obedience to law, in re
spect for justice, in fidelity to ow
ideals, principles and institutlons.—
Chicago Evening Post.
Holiday to Be Preserved.
It is to be hoped that Memorial day
will never lose its sanctity. As long as
Old Glory waves and the republic sur.
vives it should remain the one day devot.
ed to rehearsing the immortal valor ol
the millions of American freemen who
died that thefr country might live.
Not Divided in Death.
_ In the north, as in the south, there {s
no sectional distinction; the graves of
the union and the confederate dead are
‘decorated alike. They lie side by side ix
‘our national cemeteries.
; TwO MOURNERS.
latin DEOL,
y “TAGS eS
sy ae
Tp uaa uth
We agate 1 7;
Ea :F eon Ay?
(Or ie Nga
TTR
rota ae 2
0 ai
Hee ay |
ollie
2 ay ey
* CHAZ
% ca if x i
SQ trl ae a
TRA le ae ea
oN eee
ey Ea
ey EN, bie?
EAN,
SEWN UA
SWAN
“gieep,” quoth the one with the silve}
kh
ssieep i the tif anew:
all beer is sod fos thy hood you shed
ni Oey sieuasie of aisty-two?
sticep," quoth the mald with.« throbbing
rv “Caressed by a sweetheart’s tear;
For my love is there, ‘neath the r¢es talk
Qzx the grave of a volunteer.”
ere rene Nt eet ip ee tas te eee TT ae Oe fen ete ne
AT ALL DRUG STORES
FF R SALE On SENT BY MAIL.
AND BY OUR AGENTS
a
; scoTrs o
: Scott’s Face Bleach and Beautifier
} Magic Hair Straightner and Grower Is the most
Is the recipe of | wonderful skin [oggeuN
: a celebrated | whitener and aad 7
| as chemist and is | beautifier of the ‘ i
neg guaranteed to | present age—is Tm Qiliy
. ¢ “in be absolutely | guaranteed to be 5 vy
} OB safoand harm | perfectlysafeand r)
Jess, It is the | harmless and 2
g most wonder! to im; the
F ay preparation in Srost) brilliant eS
» apes the world. It j andlifeliketints. arrem sina,
: CAVA TERS forces hair to | Removes Liver Spots, Tan, Rough-
) Aya » ZToOw Jong. ness, Freckles, olga ood
, ey thick, beautiful ] Scaley Patches, Tetter, Ring-
AFTER USING straight, soft, | worms, Unslightly Blemishes and
lossy, pliablo and givesaluxurious | every discoloration of the face, It
} fiead of hair. It restores natural | makes the skin soft as velvet, as fresh
’ color and permanently cures all | asa rose, clear as a crystal. ’ It gives
} Scalp diseases, such as dandruff, | a glorious complexion to men as well
, itching, tetter, eczema, etc. as to women.
PRICE 25¢ ‘By mail. '5¢ additional | PRICE 25¢ By mail, 10f additional
} tocover postage and packing. to cover postage and packing.
: One Cent Stamps accepted same as cash
‘Your money will be returned to you if you are not satisfied
appress SCOTT REMEDY CO., LOUISVILLE, KY.
eS
AGENTS WANTED
AGENT CAN MAKE FROM $4 TO $8 EACH DAY ron'ranticuuane
eee EE
Beautiful Premiums are given absolutely Free
Agents can furnish and beautify their homes without money.
Write to-day for list of Premiums.
SS SSS
‘ADDRESS ALL ORDERS AND ALL MAIL TO
SCOTT REMEDY CO.
LOUISVILLE, KY.
Sore ane EURAIL
SAN ANTONIO & ARKANSAS
PASS RAILWAY COMPANY
One of the Best Tee South.
We are confident that many of our
people are looking for permanent
homes, and we would suggest that they
look to the great state of Texas, in or-
der to make a personal investigation
of the wonderful possibilities of the
Lone Star state, Texas, particularly
the territory traversed by the San An-
tonio & Aransas Pass railway, which
owns and operates 723 miles of road, as
tollows:
Main Line—San Antonio to Houston.
‘Waco Division—Waco to Yoakum.
Lockhart Division—Lockhart to Shi-
ner.
Kerrvilie Branckh—San Antonio to
Kerrville.
Corpus Christi Branch—Corpus
Christi to Kenedy.
Rockport Branch—Rockport to Greg-
ory.
Alice and Falfurrias Branch—Skid-
more to Alice and Falfurrias.
By reference to the map you will see
that they run through the finest and
earliest truck-producing section in the
southwest.
‘The climate is so that the farmers
raise and sell something every month
in the year; in fact, it is known as
the “open winter” farming country of
the southwest, where a man can work
out in the open air every day, and does
not have to spend all he makes in the
Pum. © to keep him through the win-
ter. It 1s uaderstood that the low rate
Homeseekers’ tickets will continue to
be on sale during November and De-
cember to all San Antonio & Aransas
Pass points, of which the following are
the most prominent local stations:
Falfurrias, Corpus Christi, Alice,
Beeville, Skidmore, Runge, Cuero,
Yorktown, Hallettsville, Rock Island,
Yoakum, Giddings, Cameron, Luling,
Rockport, Kennedy, Karnes City,
Floresville, Rockdale, Gonzales.
You can pack up Sallie and the ba-
bies and go south, and they will show
you all of these fertilized fields, where
you can enjoy life. It is a sad mis-
take when our people crowd into a
large city. You can do better by tak-
ing up your home in Texas. We will
continue this appeal for the benefit and
welfare of the Negroes.
Go on SAN ANTONIO & ARANSAS
PASS RAILWAY.
If you wish to spend a pleasant win-
ter, GO TO TEXAS.
If you have money to invest in land,
GO TO THXAS.
If you wish to be benefited by the
finest of “artesian well water, GO TO
TEXAS.
If there are another number of oth-
er things you wish to do, just take ad-
vantage of the never-before-heard-of
offer of the San Antonio and Aransas
Pass Railway and go to Texas.
Just think! Only $15 a round trip to
Texas.
Quite often one makes his home in
a place where tho best of advantages
are not offered”him.
The only way to remedy this incon-
venience is to take advantage of what-
ever opportunities afford themselves.
Texas is a state that contains acre
upon acre of production farm land.
It is not only productive daring the
summer, but what is most unusua! al-
so during the winter.
A man doesn’t have to “lay by” for
the long winter months. The climate
is such that one can farm all the year
around. Some may hesitate because
of the supposed difficulty in Cen
of crops because of lack of railroads.
Such a claim held good long years
ago. At the present time, the San An-
tonio railroad has access to every
available point, and makes this spe-
cial offer of $15 a round trip for the
express benefit of those whose funds
may be low, and who might wish to
purchase land ia Texas, and could not
afford the regular fare.
“Lt hesitate longer. Buy your tick-
et and go at once.
| 2306 Chestnut Boulevard.
First-Class Furnished Rooms with
Electric Light and Hot
and Cold Baths.
BY THE DAY OR WEEK,
Terms Reasonable.
MRS. fl. R.
WILLIAM T. DAVIS,
SHAVING PARLOR,
2811 Manchester Avenue.
First-Glass Barber Shop and
First-Glass Work Guaranteed.
Changed Hands
Rosebud Cafe
First-Class Service
Give Him a Call
Mr. Robert P. Watson
2222 Market Street
Best Meals in ihe ee for tho Money
MEALS AT ALL ere
B. B. HALL,
Tennessee Shaving Parlor
Everything Neat, Clean and Up-to-date.
1326 Morgen Street,
__ _Bh. Lours, Mo, ee
MRS. IDA. M. JONES
_ MILLINERY
LADIES’ & GENTS’ FURNISHINGS
Hair Braids and Pompadour
Our Specialty
Satisfaction Guaranteed
1532 Gratiot St.. St. Louis, Mo,
= - WILLIAMS - -
Pink Goat Bar,
Fine Wines, Liquors and
Cigars.
POOL ROOM.
8. E. Cor. 22d and Market Streets,
MR. H. YOUNG.
Coal, Kindling, Wood.
| HAULING AND EXPRESS WAGONS.
TRUNKS nian STATION.
| Office: 4017 Easton Avenue,
NOTICE.
Mr, C. H. Wheeler, the brother of ¥,
W. Wheeler, will collect from any of
our subscribers. Please pay him, and
he will give you credit for the same
J. W. WHEELER,
Sueouis Palladium
vir RUUD 2
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY
Bxtered at the postoffice at et. Lous,
flo., as second-class matter.
ac secntcn mers
Published Weekly by
J. W. WHEELER,
Manager and Proprieter.
261; Lawton Avenue.
MISS KATE JOUNSON.......Editor.
Miss Isabella Morgan.... Asst Editor.
Miss Olivia Richardson,.. ...Secretary
. H. Tandy ........ General Reporter
C. H. Wheeler, collector and solicitor.
John W. Wheeler, Jr., solicitor.
Business matters souiae to the
aper, should be eddressed to The
PrReaiom Office.
Communications for publication
moet reach ng not later than Wed-
acsday.
ADVERTISING RATES.
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No Excuse for Non-Payment. _
From the present time on, all who
livesouth of co t avenue, will please
settle their St. Louis Pallaciam bills
with Misa Kaie Johnson, 2627 Papin
Areet.
Ferdinand avenue, is the seporter and
General Solicitor for the &t. Louis
Palladium.
‘The St. Louis Palladium is sold at the
following, places:
2617 Lawton Ave.
2614 Stoddard Ave.
319 North Jefferson avenue.
211 North Jefferson avenue.
11 North Fourteenth street.
105 North Thirteenth street.
3944 St. Ferdinand avenue.
‘2801 Manchester avenue.
SEVEN POINTERS FOR THE READ:
ING AND ADVERTISING
PUBLIC.
(1) THE ST. LOUIS PALLADIUM IS
in its 20th year of regular publi-
cation.
(2) Never has missed an issue.
(3) No fake subscription list to “cate”
honest advertisers.
(4) More bona fide subscribers than
any other Negro paper in St.Louis,
or State.
(5) The ONLY Negro newspaper pub-
lished in St. Louis as the organ
of the Republican party.
(6) Because it is the official organ of
‘Wright Cuney Political Club.
(1) Because it is fearless in denounc-
ing crime regardless of conse-
quences.
OS>
The Burlington route is considered
the best northwest, and the very
low rates to all points in California
and the northwest continue daily un-
til May 15, 1904. Don’t fail to take
advantage of this. See their time-
tables.
The Big Four (Baltimore & Ohio
route) is the railroad that is envied
by all the railroads that come in con-
tact with it, The officers are by nature
cut out for railroad men.
SS Ee
Some person sent-an article signed
E. Humphrey. If something is not sent
to pay the printer we can not print
the matter. So please comply.—[Man-
ager.
If you wish to go to Washington or
any points on the Big Four route, you
will see the most beautiful landscape
and scenery that your eyes ever looked
upon.
The Frisco System is among the
best railroad systems in this country.
We advise those who wish to go tour-
ing to try this road.
‘St. Paul’s News.
Rev. W. D. Cook, D. D., pastor of
St. Paul's, is a very busy man, and is
very much in demand at home and
abroad. He has beem invited to de-
liver the annual address to the stud-
ents of Paul Quinn college, Waco, Tex.,
and at the close of his services Sunday
night will take the train for Waco. On
his return he will deliver an address
at the literary congress at Kansas
City, Kas.
St. Paul's is in for another financial
rally which will come off about the
Jast Sunday in June.
