The Appeal
Saturday, May 26, 1900
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
THE APPEAL KEEPS IN FRONT
BECAUSE:
4-It is the organ of ALL Afro-Americans.
5-It is not controlled by any ring conquest.
6-It asks no support but the people.
MRS. HILDYARD'S CHOICE
VOL. 16. NO. 21.
UST 4 o'clock and Mrs. Hildayard's drawing room, in spite of sun blinds, was too warm for the finer phase of repose; he had cornered corners in town, as Havers had just remarked. Emerton, who had subsided without resistance into a great armchair, nodded. It was extremely cool, but it was cooler when Havers was not there. The two men were waiting for Mrs. Hildayard. She took a certain innocent delight in allowing people to cool their hair. She gave her a touch of pleasure to the men, waiting. The men always waited; sometimes the women went away. She did not mind that, however. She thought little of other women's opinions of her. From that it may be argued that she was young.
Mrs. Hildyard was young, she was four and twenty, and a widow. Her husband had been twice her age-a saturnine, large man, who made great sums of money. They had never been much love between them, but had been a kind of couldd friendship which made the two years of their married life move smoothly. When Hildyard died his widow mourned him sincerely; there was never any question of heartache. But when she was not less genuine because it permitted be perfectly cheerful six months after his death. But at this time she had been a widow for two years, and she considered life a very enthralling and beautiful dish. "It will dwell hot!" Havers said. "Yes, said Emerton, eying the other with.watchful care.
"I saw a horse down at Hyde Park corner; the poor brute was clean bowled over by the heat."
"It's bad enough weather for men," and Emerson. "It's killing for horses."
"Wet at Pettigrew's last night?" asked Havers.
"No, I couldn't go; had another engagement."
"I expected to see Mrs. Hildyard there."
"Ah," she said, Emerton, without turning at him.
At that moment Mrs. Hildyard came in. She greeted the two men with nicely balanced cordiality; she appeared glad to see them both, and made no secret of it. When she sat down to dispense tea they roused themselves.
"What were you discussing when I came in?" she asked. "Or were you both asleep?" she said, "Havers, "that I expected to see you at the Pettigrews last night."
"I had another engagement," she said. The faltest glance of understanding passed between her and Emerton. Havers intercepted it, and then carefully examine the toe of his boot. He sat in the night at the Lyceum was very crowded." he said.
"It was," said Mrs. Hildyard. "I was there. My uncle, who is a great first nighter, said he had never seen such a crush before." Again a glance passed between Mrs. Hildyard and Emerton; this time Havaers missed it. "It was," said Mrs. Hildyard. "It's become the right thing to say," said Emerton: "it doesn't do any one any harm." "Don't it strike you as foolish to keep on saying a thing that obviously can't be said?" said Mrs. Hildyard. "No," said Emerton. "Why should it?" The world's too old to relapse into strict truthfulness at this time of day. We're always saying things that obviously can't be said. "Oh, yes, in other matters. I suppose a man never looks at a woman without saying or looking something not quite the truth; it's always a little more or a little less." "That quite true," said Mrs. Hildyard. "Will you have some more tea, Mr. Havaers?" "Don't think it is true," Emerton said. "It depends on your man." "And depends on your Havaers." "In time," said Mrs. Hildyard, "you might both become philosophers."
"When a man becomes a philosopher," said Havers, in the slightly sensuous sensuality that always annoyed Mrs. Mildred,yard. "Youth is never philosophical, and what good is wisdom to an old man." "It's a great deal of good," said Mrs. Bindley. "Think of-think of-Herbert Hillary." Havers wavers a decreptery hand. "Herbert Spencer is not a philosopher," he said. Emerton smiled, and in the pause that followed let his eyes rest on Hillary. She certainly the daintest of women, he thought. She had a birdlike pulse ofose, alert and gracious; a complexion that showed the blood as clearly as fine porcelain lattes through the glimmer which makes a man think russet tings which makes a man think orchards and open air. He was not at all
sure that Mrs. Hildyard cared greatly for him; his experience of life seemed so much broader than that he could not be sure of his own. He was only a year older than she, so that he had no advantage there. Havers, on the other hand, had had a more varied life. He seen the world under many eyes. He was a great poet, and he had won the confidence of men in high places. And in spite of certain reservations Emerton admired and liked him. "By the way," said Emerton, "I have always been a great teacher. We wednesday. "Die Melsingerst-De Resake, you know. I thought, Mrs. Hildyard, that perhaps you'd like to go." "I should love," said Mrs. Hildyard, "so next Wednesday. You have already seen the Harmarket with me and Col. Oliver," said Havers quietly.
The faintest blush rose to Mrs. Hildy-
yard's cheeks.
"of course!" she said. "Forgive me for forgetting. Then I'm afraid I must miss 'Die Mesteringer' this time, Mr. Emerson. I bowed and played with his cup. He told Havers had scored, and he could not grudge him a temporary victory.
"If you are very anxious to hear De Kersmawk how hard he was after a pause, 'pray cancel your engagement with me and go.'"
Emerson glanced at him quickly; the man was perfectly sincere. Emerson felt ready to have a generous admiration for him. He consulted his own heart and found
that he would not have had so unselfish a regard for his lady's hanness.
"Do Reskez will be singing again," he said, "and Mrs. Hildyard can arrange another evening. The Haymarket closes on Thursday; it would be a pity to miss the chance." It cost him an effort to say it, but not look at Mrs. Hildyard as he spoke.
"I should not think of breaking my engagement with you!" Mrs. Hildyard said to Havers decidedly.
When Emerton left that afternoon he felt distinctly unhappy. He went to his car, had a cold bath, and smoked four cigars. He had no self-conceit, and he felt that on the whole, Havers was a better man than himself. This conclusion decided him to hurry matters, for, although he acknowledged Havers to be the better man, he had no intention to play into his hands. He had no intention to play into the chances lay, not on the knees of the gods, but on the lips of Mrs. Hildyard.
Soon after her visitors were gone, and when Mrs. Hildyard's pretty brows were wrinkled with thought, Col. Oliver entered the room. He was Mrs. Hildyard's whisker, who was a man of great comfort and comfortable existence in the not unpleasant task of steering his niece through the shoals of young widowhood. His theory of life was of the simplest—to trust no woman, to look upon every man, to be a friend of all enemies, for diplomatic purposes, as friends. His practice was otherwise, for he trusted all women like a child; he was simple and tender in his friendship, and he had not an enemy in the world. Old men, old women, old lans, and any man might have made love to Mrs. Hildyard under his very nose without his being conscious of it. "Who were your visitors?" he asked. She told him. "They come here pretty often, don't they." Not oftenter than other people." "Ah!" he said. I like 'em both. Havers is clever, Emerton dashed pleasant. I've thought one or twice they were getting rather fond of you. Nelle," he said, not always thinking the most foolish things!"
"I don't blame em, dear child. If I were a young man, and not your uncle, I should want to marry you; I'm not sure that you could be trusted more than any other man, but you will probably will marry them might do worse." Mrs. Hildyard was thinking again, and hardly heard what the colonel was saying. "Don't forget," she said, "that on Wednesday we go to the Haymarket with Mr. Havers. And do remember to put on a shirt, not one of those old things you're so fond of." In my day, he grumbled. But if you remind me again on Tuesday I will see about it." "And you might let me have my diamonds for that evening," she said. He opened his eyes and looked at her under the table, but he was too wise to question her.
Emerton did not hurry matters, but by Wednesday evening he had worked himself up to such a pitch of excitement that there was nothing for it but to get on the bus. He was racher late, but by good fortune he secured a stall, and took his place in a rapidly-filling house. The orchestra was half through the overture, and before he could discover Mrs. Hilyardy with him, the obedient colonel. He began to feel uncomfortable; perhaps he had repented, after all, and had not come, just as she had escaped from the Pettigrets to go to the Lyceum with him and the obedient colonel. Perhaps he had felt uncomfortable and renew his offer; perhaps by this time she was very angry with him; perhaps she had chosen to put him out of her mind altogether. and he and all of his hopes were to be cast adrift. He was in a muse looking vaguely at a picture; only a detached phrase here or there made any impression on his brain, and when the end of the first act came he was in a museum, and ever, he sat down again, fully alive. Two rows in front of him he had caught sight of Mrs. Hilyardy's beautiful and animated profile; and her left sat Col. Oliver, on her right Haven. An ironic conversation, in the gallery caused her to turn around. She saw Emerton, recognized him with a little book and flicker of the eyelids, and went on talking quietly to Havers. Havers, on his part, was speaking very quietly, and his shoulders indicated effort. At intervals he glanced in his companion like one who wishes covertly to see the effect of a story on his auditor. Emerton felt uncomfortable; he could not hear, but he had rather felt the feeling of an eavesdropper and began to wish he had not come.
But he waited to the end of the second act, and then to the end of the third. Mills Hildyard looked particularly brilliant, and then he stood on the throne for the star was strong in him. He was not jealous of Havers; he only enveloped his seat that was all. It was a fair game, and he was prepared to play it aquarily. He wondered how Havers was cultivating his opportunity cleverly, he made no doubt. He resolutely refused to watch them, and succeeded in getting a faint impression of what the fourth act was about.
As the theater emptied, he managed to reach Mrs. Hildyard's side.
I thought you were going to Covent garden," she said.
"So I was," he said, "if you had been able to go," I came where I could see you."
"If you were so anxious to see me," she said, "you might have called." "I'm coming to see you to-morrow morning," he said.
"And I thought enough you had decided about it long ago."
"So I did. I decided three days ago." "Why to-morrow particularly?" "For an unimportant reason," he said, "but it pleased my conscience. Good night." He nodded to Havers and Col. Oliver and slipped away.
He called on Mrs. Hilyard. He assured himself that he was perfectly cool—and so he was until his hand was on the knocker; he went to pieces. The collapse was so unexpected that he incontinently thought of flight. That, however, being impossible, he was nervous between the front door and the back door.
This he did by the net unseen then or
THE APPEAL.
CLARK OF MONTANA
FROM GOV. SMITH OF MONTANA
FROM SENATE
INDEPENDENCE COMMITTEE
REHSE
THE PROVERBIAL NINE-LIVED POLITICAL CAT.
THE PROVERBIAL NINE-LIVED PGLITICAL CAT.
drifting into recklessness. For a time the careful reserve of Mrs. Hildyard's demeanor kept him in strangling check; but all at once his discretion snapped like a dry twig.
"I can't keep it any longer!" he blurted in love. You love it. If you me to go away, I will not in not in the least clever; but if you only in the least clever, I'll." He broke off. There was a most becoming moisture in Mrs. Hildyard's eyes; her hair had a tremulous softness make Emerton suddenly look up. "I'll be a man for you, or make a name for me. Do you think I should love you any better if you did? I will marry you-as you are."
She rose as she spoke, and Emerton sped him. And had her in his arms before he could speak a word. His victory had been so easy that it dazed him. To possess the desired a heart was almost too rich a concession. The shocked wet-wet with the happiest tears.
