The Appeal

Saturday, April 13, 1901

St. Paul, Minnesota

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THE APPEAL STEADILY GAINS BECAUSE: 1-It aims to publish all the news possible. 2-It does so inpartially, wasting no words. 8- Its correspondents are able and energetic. VOL. 17. NO. 15. JIM WITH THE ONE OPTIG AMERICA'S GREAT DEADHEAD With the shutting down of the prize fighting all over the country comes the dismisseion of at least one man. "Dear event," he says, "is the situation where they minister to the mind diseased. Probably there is no personage better known in the world of pugilism. He is in the army of Comlyl. He is in the army of God. Comlyl world, say the managers and promoters of glove fights, and he is proud of his accomplishment. Another important of importance is the fight of Australia during the last twenty years, and has never paid a cent to get inside He has beaten his way all over the whole continent of Australia premises here and there wherever there was a "graft." His knowledge of pugilism is his road way and his cast-iron nerve is his success. It has gotten to be a keyword among the fighters that "no bie event is complete without the presence of Comlyl in the best seat in the house." According to the New York Sun, Connolly is an English cockey, and his accent is a pachy. He exaggerates it on his wrist, and he sentenced to strangers, then he can easily talk with the wogus. An Irishman in his 70s, he was a pub owner years ago, and says he lost an eye in a contest that lasted seventy-five rounds. Whether this is the truth or not is imponderable. Connolly has but one real eye, and in the left socket he wears a glass, opaque that was when Squire Abington was here a number of years ago that Connolly first wore it. He remembered, come one more time with Charley Mitchell to help second Jim Hall in his fight at New Orleans with Bob Mitchell. The squirrel had米 to burn, and was the best fowl in the estimation of the sports, either. And Connolly were drinking together shortly after their arrival, when a queen-looking follow approached them. He were loudly booily sitting close to him, and he striped shirt, and his save was a deep crimson hue. HIS MEME WITH ABINGTON. "Is this the squire? Abhington? Eht?" queried the queer one. "The same" ejaculated Mitchell. "Wot ver want, eh." "Bar boy!" cried the queer one to the immaculate drink mixer, "a cold basket of old Mr. Mumm's best wine for him." "My good man, the squire put in, what name?" James Connolly was the reply. "Sometimes known as 'One-Eye-beeed' because—" And the queer one unhooked his left eyeball and rolled it over the left eyeball, followed a stream of language that made the squire and Mitchell roar with laughter. Connolly updressed some friends, and "Bar boy!" yelled "One-Eye," "keep the squire's bloomkin goblet filled to the bloody brim." And the immaculate berry was earlier than ever in his life. "Bring the best cigars in the bloomkin goblet next order, and there was a terrible factos. When the party had consumed all the wine that was really good for them, the party had been accumulating in front of him, and, lifting his hat, he said: "Squire and gentlemen, I have a bloomkin dress, and it must hurry away! Ta ta!" "A sport, said the squire," and "Connolly had no sooner disappeared around a screen than a bellboy approached the squire's table. He handed a scaled screen on a screen that, which was addressed as follows. TO SQUIRRE ABINGTON! NOTHING BUT MONEY! FROM JAS. CONNOLLY! The envelope was hastily opened and was found to contain bar checks amount- ing to just $2.50. The squire laughed and paid without a murmur. CONNOLLY'S CARSON CITY COUP. It was on John L. Sullivan's train to Carson City, upon the occasion of the game, on a night train, that Connolly had the success of a time. Connolly had succeeded in working some big railroad man for a pass from Virginia to Carson City. Jack McAllenfire, former lightweight player, had and had with him Harry Peppens, a colored fighter, who had no ticket between those points. When the train pulled out of Carson City McAllenfire said to Connolly: : "On me nerve, o course," was the reply. "Let's see it!" commanded Jack, and Connolly handed it over. McAuliffe promptly gave the ticket to Pepper and the two fighters with the two fighters in vain. When the conductor came along Connolly could explain, but it wouldn't work. The train had arrived off into a snowrift. He was swept away miles from carson City then, but it was not far for "One-Eye" to tramp it. The train had come inside just in time to see the men put on their newspapers and the telegraph companies. The moment Sentull saw Connolly in line he said, "Connolly, you'll have to pay." "I've got a dap, Dan," was the ready response. "I don't want to get in, but as you been my friend, I can tell ter尔 tell her dre's pain, for he trouble. Two of the men can't let 'em in. I heard can say day was gone' to shot yer block off. Now, I am still 'ere and when I see 'em 'em! I holler and you can duck quick Elk!" "Gentlemen," began the Parson smoothly. "I take great pleasure—" THE APPEAL "Umm, A. paying stone came through the door. The latter made a burried exit from the house. The latter made a burried exit from the house." TAMING A TOUGH BARTENDER. "Go ahead!" snarled the bartender. "I'll wear a shirt, bar and it whirred around top fashion. The bartender watched it narrowly, and the popper underneath it noticed that the popper was underneath. "Yer beat!" the bartender blurted. "The pupil is underneath!" "Wait a bit, me good fellow!" and I looked at him. He bled and finally was on the point of stooping when the pupal bobbed up and inched toward me. "I told you to wait!" said Connell, as he restored the eye to its socket. I let him go. "Yer I take noth' but a waller in dear jaw," roared the tough man. "You've loaded eye the dore and yer can't work me." While on their journey to Australia, the Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and the Duke of York, the British seals. The Channel squadrons will accompany from Portsmouth to Malta, and the other division from the Mediterranean seals will guard them to destroyers will form the escort through the Suec canal, and two warships will reach there. There they will be taken up by the East Indies squadrons, which will accompany them when hand them over to the Australian squadron, which will convey them to Vancouver and then to Vancouver on their way back through Canada is likely to be less formal. DEFACING OUR BEAUTY SPOTS These Vandals Should Be Restrained by Stricter Law It. Pethaps the suggested general hoyevoy should also be used to give their attention to passengers in airports and on airlines. Cities passengers in airports are encouraged to visit carding stations that cannot but have an in-flight airline. Airlines are organized for the passenger carrier (travel agent) to book a ticket on board a plane by becoming advertised, meaning it is strange that the newspaper reports that point and agitates correctly for reform. The airline would require that it would remove these advertising clichés of a longstanding public liability. Defective Page WON BY VERY DEAD BALL WON BY VERY DEAD BALL THE LIGHTFOOT LILIES LEARN A NEW WRINKLE IN BASEBALL TANGLEFOOT TOM'S SURPRISE eight, it was as if Jonah had tried to swallow the whale. "While we were at the most heartend- ward, we were suddenly interrupted by a veli- cqle who were suddenly interrupted by a veli- cqle who were suddenly interrupted by a veli- THE DEPARTMENT STORE THE LATEST. crash at the postoffice door. Biff! bang! and in clanked the wildest, wooliest lookers on his bushy brows. Somebread shapped your bushy brows, barbed wired mustachez, revolved belt and spurs on his boots to instruct the most inward thought of the battalion. A cowboy for keeps, and, what's more, one of the kind that you'd want on your side when the rough-house starts. He looked the boys over thoroughly, who's running this here joint. I want two blits wuth an yer best chewm'-nce precursor "Capt. Slugger Burrows—he had charge of the postoffice in those days—hasted the tobacco." "Bay, stranger," said the tobacco. He had stowed away one-half of his purchase in his seek and the other half in his pocket. "He's not that any excitement he had stowed away one-half of his purchase in his seek and the other half in his pocket." Ringtal Routen versus the Lightfoot Lilies at Lily park for the baseball championship of Jones county, who's doing what he, my young friend. "Baseball, pardner? Wal, that means he stakes right where he is. Why? Wal, that means he pardner, that out in Dakota territory I am considered the dundest finest balltowers on earth, an ammeter? Here I be and here I stay. "With that he drew up a box and slung his feet on the table like the rest of us. You play ball? asked the slugger eagerly. Do you mean it? Put it here. The captain at once began to explain our crippled condition, and said that if the ball would only consent to fill the outfield he outfitted in the town that he wanted and take what he didn't want home to his friends. "One!" he roared. "You would try to come in and see me. I went to throw that ham over here again. I was stealing coyote, you, I dare you to throw it." Now Cy Priest was no stenographer, no man could dictate to him. He had just swung his arm back to throw again when to our horror Tanglefoot suddenly came out. He was the ham. The suspense was terrible. Then as the ball left his hand there was a flash, followed by a loud report. To our surprise, and asked each other, to our surprise and asked each other; stood; slightly paler, perhaps, but in the THE LATEST. squad pumon as per roster, and with the ball in his right hand ready to throw it to the mat. The matter was a small round bullet ball. We could scarcely believe our eyes. We priested the ball; again there was a bullet and again the Cyril found himself holding the ball in his hand. This time there were two bullet holes. They kept at it. Where Tangfeiofo had emptied one gun he immediately opened fire with the other. Eleven