The Appeal

Saturday, June 30, 1900

St. Paul, Minnesota

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THE APPEAL KEEPS IN FRONT BECAUSE: 4-It is the organ of ALL Afro-Americans. 5-It is not controlled by any ring or clique. 6-It asks no support but the people's. VOL. 16. NO. 26. John Nicholas Brown of New York, aged twelve weeks, an amateur multi-millionaire, is the recent oak in the tree. He has inherited two great fortunes. By the time he is twenty-one he will be worth $40,000,000. An atrue he has to rent and riches will tumble into his tip. Of course there are other babies—Rockeelers, Astors, Vanderbilters, day in and day out, the same day in and some day inherit more money than he to this child of the house of Brown, but he has his fortune now and in his own name. It isn't going to come to him tragedy—the sudden death of two brothers, John and May 1 John Nicholas Brown died. He has been ill about five weeks, and his death was due to a complication of gripe fever and Typhoid fever. He is $8,000,000. The dead man had one brother, Harold Brown. The bond between them was very close. But few brothers were close enough. He was the prime of life, rich, popular and fond of life. They were members of many fashionable clubs. Each had recently married. They were social women. He had come to them as an inheritance. All they had to do was to enjoy it. Harold Brown was in Europe. A cabagel carried him the news of his birth. He was at the time the message came, but he sailed on the first boat for New York. His one wish was to reach his dying brother before the end came. The moment when the ship arrived at the pier he was carried in an ambulance to the Hotel Netherland. Pneumonia had set in. His brother was already dead. He and he never rallied. Ten days later he was Harold Brown was childless. After making provisions for his widow the residue of the estate, worth between $100,000, he bequeathed to his little nephew. With all his money, John Nicholson Brown is absolutely helpless. He weighs just twenty pounds. All he can do is to cry when he is hungry and to cry when he is sick. He's little pink fists and wiggle his little pink toes. He looks out blinking at BOOSEVELT NOT A RICH MAN HIS INCOME ONLY $5,000 A YEAR. He Will Live in Modern Style at Washington Post Entertainment but little Contrary to an impression which prevailed widely, the governor is not a rich man. He came of the old families of New York, and inherited property which he had acquired in the idea of the ancestors. Mr. Roosevelt has not been in business in the sense of devoting himself to more money-making. He has been civil service commissioner, police commissioner, assistant attorney general, and now is governor of New York. All of this time his living has cost him more than his official salaries and the income from his inherited estate. Literary work has been Roosevelt delight, the man can never be missed, the remuneration entered into the problem of keeping the pot boiling. It is vouched for by one nearly related to the governor that but for this revenue derived from the pen, Gov. Roosevelt would have been more materially to sustain his family. To-day Gov. Roosevelt receives from all of his property and investments of every kind the sum of $2,000 a year. As vice president he will receive $8,000 a year, and this will represent his income. Literary work, which is now a delight and a material addition to his income, will presumably, but not necessarily, be the sum of the vice president. Mr. Roosevelt talked about this last night, when it had become apparent to him that he could no longer resist the inevitable. He argued that he would suspend most of his engagement, not if all, of his literary engagements, which were entirely proper for him as the governor of New York. He decided that election to the vice president would be $800 a year. Vice presidents have done this. The late Vice President Hobart did not. He maintained an establishment and catered on a scale that would be smaller than Mr. Roosevelt will be able to spend. When it came to the point of deciding to waive personal considerations and to remain passive, Mr. Roosevelt talked plainly. He said it must be understood that he was not a man of N Street, at the capital, and do little in a social way. His obligations to his family required that he should live within the income of the office and his estate. Upon this he was determined that he was civil service commissioner, ten years ago, he wrote a letter which will be read with extraordinary interest at this time. The letter was private; it dwell upon the man's career. At that time Mr. Roosevelt was reluctantly deciding that he could not make a profession of politics, and was turning to literature as his vocation. The recipient of the letter, Mr. Edward Atwell, has chosen an amuclous time to publish. This is what Mr. Roosevelt told me. "If a man has political forewage, who lives in a district where the people think as he does, and where he has a great hold over them, then he can seriously go in for a continuous public career, and be a public servant for him to shape his public course more or less with a view to his own continuance in office. I am a little inclined to envy a man who can look forward to a long and steady course of public service: in my own case such a career is out of reach for me. I am so inclined to me that a man's comfort and usefulness in public life are greatly impaired the moment he begins to worry about the great world he has come into. When a pin sacks him he weeps big tears, but he doesn't know what's the matter. Just so he has a lottle of milk he may very well contented. He wants nothing more. He knows nothing about this colossal fortune that has come to him. He would rather have a tin rattle than a diamond as big as his list. And yet he has a little diamond, part he will be one of the richest men in the world. He will have every luxury that wealth can bring. He will never know what it is to have a wash denied. Little Brown, the youngest millionaire in the land, is a pretty child, with big blue eyes and yellow hair as soft as spun silk. Every one says that he looks like his father—the father who was so proud of him. He cries when he sees him found him and doctors watch over him. When he goes out for a ride a nurse and a footman accompany him. His nursery is a big, sunny room, overlooking the balcony. The balcony is a marvel of simple elegance. It is hambar-carved with dimple Capitals and garlands of roses. His ideraldown quilt is of white silk embroidered in gold. It is made of lace that is of lace caught over pink silk. There are baby chairs of every kind and toys from all over the world. There is even a gold rattle set with diamonds, and a glove set with diamonds. He has two nurses whose business is to try to make him comfortable and to study his baby needs. If he buys the doctor is called in. He has a doctor who what all this furious is about. He doesn't know that he is a millionaire. He has been ill almost all his short life. The best medical skill in the last labor to keep breath in his tiny body. He is still fighting feebly for life. Millions cannot buy him health. He has grown thin and white and peachy. He is still weak and so faint that last week it was ruined was dying. His beautiful young mother was frantic with grief. "Save him at any cost," she begged. "He is too great to pay for my child's life." Baby Brown is now in Newport for the summer. His beautiful Fifth ave nue home overlooking the park is deserte. how his votes and actions will affect his own future. When I was in the legislature I sooh found that for my own happiness as well as for the sake of doing good work, I had to ask all thought of my own future, and as soon as I had made up my mind to this and voted simply as I thought right, not only disregarding themselves, if I honestly thought them all wrong on a matter of good work, but on a goodoney, then I began to thoroughly enjoy myself and to feel that I was doing good. "It is just the same way with my political work as civil service commissioner. I believe in it with all my heart, and am absolutely certain that I could not possibly be a commissioner if the present moment more vital importantly to the public welfare, and I literally don't care a rap what politicians say of me, in or out of congress, save in so far for which I am help or hurt the cause for which I am working. I fortunately perfectly free, for I have not the slightest concern about my political future. My career is that of a literary man, and as soon as I am out of my political position, I may not be fortunately ever be called to take another public position, or I may be; in any event, I shall try to do decent work while I am in office. I shall probably enjoy the life greatly while I am taking part in it, and I may take any time to go out of it with a perfect heart." -St. Louis Globe-Demoraur DIVINING RODS. Electricity is Now Supplanting the most notable patent for a dividing roll or metal finder was issued in March last to enable granted for mechanical and electrical contrivance designed to locate gold silver ore. It has been granted for mechanical and electrical have been rejected for various reasons. The commissioners of patients would not, for example, require dividing rod, because that has been in common with the devices that have been offered in this line involve original or meritorious features. To profitability, as well as the novelty of an invention, in various forms has been in use ever since the time of Jacob. Few people realize the extent of the minerals used in the institutes are used at the present day to locate minerals, sprigs of water, subterranean rivers, New England who still earn a living that way, and highest civilization and greatest intellectual attainments, although we have frequently educated in Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska, many of the successful oilers in Pennsylvania, are bored at points designated by "pull" or "still" marks, the mining regions use magnets and all sorts of electrical appliances, and in almost every district you will find farmers who still believe THE APPEAL. VIRTUES OF JOHN CHINAMAN W. N. Lovatt, on a visit in St. Paul, says the Dowager Empress Has Been Driven to Desperation by the Encroutement of Foreign Nations—The Patroltic Chinese Will Die Fighting the “Foreign League”; Mr. Lovatt Suggests That Enslain Japan and the United States Should Heed Empress Kwang Su and Endeavor to Introduce European Civilization by Very Slow Degrees—Some Interesting Side Lights Upon the Chinese Character. “Nga Li Shi, the Chinese empress dogger, has been driven to desperation by the encroachments of foreign nations,” she writes. “She lived forty years in the Middle Kingdom. ‘She is a very able and well informed She. she knows that she cannot successfully fight Europe. But she and the other leaders of the allied powers, if possible, by showing that China won't submit famely. In any event, she and her party, who are really patroltic, will die fighting for their country will be a great pity if China is dismembered.” M C U E L E S T H N A V Y A B O P X P A N Y E L O W UNCLE SAM MONROE DOCTR CUBA, FREED KEEP THE ISLANDS ISTHMIAN CANAL AVY ENLARGED ABOR EMPLOYED XPANSION YELLOW METAL REPUBLICANISM OPTIMISM OPPORTUNITY TRENUOUSNESS ENERGY VIGOR NLIGHTENMENT LEADERSHIP TRUSTWORTHINESS REHSE UNCLE SAM: THE CANDIDATES ARE MY PLATFORM. "The best thing, it seems to me, would be for England, the United States and Japan to restore to power the emperor, and to give him more power, then introduce European civilization by very slow degrees. It is a practical impossibility to conquer and reorganize offhand a nation of 400,000,000 people. And it is also possible only to cheek the development of the **War Chinese Trade** which is the only European one. America. Great that trade is, it is but the beginning of a beginning. of millions of Chinese know nothing yet of foreigners or of foreign products.” Mr. Lovatt, who was talking at the home of his son-in-law, Charles Beard, 21, from his month’s leave of absence from his past customs service. He has been employed in that service under Sir Robert Hart since Sir Robert organized the service immediately after the war of 1800. A sturdy man, Mr. Lovatt’s features show his intelligence, his tranquil grace of manner, his low-toned, deliberate converse mirrored that Far Eastern hospitality where gentlemen in silk petticans fan themselves, slip tea, and compliment each other in verses from the trilogy of which B.C. The “Boxers and their fidelities” continued Mr. Lovatt, “are of two classes, those that act from ignorance and those that act from knowledge. There are some twenty treaty ports in China. At these ports there are familiar creatures. But a hundred foreigners from most of these ports would be more of a curiosity than a Goilies on St. Paul Streets. "There are some good newspapers printed in China all the time and by some smaller papers issued in China by foreigners at the interior mistion. But most of the papers containing reliable facts about foreigners are seldom read in the interior save by a few high officials. Without