"Last night," said Emerton said a little later, as they sat hand in hand like children, as I was watching you I thought you could be a terrible thing it would be to lose you-to know that you would never come any nearer to me."
"You mustn't think about such things any more. Here is Col. Oliver. Tell him later. In the day Emerton met Haven. The latter was rather downcast, but he welcomed the other quite cordially. Emerton that he was engaged to Mrs. Hilldayard.
"It was it." Havers said. "I proposed to her myself last night, and was refused. It was at the end of the second act." "Poor old chap!" Emerton said. "I'm worried." "I shall get over it," Havers said, a little weary.
"I gave you a fair chance, didn't I?"
RELEASE
THE PRO
naked Emerton, eagerly. "I never saw her after that afternoon last week. I guessed how things were going, and I knew how much I had to wait to-day. If you had won last night—" "But I didn't. Thank you, though, for doing what you did. It was generous of you, and I would have done it. I would have done the same. I ask you to believe that, although the chance never came." "I do believe it." They shook hands and laughed. He wove in best he might, and Emerton to walk on air. But the more Emerton thought of his defeated rival the more he liked him, and the conviction grew that he was a man. Charles Kennett Burrow in the Sketch.
The Generally Accepted Emblem Originated by a Union Officer. Of course, the wear the button of the Confederate Veterans' association very few know that the design on the button was first drawn by a Union officer. The destroyer, who is well known here as a lace scape artist and illustrator, and he drew the original design without any idea that it would ever be officially adopted by the Navy, is how the matter came about, as Lester Shurff told the story:
A few days before the first battle of Bull Run he was sent out on a scouting expedition with a small party of men of the Naval brigade, Ninety-ninth New York Coast guard, in which organization he was sent. He was to make a report on the
"Very likely not," agreed the other, but this isn't anything that you need trouble your conscience about. Gen. Baumgartner's little daughter is a great
"I wonder if you could design a sort of patriotic emblem for me," I said. "I want to show you some amusing, "I suspect that your idea and amuse of what a patriotic emblem is wouldn't
At that time the Confederates were not well turned with prison quarters for captives. Jabir person not having been captured, the prisoner brought up in the Richmond prisonyard where he had little to eat, but was treated very kindly. Biff weak from the affliction, wounds he was unable to talk about while lying on his cot in making drawings for his own amusement and for the officers' education of the soldiers. The officers got bows and ballets for him, and he made up to them. One day one of the officers who had been very kind to him came to his cot and said:
million of the country in front of the Union chum of him and I promised her I'd up some sort of a painting of a Confederate flag for her to hang on the wall. I've been trying to think up something, as a designer I'm no use. So it occurred to me that you might help out "me."
The军官 could help you to aid him as soon as the woman to him Richmond where he had the hospital care.
"Why, of course, I'll be glad to do what
I can," said Lieut. Shurffle. "Give me a
CLARK
OF
MONTANA
FROM
GOV. SMITH
OF MONTANA
OVERBIAL NINE-LIVED PGLIT
few days' time and I'll get something done in water, colors."
done in water colors."
Giving out his paints he set to work to paint his paintings with the aid of the artist, became deeply absorbed in the matter of the design, working all that day and getting up early the next morning to continue the task, discarding one of his paintings. He designed a design that suited him. This was the St. Andrew's cross in blue on a 'red ground, with minor ornamentations of stars. He finished it up handsofmly in water colors and turned it over to his wife, who was sitting with it and brought back word that little Miss Beauregard was highly delighted and was going to implore her father to let the Yankee gentleman who had made him a captain of the Navy Shurtleff was transferred to Liberty prison, and in 1823 was exchanged. He forgot about the design for the time. A year or so later it was called to his attention and he purchased a furnished Confederate battle flag consisting of his design almost exactly as he had painted it. Still later he saw an official flag of the Confederate States of America for his design, for it formed the entire corner of the ensign. Naturally the artist was not pleased with his friend, the Confederate officer, who had put him in the position to design flags for the enemies of his country.
From what he has learned since, however, Liseut. Shurtleff is inclined to be. He seems to be. It seems that Gun. Beaugrard saw the painting which had been given to his daughter, and on an evening he about it was taken to the studio, and belonged to her personally. He says
gested that she present it to her country, and after some consideration she agreed, stipulating that the original be returned the flag was then reproduced in cloak Gen. Beauregard had adopted as the battle-flag of the Confederacy. Just how much the Confederacy drew into the official flag Leut. Shurftief decided the close of the war the Southern Associations of Veterans adopted the original flag for their button, and all the Confederates used now wear that design with some slight modifications or additions. Meantime Shurftief would be interested in finding out the exact color of the adoption of his water color as the basis for the national flag of the Confederacy was brought about. There is probably no doubt that he could enlighten him, but he doesn't know where to come at the information. New York Sun
McMullen's Queen Accident. A brief telegram the other day recited to one James McMullen had lost an arm and machine in a laundry at Hutchinson. He had story related about the accident by the Hutchinson News: "McMullen stopped at the at wringer and held his hands over to dry them. He got one hand too low to dry them. The catchment caught it, and his arm from the elbow was taken off by a miracle. The wringer circular from affair, with a smaller bowl inside it in which the clothes are placed. The smaller apartment is perforated with upon the sides, and the whole thing revolves around the thousand revolutions a minute. The efface the air currents within the wringer are as terrific in their power as the center section of a Kansas cyclone." When a brick building and hurls it to atoms the amplifying and incomprehensible. The accession by McMullen was equally mystifying. The instant his arm came into contact with the current of air it was parted at the arm in the clothes that were in the machine and other dangled from his shoulder. There was a talking about the machine to give him a even
FROM
SENATE
INVESTIGING
CHARTREUSE
scramt. The move exhibited by McMullen was wonderful. "It never touched me," was the first thing he said. The girls in the room were screaming, and McMullen came to them that he was not his head that he made take off them to be still. He was taken to a hospital and his arm was amputated close to the shoulder."
EMINENT ENTITIES.
Col. Charles Long, a pioneer plainman, is dead in Kansas from a stroke from Germany in 1847. He came to America from Germany in 1847. He served in the Civil War, and Mrs. Lazarus Crawford, given birth to twin girls, joined together like the famous Shamus twins. The infants did not survive. The official Zeitung of Vienna danced with the Austrian Stephanie of Austria to Count Elemner Loayg. Judge Benjamin Wullis, a pioneer Missouri lawyer, was born in Kestuckt in 1850, and went to Postmaster General Smith was the guest of the St. Louis Commercial club last night and company Development and Commercial Expansion."
Bryan returned to Lincoln yesterday after a visit to the University, and main until Tuesday, when he starts for a month out of the Northwest and Pacific Coast. George Bartholomew, who was managing editor of the thirty years, died at the Lakewood Lake. N. J., yesterday from general debility. He was fifty years old.
After having been forty-four years in the office of a telegraph operator, Miss Elizabeth Carter, a telegraphist, will be placed on the company's payroll and will be placed on the company's first message calling for images at that time. The company will send an envelope to Miss Carter for an image.
MURDER HIDDEN BY FIRE
"A
GREAT many stories
been told of exciting
burning of the Planters
hotel in St. Louis.
old-time. Mississippi river traveler, who was in New York a few days ago looking after business interests which became important, could enable him to retire, some years ago. He was in the party I was in that night; he continued, "really cared about telling our experience after we learned how tragical the fire was that day," and this particular story has ever been told."
Harvey was one of four veteran sports who sat in a back room umpiring slipping their whisky and water, and smoking cigars as they talked over the adventures of their earlier days. The talk had drifted with the insinuations of the poker table, as it often did, and the three stirring tales. Harvey mentioned the famous fire
There were five of us playing poker that night, he said, "in a room on the fourth floor of the hotel, where we had pet by appointment, for the game had been a fight, and was to be a fight to the finish, with more or less bad blood between two of the players. This feeling which we all knew was liable to break in on a fight, was to be intensified by the circumstances of a game in which we had all played three weeks before on one of the river packets between Memphis and Natchez. Card playing on the river, even when it was intensified by the scandal of the great games and of the occasional tragedies that followed them had made many of the stealthy capitals careful. Still there was considerable playing and occasionally a stiff fight, and one of the greatest spokes of
"I had gone down the river with Charlie Upton, who was a speculator in almost anything, from a cotton crop to a monkey flush, but who was never a professional. There was on the boat, however, and the regular man, the registrar, the军官, who followed no other industry but card playing, and spent most of his time on the boats. I played then, as often as I had time and opportunity, and we had one or two sittings before the Memphis Hopkins who followed travelers who had no heavy play. At Memphis," says the narrator, as reported in the New York Sun, "the twoe get off and Maurice Jennings and Peggie Hopkins got on the boat. Jennings was in town very well. He had just sold some property in Memphis, as I learned afterward, and had considerable money with him. Hopkins was a gambler whom I had never seen before. I had never seen him, and Peggie who was not above suspicion, though he had never, so far as I know, been caught in an crooked play. For that matter, there wasn't a professional on the river who was above suspicion, so he stood at the fraternity house, and on account of Jennings having the roll with him, for the Jennings keep the roll of such things, and Jennings was known as a heavy player from Memphis to New Orleans. Hopkins' nickname comes from being a leg shy, and I suppose likely it was so.
"Harris and Hopkins, as I learned afterward, had had trouble some time before about a boy who played fast and loose ended to a girl about each other at sight. Before there had been any shooting done, however, she had gone down the river with a third man, and I suppose neither that neither one could. That neither one could get. There was sufficient hatred between them, however, to keep them from playing into each other's hands at poker, which was probably doubt if any one of us would have stayed out of the game that followed, even if we had suspected them. We were all brash enough to take our chances with any one of us, but we were all good players. How do I know they didn't stand in? Well, perhaps I don't know it, but I don't think they did, and the subsequent proceedings seemed to be very well planned. I really joined me when he came on board, and as Hopkins really had an acquaintance with him, it was not strange that we five sat down together that night. We ended up there were cards and chips on the table.
"That game lasted all night, and the climax came just as the negroes came into the main saloon, where we sat, to prepare the tables for breakfast. We went to the saloon, and which lasted stakes, they call it nowadays—and each man had fassed a thousand at the start. I dropped the last of mine about midnight, and I which lasted me through, and I which lasted loser. Upton won about two thousand, He was hucky at most things, but he wasn't in the big fights of that game, his priests were small compared with those in the big fights, who dropped all he had, which was about five thousand, and Harris won over twenty thousand, leaving Jennings the big loser with a sixteen-thousand-dollar hole in his own capital, and the play which had intensified the hatred between the two gamblers. Hopkins had followed Jennings in the hope of setting away with his money, and to his own capital also in the struggle, enough to soray any man. It was evident, too, that Harris had done all he could to weaken Hopkins' play by aggravating his own capital, by peppering fellow and once or twice I thought he had break, out, and perhaps shoot, but he himself in hand, though the gleam of his eyes told that he was angry, which was not the case, he said nothing, however, even when Hopkins on his left, ostentatiously counted the cards twice after Hopkins had dealt. Of course, it is any player's right to count how it was done showed that Hopkins trying to instigate a doubt as to whether Hopkins was holding out. It was a square game, though, and no phenomenal success, but Jennings was perfectly satisfied that his hatred was of bad luck, and so were Upton and I. What the two gamblers thought, of course I don't know, but there was not nothing contrary, and when Jennings and Hopkins knew that it was with the understanding, they should meet at St. Louis later, as we did, for another set-to.
