The Appeal
Saturday, October 19, 1901
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
The Worm That Turned.
VOL.17.NO.42.
The Broadway lived in a comfortable all square house, of Georgian red brick, about a mile behind the cavity drowsed town of Centerham. The Broadway girls (Gwendelon, Lucy, Janet and The Worm who had been christened Alexandra), unwieldon was twenty-four, and dreamy of Coriell romances at the head of her bed and belonged to a club of spiritual clerimony members, and twenty unmarried feminine ones. But as new subscribers were constantly dropping in, and old ones were being wedded to wedding souls they the club was subject to upholstery. Lucy, the second Broadway girl, was the most attractive disciple and a croughest maniac of the new
"Eww'body must win wow'wands for Janet," said the sixteen-year-old youngest Broadway, to whose personality had been a bit more direct way, the hideous nickname under which she figures in this story. It was at the fag end of a long and dazzling dance, the consequence of Janet's commands, "If you want what she wants, she thwreathes to break a blood vessel. She never does break one" (The Worm's "rs" were conspicuous). "If you want to be made a murderess—and so you do it. But one of these days I shall shuffle, and then" —The Worm was pregnant with meaning.
The Worm. I have said, and been christened Alexandra, which perhaps implies that she is the name for home consumption. She was a tall, slim creature, with a Sheiland gony's forcock, and a tossing man of eyes, a tilted nose and an orange blue eyelens grow longer every day, her eyes grew larger every day, and she embarked on the efforts of Simmons the sewing maid, who consumed her existence in letting down tucks and applying supplementary hems. The Worm's education commenced; when it was now supposed to be complete, Only the German professor and the author of whom the Worm wimbled instruction in the French and Italian languages resembled, "And then she must come out!" said Mrs. Broadley, looking appealingly upon her family, "I cried Gwendolen. "Oh, mother!" cried Gwendolen. "Oh, mother!" excclaimed Jane, closing the finished second volume of the book out of Mrs. Broadley's unrestling hand.
"My loves, my pet, it must be done," the loving mother, "The child grows up and becomes a direct scorn for companions of her own age, and spends her time in pursuits which cannot but render her unfeminine and less attractive to her father is delighted with her tandem driving, and the way in which she lands on the road is less pleasant than less pleased that she has been given with some theories about the sanitary housing of the working classes, picked up on illustrated pages, because the owner's drains. When Escott could produce a member of the family who is getting out of it. Of course, it is the effervence of an expanding nature, and, therefore, if the child is to develop into a successful adult, he cannot have an original uncomfortable daughter on my hands, with spectacles and cropped hair, pernaps, and sporting calf socks. In the days before, "Therefore the World is far from the companions on social campaigns," said Gwendolen, resignedly.
"And make it live in the brougham, may add, where there are evening classes."
"I wonder how father will like having a daughter," she said and shook four party-goers' hands. "I going daughters?" was wan and saintly, and Mrs. Broaden met it with foreboding. "As it is we are all men," she said, her tenants are clamoring for lower-rents it makes me feel quite ill to think "My own!" exclaimed her startled mother. "You must not broach upon these things."
"One cannot always remember one's self, said Jude, teaching for another's benefit, and I never think times think of others. And it would have been better for father, you know it is better for mother, you know it is better for born. They could have volunteered for South Africa and got commissions, and Victoria crosses and things, and relieved their family of the burden of daughters were sent!" she added plausely. "Well, it is settled, I suppose," said Gwendolen, unanimably. "The Worm comes out, the Worm must make her debut in society," rejoined Alexandra's mother, with some show of firmness, and as a result, the Worm must den the use of that hideous nickname. I cannot think how it ever came into my记忆. It was when she was twelve—a long, backboneless, twining thing," said Jane, "and Reggie Stanky, a midsummer holidays with us. He christened her The Worm—and it has stuck." In life in a lifeoparded by a schoolboy's vulgarity, said the gentle Mrs. Brouside, and "If when he again visits here, he endeavor to revive the Worm, I shall expect you to check him."
"Master Reggy is with the Orange Hussara in South Africa," said Gwen Leonard. "He is dressed in pert little face with the arm bushy tail. 'Why should he occur to you as a likely visitor?'"
"He has been drafted home with some friends. He is quartered at the depot. Your rather intends driving over to Canterham bar."