‘The third quarterly conference meet-
ing of St. Paul’s will take place June
4th (first Sunday.)
‘The boat excursion of St. Paul's will
take place June 19, when a good time
is expected.
You will miss a.treat if you fail to
go over the Frisco System. The cars
are beautiful, and it is pleasant to
Jook upon the scenery along that line
to the Golden Gate of California.
Notes and News Concerning
Our Peopie-- Weekly Record
of Social Events, Deaths,
Marriages and Births-«
Written Especially for
| St. Louis Palladium.
ing fine.
Mr. L. Morris, of 211 Center street,
has been suffering from a severe attack
of paralysis.
Mrs. Emma Busch is a very bash-
ful young lady. She resides at 1422
Morgan street.
Forum Club's moonlight excursion
is on the 29th of May. Keep the date
in mind and attend.
Little Adelle Renfro, of 1235 Spruce
street, is one of the loveliest and
sweetest children on that street.
Mr. and Mrs, H. H. Thompson, who
formerly lived at 2628% Olive street,
haye moved to 2307 Walnut street.
Mr. A. Russell, the undertaker will
move on the first of June to his new
place of business, 2322 Chestnut street.
Loyd, the little son of Prof. and Mrs.
L. H. Patterson, of 4263A North Mar-
ket street, is real sick at this writing.
You will have five hours on the
river for 35 cents, If you take in the
Forum Club excursion Monday night,
May 29.
Miss Nellie Leasure, niece of Mrs.
W. D. Elgin, of 1559 Gratiot street,
has been sick for the past week. She
is better now.
Mrs. E. Patterson, who for the past
three months has been stopping at the
Douglass hotel, has moved to 2827A
Laclede avenue.
Mr, and Mrs, Henry Newton, former-
ly of 4348 Cottage avenue, have moved
in their new home in Kirkwood, Mo.,
618 Harrison street.
Mrs. Julia Shipton was much im ev-
idence at the Orphans’ home, and
seemingly as busy as a bee. She lives
at 2710 Wash street.
Dr. W. D. Cook will deliver the an-
nual address before the literary so-
cieties of Paul Quinn college, Waco,
Tex., Tuesday night, May 30, at 8
o'clock.
‘The Hiawatha club had a fair repre-
sentation at the Orphans’ home last
Sunday im the persons of Messrs. Hen-
ry Lamber, Eugene Robinson and Ed-
gar Stovall.
Mrs. Edward Smith, 4319 Cottage
avenue, presented her husband a few
days ago with a very pretty girl. Al-
though it has been! two weeks, they
can not find a name for this beautiful
girl.
Wanted a first-class ausband at 1024
North Leffingwell avenue. The lady
has three gold teeth, is a good worker,
yet the one whom she wants must
‘come clean. Write to Palladium office,
or you may call at her home.
The Forum club will give a grand
summer night excursion on the pa-
latial steamer Corwin H. Spencer
Monday night, May 29, 1905. A good
time is in store for all who attend.
There will be music and dancing.
Tickets, 35 cents.
Rey. W. C. Williams, pastor of St.
James church, is ona leave of absence
for two weeks. He will visit Lexington
and Kansas City, Mo., Leavenworth,
Kas., and other points in the west. He
is accompanied by his two little sons,
ard they expect a pleasant time.
Mrs. W. B. Williams Brown, former-
ly of St, Louis, and at present living at
4152 Dearborn street, Chicago, Ill.,
will be the guest of Mrs. Dora Blount
and Mrs. Maud Anthony, of Kirkwood,
Mo. She will arrive Saturday, May
27.
Mrs. S. W. Williams, of Texarkana,
Tex., has been to St. Louis and pur-
chased a large stock of summer goods,
such as boots, shoes, millinery and all
such as completes a department store.
Mrs, Williams is meeting with grand
success in her business in tae wild
state of Texas.
Mr. George Prince, the brother of
Miss Ida Prince, is now with his sis-
ter at 2226 Chestnut street. He has
been sick for the past four months.
‘We hope he may recover soon. Miss
Prince's father died not more than
four months ago. She has much to
depress her in mind.
Annual sermon of U. B. F. will take
Annual sermon of U. B. F. will take
place at First Baptist church Sun-
day, May 28, at 3 p. m. It is expected
the entire order will turn out and let
the people of St. Louis know and see
the U. B. F. is as strong as any order
in the country. Membership in the
United States is estimated at less
than 500,000 members. Full particu-
lars of programme will be given in
next Saturday's issue of the Palla:
dium. there}
Read Scott Remedy Co.'s large ad-
-vertisement in this paper.
Furnished room for rent at 1558
Gratiot street. Use of piano included.
Down stairs.
Mrs, Wm. Cheatham, of 1422 Clark
avenue, is still quite sick. We hope for
her early recovery.
Mrs. Clark the hair dresser has
moved from 711 North Jefferson ave-
nue to 3963 Fairfax avenue.
Mrs. Emma Nelson, of 2715 Wash
street, is still the belle of that street,
the men are looking that way.
Mrs. Brown, the mother of Mrs.
Henry Bridgewaters, is sick, and has
been for the past two months. She is
one of our old citizens.
‘Mrs. Wilson, of 2109 Chestnut street,
is at the Provident hospital trying to
work her nerve up to have am’ opera-
tion performed: We believe it has
failed.
Mrs, Emanuel Beavers, of 1308 Chest
nut street, is just recovering from |
sever attack of la grippe. She is much
better, and seemingly has lost no
flesh. |
Dr. A. J. Stokes, pastor of First
Baptist church of Montgomery, Ale.
had tea Sunday evening at the home
of Mrs. J. Cooper Scott, 2749 Walnut
street.
Mrs. M. Mayo, who formerly lived
in Bast St, Louis, 1s now living at
2752 North Goodfellow avenue. Her
two daughters are there with her, also
her two sons; they are reported as
being two very smart and industrious
young men. We hope for their future
success. _
Miss Olivia S. Richardson, secretary
of The Palladium, is now in full charge
of the society, or social column, and
we believe she will turn the same into
a candy store. So watch and see. All
matter on that line should be sent to
the secretary. All matter pertaining
ads., send to Palladium office.
Mrs, Grimmes, who formerly lived at
1203 Poplar stret, is now living at 3719
Cass avenue, under the Odd Fellows’
hall. She is keeping a restaurant, as
before. She has been sick for the past
two months. We hope she will recov-
er. Her two little children, who are
very smart and industrious, assist her
in the business she is conducting.
Geo. M. Cathrell, A. B. requests the
honor of the presence of his many
friends at the commencement exercises
of the dental department of Howard
university, Thursday, June 1, at con~
vention hall, Washington, D. C., at
which time the degree of doctor of
dental surgery will be conferred upon
him.
If you desire to send one of our pub-
lic school teachers to Europe this va-
cation, vote for Miss Arsania M. Will-
jams, 2959 Atlantic street, first assist-
ant at the Dumas school, who is a can-
didate of the Seventh district in the
Star's contest for a tour to Europe.
For particulars, see the St. Louis Star.
Ballot may be found on page 2 of the
Star. * eg
ANTIOCH CHURCH NOTES
Rey. Lewis Lane is again very much
indisposed.
Mother Gurithe attended church
services last Sunday, but was very
feeble.
‘Mrs. Mary A. Lawrence spent Mon-
day and Tuesday of this week with
relatives at Edwardsville, Ill.
Rey. 3. P. Anderson will be at his
office at Antioch church, 4225 Kennerly
avenue, daily except Mondays from 10
a.m, to 12 a.m.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Moore and three
children, of 2527 RBellglade avenue,
who are visiting relatives and friends
at Jackson, Miss., are expected home
soon.
Mrs. J. R. Starks, of 4238 San Fran-
cisco avenue, who fell a month ago
and was badly hurt, is able to be out
again, Her many friends were much
pleased to see her out Sunday.
At 8 p. m,, Rev. Dr. Bennet, of Nash-
ville, Tenn., but temporarily residing
in this city, preached a grand sermon
to a large congregation. Those who
were not out missed a spiritual treat.
The L. N. D. S. club will go in a
body to Edwardsville, Ill., Wednesday,
the 3ist, and will be entertained by
one of their members, Mrs. L. McClain.
The ladies are looking forward to a
pleasant time.
Mrs. Julia A. Youree, of 2611 North
Leffingwell avenue, left on the 20th for
a three weeks’ tour through Missouri,
She will visit Kansas City, Waverly
and Brookfield. We wish her a pleas-
ant visit, but we wonder if she will
return alone.
Sunday, May 21, at 11 a. m., Rev.
Dr. C. C. Somerville, pastor of the
First Baptist church of Charlotte, N.
C., preached an eloquent sermon from
the eighteenth verse of the seventeenth
chapter of St. John. Subject: “The
Christ Spirit." The sermon was fine,
and was heartily enjoyed by all.
Tf you want Aunt Hagar’s children
to know that you are doing business,
advertise in The Palladium. It speaks
1 et ees
°
H. C. CURTIS
THE STAR FURNISHED ROOM MAN
Reoms like Home. Smeet, Sweet Home
705-707-709 North Fourteenth Street
1406-181 i28h¢-1100 Lindon Street
H.C, CURTIS, Prop.
Monroe Motley, Mgr. Altre’ Hale, Night Clery
DEATH ENTERS HOME.
‘Mrs. Priscilla Williams, the mother
of Mrs. Annie Hallom, of 1715% Gra-
tiot street, died Thursday last, and
will be buried from their home this
afterncon. She leaves two daughters
—Anna Hallom and Gertrude Wilson—
a son-in-law and two good children to
mourn her loss. The Palladium staff
deeply sympathizes with them. Dr.
Stevens, of Central, will officiate.
Great Western Excursion.
‘The Great Western club will give a
grand river excursion on the steamer
Corwin H. Spencer, Monday evening,
July 10. The boat will leave the foot
of Olive street at 8:30 o'clock.
The Great Western band will fur-
nish the music for the occasion.
The officers of the club_are Floyd
Ross, president; A. C. Cash, vice-
president; John B. Vashon, secretary;
Wm. D. Flowers, treasurer; Jas. W.
Grant, general manager.
A GOOD CHANCE
To Know That Which You Should
Know at 4251 Sacramento
‘Avenue,
Mrs. Clark is now going to teach the
hair-dressing trade and everything
connected with it—sealp massage, face
massage, manicuring, singeing, dyeing,
weaving, making bralds, short and
long stem pompadour. The entire cost
of the whole course is $10.
Any person who succeeds in forming
a class of ten will be given an espe-
cial reduction of $5.
“Fine feathers make fine birds” is
quite an old adage. Have your face
and hair in order and your appearance
is attractive in general.
Mrs. Susian E. Gross, millinery of
2609 Pine street, is holding her own.
Negro ladies and gentlemen should
patronize a worthy lady. She how
your race stands.
NOTICE.
The Sons and Daugaters of Rebecca
No. 3 meet the seeond Wednesday in
each month at Eleventh and Franklin
avenue, at 8 p. m. Mrs, Sadie Harris,
president, 1529 Gratiot street;May Wil-
son, vice-president, 1431 Morgan street,
Mrs. Annie Henry, 2614 Mills street,
secretary; Lizzie Robinson, assistant
secretary.
Look at the ad of Sam Schneider,
2628 Olive street, one of the best in
St. Louis.
Notice,
E. J. Crane & Co. of 122 West
Broad street, of Richmond, Va., have
retired from business.