*Naturally, we were all prepared for
$2.40 PER YEAR.
"Upton was the first to open his wallet, he played a flush against a full that he caught on a three-card draw, and trailed him. Jennings himself was badly beaten on another full soon after, and he produced a roll in turn. We all followed Hopkins, and the play got heavier right the second time, and it thousand on the table, and it was fifty to play each time. Such a game as that is likely to break a bank, and if any one of had grown careless he would have gone to jail. But longer we played the closer we watched one another, and if any bluff was done the bluffer was not caught. The cards were not was not often that two extra good hands were played and playing to the real value of the cards as we did mostly, we all kept alive for an astonishing time. I, for one, was beaten and felt the strain so much that I was drawing of drawing out when the end came.
"There was a jackpot, and the deal had gone around twice before it was opened, in the pot when it over five hundred in the pot when I拿到了 a strong enough hand for me to want competitors, so I opened it for five hundred. To my disgust Jennings, Harris had taken it over five hundred, boosted it five hundred. I stayed with reluctance. Jennings dropped out, with a pair of nines, as he afterward told me, "I was going to win the struggle. Upton was dealing. I drew to the strength of my hand. Harris took one and Hopkins patod put it. He was a hard preposition. I looked at my draw and I saw it. I was one one chip. Harris, knowing that Hopkins would raise, also 'chipped. Hopkins pushed out a chip and a $200 note, and just then somebody in the house-I was yelled "Fier!"
"None of us moved, but the darkly hooted for the door and disappeared. We never saw him again. I skimmed my hand over to make sure that it was not a knife, but a fork, in his hand, or pretended to, for a little, and then raised five hundred. Hopkins came back at him with a thousand more, and we knew the fight of the game was on. Harris raised it a thousand after a little change, and Hopkins came back at him once more.
"By this time there was an uproar in the house, and we could hear shouts and confusion from the street also, but none of us stirred. I felt uneasy, and thought to myself that I was a fool to sit still, and I was a fool to stand still, me, and I was determined to see the hand played out. Upton and Jennings both told me later that they had the same thought. Before Harris made his next play there was a pounding on the door and some people were shouting and fire. There was a spring lock on the and the outside couldn't open the door, but he tried the knob and shouted loud enough to wake the dead. Still, strange as it seems, we sat still. It would only be a small change, we thought, to set the hand.
"Harris called and then threw down a jack full on seven. One of the sevens was a club. Hopkins showed an eight hand, and he was the one. We were all rising from the table, when Hopkins, with a lightning-like movement, seized the deck and throwing it on the table face up, spread the cards with the hand and picked out a seven of clubs.
"You held out that seven," he said with an oath, and pulling his revolver into the hand and reached for the money with his left.
"Harris was even quicker than he. His hand was still, and as Hopkins lifted his he fell back, he ran. Then, pocketing the money, the door for the door.
"It was high time to go. The room was already filling with smoke. Jennings and I both ran, and the murderer, but he still had his revolver in his hand, and as he raised it we both realized that there was no time for a gun. Upon had turned to Hopkins and found a dead, or at least that he seemed to be."
"I reckon it's time to look out for ourselves," said Jennings, and we rushed out, following Harris, who had gone already, and got out I don't know. I have a confused face, and I smoke and down stairs; then of more stairs, and finally of jumping from a window somewhere. I broke my knee and fainted and came to in a hospital. When Jennings and Upton came around, they said that Harris' body had been identified, that he had been found in the half-burned clothes that still hung to him. When the bills had been burned or stolen with the gold there was no telling. Neither could any one have identified Harris had held out a card, or whether Harris had had the duplication seven of clubs. As both men were dead we concluded it was not worth while to tell the story."
Defective Page
The St. James Gaetze, in telling how Queen Victoria presented Lady Roberts the Victoria Lady Roberts, told the queen her magically handed her a small parcel, mying: "Here is your hand, and I am your own hand, and that I beg you to open until you get home." When Lady Roberts found it to contain the Victoria cross, she was immediately sworn in.
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Giving money is entrusted through the mail. It is almost sure to wear a hole through the envelope and be lost, or it may be stolen. Postage must be silver to us in letters do so at their own risk.
Marriage and death notices, tea lines or less Advertising rates, 15 cents per agate line, information in an inch and about seven agate lines in an inch, and about seven lines in line. No single advertisement less than 11. No single advertisement less than three months contract, cash less than three orders from parties unknown to us. Further particulars on application.
Exchanging money. Cash line, each inception. No discounts for time or space. Reading matter is set in brevier type--about six inches to the line. No read count counts.
The date on the address label shows best sub-scription expires. Renewals should be made to subscribers are lost or stolen, so that a paper may be missed. The expiration stops with a time out. It normally happens that papers -ent to subscribers are lost or stolen, not receive any when due, infirm us may be missed at the expiration of five days from the date of the expiration to ward a duplicate of the missing number.
Communications to receive attention m. be newsy, upon important subjects, plainly write only upon one side of the paper; must read twice, and not later than Wednesday, and hear the signature of the author. No manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for postage.
We do not hold ourselves responsible for the errors of our correspondence. Where. Write Solicitation. Where. Write for terms. Sample copies free.
In every letter that you write never fail to name the office and address, plainly写 letters, post office address, and plainly letters of all kinds must be written on separate sheets from letters containing news or matter of publication. Enter as second class matter
AGENTS WANTED.
THE APPEAL wants good reliable agents to canvass for subscribers at points not already covered. Write for our extraordinary inducements. Address.
THE APPEAL,
St Paul Minn.
Evidently the fool killer hasn't visited New York City recently as Bourke Cochran and Rev. (?) Henry Frank are still alive. At Montgomery, Ala., recently, Cochran advocated the repeal of the Fifteenth amendment and now Frank says:
"The most deplorable social situation which a civilized and intelligent people has ever deliberately brought upon itself is witnessed today in the relation of the Southern Negro to his environment. His native sluggishness, his imperceptible improvement since liberation, his startling lapse into barbarism, all must incline thinking people to conclude that the freeing of the Negro has proved a disastrous failure. A country should be set apart to which all Negroes would be permitted voluntarily to migrate and there yield themselves as slaves to such persons as would agree to possess them, give them humane treatment and education."
Don't all speak at once, but let's see how many will thus "voluntarily migrate?"
And now another solution, of two problems, Gen. A. G. Greenwood, sol-
RICHARD YATES
Republican Candidate for Governor of Illinois.
RICHARD YATES
Republican Candidate for Governor of Illinois.
dier, capitalist and traveler, thinks he has solved two difficult problems now before the people of the United States for solution—the problem of the Afro-American in the South and what to do with the Philippines. He would solve both by sending the Afro-Americans to the Philippines. Gen. Greenwood affirms they would be glad to go, that the climate is admirably suited to them and that they and the Filipinos would soon fraternize and mingle, while the education the Afro-Americans have received in this country would enable them to become rich and influential in the East.
every attack of the Colonel should lose to work upon the exe the Courier-Journal s
With coffee down pound, as against n 1895, there has not be in the cost of this brury under President ministration.
Dispatches from Augusta, Ga., tell us that "grave disturbances will develop as a consequence of the appointment of eleven Afro-American men and three Afro-American women as census enumerators. Any number of law-abiding, representative Augusta men have openly announced that "niggers shall never enter their homes in an official capacity." If it is always some "law-abiding" Southerner who is ready to trample the law under foot.
Every newspaper editor in the United States who desires to study facts in relation to the prosperity and panic periods of the country should secure copies of the speeches delivered in the House of Representatives May 3, 1900, by Hon. John F. Lacey, of Iowa, and on May 10 by Senator J. H. Gallinger, of New Hampshire. They contain many interesting statements and will be useful for reference during the next few months.
The democratic papers are urging the Boers to emigrate to America. The St. Louis-Globe Democrat says they will be welcome, but advises them to allow the names of their towns to remain at home. We suggest that they also leave on the dark continent their ideas about the treatment of Negroes.
Genl. Cronje and his brother Boers at St. Helena are very much disgusted because black soldiers have been set to keep guard over them. It is a fitting retribution for the Negro-hating people who have heaped wrongs upon the defenceless natives because they were black.
Colonel Watterson says his newspaper will support the Democratic nominees this year and is prepared to meet
RISHOP M. M. MOORE
African Methodist Episcopal Church
THE APPEAL A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER
every attack of the opposition. The Colonel should lose no time in going to work upon the excellent arguments the Courier-Journal set forth in 1896.
With coffee down to $7 \frac{1}{2}$ cents a pound, as against nearly 18 cents in 1895, there has not been much increase in the cost of this breakfast table luxury under President McKinley's administration.
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HARRIET BEECHER STOWE.
Booker Washington's fame is beginning to rest on a solid foundation. The patent medicine man now uses his portrait in an after-taking ad.
The Democratic platform-makers will soon be making room for a little sympathy for the Sultan of Turkey.
Mr. W. A. Gaines, of Lexington, Ky., has been elected delegate at large to the Philadelphia convention.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
SCHOOL OF PHYSICAL
SCIENCES
AND TECHNOLOGY
OF AMERICA
WEST BROOK, NY 10470
HOW THIS NOTED GAME TO BE WRITTEN.
Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe, the Author,
Said in the Last Days of her Eventual
Life, "God Wrote it. I Merely did his Dictation.
If there is anything in foreordination Harriet Beecher Stowe was predestined to write "Uncle Tom's Cabin." She did not intend to do it. She said that "For many years of her life, she avoided all reading upon or allusion to the subject of slavery." But in Cincinnati it was thrust upon her at every turn.
An incident which increased her interest in the problem of freedom was the coming to Walnut Hills of a family from the far South, who for conscience sake had separated themselves from the associations of their lifetime and sought a home in the then unbroken forests on the banks of the Ohio. Here the Ticheners and Overakers, members of aristocratic English descent, for themselves a home in the southern style, dared those really dual estates of which so many now crown the banks of the Ohio and the crests of Cincinnati's hills. This family brought with them a retinue of house servants in order to set them free. They were scattered among the various families of this lovely vicinity, some being employed at one time or another in Professor B. and some in that of his next neighbor, a profane in the seminary. One of these neighbors has said that she has seen Mrs. Stowe sit whole afternoons watching the children of the two families and the young blacks at play.