telegraphs, railroads or good newspapers, the people in any province all alike knowledge of each in other provinces or in other races from eachigner could send Manchus were there. From Manchus came from Marseille from Marseille run Chian which numerous locals just now. A M on the throne stationed Manchus form the ones the present day. ife is extremely pathetic. If the people of some provinces have not yet heard of the threat, they are not aware of its importance that it's their lack of communication, not their lack of countries from the gossip, chiefly, the Itinerant, that this provinces should not do. This tremendous body of ignorant Chinamen should fear the 'foreign detriti', of whom they know so little; only natural that they would want to deter him away or kill him. is for the intelligent members of the foreign party, the people that know, they know that England, France, Germany, Russia, have appropriated Chinese emports and have annexed, as spheres of power, the people of Chinese territory. I understand that the Chinman's dread of being thus swallowed up by foreigners has been aggravated by the alleged action of certain French missionaries who have instituted interrogations of the Chinese magistrates shall be accorded to the French missionary bishops and higher clergy. That is taken by the Chinese as a direct encroachment upon their political liberties. "Not the Chinese," he wrote. "Now, the Chinman loves his country." MONROE DOCTR BA. FREED UP THE ISLANDS IAN CANAL ENLARGED R EMPLOYED SION METAL THE CANDIDATES ARE MY patrolism. So ever since the war of 1860, when England and France made such slaughter of Chinese, the Celestials were revenge upon all the surplus revenue upon them, and have bought some vessels and any amount of guns, ammunition and supplies. They have hired officers of various European nations to instruct the Chinese to take a fatal mistake in not following the ample of Japan. Japan has educated its military and naval officers in the modern schools. In China, on the other hand, they have been too proud to accept foreign instruction, and they still insist on following the ancient military rule that, in case of an attack, they fight while all the officers stay behind. "A very few officers of the Chinese army and navy have," it is true, been educated abroad. But they are very few in the world, and have looked up to or even esteemed at home. "Of course the empress knows all this. Her defiance of Europe, as I said, is only an Act of Despotism. She has shown extraordinary talent in diplomacy and government ever since she was appointed regent during the minority of her son. And even since she was proclaimed emperor she has retained a practical supremacy for herself. But the Manchu dynasty established three hundred years ago, although, among the Manchu, a woman is considerably more important than among the genuine Chinese. One can hardly distinguish the two former enlightened transient forger could see no different from Manchu. We were certainly the more warlike and courageous when they came down from Manchuria in the north and overrun China which was then afflicted with numerous local rebellions much as it is just now. A Manchu emperor was passed on and in every big city we stationed Manchu troops whose descent forms the garrison of those cities at the present day. "Somebody, over here," the military profession is not be called. A little Czech boy who wants to be somebody lover might register. In no other country would your parents, your anti-Casualties, get a big audience than in China. The prover goes there. The scratch of the civil man makes the military mandari bend again. Chinac Gixil Service PUBLICANISM OPTIMISM OPPORTUNITY TRENUOUSNESS ENERGY IGOR NLIGHTENMENT LEADERSHIP RUSTWORTHINESS RENSE PLATFORM. Minnesota. Hundreds of students arrive the biggest brass-framed goggle spectacles look the thinnest, palest, most studious and the examiner he can handle. The examiner he can handle. Pages of Confucius gets a big income not from legal pay, but from systematic blackmail which tradition has almost legalized. Three years after the office will make any man's fortune. The man is far more important socially and otherwise than the most wealthy merchant. Even a student belongs to a superior institution, and the man becomes gray-headedstudying out-ever attaining office, he finally receives, at the age of eighty, an appointment in recognition of his honorable endeavor. John Chinaman's Good Points. "Well, the institution I have described is sufficiently known. I have cultured it." MINNESOTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY. THE APPEAL STEADILY GAINS BECAUSE: 1-It aims to publish all the news possible. 2-It does so impartially, wasting no words. 3-Its correspondents are able and energetic. Tragic Death of Indian Murderer at the Hands of H.s Victim's "I have killed your son, old woman Take this pistol and shoot me." All the intruders showed resentment at the treatment, and Larkev drew a pistol. All the intruders and ordered him from the place. Larkev refused to go, and brandished his pistol significantly. Birdhead hands on him and poised to throw him out. Larkev fired. The hall struck Birdhead under the eye, the pistol through and through and issued at the cabin his head. He fell dead without a groan. Larkev was stricken with remorse. Birdhead entered the entrance of the cabin. Lifting his beehold the mother of the man he had slain. Her face was seamed like the bark of a tree. The pistol and shoot me. "What does she say?" with little eyes that glittered with fear. "I have killed your son, old woman." "What does she say?" with little eyes that glittered with fear. "I have killed your son, old woman." "What does she say?" with little eyes that glittered with fear. "I have killed your son, killed the old woman." "I have killed your son," repeated Larkev. "We had no quarrel. I deserve to be killed." "What is your right?" he says. "I must take merely to recall some of the good points in the Chinan character and civilization. For he is civilized, decidedly, although his civilization is neither modern nor primitive, and his fine fellow personally, I lived beside him for forty years, and I must say I like him. He's an honest man on the whole, wonderfully honest in business. He's three times more intelligent than the anses, and three times more of a man generally. The Chinan is peaceful, law abiding. In the 'majority of Chinese in the highway robbery or other violence is extremely rare, the size of the population. The troubles that the 'high blinders' have given San Francisco are caused by men that came from China. There the people are far more educated than in China. But in much the greater part of China, in the numerous cities of Middle China and of North China, one hears nothing of those vendettas between rival clans. "As for the Chinaman's commercial honesty, I heard Ewen Cameron, manager of the great Hongkong and Shanghua companies in his years ago at a banquet given in his years ago at merchants at Shanghai, that in all the numerous transactions, involving millions of dollars (Mexican), that his bank had with Chinese banks, he had never lost money. He heard exactly the same statement from Manager Whitehead of the Chartered Merchant Bank of India, Australia and the bank that has numerous branches and that one of the largest concerns in the East. "The Chinaman is not merely honest, but he has often a good heart. We read in a school book stories about the Chinaman." Filial Affection: but I tell you it's an affection worth respect when it becomes, as it really has, the foundation of the whole Chinese power. If you go into a Chinese city you never see a police officer, a street corner. The magistrate, or mayor, has a few dozen men up at his yamen, or office. Then if a robbery or assault is committed and anybody is suspected it's an easy matter to effect the arrest of the informant. The magistrate is informed that Wong Kai is probably guilty. A policeman goes to Wong Kai's house. Wong is probably absent. That doesn't matter. The policeman arrests Wong's father, or grandmother, or mother, or aunt. That's enough. And give him up. He may be thief or a cutchout, but he has too much regard for his relatives to permit them to be punished in his place. "Perhaps it's additional credit to the Chinese people," virtues, and they are considerable, are able by reason, conscience and training, and Not By Religion The Buddhists believe, true, that they will be absorbed into Buddh if they behave properly, and the Taishus, who are comparatively a small sect, follow a creed of pure reason and believe that, as a matter of common sense and reason, the man whose conduct is exemplary is the one who is not a world also. There are the abstract creeds. But I was talking once with an old Taistu priest who was 'writing messages to heaven', as he said, that is, painting on bits of rice paper such information day and ate our rice—I was talking with the old priest and asked him, 'Do they really believe this?' 'Well, he answered, 'the women do. They'll buy my 'mess, the men do. They'll them in the temple tomorrow. But there no religion in China.' And the priest was right. The mandarins, in fact, the ruling class, is neither Buddhist nor Taurist. They simply imitate Confucius, with the mandarins with the 'affairs of heaven.' Yet Buddhist, mandarin and coole, is desperately Afraid of Evil Spirites. But never allow himself to be caught in the dark without his lament. 'The Cobhamman, such as he is, has a very natural love of trade, unnatural man.' $2.40 PER YEAR. Mother. shoot him," explained the old woman to the old man. "He killed Peter—of course," said the old man. "It would be proper for me to do it, but I am blind. The young man is quite strong so I not know how to shoot," grumbled the mother. "I should miss him." He will show you," said Larvie. "Here, take the pistol. So Hold it up and point it straight at me." Point it straight! echeed the old man. But he was too weak to hold the heavy revolver. It dropped to her side. Hand was too weak to hold the doomed man. "Crook this finger on the trigger-se- and pull it when it is pointing straight at me." He up and forced her calmly. The old man listened eagerly. When the report came he inquired anxiously. "Did you hit him?" "No," said the old woman. "My hands shook." She died was unmoved. She fired again. He fell, shot through the Indian justice had been done. White man's justice was amazed. Coroner's court claimed in admission of the spirit that could prompt a murderer to betake himself for execution to the mother of his children, and people they had never heard of such a man. At the inquest Birdhead's father and mother an interpreter, told the story in a matter of fact, not seem to think that anything extraordinary had happened. "He killed my son," said the old woman. "He said how to shoot him," said the old man. They do not understand why they were killed up in the county jail at Nibrora. It is because they must be tried for murder. Larvie, although so truly Indian in his faction, was half French. It is a coincidence that he was killed with a violent death twenty-seven years ago not half a mile from the spot where the Poncas were holding a council there. Le Ravier, who was drunk, tried to break up the gathering with a pistol. He was shot and faced and turned the Frenchman's fire, wounding him in the head. When the body was found some days after the attack, and how well he was treated with an aid, the slain man's child was brought up among the Indians, and how well he was treated has been put to the last aid of his life. honesty and great wealth. China is a market for all the world. But if any nation is allowed to take part of China, other nations will soon be barred out of the country that part. Let England, America, Japan, and China combine to maintain the "open door." They depose the empire; restore the emperor, and begin a very gradual introduction of modern civilization. A step forward, given for instance, in the literary examinations given, for instance, in students speaking a foreign language and students speaking a modern language, and so on. Degrees. In this way China will afford the best possible outlet to those industries on whose growth depends the prosperity of China, America and all Western countries. BURIED ALIVE "It will be remembered that the day before the departure Senior Senator and the elder Senator Freedom reporter, Dardishal is a good and a brave man. I believe can influence him to submit to American accession to the Constitution, the necessity of waging war against the Americans. He cannot, though, I hope that I may not arouse it." The memory of Caesar, a Great Dane that belonged to Mrs. T. B. M. Curdzea of Germantown, Pa., but which died recently, is to be remembered. Caesar was nine years old and three feet tall, and was a great pet among the Carderza large collection of animals that was buried in a coffin of soft silk skirts. On the monument, which is now being rebuilt, he is being waving "Reached to an old and faithful friend." Borger Owen. There are some. On it who may be the captain of the pocket wolf feeding them. E YOU READ THE APPEAL PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY ADAMS BROS. EDITORS AND PUBLISHERS 49 E.4th St St. Paul, Minu INSUED SINCE 1862LY IN Saint Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago, Louisville, St. Louis, Dallas. ST. PAUL OFFICE, No. 164 Union Block 4th and Cedar J. Q. ADAMS, Publisher. MINNY ZAPOLIS OFFICE, Room Number 600 Onida Blank H.ROBERTS, Manager. CHICAGO OFFICE, No. 828- Dearborn St. Suite 213-218 O. F. ADAMS, Manager. LOUISVILLE OFFICE, No. 813 West Jefferson St. Room S W. V. PENN, Manager. ST. LOUIS OFFICE, No. 1002 FRANKLIN AVENUE J. H. HARRISON, Manager. DALLAS OFFICE, NUMBER 497 MAIN STREET L. A- BROWN, Manager TERMS, STRICTLY **2 ADVANCE:** Single copy, one year $2.00 Single copy, six months ..... $1.10 Single copy, three months ..... 