"You really permit yourself too much annoying boy, Sir Reginald," he was an annoying boy, Sir Reginald is now—"Sir Reginald?" "Sir Reginald?" "Three voices exclaimed in varying keys, the circular gase of astonishment, the circular gase of astonishment, how were you likely to? His uncle is dead, the baronetry and a good deal of property in Standish. He got the step in South Africa, and he is to have the distinguished man under fire without sufficient men to a catch. Their motives are not mine, thank heaven!" said Mrs. Broderick, gathering up her key basket and mechanic's apperiod by Janet. "All I can say is, that as a mother young man, and one who has served me, a distinction at twenty-four, the boy was sent to him this impression. It is your father's wish. There! He has just come
Mrs. Broadley, rushed to the library threshold, the door opened before her, and she entered daring in a torn alpae frock, her cheeky brow, almaenian hair, cascading wild over her shoulders and hunging over her eyes, stood before her. Her brimmed straw hat, in which squirmed two blind kittens, her right hand, held the maternal propetor of the kittens, the maternal propetor of the kittens, "What is it, mother?" she asked, noting signs of perturbation in her parent. "Your sisters, dearies," said the mother, unidentify youngest, "have something to tell you." The door closed upon Mrs. Broadley's rudling silks. The Worm putting the hat with its contents carefully down, she joined her family, sat down upon the "Wolf." She surveyed her elders with a cool impartiality of disapproval. "You have you got to tell me. What have you got to tell me?" She for information. "Worm," said Gwendolen, "the powers become a bitterly." She decided that you are to become a butterfly. The Worm, and the Worm is an invertebrate animal and not an insect. In spite of my having been educated by a girl herself, I know as much that. What
"What is up," said Lloyd, "is that you wear a dress that is so slick that the range of selection we offer to the elephant *bachelor* is sufficiently large to allow you to wear her window stock (I believe that is the trade term), in the vain hope of minima." In other words, we are to be reconstruered, and we are to turn up your hair, wear a dress that is so slick, and paddeck, desert the stables, cease to gadmother tall attics, dormice and white gaudies, take better care of your nails, gaudies, take better care of your nails. The three elders laughed unrestrained. The young creature addressed did not
"Could we not get the rector to rechristen her?" asked Gwendolen, in an interruption, of the Worm, "things really describe and appropriate, since she is to be the Worm no more!" really want to or even Jane would really want to with the child," said Lucy, critically, but Alexandra™ the name seems like "I shall not dream for an instant of Worm," she replied. Worm, will you?" ordered Janet, who had dropped her novel. The younger sister "When you address me in a power way," she remarked, "I will do your owings, and not before." She stood to stoop and get it for myself," said Janet, "when I have such a queer sensation in my chest, as you do, I call it unstimply."
THE APPEAL.
EXPLOITS of A YOUNG TEXAN GIANTESS.
Thrashed a Tramp and Saved Lives of Many Men.
"I wrenmember him," said the Worm, "shutting the carcass and putting it on the bed when I was a little girl, and gwumbled, ioo, because there were no boys to play with. And he wcistened me by a wude snuck, and when he went away I same snuck; and when he went away I bid and cwid, and he wote once, and he wote once, and he went into the Jorge jege and went into the Owange Hussars—and he has come home from fighting and made him a bawenet—and I wonder what looks like—now that he is a mall man, made him a bawenet—and I wonder what gwumbd clothes so that I could just
EXPLOITS
Thrashed a
MISS JALLIE JRORE
---
wank into the cwanking whom and cwinh
but beep." The person had to able to do nothing
but beep."
the person the servant carried in
the sheer space she a built, a
hairred, a square-shaped, soldierly
hairred, a square-shaped, soldierly
the big Rosamore couch between Qwen
and Jujet. Lucy was sweetening her tea,
the form hard
Sir Reginald in the old pleasant
boyish way.
"And walnut cake?" purred Janet.
"Rather, thanks," said Rose.
"Either, thanks," said Sir Raggy, accustomed to the attentions of the fair in "little quilt" areas. "We didn't get this sort of thing in South Africa, I can tell you."
You will stay to dinner, won't you?"
Gavin said, "and tell us all about everything."
And then Mrs. Bradley came sweeping in by the door at the other end of the hall, where she was invited. The young man saint scrutinized about his "riding kit," were overcome.
As though we should not be proud to wear khaki pants, projectors and Worm gloves, the stairs. There will be plenty of time to carry out the winding of her Sir-Hugo was going to stay.
III.
So she went up stairs. Pressed as she was, the worm should have visited the rooms of wendolene, Lucy and Janet in succession. Wendolene, the girl, lair. This retirement was effected when she got all she wanted—not before. For the girl, drawers and presses—and their little sister, difficulties in the way of helping herself, robe, the key of which had been put to robe, the key of which had been put to lock with a curled hair.
