The Appeal

Saturday, October 12, 1901

St. Paul, Minnesota

4 pages

Page 1
Page 1
Page 2
Page 2
Page 3
Page 3
Page 4
Page 4
Page text (machine-generated)
VOL. 17. NO. 41. Luck Brid F.D. MODERS AND HIS HOME ON THE DESSERT WHERE HE STRUCK IT RICH IN THE YELLOW ASTER GOLD MINE MOOERS'S PRESENT HOME IN LOS ANGELES OS ANGELES, Col. 6- There are some newly-made mining companies, Southwest, who are nowadays the talk of every mining camp of the *territories* and the *battle coast* where whites rise to wield during the last few years of fortuneful changes that the whirlwind of fortune brings to men. The recent extraordinary rise in the value of copper is making mining in Arizona, and twice as many men in Arizona, who were struggling with mortgage debts and a *low demand* for copper at low prices a few years ago are fast getting the five hundred thousand dollar column. There never has been such activity in mining operations in the West as during the last year, and never before has there been anything like the number of men who have been digging across desert wastes, among lonely gulches through the bald, desolate canyons and among remote foothills for ledges and deposits of ores. All the old-growth forests in the mining world of the West never has been in so prosperous a condition as in these days, and the way some men have leaped from comparative poverty to large wealth in six or six years is one of the reasons given in a land of suddenly made fortunes For instance, there is Jacob Kliner, who is a copper and gold king of Arizona and Sonora, Mox. His leap into the lap of riches has been phenomenal, and his plodding, search for luck in prospects, Mexico is discussed by many an old soldier of fortune around the aires in mining camps these evenings. After twenty-four years of all manner of adversity, patient plodding, search for luck in prospects, durance of heat and cold, privations as to food and water and homelessness, he is enjoying an income of about $8,000 a month and owns property that he can sell almost any day for about $1,200,000. He is a graduate of years ago, and came to America with $17 in his pocket. He was employed in a New York brewery for two years at 70 cents a day, and having a friend in Tucson, Ariz, he came West in 1875 to be the hostler for the Arizona Stage company, a guard for the Wells-Fargo Express company and a railroad brakeman. In a mining region one naturally takes an interest in mines. The fact that the mining company has mineral wealth that is yet to be claimed and developed by any one smart enough to make the right location is as great incentive to zealous energy as is the desire to guess the number to the number of mines along with thousands of other young Troubled by Conscience. The little one had heard the laughing comment that a visitor of the family skipped "like a person with a clear conscience," and the remark puzzled her. "Does a clear conscience make us The little one solemnly took this all in and a night or so later was heard softly weeping in her little bed. "What's the matter, dear?" asked her mother. men Jake Kilner became a mining pros- nector. To be a mining prospector, in the strict sense of the word, one must have supreme patience, abnormal hope and confidence, unflagging zeal and a vast deal of enthusiasm. Ninety-five per cent of the minerals are lacking in some or all of these qualities, and abandon the work in a few weeks or months, only to renew it for a time when the news comes of some one who has struck it rich. The minerals were previously unknown, sake Kliner stuck to prospecting year in and year out. "It was three years before I even knew what sort of rock I had to look for, said he recently in telling of the hardship he endured and the dangers he faced. He was in several regions, for from any semblance of civilization. He trapped over every mountain in the territory. He walked, step by step, seeking for any indication of the presence of a protistile cave in the volcanic fissures, of fokosaken valleys, and climbed across gulches all the way from El Paso to Colorado, from Paton, N. M., back to Albuquerque, from tombstone to Yuma, from Mexico to Chiloria. An account of the wild, hard life he led for would fill a book of thrilling narratives. He located dozens of mines, worked on some of them for months at a time, only to find that the ore was too poor or too small in quantity to be worked to a profit. Many a time he thought he had at last a chance to learn more about mining only to learn after days of hard work and nights of measuring of his fortune that it was not worth a dollar. Jake Kliner and his half-scarred jackets were known all over Arizona, and Kliner's perennial belief was that he would become the jest of camps of miners throughout the territory. "How I ever managed to work and search and keep life in me for ten years of that long and terribly hard career of prospecting is now a wonder to myself," said the miner while working. "I know what privations had to be undergone until I got what I sought." At last Jake Kilner found a copper prospect in Gilman county that looked well. He had about $70 that he had made by doing day labor in the copper mines at Blissbeck, and setting down a pot with all earthy possessions, consisting of a frying pan, a kettle, a coffee pot, two blankets, and a few mining tools, he went to work to open his copper claim. He worked alone at it for eleven years with heared on for over 100 years and setting down a pot in 1883 when copper was at its lowest market value and cephal was a scarce article in the territories. After months of vainly seeking some one at least to come and look at his copper ledger Kilner trudged over the mountains and akalik desert, across the Superintendent and San "my conscience," walled the little one. "What's the matter with it?" asked the sympathetic mother, with difficulty refraining an indication to lodge. "It aches like slxy." was the answer as a little hand was laid on that part of the anatomy where what is known as the stomachache is usually felt—Chicago Post. "How do you happen to have so many of your neighbors' children here?" "Why, the fact in," replied the little woman, "I'm away behind the times, so I'm pretty likely to be at home and available to look after the youngsters." ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS. MINN.. SATURDAY OCTOBER 12. 1901. Rita mountains, down into Sonora, Mexico, where he got work at day wages in a silver mine. He still owned the copper property and had done enough work to earn $100 a month. Several months of work and he had saved $100. Then he went at prospecting again. He traveled, along with his jackass, some 200 miles altogether, sleeps watching me eat vile food and watching out for inundation. Luck came sooner on this trip than ever before. He found two claims in five months. One was a base ore mine—a combination of lead and silver—and the other was a base ore mine, a beginner development of the gold mine, an year, by the most laborious manual labor and pinching economy, he got out and shipped ore that brought him $100 clean profit. Suddenly his luck changed, who owned the reduction mill where he worked, offered $0,500 a half interest in the gold mine. Kliner was tempted to take the offer, but he says he knew he had a good thing and that it was worth working back later he sold half the mine for $8,000. That was in March, 1897. Jacob Kliner's fortune has grown fast from that time. The Armadillo mine has paid some $120,000 in profits since then, and it is still valuable. It was acquired every month. Four years ago Kliner returned with ample means to his copper mine in Gila county, Ariz. He put in the best machinery he could buy, sunk shafts and drifted crosscuts into the mine. He used a drill and many copper mines were idle. It required, much hope and confidence to put $18,000 or $20,000 into machinery to get out copper ore that had no buyers at living prices. In 1875, however, copper mines were sold. The Kliner mine began to make more money. Extra laborers were hired and the mine was deepened and explored the more. In 1888 the price of copper rose to 14 and even to 19. Last winter it touched 19 cents. It has varied from 17 to 19, and the copper mills all over the West have prospered more than ever before. Jacob Kliner has steadily declined to sell his mine in Gila county. He was offered $100,000 for while their mother's meetings and discussions intricate problems of child training. "Ah, but when they have mastered it all—" "Why, then the children will have grown up."—Chicago Post. Knew How to Travel. In a recent discussion on a certain railroad bill in the New York legislature, Assemblyman Weekes of New York had pointed to nearly "New suppose there was an excursion from New York to Buffalo, and I wanted to go. Under the existing law, what would I have to do?" "Get a pass!" interrupted Assemblyman Defective Page it h. May, 1898. Last December he de- scribed six offers of $400,000 for the same property, and within thirty days he was offered $500,000. Fortune has got altered him at all. Ex- piration of his old life. He kept nowadays and does no manual labor. He still clings to his old clothes and his clay pipe. He smiles when he speaks of the fact that he sleeps on a $100 brass bed- stead now instead of a blanket on the ground, but he still lives in a cabin and months ago he gave an old man living alone in Yavapai county, who was crippled and diseased from eating poor food, $3,600 with which to go to a San Francisco hospital. The old man had nursed him, though typhoid fever in Yuma a though typhoid fever in Yuma a never expected a slime for his kindness. The recent leaps into fortunes of millions of dollars by the three miners who discovered the gold-bearing ledges at Randsburg, Cal., are recurrent and again hopeful, confident miners who gather about the potential of mining in this part of California. Indeed, there are no parallels, in Southern California at least, to the great fortune that Frederick M. Moose, Chester A. Burchem and John H. McCormick have done in their theraps April, 1805. Last summer the group of mines which these men picked up, where they had been lying through all time for some one to come and claim the gold, have been mined by Delmar Mining company of Utah at $4,500,000. They have paid monthly dividends varying from $15,000 to $20,000 for nearly three years, and it an undisputed statement among miners in and about Los Angeles that the Delmar Group have now over $13,000,000 worth of ore blocked out in them. Five years ago Frederick M. Moers was a reporter on the Los Angeles Express. He had been connected with the Brooklyn Eagle, and came West, where he had had all the up and downs of a reporter, and his several attempts at gold mining so decidedly down that he returned periodically to Los Angeles to take up reporting at a small salary. Five years ago John Burke visited the railway station on the Molave desert, in Southern California, and Chester A. Burke was a butcher in a shop at San Bernardino, Cal. The three met at the litter desert camp at Goler, where he was known as dry washing for golden particles in the Frisbee of Scholarize. The roar of laughter which followed showed that the joke had not failed for lack of appreciation, and that Friebie knew how to travel. It Jarred Him. A Chicago broker recently found a postal card in his morning mail, reading as follows: "Dear Sear: Please buy me 5,000 shares of People's Gas at $5 cents, and your commission you may remit me the balance in a registered letter. Yours very respectfully, Hank. Flank. $6 - My furnace with which you set in executing the above order."