60 Written copy to run without prepayment, the terms are each week or day, or at the rate of $4.00 Remittances should be made by Express Letter or Bank Draft. Postmaster will be received the same as cash for the facsimile. Only one cent and two cent stamp takes. In every letter that you write us never fall to the wrong person. In the post office county and state, Business letters of all kinds must be written on separate sheets. In the matter for publication. Entered as second 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. SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 1900. Prosperity has extended even to the Fish Commission, which planted over 1,100,000,000 fish in public and private waters this fiscal year, which was more than double the work done in 1896. The following figures are interesting: Defective Page Fiscal Year. Fish Distributed. 1894 450,310,543 1895 619,915,662 1896 500,821,268 1897 568,144,042 1898 587,309,546 1899 1,056,371,898 1900 1,102,017,068 While all the appropriations made during the last session of Congress were $24,000,000 larger than in 1900, it should be remembered that nine millions will be expended in taking the census and upwards of seventeen millions will be used for improving the postal service, while another seven mil- lions will be spent in increasing our navy. In other directions there has been an actual decrease in the appropriations. The value of every cow on the farm on the first day of this year was $21.60. But on the 1st day of January, 1894, under Democratic administration, each cow was worth only $21.77. Farmers appreciate the increase of $10 in the value of each of their cows, and will vote to maintain the Republican Administration in power. Approximate expenditures on account of our war with Spain, during the years 1898 and 1900, inclusive, amounted to $372,000,000. Taking this sum out of the total expenditures during that period, the surplus of revenue during the first three years of President McKinley's term would have been over $317,000,000. More contributions to our institutions of learning have been made under the present administration than at any other period in the history of the country. Education is receiving its full share of the profits of prosperity, and education will contribute liberally to the sentiment for good government. Nearly 351,000,000 pounds of foreign wool were imported into the United States during the fiscal year ending HOLLAND' HOLLAND'S SUBMARINE TORPEDO BOAT. OW that the Holland has been purchased by the government, and is a vessel of Uncle Sam's navy in good and regular status, a ship that has taken in her history and characteristics. This particular craft was built by a private corporation. The designer had previously induced the navy department to adopt another of his plans, the construction of a boat of the same unique design. Baltimore, the government having let the contract to a well-known firm of shipbuilders in that city. For various reasons, however, that boat the Plunger has never been built. It was beached the later boat, which bears his own name, and which was constructed at Eliza- THE FISHING BOAT THE HOLLAND SUBMARINE BOAT; Recently purchased by the United States Government bethport, he thought he saw several ways in which he could improve on his original design. The Holland, for instance, is designed to be larger and harder to change her course more quickly. This possibility gives her a great tactical advantage. The Holland is shaped like a sweet potato, is fifty-three feet four inches long and ten feet three inches in diameter at the broadest part. When cruising about one-eighth of her bulk would be above the water, she would be eight feet of water. She can be wholly submerged and yet operate in a depth of twelve feet. June 3, 1897, just before the Dingley tariff became law. Last year there was less than 77,000,000 pounds of foreign wool imported, a difference of 274,000,000 pounds under protection. It is said that Mr. James Creelman is stated for Secretary of State in case of Democratic success this year. Had this been mentioned before, the Republican majority in Oregon would doubtless have been much larger. Perhaps Senator James K. Jones, of Arkansas, chairman of the Democratic National Committee, can enlighten the people as to the evil effects of trusts. He has for a long time been a member of the cotton bale trust. The American Bridge Company is one of the most recent trusts that has been formed. It already has a competitor in the Structural Iron and Steel Company which has just been incorporated at Baltimore. In the United Kingdom, the average amount of money to the credit of each depositor in the savings banks is $103. In the United States it is $370, over 250 per cent more than in the British country. Southern voters should remember that more new factories have sprung up in the South since the Dingley tariff became a law than were ever erected in that section for years previously. The party that constantly endeavors to drag foreign questions into a Presidential campaign is naturally afraid of its domestic record. The demand for farm-hands in Kansas is largely in excess of the demand for Populistic oratory. It will not require an intricate exploit in arithmetic to locate the electoral vote of Oregon. The stop-the-prosperity party is not going to make much headway at the ballot-box. Senator Pettigrew expired in a blaze or noise and misrepresentation. S. SUBMAR Propulsion is effected by a screw that derives its power from a gasoline engine when the boat is running at the surface. When she is submerged the screw is driven by an electric motor and storage battery. This battery would be pre-ionously charged by the boat's own engines. One charge of the battery ought to enable her to run seventy-five miles under water. When submerged her speed would not exceed four or five knots. When cruising she can travel a little longer. She has made a speed of seven or eight knots on the surface. Besides the ordinary rudder, a vertical plane to direct the boat's course to the one extending in $ \Delta $ horizons, and intended to alter the level at which she THE FIRST WATER CITY IN THE WORLD runs. Titting this horizontal rudder downward depresses the bow of the boat, and it then tends to bring her to the surface again. On top of the vessel, amidships, is a telescopic tube twenty inches in interior of the vessel, of being raised from right or left, the bottom of the tube a height of eight inches to one of thirty. The Opening at the upper end, by which the water is released, is closed by a hinged door that can be made water tight. This tubular device, reads a description in the New York Tribune, a newspaper, that describes the pilot makes his observations. When A New Idea in Rat Traps A rat and mouse trap which has been patented in all the countries throughout the civilized world issuing patents, the invention of Heinrich Benseler, of Beinrode, Germany, is really an ingenious arrangement, as the animal never gets a chance even to nibble at the bait, and when it comes into the trap it is automatically chance of escape without a possible chance of escape, modified form of this bottle-shaped trap is employed for catching rats and min in the house. The small end of the field trap is inserted in the mouse hole, the tubular passageway forming a continuation of the underground passages. The animal, in trying to get the bait naturally enters the hole and is thus induced to enter the tubular passage from which it cannot escape. A Pad in Entertaining An ingenious woman in Cinchinati has inaugurated a "uncheon day." She has sent out cards to her most intimate friends reading "Tuesdays in April. Luncheon from 1 till 3 p. m." The table is to be set with extra places, and at 1 o'clock the hostess will take her seat with those who may be present. As friends drop in they will go directly to the dining-room, and, after greeting the hostess, will sit there and please at table. The affairs promise to will delightfully informal. The menu will never be elaborate, and those who have the good fortune to receive cards will not fall to drop in between the hours named, for they are doubly sure of congenial company. Sleep Protects Them. A medical paper says that in railway collisions nearly all the passengers who are asleep escape the bad effects of shaking and concussion, nature's own anaesthetic preserving them. Christianity is the highest perfection o humanity—Johnson. THE BOOK WORLD STERN VIEW OF THE HOLLAND SUBMARINE BOAT As originally designed the Holland had three weapons. One was an expulsion tube of the same type that the ordinary torpedo without any special violence. The Whitehead projectile is an automobile, or self-propelling, affair. It carries a tiny screw and automatic steering apparatus, and takes care of itself when once the ship is under attack. It can carry three Whiteheads (twelve feet long and eighteen inches in diameter. One would be placed in the expulsion tube ready for services, and the others would be carried out in the boat. The tube opens out in front. The boat also had what was called an "aerial gun." This was built into the frame of the craft, and opened forward above the torpedo tube. It had an upper arm that could be opened into the air a projectile containing STERN VIEW OF THE HOUSE ical Chart of Colored Race: Light After Darkness, Xinh, 1886; Ethnography, Lexington, 1880 Blas, J. J. Gould: Synopsis of Phenology, B.J. Madison: Poems, Philadelphia. Bluga, A.: Sermons, Richmond, 1888. Black, Andrew: Two Roads, Sumer, S.C. Blydon, Edward: Liberia's Offence Blydon, 1882: Christianity, Islam, and Gero: From West Africa to Palestine. Booth, C.P.: Plain Theology for Plain People. Bowen, J. W. E.: Africa and the American Breast, Linda: Incidents in the Life of a Brooks, Chan. H.: History of the Grand Order of Odd Fellows, Philadelphia. Brown, Margaret; French Cook Book Washington, D. C., '86. Bruce, H. C.; The New Man. Hibry, Hepy.; Autobiography. Cozart, W. Forrest: The Waiter's Manual, H. J. Bohn & Bro. Chicago, 1888. Cook, W. Forrest: The Waiter's Manual, H. J. Bohn & Bro. Chicago, 1888. Cambell: Echoes from the Cabin, etc. Cambell, RI: My Mother Land. Cambell, RI: My Father Land. Carson, Hannah: Glory in Affliction, Puff aldephila, 1864. Carpenter, Charles. Chestnut, Chas. W.: The Conjure Woman: Life of Frederick Douglas; Wife of His Charles Peter H.: History of the Black Brigade, New York, N.Y. New York, Philadelph Coleman, H. H.: Poor Ben, Philadel- Coleman, W. H.: A Casket of Pulit Coleman, W. H.: Coplin. Level *J*. Key to Stirling University. 