It was then and there' that Mrs. Stowe saw Topsy and took her conical likeness in unfading colors. Topsy was a stray bit of ebony humanity that, in some unrecorded way, came to be one of the children perched on the porticos of the Overaker mansion in New Orleans, where the family had a home, or hung around the university, or played with the dogs on the Tichene campus at Natchez. She was such a little imp of darkness that "that limb was past saving'" and so she was left among the field hands, who were to work out
HARRIET BEECHER STOWE,
their freedom there on the plantation at Natzche. But the case of the abandoned wail appealed to the sympathy of Mrs. Stowe's neighbor, and the elfish Topsy was brought North and placed in the family of the young professor to be trained for service. It must be confessed that the effort to develop her into a reasonable being was not a shining success. Joan-for that was her real name—drifted into the abandoned stratum of Cincinnati life, and was seen no more by her former friends till the day of Mrs. Tich-berkelman. Black Sam, also he, of the "observeration faculty," was at service in the same hall, but he will be best remembered by the set putting the beechnut under Halley's saddle when they were about to start after Eliza. Others of the small fry named were members of the same groun.
It was at Walnut Hills also that Mrs. Stowe knew the original of "Ucle Pete" in "Dred," or Nina Gordon, as it was afterwards called. He was then an old man, known as "Colored Williams," and he certainly was of as "fellow fashion," and deepest a black dye as mortal flesh. He could take a faithful old soul who took care of the Peyton children and always spoke of himself and them as "We Peyton folks," so this devoted retainer of the professors' families for odd jobs always spoke of himself and them as "we seminary folks." Peace to his gates! He died a few years ago, Walnut Hills, aged it, was sold, 112 years.
In 1850 Dr. Stowe had accepted a professorship at Bowdin, and was living in Brunswick when the fugitive slave law of that year was passed. This was the final fire which set the colors of Mrs. Stowe's resolution to write something "which should hold up to the world as a dramatic reality." She chose a form of a story, knowing well that
Not for fame's sake did she write, but that she might execute the commission which the Divine Gulde, by the nature of her genius and culture and by the circumstances of her life.
HON. ROBERT SMALLS.
Ex-congressman from South Carolina. Congress has just passed a bill to pay him $3,000 for his capture of the Confederate steamer Planter of Charleston during the slaveholder's rebellion.
had laid upon her. The intense absorption of her theme held her away from every other interest, for circumstances were never less favorable to the execution of a great work. She was then in the midst of heavy domestic cares, with a young infant, and with a party of pupils in her family to whom she was imparting lessons daily with her own children, but the reality was so much more intense a reality than the other earthly thing that the weekly浸習 was about. Dr. Bailey's National Era never failed. Once Mr. Jewett, who was to publish it, wrote to ask her not to make it too long, as the subject was not a popular one. Mrs. Stowe replied that she did not make the story, that the story
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made itself, and that she could not stop till it was done. This feeling increased in intensity to the end. It is even said that in these last days of her life she has said, "God wrote it. I merely did His dictation." -Eleanor P. Allen in Lippincott's.
Look up Your Property
Editor The Appeal: Through your paper I wish to call the attention of your readers as far as possible to the Census Bureau is planning to make a special effort during the taking of the Census June to find the exact amount of property of every description that is owned by Afro-Americans. This means a great deal to us as a people, as we will be
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very largely judged by the world by the result. It is of the utmost importance that each individual member of the race in every part of the country begin at once to make a careful list of the amount and value of the property that he owns so as to be ready to give it at once to the census taker. It is also important that as far as possible ministers and teachers call the attention of the people to this matter as far in advance as may be thought best.
Of Head and Second Walters' Association at Pittsburgh, Pa., May 28.
The convention of the National Head and Second Walters' Beneficial Association meets in Pittsburgh, Pa., Monday, May 28, at Bethel A. M. E. church. Its purpose is to devise ways and means to improve modern dining room service, and for the transaction of such business as may be helpful to members of the profession. On the evening of Wednesday, May 30, a banquet will be given at Masonic hall, Allegheny, for all the delegates and their friends. The officers of the national association are: H. Coart, Dayton, O. president; E. T. Coart, Dayton, O. president; I. B. Goins, Rockford, Ill., secretary; C. H. McCard, Pittsburgh, treasurer. The local committee arranging for the accommodation and entertainment of those attending the convention consist of Thomas Lloyd, H. Pettigrew, C. H. McCard, J. T. Gilbert, George Hobb, Alphonso Parr, George Williams.
WHAT WHITE MEN THINK OF U3.
It is necessary for the race to understand what Southern white men think of the race in New York Age of Thursday, May 17, obtained full report of the Montgomery conference, filling two pages, including opinions of the New York daily papers, articles by John E. Miholland, Booker T. Washington, Judson W. Lyons, P. B. S. Pinchback and others. Single copies may be obtained by sending 5 cents to The Age, 4 Cedar street, New York.
"Poor old Snubbins has had a hard time of it. He has been sick for a year, his baby died last week, and the furniture man has called in his parlor suit. He told me his story this morning. He was sad, Snubbins was, and his story touched me deeply." "How much did you say?"-Baltimore News. Grafer—"I have that five you loaned me, Eezymark." Eezymark (who never expected to get it)—"Good! Grafer—"Now I'm going to make you a proposition. I need $10, but I'll only ask you for five. Then I'll have ten, and I'll give you credit for the five of yours I now have."-Ohio State Journal.
"Pardon me," said the native with the large carving knife, approaching the cave of the captive, "but could I bone you for a dollar?" The innate courtesy, it appeared, which seeks to clothe unpleasant detail in humorous hyperbole was not altogether inconsistent with advertisement of the prevailing chef rates per cadaver.—New York Press.
Assassination makes only martyrs, not converts—Lamartine.
Forty is the age of youth -50 is the
youth of old age -Victor Hage
THE HISTORY OF THE MUSEUM
GAMMON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY
The aim of this school is to do practical work in order to toward success in the ministry. Its course of study is broad and practical; its ideas are high; its work is thorough. Its methods are fresh, systematic and effective. COURSE OF STUDY
COURSE OF STUDY
The regular course comprises three years and covers the lines of work in the several departments of theological instruction usually pursued in the leading theological seminaries of the country.
EXPENSES AND AID
Tulliam Hall. The apartments for students are plainly furnished. Good board can be had for seven dollars per month. Buildings heated by steam. From loans without interest, and gifts of friends, are granted to deserving students who do their utmost in the preparation of the grace, gifts, and energy, need be deprived of the advantages now opened to him. The address REF. WILBUR P. THIRKIELD, D. D., President Atlanta, Ga.
ECKSTEIN NORTON UNIVERSITY
CANE ASPEN, BULLITT COUNTY, KY.
"Industrial training will take to motion ten thousand
Our classes and studies are so arranged that students will learn in the classroom and return to complete the course as any future time. The time to finish any course will be consistent with through work in all departments.
**TERMS.**
Board, room, fuel, fuel and washing, $8.00 × r month.
Students will be paid the year.
**HELP FOR STUDENTS.**
Deserving students may have the privilege of extra reduction in proportion to the work they are willing to do. Students will be paid the rate but on account of the very high character of the work accommodations are first-class and offered talks to both students.
Persons en route to Canine Spring, $2.95, via Louisville.
Persons en route to Canse Spring, RY. via Louisville, Ky. for accommodation at No. 227 Lafarre Street, Louisville, Ky. For catalogues and all business address the President, REV. C. H. P. RISHR, A. M., CANE SPRING, RY.
"GOD HATH MADE OF ONE BLOOD ALL NATIONS OF NEX."
BereaCollege
Christian, non-sectarian. Three college courses (100 credits) offered free from Incidental fee $1.50 a term. Expenses not so bad. White and black 210. Afro-American students. 1000. Write to GET THE BRIE EDUCATION... Address
RALEIGH, N.C.
For both sexes, Departments of Law, Medicine,
Pharmacy, Music, Missionary, Training, College,
College Preparatory, English and Industrial,
Year Boundary. For catalogues, circulars,
and other information address.
PRES. CHAS. S. MESERVE
Raleigh N. C.
Fourteen teachers. Elegant and commodious
instruments. Unimpaired. D parments:
College Preparatory. College Shorthand. Typewriting and Industrial Training.
FIFTY DOLLARS IN ADVANCE
Will pay for board, room, light, f.e.s. tuition and
incidentals for the entire year. Board $6.90 per
employee. Through work
in each department. Seal for circular, to
the president.
REV. JUDSON S. HILL D. D.
Morristown, Tenn.
CENTRAL TENNESS COLLEGE
DEPARTMENTS: English. Nor. Nov. 11. Preparatory,
College, Theatre, Law, Music. African Tail school,
Industrial. Over forty instructors. Attendance last
per school month. For further information, a
per school month. For further information, a
per school address the President, J. Bradon, jadaville, Tenn.
THE MEDICAL SCHOOL
OF THE
NEW ORLEANS UNIVERSITY
Admits Men and Women of all Races
WELL EQUIPPED, THOROUGH INSTRUCTION.
Address 5318 St. Charles.
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA.
DOES THIS REMIND YOU
OF THE
WELSH-RAREBIT
YOU ATE
LAST
NIGHT
DYSPEPSIA
AND BAD
DREAMS
CURED BY TAKING
JOHNSONS
Digestive Tablets
BOS DEMANDS A REALITY - HAS BEEN
FEET
a Tee ee
ST. PAUL.
4 weeks RECORD WW miNeso
TAS CAPITAL.
‘ie salty ly ond barat O15 Fete
Roce ee seen hentia oe
scape acceueneaae
cone
oe reat ray
FOR RENT—No. 574 Fuller street;
four large rooms at. reasonable rates.
Splendid Yocation. —*
No one can afford to pay something for
aothing. ‘The Gordon has established the
fight price for fine hate—not #5.
One or two gentlemen roomers
wanted, Apply at 527 St Anthony
avenue, or at THE APPEAL office.
If you wlah to visit a nice summer
resort for boating, fshing and plentes,
try Lake Owasso, the beauty of Min-
nesota.
Mr, and Mrs. W. 7. Francis will be
heard In a duet, new and sweet, at
the Sodality’s May, Party Monday
evening.
Ed Williams, charged with stealing
$10 trom Ella Hall, was Wednesday
afternoon acquitted by Judge Orr in
the police court.
Messrs, Allen French and’ ©. D.
Jackson will sing a duct trom “Faust”
at the Sodullty’s May Festival next
Monday evening.
Do you go to the May Festival and
May Queen, at Twin City hall Monday,
May 28th? Delights not to be surpass-
ed will there be had.
Communteations or items of news
intended for publication in ‘The Ap-
pei will receive attention if left at
‘West Hotel Drug Store,
WANTED—A first-class barber, one
‘who can please a good class of trade
and who does not get drunk. Ad-
dress W. B, Wright, Sioux Falls,
8. Dak.
‘those of our patrons who desire to
ave matter publisked must get the
game in this office not Inter than
‘Thursday, otherwise it may be erowa-
ed out.
Grand May Festival and May Queen
presented by St. Peter Claver Sodality
at Twin City hall Monday, May 28th.
Song and children’s frolic. Admis-
sion, 25 cents,
Persons destring to vistt the Appeal
office are hereby notified that It has
‘been removed from the fifth to the
*hird floor, Rooms 109 and 110, in the
rear, Union lock.
‘The Merry May Frolic, presented by
4 lot of well-trained children, will be
one of the prineipal attractions at the
Sodality's May Party next Monday
night et Twin City Hall,
Is your balr straight? Tf not send
‘50 cents to Ozonized Ox Marrow Co..