-Chicago News. and Riches for These Men Poor Prospectors Only A SHORT TIME AGO, THEY NOW ARE MILLIONAIRES AND HAVE ABANDONED ADOBE HUTS FOR NEW PALACES IN THE FLOWERLAND OF THE PACIFIC COAST desert sands was carried on. For weeks this trio, in company with thirty or forty other men, eked out a living by dry wash-ing, and the students of geology and had read much about the formation of ledges and deposits of precious ores, began to wonder where the ledge was from which the tiny rocks in the desert sands had come in past ages. Day and night, he worked at the dry washer, he piled on the subject. He formed a theory and told it to Singleton to go to help prospect for the ledges. Days were spent in the search across the grim desert under a burning sun where he found a rock that he found. Singleton soon scouted Moore's theory and returned to his dry washing. Suddenly Moore saw biological evidence of an enormous extinct volcanic center and he evolved the theory that if the outer rim of the volcano could be found, there might be located the ledges from which the gold had been washed ages ago. Singleton was appealed to again, and at last he agreed to make another trip out on the desert to hunt for the rim of the volcano. He was almost seventy years old, and he was determined to search. Walking that distance in a burning waste, under a fierce sky, was out of the question. There were only three horses in the desert camp, and hay and water were expensive and scarce artillery shells were used from San Bernardino, with his bushy horse and wagon, was asked to furnish his equipage, and a bale of hay and a barrel of water to the prospectors, and he was to share equally in the result of the prospecting trip. He finally agreed to the contract offer. He finally assured the outfall of $4 for the hay. Two days later, April 23, 1896, Moors, Singleton and Burchem reached the locality where Moors had expected to find the rim of the volcano. He had been sent to the volcano by a situation from every side. The horse was slowly driven up what is now known as Fiddler's Gulch, and Moors directed where to stop. "Boys, I am here we have it," said Moors as the wagon and its occupants moved up the barren, barned, lonely gash in the bald mountains. Then, while Singleton and Burchem attended to the unharnessing of the horse and to get About the size of It Little Charlene-Pr. what is a prohibition? M. Callierson-A prohibitionist, my son, is a man who rather quarers over time than does anything to help bring it about. -Puck. Jones-Yes, he does; if he knew we were going to fail next week he'd draw funds to day and go off on a summer vacation. -Chicago Record-Herald More Than Is Needed. "There is one thing to be in favor of these one-week courthouse," he suggested. "When people are married with such promptness, ting out the camp outfit of frying pan, kettles and drywashing tools. Moores "Burch and his hammer, and said: "Now Burch and his hammer, I introduce you to your fortune." outfitte. He went about, had a mile up: the mountain side, where no human being had been for years, and began testing the rock. He broke away thirty or forty bits of the exposed rock and examined each bit critically under a magnifying glass. Suddenly he called back to his comrades at the camp: "Come on boys; here we are. I've got it. I've got it." In a few minutes Burchem and Singleton came scrambling over the boulders to where Moores sat gazing at specimens of rock. "Look at that, Burch. What do you think of it?" said Moores, excitedly. Burchem and Singleton, one after the other, scrutinized the specimens through the glass. "We were speeches when we saw the rock full of golden speeches," said Burchem, in telling of the time. "When I could get my tongue I looked about me and said, 'How much do you think there is?' The whole damn mountain looks full of it," replied Moores. "All we've got to do is to shovel it into a reduction mill, and be Vanderbilt's." ◎ "Well, we've been shoveling the mountain into a mill for several years and we've only scratched into the mountain to believe Moores is about right about the whole mountain being full of gold." The town of Randsburg has grown there since. For two years there was not a more active, rollicking, wide-open camp where the mines were soon made by the great crowds of miners who flocked there from all parts of the West, but less than a dozen mines outside of the Rand group have been developed by the firm of Moores, Burchett and Stingleton developing the property, and now has a pay roll of about $5,000 a week. Moores lives in a house in Los Angeles that has cost him over $0,000, and Burchett and Stingleton have $100,000 into a home that they will jointly in the suburbs of Los Angeles. The Rand Mining company frequently has bank deposits of upward $000,000, and now that the mines are in good working condition, they earn the money rolls in faster than ever. James D. Fritigan, who recently sold the Duncan copper mine in Cochise县, Artiz, for $20,000 and who is operating his two larger mines in the same county, has sold them to Southern Pacific railroad in Arizona to a milliflume in six years. He is fifty-seven, and until he was fifty-two never earned more than $80 a month, and seldom over Her Ruling Passion Revenued. They had been drifting about in the open seven days, and all were near unto death, when the half-mad woman. In the love leaped up and cried, "A sail! A sail!" "What, a burgain male!" abrashed the half-dead woman and fumbling for her purse. *Ballentine World.* Improving. Bacon—Is your wife improving in her cook? *Ebert-Oh, yes.* When I first began to eat her food I had to have the doctor; now I just have to take some little things for indigestion that I should have in the house. *Yankara Bistaman.* $2.40 PER YEAR. These Men AGO, THEY NOW ED ADOBE HUTS FOR THE PACIFIC COAST NER'S RESIDENCE IN 1897 RESIDENCE IN LOS ANGELES $15 a month. His income nowadays is estimated variously at from $1,000 to $1,500 a month. He is in Europe this season, and will sail around the world before he sees his big copper properties he sees in Brooklyn and was a newsboy and boothkeeper in real years. He went to Texas when he was twenty and became a brakeman on a freight train when he was twenty-two. For several seasons he was a cowboy on a range near Benson, Ariz., and while he saw many facts about acres and how to know them, he located several base ore mines, but never got farther than the location of them. One day in 1880 he went to see a miner friend who was ill in his shanty on a copper claim. The friend was anxious to buy it even for $30. Finigan would not buy it even for $30. He plucked chum of the copper ore to be lioness, eighty miles distant. There he met a man from Tucson who knew good ore, and bought it him to buy the claim. But Finigan kept him in the location of the property. Then he went back quietly to see the friend and got a written option from Tucson closed the deal a few days later. That gave young Finigan a knowledge of the mines were worth. He shandoned railroading and cow-punching and began looking for men who had copper claims in the mine. $300 in his pocket he went all over the mine. Copper went down in value, but Finigan had faith that with the advance of electricity the demand for copper would grow, and the two prospects for $900 each, in sighting in their sleeves at the young Finigan had given them gold for more copper claims. But Finigan kept his own counsel. He did the work of opening one and earned his way by labor in the mine at Ariz. Then he sold one claim for $8,000 and bought another for $4,000. Meanwhile copper began to go up, and he borrowed money to develop his two mines. He found that he had even a big mine, but that he had hambargained for, and he organized to develop the ore bodies. When copper went booming in 1857 young Finnigan had over 400 men employed, and he bought the partners in his enterprises. He built the mine, and for all the ore from his two mines, and for all the profits of four months bought another copper mine. For a year he owned three copper properties. Until two months ago he visited Italy and night at mining, and his wealth plowed on fast. Then he sold one of the mines, and invested at least $200,000 in railroad bonds. He finally went to Europe with several friends, whose bills he is now paying on a tour of Europe. Not Applicable. Hungry Biggin—What do you think? A miner was working in a mine, and mornin'. Wetness Walkin' I've moved you since the early eighteen, but I never seen no animation about you yet. -Hi-Bits. Breeding and Bread. "2. that Mr. Breed of Boston." "I dunno her name, but she's Breed of Boston." "Then she's brown, of course." "Cleveland Plain Dale." Probably Fast Scrappy Urban-Why, old man, those chickens of yours are regular game cocks. What makes them such fighters? Robust: I am sure I don't know, unless it comes from feeding them scraps—Detroit Free Press. HAVE YOU READ THE APPEAL THE APPEAL, A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY ADAMS BROS. EDITORS AND PUBLISHERS 49 E. 4th St., St. Paul, Nana. ISSUED SIMULTANEOUSLY IN Saint Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago, Washington, Louisville, St. Louis. ST. PAUL OFFICE, No. 110 Union Blk. 4th & Cedar, J. Q. ADAMS, Publisher. MINNEAPOLIS OFFICE, Guaranty Loan Bldg. Room 817 HENRY ROBERTS, Manager. CHICAGO OFFICE, 323-5 Dearborn St., Suite 310, C. F. ADAMS, Manager. WASHINGTON OFFICE, No. 1919 Eleventh St., Northwest CHAS. E. HALL, Manager. LOUISVILLE OFFICE, No. 312 W. Jefferson St. Room 3 W. V. PENN, Manager. ST. LOUIS OFFICE, No. 1002 Franklin Avenue. J. H. HARRISON, Manager. TERMS, STRICTLY IN ADVANCE: SINGLE COPY, ONE YEAR.....$2.00 SINGLE COPY, SIX MONTHS.....1.10 SINGLE COPY, THREE MONTHS.....60 When subscriptions are by any means allowed to run without prepayment, the terms are the same. Each one costs each old week, or at the rate of $4.00 per month. Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Post Office Money Order, Return Mail, or at the rate of $4.00 per stamp will be received the same as cash for one cent and two cent stamps taken. Silver should never be sent through the mail. It is almost sure to wear a hole through it. People who send silver to us in letters do so, at their own risk. Each post office has 10 lines or less $1. Each dollar has 10 cents. Payment strictly, advance, and to be announced as a credit. Advertising rates, 15 cents per agate line, each insertion. There are fourteen agate lines on the adverting line. The account discount allowed on less than two months of any order may pay all orders from parties unknown to us, or particular on application. Reading instructions for insertion. No discounts for time or space. Reading instructions for brevity type--about six to twelve lines on the line. Line counts double. The due on the address label should be described with the description excerpt. Remainder may be made two weeks prior to expiration, so that no paper may be missed, as the paper stock may be low. It occasionally happens that papers sent to somebody do not receive any number when due, inform by postal card at the expiration of five days or by email. We carefully forward a duplicate of the missed communication to receive attention must be nervous, upon important subjects, plainly written. We must reach on Tuesday if possible, anyway not later than Wednesday, and bear the signature of the author. No manuscript request is necessary. We do not hold ourselves responsible for the views of our correspondents. Solving agents, wanted everywhere. Write to us at info@microsoft.com. in every letter that you write us never fall to our hands. We will be written, post office, county and state. We will be written, post office, county and state. We will be written, post office, county and state. or matter for publication. Entered as AGENTS WANTED. THE APPEAL wants good reliable agents to canvass for subscribers at points not already covered. Write for our extraordinary inducements. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1901. Illinois outshone every state that has thus far participated in the Buffalo Exposition in the military pump with which it celebrated the special day, assigned to it. Governor Yates' escort was the first regiment of the National Guard. The governor's staff look fine in their elegant uniforms. Gov. Yates, surrounded by his richly caparisoned staff, was cheered royally along the line of march. The governor is a fine horseman. At the exercises in the Music Hall, Gov. Yates' speech was well worth listening to. In every sentence it rung with true feeling. Senator Mason's nature was a gem of oratory. No other culogy embodied pride of state was ever heard. Col. Frank O. Lowen made a short but brilliant address in which he complimented Buffalo for the upholding of the law in the trial of the assassin of our lamenter. President and made a stirring appeal for the continuance of law and order in this country. Thousands of ill-tolerans were present and the applause was deafening when the Chicago quartette sang our famous song: BENNETT Could be writ the nation's story, Illinois, Illinois. On the record of the years. Abram Lincoln's name appears, Grant and Logan and our tears; Illinois, Illinois. Grant and Logan and our tears, Illinois, Illinois. If ever the Republican party acted wisely it was in naming such a man as Roosevelt for vice president; and here again is shown the wonderful presence of that giant mind that went out in Buffalo. It was almost a prophetic vision that swept away the clouds and enabled McKinley to see the wisdom of Roosevelt's nomination, even when Roosevelt did not want it. It was not a matter of political expediency that called for Roosevelt's nomination, but a matter of principle with McKinley. Roosevelt's popularity was not needed to catch the vote of any section, for McKinley's election was absolutely and admittedly a foregone con- 13 clusion even had the nominee for vice president been a total nonentity. The president was not only mindful of the uncertain tenure of life, but mindful as well of the needs of the country, and anxious that the policies that had inaugurated this unparalleled era of prosperity should be carried to their logical conclusion. Knowing the character and opinions of Roosevelt, the president preferred him as his second, so that in case of any such calamity as that which befell the country would still be in safe and strong hands. The sequel has shown once more the wisdom and far-sightened of the lamented president, whose judgment of men was as unfailing as his judgment of measures. The Wellesley college authorities deny the truth of the story which is going the rounds that the color line has been drawn against Miss Portia Washington, a daughter of Booker T. Washington. The story, it seems, arose from the fact that Miss Washington could not find accommodations in the college yard. A room for Miss Washington has been secured in the house of Mrs. Bryo in the village. Misses Co- The Doctor--You have nothing the matter with you but an attack of sprint fever. man, Bates and Balch, all professors in the college, live directly opposite Mrs. Bryo's, and they, with Prof. Keys, who lives at Mrs. Bryo's, take their meals together. Miss Washington entered the college as a special student, taking piano, theory and modern languages. As a special student, she is not actually entitled to rooms in the college yard. Many of the students at the college were amongst her classmates during her three years at the Framingham school. She was one of the guests invited to attend the sophomore reception, one of the events of the college year. There is another Afro-American young woman in college, Miss Charlotte A. Atwool, who lives within the college grounds in Stone hall. She is in her third year, she eats at the same table with the other girls and is looked upon as a good fellow by them. Humanitarianism is, like many otherisms, somewhat inconsistent. This 2. Why, yer won't be in it! My rooster is full blooded—yer's his pedigree. 3. Only pure blood in the state, and— whole country through the state department, and other countries, too, are very much interested in the ransom of Miss Annie Stone, the American Board missionary, who has been captured by Bulgarian brigands. The brigands demand $110,000 rapsom, or they say they will murder her or marry her. Over half of the money has already been raised by popular subscription and the other half will be raised before the month's extension of the date set for the alternative expires. This is all right and we hope the humanitarian effort will be entirely successful. But does it not seem strange that such intense interest is manifested in the case of this one woman, while hundreds and thousands of human beings in this country are being and have been illegally murdered and little or no effort is made to put an end to such outrages? In the state of Mississippi a short time ago such murders amounted to an average of one per day, but we have heard of very little being done to put a stop to them, a certainty no such concered effort as has been put forth in Miss Stone's case. As we said before, we hope Miss Stone will be THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER The Associated Press dispatches a few days since stated that Rufus L. Perry, an Afro-American lawyer of Brooklyn, N. Y., was responsible for the statement that plans were under way for the assembling of all the Afro-Americans in the United States under a sub-government of their own on Long Island. He says it will take $45,000 to carry out the project, and that $20,000 of that amount is already in hand, and that the remainder would be raised by the preachers. Baron Mauchhausen, Jules Verne et al. will have to look to their laurels. We wonder what sort of "hop" Rufus smokes, any way. GREEN BROWN Wants to Become Notorious Atchison. Kan—I have heard a great story in our paper and thought that I would write about it to let me be one of the 'porters on it. I think that I can go around and get up the news just like I see other fellows do. I am young yet, born on my father's plantation in Mississippi, raised on rice but I got in my mind that I had come to town and left the plantation. I have been going to church and Sunday school since I left home, and then in addition to this I have been in jail one time. I do not mean to tell you that I have been in jail. I tell you that I have been in jail. I tell you the cause of it. I got in a big fight in Kansas City and a great big white man came along and took me and the other fellow to jail, so that I paid my fine and got out, and now I want to be at that place any more. I want to be in every home and feel that your paper will help me to do this. I have not been North much, and a few days ago I saw Jack Frost coming, and think that I will have to pack my bag and baggage and go back to the South, about all my family down there and other folks. I wonder if you have been down South, and if not I want to invite you to bring some of your friends and come down to see us. We can take care of you all the winter and the 'Yans' and coons and rabbits you can eat. I can kill a rabbit as far as I can see him. One day when I was hunting down South a rabbit jumped up and before I could get my gun in shape he was five miles away from me, just the same and brought him down. A I think that I had better bring this letter to a close, for I am tired now and want to say just a little. Give my love to all the folks up North, and tell next summer I am coming to see them things to you and your readers if you will give me a chance to write. I was born to write for newspapers and will show you this if you will give me a subject, furnish me with plenty of senses and other things to make a sense of it. I have a little more education. Excuse bad writing. I am well at present and hope when these few rambling remarks come to you they may find you the same. I am Aunt Hannah's son. LITERARY SENATOR WILLIAM E. MASON. SENATOR WILLIAM E. MASON. Who Delivered an Address at the Buffalo Exposition on Illinois Day. Rest your little; just a week or two. Wash with NE-soak, boil rinse the clothes—just directed. Then go back to the old way ap and hard rubbing on washboard, if are willing. In any case you are er off—you are rested, and the life-of clothes is spared just that much. 640 Pearline use no Soap Rest your arms a little; just a week or two. Wash with PEARLINE—soak, boil, rinse, the clothes—just as directed. Then go back to the old way —soap and hard rubbing on washboard, if you are willing. In any case you are better off—you are rested, and the life-of the clothes is spared just that much. 640 Pearline use no Soap Defective Page laws of its health as primary pupils are interesting to be comprehend can be made interesting such as of educational and practical value. A *Textbook of Psychology*. By Daniel Putnam, L.L.D., Professor of Psychology and Polagogy in the Michigan State Normal School, 8100 Oakland, Michigan. American Book Company, New York, C. neilman and Chicago. This work is better with well adajunct students than with student. It presents in simple and direct language a clear expedition of the generally accepted principles of psychology which may properly be called the same time the physiological aspects of psychology receive due attention, an appendix giving helpful directions for psychiatry, the same time the necessary apparatus thereof. Academic Algebra $^{b}$ By William J. Mifne, William L. Mifne, State Normal College, N. Y. H. State Normal College, Albany, N. Y. H. large, large 12mo. 444 pages. Price: $12.00. New York, Cincinnati and Chicago. The natural method of mathematical teaching has been developed to provide proper inferences, to express these inferences briefly and correctly, and to prove these inferences. THE WORLD IS A BIG BALL. soning. The definitions are complete, yet clear and concise, and are in all cases fully memorized, and so graded that the more difficult ones may be omitted for desired, thus making the easier course at the option of the teacher. A Textbook of Psychology by Daniel Petuum, LL. LL. Psychology and sociology department in Michigan State College. Cloth, 12mo, 300 pages. Price. $1,00. American Book company. Price. $40. American Philex company. Work is equally well adapted for the general purpose of the study. The simple and direct language a clear exposition of the generally accepted principles of hypnosis are clearly indicated, and the general nature and moral law, the evil effects of hypnosis are clearly indicated, and the textion that is sound. We are particularly pleased with the book in that an appearance of produtivity is not sought for by the students. The technical forms of expression, but every form of psychology receives adequate treatment. If man can by art make, of ashes, the curious glass, why cannot an omnipotent of dust and ashes, make glorified bones as fair as crystal?