1880. Key to the Church, Nashville, 1880. Key to the Church, Nashville, 1880. Council, W. H.; Laws of Widow. Council, W. H.; Talks for the Times; Council, W. H.; History of Bethel Cromwell, John W.; History of Bethel Historical and Literary Association, 1886. Crostwalt, Wm. A.: The Negro Problem, Camel, Alex. A: The Greatness of Christ, Africa and America, 1831; Future of Africa; Civilization the Primal Need, etc. 1884. Cugano, Ottibah: Narrative of Enslave- dia, D. Webster: Poems. Delaware State: Principles of the Colored Culture, 1852. Condition of the Colored People, 1852. Life: Bondage and My Freedom; Haytizi Douglass, Wm.; Annals of the First Afr. Douglass, Wm.; Philadelphia of Dube, John L.; Philadelphia of My Native Land, 1882. B.; Suppression of the Slave Trade, etc.; Philadelphia Negro and Minors; Lyrics of Lowly Life; Uncolled; Folks from Dike; The Heartbreak, Durham, John S.; How to Teach History, Durham, John S.; How to Teach History, History; Unity of Human race, etc. Earliest, 1882. (M. Matthes; Anns. Easton, William E. I: Dessalles. Embry, J. C.: Digest of Christian Theo- leum, E. I: Dessalles. Equinho, O. I: Autobiography, Boston, 1837. Flipper, H. O.: Colored Cedet at West Oak. Fortune, T. T.: Negro In Politics; Black and White. Foote, Jolia A.: Brand Plucked from Fire Frederick, Francie: Frederick's Slave Life. Francis, Jas. T. T.: Crimson Altem, Memphis 1838; Mildly Gleaning, Memphis. Gaines, W. J., *African Methodist in the Mangrove*. D. B.; *Racial Socialism in the Mangrove*. D. B.; *Racial Socialism in the Mangrove*. Henry Highland; *Pamphlet Addresses*. Garnet's Memorial Disc course, 1850. Gresham, G. N.; Mathematics (text book) Grimke, G. N.; Impersonal (text book) Grimke, A. H.; Life: Charles Sumner William Lloyd Garrison Henry M.; M. Colored Man in the M. E. Church. Haley, James T. P.: Sparkling Gems (poems). Holiday, J. M. H.: Manual of Discipline; The Racial Problem. Hamilton, F. W.: Conversations on the C. M. E. Church; Plain Account of C. explosives. Then there was a somewhat similar gun, pointing at and submerged, so as to send through the water, with force derived from a considerable charge of powder, a torpedo devoid of means of self-propulsion. This was called a submarine gun. Experiences with the Vesuvius, by revealing the diffusities of imaging a fixed gun, has led experts to believe that the Holland's aerial and submarine guns will be practically useless. It is not improbable that they will be abandoned, and the Whitehead torpedo tube fire the sole offensive feature of the armament. The chief virtue of a submarine torpedo boat is that she can render herself more completely invisible than a vessel that always stays on the surface. She could be attacked by night without detection, and it is hard for she could do so by day. The latter is altogether out of the question with any other type of torpedo boat. Of course, such tiny craft cannot navigate in rough waters. They are fitted to live and work only in the open sea, and they meant for coast defense only. They special skill and courage on the part of officers and crew. But they can do what no other torpedo boat can, and have a distinct field of usefulness before them. An officer of the United States navy who has been involved in about a year ago evinced great faith in her possibilities in the right hands. LLAND SUBMARINE BOAT. Harper, F. E. W.; Iola Lever, 1828; Poems: "The Black History," Black Man; Negro in Sacred History; John M. Henson; Henderson, John M. The Black Man; Henderson, John M. The Owner; Fabres of the Negro, Own Daughter; Henson, Josiah: *Hearth Henson's Story.* Hood, J. W.: *One Hundred Years, etc.* Hood, M. E. Z. Church: *Negro in Christian Fulpii; Two Characters, Two Destinies.* Jennings, Paul: Colored Man's Life of Madison Johnson, E. A. (Mrs.) The Hazley Fam- lily Johnson, Edward A. : School History of Nigeria Rye; Negro in Spanish-American Johnson, Jas. H. A. The Pine Tree Misi- fonian. Johnston, H. T.: The Divine Logos. Johnson, H. T.: Prominent Colored Men of Jewish History. Keeckley, Mrs. E.: The Blues on the Scenes. Lampton, E. W.: Sacred Dynamite on Loney, Lucy C.: Struggles for Freedom, 1890. Langston, John M.: Freedom and Citizenship. From the Stanton to the Capitol. Ed. by Adrienne and Adrienne of North Carolina. Leary, John S.: Creators of North Carolina. Leary, B. B.: Light and Truth, Boston, 1888. Logue, J. W.: As a Slave and as a Freeman. Logue, K.: History of the First African Church, Church Mossell, C. W.; Toussaint L'Overture, Miller, Kiley; Review of Hoeffner's Race Woll. N. C.: Colored Patrols of the Revo- Anonymous. The Negro Pew, Boston, 1837. Newson, J. T. C.: Know What You Want Northrop, nominee. Twelve Years a Slave. Ousley, Benl.: Translation of Gospels and Pale, T. F.: Twenty-two Years of Free- dom. Daniel A.: Recollections of Seven- years: Trentise of Domestic Eight. Bilstein of A. M. E. Church. Bilstein, M. M. Mecillaneous. Poems. Baltimore, 1850. Pope, Barbara: Storelettes, and the War. Quatroon (assn.) A Colored Man Around the World. Baird, A. L. Life of Rev. John Kasper, Richmond, R. Randolph, Peter: Sketches of Slave Life. Ransom, R. C. School Days at Wilberforce, 1882: Disadvantages and Opportunities of Colored Youth, Cleveland, 1884. Ray, H. Cordellain: Lincoln (a poem), 1883; Rector, John K.; Chart of Negro Progress, 1888; Rector, J. D., A. J.; Life of D. A. Blide- out, Sr., 1891. Riley, Jerome F.: Philosophy of Negro Suffrage. Rowe, Geo. C.; Thoughts in Verse, 1857, *Histoire du Monde Afro-American Congress*, 1883. Rush, Christopher; Rise and Progress of the American Civil War, Sampson, John P.; Temperament and Phenology of Negro Race; Mixed Scarborough, W. S.; First Greek Lessons, AFRO-AMERICAN STATISTICS From the United States Exhibit at the Paris Exposition. From Special Staff Correspondent of the APPEAL Paris, June 15th, 1900: The most artistic work in connection with the Afro-American Exhibit at the Paris Exposition of 1900 are the excellent chart designs executed by and under direction of Prof. W. E. B. DuBois or Atkinson of Prof. W. E. B. DuBois. This work consists of a series of charts presenting statistics pertinent to the Afro-American. These charts and diagrams are so designed as to give one at a glance what would require pages of reading. This work is historical standpoint, as well as showing the ability of Prof. DuBois. It is needless that this particular part of the exhibit receives the attention of those who are seeking to learn the real status of the African man. It is very usual to observe Mr. Calhoun explaining these diagrams to an interested group of listeners. Proportion of Afro-Americans in the total population of the United States as shown by each 30 years: 1800, it was six; 1830, it was one-sixth; 1860, it was one-seventh; 1880, it was one-eighth. Proportion of total Afro-American children of school age who are enrolled in public schools: 1876, 37.59 per cent; 1869, 57.66 per cent; 1869, 57.29 per cent. Enrollment in the Afro-American Common Schools of the former slave states of the United States: 1876-77, 575; 1876-78, 801; 823,74; 1876-78, 1048,659; 1890-91, 1,239,549; 1895-96, 1,429,713. Number of students pursuing various courses of study in the 178 special institutions for Afro-American education: Common elementary training, 25,095; grammar school courses, 13,563 industrial training, 12,341; normal training, 4,672; high school college training, 1,455; professional training, 1,319. By noting the last item it will be seen that a very small number are pursuing professional studies. American newspapers and periodicals are the most showing that we have: Magazines, 3; daily papers, 3; school papers, 11; weekly papers, 138; total, 153. Experience among Afro-Americans shows that 100,000 there are 38 pupils (1890). Statistics of Afro-American church organizations: Number of organizations; number of church edifices; 23,770; number of church property; $26,628,448; number of communicans; 2,673,977. Religion of Afro-American: Catholic, Protestant. With reference to the following statistics of the state of Georgia exclusively, Mr. Calloway explains: "The state of Georgia was because the state of Georgia was because the state of Georgia was probably more Afro-Americans than in any other state in the Union, and further because of the fact that Prof. DuBois, being thoroughly acquainted with Georgia, was decided upon as the most able person to handle the subject." The population of Georgia by counties shows that the county in which Sumitran is located has over 30,000 Afro-Americans, the state having over 858,000. City and rural Afro-American population in 1890: 78,139 in cities of over 10,000 in cities of 5,000 to 10,000; 37,999 in farms from 5,000 to 5,000; 37,452 in villages in the country and villages. Illiteracy among the Afro-Americans (1890): 86,99 per cent; 1870; 92 per cent; 1870 per cent; 1870 per cent; 67,27 per cent; 1900; 1900; 1900; Afro-Americans children enrolled in public schools: 1806, 710, 10351; 1878, 72,655; 1884,110,150; 1888, 120,555; 1888, 156,383; 1897, 18056; Afro-Americans public schools: 1886, 2,512; 1889, 2,500; 1892, 3,206; 1897, 3,216. Number of Afro-American public schools in Georgia: 1871, 124; 1878, 1436; 1883, 2,020; 1891, 2,465; 1898, 2,795. Number of Afro-American students taking various courses of study offered in Georgia schools (1890): Business, 12; classical, 18; professional, 152; scientific, 161; normal, 383; industrial, 2,252. Valuation of Afro-American public school property in Georgia: Athens, 10; Macon, 16,000; Columbus, 17,400; Mason, 15,000; Savannah, 40,000; Atlanta, 30,400; places, 44,110; total reported, 198,910. Value of land owned by Afro-Americans in Georgia, 1875, 1,263,902; 1880, 1,522,171; 1885, 2,828,198; 1890, 3,425,176; 1895, 4,158,900; 1899, 4,220,120. Correspondent. One of the most interesting Parts Exposition is that of the Republic of Georgia in agricultural section. The exhibit consists chiefly of the products of the little country--coffee, palm oil, kernel roos, rubber, ivory, dyewood, arrow root, cocoa and rice. Overlooking the large portrait of President Hilary R. W. Johnson, surrounded by his cabinet. In connection with this exhibit it may be well to call attention to some interesting history in connection with the idea of a republic. The Republic was founded by Americans as a free settlement for United States Negroes in 1822. July 26, 1847, the Republic was declared independent, and was recognized by England, and the government is formed after that. The government consists of a president, and a congress composed of a senate of eight members, elected for four years, and a house of representatives of thirteen members, elected for three years, in addition to the senate. It is similar to that of the United States. MORRIS LEWIS. A JAZZCASTLE GAMMON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY AIMS AND METHODS The aim of this school is to do practical work in helping men toward success in the job market. It is broad and practical; its ideas are high; its work is thorough; its methods are fresh, useful and interesting. COURSE OF STUDY The regular course of study occupies 10 hours of work in the several departments of the theoretical instruction usually pursued in the leading theological schools of the country. EXPERIENCES AND Tutition and room rent are free. The apartments for students are plainly furnished and are free of charge, with no dollars per month. Buildings heated by steam. From loans without interest, and gifts of friends, are granted to deserving students. Gifts of money, self-help. No young man with grace, gifts, and energy, need be deprived in this advantage. For purposes of him in the advantage address REV WILBUR THIRKIND, D. D, President Atlanta, Ga. GKESTEIN NORTON UNIVERSITY CAMP. CARESPRING, BUILTTON县, NV. "Industrial training will set to motion ten thousand wheels." REV. WM. J. KIMMON, D. S., LL.D., Co-owner and firm Chancellor. THE LOCATION. The Eckert School is situated at campus Spring, Ky., twenty-one miles from Louisville, Ky., in the county where the county being what is known as a prohibition county for many years. The building and grounds are occupied by a mountainous, draining miniature caravans, each county being what is known as a prohibition species. In this quiet retreat away from the bountie of mountains, places of rice and unwholesome amusements, places of places of rice and unwholesome amusements, powers developed and secured. All this plays no role in the desire to do proper for an active life. DEPARTMENTS Library Photography, Oakland Mining Basket Making, Tailoring, Cooking, Basket Making, Dress Making, Business College, Shop. The above departments are under competent successor branches to the ones they have from Owen Park, in a State University, Chicago Medical Training School, state医院, or on our test Institutions. The rooms and staff are as arranged that students may study any of most desirable, laws of any age, course at any time. The courses at any future time. The time to initial work in all departments. TERMS. Board, room, faculty, and teaching $8.00 per hour. Students may enter at any time in the year. Deserving students may have the privilege of extra reduction in proportion to the work they are willing to do. We ask patience and account of the time but on account of the very high character of the course and all conditions are first-time and offered to both sexes. Deserving route to Cone Spring, KY, Louisville, KY, and all business address the President. REV. C. H. PARRISH, A. M., CANE SPRING, KY. "GOD HATH MADE OF ONE BLOOD ALL NATIONS OF MEN." IS THE NOTTO OF Berea College Christian, non-sectarian. Three college courses: English, French, and Spanish. Indecent fee of $10 per term. Expenses less than $500. 282 white and 217 Afro-American students. Send resume to GILBERT THE GIRL EDUCATION. Address: 1234 Main Street, New York, NY 10001. SHAW UNIVERSITY RALEIGH, N.C. For both axes, Departments of Law, Medicine, Biology, and Psychology. College Preparatory, English and artistry. Years begin tenure as JR for catalogues, circula- tions, and course materials. PRES. CHAS. S. MESERVE Raleigh N.C. Fourteen teachers. Elegant and commotion- building. Climate unpassive. Partitions: short, medium, and shortest. Typewelling and Industrial Training. FIFTY DOLLARS. **ADVANCE** Will pay for board, room, light, tuition, and incidentals for the entire year. Send $60 per month for $20 per term. **Through work done in each department.** Send for circular, to the president. REV. JUDSON S. HILL D. D. Morrissell, Tenn. CENTRAL TENNESS COLLEGE NASVILLE, TENNESSEE Department of Pediatrics, Pregnancy College, Theological Medical, J. F. L. A. Pharmacology and Biochemistry, University of Nassau, Nassau district. Over forty instructors at attendance last month. For further informaI and catalogue, go to www.nasville.edu. 