Be Your Own Biss,
If you are tired working long hours
for poor pay; if you want to be your
own boss, and earn no less than $5
every day of your life; if you want to
be of use in the world, and be both
independent and prosperous, write to
me, and I will not fail to point out
to you the path which leads to suc-
cess, happiness and prosperity. A
postal will do. Address
RILAS GALLINGHT,
No. 9 Governor Street,
Richmond, Va.
The Helping Hand Siciety.
Meets the first Tuesday im each
month. Admission fee, $1. Mrs. Ethel
Kimble, 2739 Laclede, president; Chas.
H, Athle, 3527 Scott, avenue, treasurer;
‘Mrs. Katie Johnson, 4262 Sacramento
avenue, vice-president; Mr. F. Ar-
buckle, 2623 Papin street, secretary.
MONEY MAKES THE MARE Go.
For the past two or three weeks
some preachers of churches take the
liberty of sending many locals to the
Palladium for publication. We again
state that we pay 35 and 40 cents per
thousand for setting up our matter,and
unless you send something to pay the
printer and grease the wheels of the
Palladium, such matter will be cast in
the waste basket. A hint to the wise
is sufficient.
8. L. Pickett. Drugs fresh daily.
Don’t pass bis door—2601 Lawton ave-
nue. FSi et
: ’
Workingmen’s Club
Newly fitted up with
BOWLING ALLEY
First-Class for Ladies and Gentlemen on the First Floor
————————
Se Baers dS gS ae 4
te OO
war Rg) Cee
ee ee |
bebe ae a {
POOL AND BILLIARD PARLOR = 34f937,32° tsrxe:,5«
Z :
= FIRST-CLASS IN EVERY PARTICULAR
Three Days in a Week for Ladies
MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY
Every accommodation for ladies. Mr. Brooks, president of the club, still leads
pressing forward as the foremost man in billiard and bowling alley business. He is
the first man of our race who has ever set up a billiard hall and bowling alley
‘separate from a buffet or a salocn. A. A. BROOKS, President.
2326 MARKET STREET
mm
HARRIS and MOSBY’S
‘The leading Negro druggists of the
city will celebrate their. flith anniver-
sary on Tuesday, May 30, 1905, at
‘their Market street store, where they
will be pleased to serve their custom-
ers and friends with a delicious, re-
freshing glass of punch. Free.
This is their fifth successful year
in business, and they have you to
thank for it, so it is their treat. Visit
their Market street store and drink
with and wish them well.
They now have a complete stock of
drugs, patent medicines, cigars, can-
dies, perfumery, stationery and toilet
articles, tastefully arranged. and as it
has been their custom they will contin-
ue to give their patrons the very best
to be had in their line at the lowest
possible prices.
Their soda fountain is one of the
prettiest and most expensive in the
city. They serve only true fruit flavors,
which makes it possible for them to
serve you the very best glass of soda
water obtainable at 5 and 10 cents per
glass.
Fancy drinks is their specialty.
Flowers and souvenirs for tae ladies,
Music for all.
On May 7, 1905.
About eight or ten boys and girls
got off the street car near Talcott
avenue and North Broadway. They
went east about a block. At this
point the Palladium man lost sight of
them, but we went in search, and as
We passed a little frame house, where
a Christian lady and gentleman, with
their family, reside, we heard a boy
say: “Well, the lid is on in St. Louis,
and we have come, out here in the
country where we can get some beer.”
‘This, of course, shocked the Christian
modesty of the lady of the house.
In the front room the girls attempted
to play the piano and dance, but they
were given plainly to understand that
this kind of conduct could not be
tolerated in her house. After these
rowdies had gone she asked her mar-
ried daughter about them and who
they were, She said that she met
them at some party or picnic, and they
‘were high school girls. Let the
mothers and fathers think on this mat-
ter.
Real Estate News.
Hutchins Inge, real estate agent, re-
ports the closing of the following sales
recently: 2919 Lawton avenue, 10-
room stone front; price $3.300. Mrs.
Amelia E. Commodore, purchaser.
1724-26 North Bleventh street, two six-
room brick houses; price $5,000. Pur-
chased by Dr. Wm. L. Perry. 1521
Goode avenue, 7-room brick house,
purchased by Charles W. Campbell
for $2,500. A vacant lot on Walton
avenue, purchased by Henry C. Pen-
dleton for $1,200, He will build a fine
‘Tesidenct,
| WANTED.
Wanted to know the whereabouts of
one named Mannie Jones, who former-
ly lived on Chestnut street, near Sev-
enteenth street. Her husband’s name is
Arthur Jones. Call at Palladium office.
Information will be recerved-
ROOMS FOR RENT.
ROOMS FOR RENT—T16 N. Jefter-
son avenue. Mrs, Emma Murphy.
~s ~~
: y iB tae Be
HENRY BROWN,
Neatly Furnished Rooms
703 and 7M NORTH lth. Street.
Cranches 1433 and 1519 Lucas Avenue,
ST. LCUIS, MO.
LINKY BROWN, DELIA BROWN,
Matuier. Proprietress.
‘ a 2 ?
5 2s,
cal , ace
F > es
* e ee oe
‘a 5 — 4, =
Ze See ) a
a S, z ost
PSA
Young Men’s |
Social, Musical and
Literary Club
1308 Chestnut Street, St. Louis:
Emaauel Brown, President
Geo. Vashon, Vice-Pres. Wm. H. Fields, Secy>
Ed. Carlton, Ass’t Secy’
Sina Temple, No. 124, of S. M. T.
meets the third Tuesday in each month
at 8 p. m., at K. of P. hall. Mrs. Mary”
Beivans, W. P.; Mrs. Rosa Cummings,
W. See, 118 N. Twenty-nacone street,
Wanted a young man or lady to col-
lect for the Palladium. Will pay a good
salary and 5 per cent. on their collec~
tions. Call at Palladium office-
THE QUADRENNIAL SERMON
(Preached By The Late T. M. D. WARD. D. D. )
Which Was Preached in 1880, Was One of the Most Eloquent Ever Delivered By Man.
Rt. Rev. T. M. D. Ward, D. D., of Atlanta, Ga., delivered the quadrennial sermon. His subject was "The Shepherd and the Flock;" his text was the twenty-eighth verse of the twentieth chapter of the Acts. He said:
From the beginning of time until now, whenever God contemplated any great change in the affairs of the world or the church. He has invariably raised up instrumentalities with which to prosecute the work He had planned out in his own mind. Abraham was to be the sire of a race who were to be the almoners of God's recorded will. This nation was to be in number as the stars that illumine the midnight skies and as the shining sand-grains upon the ocean's strand. Moses, who was an adept in the learning of the Egyptians, was commissioned to bear the message of liberty to the courts of the Pharaohs.
Prayer had smote the ear of Infinite Pity, and the arm that ruled the world reached down and grasped the manacled hand of captive Israel. The proud tyrant was warned of the approaching vengeance. In vain he defied the uplifted holt of avenging Heaven. He resisted and was crushed. The new-born nation, guided by the mystic fiery cloud-pillar, rolled back the glad paean. "The Lord is a man of war; the Lord is his name;" and passed dry shod through the channels of the deep, and planted their feet, amid the strains of timbrel and harp, on freedom's distant shores.
When He announced the decalogue, whose provisions were for the government of all nations in all after time, Moses was the agent; from the trembling summit of Sinai, amid the deafening roar of booming thunders, the blare of sounding trumpets, the quick, sharp shock of earthquakes and the lurid glare of lightnings' God simply uttered His protest against sin and announced the fearful punishment which should follow its commission. Above the column of smoke and fire and cloud was seen the cross making radiant the hill of Calvary.
When He would establish a permanent house of worship he elected David to collect the materials; which were valued at thirty millions. But he, being a man whose skirts were lurid with the gore of God's foes, was not permitted to build a temple, which, for beauty, durability and strength, has challenged the admiration of the ages. This magnificent structure was the emblem of that nobler and grander building, whose stones are the living members of Him who is our risen, living head—that stone upon which this unbelieving and godless age is now breaking itself to pieces. The spiritual walls are still towering upward, and extending poleward their shining minarets catch the morn-beams of the burning dawn and flash back the golden glories of the western sunset.
How labyrinthine and mysterious were the movements of the church in the earlier ages of the world? Prophets spoke, prayed, hoped and died. There came a time when there was no Urim or Thummim. The oracles of Heaven were dumb. The nations were sighing for spiritual deliverance. Minerva could not satisfy the polished, the philosophic Greek. Who will feed our famishing soul? was the wall that escaped both Jewish and Gentile lips.
The predicted hour announcing redemption's morn had come. It was Christmas morning; the air was crisp and cold; the shivering shepherds were watching their flocks. A strange feeling seized them; the heavens looked softer than ever before. They were strangely exhilarated; they looked and saw, trailing across the sky, a celestial visitor. They were alarmed. The heavenly stranger bid them dismiss their fears. He wheeled his steed of light, and moved back with marked celerity toward the gates of pearl. Millions of angels led the chorus of Redemption's song, while earth reeched back the choral strain, "Glory to God on high, peace and good will to all men," white and black, rich and poor, illiterate and learned.
The light that streamed from Bethlehem's star chased back the cimmerian darkness that shrouded the pathway to the tomb. The Babe of Bethlehem became the world's Redeemer. Others before him had enunciated great principles and truths. The tendency of their saplent utterances was to purify society, perpetuate order, illuminate the mind, bring in the reign of law, crush the iron hoof of the proud oppressor. But the soul's hunger-pains were still unsatisfied. Who will feed us? asked the hungry sheep. Those deep, stronger spiritual wants must be supplied.
Rome, flushed with conquest, her eagles and well-drilled battalions sweeping from sea to sea, panted for the rest which remains for the people of God. The adelphic oracle could not answer the soul's question: How shall I find rest?
Minerva, Juno and Apollo were silent. Demosthemas, Socrates, Nero and Cicero could not feed the famishing heart.
The old thoughtful Greek heard weird voices in the forest copse and on mountain cone; he saw wondrous shapes in flower, bird, cloud, star and sun.
But what is the great beyond who will illumine the voiceless valley of the dead. What light shall drive back the thick night of darkness that hovers over the gates of the tomb? Shall not the fires of friendship and love be rekindled in the great, the ever-
lasting forever? Tell me ye oracles of heaven!
One has said that the City of God was built on the
CONFLUENCE OF THREE CIVILIZATIONS.
These separate states of men were represented by the Hebrew, the Greek and the Roman. From this triple-headed fountain were to emerge the waters of the River of Life.
The Hebrews were the chosen people of God. With them He deposited His Word. In all their wanderings they forgot not the God of Abraham. They cherished the memories of their prophets priests and kings. When captives in the land of the Chaldeans they would not tighten the wires of their harps, because the Daughter of Zion was humbled and crushed. We can not wipe out the memory of Salem's sacred towers. Our harps shall still hang on the drooping willows that throw their long shadows over Babel's troubled stream.
For ages this Hebrew stream rolled through the earth—often turgid and turbulent—still its sacred waters fertilized the arid valleys of this sinnetted earth, healing, purging, cleansing the surrounding nations. What wondrous memories cluster about that heaven-guided race?
The decalogue was the corner-stone of their civil as well as their ecclesiastical government. The altar, the victim, the blood—all pointed to the great Victim, whose blood was to be an atonement for every race of every age and clime. One of the great changes which opened a new era in the world's history was the overthrow of the Chaldean empire; and the Medean and Persian army, under the leadership of Cyrus, whom God had called, was the chief instrument in creating this marked epoch. Babylon, with her massive walls, swinging gardens, brazen gates and stately towers—Babylon, the Hammer of the earth, was broken; but the power of Cyrus passed away.