—Lowe. OPENINGS FOR ARISTOCRACY. Military Rank Contemplated for Highborn Indian Cadets. An important step is to be taken in India with the evident object of increasing the loyalty of the native aristocracy. It contemplates the hostility of military rank upon a certain number of highly born cadets. A large field is already provided for the military employment of native officers of good birth or position, nearly 3,000 being in the commissioned ranks of the native army; but there has been a dearth of corresponding openings for the good of Indian princes, noblemen and gentlemen, which may receive a superior education, but to whom opportunities of active public service when they reach years of manhood are restricted. A desire to gratify the military aspirations of these classes has long existed, but difficulties in connection with selection, tuition, military Sl. Waal, say, Thompson, youn may have pedigree an' blood, but mine has sand, an' don't yer forget it. rank and duties have barred the ways. The present experiment will be of a tentative character, and some time must elapse before its details are fully worked out. It rests upon the periodical selection of a small number—probably twenty to start with—of so-called students with which rise exceptions, will be drawn. These colleges' colleges at Ajmer, Lahore, Rajkot and Indore, and who will constitute what will be known as the imperial cadet corps under the command and adutant. The cadets will pass through, a two years' course of training in the cold weather, and will from time to time be in personal attendance upon the Viceroy on ceremonies and other occasions. Such of them are special officers; their pass through a series of military training in a garrison class, and ultimately will be appointed to staff positions or other extra regimental military employment. The scheme is said to have the enthusiastic support of Edward VII—New York Post. school savings Banks. Statistics show that there are 3,588 school savings banks in this country and 63,567 depositors. The amount posted since the work began is placed at $87,600; the amount remaining on deposit January 1 of this year was $25,000. In one county in Pennsylvania where the work is well advanced school children have deposited in ten years $175,200. On the first of January there 4,069 depositors had been in the school of 4,618. In the schools of Atlantic City last year $6,378 were deposited. Those have had experience with the work say that it does not place great labor or responsibility on the teachers or school teachers. Once a week the teacher makes a deposit on the pupils deposit whatever amount they like, from one cent upward. The collections are forwarded to a responsible banking institution. Abroad. In France and Belgium especially, the system has long been in use with the best results from every point of view. EDUCATIONAL H The aim of this school is to do practical work, helping men toward success in the mining industry. We broad and practical; our ideas are high and fresh, systematic, clear as, simple. **10 Industrial training will set to modern ten thousand** **WREW, WV WJM, GIMSOS D, LH, LD,** **Co-founder and first Chancellor.** ## THE LOCATION The Ecklein Berton Norton is located at棠林 Spring, NY, twenty-one miles from Levantine, XI, in New York County being the county seat of the county. The county being an amphitheater county for nine years, polling ground is surrounded on all sides by mountain streams, draining miniature cairnats, and by mountains of plateaus and wooded areas. In this quiet retreat away from the hustle and bustle of city life, students can find study space, recreation height, and the physical environment of places of view and whole-world environments. Our students participate in a student life, and is apt to all who desire to pursue a career in the arts and life. ## DEPARTMENTS’S. **Literature,** **Society,** **Shackstitute,** **Gray Work,** **Telegraphy,** **Paint,** **Art,** **Assemblage,** **Painting,** **Dance Making,** **Bible Shop,** **Workshops in Woods and Moats,** **Shortland and Yorkshire,** **Pittsburgh,** **Musical Conservatory.** The eight departments are other complimentary arts and sciences and specialties in the State University, George Manual Training school, Normal School, Rhode Island, and other of eight colleges. Our classes and studies are so arranged that students may study what is most desirable, where at any time, to attend. We have a variety of courses as any future time. The time to building work in all departments, with education work in all departments. **ERINES.** Board, room, furl, tuition and waiving, $8,000 per year. Students may attend at any time in the year. **HELP FOR EDUCENTS.** Describing the nature of the work we are doing in reduction in proportion to the work they are doing is but an account on account of the high character of the work done. Our accommodations are first-class and Faroumoue route to Cansi Spring, Ky., via Locaux Littoral, Ky., and to Cansi Spring, Ky., via Locaux Littoral, Ky. REV. C, H. PARRISH, A. M., CANSE Spring, Ky. REV. C, H. PARRISH, A. M., CANSE Spring, Ky. PHILADEWER SMITH COLLEGE An institution of a steady and solid growth in the field of education, it has images to those seeking a through education. Healthful location, strong faculty, extensive courses, reasonable expenses. Students from nine States and from 45 counties of Arkansas. NEXT SESSION BEGINS ON 1, 1901. For catalogue or further information address REV. J. M. COX, D. D. PRESIDENT. HAMILTON ACADEMY Normal Department- English Course, Biblical Department. Night School, Music Department. First Session Begins Sept. 25, 1901. Total cash expense $6.00 per month. All bills payable in advance. REV. CORNELIUS JOHNSON, A. M. B. D. Principal. Government Street, BAY RIDGE, NJ Clark University Christian school. It offers the best baccalaureate and diploma programs. Classical, Scientific, High Normal, Normal, Normal. Our curriculum is Grade 10. Our aim is to train the formation of intellect and intellect. C.M. MELDENBURG. Atlanta, Ga. Shaw University For both sexes. Departments of Law, Medicine, Pharmacy, Music, Missionary Training, College, Education, and Industrial. Year preparation. Oct. 7. Luges, circulators and other information adresses. PRES. CHAS. S. MESERVE, RALEIGH, N. C. Fourteen teachers. Elegant and accommod- building. Climate unimproved. Depart- ment: College. Normal, English, Music, Shorthand, Typewriting and industrial Training. SEND DARS IN ADVANCE Will pay for board, room, light, tuition, and accidents for the entire year. Board needs $2,000 per term. Through work done in each department for circulation to the president. REV. JUDGON S. HILL, D. D. Morristown, Tean. THE MEDICAL SCHOOL OF THE NEW ORLEANS UNIVERSITY admits Men and Women of All Races. WELL EQUIPPED. THORBORGH INSTRUCTION Address 5318 St. Charles, NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA. POW FOR HAWAII, HEALTHY, SHIPPING FEET PLEASE BE AWARE OF THE BROADCAST EYE FOOD INFORMATION ```markdown ``` A WEEKS RECORD IN MINNESOTA TAS'API The Saint City City and Salinity City Folk- Newy Items of Social, Religious and General Matters Among the People, Bolled Down. Mr. V. J. Henley, of Chicago, was in the city this week. Don't fall to secure a copy of THE APPEAL next week. Mr. William Alston, Jr., has returned from Chicago and Milwaukee. The hour for the sessions of St. James' Sunday school has been changed to 2:30 p. m. For Rent—Two furnished rooms for enliven. Apply to Mrs. D. E. Falbert, 553 Sibley street. One or two gentlemen roomers wanted. Apply at 527 St. Anthony avenue, or at THE APPEAL office. The Wm. E. Nagel Undertaking Co. Wabasha street, between Third and Fourth streets. Telephone 508 day or night. Thomas Morgan died at the city hospital Sunday of Bright's disease. He was forty years old, unmarried and lived at 485 Broadway. Mis Mamie Wiley, one of Chicago's accomplished young ladies, is the guest of Mrs. W. D. Carter. 