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 HOW TO HAVE EASY, HEALTHY, SHAPLEY FEET ST. PAUL. 4 WEEKS RECORD IN MINNESO TA'S CAPITAL. ee ‘he Salatly Clty and Hatatly City Holle Newsy ema o€ Social, Religions atu “enernt Matiers Among the Poopla, oi) ee Xo one can atford to pay something fr fothing. ‘The Gordon has established the ‘ght prlee for fne hatemnot $5 One or cwo gentlemen roomer eanted. Apply at 527 St. Anthony avenue, or at THE APPEAL office. If you wish to visit a nice summer ‘resort for boating, fishing and plenies try Lake Owasso, the beauty of Min esota. ‘The steamboat excursion which has deen aavertised to be gifen by St, Pe ter Clavers’ Sodality has been indef nitely postponed. Mrs. Charles Coleman left this week for St. Louis, where her mother will shortly join her. ‘They will be the guests of Mrs, Nancy Lyons. -those or our patrous whe desire te pave matter publisked must get the ‘same in this office not later than Thursday, utherwise It may be crowd- ed out. 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, Stoux Falls, 8. Dak. Mr. Burrill Witkinson is in the city to spend the summer visiting friends Mr. Will Alston, Jr. left for Chicago last week to visit his uncle, Mr. W. ‘Williams. Gertle Bell and Clara Morris, a0 -eused of robbing William Nelson of 327 at 50 West Tenth street, wore re- leased Monday, owing to a lack o prosecution. Persons ausiring to vistt the Appea office are hersby notified that it has been removed from the fifth to the *hird floor, Rooms 109 and 110, in the rear, Union Boek, Is your bate straight? If not ser 50 cents to Ozonlzed Ox Marrow Co. TG Wabash avenue, Chieago, I, fo © vottle of Gzonlzea Ox Marrow and you can easily straighten it. ‘The publie bath house will be oper Yrom 6.8. m, to 11 p. m, from now on ‘excepting Wednesday. On that day. tor the exclusive use of women, the hours will be § a. m. to 6 p. m. ‘RY THE MEALS AT JOHN Gon- FREY'S, NO. 148 BAST NINTH STREET, BETWEEN ROBERT AND JACKSON, AND YOU WILL NOT WISH TO EAT ANY OTHERS. Mr, and Mrs, W. B. Turner and daughter, Bernice, of Chicago, are in ‘the clty to reside, Mr. Turner 1s a Digther of Mr, J. B, Turner, 292 Sher ‘ine avenue, with whom he will make thole home. Some people who send matter sor publication in THE APPEAL, seom x think they need only to put a 1 cens ‘stamp on same Decauso the envelop: 48 unsealed, All communtcations should tear a 2 cont stamp. Iuulu Lee, May Gould, Jessie James and Fanny Anderson, from Minneapo- Uis, wore arrested on the streets after midnight Monday, charged with loit fering after midnight. They were dis- ‘charged Tuesday by Judge Orr. Af you wish good shave, batr cut ce shampoo, call at Richard Cvusby's ‘neat shop, No. 97434 Minnesot treet Cirst-class workmen oniy. | isfac Hon guaranteod. Music for ¢ occa ons furaisited on ekort notice, Mr. Jon Godteey has moved is boars Ag house to No, 148 Bast Ninth street, ne trveon Teter! sd Jackson, and Is now nem Saved to furnish those dellghtfal mens {is now place is much more conventent fis patrons. Ail are Invited to call and ts a meal, ‘The Juvenile department of the pub- lic brary, which Is located in one of the rooms formerly oceupied by, the mayor, will be removed to the new Ii brary building this week. ‘The room will be restored to the mayor's ulte. If anybody doesn’t know why Link Overalls has a smile for everybody he meets, the information is given here- in, “His wife presented him a fine ten- and-a-half-pound boy Wednesday morning, with the ald of Dr. Val Do Turner. ‘At the St. Paul Carnival on June Jsth to 30th there will be Hawaitan Japanese, Puerto Rico, Filipino and Oriental theaters, which will give the visitors an opportunity to witness ‘amusements as supplied by theatres In foreign lands, Jane Patterson, the woman accuses of conducting a disorderly resort at 318 Minnesota strect, falled to appear for trial in the municipal court yester Say, having been released on her own Tecognizanee, and an attachment was Tesued for her. Sallie Watkins, Mand ‘Taylor and ‘Viola Shaw, gathered in by the police from 128 East Highth street Wednes- ‘Say, will have a hearing today. ‘The ‘Watkins woman is charged with Keep- tng and the other two with visiting Aisorderly house. THE WAITER’S MANUAL, th 'W. Forrest Cozart, Hotel Beckel, Day- ton, Ohio. Price only $1.00, xt will pay you to buy Union Label Patent Flour. Every sack 1s guaran- teed to be made by Union Labor and from the Best of Hard Wheat. Try it and you wlii say it is the best. Re- member the rame, Union Label Pat- ent. Sold ty all Grocers. Don’t take any other. ‘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 eat good, wholesome, home-cooked meals should try those furnished at Johp Godfrey's, No. 148 East Ninth street, near Jackson. Mamie Scott, who has been work- ing for Mrs. Hart, 312 Bast Seventh street, in the capacity of a domestic, was arrested Monday charged with stealing $20. She was brought before the police court Tuesday, but the pros- ecuting witnesses failed to appear and she was discharged, Haggenback’s great wild animal show will be seen at the St. Paul Car- nival, given by the Elks from June 18th to 80th. No traveling menagerie carries a finer collection of animals than will be presented and the adinis- sion to see them will be but the small amount of ten cents. John Godfrey, No. 148 East Ninth street, between Robert and Jackson, fm prepared to take care of a few Toomers at reasonable rates. Tran- sients accommodated. Board furnish- ed when desired. Best home-cooked ‘meals in the elty. If you doubt it, try them once and you'll be convinced. Postmaster A. R, MeGill will take formal charge Sunday morning. On ‘Monday the six additional clerks au- thorized by the department at Wash- ington will begin work. Frank L, Krayenbunl, a member of the last state legislature, has been named to succeed ‘Charles W. Copley as cashier in the Postoice. The job pays $1,800 a year. Melvin H. Smith and G. Lemke (white) visited the saloon of Nick Krey on Third street, last Wednesday night. A dispute arose over a dice same and Smith drew a revolver, but, as Lemke had the cartridges, Smith had no chance to make a more war- like demonstration. Smith and Lemke were arrested for disorderly conduct. ‘The Japanese theatre at the St. Paul Carnival, from June 18th to 30th, bas one especial novelty. A Japanese Juggler lies upon his back and tosses in the air with his feet a little Japan- ese boy and a barrel, alternating the objects, keeping both the boy and the barrel in the air at the same time, ‘The little fellow seems to enjoy the toss-up. ‘The Oriental Hair Parlors, Mrs, . 3. Allen, prop, Fashionable hatr dressing, shampooing, hair cutting. curling, manfeuring, ete. ‘Har straightening and sealp treatment a apecialty. Hair work to order, Calls made at residences; satisfaction guar- anteed. Special sale on switches dur- ing the holidays, 205 Krahmer Block, N. B. cor. ith and Sibley. ‘The German village will be one of the notable features of the Midway at the St. Paul Carnival from June 18th to 20th. While refreshments are serv- ed at the numerous tables, choice en- tertainments will be given by star per- formers. It will be a restfuj and joy- ful spot in the Midway, and “Meet us in the German Village on the Midway” will be the shibboleth of the two weeks" carnival e ‘The Midway at the St: Paul carnival, to be given by the Elks from June 18th to 20th, will furnish a series of most attractive exhibitions. ‘The streets of Cairo will always be a novelty to an American audience. They will be a special attraction to children, as an opportunity will be offered for riding elephants, camels and burros. This will suit both old and young, and the children will flock by the thousands to the streets of Calro, In the streets of India which will be reproduced at the St, Paul Carnival, gion on June 18th to 30th, some of the most remarkable features of jug- gling ever seen will be witnessed. ‘The Juggler will make a tree grow before the eyes of the audience; he makes a polsonous snake stand on its tail and dance to music; he causes a. fifteen- year-old boy to disappear, though he has no stage or apparatus to ald him, 4nd performs various other wonderful features, ‘The police continue to make it warm for the Minnesota street contingent. ‘Mr. Thomas Jefferson, proprietor of ‘The Eureka, was arrested Wednesday THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER. rat Eas [iil {1} Wor Se (1 ee ee | Sale Now On| ee Pit Serer PRCT [Sale Now On] eatin: fed (DEED ative Cash or Credit | gy ore dbssae™ Furmastinc co PES? Cash ret | P. L. Getchell was filed in the supreme court Monday by Davis, Kellogg & Severance. The case will not be heard until July 18, when it is expected that the question of the validity’ of the en- abling act under which the new char- ‘ter was submitted and adopted will be argued. ‘Rerverroaxs Hold thelr Convention in St. Paut, and ‘Nominate theRxrnlog Tickrt. ‘The Republican state convention was held at the Auditorium Thursday. It was a largely attended and most har- monfous convention. The -result of the convention was the nomination of the following ticket: For United States Senator—Knuto Nelson, of Alexandria. For Governor—Samuel R. Van Sant, ‘of Winona. For | Lieutenant Governor—Lindon A. Smith, of Montevitleo. For Secretary of State—Peter E. Hanson, of Litchfleld. For ‘State ‘Treasurer—Jullus H. Block, of St. Peter. For Attorney General—Wallace B. Douglas, of Moorhead. For Chlet Justice of the Supreme CourtCharles M. Start, of Roches- ter. For Associate Justice of the Supreme Court—Loren W. Collins, of St. Cloud. For Railroad Commissioner, Four- Year-Term—Joseph G. Miller, of Two Harbors. For Railroad Commissioner, Four- Year-Term—ira B. Mills, of Moorhead. For Railroad Commissioner, Two- Year Term—Charles F.. Staples, of ‘West St, Paul. S FRIENDS At the Grand Opera House, St. Pant, ‘The onnouncement that the Pike The. atre Co,, is to prevent next Suada? night asthe second bill of their sesron at the Grand. Edward Milton Royles famous play “Friends” recalls the fine impree sion orbated by the ioitias presentation of that play in this city. Royle, ite au thor at that time persons lly appearing ip the cast. It will not be d.ubted by thote acquainted with the remarkable versatility and arlistic ability of the Pike Co,, bat that this clever orgin:zition wil give a performance of Mr. Rayle’s plas that wi I etand even the test o* compari som tothe minutest degros. ‘The av'sh ‘manner in which the plae wil! be mount ed will algo undoubtedly be @ revelatior to patrons of former stock seesans “Friends is a play characterized by many pictures, momentary tableaux viv- ‘Ants, as it were, by means of which cer- thins s tuations and scenes are held for a ‘moment and impressed upon the mind of the auditor. So that efter leaving the theatre they may be recal'ad, one afeer another, with pho'ographic distinction. ‘The comedy elements in Friends” he® not been cverlooked and is so skillfally injected throughout tha'play, by its au- thor that it relieves the test of the moet ‘drematic’scenes ina manner that is at once charmingly refresbing. ‘The cast includes Mies Sarrah Truex, Fred J. Bot- ler, Herchel Mayhall, J. B. Everham, Byron Dovgies, Chas, Wyngate, Lila ‘Vano, Katharine Fisher, Angela Dolores, Frederick Wallaco and Mies Duncan. KING GHRISTIAN. ‘with Laborers, King Christian of Denmark has tho reputation of being the most demo- cratic despot as well as the best bé- loved King in all. Burope. Notwith- standing that his people like him, En- glishmen, who are used to a monarchy, ean not understand why in this en- Mghtened age the Danes will let their king rule over them in a way rather similar to that for which King Charles lost his head 250' years ago, King Christian chooses his ministers accord- ing to his own fancy, and not from the party that Js in power in the Rigedag. Danes sometimes object to this, bnt they seem to put up with it. As illys- trating the democracy of tho king, one day he was walking out alone as usus!, ‘and unguarded, and he came upon a Jot of workingmen who had struck and who were discussing thelr grievances. “Let us ask the king what he thinks,” said one of them. “Ja, Ja,” sald the rest; and so they told him that they were not paid living wages, while their employers were rolling in wealth. ‘Afar ey Had ile No Gk uo the iseussion and pointed out, where they were right and where thoy were wrong. He told them that thelr employers ‘were not as rich as they were supposed to be, and that the granting of shorter hours and more pay ‘ould ruin the in- dustry of the Kingdom. The workmen @idn’t agree with thelr king and said 80, and: for an hour the joint discus- sion continued: “He didn’t make'a sin- gle convert, nor did they win over thelr King; and they parted in good humor.