shouts and then came the climax. As Cy. Priefer took the preparatory to his twelfth attempt, the ball was awful. Then came a sudden swain, and -bust! Instantly the air was filled with the ball. The ball bled of rubber and horsehose. And from somewhere out of all this twelve little balls, the pattern cherished upon the ground and patterned foreseen had happened; the ball has burst. As soon as the crowd had recovered from the pattern somewhat and began to realize that they had gave vent to a general sigh of relief. The base runners jumped to their feet, the matter locked back to their positions, and Doc Duncanbush began to unwrap a new ball. Not so last thar, Mr. Umpire, Tanglefoot was crying out, 'Who ain't handed in yer decision yet.' What's yer diagnosis of that last play, Doc? "The Doc was about to make some reply to you," Tanglefoot said that Tanglefoot was calmly pointing that the Doc pulled a baseball guide from his hand and began to thum the pages nervous and calmly pointing that unable to find any rule that just covered it ticular case. He again started to speak. Tanglefoot Tom had finished loading his tandem and calmly pointing them tenderly. The Doc scratched his knees he caught sight of the bits of horse hide, rubber and woolen string that lay strewn about him, and slipped his knees joyfully. Cont nured on 2nd Page IOTS IN THE KINDERGARTEN IOTS IN THE KINDERGARTEN SOMETHING ABOUT THE FIRST SCHOOL DAYS OF THE LIT- TLE ONES St. Paul's Young Well Provided With the Facilities for the Early Training of the Little Friars. One of the most important and interesting features of education in this country is the kindergarten. A great many are in favor of it, and a great number are in favor of kindergarten is a means of teaching young children a play and amusement. It was founded by Freebel over half a century ago, and by nearly every country in the world. At present the kindergarten has become one of the most important departments of the common schools, and promises to offer an imminent influence in the future. The first kindergarten was started at Blankenberg, near Rudolf, in the early 1900s. However, eight years later it went out of existence through lack of funds, and three later, in 1851, the russian government passed a law to the effect that kindergarten should be its principles, or principles like them, could not be allowed." It was looked upon with disfavor by a great many strong hold, and not many years after M. To be a good kindergartner a teacher must, above everything else, understand children and be himself a person of judgment and sound sense. A child enters at the age of five years, or even younger, in some cases, and is supposed to have at least one year in the kindergarten before entering the first grade, which a child used to enter at the age of six. INTRODUCED IN ST. PAUL. The kindergarten was only introduced into the St. Paul schools a few years ago, about 1886 or 1887. Before that a child was entered in the first grade. MUSIC AND STORIES. Others are sitting in a circle singing songs or listening to the teacher, as asked. They are always one that will call forth a good one, and it makes the little people think hard about their brains into action. Without realization, they are brought under perfect discipline. They are moved to and to move without making a need, and to move without changing, to be under control without challenge. On the walls of these kindergarten rooms are always many pictures happily displayed, the teacher asks the children to tell stories of these pictures. And very often the story that a toot of five tells shows deep emotions, the teacher trained intellect. Sometimes the teacher is told to bring their lunch to school, and they all eat it together. Many of the little ones give their first lesson in table manners, ways be remembered that their mission is to refine as well as to educate. If we refine by many doctors that the age at which a child learns to eat and that the restraint they are put under and the work they do is warranted the teacher nervous wrecks. But this as it may, the greatest teacher of culture now at work in this country. The English say that we are making a great mistake, but that the teacher is not nurturing cultured than are the masses in England, and the kindergarten is doing much to continue this condition. And the teacher is not nurturing cultured she can with ease run hundreds of children. She can make their nervous and bad tempered, just as a man can spoil a good horse. But teachers are so worried that there is little or no danger of this. For the first six months the kids little but make paper baskets and sing songs, and match around the room. If they get to the kitchen before they have the teacher will tell you they are getting along very nicely. But after the first six months the teacher will tell you the year is up they are supposed to know certain words when they see them in print or on the blackboard. The months are over the children are very much interested in their kindergarten work, and you can see them going to school in all their hands around the border on their way home working in their hands pieces of paper worked with red paper around the border if you stop to ask any questions you will find they are highly pleased with this class of work and show it to their parents with considerable FROEBEL'S DISCOVERY. Froebel noticed that the children he saw at play were fond of using their hands, and that they had a way of pulling things apart, and then endeavoring to put them together fully, and learned that those things that most appealed to their senses were sight, sound and touch. He also noticed that they were not so adept at not if not spoiled by older persons, and that they looked for sympathy in their comparisons. Froebel's greatest discovery in this regard was that their occupations were all active. Many games are played into which music and poetry always enter. However, Froebel's plan was to have the kindergarten canteen in the city, and their occupations were all impossible in cities as far westward as St. Paul on account of the weather. But St. Paul allowed the teachers to keep children out of doors for the time. In Washington it is not unusual to see children on the street cars to see them in the country. They set on and off their cars much ease and order as a company of regular soldiers would have done, although none of them were over five years of age. Froebel was in the Zoo and study nature, and learn lessons from the world of living nature in the schoolroom. In St. Paul during May and the kindergarten children also make trips into the country and study the trees in the woods, and they think of these things and you will yourself what the kindergarten is doing. Found a Way to Frade the Provinces of Her Late Husband's Will. Winifred (Corn) Spe. New York Jour. Love has played many a part in this delightful world. It played today the gentlely manly life of a waited gently on the wides of matrimonial bearing two hearts which beat as one heart. He was a man of strength. The hearts belong to Mrs. Alfred E. Moore, widow young at thirty-eight. E. Adams, mature in the early twenties. A famous aeronaut was the Alfred E. Moore with the clouds and the other far above them. His ascensions ran far up into them. She had seen him go up in a balloon. She had seen him go up in a balloon he had seen him go up in a balloon the quality which women must love. Children came to them and taught them the love of lofty lyrics, saw that soon after turned their eyes even from his ascension, like a worm, creep into his soul. "It all came out when he alud. tired me, and I was very tired. He will very much like one of his own salads, and he will sit there listening to it to keep it down to earth. He will let the right to enjoy his palatial street, this city, $1,000 and one hundred, $0,000, so long as she remained a widow until their youngest child. All of her older years old should be taken to school." $2.40 PER YEAR. MR.VANDERBILT'S START LIFE IN A NEW JERSEY TOWN While Conducting a Hotel He Took His First Lessons in the Field There was for a Railroad. The marriage of a young Vanderbilt has set all the gossips of New Brunswick, N. J., talking about the days when one of the millionaire's ancestors kept a very good hotel on the Raritan river, a classic city, says the New York Journal. It was here that Commodore Vanderbilt, the great grandfather of Alfred and the most famous man, was mine host of the old Bellonia hotel. The great grandson had a half-million-dollar wedding. His shrewd to ebar cage and his sharp wit made a glass, and in this way helped to make his first thousand dollars and found the colossal family fortune. The brunwick landmark now. Half the old flairs and most aged inhabitants in town will tell how they drank with him, but rarely at his neck near the way in which fortunes are, are founded. The hotel is now a tenement house. It shows the wrinkles of age. Its ancient walls are made of brass, and the tenement, is that it serves to point a moral and adorn the tales of the chin-wiskered fraternity who retail reminiscent But in the old days when the Vanderbilt who was to become a commoioe and ran the river to the sea, one of the most important stopping places and one of the best ginger saps between the passenger and freight sloops, between New Brunswick down the Darien river to the bay and thence to New York city, at the battery every alternate day. A trip by sleep from New York to the Brunswick days was almost momentous in Europe now. Mr. Vanderbilt caught the coming and coming and put them up his boat for the officers waited at the Beaulieu for arriving or departing boats or for the coach to arrive. He drank a big log酒 or drank hot toddy in the barroom, mixed by the good wife of the original Vanderbilt, a baxom, homely how to how to brawl a ranch that warm worm the heart of the weary guest. Eloping couples soured under the Vanderbilt roof and statemen of the Horns Horns who loved the cheer of the Bellona. One successful season put young Vandellion in control of a little capital, and Gibbottion, who has always remained his firm friend, advised him to the management of the Bellonia hotel, which was then in need of a manager. He made money at once. His wife attended the hotel and served the increasing trade of the hotel, the good and enticing drinks, while Vanderton maintained on one of the freight boats of the transportation company, this position, and helped him through Gibbons' patronage. It was in 1835 that Vanderton assumed charge of the Bellonia Hotel. For many years, he was the wife of his wife. Then, with increasing good fortune Vanderton desired to change the hotel quarters for a private residence, and the hotel house a few hundred yards north of the hotel. There they lived for many years. The best way is good enough! Use the Minnesota and St. Louis to Omaha. *Blows the Biggest Horn.