Alexander, the son of Philip of Macedon, leaped forth, like a lion from his covert shaking the glittering dewdrops of the morning from his bristling mane. His invincible warriors swept through the earth like a tempest of fire. For ages the Greek was the prince in the kingdom of letters, Athens became the birthplace of philosophy, oratory, science, sculpture and poetry. AFRICA CONTRIBUTED LARGELY Toward increasing the literary grandeur of Greece. The Greek kindled his torch with the red fire that flamed and blazed on African altars. Mount Olympus almost became the rival of Mount Zion.
That was the golden age of letters. When has the world produced such men as molded and directed the Grecian mind?
When Paul entered Athens they were ready to listen to the new but glorious truths of salvation; they were familiar with all branches of learning; they were refined, generous and brave, but were not the children of God—not joint heirs with Christ. Their influence was civilizing, but not Christianizing; their form of civilization created a taste for learning, but their theology was divorced from their morality.
The Third Confluent—The Romans had become the world's masters. All other nations bowed to their sway—the two legs, part iron part clay. They were both weak and strong. They were warriors and merchants. Their republic, like ours, was first founded upon justice and human rights; but, like as we, increased in numbers, grew in wealth, they became rapacious and cruel. They had become demoralized by their slavery and civil and foreign wars. Their buildings, baths, harbors, roads, bridges and sepulchers surpassed any other nation on the globe. The Greek language, expressing the highest forms of thought, became the ruling tongue of the age.
Most of the books of the New Testament were written in this tongue. It is to-day the grandest of all tongues. Through this medium the nations received the news of grace. Thus the Cross of Jesus followed the Eagles of the Caesars. The Romans were a powerful people. These signs of material greatness demonstrated their greatness and power as a nation; but these signs were also emblems of oppression, and cruelty, and wrong.
The most powerful nation on earth felt itself to be the most helpless nation—helpless because they could not draw strength from the Arm of Eternal Might. The Hebrews wanted a Messiah, the Greeks a Healer and the Romans a Consoler.
therefore, is raised up to bear the tidings to these Gentile nations. Though a Jew in the broadest acceptance of that term, he was the chief exponent and champion of the gospel to the Romans and Greeks—to the Gentile world. The power of God unto salvation, first to the Jew, then to the Greek, was the burden of his theme.
Called and chosen, he goes forth sowing the seed-grain of gospel truth in different parts of the earth. What a record of labor and of sufferings, of heroic endurance. Wherever he went, the rod, the scourge, the halter, the dungeon awaited him. Did he falter Did he quall? Did he mark over his brow in big letters.
"I AM FOR SALE?"
No! He reproved rulers, denounced
wicked and profligate kings, and despised the shame and glorified in Christ. Hissed, traduced, villified and persecuted, he held on his way, and dying, shouted back from out the mystic waters of Jordan, "Death, where is thy sting; grave, thy boasting victory?" Paul was the representative of this new doctrine, the doctrine of the resurrection from the dead. Philosophic, thoughtful, earnest, with a broad mental grasp, he was a fit character to become the propagator of a truth the acceptance of which would lead millions home to God.
Familiar with the traditions of the church as well as the Scriptures and the Talmud, he had the ability to grapple with the enemies of the new gospel and to preach Jesus risen from the dead. He had seen the glory that beamed from the face of the Incarnate Deity, and cheered with his presence, he persevered to the end. The vessel halts for a few hours; word had been already sent that Paul was to halt at Miletus. The Bishop and Presbyters of Ephesus meet him, perhaps for the last time. How solemn the scene! How grand the hour! Here were men who were facing death because they embraced Christ.
They had read his epistle. The thoughts it contained had strengthened them for the moral conflict. Once more they gaze upon their great leader, small in stature, but tall enough to touch the heavens.
Listen to the words which are still ringing through the ages, thrilling the heart of the church. Having delivered his message, he dropped upon his knees and prayed until men wept, angels shouted and devils trembled. * * * * * * *
SANITARY SUGGESTIONS.
So readily is the mind affected by the condition of the body that it is the duty of every one to see that his system is in good condition. Wrench and twist the body with torturing pains and the mind ceases, in a measure, to work. Many men break down at two-score by reason of self-abuse.
What a wonderful piece of mechanism is the human body; 240 bones, 400 muscles, the alimentary canal thirty-two feet long; the heart is about six inches in length, four inches in diameter, beats seventy times per minute, 4,200 per hour, 100,800 per day, 36,792,000 times per year, 2.575,440,000 in seventy years; at each beat two and a half ounces of blood are drawn out of it—175 ounces per minute, 656 per hour, seven and three-quarters tons per day. All the blood in the body passes through the heart in three minutes. This little organ, by its ceaseless industry, in the allotted span the Psalmist gave to man, lifts the enormous weight of 400,000,000 pounds.
The lungs will contain about one gallon of air at their usual degree of inflation. We breathe an average of 1,200 per hour, inhaling 600 gallons of air, or 14,400 gallons per day. The aggregate surface of the air-cells of the lungs exceeds 20,000 square inches, an area nearly equal to a twelve-foot room. The weight of the brain is three pounds eight ounces; the nerves are all connected with it or the spinal marrow, and these nerves, together with their amplifications, exceed 100,000,000, outnumbering the greatest army ever marshaled.
The skin is composed of three layers, and varies from one-fourth to one-eighth of an inch in thickness. Its average in an adult is estimated to be 2,000 square inches. The atmospheric pressure being about fourteen pounds to the square inch, a person of medium size is subjected to a pressure of 40,000 pounds. Each square inch of skin contains 3,500 sweating tubes, each of which may be likened to a little drain tile a quarter of an inch long, making an aggregate length of the entire surface of the body of 201,160, or a tile ditch for draining nearly forty miles long. Keep the head cool, the feet warm and clean. When the stomach is disordered EAT NOTHING BUT GRUEL until you get well. We Americans are great gourmands. Toughen the throat by keeping it exposed.
Without health we shall be failures. Physical culture for a long time made the Greeks the ripest scholars and best warriors the world ever saw. Two hours' daily play with the buck and saw has saved many valuable lives.
The age demands an enlightened and sanctified pulpit. Religion, learning and wealth are the three great forces which must give power and prestige to the race.
These three great elements of power are destined to lift us out of the unsunned depths of ignorance and superstition and sin. The accumulated debris of the ages of oppression must, through these grand agencies, be forever removed.
Mental development and moral purity are our two first and greatest wants. We must plant the seed buds of thought. To do this we must subject ourselves to severe mental discipline. The march of thought is always slow.
God has opened to us a door of marvelous usefulness. Four millions of people look hopefully toward our organization. The different colored Methodisms of America point with exulant pride to our Wilberforce and Payne institute and pay homage to our iron-throated orator, the Christian Recorder, whose voice penetrates to either pole.
"The price of liberty is eternal vigilance; the price of wisdom is eternal thought."
How vast the power of the human mind! The general conference, with its vast brain power, should introduce a measure looking toward the founding of a conference seminary in every conference district. The work is not so formidable as some may sum
pose. Nearly all the conferences are having a supply of educated men. Place such men at all great centers of influence and let it be understood that they will be expected to build up our educational work if upon never so small a scale. Let the president of Wilberforce be paid from the Dollar Fund. Do not allow him to be embarrassed. Untie his hands and give him a full, free swing.
The mental condition of our people in the south is appalling, heartrending. We must make provision for intellectual wants of our people in that section. Nearly every other denomination is leaving us in the rear. BRAIN-POWER WILL BE SUPREME.
Encourage learning, and you will live; despise it, and you will die. Can we comprehend the occult law which govern the material without learning?
Nature may whisper sweet, entrancing melody; the stars may shimmer and glow until the midnight heavens are radiant with the light of celestial worlds; the spring-tide may annually stir the heart of nature with strange, mystic power; buds, blooms and quivering leaf may strike the eye and the ear; the deep-voiced thunderstorms may roll their reeville, summoning the armies of nature to battle; the lightning, God's shining battle spear, may gleam in overwhelming grandeur as it cleaves the mountain oak and illumines the skies covered with thunder clouds; the hills and mountains flash back the glories of a thousands suns until laughing streams and swelling seas all shout, "Praise ye the Lord," and yet the ignorant may not hear all these celestial nor see those divine visions. To feed the flock we must pray, study and meditate. Time does not permit to pass through the rich fields of scientific and practical learning.
We shall take time to select such text books as will materially aid our young men in gaining a right conception of the power and priceless value of sanctified learning. Once create taste, an earnest thirst for knowledge, unveil the wonders which lie hidden in siderial science and the occult mysteries of sea and shore, and when this unwritten volume is once unfolded to the budding intellect of our rising pulpit, a halo of moral beauty will glow around our young men which will command the respect of even those who prate about Negro inferiority.
An enlightened ministry, whose talents and culture have been consecrated to God, will make an intelligent, large-hearted church. Like priest, like people. We should select books that contain within as small compass as possible the pith and marrow of the best authors upon such subjects which most interest and concern us. No man can learn everything, but what any other man has done we can do. Master whatever you take in hand. A knowledge of the classics, and especially of mathematics, will be great aids in the interpretation of the doctrines of the gospel.
CLOSING EXHORTATION.
Ye who come from the different sections of our ocean-bound republic—a country made one by the blood of a million of men—a nation whose empire extends from sea sea. Purified in the hot furnace of civil war, she is now rising into greatness, not through her vast possessions only, but by her respect for the rights of man. This nation, with her feet dipping in the waters of the Gulf, her head reclining on the granite peaks of Alaska—to such a country we return our unswerving allegiance, when she tramples upon our right we will say "Strike but hear." Men who come from the sunny savannahs of the flower-spangled south and from the rolling, teeming prairies of the west, as well as from the sunset land where Mounts Shasta, Hood and Baker lift their white shafts to the clouds—to one and all we say, be loyal to God, true to yourselves, to your church, to your race; avoid the pedantry of learning; crush out the blue imps of ignorance, vaulting ambition, treachery, political trickery and hell-born caste, always placing true and tried men over the flock. Do all these things and more and we shall be a pole star to the Colored Methodisms of America. Africa, long shrouded in pagan night, shall catch silvery beams that stream from Bethlehem's star. Ethiopia, long despised, forgotten and forsaken, shall stretch forth her hands to the heavenly Shepherd, who to-day is ranging the cold, barren mountains of Paganism, seeking the millions who have been torn by the wolves of superstition and idolatry.
He who has guarded and defended this flock for three score years and four is with us still. The Lion of Judah guards the chosen fold. May your deliberations be marked with wisdom, moderation and patience, so that the work we may do may draw upon the assembly the approving smile of Heaven. May the Holy Ghost dictate every official act. Thus imperfectly have we aimed to do our duty. We have tried to do our best. God demands no more. Many of us are brushing the dews of Jordan's shore. We will soon have crossed to dwellings of Jordan. Let us with girded loins, well-trimmed and well-filled lamps, be ready when the Bridegroom comes, and shout, "Death, where is thy sting? Grave, where is thy boast?" May He save us for His name's sake. Amen.
ENTERTAINMENT.
Rebecca 'temple and St. Mary's Temple, S. M. T., and Eliza lodge will give an entertainment on June 1 at Bloemecke's grove, 6200 North Broadway. Bills will soon be out, and timely notice will be given through the columns of The Palladium.
W. A. Smith Lodge U. B. F. meets the third Tuesday in each month.
Stop that cough. Go and get Pickett's Cough Drops.