—New York Press. : BRR Se cb aera pees reece eee MINNEAPOLIS. DOINGS IN AND. ABOUT == GREAT “FLOUR ciTy." Matters Social, Religions tad Gever ‘Which Have Happened andare to hnppes Among the People of the Olty oa te Tea ‘Mrs. Elliott has taken to wheel rid Ti nhs cal a al cates sean. ‘The little son of Mr. and Mrs, Yack a, bess Guat oa olin arene en ee the city last week, the guest of Mr. tia its, Ghar / Mr. Wash Rogers was on¢ of the do egates to the Republican ,state con- Frat cman a Mrs. Ella Smith was in the elty les rat ae aoe ee Sa her ot oa ‘Coutts of feat a intended for publication in The Ap- al ete ate a Woche ace etna erin, aa sie they: is eerec eerye eernea tae Cetera or atal jae ais Saar anes eee these homes you must publish'them it the Appeal, ‘The city hospital is under quaran ets way i te Rei at eluate eth cal wees roe Brown, John has married sinc A ecru ue trast y B i y aN es. Sd wr rt i a m DFR IP eo ee Bande, and fee entertalnment by pro fecslonal performers for four’ hear tach’ day. "Ie only cons ten coment fain tdmoaion to the atrete ke Midway is to be beyond the street dis- play, and there ton doting shoes be found. “The aditsston: however te ach fs but ten conta, 8 that te whol Satertalee cat ents, 80 that the ws | Sical class will repeat their entertain- te | ment at Bethesda Baptist church, in ve [the mear future. Watch ‘THE AP. | PEAL tor the date, ie] Mrs. J. C. Reld has opened a dreds: c making parlor at her home, 2638 Stev- ens avenue, where abe will stake aun 2.| mer dresses for $1.50 and upward; “|shirt waista trom 60. cents upwand i¢ | Good work guaranteed. ir| Mrs. William Parker, of Spokane h.| Falls, isin tho ety visiting ner slater, 1° | Mra. &. Hunter, Mrn. Parker expect "7 |to remain in our city until her hue &-| band is setted in Africa, whore he has "| gone to start a business, er| Mra. M. 0, Cannon Was the recipient n- | of a very novel letter from her brother iy|the other day. It was written, on y-|BiTCh bark, taken. trom a tree at the n | top of the blut of Malden Rock, tou or hundred feet, or more, above Lake Pe | pin. ; * Geo. W. Nedson, ‘the re ‘Bide arug- aq Sist Is Keeping tn line with the prog- rees of the aye; Inasmch ab he ts 1m- eee Defective Page proving his store by the addftion of an elegant up-to date soda rountain, from ‘whleh he promises will be drawn a sparkling soda, second to none th the ity, When you are cut wheeling give Jim a cal DR. R. §. BROWN, Physician ane Surgeon.” Ome, rooms 408-8, Reeve bullding, 488 Nicollet avenue; telephone Bis. Residence, 2809 Portland avenue; telephone &17—L south. “Oflee hours: 490 to 12:80; 2 to 4:0; 7 to 8:20, Sundaye, 920 to 1: 1220 to 2, Mr, Robert L. Boone, youngest. ot ine sons of Mr. and. 3frs. John A. Boone, of Norihfeld, Minn., is a grad- uate of the Northifleld High School. Mr. Boone is at present with Company D, Second’ Regiment, Camp Lake View, Dut will be visiting in this ety in the near future, the guest of his sister and brother-inlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Mf. 0. Cannon. Mr, W, M. Jenking, the wellknown hotel man of Minneapolis, has leased the slat No, 9 Second street north ant hag remodeled and refurnished it with «ail modern improvements, Tt is situ- ‘tod fn a destrable location, being one lock from the Nicollet house and ‘ree blocks from the West hotel, The rooms will be let to those who desire ‘eat and comfortable zooms at reason- able ratea, call at No, 9 Second stroet orth, Ast flat for W. Mf. Jenkins, pro- preter. Anchor Lodge had {ts annual sermon preached at Bethesda Baptist church last Sunday. Rev, Brooks preached 8 very pleasing sermon, and from the smiles that were seen on the Masons! faces, they were very much pleased. ‘The church was Alled to its fullest ea- pacity. The lodge donated to the church $14, and to Rev. Brooks $5, The members are doing a grand work, They have started a ladies’ Court named. the Eastern Star. ‘The lodge for St. Paul, and also the ladies’ lodge, turned out in thelr uniforms. Mr. and Mrs, N. C, Stone celebrated the first anniversary of thelr marriage at thelr residence, 2531 Second avenue south, Thursday evening, June 28. The parlors were beautifully decorated with potted plants and cut flowers. The table was spread for 24 guests. Each guest remembered the host and hos tess, with a iittle token of friendship. Owing to the late notice, the names will have to be omitted. “Thetr many frlends lett for thelr homes at a late => A TREAT In Sture for Ladies and Children of Mon. ‘eapolis, Mrs. Victor Webb, who for the past year has been in attendance at the in- firmary Parlors of the N. I. 0., has ‘opened at 29 Washington Ave. 'S. a very neat bath parlor where she is prepared in a modest way to give al- ‘cohol, vapor, sulphur and sponge baths also massage treatment. Mrs. Webb,on making inquiry, found ‘that there was not a place where la- dies of her race could receive these denefits, hence her long ambitious de- sires have been fulfilled by opening ‘such a place herself. Rheumatism, nervousess, kidney and skin diseases successfully treated, also, by securing perfect circulation of the blood the complexion is made clear and the skin smooth. She earnestly solfeits the patronage of all who de- sire health and beauty. As she will ‘make no distinctions of race or color she will be pleased to have any and all of her friends call. Hours: 9.30 a. m. to 9.30 p. m., ard floor, No. 29 Washington Ave, 8. ib: embare sekemaat wate: [;, SBe Srestect font of modera: eivilisn: tion ir the modern: acwopepex. ‘Tis thought come to mlad almost very day a8 we take from ite wrapper ‘The Minneapolis ‘Tribune. Tt Is sim loty astounding how much in the way [ot information and fact, as well as in- teligent comment one ean bey for a ‘cent—new and fresh’ ‘every day. "There Is aotnething to bo auld. about tue ‘Temune which probably is un true of any other Twin City daly. 1 Is consiotentiy and persistently” Re Dubllenn: ‘The Tribute near Goan ot tar flo goin nor do to Heah pots ciice or the allorensente of gus’ ere Swerve t trom its support ot the igh ‘Ae the ante time, Ie modest (2 etfors to shape party policy and th. [selection of candidates for ofice. fil thls ‘may be ‘andenoes, how ever, rom the fact that The "eibon: inn no-sense an organ {tio « news Taper with the accent upon to eer [PRe doubt this accounts for Novy topping erealation, “When's pepe ‘Mlunesots averages tor an ent yer rer soow citculation, ae toe Frisee ks 60.085 for the year ending are E190), 1 te got to ores eos considering the number of peop’ feithin x fold, chan any pape Tow of ‘There are moré kinds of people in Minnesota interested in the dog in ‘The Tribune's dally cartoon than In any other one dally creation. These cartoons are inimitably funny, and at the same time full of good sense. They drive home a witty thrus: when a whole column of ediforial might glance oft ineffective. ‘The Tribune has recently moved into its new marble front building, of which itis justly proud. Jts equipment is ‘sald to be without exception the finest and most up-to-date in America. No money has been spared to make it 0 and the paper tells on its face that It is the product not only of the best mechanical facilities, but the best newspaper brains and character in the Northwest. We feel like saying to others “Toe the mark with The Minneapolis Tribune.” TIDAL WAVE Ie A Rives, to the Spot. ‘The moon was riding at the very, zenith, says the Century, and it dizzied us to look up to it. Bach one stood evenly within the circle of his own clear-cut shadow onthe ground, at that moment of the moon's transit, and the bore was due; but It was a calm night, and it was three-quarters of an tour after our unaccustomed ears had caught the first far-distant, muttering undertone before the white thing was seen, a ghastly line advanc- ing as evenly over the water, and as Quickly, as the dark shadow of an eclipse sweeps over a Jandseape, Near- er and nearer it roared, growing greate er and whiter, until we could see the whole cascading, bubbling, frothing front, with spray-drops showering from the crest higher up In the moon- light.- With the roar of awful waters ‘the dread thing came on, raising its white crest higher and higher as it Mcked the edges of the piles beyond which the junks lay, There were shouts and yells, and tke usual boat- men's pandemonium tet loose on the junks as the roaring wave approached. ‘A rocket sizzed, some fire-crackers sputtered and gongs resounded, but all small sound of earth's creatures were drowned as the fearful white thing jerashed past, and a frightful hissing, a seething, iashing and swirling of still higher billows sueceeded—the most sinister sound of water ever heard—all speeding, rushing, whirling madly, irresistibly on. As the ten-foot wall of foam reached the edge of the piling and the junk platform, it floated the funk loose at the instant. Each funk rode to the flood’s fury bow on, and continued to rise, to lft itselt dodily up, up, along the sea wall be- fore ‘one’s fascinated gaze. In the fierce after-rush, the water went swift- er and more swiftly by, until one had & dizzying sense of danger to come, Dut past fleeing from. Something held one fascinated to the spot, although in the fewest minutes, barely a quarter of an hour, two-thirds of the whole body and mass of the flood-tide had flung itself against the wall, and, it seemed, might continue to rise with the same force for hours, A salt, fresh smell of the sea, the breath of the ocean's coolest, deepest under- World, came in with the awful tide, A ghastly mist succeeded. Shreds of vapor scudded over the triumphant moon, and the sea's curtain fell on ‘one of the most sensational, spectacu- Jar performances the Pacifle ocean and ‘the moon ever make together. OM PAUL’s HUMOR. - Mow We Fooled a Loblylat at a Hotel. Many years ago, when President Kruger was in England, he was ap- Proached concerning some concession, railway or otherwise, by a business man here in London. The negotia- tions Insted for some time. One even- ing the Londoner, who was staying at the-same hotel, “having spent many hours with Mr. Kruger and his com- panion, went to bed much exhausted, and fecling he had not got quite all he wanted. Next morning he arose at 9 and went along the corridor to Mr. Kruger’s bedroom. To his astonisti- ‘ment it was empty and all the luggage was gone. “Oh, sir,” sald the chata- bermaid, “Mr. Kruger and his friend left at 6 this morning.” ‘Then, with a Biggle of amused reminiscence, the gi added: “They was a queer couple, sit, and no mistake. When ’e passed your door, sir, Mr. Kruger, e started dancin’ right outside your door, sir, ’e and his friend. ‘They didn't know as any one saw them, sir, but Bessie and 1 sec ‘them, unbeknown, from the top of the stairs. Then ‘they went downstairs, sir, fairly splittin’ thelr sldes with laughin’, though they dfdn’t say a word.’—London Daily News. Fesbniis Wicd ha eee. A perfect highway from New York to San Francisco, in as near a straight line as it 1g possible to make it, with a ‘width of 120 feet, for the use of auto- mobiles and bicycles, as well a3 for the Use of the farmer, 19 a thing that the Automobile club of America will try to bring about, The subject was seri Susly Alscussed at a banquet, in ovat fof members of the National’ Highway Commission, at the Waldort-astori, in New York, when plans were made ‘and the route announced, "Besides a direct path from New York to San ‘ranclato, passing through Chicago, St. Louis, Kansas City, Omaha and Ogden, the club wants a. highway along ‘each coast. Congress will be asked to appropriate one-third of the expense, and the states, counties, townships and clties en route will be anked to pay tho reat; the owners of property benefited to donate the right- ofsway. The club and highway ‘com- tission have on thelr lst of mem- ership the names of some of the foremost men of America, lo Janeizo’s Raglan. ‘me following amusing notice is written in a cemetery at Rio Janelro In several languages: “Noble mes- dames and gentlemen who may desire ‘2 dog to follow ip this tombyard wil fot be permission unless ‘im drawn by a cable round him throttle.” Nellie, aged 6, had two pets—a ca- nary, whlch was a fine singer, and a eat. ‘One day the cage door was lett ‘open and the cat was discovered in ‘the act of swallowing the last morsel ‘of poor birdte. Nellle gazed at the cat a few moments In sorrowful. medits- tlon and then sild: “Mamma, will Line Savete sing maven: Pane ee — t Wort. A Si i ae ru oo KL — — See is insures coomections with morn- ing ales frac Eant and Soul Raker setisece otters ecueandtly Serves free erect over te | $Uisfag GS RonWesternbine. “gee Oe ‘Our other trains * fori cy ZEARES nian gaa Lx. StPaut, a) Ne yy 810 PL GN ee 5 ott Im fo Sq es a | Mee cit 7 A Xcess 2S g oor THE SHOE THAT SATISFIES Waukee, eek Exqerag ~~ $3.00) TRY A PAIR, sax oum RUBBER SOLES , 35c reacts Ge Mana eae) 29-13 lnc: ee | py VP > ae Si LEN ia i) SATISFIES. | Supplied by agents every where or Caos Brewing Co. St.Paul! ‘108.8. C00K Jon » ror Euok & Porter | PHYSICIANS AND SURCEONS. ‘Omcos: S. W.Cor, (2th and Robert Dr.Cook’s Dr. Porter's / onnice nouns: orvics nov: totoxzend eto 91010 snd 108 Stan and Nghia ‘sto rand Nighta Over Lowe's Drug Store Phone, Maln 386 ‘St Paul, Minn. ———— OR. H. J. RELL, Special Attention Given to ‘Crown and Ericge Work Preserving the Natural ‘Teeth and Roots, Cor. 6th and Minnesota, ST. PAUL, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office, 27 E. Seventh St., Kendrick Blok Residence, 353 Sherburne Ave, bE | moi eerave.ac, ———— ‘The Great ' Invention. ‘hie Nor Arteta Lid an eaica ee unseat potas hee oe onc wee ee crraen Neg eee AMERICAN ARTIFICIAL LIMB Co., ‘0 Wancen sere, sates oe CHICAGO. THE "WORLD BIRCITY" "VIEWED BY THE APPEAL MAN." A Compilation of a Fig. 11 of Happenings, Social and Otherwise, Among the Afro-Americans of the Seventh City of This Glorious Union. Mr. G. W. Lewis, of Philadelphia, is in the city. Mr. T. T. Allain will stump for McKinley and Roosevelt this fall. Dr. V. D. Jones had a delightful trip to Philadelphia and Washington. Dr. J. W. Corbin, dentist, northwest corner of Twenty-ninth and State streets. 