* American. After many attempts on the band, of Willamapass, has at last found a man who can play the piano and the bass, world used for musical purposes. This man is frank and double bass. The marvel is Frank Eyre. He can manufacture the enormous horn spaced apart, new tools procured. It is no large that one musician in a hundred can produce, extracting music from its cavernous interior. He has yet succeeded in playing it success. So far as known, the only bass horn larger than the one played by Byers can be played at the Paris Exposition. No one could know who could make a sound upon it. He could have the ability to haughty that he would play in public, then he would sit with his back to the audience. When he played he swelled up to face. The strain, however, was too much to give it up as injurious to his health. A young French-Canadian giant, at present in Ottawa, is believed by his ad- dresser, a French-Canadian world. His name is Edward Beauleur. He is 7 feet 8 inches tall. His weight is 150 pounds. He is long. Along the arm close to the arm-pit his measurement is 64 inches. Of the northwest territory of Canada, his father was a French-Canadian and up to the age of three the young giant was no bigger than an ordinary baby enormously, until at the age of ten he was six feet tall. He is in excellent health. All his brothera and sisters are of normal size. YOU READ THE APPLE NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY ADAMS BROS. EDITORS AND PUBLISHERS 49 E.4th St St. Paul, Minn. INSURE MINUTUALLY IN Saint Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago, Louisville, St. Louis, Dallas. ST. PAUL OFFICE, No. 164 Union Block 4th and Cedar J. Q. ADAMS, Publisher. MINNEAPOLIS OFFICE, Guaranty Loan Building, Room 817 H. ROBERTS, Manager. CHICAGO OFFICE, No. 823-5 Dearborn St. Suite 213-215 C. F. ADAMS, Manager. LOUISVILLE OFFICE, No. 812 West Jefferson St. Room 8 W. V. PENN, Manager. Communications to receive attention m. be neway, upon important papers or the papers of the paper reach as if救灾es if possible, rayway not important, and bear the哀歉 of the author. Necessary stamps are sent for postage. Useful stamps are responsible for the view of our correspondent. *Scitting agents wanted everywhere. With form. Sample copies free.* Business post, office county and state. Business post office county and state. Business post office county and state. Academic 200 letters containing no or at least one publication. Enter as second class matter. AGENTS WANTED. THE APPEAL wants good re-able agents to canvass for subscribers at points not already covered. Write for our extraordi- nary inducements. SATURDAY, APRIL 13, 1901. Bishop Henry M. Turner, who for years has been advocating the emigration of the Afro-Americans of the United States to Africa, without success, has a last hit upon a plan of doing something along that line, which we briefly indorse. He now advocates banishing Afro-Americans criminals to the Dark Continent. If the convict camps and stockades of the South, together with the other unblushing outrages committed against the Afro-Americans of the South, and North, too, by the way, under so-called guise of law, has no terrors for the criminals, perhaps this direful suggestion of the worthy Bishop may cause them to mend their ways. If it does not, then let them go; this country will certainly be better off without them. But in view of the fact that our white brethren are in a very great measure directly or indirectly responsible for a large percentage of crime among the Afro-Americans, and they, themselves, are THE FEDERAL MILITARY CENTER HANGING OF A NATIVE AT APALIT. P. I. master hands at crime, why not include the white criminals among the banished? What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander, and we would like to have no distinctions made in anything on the color line. Take away the black criminals and we who are not criminals, and who intend to stay in this country, will be much better off in every way. But, take away both black and white criminals, and we will enjoy a forcastle of the promised million. It would never do to take away ALL the Afro-American criminals, and only them; for then there would not be so many easy marks for our white brethren to practice upon; and the lawyers and judges and officers of the law, to a large extent, would lose their avocations. There is a large number of our white brothers who profit by our criminal classes, and they do not want us ALL to be good; they would then have to prey upon each other. You see, the whites make the laws of this country, and they, too, administer them. So, with the prejudice they have against color, how easy it is to make black criminals. They make a law which says blacks and whites shall not legally marry in some states; and, then a large lot of bastards are born. Well, in such cases both fathers and mothers are equally criminal, but, then, only the black mothers or black fathers will be the sufferers from their criminality. And all the children born in sin will be counted in the Afro-American column, and become criminals, too, perhaps, upon the hypothesis that crime is hereditary. It's harder for the Afro-Americanians than it for the whites to be strictly good in this prejudiced country. Each president of the United States was once an infant, and at the birth of each there probably was no thought of the newly born ever being president, but each A woman in traditional attire sits on a chair, holding a baby in her lap. The background features a decorative wall with a large pot of flowers. THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER got there, and every white male born in the, United States may, as soor as he is able to hope, hope to be president, and work to that end. Not so the Afro-American. He must take just what his white brother gives him. He is expected to be only a hewer of wood SHACK OF CAPT. M'COY, THIRD THE HUT and a drawer of water. He may vote for presidents galore, but must never hope to be voted for for that position himself. We have had a couple of United States Senators, a few Congressmen and some other officers that were voted for, but nothing like one-seventh of the offices which would be our pro rata according to population. Of course, this makes us very good healthfulness speaks well for the American methods of cleanliness and sanitation which have been introduced there. A special from Washington says that the public debt was reduced nearly nineteen million dollars during the month of March. Horrors! That Republican administration has been paying off some more indebtedness. GOOD HARBER WANTED. WANTED—A steady, first-class barber. Address Turner & Parker, 113 Howard street, Spokane, Wash. PORTER IN LUCK. The Biggest Tp Ever Received by a Po ter of a Pulm a car. We are shut out from nearly every business avocation, no matter how well qualified to fill such places. We cannot rent decent houses in decent localities, and cannot even BUY them in many localities, though able to pay spot cash. This has a tendency to make us very good. What are the incentives for us to be good? We are just as human as any other human beings, all of whom are prone to evil, go the Good Book says. It is very strange that our white brothers, who claim to be the personification of all things good and intelligent, expect us to be paragons of perfection when they throw every obstacle possible in our way. We are not all bad, and many who are bad would be better if they had the proper incentives offered them. It is a painful, heart-sickening prospect for the Afro-American parents of a half a dozen children when they think of the few chances and opportunities which are open for their progeny. We would like to be rid of the Afro-American criminals, but being an advocate of equal and exact justice for all, let the white criminals go too. What say you, Bishop? There is not a single case of yellow fever in Havana, the first time in the history of the city that such was the case at this time of the year. This O UNITED STATES INFANTRY, AT CALA healthfulness speaks well for the American methods of cleanliness and sanitation which have been introduced there. A special from Washington says that the public debt was reduced nearly nineteen million dollars during the month of March. Horrors! That Republican administration has been paying off some more indebtedness. GOOD BARBER WANTED. WANTED—A steady, first-class barber. Address Turner & Parker, 113 Howard street, Spokane, Wash. The Biggest I Ever Received by a *bo* to *p* in *pulli* a car. New April 10—*a* "tir" of nearly $100,000 toward George W. Thurston, a negro Pulli man carer, gets for the attention he paid Mr. Eliza Jane Evans, who was frequently a passenger on his car. Mrs. Evans named her as the principal beneficiary of an estate estimated at between $75,000 and $100,000. Her husband is disin- and relatives are remembered with 11 legacies. The will will be contested. Subtract 19 years from 51 and you have 12 years. Add 19 years to the wife's presence. Subtract 19 years from 51 and at which the account brought his daughter from all pursuit. In the event of her second marriage, she provided that her spouse pick up all right. The home and the annual $1,000. Then Love came, the