[Image of a man with a mustache and a bow tie, wearing a suit and a necklace. The background is plain and oval-shaped.]
GEORGE WILLIAM
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 MR. R. E. SAUNDERS, Managers
CHARLEY HARRIS, Proprietor
DILLAR BILL BAR
TELEPHONE: D-503.
ICE WINES & LIQUORS.
LIGARS AND TOBACCOS
Room in Connection
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
5 MARKET STREET
PLEASE GIVE US A CALL
H. CLARK, Gen'l Mgr.
CONNECTION
Cigars.
cove Bar,
MARKET ST.
LUIS, MO.
DOLLAR B
TELEPHONE
CHOICE WINES
CIGARS AND T
Pool Room in
OPEN DAY AND
2135 MARKET
PLEASE GIVE U
JOHN H. CLARK
URANT IN CONNE
DOLLAR BILL BAR
TELEPHONE: D-503.
CHOICE WINES & LIQUORS.
CIGARS AND TOBACCOS
Pool Room in Connection
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
2135 MARKET STREET
PLEASE GIVE US A CALL
JOHN H. CLARK, Gen'l Mgr.
Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars.
The Alcove
2032 MARKET
ST. LOUIS, MO.
HARVE
STEVE SMITH,
Prop.
GEO. FOUNTAIN,
Gen. Igr.
e Alcove Bar,
2032 MARKET ST.
ST. LOUIS, MO.
HARVEY H. DAVIS, Prop,
GEO. FOUNTAIN,
Gen. Igr.
The Greeley
Fine Wines,
and Cigars
Phone: Kinloch D-837.
1300 MORGAN
ST. LOUIS.
POOLROOM IN CO
ROOMS UP STAIRS, NEWLY
ARE DRUGS
get them at this store. We
RESH, PURE, FULL STRENE
CALS. It pays to handle pu-
only. Our friends and patro-
on pure drugs. We strive for
the other—PURE DRUGS
HT & B
MOUNTAIN, GEO. TURNER,
St. Mgr. Ass't Mgr.
Greeley Saloon,
Wines, Liquors
and Cigars.
Loch D-837.
MORGAN STREET,
ST. LOUIS, MO.
EROOM IN CONNECTION.
TAIRS, NEWLY FURNISHED
DRUGS PURE?
this store. We never handle
FULL STRENGTH DRUGS
to handle pure drugs, and
friends and patrons' approba-
sions. We strive for the one by
PURE DRUGS.
& BOLEN,
FURNISHED ROOMS UP STAIRS, NE
WHEN ARE DRUGS
When you get them at this store. any but FRESH, PURE, FULL S and CHEMICALS. It pays to hand pure drugs only. Our friends and tion hinges on pure drugs. We st handling the other—PURE DE
WRIGHT @
WHEN ARE DRUGS PURE?
When you get them at this store. We never handle any but FRESH, PURE, FULL STRENGTH DRUGS and CHEMICALS. It pays to handle pure drugs, and pure drugs only. Our friends and patrons' approbation hinges on pure drugs. We strive for the one by handling the other—PURE DRUGS.
2333 MARKET ST.
PETER H. HARRIS
DICK KENT, Prop.
A. B.
A. B. C.
VINCENT MAYER
Mrs. Nannie Moore Neuse has opened business again at 209 North Thirteenth street, what is called the Southern Kitchen. Mrs. Moore has been in the restaurant business longer than any other Colored lady or gentleman in the city and she has met with success. Why? It is because she knows what the public wants. She has just returned from California from a needed vacation. Don't fail to call upon this place of business for she knows what you need.
A New Bar.
We take pleasure in presenting Mr. Charles Narcise, who is now managing a bar at 2216 Chestnut street. We hope that he will be successful, as he is one of our old citizens, and we have known the young man for many years. Give him a call. Yes, the bar at 2216 Chestnut street, is a very nice place.
Don't forget, as he, Mr. Charles Narcise, one of our citizens. So go and see for yourself.
B. BELKER,
Dealarin
Groceries, Wines,
Liquors, Cigars and Tobacco.
Meat and Vegetable Market.
819 and 1121 Morgan Street,
St. Louis, Mo.
Mrs. Susan Gross,
2609 Pine Street.
Millinery.
Up-to-date Hats.
Trimmings and all material in that line.
Sam, the Tailor
Is the Place to Get Your
Fall and Winter Suits
Made to order. One of the Best
204 North 14th Street.
Wm. A. Overton,
Plumbing
AND GAS FITTING.
Furnaces, Stoves and Ranges
Repaired and put up.
Expressing and Moving.
1124 N. Sarah Street
Phone Lindell 249 A.
B. MUNCHWEILER
Dealer in
LADIES' and GENTS' SHOES
DON'T FORGET THE NUMBER
1409 Market Street
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.
Louis Deppe,
Importer and Dealer in
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
Wines, Whiskies, Brandies,
ETC., ETC.
Southeast Corner of
Market St. & Jefferson Av. St. Louis, Mo
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, Secy.
---
P. L. Morton Express! Express!! COAL, WOOD and KINDLING
Moving Furniture and Trunks with Care
2801 PAPIN STREET
THE POPULAR
1331 POPLAR ST.
First-Class Work and Up-to-Date
Barbers.
G. W. HOOD, Proprietor.
MUSIC FURNISHED for
Receptions, Balls and
Parties.
Musical Combinations to be hired for small parties and entertainments. Violin, Cornet, Harp. 1- VIOLIN AND HARP. 2- XIOLINS, VIOLA BASS. Bell Phone: Main 3268.
Adali Temple, No. 32, meets Second Friday in each month at PYTHIAN HALL, LUCAS and JEFFERSON AVE., at 2 p.m. All sisters and brothers are invited.
MRS. ANNIE HALLAM, W. P., 1715 1-2 Gratiot Street. MALISSA WILLIAMS, Secretary.
First-Class Restaurant
OPEN FROM 5 A.M. to 9 P.M.
DON'T FAIL TO CALL.
MRS. HENSLEY, - - Prop.
MRS. DORSEY'S
CAFE.
Hot Meals at All Hours.
Regular Dinner, 10c, 15c, 25c.
722 N. HIGH ST.
Wm. KNIGHTS Jewelry Store at 211 N, Jefferson Av. is the place to go. Ten years experience.
Mrs. Mary White ROOMING HOUSE
NEWLY FITTED UP
REASONABLE RATES
The Best in the City for the Money
1418 Pine Street
St. Louis, Mo.
The Douglass Shaving Parlor,
Under New Management. First-Class Work; there is none better in the city. We have Bath Rooms in connection with the shop, and up-to-date workmen.
GIVE US A CALL.
Shoes Shined Free to Each Customer.
S. OGDEN, Proprietor.
RAMSEY'S
TEE 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.
12 S. 15th Street.
MRS. HATTIE J. RAMSEY, Proprietress.
Al, Shines Five Cents.
Go to Jefferson and Market, to get a shine. Harry's place. First-class shine.
The Best Missouri News
Will Develop Kansas City Line.
The eastern interests, headed by Henry Sielecken of New York, who at the stockholders' meeting in Kansas City secured control of the Kansas City Southern railway, are planning extensive improvements for the new property. Daniel C. Boissevan of New York, one of the new directors, said "The Kansas City Southern has been held down by the voting trust. It could not be developed. We intend to make it the Great Northern of this section. Just as that road stood in St. Paul as the feeder and fed by five or six lines, so shall the Southern be in Kansas City. We can get all the money we want now, and we shall make the road what it should be. We shall try to make Port Arthur a port of entry so that Kansas City shall have another connection with ocean steamship lines and the rest of the world."
Cemetery for the Faithful
Cemetery for the Faithful.
The Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints has purchased a tract of 20 acres one mile north of Independence, on the rock road. The title to the land has been vested in the board of control of the church and it will be made the regular church cemetery. This will be the second cemetery founded in the United States by this creed, the only other one being at Lamont, Ia., one of the strongholds of the sect. The bodies of the faithful who die in this state or any of the surrounding ones will be brought to Independence for interment in the new cemetery. It is planned to make the cemetery one of the most beautiful in the state. All the money derived from the sale of lots in it as well as other sums will be spent in its improvement.
Columbia Commencement.
Announcement is made that the baccalaureate sermon at the university of Missouri will be delivered Sunday, June 4, by Rev. Frank W. Sneed, D. D., pastor of the East Liberty Presbyterian church of Pittsburg, Pa., the Phi Beta Kappa address by Dr. Calvin M. Woodward, LL D., of Washington University, St. Louis, and the address before the university by Charles J. Hughes, Jr., LL D., of Denver, Col., an alumnus of the university and formerly of Ray county. Commencement day will be Wednesday June 7.
Will Supply Three Towns.
Neck City, Purcell and Alba, three thriving mining towns in Jasper county, are soon to have a water works system. A pumping plant which will supply water to the three towns will be installed at once on a tract of land just west of Quaker Mills, on Spring river. A standpipe will be erected at Purcell, as it lies between the other two cities, and mains will be run from the standpipe to Alba and Neck City, and also to the surrounding mines. The entire system will cost $100,000.
Missouri Old Fellows.
According to the report of Grand Master G. G. Lydv. of Springfield, there are now 50,000 Old Fellows in Missouri and more than 16,600 Daughters of Rebekah, an increase of 2,620 in the former and 976 in the latter division of that order. Twenty-two new lodges have been organized and 26 Rebekah auxiliaries in the past year.
Sedulia Boy's Rash Act.
Arthur Hulen, 15 years old, died of injuries received by falling from an electric light plant pole. He was playing with other boys and climbed almost to the top of the pole. His hand came in contact with a live wire. When he fell his head struck the curb, crushing his skull.
Fatal St. Joseph Quarrel
Ollie Brown, aged 24, an employee of the Barber Asphalt company, was stabbed to death at the Everett hotel, Eighth and Olive streets, St. Joseph, by Clifford Brown, aged 19. The men were not related. They quarreled over possession of a dog. The murderer is under arrest.
Hannibal Man Goes to Georgia.
G. D. Helmick of Hannibal has been appointed superintendent of the plant of the Southern States Portland Cement company at Rockmart, Ga. He was formerly connected with the Hannibal plants of the Atlas Portland Cement company.
For Myers Murder Trial.
The prosecution and the defense in the case of Mrs. Aggie Myers are preparing for the trial June 5 at Liberty. The state will subpoena 57 and the defense 28 witnesses. Lawyers for the defense say they will be ready for trial.
Fined Col. Phelps $50.
Col. W. H. Phelps, the Missouri Pacific legislative agent who failed to appear before the recent grand jury, was fined $50 by Judge Martain, of the circuit court, at Jefferson City.
Boonyike Votes Bonds.
The proposition to bond the city of Boonville for $75,000 for municipal ownership of water-works carried by over 10 to 1. When completed, Boonville will have one of the best waterworks in the state.
Gets Chicago Fellowship.
Louis Ingold assistant in mathematics in the university of Missouri, has been awarded a fellowship in the university of Chicago. He had already received a fellowship at Harvard, but will probably accept that of the Chicago university.
Good Roads Experiment.
A special meeting of the Commercial club was held at Macon, in which Congressman James T. Lloyd and A. N. Johnson, highway engineer of the agricultural department, Washington, D. C., and D. Ward King, of Maitland, spoke regarding good roads. The gentlemen were driven over the mile of experimental road which the government is going to build out of Macon. The citizens will furnish the stone, teams and common labor, and the government the machinery and three experts. The object of the agricultural office is to show which is the best method of road building. This is the first piece Mr. Johnson has made in Missouri.