'Phone S. 185. Chicago. Mr. Cyrus Field Adams has returned from the convention at Philadelphia, Washington, Atlantic City and New York. THE APPEAL is without question the best advertising medium through which to reach the Afro-Americans of Chicago. Subscribers for THE APPEAL who wish to discontinue the paper must send written notice to the office, proposing the first anniversary of the Amanda Smith Orphan Home at North Harvey was celebrated Thursday from 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. The work is prospering. Instruction in Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese, German, Swedish, Bosnian, Latin or Greek. Terms reasonably for the APPEAL office, 325 Dearborn street. Do you want to preach? Learn at home, send two-cent stamp to Prof. B. R. Hewitt for catalogue of Correction School 2908 Magazine street, New York. Wanted—To know the whybwahors of Mr. Lee Nance, who published "A Republic or a Despotism, Which?" during the World's Fair, also got out across the patriotic music. – DESPIRE THE APPEAL 323-325 Dearborn street, Chicago, IL. The Monarch Insect and Contagious Disease Exterminator kills insects, bugs, roaches, moths, mosquitoes, and silver bugs instantly. By mail, 12 hours before shipment, and Oil Co. Geo. Jas. Washington, Mgr., 135 Washington street, Chicago, Ill. The Nickel Plate Road will sell excursion tickets to Chitaquaque Lake, Ks. and return on July 6th, at 6:14 for $14 for August 7th, and of August 7th, 1900. Tickets will be good on any of our three daily trains. Cheap rates to other eastern points. Van Buren St. Passenger Station, on Route 10, for further information, address J. Y. Calahan, General Agent, 115 Adams St. Chicago. Midnight Flyer to St. Louis via the Wabash Road. On and after June 3, a new Wabash train will leave Chicago at 11:30 p.m. and arrive St. Louis 7:56 a.m. m.; re- rieve St. Louis 7:56 a.m. m.; arrive Chicago 11:30 p.m. and arrive Chicago 8:00 a.m. Two other fast trains via the Wabash if this does not suit you. All equipment up-to-date. Write or call City Ticket Office, 974 Adamsburg. City Ticket Office, 974 Adamsburg. Minco's Trocadero Theatre. Patrons of the Trocadero next week will be well repaid for their time and money as a first class, rattling good, all-round mixture of burlesque and specialty will be offered, Little Maggie, the first class Eastern reputation, furnishing this outfit, among other entertainers, will be the Irish team of Clark and Emmons; Paus Le Petre, noted on every circuit; the soubrette du, Coleman and Livingstone; Swain and Downie, funny fellows, and the rat-tail team of Smith and Vannetta. The team of Smith and burlesques, both chuck full of red fire and ginger, and crowded with voluptuously pretty women. The People's Favorite. The Nickel Plate Road again offers its patrons improved train service by inaugurating, on May 6th, a daily service of 27 hours between Chicago and New York. Unexcelled car service at, popular prices. All trains leave station, the Passenger Station, on the Elevated Locks, to Office 111, Adams St., and Auditorium Annex, Telephone, Central 2057 and Harrison 208. Births. Son to Mrs. Sarah Johnson; Dr. J. W. Allen. Daughter to Mrs. Richard Denman; Dr. Geo. Newton. The Nickel Plate Railroad Offer the traveling public the choice of three daily express trains between Chicago, New York and Boston. Twenty-seven hour service between Chicago and New York. All meals on day trains from Chicago are served in dining cars, which service is unexcused and popular prices. All information charged is armistice by J. Y. Canahan, General Agent, 111 Adams St, Chicago. Defective Page DEENING. Louis H. Johnson, 22 years, 1419 61st street. Hattie Randall, 34 years, 3218 eDarborn street. Mike Wood, 49 years, 380 Cleveland avenue. Waterman Streets, 11 years, 6612 Vernon avenue. Madison Trust, 23 years, 1809 W. 624th street. Sarah Armstrong, 44 years, 83 E. 35th street. FOURTH OF JULY. rates via Nickel Plate Road. One fare is $10. The other is $20 in two hundred miles of starting point. Return limit July 5, 1900. Write J. Y. King, Jr. in Adams St. Chicago for particular. Olivet Baptist Church. Olvet school convened at 9:30 a.m. by singing hymn, "Tell It Again," by David Johnson. Visitation by the Rev. M. Evansville, Ind. editor, Miss Kelley of Kentucky, artist; Rev. McCo0 of Montgomery, Ala., Attendance, 440; metchery by the morning service of J. F. Thorn, preached a sermon on, "The Church's Fight and Victory in Temptation." In the evening he selected for the third annual course, "The work of the Holy Spirit." Three united with the church B. NELSON'S STRAIGHTINE BEFORE AFTER STRAIGHTINE is an elegant and highly perfumed pomade. It softens and insignificates the hair, makes the hair grow. Prevents it from falling out. Remove Dandruff; cure it. Ichling, irritating Scalp Diseases, gives a shin, 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 a large can at all druggists, or sent by mail to any address on receipt of price in stamps or silver. Address NELSON MKN'FG GO., Richmond, Va. Active Argents wanted. Write for The Best and Cheapest place in the city to Buy All Kinds and Qualities of Household Goods The Eagle Brand Butter is the highest grade and best flavor of any butter made and is fresh from our churns daily T. F. DUNLEVY MANUFACTURER AND JOBBER IN Silk, Stiff and Soft Hats AND THE VERY LATEST IN NOVELTIES. YOUR PATRONAGE DESIRED NO. 314 NICOLLET AVE. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN Planos, Organs and Musical Merchandise, Short 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. Y. P. Union was well attended. Our next leader, Mr. Wm. Cruduph, the president, attended. Juniors meet at 3:30 p. m. Mothers' Union meeting convened at 4 p. m. Dr. Wilberforce Williams deceived the audience of Consumption;" Dr. Punkunkeh "Sign of Health." Miss Mary Churchill Wilson favored the audience with a solo entitled "Slumbering Song." Mr. Williams sang "I Pays to serve Jesus." 47 STORES IN AMERICA When siolng to New York Take the 27-hour train via the Nickel Plate Railroad, leaving Van Buren St. Passenger Station, Chicago, daily, at 3:30 p. m. Choice of three daily fast express trains from Chicago to New York, on or address J, Y, Calhoun General Agent, 111 Adams St., for detailed information. CHEERS FOR DOLLIVER CHICAGO GREETS THE IOWAN In a Speech at the Hamilton Club's Rally Heation Meeting He Predicts a Sweeping Success for the Republican Party in the Coming Election. Prolonged applause greeted Congressman Dolliver, of Iowa, as he stood Tuesday night with smiling face on the platform of Steinway hall, looking over the enthusiastic Republicans assembled under the auspices of the Democratic Party. Delphia nominations. Every seat was occupied. In the audience were more than 100 women. Congressman Dolliver's speech consisted of an attack on the Democratic anti-imperialistic crusade, a declaration that trusts were not destined to be lost to the Republican administration had brought prosperity to workingmen and praise for the Republican nominees. The speaker was applauded loudly when he said of Democracy's opposition to militarism: "The head of the God that I never had any part with the party that I had an actual conflict with the army of the United States." Comptroller Dawes preceded Congressman Dolliver with a brief speech, in which he told of the work of the Philadelphia convention and eulogized the Republican standard bearers. "I am in favor of a ticket for 1904 having at its head the names of Roosevelt and Woodrow Wilson, and a voice from the audience cried out, 'Why not Dolliver and Roosevelt?' In answer to this came a storm of cheers, during which the representative from Iowa bowed and looked up at the crowd, emphasized the fact that the occasion was the opening gun of the national campaign in Illinois. Vice President Frank O. Lowden, of the vice presided. Other speakers were F. A. Dennison and Patrick H. O'Donnell. Sam T. Jack's. Sam T. Jack's Champs Elysées Burlesquers will commence a short engagement at Sam T. Jack's Sunday matinee, July 1. The company, as its name indicates, is decidedly French, but the burlesquers are members of it. "The Roman Maidens," the curtain raiser, gives a glimpse of the ancient empire and introduces beauty, song and invigorating merriment. A magnificent nautical burlesque, "Billee, the Sailor," and several well-known Italian artists attention has been paid to the vanderville portion of the entertainment. It comprises the famous Eldriges in a clever sketch; George Beban, parody singer and clever entertainer; Mille Fatina, the Oriental queen; Dick Browne, the matriarch and a loft of other well-known stars. Sam T. Jack's is the coolest theater in the city and the management will see that its numerous patrons have nothing to complain of during the sultry days of July and August. Important Change of 2 time on the Nickel Plate Road. A daily 27-hour through service has been inaugurated, between Chicago and New York, leaving the Van Buren St. Passenger Station, Chicago, at 10:20 a.m. and 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 formerly, with through cars to New York and Boston, arriving at either city center. Night Express leaves Chicago daily at 10:30 p.m., for New York and Boston, arriving at either city early the second morning. Courteous Afro-American porters are in charge of coachs, to look after the children of the porters, ladies traveling alone. Dining car on all day trains from Chicago, on which the service is unexcelled, and at popular prices. Y Calahan, General Agent, 111 Adams St. Chicago will have pleasure in giving all detailed information as to rates and trains. Chicago passenger station, Van Buren and Pacific Ave., on the Elevated Loop. City Ticket Offices, 111 Adams Street, 2007 Central and Union Ticket Office, Chicago Annex; Telephone, 208 Harrison. A Christian when he makes a good profession should be sure to make his profession good. It is sad to see many people who carry a lantern for others—Pecker. MUST PAY. Subscriber Who Failed to Notify the Publisher to Stop His Page Publisher to Stop His Paper. Justice Johnson, of St. Paul, has deceived the case of the Odd Fellows Review against John G. and Yvette Scribes desire to have a paper discontinued to his address, he must first pay publisher the amount he owes for the New York year and the paper be discontinued to his address. The evidence in the case brought forth the day before that they subscribed and paid for the New York year and the publisher he continued to accept it after his subscription had expired. He later changed his address to the publisher, and claimed not to have received the paper. The court held, was wrong no fault of the publishers, who received no judgment for the amount due and costs. WANTED-SEVERAL BRIGHT AND ROUGH persons to represent as the Managers of the publishers, who received no judgment for the amount due and costs. Straighten up, do more, no more, year and expenses. Position prominent. Our references, any and all. Position prominent. Our references, any and all. Position prominent. Our references, any and all. Ensure self-addressed stamped envelope. DOWNLOAD COPY THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER SCOTLAND WOOLEN MILLS CO. SCOTLAND WOOLEN MILLS CO. All Suits or Overcoats Made to Order. MORE $15 NO LESS .....FROM MILLS TO MAN.... Burlington Route UNDER ONE ROOF The Burlington's Chicago and St. Louis Limited, can live as well as at the finest hotel in America. can dine in a dining car, smoke in a smoking head in a library car; sleep in a compartment or hard sleeping car; and recline in a reclining all under one sooty Electric lighted and steam Leaves Minneapolis 7:20 p.m., St. Paul 8:05 p.m. arriving Chicago 6:25 next morning. The "Scenic" Ex- an elegant day train, leaves Minneapolis 7:40 a.m., St. 1:15 a.m., except Sunday. Your home agent for tickets via this line, or address Agent, Chicago, Ill. Asn't Gen'l Pass Agent, St. Paul, Minn. STRAIGHTINE MAKES MY MARK STAYING STRAIGHT BEFORE AFTER INE is an elegant and highly perfumed pomade. It softens the hair, makes the hair grow. Prevents it from failing out. ruff, cures itching, irritating Scalp Diseases, giving a rich, rich head of hair, so much to be desired. Perfectly harmless. hundreds of cans and never had a single complaint. Price 25c or silver. Address NELSON MINN-FO CO., Richmond, Va. wanted. Write for terms. $15 On the Burlington's Chicago and St. Louis Limited, you can live as well as at the finest hotel in America. You can dine in a dining car; smoke in a smoking car; read in a library car; sleep in a compartment or standard sleeping car; and recline in a reclining chair car. All under one roof. Electric lighted and steam heated. Leaves Minneapolis 7:20 p. m., St. Paul 8:00 p. m., daily, arriving Chicago 9:25 next morning. The "Scent" Express, an elegant day train, leaves Minneapolis 7:40 a. m., St. Paul 8:15 a. m., except Sunday. Ask your home agent for tickets via this line, or address P. 9. 