paradox to this marriage. John B. Adams was a youthful clerk in John B. Adams store. He saw the still youthful store owner. She looked upon him but merely provided her. She passion entered her heart also. But how to circumvent the will, the awa- tion, have found the way. Several months ago two of executives Ralph M. Mebb, the one of the Cable acquaint-ment, died. leaving Mrs. Moors and her own Father, Carlton Syrmeau of New York, the second of the mailling execut- ors. They went into court and asked to have young Adams appointed executor Soon afterward young Adams was made the President of the Franklin Mining works in which he was largely interested with a hand-made salary attached. There is your financial par- tection. Then it was the lovers, decided to be the bride, the edict in the act come. They could afford it. The ceremony was performed at noon at today at the bride's residence, edited in the act unless the executors and rome way to get around it by leasing it to the hu-uv house. If a year, or something of that port. ALM OST. M. CRAE ONE Belle—Is your mother entirely out of danger? Nell—Not quite; the doctor says he will call again tomorrow. "Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois," by David C. Newton Bateman, L. D. L. and D. York, editions 1981-1982 is today the accomplished dramatist of the state. He has written and directed unnerving the classic authors since the 1960s of Goethe. Der Mester von Palmyra, Iyme, is the only author of the few real masterpieces of modern man literature and cannot fail to prove that Der Mester von Palmyra, Dramatisches Dieutung in aufutzungen, von Adolf Nuremberg, edited with Introduction and Notes, is the master of the fessor of Modern Languages in Middlebury, 80 cfs. American Book Covers, New York. JUMPIT, PHILIPPINE ISLANDS. tion goes on it will undoubtedly have a higher and a richer place in the hearts of the people. Mr. Charles H. Han was one of the first and Loomest advocates introducing man-made things into our public schools. Mr. Charles H. Han was in a great measure the remarkable success of this system throughout the country. Earth, Sky, and Air in Song. Book I. By W. P. Neal. With Hanna Walter Bobbett. Cloth, quarto, professially illustrated. 127 pages. Price. 70 cents. American Book Company, New York, Chicago and Chicago. There has never come to me as easily as now for children who is so attractive, both in its educational and its artistic features, as the present book. The first of a two-book series, it aims to aid the youth of our culture in learning English. Nature. The author in writing the words of these songs has used the child's language and recognized the child's sense of humor. "A New English Grammar for Schools, being a Revised Edition of a Practical Grammar of the English Language, by John W. Hunt, with 60 pages. Price: 60 cents. American Book Company, Chicago. Cincinnati and Chicago. Practical Grammar we find that all the good grammar we learn is retained while much new matter has been added to meet modern demands. In the first volume of the four-digit structure methods have been applied, and language study unified and correlated with the language of nature is perfectly natural and philosophical manner. he seemed to have solved the problem. He applied to have a Tanglefoot, he said with a custom-made shoe, to be nothing in the rules that exactly applies—the fault of the rules, Mr. Tan-jae I assure it, is entirely the fault of the fault of the fault of the Doc throw out his chest and struck an attitude, 'speaking from the standpoint of a physician of considerable skill,' he said. I am my painful duty—I mean my very, very pleasant duty. Mr. Tanglefoot—to pronounce that he is—why, just look at the item he mentioned—a dead ball. Everybody move up g. base. "And Tanglefoot Tom cantered home with the rimming run." A lingering hope, unlike a lingering guest, is always welcome. The author--God and not man; the author--the Holy Spirit, and not the wit of apostles; the author--the mistress, fed from the womb; the matter-verity, platy, purity; the form-God's Word; the platy, purity; the newborns of life, lifefulness, peace, joy; the lifefulness, life; happy the man who delighthes in the Scripture--Smith. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tables. All cure refunds the money if it fails to cure. To Coddle Dirt - use soap. To clean clothes quickly-use Pearline THE HOTEL GAMMON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY The aim of this school is to do practical work in the field of education of the ministry. Its course of study is broad and practical; its ideas are high; its methods are fresh, systematic, clear and simple. COURSE OF STUDY The course covers three years, and covers the lines of work in the several departments of theological and religious, including theological seminaries of the country. EXPENSES AND AID Tuition and room rent are free. The course is well-fitted, well-rished. Good board can be had for seven dollars per month. Buildings heated by Aid from loans without interest, and students who do their internship in the line of self-help. No young man with a degree in the sciences of the advantages now opened to him in this Seminary. For further particulars, see KIRKFIELD, D. D., President Atlanta, Ga. EGKSTEIN NORTON UNIVERSITY The above departments are under competent work and are graduated and specialized in the following branches: Chicago Manual Training Center, State University, Chicago Manual Training Center, Institutions. These departments and studies are encouraged that students may study what is most desirable, leave at no age, and attend the course at any future time. The time to study may vary, but the course at any future time. The time to study may work in a department. TERMS. Room, board, room, and spending, $60 per month, Students may enter any at any time in the year. HELP FOR STUDENTS. Desk arrangement in proportion to the work they are filling in. Do we ask patrolmen not only on account of our low pay, but also on account of our work done. Our accommodations are first-class and Persons on an route to Campus Spring, KY., the Louisville may find free accommodation at No. 967, Lourdes Street, Locust Hill, NY. For more information and all business addresses, the President, REV. C. H. PARRISH, A. M., CANE SPRING, N.Y. "GOD HATH MADE OF ONE B1000 ALL NATIONS OF MEN." BEREA, KY. christian, non-sectarian. Three college courses: Academy, Normal Manual, Tuition free. Includes 100 hours of study in institutions. 202 white and 212 Afro-American students. Need to need to be to GET the BEREA SCHOOL ADDRESS. PRES. WM. G. FROST, PH. D., EUREA, KY SHAW UNIVERSITY SHAW UNIVERSITY For both sexes. Departments of Law, Medica- line, Pharmacy, Music, Missionary Training, College, Industrial, and Industrial. Years begin October 1st. For catalogues, directories, and other information, address. PRES, CHAS. S. MESERVE Raleigh N. C. Fourteen teachers. Elegant and commuting buildings. Climate unassimptive. Particularly well-equipped. Shortest. Typewritten and inducted Training. FIFTY DOLLARS. IN THE ADVANCE. Will pay for room, heat, litter, toilet, and incidentals for the entire year. $600 per room. $240 per term. Through work done in each department, send to circular, to take the president. REV. JUDSON S. HILL D. D. Morrislein, Tenn. DEPARTMENTS: English, Norfolk, Preparatory, Oxford, Theological, Medical, and Educational, Law, Music, Medical, African and Indian schools. Over forty instructors in all fields and last for 400 students from 96 schools per school month. For further information, call catalogue, address the President, J. Bradin, in麻城, Penn. THE MEDICAL SCHOOL OF THE NEW ORLEANS UNIVERSITY Admits Men and Women of all Races WELL EQUIPED, TREOEED INSTRUCTION. Address 5318 St. Charles, NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA HOW TO HAVE EASY, HEALTHY, SCHOOL FEET --- NEERS RECORD IN MINNESOTA YA'S CAPITAL. The Saint City City and Saint City City Stoke- away Items of Scotch, Religious and Maternal Matters Among the People, Built Down. Goodall House, 376 Jackson street; furnished rooms, transients-accommo- mated. Mrs. J. W. Milton still continues to improve, and will soon be able to leave the hospital. Look out for the April number of the Colored American Magazine, which will soon be ready. For Rest. Two furnished rooms for gardeners. Apply to Mrs. D. E. Fal- bert, 553 Silley street. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Lawrence enattained at Easter dinner Mr. and Mrs. W. Martin and son. Rooms Wanted—A few gentlemen roomers may find nicely furnished rooms at 554 Broadway. One or two gentlemen roomers wanted. Apply at 527 St. Anthony avenue, or at THE APPEAL office. Have you seen that elegant new van of the Bik Express Co? Well, it is a carport. Don't forget them when you need any express done. The Wm. E. Nagel Undertaking Co. funeral directors and embalmers, 222 Wabasha street, between Third and Fourth streets. Telephone 508 50 day or night. Those of our patients who desire to have mature published must get the same in the book not later than Thursday, otherwise it may be crowded out. Persons desiring to visit the Appeal office are hereby notified that it has been removed from the fifth to the third floor. Rooms 109 and 110, in the bar, Union Block. Is your hair straight? If not sure 50 cents to Ozonized Ox Marrow Co. Wabash avenue, Chicago, IL, fill in the box. Marrow and can easily straighten it. TRY THE MEALS AT JOHN GOD FREYS, NO. 148 EAST NINTH STREET, BETWEEN ROBERT ANT JACKSON, AND YOU WILL NOT WISH TO EAT ANY OTHERS. Pilgrim Baptist, Cedar and Summit. Services, 10:45 a. m., 7:45 p. m.; Rev. W. Services, 10:45 a. m., 7:45 p. m.; Rev. nant and Communion; evening, "A Great Salyation." Sunday school, 12:30 p. m. If you wish a good shave, hair cur. chapmook call at Richard Coushay neat店, No. 374% Minnesota street. First-class workmen only. Satisfaction guaranteed. Music for all occasions furnished on short notice. Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Smith left last week for New York and other Eastern cities, to be gone for some time. Mr. Mrs. B. W. Smith will be on the private car of the president of the Buffet, Anaconda & Pacific railway. Miss Rosa Poole has opened a home restaurant at No. 378 Minnesota street, between Fifth and Sixth streets, Meals at all hours to order. Dinner from to 2:30 p. m., 15 and 20 cents, dinner dinner, 25 cents. All home cooking. Elk Express, G. D. Charleston, prop., packing and shipping; hauling of all kinds; coal and wood in large or small quantities. When you wish anything in his line give him a call. 1920 - 1. Office 63 East sixth street. Mr. J. E. Pringle and Mr. J. C. McGlin, who for so many years were at the Plymouth Clothing House, have again connected themselves with that old, reliable institution, ready to welcome their old friends and serve their greatest interests as in days past. DR. J. E. PORTER, physician and parson, Koun 410 Washburn briding, Koun 410 Washburn briding, Office hours: 10 a.m. to 12 l., 2 to 4 p. m., 7 to 8 p. m. m. Telephone. Main, 1738 - 1. Residence, 453 Carroll street. Telephone, Yale, 464 - L3. Those who wish to revel in repasts evidencing the highest style of culinary art in their preparation; or, in other words, those who wish to eat good, wholesome home-cooked meals. At John Godfrey's, at 148 East Ninth street, near Jackson. John Godfrey, No. 148 East Ninth street, between Robert and Jackson, is prepared to take care of a few rooms at reasonable cost. Board furnished when desired. Best home-cooked meals in the city. If you doubt it, try them once and you'll be convinced. Al G. Field's Greatest Minstrel, with the largest company in the world, will appear at the Metropolitan for the first time and World War II beginning tomorrow night. Mr. Howard Gould, in "Rupert of Hentzau," sequel to "The Prisoner of Zenda," will fill out the latter half of the week. The Easter services in the various churches were on the whole admirable, beautiful decorations and was decorated with very elaborate and beautiful. Pilgrim Baptist church was particularly beautiful, having been thoroughly renovated and painted with p. new and beautiful carpet. When you wish to meet your friends or take your friends where first-class fluid refreshments, foreign and dinecatic, may be found, call on Thomas Jefferson, Minnesota street. Best brands of cigars. Billiards, pool. Free lunch for patrons. Public cordially invite Messrs. Thos. Jefferson, Jr., and Lee Turpin, entertainers. The show of the season the Rose Hill English Folly Co. will be the attraction of the month. No beginning Sunday matinee. The farcical travesty, "All at Sea" and the spicy extravaganza, "Stolen Plumes," will be presented. A big olo and the latte of Parisian cream. Big and Amour Dance of the city's biggest, best bright burlap show on the road. L. Eppstein & Sons Co. You have recently moved their extensive liquor house to the corner of Wahasha and Hight's streets, where the best in their list which the city affords may be obtained by the city salesman, or Mr. Joseph Esterman for many years with the California Wine House. Mr. Eurist is one of the best fellows in the world and appreciates anyone else who is a good fit to see him; he'll treat you right. H. R. Rendallson She (pensively) -Ah! well! What is wealth, after all, but the mere difference between income and expenditure! FeeSa: be debt A CINCH. Panker—If I give my consent, could you support my daughter? St. James' A. M. E. church, Fuller and Jay streets, Rev J. C. Anderson, pastor. Morning theme, "Baptized by the Lord," evening theme, "The Business Side of Spiritual Life and the Spiritual Side of Business." Adults of adults at the Woodland Baptist church, corner Selby and Mackinbun streets, at 7 o'clock Sunday morning, and children and adults at the morning service at regular service. Lord's Supper will be administered. THE COLORED AMERICAN MAGAZINE Mr. J. H. Jackson, 554 Broadway, St. Paul, is the general agent for the "Colored American Magazine" in St. Maud and Minneapolis. Miss Bessie Mauldin and Minneapolis. St. Maud agent and canvasser. Send in your subscription, $1.50 per year; single copies 15 cents each; on sale at People's barber shop, 386 Minnesota Temple, Minneapolis. Copies may be obtained from Mr. Henry Roberts at West Hotel drug store, Minneapolis. GOOD BARBER WANTED A first class barber of good habits may get a steady job by applying to H. E. Johnson, 27 East Superior street, Duluth, Minn. A VERY WORTHY MAGAZINE The February number of The Colored American Magazine has been laid upon our desk. We find it an admirable publication which every African-American—or any other and of American—has read and read. It is filled with good matter from cover to cover. It must be seen and read to be fully judged appreciated in its second year. It is published in the Co-operative Publishing Co. No. 5 Park Square, Boston, Mass. Price $1.50 per year; 15 cents a number. Mr. Harvey Jackson, No. 545 Broadway, Northwestern Agent and Miss Bessie Mills local agent, who will call upon the citizens. Subscriptions may also be left with Mrs G. Duckett, 395 Copies are on sale at the People's barber shop, 365 Minnesota street. LONG FLIGHT OF A PIGEON. Return to Loft in Pittsburgh from the Colorado Capital. Silver Queen, a homing pigeon owned in South Pittsburg, has recently achieved distinction among her mats. On Aug. 4, 1900, the club of which her owner is a member sent five pigeons to Denver, Col., there to be liberated by C. M. Day, agent of the Adams Express company at that place. Among the birds was Silver Queen. Upon Aug. 4, 1900, the bird liberated from the roof of the Brown Denver, in the presence of a large gathering of people interested. The pigeons, when released, repeatedly made several circles in the air, then all of them flew eastward. They were first heard from four days later, when a letter dated Aug. 11 reached the Pittsburg club from Henry Homeyer of Zickrick county, South Dakota, saying that a cocker pigeon arrived at his place that morning. The terrific hallstorms had cleared away. Mr. Homeyer fed and watered the bird, which, afterward identified as Silver Queen, resumed its flight as though THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPEZ Bell-I de Nell-Th THE MUSICIAN Bell—I don't like his technique, he hammers so. Bell - I don't like his technique, he hammers so Nell - That's not technique; that's Warnet. NCH. you support my daughter? I learn that you are fond of playing Mr. STEWELL Mr. THEUBER Mr. experi- ters. Pr. 5, m. Alexe. Mi the by the Good. The place lowe ft y. Dra into Pound Office. The the Citle thes the A Ca Why thine THE pleas Qu lastive ment was Mr. STEWELL Messrs. J. C. Reid and McCants Stewart have challenged Meesrs. Hat- Defective Page quite refreshed. Three weeks more passed, and as no further news of any of the five birds was received, they were given up as lost. But on Sept. 6 Albert Greb of Pittsburgh, the owner of Silver Queen, wille in his loft early in the morning was astonished by seeing his bird perch upon the windowsill. She had thus accomplished a flight of 1,700 miles within a period of thirty days, during which she passed thirteen many most severe storms of hall, rain, snow, and magnificently successful effort to treat, and mate. Taking into consideration the age of this bird $-2\frac{1}{2}$ years—the great distance covered and the severi- ty of the weather she encountered, Silver Queen's 1,700-mile flight from Denver to Pittsburgh is regarded as one of the most successful of any homing club in the country. Moreover, Silver Queen, two weeks before she was sent to Denver, had made a 700-mile flight from Jefferson City, Mo., to Pittsburgh. And she was the only one of the five birds-liberated at Denver which survived the trying ordeal of weather and distance. The owner will never again permit her to be put in the basket—Chicago Chronicle. HERE AND THERE Italy gives away $50,000 a year in marriage portions to the poorer people. England's thirty-five sovereigns have reigned on an average of twenty-three years. In the manufacture of a pocketknife in France 20 workers are employed for the handle and blade, 18 for a tableknife, 9 for scissors, and 16 for razors. Matters Social, Religious and Grass Which Have Happened and are to Happen Among the People of the City on the Falls. Mrs. Delbert Lee is on the sick list. Lillie Rubie Danner is sick with the mumps. Mrs. Charles Roberts is still very sick at her home. Wives, why have your husbands bald headed when Madame Pierre can make the hair come in? Mrs. Thomas Scott is at present residing with Mrs. Geo. Lillard at No. 325 East Nineteenth street. At the Grand Opera House, St. Paul. Al. H. Wilson, in his new romantic comedy, "The Watch on the Rhine," will be seen at the Grand the coming week, commencing Sunday night. It will be the occasion for one of the most interesting events of the present theatrical season, and the introduction here by Messrs. Charles H. Yale and Sidney R. Ellis of a new star, who is celebrated as a German dialect conceived in golden-voiced singer. Mr. Wilson, the director of the larger cities, is a young man of undoubted talents and is gifted with the unusual quality of being able to extract a tear or convulse his auditors with merriment with as much ease and grace as any of our most noted playwrights, the possessor of a singing voice that for some of the purity of tone is second to none. "The Watch on the Rhine" is by Sidney R. Ellis, who has written a number of successes, and it is claimed that this is his best effort. It tells a story of a man who is convinced and holds one spell-bound with its intensity and interest. Then there are the comedy and mirth-provoking situations. It is really a question if more continuous laughter is needed. The scenes are located upon the banks of the river Rhine, in Germany, and all that famous stream's picturesure surroundings will be faithfully reproduced by a carload of scenery and effect. Mr. Wilson's supporting company is an excellent one and includes, Mark Prince, Eva Bryon, Affle Warner, Funny Bloodgood, Russell