8 Yottle of Ozonlzed Ox Marrow and
76 Wabash avenue, Chicago, 11, for
you can easily straighten It.
‘TRY THE MEALS AT JOHN GOD-
PREY'S, NO. M8 EAST NINTH
STREET, BETWEEN ROBERT AND
JACKSON, AND YOU WILL NOT
WISH TO EAT ANY OTHERS.
‘Who will be queen at the May Fes-
tival? Just come and see. None ever
looked prettier, sweeter or more fairy-
ike than will she at Twin City Hall
on Monady evening next; Sodalitus
‘Festival.
Jordan & Martin is tho stylo of a new
‘Arm of tailors fust started tn our city.
‘Tholr place of business 1s 513 Robert
street. They are prepared to do anything
tm thelr line at reasonable prices. Call
to seo them.
Some people who send matter for
publication in THE APPEAL, seem to
think they need only to put'a 1 cent
stamp on same because the envelope
4s unsealed. All communications should
dear a 2 cent stamp.
At you wish @ good shave, hatr cut
‘er shampoo, call at Richard Cnusby's
‘neat shop, No. 374% Minnesot” ‘treet.
First-class workmen only. i tsfac
Hon guarantend. Music for ¢ occa-
sions furalstied on short notice.
Me. debn Godfrey has moved bis’ bonrd-
{ng hoase to No. 148 Bast Ninth street, be-
tween Robert aud Jackson, and ts now pre-
pared to fnrniah those dolighttot meals.
His now place ty much more conveatent to
huis pattous. All'are invited to call and try
a meal
Mr, F. H. Engles, of Barnesville,
Minn,, wishes to get some, good, young
girl, 16 or 17 years of age to work tor
him. There are three in the family.
Good wages and a good home. Trans-
portation furnished, Apply to him or
at THE APPEAL ofc.
‘THE WAITER'S: MANUAL, the
book that made Atro-Americam waiters
famous, should be read by every walt-
cer. It was adopted by the Headwaiters’
Asssoclaton as a guide, Compiled by
‘W. Forrest Cozart, Hotel Beckel, Day-
ton, Ohio. Price only $1.00.
Viola Shaw, who came to St. Paul to
escape being sent to the small pox
hospital at Minneapolis, was arrested
‘Tuesday by Health Commissioner
Ohage, upon being discharged trom
the detention hospital, charged with
wiltully violating the quarantine law,
X will pay, you to buy: Union Label
Patont Flour. Every sack ts guaran-
‘teed to be made by Union Labor and
from the Best of Hard Wheat, ‘Try it
and you wili say tt is the best... Re-
roe eer ete
>. se mM We tare melanin ¢ | bid in
2 "priced ‘Stock of Spring ‘and
Ei J | 7 @, Summer Furniture and House-
ne @ tornishings in Town, *
You can buy just what you want for the Summer to the best advantage now. ‘The stock is fresh and the. as-
Sortment unbroken, You ean buy, perhaps, to just as good advantage later as far as’ prices are concemed, fot ont
prices are always the lowest, but the late Summer stock is always smaller than now, and many desirable things will
have disappeared, Qur “little-at-a-time” paying plan makes it easy for youto buy early, z
THREE CAR LOADS OF FURNITURE ON SPECIAL SALE.
EI. 2 SSR EM, Keio
Sra Henan ee Gere (Soo) \ Reed Rian
TES rE ert ae OS eee SUA GLOCEL EMG EY -
es eo _ a) NAHE S. seockes: IE
Coenen ae, A ee cen Ete
SS eee (ler em | TOO
ACARLOAR oF covenss nt munity seian ——_ ¢ RESEREBE LenS iy eee AN sae
RAEN S65 AN Cee Game oy PEND
sted: wee 3 i NZS Prd S ite \ E? ‘i
ONG) Oey. Le MING VIR NE CL
fous Hae ) Tier] 7 ett.ecchir cocina tat RES SCR Ae] RS
“eat INTER TTS] ff Sicerse, tee cutris tho taneat seotge govlon oat guar sat iy SH
ets? Kee | mee $3.48 Met s3.98 pe Aon
Sete Martine, a | nl : i
tagline arti, age Wom ts cise,” "isha aoe, A NONENIO DOD
HGS. $1850 vee nue [CAR PETS, spit are.tt turieh mt a
RS BUHL! HMO SSS SO] akeleee NY BOG yamamt™ Be [rennin
SSsenren
RTT i BC BBO
—_ apis nur "Be fp
ieee QBC crues cacaen see ree Ge QS ’ wea Q
EE ee Te, SC UWS a
susatast Finem OY 88 BE Ale Rines, “te Daw” QE > Set is fh
SS : Be eee 100 wens, Ba
| TpaaihRton a | GN sonar or Essgo-08 ) (ey
les Pos a gigay RENE. Be ofp ee
i SSE OUB toon, sxe pei Sy {rire rotate atahor, =
lmccaceall i" Sic0 4) ey * 3° reece
vam 280 gee ee, NES ‘ a
ausieye, Dee 4” Bo rome Doge ae CER mre,
den mea Oc ac" Srey mee, AE
Lo hia, Bebeconnn G8 1-68. Lequare Dishpan, Z a
caren oe ae ee eS :
Rae. FI Mone BE j squecser tineut.... OC
rargo wrowni PRE a ERB Garden Hoo. 4.) rE
"Se en re Oe at unas Ho Be co
Y AG ts, 48e “ : Lown shears
ee err, — uiege art Ze
cae AE spent Can soles ‘ Bate
ge BNBe a Sho Miia Se GENT Y YS wo" Peodnima Be BeBe
Che American bust
Those who wish to revel in repasts
evidencing the highest style of culin
ary art in thelr preparation; or, in
other words, those who wish to’ ea
{z00d, wholesome, home-cooked meats
[should try those furnished at Jobs
Godfrey's, No. 148 East Ninth street,
near Jackson.
John Godfrey, No. 148 East Ninth
street, between Robert and Jackson,
§3 prepared to take care of a fen
Toomers at reasonable ‘rates. ‘Tran.
stents ‘accommodated, Board furnish.
ed when desired. Best home-cooked
meals in the city. If you doubt it, try
them once and you'll be convinced.
Robert J. White, who once. was s
special policeman, got full of bad
whisky and, putting on his star, made
some trouble for himself, for he was
arrested and sentenced to the work-
house for thirty days, without the
option of @ fine. Judge Orr finally
relented and allowed him to pay a fine
of $25.
. Willie Douglas, the little boy whe
lias. been before the munielpal cour
fon the charge of setting barns afire,
will not be elght years old until June
18. He will be sont-to the state
school at Owatonna until that date,
and then be committed to the state
training school, as he cannot legally
de sent there until he is elght years
ole.
Special services will be held at St
Peter Claver’s chureh. on Sunday
morning next/at 10:30. ‘The choir will
sing the musle sung on Easter morn-
ing, with violin accompaniment by
‘Mr. Wm. French. The sermon will be
by Fr. Lawler of the Cathedral. Fol
lowing te service there will be bap-
tlom of an adult class of eight per-
sons,
May Festival and May Queen. A
‘musical program of unsurpassed merit
furnished by the eweetest singers. A
‘May Frolic participated in by merry,
nimble children. ‘The whole to. con
elude with the crowning of a May
‘Queen that in every detail will ecipse
all former efforts of St. Peter Claver
‘Sodality to furnish entertainments o
‘the best.
|The Orlental Hair Parlors, Mre, H
3. Allen, prop. Fashionable hat
dressing, shampooing, hair’ cutting
SS
straightening and scalp treatment
fspectalty. Hair work to order. Call
made at residences; satisfaction guar-
[anteed. Special sale on. switches dar
{ing the holidays. 205 Krahmer Block
N. EB cot. 7th and Sibley.
cones ‘committee: of St. James
eva chase \corareed ot ty
Strong, R. C. Minor, J. H. Dillingham,
ALI. Boll, M, D. Pettis, A. M. Lee
and Stephon § Harris, mot Tuesday
tvening ‘with a full attendance and
organized by electing J. H. Dillingham
chairman and A, 3. Leo. secretary.
‘They start out with bright prospects
for success in remodeling the church,
There will be another meeting of the
committee next Wedneatay evening.
The yummer stock season at the
Grand Opera House will commence
June 2. "The company that has, been
secured to inaugurate the seasoa isthe
Valentine Stock Company, which
lain Gotumbee, O, a5 Its Rebdguar
ters and puts ina "large portion of
each season there. Mse-Aane Blancko,
Temembered qe the diminutive and
Clover soubrette of the old Neill Com-
pany, is the director ot the organiza.
tion.” Ati Blancke has conductod her
organization for the past three Yeas,
and it 1s rated a one ot the best of
the stock organtzations. ‘The principal
members of the organization are Beu-
Tah Watson, Jeasie. Bonstelle. Mary
‘Taylor, Kate Blancke, B. N. Leonard
Edward Mawson, Jack Webster, Robert
Evans, Charles Fleming. Pamund
Whitty, Frederick Haak and B. W.
Morrison. Later the ‘Boston Lyre
Opera Company, under the direction of
ol. William ‘Thompson, wil be seen
fan enlarged and” extended reper.
tolre of comic operas, which in turn
ill be followed by ‘Th Pike Theatre
Stock Company.
‘A copy of the premiam list for the
reat Minnesota, State Fuir of 1900
has been received. It ls evident that
plans are being perfected upon a
larger scale than ever and it is prob-
able that even the brilliant record of
Inst year is to be eclipoed., The fair
will be held September 3 to 8, upon
is) Hitlise grounds, aildway be
teen the cities, as usual. If you care
for one of these premium lists, ead a
Postal card request to Secretary E. W.
Randall, Hamline, Minn. and one il
be mailed to you,” The premiums and
ursen offered aggregate over #10000
‘The next National Bahibition and sate
ot Hereford cattle will bo hela in con:
nection with this fair;’ the American
Shorthorn Breeders’ Assoclation Joins
in folding out unusual inducoments to
Shorthora exhibitors; the Minnesota
‘Live Stock Breeders’ Association joins
‘tm giving rich prises for feeding ant-
‘mals; the Aberdeen-Angus. Beceders
Association offers apecial prizes als,
‘and with the eo-aperition of these and
other Lite Stock organizations, it 1s
ee
premiums in the Dairy, Agricultural,
Horticultural and Woman's Depart-
ments and the Machinery, Honoy,
Forestry and Mineral exhibits are to
be given careful attention. The race
programme contains the two guaran-
‘teed $5,000 purses again and is rich
‘throughout, while the magnificent
evening entertainments, inaugurated
last year, are to be continued. State
Fair week will be the holiday week
of the year. 4
FOR'FAIR VIRGINIA.
At the Grand Opera Houre, St. Past.