8. 6. CEFI Gent Pass, Agent, Chicago, IL. Ask your Gent Pass agent, Agent, St. Paul, Minn. GO TO THE..... RAL FURNITURE & CARPET CO. NICOLLET AND 207 HENNEPIN AVS. and Cheapest place in the city to Buy All Kinds and Qualities of Household Goods In Easy Payments New or 2nd Hand Goods GIVE US A CALL. ASK FOR, MOOS MANAGER SCONSIN DAIRY MANUFACTURERS OF Brand Butter and Ice Cream Butter is the highest grade and best flavored of any butter made and is fresh from our churns daily ICE 20 CENTS PER POUND. Is made from the same pure cream the Eagle Brand Butter in flavored with pure fruits. Our prices are the lowest SIS PER QUART; 50 CENTS HALF CALLON Special Prices For Churches, Societies and House Parties T Peter Street, 13 South Third Street, NT PAUL MINNEAPOLIS F. DUNLEVY MANUFACTURER AND JOBBER IN Stiff and Soft Hats BRY LATEST IN NOVELTIES. YOUR PATRONAGE DESIRED COLLET AVE. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN TH MUSIC HOUSE 206 NICOLLET AND 207 HENNEPIN AVS. WISCONSIN DAIRY MANUFACTURERS OF 442 WABASHA STREET, ST. PAUL, MINN. Ins and Musical Merchandise, Short Music Books, etc. ast of what we can do, but come in and see what we will do on prices and terms. R CO. ... ACETYLENE GAS Cheapest Light Known, Clean, Bright, Perfect and Cheap- le. No Varies to Stick or Leak. No Ratchets, Levers or to Faucets. BREHER, Office and Factory, 183-187 W. Third St. FURERS. Cor. Exchange, ST. PAUL. Making Huge from Carpets. Garpet Cleaning Works L. M. BEVANS, Floorstaining and Best and Cheapest Light Known. Clean, Bright, Perfect and Cheap. Best and Cheapest Light to Stick to Leak. No Ratchets, Levers or Forks. No Fareys. 3 14 STORES IN EUROPE You recall the Western cow-boy, who at a revolver and shot the butcher-barrel into fragments. The lundy shriekled, "Why did you do that?" The man, his mum, I ask. "I was the butter man, my dear mum, hamh." I now put the butter on the revolver and took it to know that some butter was strong enough to seriously habit. It has a strong hold upon everything. When you do something it continues doing it. If - are in the kitchen, you can keep it on your article keepon buys, give it a habit. You do not realize that' there may be for admission. **DWIGHTS** **FLOUR** has already earned its reputation for Super has already earned its reputation for Super hours are in great demand for Super hours are in great demand for Super mary grades. Your order is respectfully received if you cannot eat it. Telephones 1500 21 E. 82 street. "I must to the barber's, for mothicks. I am marvelous hairy about the face." PALACE BARBER SHOP. 200 Washington Ave. S, R. Del Rzo, Prop. (Under Washington Bank). Assisted by best classmates. PORCELAIN LINED BATH TURNS AND SHOWER BATHS, BATH ROOMS OPEN ON SUNDAYS FROM 9 TO 12. "Mae's nice restorative his balmy bath, his balmy play, his balmy play, The various movements of this nice machine, Which takes such frequent periods of repair." Minneapolis, Minn. Minneapolis, Minn. Wonderful Discovery BEFORE AND AFTER TIME: OZONIZED OX MARROW THE ORIGINAL—OFFICIATED. The only safe preparation in the world that may only hair acrylics, as shown above. It nourishes the soap, prevents the hair from fading, and used by thousands. Warranted departee, and used by thousands. Warranted departee, and used by thousands. Warranted departee, and used by thousands. Zed Ox Marrow, as the common water rink for children and adults. Sold by dealers or end us $1.40 postal or cash. Write our home and address directly to ZEDIZED OX MARROW, 76 WARREN AV, CHICKEE, IL. The Minnesota Storage Co., 62-64 West 10th St. Buy, sell, exchange, repair, pack and store Furniture of all kinds. ARTIST PHOTOGRAPHER 101 EAST SIXTH STREET, Opp. Met. Opera House Retrobeaming. Building, Skyscraper and Chemicals. Developing, building and larging. Lighting and Dark-Room instructions givenfree to those dealing with us. Tel. 1071 RIGGS & CO. 190-192 E. Third St., St. Paul ROCERIE supply Hotels, Restaurants, Boarding Houses and all other goods in quantity. Call and me to buy them. Attorney at Law PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS 617 Guaranty Loan Bld. Minneapolis THE PULLMAN HOUSE 409 First Avenue So. The popular and most centrally located, first class house in the city. Convenient to all car lines, the剧院 and depots. Located in the heart of the reti-t business district. EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN PLAN. First class accommodations in every respect. Everything modern. Prices reasonable. Table board cannot be excused. Your vatname Sollicited. MRS. ADA NICHOLS. Proprietor. Dr. E. N. RAY DENTIST..... Oscar-Cor, 7th and Wabasha, over McAuley's. Two sisters in the practice, please use the Sweet Air, the sisters Anesthetic known. Lurged by all the leading physicians. Read the book by all the leading physicians. Read the largest teeth that can be made on American rubber. $88.99 gold crowns and caps. $69.99 gold fillings. $49.99 pure gold fillings. $84 and up. Remember this largest is used. This is just "half" what other dentists charge for the same work. All our work guaranteed. Call and see us before going to see us. NOURC | DR. KEAN 167 B. Clark St. Chicago. Consultation personally by mk Carrie and Special Hours Hours Harris and Special Hours ```markdown ``` HURD, St. Paul. of ex- 25 SALVATORE MILWAUKEE. THE CREAM CITY OF THE LAKER AND ITS FOLK Items of all Sorts Gathered Together by Our Disquitons Reporter and Served up in Dalaty Style for the Delicatation of Our Readers. Mise Llzzie James has returned from Chicago. Mr. Clarence Mason, of Hot Springs, Ark., is he Mr. B. Montgomery has returned from the national Convention at Philadelphia. Mr. Geo. Graves has gone to the country for e summer. The ladies and gentlemen constituting the committee who entertained the Afro-American dilemates to the National Educational Association which met here in 1888 will bring against Riordan more than 100,000 more will retain attorney Green for that purpose. Mer. Betra Klinner, wife of Mr. Gus Klinner died on the 30th last Friday. The deceased was loved by all who knew her. She died a Christian, her last word was: "I am going to rest in the army." She leaves a husband and child to mourn her. She leaves many friends and have on sympathy in their bereavement. There are several Afro-Americans here who will establish a week *p* year in the interest of the race. The Indianapolis Freeman is worth more to the race than all the other joiners' combined. We wish active young men to secure the training of a hundred of more copies per week. We have more worthless apers through the connie port. We can use port. The Hollywood entertainment was a grand success. All the society people turned out and paid their respects to the commandery. The com-munity returned to the Miles returns grateful thanks to the general public for its presence and all assure that it wi-tive to make its annual entertainments more atractive in the future than the past. The foli-ous members of the Miles returne-ss, Panosel, Muss Berry; Welcome Addres, Mr. J. J Miller; Address, WM.Miller; Select Reading, Miss Wiano; Solo, Mr.David Brown; Address, Mr. A. Miles; Dr. A.L. Heron; Piano Solo, Miss A. Miles; Address, Atty. W. T. Green; Song Prof. Revels. WHEN DUELS WERE FOUGHT. Death of a Man Who Was a Maker of Coats-of-Mall. "About two years ago," said a business man to a New Orleans Times-Democrat reporter, "there died at the Charity hospital an eccentric old German who once upon a time followed the queerest trade in the world. He was a maker of coats of mail. Long before the war he had a little jewelry shop on the north side of Canal street and the coat of mail business was a man with private side line. The armor he had was small small links of very hard steel covered to compactly that one could not thrust even a pin through the interstices, and it was said that the "coats" would turn either a knife or a bullet. They were fashioned something like a sleeveless undershirt, and were intended to be worn immediately beneath the outside garments. In those days the use of such devices was popularly attributed to fellows who wanted to secure an unfair advantage in duelling and the reputation of wearing one under any cuff or for courage, was fatal to a reputation German didn't go to any pains to exploit his business and his customers must have come to him through many devious channels. I knew the old chap quite well when I was a boy, and I have often seen him putting the mail together in his little back room. He got the links from Germany, and they came in long single strand chains, which he fastened together at the edges with small steel rings, thus stuck up a fribric, like knitting a stocking or coats were made over a wooden form, like the torsor, and were astonishingly light. After the war broke out a good many men bought them openly, as a legitimate protection, and for a while the old man had more business than he could attend to." Pauperism in London. The very latest statistics on London pauperism are not encouraging A review of the last twelve months shows that although for four successive years the British metropolis has experienced good trade and open winters, there was no great diminution in number seeking relief under the poor conditions of the land for the first four months as mass of pauper was greater than it was for the same period of 1888, and stood at a higher figure than in more than half of the previous 42 years during which a record has been kept. Butterfly Parasols. One simply can't find anything more delicate and fetching than the butterfly parasol. A beauty which a lucky belle will carry is of silk with four exquisite butterflies embroidered on every other gore. And such butterflies as they embroider! Lovely, large creatures, embroidered in more pastel thin that one dreamed existed, and similarly light at the faintest move. But they They must continue to adorn Beauty's sunshade. MOST WORSHIPFUL GRAND LODGE OK MINNEAPOLIS Hortonburgh or Ruyne No. 533 G. U. G. O. Meets first and third Monday in each month for M. Meets first and third Monday in each month for Fellows Hall, 532 Webbans. M. Meets first and third Monday in each month for M. N. M. Ida M.Da. Webbans, W. R. 373 Summit Piece 8T. JAMKS, A. M E. CHUBCR. SUNDAY SERVICES: 11 a. M. 7:30 p. M. Wed- day prayer meeting. $10.00 p. M. Pastor visits a church. $10.00 p. M. Thursday. Weddings, funerals and the slok dressed on notice. REV J. C. ANDERSON, P.A. PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH. Oc. 19th and Cedar. Sunday Services. $10.00 p. M. 4:30 a. M. 4:45 p. M. Sunday at 12:30 o'clock. Wednesday evening general prayer meeting. Friday evening evening general prayer meeting. Funerals and wed- dings promptly attended. REV. D. S. ORNER, Pastor, 405 Farrington SUNDAY SERVICES: Morning Prayer, Liturgy Sunday Services: 10:30 a.m., Evensong and Prayer in the Vegeta's Vegeta 0:00 p.m.; Evensong and Sermon in the Vegeta's Vegeta 10:30 a.m. Lecture 8:00 p.m.; Friday, Cloak Rituals and Sunday Services: 10:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 10:30 a.m. 4. All cordially invited. Saints free from charge. G.A.R. BIDDLE CIRCLE No. 88 LADIES TO G. P. A. Burton College No. 88 LADIES TO G. P. A. Gerald Field Hall Post H叭absha Street Gerald Field Hall Post H叭absha Street KAVIE MYERS SBC, 402 Cedar F3 SINCE 1970 2. U. Q. Q. C. 4 St. Anthony Long, No. 2877, copies tax and three Wednesday in each month in the town and third Thursday in each month in the or interaction in the hall. Second street, even Stollet and Heineken, No. 116, H. N. G. JAMES A. SCOTT, P. B. P. O. W. 23 KNIGHTS OF PHYLIAS Way, Tremont Long, No. 2, K. of. P. moste- cond and fourth Thursdays in the month. Lunch in good chancing welcome. At Labor Town. Fourth Thursday. J. W. JACKEN, C. G. JEN. A. GORD. G. and B. Mary Long, No. 1, K. of. P. moste- cond and third Thursday in each month. A birth in good standing welcome. At Mary Long, No. 1, K. of. P. moste- cond and third Street between Heineken, and I. L. A. FREDE OF LINN, O. C. R. D. WARD, K. E. and S. The Wonderful Witch. Place her on your hand then watch how the witch tries, tries, falls, and then. I TELLS YOUR PORTIONS Wick. - Your Endor second of two thing, & conveys a crew with lahighter. Every move you place him on youreward you place him on youreward burnuga and twiddles, and raker to the printed, drawn ticket, will give you whether she thinks him has dominate or constant. changeable jealous, cold, diligent, great fearless, will also tell what all they want. Send to cnt. in silver stamps and receive two learn how to make a bet dollars easily. Randolph Novelty Adv. Company Union City, Indiana, U.S. R. A DASY! If you will send thirty-2-cos oat stamp to THE P.P. phone (312) 255-1234, put it in your address on 3-mont- tial. It's a daily! It works too.