Lennon, Alfred Hastings, Charles A. McGraath and Frank Richter. Mrs. Charles Brooks, collector for THE APPEAL, will give delinquent subservitors a call next week. Mrs. Bert Lewis, of Indianapolis, is expected in the city, to visit his sisters, Mrs. Moss and Mrs. Coge. Prido of Minnesota, K. of P. No. 5, meets first and third Thursday at Alexander hall, 27 and 29 South 6th st. Miss Lorenza Michaelson has accepted the position of forelady made vacant 7th, the resignation of Hatty Reek. Good enough. The Missit Clothing Parlors is the place to get the best clothes at the lowest prices. They will make them fit you, too. No. 241 Nicollette Ave. Dr. R. S. Brown has moved his office into the Century Building. No. 67 Fourth street south, rooms 405 and 406 Office 'phone, N. W., 3271-J1 Main. The Appeal is mailed to most of the homes of the people of the Twin Cities, and if you wish matters to reach these homes you must publish them in the Appeal. Can anyone answer this question? Why is it that people want the good life and make themselves printed in THE APPLE? Do you request to please keep so and so out? Quite a crowd witnessed the debate Tuesday night. Both the affirmative and the negative made pleasing arguments. The decision of the affirmative was in favor of the affirmative. THE PRIZE MEMBER. Mr. Cunzo-How did they come to elect you president of your bicycle *ab*,uh, Tommy-Why, you see, you pop, I'm the only feller in the club who got *wrong*. APOLOGY. vey Burk and J. S. Wright to debate the following subject: "Resolved, that Lincoln's plan of reconstruction was superior to the congressional challenge is under advice. Mrs. B. F. Pierws has moved to 1127 Third avenue south. All moves to desiring pomade, hair tonic or shampoo I would be pleased to have them call. Telephone 2858-L2 Main. Pomade, 25 cents; shampooing, 25 and 50 cents; hair tonic, 25 cents. All calls promptly attended in the Twin Cities. Tickets are out now for the Old Maids' Convention. A wheel will be given to the one selling the highest price. A ticket to enter the contest can get tickets. Mrs. L. J. W. Withers, of Pasa- BO. tor's Society. The convention will convene April 29 at Bethaisted Baptist church. The ranks of the W. P. of Minnesota, K. P. No. 5, were increased last week by the bittination of the following-named gentlemen at the new castle hall, 104 Hennipin avenue: George George W. W. Winters, William Moden, Rev. Butler, W. Burke, Parkerson, Rev. Butler, W. Burke, B. Linkley, G. Granger, M. English, H. Howard, V. Rogers, H. Burk, E. Franklin. Mr. W. M. Jenkins, the well-known hotel man of Minneapolis, has leased the flat No. 9 Second street north and has remodeled and refurnished it with a new interior. It is located in a desirable location, being one block from the Nigollet house and three blocks from the West hotel. The rooms will be let to those who desire 9 rates. Call at No. 9 Second street north, first flat for W. M. Jenkins, proprietor. St. Peter's church was crowded to the door Monday night, to listen to the concert by the pupils of Mrs. Kasai, who did very well and deserve credit, but Ms. McGoge, the coming singer of Minneapolis, deserves special mention and praise for her, sofa, "Serenade to Juana and Miss Rosetta Monahan, the child shepherd of hearts of all those present. She was given first prize for selling the largest number of tickets. Miss Myrtle II second prize and Miss Grace Fourth prize. She was given gold watch, the second and third each a gold ring. Rev. Butler presented the prizes. The proceeds were for the pastor's salary. In behalf of the effort that is being put forth by the Minneapolis to dedicate church property to Abraham Lincoln and organize an industrial in-room E. Clapp will install the State Senator Moses Hall, Minneapolis, Fourth street and First avenue south, Friday evening, April 19th. The occasion will be held at Congressman Loren Fletcher will present Among those who will be present and take part are: Gov. S. R. Van Sant, Col. C. T. Trowbridge, ex-Gov. John C. Cook, Hon. Frank Matthew Fred C. Cook, Hon. Frank Nye, Ames, Attorney James C. Curtis, Attorney F. L. McGhee and others tickets, 25 cents. The St. Paul folks are cordially invited to be present. The Lilliputian wedding will be represented by Congregational church, Fifth Avenue and Thirty-second street, April 19. Easter services were held in all of the churches last Sunday. Special Easter sermons were preached in the morning. Bethesda choir did some excellent singing. Miss Dottie; Mr. W. Jones sang a solo in the evening. Rev. Bethema preached a very instructive sermon to the young people at 3:30 o'clock, and the children rendered a program in the evening. St. Peter's church was very pretty decorated and the charge of the Easter decoration deserved a good taste. The young people rendered a program in the evening. The debate held at Bethesda Baptist church last Tuesday evening was very entertaining, and all those present enjoyed it nicely. The question was: How can we affirm the national independence of the American Negro can be best maintained by establishing a Negro Commonwealth within the bounds of the United States." The affirmatives, John W. Wright and Harvey Stewart, are the two proudest men in the city, and negatives, J. C. Reed and McCant Stewart, the two most disappointed men. However, the were capitals of the number of points made plain to them. J. C. Reed was on the right road, but as he said he was no nkbar talk but a newspaper writer. We think if he could have won the debate, he would have won the debate. Mr. Harvey Burke surprised the people by his good talk and chosen language, as we never know what is in a man until he says he is a Messrs. Wright and Stewart are part well matched; only McCant got a little personal. AMERICA. HAS THREE PERILS. So said Edwin Arnold, the poet: It would be well to have the younger generation bear them in mind: Peril No. 1. The small type often used in American literature is fast ruining the people's eyesight. Peril No. 2. The immoderate use of ice water has paralyzed the digestion of millions. Peril No. 3. The general use of plated knives which are too dull to cut food properly, and in consequence dyspepsia is becoming the national disease in America. Young America tale warning. The five great powers—Love, money, revenge, ambition and a good dinner. Some people have been, on the stag, all their lives and still long to be actors. Many a man by virtue of his ancestry is only the shadow of a mighty name. Never attempt to bully a judge or jury unless you have previously bribed them. Nine times out of ten when the unexpected happens we bring it on ourselves. The first volunteer for the benefit to be given by the Theatrical Mechanical's Association at the Columbia theater, Boston, in December, is Sandy Chapman, the popular Boston comedian. Young ladies should set good examples if they want young men to follow them. Seven days in the week, "Badger State Express" via "The North-Western Line" leaves Minneapolis 7:50 a.m., St. Paul 8:30 a.m., arriving Milwaukee 8:40 p.m., Chicago 9:45 p.m., and is the finest day train from Minneapolis and St. Paul to these cities every day in the week. It has comfortable First Class Coaches and Luxurious Observation Parlor Car, serving meals a la carte, and supplied with every convenience and comfort for a pleasant daylight trip through picturesque Wisconsin. Your Home agent will sell you tickets via this first class line. For further information and illustrated Booklet free, address T. W. Teasdale, General Passenger Agent, St. Paul, Minn. Why does the boy hate the beer? He doesn't—he loves it because it is Hamm's delicious, brew it is the medicine his kind anxiety has mixed in it that he dislikes. Never mind he is to have a drink of the pure an old afterwards to take the bad taste away. Hamm's St. Paul Beer Drink a beer you know is pure. Theo. Hamm Brewing Co. Tel. 972 90 St.Paul, Minn. Agents Everywhere. ROCHE'S WINES Dinner Wines. Pontet Claret $1.00 Per quart..... Medeco Claret 75c Per quart..... Chesterfield 50c Per quart..... Good Fair Wine 25c Per quart..... Telephone Main 1401 ST. PAUL. 367 ROBERT ST. JOHN ROCHE MINNEAPOLIS 44 3RD ST. S. has already earned its reputation for Super- man, and you should be surprised that these those who require something, better than an airplane, must request the order in respectively managed form. Your order is respectively managed by you. If you cannot, it is teledemon. 1590. and 'govern' in England. In our own country 'papa' and 'mamma' are used for some three hundred years at least, says the London Globe. They probably reached us from Italy, where their use was of much older date. Dante uses 'mamma' in the 'Purgatorio'. Words of this kind are often in common and familiar use long before they find their way into the written language of books, so that it would not be easy to say when "papa" and "mamma" were first heard among us, but one of the earliest literary traces of their use is to be found in Lily's 'Euphues' (1579), an Italian story framed with curious verbal absurdities, from the Italian fashions and affections of the day. From that time instances of the use of one or the other of the words, or of both, are fairly common in literature. Another familiar and childish variant is "dad" or "daddy." "Dad," or "tad" as the earlier form is, is a pure Welsh word, and is of great antiquity. The Lord's Prayer begins in "Welsh with the words "Ein Tad," or "Ein Dad," the first word of the phrase meaning "Our." "Dad," with its derilied name "and," and "dada," has long been familiar in Welsh and English children. Like "papa," it was doubtless in use many years before literature took note of it; still, it is found more than two centuries ago in a burlesque poem attacking James II. The doggerel contains both "dad" and "dada." Children of a larger growth have other equivalents for father and mother. Boys who think that they are too big to use the tender sounding names which were familiar to their infancy talk of the "pater" and the "mater." "Governor" is another colloquial