‘Among the most deservedly succeseful
American plays, must assuredly be rank-
‘ed Mr. Russ Whytal’s romantic drama
“For Fair Vitgioia” which will beseen
atthe Grand Opere House noxt week
with the atitho? in the etart part. ‘This
play was fiat brought out more than two
‘Years ago at the Fifch Avenue Theatre,
New York and was played with brilliant
reeulte all last seston... The! pieee deal
with domestic life ia Virginie daring war
time’, but it isin to sence a melodrama;
indeed Mfr. Whytal appeare io-n comedy
character. ‘That datticilarly pleasing
Child actress, Little Teabello Barrizeal
thas an important part. While the piece
hhae a war bach ground, ite story is etrong-
ly domestic and foll-of bearts iotersst,
It ig gresonted’ under the direction of
Mr. Frack V. Hawley, who. has always
een indontified with Bret class attr:c-
tions. The eapporting company ine!ud-
0 Mias Mabel Knoles, Mise Angeline 8.
Piltis,, J. H. Geldart; Charles Halton,
Jor. Dingoon, Jas. Maiville, Alex Stew.
‘rt, Geo, W. Walters, Clinde H, Cooper
Myadart Staria and others,
awe
It is definitely settled that John
Clark will be the ‘next chief of de-
tectives.
‘Thomas Fitzpatrick. has. been re-ap-
pointed to. the workhouse board by
Mayor Kleter.
‘An effort is to be mate to save Chiet
Getchell. He will be reduced to a
captainey ‘and "made acting chlet in
the hope that, ue. will be allowed to
remain ih that position.
Dame Rumor says that Richard T;
O'Connor will be” president of the
Board ot Polls Commissioners, and
that all the members will be men who
affliated with the Democrats. Johnny
Gtancy, the defeated candidate. for
Justice of the Peace; is an aspirant
tor secretary of the board.
Mayor, Kister and Additor Johnson
got together this week and agreed
the selection of ‘Adame Bohland as
county assessor. 16. will eater upon
his dlties June 1. The tncoming. ad-
Inlatrtrtion ua hewonees aot
sald, agreed upon: or in the
person ot! Py T, the ane-
‘toma. 5-50) ee Re as
‘The recount of the votes in the Mc-
Cardy-Betz contest for the comptroller.
ship has resulted in @ reversal of the
situation, so that now McCardy has
twenty votes the best of it. In the
Benson-Parker contest for the assom-
diy, Benson. has gotten on top by
thirty-four votes, it seams that some
of the judges and clerks were woefully
ignorant or criminally careless, if not
both. =
‘The call for the Republican state
convention of June 28 was issued
Wednesday. The call provides for
county conventions to be held a week
earlier than the state convention. At
the latter a proposition will be made
to indorse a candidate for United
States senator, which, of course,
means Senator Nelson. ‘The new plan
of organization for the state central
committee 1s put forwant for dlscus-
sion and action,
‘The melencholly days have come—
‘The saddest of the year—
Men eat thelr meals, now, standing up,
For house cleaning time is here.
The children, all, are cross as bears,
‘And the good housewife gets blue,
When, after working off her finger
‘ends, E
‘There's still so much to do.
But when it's done, all nice and: neat,
‘From foundation’ wall to comb,
The wife and husband then will feel,
‘There is no place like home.
‘TOUCHING TALES.
‘Thorne—“Jack Gladhand says he
‘las’ sworn off. borrowing. money.”
Bramble—“Ho had to. All his frlends
have sworn off lending him money.”—
New York Journal
Perry Pathetio—“Mistor, kin” you
help mo with a little money? “I ain't
got a friend on earth.” Mudge—"It
you have no friends, thero ls no rea-
son why you should not be able to
ckeep your inoney. Go on away from
horo."—Inglanapolis, Press.
Briggs—"Do you believe that. the
‘Wend Is divided into two classes, those
who borrow and those who lend?”
Griggs—"No, sir! My experience 1s
that two other classes are much more
Drevalent—those who want to borrow
0d those Who wo" 1938"—Lite,
A speculator's hopes lle inthe fact
tat he expects to be an ex-speculator.
With the average boy the world
‘yacillates between straps and scraps.
Some people. wouldn't be’ true’ te
thelr nature if they were true to amy-
thing tse: 4
‘There will always be rascals as lomy
‘as there are fools enough for them te
‘work ox'—Chicago| Dispatch.
W! ‘BRIGET A¥p Hox.
We =
EReS gino oat
MINNEAPOLIS.
DOINGS IN AND ABOUT +=
“GREAT “FLouR city.
Matters octal, _Beligions and G-ten"
‘Which Mave Uappesedandare vo aappo-
Among the Feople of tne Ol on the
ig
‘Mr. G, W. Roper is in the clty visit:
ing friends,
Mrs. R. J: Coleman and daughter
Rubie are on the sick list.
Rev. D. 8. Orner of St. Paul will
preach at Bethesda Baptist churet
‘Sunday morning.
Mr, Oliver Streepes has returned to
the city, after visiting his parents and
friends. in Chleago,
Edward Williams was fined $25 by
Judge Kerr for scorching on Nicollet
avenue the other day. i
‘Mr, Ed Comey of Winnebago, Ia.
was the guest of his niece, Mrs, Joseph
Patterson, last week,
Mr. C. H. Brooks will call on all
subscribers of THE APPEAL: as col-
lector. Please he ready to settle.
‘Mrs. Chas. King “expects to visit
Kansas City in the near future, She
will be absent from the city a week:
Mr. W. H, Clemmins, formerly of
this city, has returned after spending
‘two years in Philadelphia and Boston,
Master Leroy Roberts will recite a
poem entitled “The Knights of Pythias
Boys,” at the annual sermon of the
Pride of Minnesota Lodge No. 5, May
2th,
The Appeal 1s mated to thost of
the homes of the people of the Twin
Cittes, and if you wish matters to reach
these homes you must publish them in
the Appeal, ast stae as
Mr. A. W. F. La Montee says he will
soon Iead a Fourth avenue lady to
the matrimonial altar. The young
Indy is to be congratulated, as he is
one of our finest young men,
Little Bthel Holder died last Tues-
day at the home of her mother, 411
4th ave, S., at the age of ten years,
She has been sick for over a year
and death came as a welcome visitor
to the little sufterer.
‘The annual sermon of the Knights
of Pythias will be preached by Rev,
W. 8. Brooks at St. Peter's church,
May 27th, at 8 o'clock. All Knights
im good standing are invited to turn
out. Captain Clark will command the
uniform rank
DR. R. S. BROWN, Physician ano
Surgeon. Office, rooms 405-8 Reeve
‘uillding, 408 Nicollet avenue; telephone
548. Residence, 2839 Portland avenue;
telephone 317—L south. Office hours:
9:20 to 12:20; 2 to 4:90; 7 to 8:0. Sundays,
9:90 to U1: 12:0 to 2.
‘The A.M. E. Conference held at
Columbus, Ohio, was Invdea by the
death angel. Rev. R.,M. Cheoks,
editor of the Southern Christian Re-
corder, of Atlanta, Ga, died of loco-
motor ataxia. Eulogies upon tho de-
ceased were pronounced in the Con-
ference.
Geo. W. Nuleon, the Bast Side drug-
gist, is Keeping in line with the prog-
frees of the aye, inasmuen as he fg {m-
proving his store by the addition of an
elegant up-to date soda fountain, from
which he promises will be drawn a
sparkling soda, second to none in the
jelty.. When you are cut wheeling give
him a call.
Commencement Day exercises of the
several high schools of the city occur
in the evenings, 8 p. m., June 5, 6, 7
jand 8. The East high wchool, Tues-
@ay, June 5, at First Congregational
chureh; the South Side school Wednes-
day, the 6th, at the Swedish Taberna-
cle? the North, at the hall in: the
North high wchool building, Thursday,
June 7, and the Central High on Fri-
‘day, June 8, at the Swedish Tabernacle.
Mr. W. M. Jenkins, the well-known
hotel man of Minneapolis, has lensed
the Hat No. 9 Gecond street north and
‘has remodeled and refurnished it with
‘ail modern improvements, It in altu-
ited in a desirable location, being one
block from the Nicollet house and
three blocks from the West hotel. The
rooms will be let to. those who dealre
neat and comfortable zoome at reason-
able rates. Call at No. 9 Second strost
north, first flat for W. 3. Jenkins, pro-
ATREAT.
In Slore for Ladies and Children of Minn
Mrs. Victor Webb, who for the past
year hag been in attendance at the In-
‘irmary Parlors of the N. 1. 0,, has
‘Opened at 29. Washington Ave. 'S. "a
Neer nest nth "gare were she
prepared in @ modest way to give al
cohol, vapor, sulphur and eponge baths
also massage treatment.
Mrs, Webb.on making: inquiry, founc
that there was not @ place where la-
ies of her race could receive thes
benefits, hence her long ambitious de
sires haye been fulfifilled by opening
Such a place hereof.
Rheumatism, nervousness, kidney
and skin diseases successfully treated
also, by securing perfect elroulation o
‘the blood the complexion fe made clea
and the skin smooth. She earnest
solleits the patronage of all who do
Siro health ‘and beauty, “As she will
‘make no distinctions of race or colo
she will be pleased te have any and
All of her friends call. Bee
Hours: 930 a. m. to 930 p. i, ar
‘Noor, Na: 29 Washington Ave, 8.
—— Kou Pet There are.
If you looes the risk yon are after
there ‘nce othera; {f you're duped by
Mara rare, dou't sueetmb to foci de
[spair, not yout costly clothing tear—
there are others; if your friends desert
jend mock you--there are others; it your
awootheart firts ani shocks you-there
others: you're not tas only jay who's
been treated én this way, so just look st
‘eer and esy—tnere aro cthen.”
ee sit
== (ley
Seo?" auome
Tgomanracestada™
‘Tocenjey these special’ Superb Skepi
Soe Seee tise
mere Eee
‘ous trains, ee
Maton At
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kegel }
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ie ee
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ad | d| | Pees
eMeiay THE SHOE a
a TWAT SATISFIES
len
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~~ $3.00)
TRY A PAIR.
ov S5C
Dory ane
rae Tac}
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An Excellent Toric Drink
Iw =
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ID
THEO. HAM BREWING CO
200.4. 20 sour yore
Enunuk & Porter
PHYSIOIANS AND SURCEONS.
omece: ‘8. W. Cor. (2th- and Robert
| ‘Drccok’s | Br. Porter's
cebelicii’> oemea is
iusakte eC paeaeiioe
tentna Siren
a Phone, Mais 386
Paul, inn.
ena eas
| UR. H. J. BELL,
DENTIST
|Special Attention Given to
Crown and Bridge Work
Preserving the Natural
‘Teeth apd Roots,
Cor. 6th and Minnesota, ST. PAUL,
PHYSICIAN AND aURGEON
Office, 27 E. Seventh St., Kendrick Block
Residence, 353. Sherburne Ave.
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LIMB CO.,
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THE "WORLD'S SAIRCITY" VIEWED BY THE APPEAL MAN.
A Compilation of Biographies of Happenings, Social and Otherwise, Among the Afro-Americans of the Second City of The Glorious Union.
Mr.Seward French is assistantsuperintendent of the census for the fifth congressional district.