Wanted to Go to the Circum.
Wanted to go to the circus.
The girls at the Industrial home initiated the superintendent Mrs. Emma Mackay, with a riot. The inmates of Marmaduke cottage got loose. All but two were captured early in the evening. One of these two was caught two miles from town in an abandoned brick yard. The other was found in a barn at Wheeling, ten miles east of here, Tuesday morning. She was brought back by Constable Collins of Wheeling. The trouble started over the refusal of the officers to permit the girls to attend a circus in the afternoon.
Return Race After 50 Years.
June 15, 1855, Joseph Nipp and F. S.
Chambers met for a match foot race on the prairie south of what is now Nevada. Mr. Chambers won the race and it was agreed that there should be a return match. After considerable bandying it was agreed that the second race should be run after the lapse of 50 years, which makes the date of it June 15, 1905. Both are still living and it is said the race will be run as per agreement. Mr. Nipp is one of the wealthiest citizens of Nevada.
Chinaman Saves His Queue.
Judge Rogers, of the United States district court, has issued an order allowing Ng Jung, a Chinaman, convicted and sentenced to a term of 90 days in the Missouri penitentiary for passing a raised $10 bill, to retain his queue while serving his sentence. Jung told Judge Rogers that the retention of his queue was a matter of religion. He will be the first prisoner who has been confined in the state penitentiary who has not first had his hair cut short.
Hunged Himself at 80 Years.
R. M. Woodward, of Lamont, hanged himself in the barn of his son, H. E. Woodward, six miles northwest of there. His body was found by members of the family. He was about 90 years old and was a native of Kentucky. He leaves a wife and several children. It is supposed that despondency was the cause of the act. About a year ago he tried to end his life by taking poison.
Missouri Doctors Elect Officers.
The Missouri State Medical association has closed its annual convention at Excelsior Springs. Jefferson City was chosen as the next place of meeting. The officers elected were: President, Dr. Gore, Marshall; first vice president, Dr. Lowrey, Excelsior Springs; second vice president, Dr. Avery, Lincoln county; secretary, Dr. C. M. Nicholson; treasurer, Dr. Welsh.
Killed in a Missouri Fcnd.
As a result of a neighborhood feud ending in a pistol fight Mathew Pulliam and Walter Rice are dead and Charles Middaugh, Burr Snow and Otis Snow are dangerously wounded, the last named having been shot five times. The fight occurred five miles northeast of Cameron, near Mabel. The participants were all young farmers.
Dead at 138 Years.
Ben Harrison, an old negro who has lived in Chariton county all his life, is dead, aged 138 years. Or at least he claimed that he was that old, and those who knew him say that it is highly probable that he was as old as he claimed.
Rocheport Democrat Leased.
W. J. McQuity has leased the Rocheport Democrat to O. H. Turner, of the New Franklin News. Mr. Turner will operate both newspaper properties. Mr. McQuity will spend a year at Eldorado Springs seeking health.
Centralia to Vote School Bonds.
At a special meeting of the Centralia public school board a special election was ordered June 6 to vote on the issuance of $12,000 in bonds for the erection of a high school building.
Horse: Trader Arrested
George Montgomery, Louis Haygood and George Fonder, itinerant horse traders, were arrested near Mexico charged with stealing a horse from Mrs. James Ryan, living two miles north.
New Board of Managers.
Gov. Folk has announced the appointment of the following to be members of the board of managers of the state hospital for the insane No. 4, located at Farmington: Paul P. Hinchey, of De Soto; B. C. Jones, of Popular Bluff; John A. Hope, of Jackson.
Grand Jury for Kansas City.
Judge Wofford, of the criminal court at Kansas City, has announced that he will call a grand jury to meet June 12 to investigate rumors concerning alleged booding at the city hall.
Conviction Follows Trial
When buying loose coffee or anything your grocer happens to have in his bin, how do you know what you are getting? Some queer stories about coffee that is sold in bulk, could be told, if the people who handle it (grocers), cared to speak out.
Could any amount of mere talk have persuaded millions of housekeepers to use
the leader of all package coffees for over a quarter of a century, if they had not found it superior to all other brands in Purity, Strength, Flavor and Uniformity?
Self-Sacrificing.
He—I don't see what makes women such awful gossips. Now, a man prides himself on being a good listener!
She—That's just it! A woman likes to flatter his vanity and how could he listen if she didn't talk—Detroit Free Press.
BY MR. S. B. HEGE.
B. & O. R. R. Passenger Agent, Washington, D. C., Tells of Wonderful Curse of Eczema by Cuticura.
Mr. S. B. Hege, passenger agent of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad in Washington, D. C., one of the well-known railroad men of the country, sends the following greetful letter in praise of the Cuticura Remedies.
"Thanks to the Cuticura Remedies, I am now rid of that fearful pest, weeping eczema, for the first time in three years. It first appeared on the back of my hand in the form of a little pimple, growing into several blotches, and then on my ears and ankles. They were exceedingly painful because of the itching and burning sensation, and always raw. After the first day's treatment with Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills, there was no difference in itching and the cure now seems to be complete. I shall be glad to aid in relieving others suffering as I was, and you may use my letter as you wish. (Signed) S. B. Hege, Washington, D. C., June 9, 04."
One Good Way
"And so Jimpson read his poem to you yesterday! How did you endure it".
He fixed my glass eye on him, and went to sleep with the other."-Chicago Journal.
The Coming Country.
The opportunity for the man of little means is probably better to-day in the prairie states of the Southwest than ever before in the history of the nation. The chance of pre-empting claims or of taking up lands under government laws is gone and will not return again. It is a different kind of opening which lies before the settler and its promise is of exceeding brightness. Its best opportunity is the transformation Southwest where the transformation is going on and where the conditions of soil and climate are in harmony with the warm skies and temperate winds. To the man who is not satisfied with his condition, the Southwest has an inviting future.
Along the lines of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway there are vast areas of unimproved lands awaiting willing hands to make them land the bountiful crops of which the land is capable. There is a need of stores, factories and new business of the Southwest to provide an opportunity in the finest section of the United States. The Southwest is unexcelled for the variety and fertility of its soils—for its climate. Its people are progressive and up-to-date, its religious and educational facilities are as good as can be found elsewhere. The Southwest RY has no lands for sale, but is interested in building up this productive country. It is believed that the Southwest has brighter prospects and offers better opportunities than any other seeing. Seeing is believing. For that reason the Southwest courts investigation of the conditions as they exist. Anyone desirous of learning more of the Southwest RY, to address the Georgia Morton, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Missouri, Kansas and Texas RY, Box 011, St. Louis, Mo.
Bad Beginning
"So the engagement's off?"
"Yes; she advised him to practice economy, and he started by getting her an imitation diamond."—Stray Stories.
Clean House To-Day
Don't wait till to-morrow, but clean house te-day, with Dr. Caldwell's (laxative) Syrup Pepsin. Of course we mean your house of flesh and bone—your body. This is the best house you own, and should get the most care. Yet most people neglect it in a dreadful manner. As a result, stomach, liver, and bowels soon get out of order, and cause great pain, distress, and dangerous internal diseases. The only safe, sure cure, is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. It clears all of causes of sickness, cures constipation and indigestion, cleans house, and makes you well. Try it. Sold by all drugstores at 5c and $1.00. Money back if it fails.
It is well enough to profit by our own mistakes, but it is a good deal more profitable to profit by the mistakes of others—Puck.
Overworked People
and those who are suffering from Rheumatism, Pains, Weakness, Blood or Nervous disorders, Indigestion, etc., should take Pusheck's-Kuro. It is unquestionably the best medicine to-day for these diseases, also for Nervous Debility, Insomnia, and Stomach troubles. Try it. Insist upon your druggist always keeping Pusheck's-Kuro on hand. Dr. Pusheck, Chicago.
One discouraging thing about the maxims of the great is that they generally formulate their maxims after becoming great.—Chicago Record-Herald.
I am sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved my life three years ago.—Mrs. Thos. Robbins, Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17, 1900.
A man's idea of a good summer vacation is where he can wear his old clothes; a woman's where she must wear a lot of new ones.—N. Y. Press.
Conviction Folly
When buying loose coffee or anything to have in his bin, how do you getting? Some queer stories about could be told, if the people who have speak out.
Could any amount of mere talk housekeepers to use
Lion Coffee the leader of all package co of a century, if they had not found it su
Purity, Strength, Flavor
This popular success of LION COFFEE can be due only to inherent merit. There is no stronger proof of merit than continued and increasing popularity.
If the verdict of MILLIONS OF HOUSEKEEPERS does not convince you of the merits of LION COFFEE, it costs you but a trifle to buy a package. It is the easiest way to convince yourself, and to make you a PERMANENT PURCHASER.
LION COFFEE is sold only in 1 lb. sealed packages, and reaches you as pure and clean as when it left our factory.
Lion-head on every package.
Save these Lion-heads for valuable premiums.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio.
Mrs. Sarah Kellogg of Denver, Color Bearer of the Woman's Relief Corps, Sends Thanks to Mrs. Pinkham.
The following letter was written by Mrs. Kellogg, of 1628 Lincoln Ave., Denver, Colo., to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. Dear Mrs. Pinkham: "For five years I was troubled with a tumour which is growing, causing me intense agony and
Mrs. Sarah Kellogg
M. B. H.
Mrs. Sarah Kellogg growing, causing me great mental depression, intense agony and a great tendance to my house work, and life became a burden to me. I was confined for days to my bed, lost my appetite, my courage and all hope.
"I could not bear to think of an operation, and in my distress I tried every remedy which I thought would be of any use to me, and reading of the value of Lydia E. Pinkham's thought would give it a trial. I felt so discouraged that I had little hope of recovery, and when I began to feel better, after the second week, thought it only meant temporary relief; but to my great surprise I found that I kept gaining, "The Compound continued to build up my general health and the tumor seemed to be absorbed, until in seven months, the tumor was entirely gone and I a well woman. I am so thankful for my recovery that I ask you to publish my letter in newspapers, so other women may know of the wonderful curative Compound."
When women are troubled with irregular or painful menstruation, weakness, leucorrhea, displacement or ulceration of the womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, backache, flatulence, general debility, indigestion and nervous prostration, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once removes such trouble.
No other medicine in the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine:
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
Health is too valuable to risk in experiments with unknown and untreated medicines or methods of treatment. Remember that it is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound that is curing women, and don't allow any druggist to sell you anything else in its place.
No Time for Little Worries
"John," said the wife of the literary man, opening the door of the library, "I want to know when you are going to have the screen doors and windows put in. The flies are getting awfully thick in this house." "I wish you wouldn't bother me just now, Maria," he answered, with visible irritation. "I am writing an article for a magazine on 'How to Exclude Aliens from the National Domain.'"—Chicago Tribune.
Good Reason.
Wille had been naughty, and his father was going to whip him.
"My son," he said, sternly, as, switch in hand, he confronted the lad, "do you know why I am going to whip you?
"Yes, dad," replied the little fellow, "it's because you're bigger'n I am."—Lippincott's.
ANOTHER LIFE SAVED.
Mrs. G. W. Fooks, of Salisbury, Md. wife of G. W. Fooks, Sheriff of Wicomico County, says: "I suffered with kidney complaint for eight years. It came on me gradually. I felt tired and weak, was short of breath and was troubled with bloating after eating and my
mico County, says: "I suffered with kidney complaint for eight years. It came on me gradually. I felt tired and weak, was short of breath and was troubled with bloating after eating, and my limbs were badly swollen. One doctor told me it would finally turn to Bright's disease. I was laid up at one time for three weeks. I had not taken Doan's Kidney Pills more than three days when the distressing aching across my back disappeared, and I was soon entirely cured." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N.Y.