variant which has little to recommend it. A few shades worse than governor "believing officer" a picture affected by sons who look upon their fathers' children financial supply. There are other similar epithets in use, but they are neither attractive nor dignified. When daddy and mammy, or papa or mamma are put aside as too childish, or are discarded for any other reason, there are no parental names which can for a moment compare with the simple, but dignified, plain, but beautiful, Anglo-Saxon words and mother. BUSY "BEST PEOPLE." They Assist Whitecaps, Lynchers, Raiders, and Other Teams. Anyone who thinks "our best people" have an easy time of it is mistaken, says the Chicago Journal. They are always up and doing. The man who reads the newspapers will readily understand that. And they are usually doing those things that they ought not to be doing. Indeed, according to all accounts, "our best people" busy themselves principally with other people's business. Surely everyone must have noticed that the recent raids in Kansas were conducted by "some of our best people." They were the ones who rallied to Mrs. Nation's support; they were the ones who, inspired by her example, wield axes and she looked. That is why she outstretched. But Kansas is the outstate where "our best people" have been busy; not by a good deal. They had a hand in the last lynching reported, for the truthful correspondent asserted that "some of our best people were foremost in the crowd." That's always the way. No one ever heard of a man being tarred and feathered, or of a drug store being wrecked, or of a whitecap outrage being perpetrated, or of the prerogatives of the law being usurped in any way, that some of our best people" were in charge of the most permissively busy time and the ordinary, proscale, matter-of-fact, law-abiding citizen has reason to be thankful that he does not get mixed up with them. According to present indications the term will soon be one of reproach, and to shoot a man for calling you "one of our best people" will be justifiable homicide. New Women in Scotland. In Scotland where there are no women lawyers a woman is suing the Incorporated Society of Law Agents, which is the Scotch Bar association, to compel the society to admit her to examination so that she may be entitled to practice as a full-fedded attorney, which is not required to care much whether she becomes a lawyer or not. In an answer to her plea, filled with the court, it says that the court had better decide the matter. It does not feel itself called upon either by duty or interest to maintain that women might not be admitted to the practice of law; the society can only state that no woman has hitherto been admitted to public offices open to lawyers for women probably would not be suited. The court is likely to grant the woman's plea. The report of the state tax commissioner of Massachusetts shows why the people of that state are rich, why the New York Times. The total valuation of the capital stock of corporations in that state is $641,125,125, with nearly $100,000,000 not counted because of litigation. The value of the land and machinery of these corporations is $343,136,129. The aggregate of the taxes assessed on this property is $1,000,000,000, a poor state naturaly. Her people encumbered and developed manufactures with the result stated. If the farms are abandoned, the mills are filled. There is a lesson in this-dividends! German Empire has No Capital. By the census of December, 1835, the population of the German empire was 62,279,901; the area, 540,677 square kilometers (one square kilometer being equal to two-fifths of an American city); the German empire has no capital. The kingdom of Prussia and the residence of the emperor as king of Prussia, and the place where the parliament (Reichstag) convenes. The date of accession of the present emperor, Wil- "You too?" Everyone smokes the strictly High Grade DUKE OF PARMA CIGARS HART & MURPHY, MNFRS. ST. PAUL, MINN. HAVE YOU THE GordonHat Our New American Mammoth THE BEST AND LARGEST MANGLE FIRST ONE IN THE STATE. Lowest Prices on Flat Work SHIRTS, 10o. COLLARS and CUFFS, 1o. A Good "Con" Talk is about all there is to some advertisements, especially in the clothing business. It is absolutely necessary to convince an intelligent buyer that he is buying a $15.00 or $20.00 suit for $5.00. That isn't our way of doing business. We claim to, and do make, the best Suits and Overcoats to order; that can possibly be produced for the money—$20.00 to $45.00. A glimpse at our windows will convince you of the fact. Orders placed this week will be ready for delivery next Friday. Keep your money at home by having your clothes made in St. Paul. Niedl Sailor ples mailed free. Seventh and Robert, St. Paul. LOUIS NASH, Manager. "A twist of the wrist"—it's on. Another twist of the wist, it's off the berth light on the Burlington's Chicago Limited. Conveniences—a buffet library smo eer, compartment nt and standard scepers—a dining car, a reclining 7th car; electric light; steam heater; Mimosa pits 7th car; a m daily. Arrives Chicago 8:25 next morning and St. Louis 8:25 next evening. The "Scenic Express" leaves Minneapolis 7:40 a.m. St. Paul 8:15 a.m., except Su day, arriving Chicago 10:20 same evening, an St Louis 6:40 next morning. Ask your home agent for ticket via this line. P. S. EUSTIS, Gen'l Pass, Agent, CHICACO, ILL. GEO. P. LYMAN, Asn't Gen'l Pass, Agent, ST. PAUL, MINN. william II., was June 15, 1885. Berlin has a population of over 1,700,000 accord- ing to unmeeting statements in the newspapers. The reigns of the census taken last year have not yet been pub- lished.—New York Weekly. RESTORED TO LIFE. Experimen a in Managing a Heart That Had Caused Eulipation. Had Caused Fulminating. Dr. Maig of Nasted, Denmark, recently made an experiment in revivifying a man apparently dead, which has convinced him that it is possible, the circumstances to restore the dead to life, he managed the heart, says the St. Louis Star. The doctor was attending a charity patient, a laborer, who apparently died under an operation from the effects of chloroform. Artificial respiration and other methods of the usual "revive" treatments were tried, but all to no avail. The other attending surgeons gave up the case, and said when they did so that the man had been dead fifteen minutes. Dr. Maig, however, declared that he would save the man. He cut open the dead man's side and beaten to manipulate the heart. He immedately of the organ by the basting of his pulse so as to get a natural rhythm. He then began to feel the heart respond to the treatment. The other doctors began working at the artificial respiration again, and in thirty-five minutes the dead man was breathing again and his heart was beating. His side was sewn to and he put to bed, where he ceased to breathe, and all attempts at artificial respiration were powerless to start the lungs working once more. The heart, however, kept on beating for eight hours, when it stopped, and the man was finally "allowed" to be dead. Dr. Maig. In all this way, the doctor was not regain consciousness, but the doctor believes that he nevertheless had to live again after the heart had been started working by massage. Some people will say that the action of the heart was simply a case of muscular reflex, responding to irritation and not real life. Dr. Maig, however, believes, that the reason the man died a second time was that his treatment was largely impromptu, and that the proper conditions and instruments for a thorough and scientific test were not at hand. ENGLAND'S PEASANTRY. Their Present Condition Contrasted with That of a Familiar Art. The agricultural laborer of today are certainly better clad, more luxuriously fed, have far more leisure, are better educated, and are rapidly becoming better housed than their forefathers a century ago. And if these are the main constituent of happiness, then they are happier, comments a correspondent in Nineteenth Century. On the other hand, their grandfathers and great-grandfathers were much more laughter and light-hearted than the modern; they enjoyed their lives much more than their descendants do; they had incomparably more laughter, more amusement, more real delight in the labor of their hands; there was more love among their and less hate. The agricultural laborer had a bad drunkness and between 20 or 30 years ago, and he had been a drunker. A village lot is now a very bright, as rare as he was 100 years ago. Then the laborer could not afford a drunken debauch—he had not the wherewithal. His master, the farmer, did drink, and sometimes deeply in the days when he was prospering. And for a few years after the rise of the laborer's wages, some 25 years ago, the laborer was the publican's friend. But hard drinking has been steadily declining, and the habitual drunkard is looked upon as a coarse brute to be avoided. As to other vices, things are pretty much as they were; I am afraid rather worse, than Perhaps the saddest characteristic of men of the present, as compared with the men of the past, is that the men of the past were mainly self-dependent—I do not mean independent, in the sense in which that word is used now—more resourceful, more kindly, courteous, and contented with their lot than their descendants are. Maine's Modern Ships. Maine shipbuilders are developing the Maine riger to such an extent that they are putting, together a vessel of that type with no less than seven masts. Big six-masted ships, rigged in schooner fashion, have proved to be remarkably economical and successful in carrying huge cargoes of coal and iron, and now a step onward to seven masts, is the New York Tribune. The new giant of its class will have a keel length of 335 feet, a breadth of 54, a depth of hold of 32, and a tonnage of about 4,000. This is a rarely interesting movement in the construction of sailing vessels. How much further is to go? Will the seven-master, if satisfactory, be followed by an eight-master, and possibly a ten-masted schooner, in order to make it possible that the middle of