Mr. Julius N. Avendord returned to the city Tuesday morning after spending Sunday and Monday in Marquette Mich, the guest of Miss Jennie L. Claven.
Men's Sunday Forum
The Young Men's Sunday Forum held its election of officers Monday evening at Bethel church. The following persons were elected: President, Ed Wilson; first vice president, Julius N. Avendover; second vice president, L. Anderson; secretary, L. J. Davis; treasurer, L. J. Davis; board of control, S. L. Wang; Hale G. Parker, L. W. Benson, John G. Jones, W. L. Martin, J. L. Parks.
Sam T. Jack's Theatre.
Sam T. Jack's Folly Company will commence its second week at Sam T. Jack's Sunday matinee, May 27. As the female portion of the entertainment company, it will lead of any organization of its kind in the country. Among the score of handsome women in the cast are Aileen Vincent, Helen Russell, Marie Crawford, Doris Goodwin and Sarah Morris. The Mormon" is the title of the closing burlesque, which is a lively travesty on inside life at Salt Lake City. There are many other shows each one of them is an entertainment self. "The Harem of the Effendi" is the opening part. This shows a troupe of American minstrels at the court of the Mormon. It is entirely new and introduces some of the best vaudeville acts on the road.
WOMEN ASTONISHED.
Afeo-American Woman's Clubs WILL Not Be Represented at the 2016 Women's Clubs Convention.
Chicago Afro-American women are indignant over the action of the programme committee of Women's Clubs Saturday, in refusing to recognize Afro-American women's clubs. On account of it the Afro-American women of Chicago and the entire country as well will not be represented at the general federation meeting to be held in Milwaukee in June.
MRS. FANNIE BARRISE WILLIAMS:
Mrs. Fannie Barrier Williams, recognized as the spokeswoman of the local clubs, said:
"I am astonished at the action of the committee. The decision affects 300 Afr-Orean women's clubs in the country. In Chicago there are at least four important clubs of Afr-Orean women; the Phyllis Wheatley, the L. B. W. club, the Women's League, and the L. B. W. club, four have a membership of about 400."
JOHN BROWN STATUE OFFERED.
Memurint Association Asks the South Park Commissioners to Furnish n Site.
A statue of John Brown, the "hero of Harper's Ferry," will be set up in one of the South side parks if the com-
John O'Downt.
missioners heed the communication of John Brown Memorial Association received by them. The association referred to Brown's services and suggested interesting bit of memorabilia would and an interesting bit of memorabilia collection if they would furnish a site. The memorial association will spend $10,000 to secure a good statue.
Defective Page
Ladies day at the Forom.
The Young Men's Sunday Forum will close its session Sunday afternoon, which will be Ladies' Day, Prof. J. E. W. Bowen, of Atlanta, Ga., will deliver the address. Mr. Bowen needs no introduction as he is one of the brainstem men in this country.
Miaco's Trocadero Feature
Burlesque of the smappiest kind with a new and special assortment of young and shapely women, clever as well as finely proportioned and handsome featured, will prevail at Micoo's Trocadero next Sunday afternoon when the Robin Hood, Jr. burlesque company, a new eastern organization, begins a company, starting out at the beginning of summer season, is said to have a regiment of beautiful young women, the very sight of whose pretty faces and
lissome limbs would be enough to draw a hermit from his cave or cause a cyclone in a bachelor apartment house. These jolly girls will be exhibited to the schoolchildren in their leagues, "A Widow Gay" and "Our High School Girls," with plenty of music, costumes, and a glittering paraphermalia. Between the burlesa there will be living pictures of the daintiest kind and a long list of clever specialities.
Entertainment Given at the Hannah Griffin Home.
A social gathering for the benefit of Hannah Griffin's Benevolent Home for Afro-American Children was held on Saturday, the home, 1841 West Sixth-venth street.
Mrs. Griffin's home was founded two years ago at Twenty-fifth street and was moved to the home by her husband, and with the assistance of a few friends who gave her donations. The move into the country took place three weeks ago because a friend of hers was born.
Griffin has 19 Afro-American orphans, whom she supports and educates.
Deaths.
Elizabeth Burton, 51 years, 2966 Armour.
Ray Cooper, 16 years, Holland Hotel.
Blanche McDonald, 16 years, 1304 Indiana.
Sarah Williams, 53 years, 3006 Armour.
David McMiller, 31 years.
Nettle L. Minnette, 23 years, Provident Hospital.
Andrew Jackson, 25 years, 2444 Indiana.
Mary Foster, 43 years, 2903 Dearborn.
Julia Johnston, 17 years, 3826 Dearborn.
Births.
Son to Mrs. Carrie Stanley, 4431 Dearborn; Dr. L. W. Dunavan.
Son to Mrs. Maggie Jordan, 2407 Dearborn; Dr. J. H. Paddock.
Births.
Daughter to Mrs. James Jackson, 16
Chestnut place; Dr. O. H. Kraft, Jr.
Daughter to Mrs. A. Boston, 2971 La
Salle; Dr. G. A. Gowen.
Son to Mrs. Thompson, 378 Thir-
tieh; Dr. G. A. Gowen.
That inimitable little Irishman, Barney Ferguson, and an excellent company will give "Muldoon the Picnic" to the Alhambra theatre for one week, commencing Sunday matinee Sunday, March 11. This clever company will do as it always has done before—make people laugh, even the most sedate person is bound to laugh at his irresistible humor and ridiculous antics. Assisting Barney in his festival of fun, are Mr. George Gale, Robert Jackson, and Mr. Robert Witchel, Miss Grace Passmore, Madie Wensley, Virginia Knight, Logan, Hess jisters and the American trio and Jerry the famous Muldoon donkey.
Olivet Baptist Church.
Olivet school convened at 9:30 a.m. by singing hymn, "Tell It Again." Invocation by Mr. Charles Johnson. Visitors present with us, Mr. Hunter, of Missouri Chapel, Rev. Adam S. Green, of Missouri Chapel, Rev. Adam S. Green, won in the singing contest was presented Rev. J. F. Thomas to the school, which was highly appreciated by all. The following addressed the school: Mr. Hunter, Miss Gertrude Johnson, Mr. H. T. Elbay, Supt. Rev. J. F. Thomas and Mr. L. Perry, choirist. Attendance, 34% infection, $8.5. At the school, Service Rev. Adam S. Green, of Missouri, preached a sermon on "Moses Song," which set forth God's mercy and vengeance.
In the evening the pastor, Rev. J. F. Thomas, selected for the theme of his discourse, "Impregnable Rock of Our Island." B. Y. P. Union was well attended. Our next leader, Mr. Charles Johnson. All are cordially invited to attend. The meeting was held at Olivet Monday, May 21 at 1 p. m. Sermon was preached by Rev. J. F. Thomas. She was a memorial and departed triumphant in the faith.
NEW BISHOPS
Of the African Methodist Episcopal Church.
The following new bishops were elected at the general conference of the African Methodist Episcopal church at Columbus, O.:
M. M. Moore, D. D., Secretary Financial Department, Washington City, D.C.
Evans Tyree, D. D., Nashville, Tenn.
School Union, Nashville, Tenn.
C. T. Shaffer, D. D., Secretary Church Extension Society, Philadelphia, Pa.
L. J. Coppen, D. D., Philadelphia, Pa.
Important Change of Time on the Nickel Plate Road.
A daily 27-hour through service has been implemented between Chicago and New York, leaving Chicago at 3:30 p.m., arriving at New York 2:25 p.m., following day.
Standard New York and Boston Express leaves Chicago at 10:35 a.m. daily, instead of 10:20 a.m. as, for instance, with through cars to New York and Boston, leaving city early the following afternoon.
Night Express leaves Chicago daily at 10:20 p.m. for New York and Boston, arriving at either city early the following morning. Courteous Afro-American porters are in charge of day coaches, to look after the comfort of passengers, especially ladies traveling alone. Dining car on day trains from Chicago, on which they are unexcelled, and at popular prices. Mr. J. Y. Calahan, General Agent, 111 Adams St. Chicago, will have pleasure in giving all detailed information about Chicago passenger station Van Buren and Pacific Ave., on the Elevated Loop. City Ticket Offices, 111 Adams St.; Telephone, 2067 Central and Union Ticket Office, Auditorium Annex, Telephone, 208 Harrison.
FOUR THINGS.
Four things a man must learn to do
He would make his record true:
To think without confusion clearly;
To act from fellow men sincerely;
To trust in God and Heaven securely.
—Henry Van Dyke, D. D., in New York Independent.
WANTED-SEVERAL BRIGHT AND MOIST persons to represent us as Managers in this and by counties: Salary $500 a year and expenses: Bright bounties and no work, no salary. Position prudent. Our references, any and all, will be obtained at home, Reference. Ensure self-addressed stamped envelope. Become Decking Company! Page & Chicago
THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER
SCOTLAND WOOLEN MILLS CO.
$15
A handsome map of the United States, 38 by 48 inches in size, printed in four colors, and mounted on a roller for hanging up, will be sent to any address on receipt of FIFTEEN CENTS. Postal or Express Money Order or Coin preferred. Apply to GEO. P. LYMAN, Asst. Gen'l Pass. Agent, C. B. & Q. R. R., ST. PAUL, MINN.
STRAIGHTINE
BEFORE AFTER
STRAIGHTINE is an elegant and highly perfumed pomade. It softens and invigorates the hair, makes the hair grow. Prevents it from falling out. Removes Dandruff; cures itching, irritating Scalp Diseases, giving a rich, long, and luxurious head of hair, so much to be desired. Perfectly harmless. We have sold hundreds of cans and never had a single complaint. Price 25c for large can at all druggists, or sent by mail to any address on receipt of price in stamps or silver. Address NELSON MANFGO CO; Nichmond, Va. Active Agents wanted. Write for leroy.
CENTRAL FURNITURE & CARPET CO.
206 NICOLLET AND 207 HENNEPIN AVS.
WISCONSIN DAIRY
MANUFACTURES OF
The Eagle Brand Butter is the highest grade and best flavored of any butter made and is fresh from our churns daily
PRICE: CENTS PER POUND.
Our Ice Cream is made from the same pure cream the Eagle Brand Butter is made from. flavored with pure fruits. Our prices are the lowest
30 CENTS PER QUART; 50 CENTS HALF CALLON
For Churches, Societies and House Parts
500 Saint Peter Street,
SAINT PAUL
13 South Third Street,
MINNEAPOLIS
T. F. DUNLEVY
MANUFACTURER AND JOBBER IN
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NO. 314 NICOLLET AVE. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN
Planos, Organs and Musical Merchandise, Shafi Music Books, etc. We do not boast of what we can do, but come in and see what we will do on prices and terms.
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STORES
IN
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PALACE BARBER SHOP.
800 Washington Ave. S, R. DALKO, Prop.
(Under Washington Bank.) Assisted
first class artists.
POFORLAIN LINED BATH TUBS AND SHOWER
BATHS, BATH ROOMS OPEN ON SUNDAYS
FROM 9 TO 12.
"Mas's restorative his balmy bath.
That supplies lubricates, and keeps in
condition his skin, machine.