LION
WOLLSON
COFFEE
WOLLSON SPICE CO.
WOLLSON SPICE CO.
Railroads and Progress.
In his testimony before the Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce at Washington on May 4th, Prof. Hugo R. Meyer, of Chicago University, an expert on railroad management, made this statement:—
"Let us look at what might have happened if we had heeded the protests of the farmers of New York and Ohio and Pennsylvania (in the seventies when grain from the west began pouring to the Atlantic seaboard) and acted upon the doctrine which the Interstate Commerce Commission has enunciated time and again, that no man may be deprived of the advantages accruing to him by virtue of his geographical position. We could not have west of the Mississippi a population of millions of people who are prosperous and are great consumers. We never should have seen the years when we built 10,000 and 12,000 miles of railway, for there would have been no farmers west of the Mississippi River who could have used the land that would have been opened up by the building of those railways. And if we had not seen the years when we could build 10,000 and 12,000 miles of railway a year, we should not have today east of the Mississippi a steel and iron producing center which is at once the marvel and the despair of Europe, because we could not have built up a steel and iron industry if there had been no market for its product.
"We could not have in New England a great boot and shoe industry; we could not have in New England a great cotton milling' industry; we could not have spread throughout New York and Pennsylvania and Ohio manufacturing industries of the most diversified kinds, because those industries would have no market among the farmers west of the Mississippi River.
"And while the progress of this country, while the development of the agricultural West of this country, did mean the impairment of the agricultural value east of the Mississippi River that ran up into hundreds of millions of dollars, it meant incidentally the building up of great manufacturing industries that added to the value of this land by thousands of millions of dollars. And, gentlemen, those things were not foreseen in the seventies. The statesmen and the public man of this country did not see what part the agricultural development of the West was going to play in the industrial development of the East. And you may read the decisions of the Interstate Commerce Commission from the first to the last, and what is one of the greatest characteristics of those decisions? The continued inability to see the question in this large way.
"The Interstate Commerce Commission never can see anything more than that the farm land of some farmer is decreasing in value, or that some man who has a flour mill with a production of 50 barrels a day is being crowded out. It never can see that the destruction or impairment of farm values in this place means the building up of farm values in that place, and that that shifting of values is a necessary incident to the industrial and manufacturing development of this country. And if we shall give to the Interstate Commerce Commission power to regulate rates, we shall no longer have our rates regulated on the statesmanlike basis on which they have been regulated in the past by the railway men, who really have been great statesmen, who really have been great builders of empires, who have had an imagination that rivals the imagination of the greatest poet and of the greatest inventor, and who have operated with a courage and daring that rivals the courage and daring of the greatest military general. But we shall have our rates regulated by a body of civil servants, bureaucrats, whose besetting sin the world over is that they never can grasp a situation in a large way, and with the grasp of the statesman; that they never can see the fact that they are confronted with a small evil; that that evil is relatively small, and that it cannot be corrected except by the creation of evils and abuses which are infinitely greater than the one that is to be corrected."
AT BED TIME I TAKE A PLEASANT HERB DRINK THE NEXT MORNING I FEEL BRIGHT AND NEW AND MY COMPLEXION IS BETTER.
My doctor says it acts gently on the stomach, liver and kidneys and is a pleasant laxative. This drink is made from herbs, and is prepared for use as easily as tea. It is called "Lane's Tea" or
LANE'S FAMILY MEDICINE
All drapes or by mail $5.00, and $6.00. Burt to
lanes. Family Medicine moves the
necessary. Address: Box 950, Le Roy, N.Y.
Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Dizziness from Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Heavy Eating. A perfect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They
THE
CRUCIFIXION
Sunday School Lesson Ior May 28,1905
Specially Prepared for This Paper.
LESSON TEXT.—John 19:17-20. Memory
Versees. 25-27. Read all the chapter.
GOLDEN TEXT.—"Christ died for our
sins according to the Scriptures."—1 Cor.
15:3.
TIME.—Friday. April 7. A. D. 30, from nine
a. m. to three p. m.
PLACE.—Calvary, just outside the city
walls of Jerusalem. Probably on the
knockout side of the city.
SCRIPTURE REFERENCE.—Parallele.
passages: Matt. 27:31-66. Mark 15:21-47.
Luke 22:26-56. Passages on the atrium:
Isa. 53. Dan. 9:24. 26: Zech. 13:11. Mark. 26:28.
John 3:16. Acts 5:30. 31:20. 26:22. Rom.
3:24. 6:29. 8:32. 14:1. Cor. 15:8. 2 Cor.
5:14-21. 6:9. Gal. 1.3. 14:31. Eph. 1:6. 5:22.
Col. 1.14. 22, Phil. 2:7. 8:1. The 5:10. Heb.
2:9. 9:12-16. 12:2. 3. 14:31. Tit. 1:6. Tit. 2:14.
1:1. Pet. 2:21. 2:4. 3:18. 4:1.1 John 1:7. 2:22.
4:10. Rev. 5:60. 7:14.
Comment and Suggestive Thought.
V. 17. "He." Jesus. "Deating His cross." Carrying and dragging the huge wooden cross on which He was to be executed. This all criminals were required to do. "Golgotha." Called in Latin, "Calvary." It was named "the place of a skull," because the barren hillock resembled a skull.
V. 18. "Crucified Him." Nailed Him to the cross, which was then planted in the ground, and the victim left to suffer long agony until death should relieve Him.
V. 19. "Pilate wrote a title." Under the Roman governor's direction a board had been prepared on which, in black letters, was inscribed the words: "JESUS OF NAZARETH, THE KING OF THE JEWS." This tablet was carried by a soldier in the procession on the way to Calvary, and then nailed at the top of the cross when this was get up.
V. 20. "Written in Hebrew, Greek, Latin." Hebrew was understood by Jews, Latin by Romans, and Greek by most of the other peoples. V. 21. "Write not, The King," etc. Jews were offended. They saw that Pilate had taken revenge upon them because they had forced him to act against his wish. They wanted the world to know that Jesus claimed to be, but was not by them acknowledged, King of the Jews. V. 22. "What I have written I have written." Pilate refused to change what he had written. It satisfied him that he had charged the Jews with executing their king.
V. 23. "Took His garments . . . four parts." The garments of the crucified one were awarded by law to those who crucified him. Jesus' cloak, cap, girdle and sandals were given one to each soldier, but the inner tunic, like the highpriest's robe, was woven entire, and to tear it would destroy its value, so they determined by casting lots—perhaps throwing dice—which one would receive this.
V. 24. "Scripture fulfilled." See marginal references in your Bible.
V. 25. The other Gospels tell that great numbers of the enemies of Jesus surrounded or passed by His cross, and mocked and jeered Him. John tells only of the heart-broken friends who gathered about, watching His last agony. "His mother's sister." Probably Salome, the mother of John.
V. 26. "The discipline . . . loved." John, "Woman." This was a respectful way of speaking. "Behold thy son! . . . Behold thy mother!." Thus He committed them to the care of one another. V. 27. "From that hour." From the time of Jesus' death. V. 28. "All . . . accomplished." All that God in human flesh could do to reveal Himself as the Lover and Saviour of men, had been done. He had traveled all the weary road any of His human children are called to travel "Scripture fulfilled." See marginal reference. "I thirst." Such wounds as are given a crucified one produce most terrible thirst. V. 29. "Vessel . . . vinegar." A jar of the sour wine the soldiers had brought to refresh themselves. "They." One of the soldiers. Having received the drink, Jesus cried out in a loud voice, then presently said (30), "It is finished," and His spirit returned to the Father.
Cross-Bearing for Christ.—At a large Sunday-school anniversary a boy of Jewish caste, with piercing eyes, in the midst of deep silence rose and repeated: "Jesus, I my cross have taken, all to leave and follow Thee," in a voice so thrilling as to move the whole audience. Many eyes were moist, for the story of the young Jew was known. His father had told him he must either leave the Sunday school or quit home forever, and the hymn showed what he had given up to follow Christ. The meeting was inspired with new life. Friends gathered round him at the close, and business men united in securing him a situation by which he could earn his own living. —Christian at Work.
Practical Points
V. 17. Let us rejoice to walk in the way of self-sacrifice, since there we can walk with Jesus.—Mark 8:34.
V. 18. The shameful cross is the Christian's most precious token.—Gal. 6:14.
V. 23. Jesus' character, like His robe, is without a flaw.—Heb. 7:26.
V. 24. Unconsciously, even the worst of men are working out Divine purposes.—Ps. 76:10.
V. 27. The tender ties of human relationship are legacies from God. We should love and care for each other for His sake.—Col. 3:18-22.
V. 30. Let us lovingly give our lives to Him who gave and gives His life for us.—2 Cor. 5:15.
Base. Indeed.
It is a base life to which nothing is real but the objects of sense.—Chicago Tribune.
FOR
SUNDAY
READING
SAVED IN SERVICE.
Forbid for me an easy place,
O God, in some sequestered nook,
Apart to lie
With folded hands, in quiet rest,
To doze and dream, and weaker grow,
Until I die.
Give me, O Lord, a task so hard
That all my powers shall tax be
To doze and dream,
That I may stronger grow in toil,
And fitted be, for service harder still,
Until I rest.
This my reward—development
From what I am, to what Thou art,
For this I plead:
Wrought out, by being wrought upon,
By deeds reflect, done in love,
For those in need.
-Charies C. Earle, in Service.
WHAT IS CHRISTIANITY?
An Answer as Given by Dr. John Watson (Ian Maclaren) in the Congregationalist.
It is to believe that at the heart of things there is a Power with a mind and a will, from Whom everything has come, and by Whom everything is sustained; Who is immanent in the universe, and specially inhabits the human soul; Who is directing everything to moral ends, and Whose character can be summed up in love. That Jesus Christ came from God and is in a sense peculiar to Him the Son of God, that He has declared the character of God to the human race, has broken the power of sin, and is the point of union between God and man.
It is to fight the lower self at the base of our nature, to give the supreme place to the soul, to carry the Cross of Christ in daily life, and to keep His Commandment of love, to forget one's self, and to think of others, to serve instead of ruling, to give instead of taking, to suffer instead of resisting.
It is to hope that in the long battle between right and wrong, right will conquer, that the things apparently evil are making for good, that the agony of suffering will end in the blessing of holiness, that God is working everything up into something better in this world and that which is to come, and that humanity will one day be raised to the perfection of Christ.
Faith, Hope and Charity; without the faith there can neither be the charity, nor the hope; without the charity the faith is not living; without the hope the charity is not crowned. The charity proves the faith and creates the hope—the greatest of these is charity. He who loves is therefore most surely a Christian.
A LAMB SCHOOL.
Missionary in Cesarea Gives an Interesting Glimpse of Life in That Sacred Land.
Rev. James L. Fowle, a missionary in Cesarea, Turkey, says: "A3 I was approaching a Turcoman village on the Angora road, I noticed a spot of white on the green sward that was going back and forth in what seemed to us an unaccountable manner. . . .
to us an unaccountable manner. . . .