555 Elfelt street. Mesdames J. B. Turner and J. W. Hackerney have returned home after spending several weeks very pleasantly in Chicago visiting friends. The Elk Express Co. now has a large, commodious store house, where furniture or other household goods may be stored at reasonable rates. Have you seen the elegant new man in the lobby? Well, a corker. Don't forget them when you need any expressed done. Any customers who wish work done or those who have hair work which has not been called for will please call at 553 Sibley street, Mrs. E. J. Allen. The most popular place for people who take their meals down town is John Greene's. No. 552 Wabasha everything great, clean and well cooked. Pilgrim Baptist, Cedar and Summit Services, 10:45 a.m. 8 m.p., Rev. W. D. Carter, pastor. Morning: "The Nature of Prayer;" evening: "The Fixed Heart." Is your hair straight? If not, send 50 cents to Ozonized Ox Marrow Co. 76 W. Avenue, Chicago, IL., for a bottle of Ozonized Ox Marrow and you can easily straighten it. Anyone who contemplates attending the Pan-American Exposition who wishes a nice place to stop may learn of the same by application to J. Alex Ross, 509 Michigan Ave, Buffalo, N.Y. Write to Riley Allen, St. Anthony Hill station, St. Paul, Minn., state the date of your birth and enclose ten cents, and he will send you a wonderful life reading of character, ability and prospects. If you wish a good shave, hair cut or shampoo set at Richard Cousby's shop, No. 374% Minnesota street. First, purchase only. Music for all occasions furnished on short notice. When you're out late at night, And you wish a nice bite. Of food that will fill you with joys To a lunch wagon go. And you'll get the best show At Johnson & Williams "Iroquois." "The Sign of the Cross" will open at the Metropolitan Monday night for a week's engagement. Scenery, costumes are new, and the company has been changed very materially since last season. The St. Paul Autumn Leaf Club gave a very delightful party Wednesday evening at the residence of Mrs. E. J. Imagery in honor of Miss Gertrude Imagery in the charming young violinist of Chicago. All had a good time. Elk Express, G. D. Cartesian, prop, packing and shipping; hauling of all kinds; coal and wood in large or small quantities. When you wish authority in your call a telephone, Main 1920-J 1. Office 83 East Sixth街. Those of our patrons who desire to have matter published must get the same in this office not later than Thursday afternoon, otherwise it may be taken in the notice will be taken of any communication that is not signed by the author. The High Rollers, one of the largest and best vaudeville and burlesque companies on the road, will be the at home host of the annual week. From the paper on the blue boards one may judge that the female contingent is quite attractive. Mr. J. F. Pringle and Mr. J. C. McGinn, who for so many years were at the Plymouth Clothing House, have announced themselves with that role, relish the opportunity to come their old friends and serve their greatest interests as in days past. Mrs. Cushman K. Davis has presented to the State Historical Society the Spanish cannon presented to Senator Davis during the Spanish war. It is a great opportunity to pound. It was captured in Havana after the surrender of the Spanish. DR. J. E. PORTER, physician and surgeon, Room 410 Washburn building, Fifth street, opposite Court. House. Office hours: 10 a. m. to 12 p. m. Main. 1738-J. 1 Residence, 453 Carroll street. Telephone, Dale, 464-IL. Messrs. J. J. Johnson and A. Williams have started a new enterprise in the form of a night lunch wagon which they have named the "Iroquois." They have a stand on Minneapolis between Sixth and Seventh and are prepared to serve all comers Give them a call. The famous chef, John Godfrey, has moved his kitchen to North Dakota's basha street, between Tenth street and eighth avenue, where he all the modern dishes prepared to serve his guests. Board and zoom to the day, week or month at real dinners from 1:00 to 5:00 a specialty Transients accommodated. The reasons why you should buy your coal, wood, flour, feed, hay, etc., from C. W. Stachle, corner Rice, Carroll and Igleah street, is you can get full measure, the best prompt delivery in large or small quantities. It will pay you to try him. MARSHALL Chunks, Soft Coal, Coke, Sawed and Split Wood and Best Hard Coal Telephone Main 1446. At the meeting of the Men's Sunday Club at St. James' church last Sunday the following officers were elected: Dr. Robert B. Hunt, executive vice president; J. J. Allen, secretary; J. Strong, treasurer; executive committee; F. L. McGhee, J. H. Loomis, C. H. Miller, Rev. J. C. Anderson, E. J. Kearney, executive objective to be discussed is "Hawaii and Its Resources," led by Richard Farr. Thomas Etalanantees, thirty-five years of age, was painfully injured Wednesday afternoon at the Northwestern Fuel Company's yards, Minnesota and Arunel streets, Etalanantees, Minnesota saw. Rising from a bent posture, his hip was pressed against the saw, making a wound six inches long, extending to the bone. The wound was dressed with adhesive tape and the man sent to the city hospital. The October rally of St. James' Sunday School tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. promises to be quite attractive. The program includes: Paper, "The Customs and Characies of the Hawkinsians and Characies of the Beasley; solo, 'The Lord is King,' E. E. Woodworth; solo, selected, Prof. J. W. Luca; piano solo, Birdie Low; recitation, Freddie Parker; piano solo, Helen Anderson, etc. The chorus of Characies of the Charcester C. M. Vassar, will be a special feature. All are welcome. Rev. and Mrs. J. C. Anderson were tendered a surprise donation party one night last week by the members and friends of St. James church. Mrs. Adem Williams and Mrs. J. S. Strong were the moving spirits. The house was decorated with a good time. About a wagon load of good things were given by the members of the party. Speeches were made by Dr. J. E. Porter, F. D. Parker, J. Strong, Mesdames Jennie and John Rev. Responses were made by Dr. J. E. Porter. The occasion was a most pleasant one to all parties concerned. St. James A. M. E. church, J. F. Anderson and Jay streets, Rev. J. C. Anderson, pastor. Morning theme. "The Divine Requirements. Evening. The Mission. Church School. School evening service will be of special importance, it being the annual Endowment Day of the Fourth Episcopal Church. A experienced member of the church has asked to speak on "What We Owe to the Fathers." Mrs. J. C. Anderson will sing a solo and other special numbers will be rendered under the direction of the Quarterly meeting next Sunday. He elder, Rev. Harry H. Thompson, the sweet singer, will be with us in all services, beginning with Friday night. THE ANDERSON RECEPTION The friends and members of St. James' A. M. E. church assembled on Thursday evening in large numbers, despite the unpleasant weather, to receive Rev. J. E. Anderson and wife a reception on their church for another year, for never in the history of the church has there been a pastor who has done more for his people both spiritually and morally than has Rev. Anderson, and he certainly was the one that were said about him. Dr. J. E. Porter presided and introduced each speaker in a very pleasing manner. The exercises were exceptionally fine and consisted of a piano solo by Mrs. J. E. Anderson, and a vocal solo by Mrs. R. C. Minor with violin obligato by Miss Gertrude Imogene Palmer. Miss MaeWilliams accompanied. Miss Palmer rendered a solo in a very artistic manner, Miss M. V. Anderson, men's cornet solo. Short addresses were made by representatives of the various departments as follows: Trustees, Mr. J. Bell; steward, Mr. J. H. Jacobs; stewardess, Miss M. V. Anderson; Men's New Church Society, Mrs. C. H. Ler; Young People, Mr. A. W. Haynes; Sunday School, Mrs. J. E. Porter; altar committee, Mrs. M. Mills. Rev. J. C. Anderson responded in a very hearty manner after which every one present was being fully two hundred, was served with seasonable refreshments most boundlessly, which had been prepared by the ladies of the church, and all dearly missed with a happy late hour delighted with the refreshment and fully determined to make this the banner year for St. James. Ward and Vokes will present their new farcical extravaganza, "The Head Walters," at the Grand Opera House for one week, commencing Sunday evening, Oct. 13th, with the usual matinees, the coming of these popular new works, and the young ladies and a great many of them, catchy music, rich wardrobe and an immense amount of good fun. This year it is promised that they have more than the usual of all these new works, and which to show them off. The production is one of the heaviest ones that travels. Their superb wardrobe has earned the rightful distinction of "The best-dressed organization in America," and the new class in theatricals "Pierced Extravaganza," containing all the old THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER ALL ABOARD FOR SAINT PAUL! We have taken great pains in arranging one of the finest entertainments ever heard of before in the Twin Cities. There will be Original Singing, Buck and Wing Dancing and Instrumental Solos, all rendered by the individual Stars of Prof. Howard's Brass Band. CONCERT BEGINS 8:30 Sharp. GRAND MARCH at 10 o'clock. PROF. HOWARD, Mgr. V. ROGERS, Ass't Mgr. BILLIE MODEN, Sec'y. TICKETS. 500C sharp. Including Round Trip on a Special Chartered Car, leaving 1st Ave. S and Wash. at 7:30 P. M. Tickets can be procured of Henry Roberts, in West Hotel Drug Store, 5th St. and Hemsepin; De Leo's Barber Shop, 1st Ave. So. and Wash. and at Prof. Howard's Studio, Eastman Block, 412 Nicolifat Ave., Room 50. Pride of West Company U. R. K. of P. will give a Prize Drill at 8:30 o'clock. All K. of P. and the Band will Leave at 8: o'clock on Chartered Car. delights of a good farce comedy, but so richly staged and so numerically strong as to merit a distinct classification. Much of this success has been gained by a business policy that encourages students in their support to "make good." No one is relegated to the back row that the stars may shine; the center of the stage is there to be held by the one who has the ability to "make good" the audience. That same center of the stage is there to have rock on which many a star ship has struck and gone to the bottom. In the present company Ward and Vokes will bring to this city Lucy Daly, Margaret Powers, Gilbert Sidney, Louis Powers, Oliver Kidder and Ladies' band and a fine chorus of pretty girls, fifty-five people in all. ALL ABOARD TAKE A Trolley Ride on a Special Cl TO ATTEND THE GRAND CONCERT AND BAND TO BE GIVEN BY Prof. HOWARD'S K. P. BR. at SHERMAN H. Sixth and Wabasha Sts. Mon. Eve., O We have taken great pain one of the finest entertainments before in the Twin Cities. There will be Original Sin Wing Dancing and Instrumenta dered by the individual Stars of Brass Band. CONCERT BEGINS 8:30 Sharp. GRAND M REFRESHMENTS WILL BE Prof. Howard, Mgr. V. Roger BILLIE MODEN, Sec TICKETS. 