Which asks such frequent periods of repair.
Minneapolis, Minn.
ARTIST PHOTOGRAPHER
101 EAST SIXTH STREET,
Opp. Mat. Guests iloosa.
Retention for the sale of the building, Cameras
and chemicals. Developing, furnishing and en-
larging. Lighting and Dark-Room instructions
given free to those dealing with us. Tel. 1071
CRIGGS & CO.
190-192 E. Third St., St. Paul.
PROCERIES
supply Hotels, Restaurants, Boarding Houses
who buy in quantity. Call and see
what can be saved.
W. R. MORRIS
Attorney at Law
PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS
617 Guaranty Loan Bld. Minneapolis
409 First Avenue So.
The popular and most centrally located, first class
house in the city. Convenient to all car lines,
theatre and depot. Located in the heart
of the ret-11 business district.
EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN PLAN.
First class accommodations in every respect.
Everything modern. Prices reasonable. Table
board cannot be excelled. Your amenity
Solicited.
MRS. ADA NICHOLS. Proprietor.
Dr. E. N.
JAY
NO CURE NO PAY | DR. KEAN
187 E. Clark st., Chicago
Consultation personally at by mail.
Free of charge on private, Nervous,
Circum and Social Disorders. Moved
8 a.m. to 10 a.m. Sunday. 9 a.m. to 12 a.m.
Dr. W. J. HURD,
81 E. 7th, St. Paul.
Pat system of
contracting teeth
without pain. 25
years' successful
use in
'thousands of
cases. Plates.
Bridgeges,
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THE CREAM CITY OF THE LAKES
AND ITS FOLK.
Items of all sorts Gathered Together by
Our Uniquious Reporters and Served up
in Dainty Style for the Delicatessen
of Our Readers.
Mr. Dan Palmer of Chicago, is in the city.
Mr. Lawrence Charles of Brothertown, Wise, is
in the city.
Mr. G. W. Bland who has been on the sick list
is convalescent.
Mr. Calvin Lyvere who has been on the stick its able to be out again.
Murphy the bone polisher has stopped plugging and will return to honest labor.
Messie Clifton Miller, Alexander Ferry and John Sime of Chicago, are in the city and may be found at the Flankton.
Messie Clifton Miller and Watson A. V. Rainey and daughter of Jill and daughter of John Sime are disposed for some time are able to be out again.
Mr. and Mrs. Hutchison are stopping at the Matthew's villa 392 Jefferson street where they will be pleased to meet some of the Cream City elite.
Capt. J. B. Buford who was offered his former position at Flankton as captain of the morning watch, has declined and will work at the Davidson.
Mr. Richard Charles who has been away from the city for several weeks has returned. Mr. Cattin says he has been up to Florence, WI., training.
Messie Peter Evans and Geo. Dews of Chicago have left the Davidson hotel because they could not take it along. The Flankton head-lead-water Hutton some waiters until he could come.
Mr. Geo. Excel an ex-head-water of Chicago, after trying for five days to hold down an eight-hour job, assigned his position and has returned to Chicago. Messie Sillway Michigan hotels are to warm for him.
Mr. J. M. Iles Jr. writes that St. Paul and Minneapolis are too slow for him. He has establishes the headquarters in Duluth, Minn. He says he will be able to work on the 6th inlet, where he will spend the summer among the big trees.
The ladies of the executive committee of the Women's Club have decided to draw the color line at their convention which will convene in June 6th. They claim that the Southern women in Minneapolis would admit the Afro-American Women's Club.
Mr. Gilbert Hamilton, who has been employed at the Planktonist for the past ten years as bead private water, has resigned his position and will amass an amphosplays, Minn., where he will reside in the future. He is one of the pillars of St. Mark's A. M. E. Church he will be greatly missed.
Several young men who are studying law, are in the city in quest of employment. It would be more profitable if they would study agriculture. There are now more lazy lawyers in the country than lawyers in the city. Many of our professional men do not know how to treat their clients and patients.
Wanted 34 first class waiters for four days commencing July 10. They will pay $1.50 day and transportation from and to Chicago and place to sleep, or will pay $2.00 day without transport, or will pay H. Yunghn in June 11 at Elite sample room. None but up to 7 waiters need apply.
We notice in the hotel papers that some of the head walters are in the habit of giving cake walks. As in a mat performances to amuse the guests. To such a well-behaved audience should drop all 18 bands from the audience and seize a coach. A head waiter should be a man of some character and not a monkey. He should conduct himself in such a way as to command the respect of the patrons of the hotel and his men. He should be on the part of ignorant men is doing much to restrain the craft of the craft.
The following letter, received by J. J. Miles refers to his efforts on behalf of the erecta monument to Charles Sumner: Library of Congress, The Senate Reading Room Washington, May 11 J. J. Miles, Esq. Supp: Your very interesting letter came daily to hand to the senator. Your method and will recommend it to others. You will be the banner state in raising the funds necessary to honor a great and good statesman. I wish we had more noble workers like you. I believe we would soon raise the $30,000. Accept my kind regards and well wish your success. Very thank you.
W. H. GHAMSHAW
J. M.iles, the oldest employee of the Planktonin J. house, celebrates his twenty fourth anniversary of head water of the main dining room today. Many perous congratulated Mr. Miles for having his position since his position so long and with so many creations and players. Some persons may desire to know whether there is another head water who has held his position so long. It is stated that there are a few where they worked for hotel proprietors, not only for the employees, but for those more appreciate the value of the employee more than the staff and stewards. It is a custom for managers and stewards, when taking charge of a house, to dismiss all servants to make room for their friends and house showers. The managers of the Planktonin house have shown that the successful hotel man, Mr. Miles says that each man is Potter Palmer, John B. Drake in his day, and Messrs. Whitebeck and Chitten, and in fact no successful hotel men allowed the heads of the hotel to work. The manager changed if they were competent. Mr. Miles says that the successful hotel at Chicago 19, 1876, to work for H. B. Sherman, who was then proprietor of the Planktonin. When Mr. Miles leaves the Planktonin he will return to Chicago to spend the remainder of his life, where he ten years before coming to Wisconsin. He was a friend of Mr. Miles and assisted him in many ways of the employee from the humbest servant to the highest official he treated him with the greatest kindness since he was born at the hotel, and that he has made some very special friends with the greatest from all over the country.
As there are none so weak that we may venture to injure them with impunity, so there are none so low that we may have no time able to be able to repay an obligation. Therefore, what benevolence would dictate, prudence would confirm—Colton.
The Roentgen rays are proving their value in field surgery in South Africa. A fresh equipment of apparatus has been ordered, and skilled operators are being sent to the front.
An interesting experiment is to be tried shortly on the Leeds and Liverpool pools, in the substitution of an electric power for the horse now used for traction purposes. The work of opening and closing locks and of operating sluices is also to be done by electrical power.
A burglar has been caught in London, and, according to the English Electrical Engineer, among his implements of trade was found a portable electric light set. It was undoubtedly intended to be used in his business, and be easily switched on and off, and there would be an entire absence of color.
ST. PAUL
JOHN N. NEXL, Grand Master.
622 Boston Blk., Minneapolis, Minn.
WM. R. MORNIN, Grand Secretary.
81 GARANT Bldg., Minneapolis, Minn.
FONDER LOREN, No. I. A. P. AND A. M. meet the first Monday in good standing at Mascall Hall on Monday.
Mascall Hall in good standing at Mascall Hall in good standing always welcome.
S. H. BADLEY, W. A. WILHAY, S. A. AWLEWER.
MINNEOTA LOOD, Third and A. M. meet the first Tuesday in each month at Mascall Hall W. S. corner of Fifth and Robert Street. Master Mascall Hall in good standing at Mascall Hall in good standing always welcome.
MINNEAPOLIS
J. K. R. & LADON, No. 2922, meets Bristol and
and street between Hempepla and Nicolett Mason
Masons in good standing always welcome.
HARRY BUNY, See Medical Block
AMOND LODA A. P. and A. M. R. no. 14, M. H.
Masonle Hall Second street between Besson
and Nicolett Ave. Masons in good standing
welcome.
GEO. W. D. WAY, Medical Block
W. M. LASTER, Soc'y Lumber Exchange
Squared Supremes Council 83% of the A. and
A. Rite for the Southern and Western jurisdiction
D. C. mees the second Tuesday in each month
All Masons in good standing always welcome.
KEMP S. G. Soc'y WM. Lodge
DOD FEE TOWN
MARS LODGE, No. 2922, meets second are
and the third Wednesday for instruction at GOD
Fellows Hall, 233 E. 7th street.
T. R. HICKMAN, P. S. 422 St. Antiouw
F. D. PARKER, N. G. 396 Edmund St.
HOUSEHOLD OF RP No. 555 G. U. O. of C. F. Jacobs first and the Monday in each month for the first week of the month. Fellows Hall, 532 Webbans. M. N. G. IDA. M. J. WORKSON, M. R. 571 Summit Place
SUNDAY SERVICES: 11 U. M. 7:30 P.M. W. M.
sunday prayer meeting; 8:00 P.M. P. Victoria
sunday prayer meeting; 8:00 P.M. Thursday.
Weddings, funerals and the sick
died on noon.
REV J. C. ANDERSON, Pa.
PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH.
Cour. 18th and Cedar.
SUNDAY SERVICES: 11 U. M. 11:30 A.M.
7:40 P.M. Sunday at 12:30 o'clock. Wednesday
evening general prayer meeting. Friday evening
general prayer meeting. Sunday and weddings
promptly attended.
REV. D. S. ORNER, Pastor, 405 Farrington
SUNDAY SERVICE: Morning Prayer, Liturgy
and Worship. 8:00 p.m. in the Wesley's
veens 'Weeps' 8:00 p.m. Reverence and Sermon
8:00 p.m. Wednesday Evening Prayer and
Sermon 8:00 p.m. Brotherhood of St. Andrew 8:00 p.m. AB
cordially invited. Seats free.
G.A.R.
DUBLE CIRCLE No. 88 LAMBS Op. T. G.A.R.
Meets the first and third Tuesday afterwards
Garfield Post Hill, Alabama Street
KAYNE MIRCLE St., 620 Cedar St.
KAYNE MIRCLE St., 620 Cedar St.
MINNEAPOLIS
R. ATHYSON Long, No. 3877, records 180
sessions of the game. b. second and fourth Wednesday
action of baskets, b. second and fourth Wednesday
near the street, b. second and fourth
near the street and Hennep's ave. c. N. G.
JAMES A. Scott, S. P. P. O. H.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS
WAT. Turon Lunen No. 2. K. of P. moustache and second fourth Thurdays in the month. The best in good standing welcome. At Labor Town Fourth and Ninth Grade. J. W. JACKSON, G. C.
JAIN, A. C. A. C. and G.
FRIED OF MINNESOTA Lea. N. I. K. of P. moustache and second fourth Thurdays in the month. Brothers in good standing welcome. At Hauk's Hall second street between Hauk's and H. niel Ave.*
FRIED OF MINNESOTA G. S
K. D. WAR, K. B. and S.
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