We puzzled over the phenomenon for a long time, but in vain, till we reached the outskirts of the village. There we found it was a lamb school. They were teaching the lambs and kids to know and follow the voice of the shepherd. The boy that was to act as shepherd went before them either playing on his simple pipe or making a bur-r-ing noise with his lips and voice. On either side or behind were boys with slender switches with which they gently turned back stragglers or urged on laggards. And so back and forth, to right and to left, they were led until they got used to hearing and following the voice of the shepherd. And the hunger of the kids, too, helped in the lesson. Away off in the distance the flock of mothers—a mothers' meeting—could be seen slowly approaching the village. The little ones know that if they follow the shepherd's voice, sometime they will find a breakfast. . . . It is needless to say that 'school is dismissed about that time'
FIGS AND THISTLES.
Love is life's magnetism.
Happiness is heart health.
Serenity follows sincerity.
A bias is not a good basis.
Men never give flattery outright; it is always a loan.
He cannot lead men who has no time to listen to a child.
Praying for a man will soon take all envy out of the heart.
It takes a long while to feather a nest on a wild-goose chase.
The power of piety does not depend on its being painful.
People who ride the high horse will wear the big bandage.
The man who displays his doubts doesn't want them dissolved.
The richest life is the one that has been willing to lose all.—Ram's Horn.
Choosing God.
Those who choose God for their portion, who trust Him for salvation, love Him above all created objects, renounce worldly interests and connections for His glory, and count nothing too valuable to part with, too hard to do, or too sharp to suffer for His sake and to promote His cause, shall be honored by Him; but those who despise His authority, His salvation, His cause, in comparison with the interests, credit or pleasure of themselves will be dishonored.—Scott
you were left a widower?
He-Oh, I suppose pretty much the same as you would do if you were left a widow.
You wretch! And you always told me you could never love anybody else."—Pick-Me-Up.
Undisturbed
"Do you feel at all worried over the yellow peril?"
"Not now." replied the man who has hay fever. "I don't borrow trouble. The goldenen won't begin to blossom for three months." -Chicago Record-Herald
Back at Work Again.
Buffalo, N. Y., May 22nd.—(Special)—Crippled by kidney Disease till he could not stand on his feet for the hours required at his trade, F. R. McLean, 90 East Ferry St., this city, had to quit work entirely. Now he's back at work again and he does not hesitate to give the credit to Dodd's Kidney Pills.
"Yes," Mr. McLean says, "I was too bad, I had to quit. I could not stand on my feet for the necessary hours. It was Kidney Disease I had, and a friend advised me to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. I did so and after using six boxes am completely cured and am working as steadily as before I was sick. I recommend Dodd's Pills to anyone afflicted with Kidney trouble." There is no form of Kidney Disease Dodd's Kidney Pills will not cure. They always cure Bright's Disease, the most advanced and deadly stage of Kidney Disease.
Some men spend so much time in getting ready to die that they make a dismal failure of life.—The Commoner.
It Cures While You Walk.
Allen's Foot-Ease is a certain cure for hot, sweating, callous, and swollen, aching feet. Sold by all Druggists. Price 25c. Don't acceptany substitute. Trial package FREE, Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Don't believe the fellow who tells you what he would do if he were in your place.—N. Y. Times.
Given Away
on receipt of 20c to pay cost of postage and packing, a full-size $1.00 box of Dr Mowrey's "Stomach Tablets." They cure indigestion. STOMACHIC CO., Sturgis, Mich.
The nearer one gets to God the closer one gets to one's neighbor.
Lewis' "Single Binder" straight 5c cigar, made of extra quality tobacco. You pay 10c for cigars not so good. Lewis' Factory, Peoria, Ill.
If you feel like starting a little argument at home just spring that statistician's views about a woman being able to cloth herself with $85 a year.—Albany Times-Union.
The inventor of the rubber collar must have reasoned that a great many necks were waiting for something of that kind.—Chicago Tribune.
Art can hardly hope to compete with nature as long as Nature continues to work 24 hours a day.—Puck.
A self-made man sometimes works the short-change racket on himself.-Chicago News.
GRIP'S UGLY SEQUEL
GRIP'S UGLY SEQUEL
KNEES STIFF, HANDS HELPLESS, RHEUMATISM NEAR HEART.
Mrs. Van Scoy Experiences Dangerous After-Effects from Grip and Learns Value of a Blood Remedy.
The grip leaves behind it weakened vital powers, thin blood, impaired digestion and over-sensitive nerves—a condition that makes the system an easy prey to pneumonia, bronchitis, rheumatism, nervous prostration, and even consumption.
The story told by scores of victims of the grip is substantially the same. One was tortured by terrible pains at the base of the skull; another was left tired, faint and in every way wretched from anemia or scantiness of blood; another had horrible headaches, was nervous and couldn't sleep; another was left with weak lungs, difficulty in breathing and acute neuralgia. In every case relief was sought in vain until the great blood-builder and nerve-tonic, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, was used. For quickness and thoroughness of action nothing is known that will approach it.
Mrs. Van Scoy makes a statement that supports this claim. She says:
"I had a severe attack of grip and, before I had fully recovered, rheumatism set in and tormented me for three months. I was in a badly run-down state. Soon after it began I was so lame for a week that I could hardly walk. It kept growing steadily worse and at last I had to give up completely and for three weeks I was obliged to keep my bed. My knees were so stiff I couldn't bend them, and my hands were perfectly helpless. Then the pains began to threaten my heart and thoroughly alarmed me.
"While I was suffering in this way I chanced to run across a little book that told about the merits of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. The statements in it impressed me and bef me to buy a box. These pills proved the very thing I needed. Improvement set in as soon as I began to take them, and it was very marked by the time I had finished the first box. Four boxes made me a well woman."
Mrs. Laura M. Van Scoy lives at No. 20 Thorpe street, Danbury, Conn. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are equally well adapted for any other of the diseases that follow in the train of grip. They are sold by all druggists.
PAXTINE TOILET ANTISEPTIC FOR WOMEN troubled with lilies peculiar to their use, the disease is marvelously successful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs, stops discharges, heals inflammation and local soreness, cure leucorrhoea and nasal catarrh.
AVegetable Preparation for Assimilating the Food and Regulating the Stomachs and Bowels of
Promotes Digestion,Cheerfulness and Rest.Contains neither Opium,Morphine nor Mineral. NOT NARCOTIC.
Recipe of Old. Dr.SANUELPITCHER
Pumpkin Seed -
Alk. Vanat +
Ralula Salts -
Aprine Seed +
Parsminit -
Dr.Carbonate Sodix +
Worm Seed -
Copper Seed +
Wintergreen Flavor
Aperfect Remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms,Convulsions,Feverishness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Fac Simile Signature of
Charles H. Titchener
NEW YORK.
At 6 months old
35 DOSES - 35 CENTS.
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
Dietvs. Drugs
People Are Finding That Proper Food is Bottle Than Medicine.
A distinguished physician in a recent medical College said: "It is my cent of all human ailments arise pridiet would nearly put the physician on. If you desire a clear head and a sore mouth only please consult a dentist. All physicians and food experts agree factured is an ideal food. EGG-O-SO most wholesome of all flaked whel of the best white wheat thorou crisped bread by a hands and health, appetizing enjoyment a
A distinguished physician in a recent lecture before a class in an Eastern Medical College said: "It is my settled conviction that ninety percent of all human aliments arise primarily from the stomach. Proper diet would nearly put the physician out of business."
Egg-O-See is a food especially adapted
smaller towns and country districts because
of the abundance of rich cream at hand.
Nearly Everybody Eats It Now.
W. L. DOUGLAS
UNION MADE. $3.50 & $3.00 SHOP
W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are the great
world because of their excellent style, easy
wear, tight fit and low cost from $5.00 to $7.00. The only differ-
ent shoes we offer are shoes costing $3.00,
shape longer, wear longer and of great
other $3.50 shoes on the market today. W. L.
Douglas shoes are available in a
bottom of each shoe. Look for it. Take one
Douglas $3.50 shoes are sold through his
office where you live. W. L. Douglas shoes are at a
BETTER THAN OTHER MAKES at A
"For the last three years I have worn W. L. Douglas $3.50
only as good, but better than any shoe that I wear had,"
Chan. L. Karrer Act. Cashier The Capital National
Botts wear. W. L. Douglas $3.00 and $3.00
better, hold their shoes and wear longer than
W. L. DOUGLAS $4.00 SHOES CANNOT BE EQUAL
W. L. Douglas must Coinliterate in A $4.00
Coin is considered to be the finest patient lea-
fast COLOR EYELETS WILL NOT
W. L. Douglas has the largest shoe mail order
Kcats wear. W. L. Douglas $3.00 and $3.00
further information, write for illustrated Cyclops
W. L. DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS
Ask for a QUALITY
MERCAR
BEST BECAUSE You are not paying
VANA TOBACCO, EQUAL TO IMPORT
"305" and "Agents" 5c Cigars Are Leader
BEST BECAUSE You are NOT paying for BILL BOARDS, FENCE PAINTING, CLOCKS, FREE DEALS, etc., but for FINE QUALITY HAVANA TOBACCO, EQUAL TO INHALLED CIGARS. You are not up "305" and "Agents" 50 Cigars Are Leaders of the World. F. R. BICE M. C. CO., Manufacturers, ST. LOUIS.
ALL EMERGENCIES
IN
THE FAMILY
OR
ON THE FARM
FOR MAN
OR BEAST
SLOAN'S
LINIMENT
KILLS PAIN
KILLS GERMS
DR. EARL S. SLOAN,
615 ALBANY ST., BOSTON, MASS.
MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN
A Cure for Feverishness,
Constipation, Headache,
Rheumatism, Muscle
Disorders, and Destroy
Worms. They Break up Colds
Nurse in Chiln in 24 hours. At drugstore,
cbs.
dren's Home, Sample mail FREE, address
New York City. A.S. OLMSTED, Lo Roy, N.Y.
PATENTS 48-page book FREE
FITTERMALD & CO, Box K, Washington, D.C.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
Chat. H. Hitchcock.
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
A large package at any grocery
THE EGG-O-SEE co.
Quincy, Ill.
Recent lecture before a class in an East-
mary settled conviction that ninety per
primarily from the stomach. Proper
out of business."
strong body, the moral is plain that you
and beautiful foods.
agree that finked wheat properly manu-
-SEE is the purest, daintest and the
wheat foods. It is the whole grain
properly scam, cooked and then
properly flavored. There is
it and economy in every package.
ITY IS OUR MOTTO
CANTILE
10cts
Selling for BILL BOARDS, FENCE PAINTING.
REPAIRS, that for BIRD QUALITY HA
TERED CIGARS. Sold direct to the retailer br
ders of the World. | Manufacturers, - ST. LOUIS.
Dittmann's SHOES
FOR WOMEN
AND CHILDREN.
We Cater
to the trade of
Particular People.
It Has Become a Habit
with us to produce
GOOD SHOES.
You are urged to TEST OUR ABILITY.
Add your design for a pair of "D. K." shoes at
$2.00 Per Fair. We are willing you should
judge us upon their merit.
Booklet showing 80 styles on request.
DITTMANN SHOE CO.
SAINT LOUIS.
LIVE STOCK AND
MISCELLANEOUS
In your family, for sale at the lowest prices by
A. K. KEELLOGG N.S.EPAER CO., T2 W. 4dams St., Chicago
A. N. K.—B 2075
PISO'S CURE FOR
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
in time. Sold by drugrists.
CONSUMPTION
W. L. Douglas
makes and sells
more Men's
$3.50 shoes
than any other
manufacturer
in the world.
$10,000 REWARD to
any one who
carfdisprove this statement.