500C. Including Round Ticket Hennepine; De Leo's Barber Shop, 1st Ave., Room 50. Pride of West Comp Band will Leave at 8: o'clock on Chart TAKE A TENDERFOOT ALONG. Woodsman Says It's Fun to See a Younger Echo the Outline. Younger Enjoy the Outing. I have be a lover of the rod and the forest from my youth up. I have taken trips with and without guides and companions; with those who knew me well before I did him; and I can say for a fact that the best times that I have ever had in the woods were those when as a luxury I felt I had earned from life, I took with me a well-bred tenderfoot and saw him enjoy it. The times we live for ourselves are joys of the moment. They are gone and forgotten. The pleasures we give to some others are things we remember perhaps when the men themselves are dust. Try this for a season! Suspend to last until you have tried it; for others it is the least qualified to judge. I am glad to be able to say that there are also others, although their deeds are not heralded. My own tenderfoot paid their own expenses; and I could afford to give only some spare experience. But at least one wealthy man I wot of, although I know him not by sight, who regularly each year invites to his well-appointed camp a young life and who is passionately fond of the life and the wherewithotherwise to enjoy his experiences out of it cannot be measured without knowing the man; but, fortunately, it is a known fact in humanity that it is absolutely impossible for a man to an outing so radiant with health and happiness and gratitude and not himself to have had his share while bringing that result to pass—Forest and Stream. Buffalo Pan-Americas Tickets. via the Nickel Plate Road, $13.00 for round trip, good 15 days, $10.00 for the round trip, good 30 days. Three daily trains with vestibulated sleeping cars. Meals in dining cars, ranging in price from 35 cents to $1.00. Address John Y. Calahan, General Agent, 111 Adame St., Chicago. SOMMERS EXTRADITED GOVERNOR VAN SANT HONORS THE REQUISITION. Attorney Mechiee Made the Fight of his Life to save the Un ordnate man from the Hands of the mob That re- itching for him, B. it to no Purpose. Never in the history of St. Paul have the Afro-American citizens been wrought up to such a pitch of intense interest as they have been in the case of Henry Summer, who has been imprisoned in this city for the past few years having the action of the governor upon the extradition of the governor of Tennessee in which state Summers is charged with the K. L. MOHER murder of one Lewark a white man on Nov. 1 1900. When it was learned that Summers had been arrested and was awaiting extradition the people at the courthouse believed if he was taken back to Bolivar, the town where the alleged crime was committed, he would be lynched. Attorney T. L. McGhee was secured by the police to save the poor unfortunate and almost simple-minded man from death CHARTERED Car FOR CONCERT BALL MALL, ST. PAUL, Oct. 14. is in arranging ever heard of singing, Buck and Solos, all ren- Prof. Howard's MARCH at 10 o'clock. SERVED. ERS, Ass't Mgr. y. And Trip on a Special Chartered Car, leave kickets can be procured of Henry Roberts, Ave. So. and Wash. and at Prof. Howard company U. R. K. of P. will give a Prize Dr chartered Car. W at the hands of the mob. He did everything he could do. A mass meeting of the citizens was held at Twain last Friday, which filled the hall to over 200 people. Howard presided and Mr. D. C. Cottage acted as secretary. A number of speeches were made by both Afro-Americans and whites and a subsidiary group of African-Americans, fray any expenses that might arise. On motion a committee was appointed to prepare a memorial to the governor, urging him to refuse to honor the revered Rev. Father Printon, Rev. J. C. Anderson, S. E. Hardy, T. H. Lyles, F. D. Parker, Dr. V. D. Turner, G. B. Lowe, Mrs. J. R. White, Mrs. James H. Hickey, Mrs. J. R. White, Mrs. Jean French, Rev. W. D. Carter, George James, Harry Howard, D. C. Cotton. The hearing before the governor was set for Thursday at 2:00 p. m., and never before was the governor's office and reception chamber filled with people from all over the Americas who had come to see what the man they had helped to elect to his high position would do in the case of a black man, who was wanted, in the courtroom, but back meant death at the hands of judges judging from the record of that state. Mr. McGhee-presented the case in a most masterly manner and produced facts and figures and precedents that showed the governor almost any human being, that Summers stood no chance for his life if he was sent back. The governor listened stolically to the impassionate plea of our sloughest attorney, and William Summers heard lasting about two hours, took the matter under advisement. Yesterday foremost he rendered his decision and signed the requisition papers to the date not made in the South and in the state of Tennessee alone 175 persons having been lightegally executed within sixteen years. The decision of the governor was as surprising as a thunderbolt from a cloudless sky as the universal opinion was that the governor would refuse to honor the requisition, such as once as many other governors have done even southern ones. But all who had such high hopes and confidence in the governor were doomed to disappointment. In talking of the matter to THE APPEAL the governor said that had he followed the dictates of his feelings and desires he would have refused to take the governor's order to due deliberation he was forced to the conviction that it was his duty to send the man back. Appalled that the governor is honest in all he says but very very hard to get the Afro-Americans of St. Paul to believe it. He however, asks that we withhold our judgment until such a time as subsequent events permit us to believe his judgment. It is sincerely hoped the strong fight which has been put up will have some effect in preventing a mob murder, but it is not believed that the governor will even if he is not lynched, and whatever his fate it must be laid at the governor's door, who might have saved all further trouble or anxiety in the case of us to honor the requisition. We will wait to hear from Tennessee. BEAUTY OF AN EMPRESS Was Maintained $7 an Outlay of $220, 000 Apposals. The Empress Josephine of France was allowed at the beginning of her reign $7,200 a year for her toilet, and later this was increased to $80,000. But there was never a year during the time that she did not far overreach her allowance and oblige the emperor to come to her relief. According to the estimate Mason has made, Josephine spent on an average $220,000 yearly on her toilet during her reign. It is only by going over her wardrobe article by article and noting the cost and number of each piece that one can realize how a woman could spend this amount. Take the simple item of her hose—whiteth were almost white while she then richly embroidered or in openwork. She kept $10 or more pairs on hand, and they cost from $4 to $8 a pair. She embroidered two hairdresses—one for every $1,200 a year; the other for great occasions, at $2,000 and she paid them from $1,000 to $2,000 a year for furnishings. It was the same for all the smaller items of her toilet. INT PAUL! ing 1st Aye. S and Wash. at 7:30 P.M. in West Hotel Drug Store, 5th St. and I's Studio, Eastman Block, 412 Nicollat ill at 8:30 o'clock. All K. of P. and the The World's Debt to Asia. On the whole, when the continent of continents is fairly viewed in her length and fullness of history as in her breadth and wealth of land, Asia must be held at once the cradle of humanity, the birthplace of nations, the home of cultures and all right-thinking men must hope that the debt of the western world to the queenly continent: will be paid in full measure, and in peace and good will to the men of ancient lage, whether their skins be brown or yellow—National Geographic Magazine. Mr. Chapple left for St. Louis Thursday night. Manager—or stay up, or we'll m Leading Lice. But I've lost my Manager—never mind. Leading Lice. But I had 80 c A HEAVY LOSS. Manager—or up, or we'll miss our train. Leading L. But I've lost my diamonds and purse. Manager—never mind. Leading L. But I have 20 cents in the purse. DOINGS IN AND ABOUT THE GREAT "FLOUR CITY." Mattera Social. Religious and General Which Have Happened and are to Happen Among the People of the City on the Fale. Rev. J. Will King is in the city. Room for rent: excellently furnished. Apply at 707 E. 18th St. William Madison of Davenport, Iowa, is in the city to make it his future home. Pride of Minnesota. K. of P. No. 6 meets first and third Thursday at 104 Hennepin avenue south. Mrs. Addle Wilkins has a nice furnished room for rent, corner of 17th street and Third avenue So. Mrs. D. E. Butler and son, Wall Hallowen have returned after spending three weeks visiting friends and relatives in Chicago. At Prof. Howard's band concert at Sherman Hall, St. Paul, Monday night, Oct. 14th, the members of St. James' church will serve supper. It is rumored that Pastor Witherns has been seen riding his new wheel that was given to him by the ladies and friends of the church. Dr. R. S. Brown has moved his office fourth street south, building No. 4F fourth street south, building 4F office 'phone, N. W., 2271-J-L Main. The Mist Fit clothing Parlors is the place to get the best clothes at the lowest prices. They will make them fit you, too. No. 241 Nicole Ave. The Appeal is mailed to most of the homes of the people of the Twin Cities, and if you wish matters to reach you must publish them in the Appeal. Le Roy Roberts will call on all disqualified subscribers of THE APPEAL. Please don't disappoint him, as this is his first attempt at collecting money. The disappearance of Samuel Jeffrey is still a mystery. Anybody knowing what happens will confer a favor by notifying Roberts at West Hotel drug store. There will be an organization in the near future of Bethesda Baptist church, to be known as the Young Men's All Men are invited to become members. Sister alert announcement. Rev. Timothy Beeves, the new pastor, has arrived and preached his first sermon. He is one of the most eminent preachers in the conference, and she has doubled give him hearty support. For Rent—1 room flat; neatly arranged; in excellent condition; all water convenience inside; within seven blocks of St. Peter's church; directly on car line; rent cheap. Apply to Roberts, West Hotel Drug Store. Our St. Paul friends may be on the lookout Monday evening for the uniformed rank of the Pride of Minnesota, headed by Prof. Howard's brass appaltions to the dedication of Minneapolis to a grand ball to be given at Sherman hall. The following persons have been elected as trustees of St. James' A. M. E. church for the ensuing year: Will. R. Morris, Horace Carle, I. Newton, Robert S. Sullivan, The pastor and members expressed complete satisfaction at the selection. Bethesda Baptist church, Eighth between Eleventh and Twelfth avenue South. Rev. M. W. Witers, pastor. Residence, 117th South Sixth st. is invited to come and worship the Lost Churches and strangers are made welcome. Sunday school 12:5 p. m. Classes for all ages. At the Men's Sunday Literary Congress at St. James' church, 405 Sixth avenue south, Sunday, Oct. 13, the subject, "The Pressing Needs of Our people," will be introduced by Hon. Wonk, pressed by the Congress. Good music. All men invited. Hours, 4 to 5:30 p. m. Bethesda Baptist church, Eighth street between Eleventh and Twelfth avenue South. Preaching, 11 a. m. pastor, Sunday school 12:30. The meetings that have been in progress for the last three weeks will close uninterrupted after the state convention. Rev. William Carter of St. Paul, who did some very effective preaching. There will be several candidates for baptism-Sunday night. The entertainment by the Minneapolis Military Company at Century Music Hall last Monday night was a performance filled. The hall was comfortably filled. Special made by W. R. Morris, F. L. McGhee, Col. C. L. Trobridge, Sergeant J. W. Harper. The drill crops made an exertion of G. W. Owens under the command of Col. G. W. Owens. Prof. Gray's orchestra did itself proud by the excellent music furnished. The affair was fine in every way owing mainly to the strenuous effort of G. W. Owens, O. D. Granham and P. F. Hale. The Uninvited Guests Hamm's Beer it is supplied by Agania everywhere Hamm's Beer is an excellent table drink! THEO. HAMM BREWING CO. Saint Davi, Minn. Great Special Sale of PIANOS Some that have been used. Other* only shopworn. ALL UPRIGHTS. 