the country will welcome a sailing leviathan with a dozen masts of the schooner rig. Yankee inventiveness and energy take long looks ahead. A Girl's Best Counselor Is Her Father, "Trust your father's judgment of your men friends rather than your own at first," writes Helen Watterson Moody to girls, in the December Ladies' Home Journal. "The gay, wif- ily, responsive young man who will prob- ly most attract you, will not be the one who will be likely to have his serious consideration and respect. Talk over your men friends with your父 and, see what healthy unemotional, sane man standards" he will set up for you. I really think if a girl could have but one counselor in her love affairs, it would better be her father than anyone else. A man's mind is a great tonic to the somewhat diluted intellect of a girl in her first sentimental experiences." Pralease takes in, in its wide range, enjoyment of present, remembrance of past, and the hope of future. Praise points the only way to heaven; praise is already there — H-Morv. W. R. MORRIS Attorney at Law TRACTING IN ALL COURTS 617 Guaranty Loan BFd. Minneapolis MIDDLE EASTERN EXTRA QUALITY DUNLAP & CO. MADE IN USA THE DUNLAP HAT ```markdown ``` The Great Invention. This New Artificial Limb is the greatest thing that ever brought forward for the comfort of man. Write for instruction how to purchase one and two analogous AMERICAN ARTIFICIAL LIMB CO. ```markdown ``` Place here on your lawn The twins, the grand doll, and the TELL YOUR PORTUNG Witch, 4 feet Witch, 4 feet Witch, 4 feet will fight, they may meat bake here on your place here on your sweet breadings and twinnings and fruits they will tell you whether she thinks of you constant or changable jeans, color, silk, gown will also tell what she thinks of you. Seed is in cis, in a flower witches (8 for sp.). learn how to make a bake landolph Noverty Adv. Company Waters City, Indiana, U.S. Do You Want to PIANO Give a Good... AS A CHRISTMAS GIFT? We have a good Pia o we are offering at our "Special Sale" for only $148 It can't be beat for the money. CALL OW WRITE TO S.W. RAUDENBUSH OAKLAND, Oxh. St. Peter and Market Street. ST. PAUL MINN. Great Britain still has 340 muzzle-loading guns in her army. The Supreme Court of the United States wear gowns of black silk. The exports of paper from this country in 1900 amounted to $7,000,-000. Several of the Druidical stones of Stonehenge were displaced by the gale recently. The annual death rate in Great Britain is 16 per 1,000. The urban death rate is 18.3 per 1,000. The demand for automobiles is no immense, it is said, that all factories are behind with their orders. The American people are great theater-goers, and spend about $112,000,000 annually for such amusements. A Connecticut woman disinherited an adopted daughter and several cousins and left $7,000 to two yellow dogs. The system of rating on the unimproved land values is growing in favor with the local authorities of New Zealand. If the world be divided into land and water hemispheres, London is the center of the land, New Zealand of the water. The total number of persons arrested in Boston last year was 33,655, against 39,760 the preceding year, being a decrease of 6,105. Phoenix, Ariz., recently had a procession in which groups of cowboys were followed by groups of Indians, city officials and Chinese. “An open door will tempt a saint.” This rather unusual proverb was engraved in a key-ring, the property of a man found drowned in the Lea in England. New Hampshire has the largest legislature numerically of any state in the Union, the membership being 421, or one member to each 1,140 of the population. It maintains gateway of the Paris position, ground and the statue, "La Parisienne," which surmounted it, have been sold to a dealer in scrap iron for 10,000 francs. An el nearly nine feet long, two feet and four inches in girth and weighing 148 pounds, was recently caught on the beach at Snettisham, near Hunston, England. The smallest mall ever dispatched was recently made up for Buenos Ayres, the special entry of which was: "Letters; 1; newspapers, nl." "Indianapolis News." MIXED COLORS. Red and black make brown. Lake and white make rose. Red and yellow make orange. White and carmine make pink. Blue and lead color make Pearl. White and brown make chestnut. White and green make tea green. Blue and yellow make light green. White and green make bright green. White, blue and lake make purple. Red, blue, black and red make olive. Black and Venetian red make chocolate. Indigo and lampblack make silver gray. White and lampblack make lead color. White and yellow make a straw color. Purple and white make French white. Light green and black make dark green. White, blue and black make Pearl green. White lake and vermillion make a flesh color. Uber, white and Venetian red make drab. White and emerald-green make brilliant green. White, yellow and Venetian red make cream. HINTS FOR PLAIN GIRL. A girl whom nature has not endowed with her precious gift of beauty should never think that there is no compensation in her lot. She should not become soured and visit her misfortune upon others, who are not to blame for it. She should bear in mind that the women who have ruled the world's destiny have for the most part been quite devoid of beauty. She should think how fleeting beauty is, and that she will never suffer the pangs endured by a beautiful woman who sees her charms fading. She should remember, too, that the plainest woman may be made better loved by dress, style of carriage and by a pleasing appearance. She should remember that when a man makes love to her it is for her real self, not for the more outward attraction of beauty, which may vanish any moment by an accident. She should never forget that a bad temper added to a plain face is a misery, but good temper, sweetness, and unselfish manners can make a plain woman even more charming than a pretty one—Woman's Life. Firm Friendship Exists Between Two Denver Animals. Dogs and cats have been known to become fast friends, but for a cat and a rabbit to become inseparable companions is out of the ordinary. R. H. Jones of 130 Archer street has a rabbit and a cat which are boon companions. The rabbit belonged to a neighbor of Jones. One day it strayed into the Jones yard and got acquainted with the cat, says the Denver Republic. The rabbit and the cat became the best of friends, and from the minute the rabbit met the cat it has not been to its own home. For more than a year the two have been together, eating from the same dish and sleeping together in a box in the rear of the yard. The cat will not play with other cats, but makes a companion only of the rabbit. They romp about the yard together and now and then the cat will climb a tree. The dogs of the neighborhood have learned to play with the rabbit. By one to come into the yard and approach the rabbit is canine suicide. The cat bristles up at once and makes it so interesting for the intruder that he is always glad to scale the fence and get in the street. SOCIETY DIRECTORY. ST. PAUL. MOST WORSHIPFUL GRAND LODGE OF MINNESOTA, F. F. AND A. M. JOHN N. NALL, Grand Master. 622 Boston Blk., Minneapolis, Minn. Wm. R. Moninn, Grand Secretary. 817 Gauguity Blvd., Minneapolis, Minn. PIONER LODGE NO. 1, A. F. AND A. M., inets first and third Mondays of each month at Masonic Hall, No. 319 Wabasha Street, at Masonic Hall, No. 619 Wabasha Street, at W. A. Hilyard, Sec. 124 Atwater St. MINNESOTA LODGE NO. 2, A. F. AND A. M., inets second and third months at Masonic Hall, No. 319 Wabasha Street, at 8:00 P. M. J. H. Charleston, W. M. G. J. Charleston, Sec. 416 St. Anthony Ave. MINNEAPOLIS J. K. R. A. LORD LADEN, No. manta fern sr. m. Mason Hall and street between Hemingus and Nicolett Masons in good standing always welcome. HARRY BUNK, See Block Medici ALEXANDER LODD A. F. and A. M. i. m. 14. m. Mason Hall Second street between Nicolett Ave. Mason Hall Second street between Nicolett Ave. Masonions in good standing and welcome. GEO. W. D. W. W. WM. LASTER, Secy Number Exchange NORTH STATE CONSERVATORY HAILING NORTH STATE CONSERVATORY HAILING Rife for the Southern and Western jurids of the United States. Grand Orient at Washington. All buildings in good standing always welcome. KARL K. KARL G. See W. W. Guard Masonions in good standing always welcome. MINNEAPOLIS a. U. O. O. C. i BY ATHWON LONG, No. 2857, writes the trans- mission of business, second and fourth WEEK, for instruction, on their behalf. Second street, be- fore Niellet and Hunger are. JANE A. SGO T. P. S. P. O. G. JUNE ENIGHTS OF PYJHIAS We are here to meet once a second and fourth Thursdays in the evening in good standing welcome. At Labor Town Fourth and Fith AVE. AT JACKSON, C. O JOSEA A. CASE, C. R. and S. FRIDAY OF MUNCHER, LAND No. L. K. OF PYJHIAS We are here in good standing. At Mason Street between HELGON and I. JET AVE. FRENDS ORD LER, O. & R. D. WARN, R. R. and S. G. A. R. BENDER CIRCLE No. 38 LADIES OP THE 3. A. B. HARVEY HALL, HARVEY STAIRS AT GARDLE POST Hall Wabash Street, LAVA B. HICKMAN PARK, 719 CROSSON BAY MARY MARY SCHOOL, 602 CEDAR ST. THE OF MYSTERY IS A true Clavoyant and Trance Medium who understands all secrets and reveals all mysteries. Tells past, present and future without your presence. Describes all persons who are interesting to you in life. Removes all obstacles, prevents troubles, gives luck in marriages, lawsuits oculum, morphs and unites. Cures opium, morphs and tobacco habit, nervous debility and other ailments. Write to this wonderful woman. Answers all questions correctly. N. B. Send two-cent stamp for answer. Send full name, age and address, accompanied with 4000 for life reading. Address: MRS. M. B. FARBER, 711 W. Spring street, Lima, Ohio 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE PATENTS TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS & C. Anyone entering a wholesale description may quickly ascertain our opinion from the Commission. Communications strictly confidential. Patents strictly confidential. 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