1 Mahogany Ernest Gabler. nearly new ..... $225 1 Mahogany Kimball ..... $195 1 Chickering ..... $195 1 Steinway ..... $175 1 Ludwig ..... $135 1 J. & C. Fischer ..... $120 New Uprights ..... $143 This is a good Piano at a cheap price. SW RAUDENBUSH THE COMPANY SIXTH, STETER AND MARKET, OTIS. S.E. PAUL, MINN. SMOKE Straiton & Störm Co's NEW FIVE CENT OWL CIGAR! ROCHE'S WINES Dinner Wines. Pontet Glaret $1.00 Per quart..... Medon Glaret 75c Per quart..... Chesterfield 50c Per quart..... Good Fair Wine 25c Per quart.... Telephone Main 1401 ST. PAUL 367 ROBERT ST. JOHN G RECHE MINNEAPOLIS 44 3RD ST. S. THE MERCHANT PRINCE-CORNVILLE A COMEDY BY SAMUEL EBERLY GROSS FOR SALE BY All Booksellers. Dr. W. J. HURD, 91 E. 7th, St. Paul. Pat. system of oz. tracting teeth without pain. 25 years' successful use in thousands of cases. Plates. Bridges. Crown Filling. Images. Popular stores. L. M. BEVANS, Electrotyping and Stereotyping, 51 East Fifth Street, Telephone 1676-2. ST. PAUL, MN. ```markdown ``` a CCC ATTIO, TELOAGO. HE “WORLD'SIFAIR CITY” VIEW~ ED BY THE APPEAL MAN. ‘4 compltation of « Number of Happeninen Social und Otherwive, Among. the Afro. Americans ot the ‘Second Clty “of This ‘Giatnes URGE . ‘Mrs, Laura Crump, of Aurora, Ill, 1s visiting Mrs, Td" Stone, 1205 West Lake street. Mrs, Josie Moore, of Denver, Col. is the guest this Week of Mrs, Well, $537 Wallace street. Mrs. L. Whiting, of 88 Paulina street, swho has been ill for several weeks, It again abte to be out. Mrs. B. Brooks, 2121 Deardorn street, is visiting friends and relatives in Nashville, Tenn, Col, Marshall and S. B. Tuener spent several days In Springfield last week Bttending the State Fale. Mise Mabel Curtis daughter of Dr. J. “Webb Curtis, let for Atlanta, Ga., this reek to attend Speliman Institute ‘The many fefends of the wife of Rev. ‘A. J. Carey ill Tegret to hear of her itinese and. wish for her a speedy Te- covery, THE APPEAL 1 without question the best advertising medium through Which to teach the Afro-Amerleans ot Shieaxo, Mr. D. Williams, who lived with his parents at 1708 Dearborn sttéet, drop ed dead one day this. week of heart Uisease Attomey,S. J. MeAlwee. is now tn Nashville, Tenn, arranging “to bring his family to Chicago, where they Will ereatter reside, Mrs. Marian, 514 Grand avenue, gave an tnformal dinner Sunday evening In honor of her brother, who ts now visit= Ing her at her home. Subseribers for THE APPEAL who swish to discontinue. the paper “must seni written notice to the offles, prop rly dated and s'gned, ‘The host of friends of Mrs. aMattle ‘rarer, 115. Paulina street, will De pleased to leaen ‘of her complete re- Tovery trom recent illness Mra Hester ‘Thomas. Morrison. of New o¥rk, daughter of the late J-W-B. Thomas, fe in the Bly. visiting Mrs. J. Jeffry, 2004 State street, Miss Ada H, Shreves, of Jersey city, N, 3, formerly of this city, Is now visiting her mother, Sirs, James Shreves, 2142 Dearborn street, ‘The many friends of Mr. Cliester H. Howart ‘will regret to learn that he has left Chicagorand will'go into bust ness at Hot Springs, Ark. James A. Scott, attorney-at-law, can be found at THE APPEAL office dur- Ing business hours... Prompt attention given all legal business entrusted. to Graco Presbyterian Sunday _schoot will hold serviees at-1 p. m. tomorrow in memory of Mrs. Cora Gray, wite of Mr. Edgar Gray, You ave jnvited to be present. THE APPEAL has fixed advertising ates, and will not eut them in. order to secure advertising. However, if You want to reach the people, adver tise in THE APPEAL, Rev. Dr. RC, Ransom, of the In- stitutional church, has returned trom his trip to Bngland and the Holy Land and is looking exceedingly ‘well after aan absence of maay weeks, Do you want to preach? Learn at home. ‘Send two-cent stamp to. Prot Ri B. Hewitt for catalogue of Corre: spondence Bible School, 2008 Mags: zine strovt, New Orleans, La. Miss M. Grainger, 2940 Dearborn street, has opened a ‘news and station ery store at the above number, “THB APPEAL can be found on saie exch ‘Week at Miss Grainger’s lace. Seward French, the West Side poll- ticlan and one of Senator Mason's fat friends, spent several days In. Spring: fleld last week attending the State Fatt and talking polities. "See" war In hs element, FOR RENT—A satoon between 34th and 35th streets, west "side of State;" good” location’ and. splendid trade; other business prevents per sonal attention. Call) frst fat 2423 State street, “Chicago Day"—last Wednesday— was appropriately celebrated. by the Appomattox Club. A large number o aay guests were present and were splendidly entertaned by the meny ders of the club. ‘This Saturday evening will be the opening event at’ the. Appomattox lub, S144 Wabash avenue, The gen tlomen friends of the members at the club will be duly welcomed ‘and tuly initiated tn'tho mystertes of; whist, ‘AIL members of the I. B.gW. W. are hereby notified: that thé club wil Ineet every Thursiay at 2 p.m. at Mrs Mf Anderson's, 4609 Vincennes’ avenue until Turther notice 1s given, and. at ‘carnostly requested to De out to, meet eer 6. Dr. J.’ Webb Curtis, who recently re turned trom the Philippines, where hi served one year and a halt in the Unit fed States volunteer service 4s. ascist fant surgeon, has gone to Hot Springs Ark, possibly to locate. and. practice ints profession. Z Mr. James B, Parker, tho Afro American who prevented the assassit of President MeKtinley from fring an ‘other stot. will soon visit Chicago. Mr Parker will recelve. a peptect ovation ‘when he comes to this ctf. THE AP. PEAL suggests that she Appomattos ‘and other elubs at once begin prepart Hone tor his reception: “He deserves a toyal welcome. : Bxwcmisstoner savant, H sieht 'can be Tound ye set and friends at his new oflice, suite 431 360 South Clark Bikes Areca ‘S52 APFuaz a NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER. i ’s Store Ne — Schlick & Company's Store News. Choice flannelettes. | Good gloves, 1.00. Flannelettes that have the fine styles and choice | The most satisfactory glove we haye been able to colorings of materials costing many times as much. { find at 1.00 is Oar Own. ‘They are made from soft, Four completo lines suitable for shint whist, house | pliable skins, AL penlsily ond’ weat Geli” cokes Sacques, wrappers and lounging’ robes. 10c, 12ic, 150 | and sizes, 1.00. anata eae Pisaguc “4 fanmade neg ol Outing flannel special—Heavy teasled outing | Andee st sveet and calling wear 150. Mannols, stripes, checks and plaids in all colors—Mill | Pe aie ects ends of 2to 12 yards that are worth in, the piece 1¢o yard.” On sala Thursday 6c! Fall goods for men. One 6f the biggest. underwear bargains possible SE ae is hts oun eseat# wlate Yell dues wil tad : drapers well iiotnd nod Gort Oe, celng to Underwear bargains. nioryow ap ocgieeeles tt Nei eRe Here’s a line of vests and pants and union | Special at 1.00—Here. are ‘two of as. good lines of aul “e)Uargule' prios: Thay dee” alt he “eaiehe | RO cE oe santed now and ace ecieomely tho ribbed wien woautr | ses ted tem cue Gane ee eee ful silk crochet trimmings—union suits $1.50, ter weight, and both: gold “all. last season’ at Yosia aad paate we ececciacecccsatt 72 WOO | Vor Ron ne £00 Double fleeced—Winter weight, ribbed maco SW oak hits Puss sinew sey auansectie ahah oka {ara vests and pants—doublo eoed .......- QUE | Wool shirts. Fins ithe them—it’s all the? anitl had. Corset covers—Natural gray wool corset cov- Regular price is 1.50. This case, special here ers with long slgoves reduced from S500". DOC | ares Garni ee lO ‘Wool union suits—3.%5 and 4.00 heavy im- Socks—Heavy blacks cotton.socks, seamless and ported natural gray wool union suits reduced to SeLQ | stainiess-—good wearing 130 kind, for, -eves-s4 LOC. and Madison streets for the foundation of the new Tribune building is. being levgdly Adds by Afea“Aimaricen labor Ph + eee ele oT ain be Bye eae eae ae Pci | me EEN ts ee UN ee os CLS Ra he \ #ISK CLUB The Fisk held its annual Jubiteo Day celebration Monday evening. at the residence of Mrs. C. D. Rice. 351 Thivty-frst street. "A literary and mu. sical program was the feature of the evening, which was rendered as fol lows: Invocation, Rev. Stanley Chase introductory remarks, Mr. Julius N. Avendorph, the president; " “The Origin of" Jubilee. Day." Dr A. “A. Wesloy;" instrimental solo Miss Sally Jones; vocal solo, Mize president; “The Origin of Jubiler Day,” Dr. A. A. Wesley; instrumental solo, Misé Sally Jones; vocal solo, Miss Senora Seldon; recitation, Mr. R. P. Harrison; paper. Miss Lizzie Lewis; instrumental solo, Miss Sally Jones Refreshments were served” at 11 clock by the club, after which a gen: eral discussion was enjoyed. Among the invited guests present were: 3Irs M. EL Napier Work. of , Nasiivie Tenn; R. F. Bell, of Lexington, Ky.; J.B. Crum, Mre! J. N. Avendorph Miss Bradley and Mr. Thompson. THINGS POLLTICAL, AND, OTHERWISE Last week all the politicians of the Republican persuasion of Tilinols met at Springfield and “log rolling” was thacorden erithe aig, : TS aie By Daylight Along the Mississippi ‘The most beautiful river scenery in the world is between St. Paul and Chicago. Our ‘‘Scenic Express” leaves Minneapolis 7:30, St. Paul 8:05 a. m., and. reaches Chicago at 9:35 p.m. An interesting and comfortable trip. Ask Your Home Agent to Ticket You by the Burlington. ‘The indictment of Bobby Burke for embezdlement and hie resignation as oil Inepector has thrown a wet blanket |over tho Democracy of Chicago. | “Senator Culloni—the nestor of ‘1 _nols politcians—was "at Springeld ‘cireulating among his friends and as steered She mot your eas Bx Alderman “ME. B, Madden seems to have dropped out of the race for ‘United States Senator before he got ‘piry started. Senator Macon is perfectly san- guine as to tho final result of the Sreat, Senatorial fight in Titinois and already lays claim to many ‘counties besides Cook. ‘The triends of Mr. Dawes were alive and wideawake at Springfield and were much in evidence at the Le- land and the state fair grounds and promise to givo Senator” Mason the Aight of his ite. Speaker Sherman has shied his cas (or into the arena and his great pop. larity in Southern and Central Illinois will be duly felt in the contest next maa = Ri “¢ In the Great ScD ymoiuth? Shoe Jalesroom. ‘The “Emperor” ts the best of all the $3.50 Shoes for men, made especially for us in all leathers on the latest and most modern up-to-date lasts. Its a pleasure to guarantee a shoe that will uphold ‘every claim made for {t, giving the utmost comfort and i, Satisfaction. ~We claim that a Shoe of equal value cannot be had for equal: money, nomatter where you "go. A new pair for any pair that goes wrong. New Fall Styles Ready. «> _ The “Empress {s likewise the best of all the $3.50 Shoes for women. We are Sole Agents for Hanan & Sons’ ; Fine Shoes. ‘ “i The Plymouth Clothing House, Seventh and Robert. i 3 Reda: Revenue Collector Henry L. Hertz is Feported to be a possible candidate for congress’ from the new Seventh Dis triet—otherwise known as Hertzville. RODOm Ga Sate Lam eo Wwe homa, Terehy tren, that, Wallace cin, Marieage aia au wena we bees Macatee ay ere Hiatal anton ane i peace Area Shy geass Aa ara eg AB Piet alee Ha 2h eat ite & : ail eee Mahe Ge See ene ieee ate sto gga at tte Pe a ree ie irate be aan ae iid meet Sarg a ieee eneaane haa are ese atid a Bek cre fifo ae corte nd edna iP nae a Ban aoe pati tet located attic ela ihe Suan ain ps SMa Sel aeame hea ot igor tautets decir hie seine rte nhs a Shh Gio ts oft Rat Gee Obeid ara Sha tat He umd area ene Se caer geraatn at at Seca cathah va ai ey FP sue ge, cone Wr Se BRA WER ek Mo ithoraier aifele HERMAN OPPENHEIM, = A ein ‘St Panl, Minn, iJ cseentte Bunt tinns® HAVE $3 you | SEEN TRE iy il ft , i Hf NGOMIH Bowlby & Ca, YYotion, 6th & oa Headquarters for the Gordon: NOTICE -OF MORTGAGE SALE Ay Rema Ae fee Wallace to Ri REE Ue are Beale pata vote Cant Hetasir ie atta SPSL Wes ats et A ath dat tes Gs AE cides ea aac ae Mage oP paatat ese ae "Re iheos, "Wasnt i aol is ete Sat eat a a ie tea Macht bac acy ha SP allt OO cet ear ae ieee Sore ld ale es SREP ee mle dee oF ay oy tad aa sah ad rats ite retest eae hae Soles ta aceiang eeeanset it nova ‘end devcribed in mala deca as Lot STS ETE TED Last Month or tur | Exposition ‘The Pan-American Expo- sitionat Buffalo closes October 33, You must go this month if you go ‘atall, Via St. Paul and Chicago the most com- fortable line is the Bur- ington, “ASK YOUR HOME AGENT TOR TICRETSV IA THE BUREINGTONGswase EVERY | i he, fe Mule REN <a | io ‘With a famtly to bay Shoss for sh2u14 | trae here." Srony aceastage to feed at opus sie and os pce EVERY CHILD NEEJE SHOE? | Tsses' Tan Shoes, iy all the now BU $1.25, $1.35 ane case See salen 900, $1.25 38 $1.50. 0 OO or the sew biog lek SEE OUR WINDOWS. | TREADWELL SHOE GO Pasa K} perce CFB 51) ie WONDERFUL DISCOVERY, ee: Gee Aza. __dehe BOCA aren orate OZONIZED OX MARROW Riser sted Shi ielelt a rowanbore it Sree reine aes Pace Guat setae ited Sete otras fo ae Eiawieuaawes wimsennas S: OY Jie oe POE Lindekes/ Apple zg BN Blossom ie | Flour Ae ij ie “STANDS A fees Nonp Eetter—Many Worso =Few as Good, Fimee||| Mens Shoes es $350 Chante acer Toa the ntole vg"on: 1] | sore of leather. re ae [fdas opcetat | ee || [Eamets ree | - cal] TREAT BROS El] soo atw'st. Defective Page rine (89) of the Wert St. Paul Real Es: Take anal dsoporeaesh, Synalete Adalln Sat aoa a ie eer eset? oe tae it eee ete ae tained In ‘sald. mo Teena “the Statite'in ‘such “cate inde. aud “ptovided, Sete ete Bees ae dens Potcaer toner eee 3 sehr eee a isfy the amount then due on ald mortgage, pacer ey oer ated St. Paul, Minn... August 26th, 1901 SRE Pe aay Aas 2m HERMAN oppeNneDs, 7% Wig New: York ‘ite Bidg., 2 Belts “hortanete, Sd” au cate dah Mite fai ihe, eee HG put it HS at ei tae ia hc oa bese a fim sat alc Stern deg aattity tae ts uae he tha ay at, uheirareyrts gy encarta EAS ene eg cin ae {his notice Is the suo of $308.34, and. sald saab rd ase are SE Srrea reese tener ae ates Tete Sogn in nd cre op heen denied nando ad silamey see tes cnt a Sal tea conn Manta td BEG Barta gee mire tate! and Genpeovemene syatiieate MSMR aren saan are air ete arin tree Eset ate ttt amas puta in Said mortage’ dec, an ths Be ated Ai hasty haa fie aretha Had fe crn farted at Eb ue rr a meee 1 Dated St. Paul. Minn... Adigust 20th, 1901. amieray oprexnens, OE netics, Mqitetely given | that sane 2B. Selkas, Mortgsxor, SUkd duly" “exteute shia delitee tothe Wege St. Paul teal Es inte Suit Tusprovetent Syndicate a corpo te ete is nice ope one peigS td uy recone fa the oes 9 Bie 'Htezister at Doeds for dtamsey Cogn Minnesota, nt four (4) o'eloek Pe St oh gue Bint day’ of Ape AD. JSS, hn Rook 13 oP mortgages on Page’ 48h ahd, that Aiefante ina been’ siaaé iy. dhe’ comics of sald mortgage by uon-pasient of pre ‘Cipalland interest ana tive aaouhe none ae ‘in clalined ta ber de thereon, ts the. si OF S468, ata eald mortsazee IS how the Souter ‘aniowner ‘of sali wortease and the debt secured thereby, and’ no action at tana thera, ns nen, Instttted to reaver sald debt or age pare thereof ‘Tike premises enerinea in and convered said "mertenge deed are sitinie wg fd antsy “County. ailomesotas andre faiown and described 14 said tesa’ ne Eat uuiniered ‘ively (2) hn Ttloek uber Sixtyralve wo) of the West St Paul Rent Be fate and. Tupyovemene Syniteate, Addon finmbee sie 46) aecording tothe. feented HIRE, thereoe ‘on ile Inthe. ole of the Rexister of Deas tn thd for eald Teamases inte ana thread to the! peer of sale alain ai oetgage doch an he aiid" mortgage will he foreclosed and The Dremives ‘above Weseribed. will bs sold at Hrubile auetion co the highest Winders for anh a the Cedar atroct ani entyse’ (oe eoet House, ty the Clty of Se Bau ft Cont rhage hn Bin day of Getoner, 1804, nt ten oredoek In the tore. toon, by the Sheeit of atid Counts. to ene Infyvine amount then due om sald miotteage, together: with $25 attorney's fees aad costs Dated St. Put, Minn., Aueust 26th, 1901, THE AVESD SE PACE ey err AND'BIEROVEMENT SYNDICATI HERMAX oprENnEts, MG New Vouk Lite Bits. SePaul Mints SOMCE GY SIORTOLGE ace, We nals Heres, gtren, that Wallace Kemas, Arias da ‘tly. ante And deliver to he West St Paut Resi Be {ite aad Tuproretient Soadicdtt eset aee {itn ctatgee WN inechae hs” Reet aus ito se Sh oe ersten of Bede Portas’ Cutts Mitiearea aC SEE ocho Se, Gr: sth Gon" Nocemner Ato Inno, 5 gk mortaages om pase Tossa that deta Raga de the ‘conditions at ata -mecteage Or non-pnsmont oF peusion Iecreat" anh "oP Wane “nde ae 2 flaimed be ie thereon, Beene ate at {iatouice #2 chest of Eo 62 oS al tnortznze ‘howto har tnd aenet Reina ortenge, soa he ach scented hereby, fd ao acto ati ox oles free, haw. been. tnttated to recover sala Too ot had Get hereae “Phe prelate devurifed In and convesea by paid mortsnge iced ane altuna Shud"ttamey County adenetota and ae hove aad ‘verily anacea'at Et Sistrinine od) of cue Went St Bank Weal Be ition Geporenont Spats: Adtech inimbee ale (0) according tothe, fected Bint etary “aie Sn de SP at Resudte of nstas a tha"toe ae rate SSRN ana putgoant tthe’ power of al sontaibod in Mald-grtgage: dec ane State uch ‘ote tnade and ppostde Salt tortzae wil be oreeiuen aad i Fremisor ahore ‘lekerioed "witb ‘etait Heblie‘auetion’ othe Blavert blader ts ‘aaa te Coder ret iinet fhe Couronne eC of Se aa {saa Counts on "racsana the 38i4 aoy oF Setaner aii, at teat’ the tank fons bythe Sherk SF said Gomi to at Ie aa tend el ota comtn of foreclonares COT"? Dated Ae" Pach on. August 2¢1h, 1001. APES ek SR HN eh ee ‘thy TithoveateN st Sbfoke, HERMAN, OPPENHEIM, ce ge baer hg Ste eee mas, 2S Bhat Mion! eiscinaaor sownGian ate: Notice Is hereby’ given | that Tsane ei, aceneebty, sleet tbat Lea Ricdnithe We ae Gaal aa ate and Tnptoveient Syntica ea orparh {ibn, tnorteazeo, he pupshase ones mort ise Sect tne the Sth dak ok cee Sass Sieh dale eae ia ace te ghee of Bac for Hamete Cota Sreaser oe meets doe Bamee Cosy Be aes of abel, ADE far ia sek Sa of hottest on pate Lat all eee te eae eet ws Moat ae inicee*emtes in Buse 2 oF aeeteeted eee ese aden ee at alin eilltione ae oer aoa sa piomest oC pon neg ieee Ri Boorse aceite Van ati We Mee ad ts SAar oP sBble” an el manapance 1 te ‘the holder aid owner of sald tortgaze. avd Reseaes aes oir at ie aah tas Si itelof“olhcrwiee "uae: Bete tnlate to reroree ald Gch oe any part, crest ‘the premiver described in’ anit conveyed vy fald mortgage deed. are" situate. within ita Haste ‘Countyallanestas ond ar Leen nd ecient maibeed ee dy a Bie th Aisne a) oe dhe welt fe Paul eal teas ind Nop loveeens arta ial de tivation he ene Sa Tone On Ste Mt anh ete Bedaer ot pobor tn: tai ah ss Counts: ama priswaane to" ehe power of male atncd i aa taste aah Stamey eth ante nae Sete Bid Sorteage il bo fares ena On Seenshty ae dened Sn te a ta Bipneetale’ ete thie Balt nad betel ted aa Sse fe said ante on uceaty Sei ane Se toner Ai, Be Lain I ‘noon, by the Shortt of ald County to an feet aidan hes ae on sald an tegen wih 25 tats’ fens a ft ee aiated San), scion. Angus 200 At oe iT ST. PAUL REAL ESA Pe See ae oppenaene, 17 Sea Noy Nore ite “Biag., i oN MO alee iter 2 Hi SUBIETY UlRKELTHR:: — % ‘OT. PAUL. \ aFAK G pFiaaen Den A Aimy) IZ | Ae, RG et Sy ee Ae osr-WonsntPrUL.oHAND LoDye Se aieEnoPAL AP eno A fexmeier it, Monsraie oe rioNEER LODGRNO. 4, 4, F AND A PERPRCT ASULAR LODGE Nosy, & MABS LODGE, NO. 2202, meets accond qu Fourth Wedgesny In cach month tor iidiaet tnd the ish Netsenday a a Aeuetion “at Gsa\ ¥ehowe, Rally 325 8 Erenth se val ‘bo turner, NG. Re Hickinmo, BP. Sy 482 se Anthony Ave, HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH, Xo, 652, G. v, o.Net Herel arat aud Weick Mtonaay Wh ach’ manti for business: eecond Ses day" for instruction, at Oad eslowss ial, oy cer guecection SF OFM, Colo Hall Be ees ae ae ee Ni. hee treet ST. JAMES' A. M. E_ CHURCH, cor, Poller “thd dag “streets. “Sunday Serices: Ta. tne: ops Sie Wadley pases Hctin, 80 pe "Bastar ate Soe dy and Tuesday’ at home: Wednesday at Anraa Waadlngy, fanerate aid he Son: Pastors a8 Louis's PUGH raprisy CHURCH, Cor. 42th anu Ceaar “Sunday Serviees! Preach tig at it geet and ects ise Sony Tat dntel pra aecunl HURE ore Ihe, Siady sinday schon! lcson. Honcrals CAT TneS Bes, ST. PHILIP'S EPISCOPAL MIxsI0". giz Aetna avenue and acu ges Buchatist, 720 a, ti High celebestion ee Holy unariarst and tied Suds’ Lio) ain’ Mating, second "nd Cote Sunday, 1:0) acim Samay acho 12 b.'tne Brother “of Ste Nude, 6:30 y Rg kane ta te Wook Savied! Brldass, evento prayer, 8.00 pm. Stu days, Holy Eucharist. 9a. m. REV. A.C. WCaRHHER, Meetos, 385 Content Sveue, MINNEAPOLIS EM. ane Lopes, Me mare ns. rm ond Bornaay te ktaoath ieee at Se Seasons tame ewer “ane Nene assis food sang Hloass were onnta erea ree s Hanver Bonen isc Mohs Hii asian yev0e hf 200 ft 08,34. 2184, stad ated: isang i is sie Hsgate el Secoad vie: becweas, Se’ Mant kate Micon te ood net Tere Gen. W Day. Wt orp: aaerasl Woy Cen Bee MUIENEAPO_In. avoaci att Atreper iat, 80, ir, ore an ee Scr iosirecaie: tine alk ae ee KNIGHTS OF PYTINAS Sen Speen ere te AS tt omit, Riera, Se re fom A. Onan, 0. Rana Ss Pr ecsepatetenn str GR EeRSenNS Sh na wi cmt * can pais cs 5b ape basa SERS meat arts Wrens boar as coats eet ae The Monarch of Them Ali, seas Dect | Sree THE DUNLAP Har. RA, LANPHER 8 G0, Bas: A true Clairvoyant and Trance Mediom wiio understands al geereta aed eens fotore wiiteat Jour. presence Peteete Aleqeons he eer Roepe End chants nepereegiuaa tee 50 Years’ EXPERIENCE Prater ., Copyricurs &c drnseis sacar aS pect eae eet Eee oa eee a | “Scienatie Hiugican, aoe a D Oftice. HET St Wasnoton FO