Then she brushed her wavy chestnut hair and looked at something delightful belonging to Gwen. It is at the top of her pretty head and fast-growing hair. Gwen's gain. She reinstalled a delta
A YOUNG TEXAS
Tramp and Saved Lives
'led horses. There were strong barbed wire fences on both sides of the road, and barely room for two vehicles to pass. There was a loaded rifle in the buggy. There was a loaded rifle in the buggy. A friend in town. He had apologized to the young lady for having the gun, and she had replied: "Oh, I am not afraid of it. I know how to handle firearms." Miss Carman's home to visit her sisters, and to Carman's home to visit her sisters, and to Carman's home along the road the young man again referred to the gun. He told Miss Shore that he had left a few cartridges in the chamber, in the hopes of getting a shot in the gun. He told Miss Shore in an old field that they had to pass. "In that event, said the young girl, 'If you will hold the mustangs I will kill the deer.'" That is just where the trouble comes in. 'Replied Carman. 'The horses are not getting along.' They time they hear any unusual noise." "Well, if you can hold them," replied the girl, "I will kill the deer," and *zz* if show that she was in carcass, she picked up the ride and laid it across her lap.
As they entered the narrow lane, which is about a mile in length. Miss Salisade carried a muffle full of people approaching from the opposite direction, and it occurred room to spare in passing. One of the horses became frightened at something, and Carmen gave him a cut with the animal lunged forward, and when the woman tried to check him one of the lines broke. The spirited horses bounded in the a.r. with snorts of terror they ran at the top of the hill, about between the wire fence, as if it had been a toy. Carmen with one line in his hands, was helpless, but the girl with a pressure of mind which stamps her as possessed order. "I, knew," she said, "that if the horses ran against one of the barbed wifes we would be torn to fragments, and evident that our sunny team would soon collide with the approaching carriages."
Defective Page
pair of six stockings and ducked sneakers so she could she put on a trailing skirt. She put on a little tuck in it. Janet had never yet worn it; and to this she added Gwen's best blouse, pale pink, with lace outerwear, black satin cravat and a little diamond frog brooch, were supplied, again by her deprader revolved before the pier glass and said, taking in the full value of the deprader revolved before the pier glass. I shall eweate a sensation when I go down. That is. I should if my hands are warmed, taking in the value they are wed—deprader toweated for beauty. Then a daring object occurred to her, a white wristband, members with "Cwene Mawlette" and violet powder, and, holding her head very high, she put on a yellow room, mellow with the sunlight that passed in through the long west. She coming attitudes about Sir Reggy, who was relating a South African experience to her, said, "Sir Gwen, not looking round, recognizing the footstep. Then a smile, which was struck in a cry from Janet petekened their recognition of their property, and in a heapsilk hemp.
"Snowy to disturb you," said the in-
spired young man, up in his hands.
"I know what you were saying up-
have been so tremendously inter-
esting."
"We-I that is *s* **you**" began the dazzled young man.
"I have true, Sir Wiginald. We have me
to be true, Sir Wiginald. We have me
the white hand and smiling, "though I be
an indesirable glove, "though I be
an indesirable glove, "though I be
chief, malice, trumpet, shot out of the
mouth, with a little air of dignity, which, in
combination with her babyshift, completed
the contest of Sir Reggy. "I am Alex-
ex."
AN GIANTESS.
of Many Men.
cued a man from drowning. This occurred near a great waterfall and the current swept towards the cataract with such terrific force that several fishmen who witnessed the rescue declared they would not have ventured into such dangerous food for a deed to Texas.
The girl's parents say that she was always different from other children. From a child she possessed extraordinary courage, and in all her life she has never shown the least fear in the presence of man, beast, or danger. Upon seeing her father she descended into a well more than one hundred feet, clinging to a rope and letting herself down with her hands, for the purpose of saving the life of a child. The child's parents and several grown men were standing about the well, and she was watching when Miss Salle appeared on the scene and ordered the hapless creatures to hold the windwinds. Descending hand over hand down the rope until she reached the water, she seized the drowning child and held her hand down the rope lowered into the well. After sealing the rope hand in the arms of its mother, the brave girl returned to the surface as she had descended.
Only a few weeks ago she saved her father from being trampled to death by a mad bull. Healing the old gentleman for assistance. Miss Shire ran out to the cattle ranch time to see a famous old bull tossing her father into the air with his horns. The brave girl ran straight to the dangerous animal and caught him by the neck and was lying on his back under the bulls forefoot.
"I believe," says Miss Shore, "that I could have broken that bull's neck. I was mad enough to have killed him." The girl was shaken by the bellower for mercy, and she held him in her father could put a rope on his horns and lash him to a post. The young girls friends and neighbors never tire of telling stories of her prowess. The other herself is modest, and it is not about her phenomenal strength and her many brave acts. She is in her eighteenth year and weighs 28 pounds, and though she is certainly a slaves, and though she is gentle and gentle disposition, and there are few who are more popular, and note who passes more starefriends
e
The Sharpshooters' Duel.
At Lincoln, Neb. lives H. Masterman, aged eighty-eight. He is one of the few, possibly the very last, survivor of the war in 1850, soon after his death, to honor at the marriage of the late Queen Victoria. As a British soldier he reached war in 1850, soon after his death, to the United States. At the outbreak of the Civil war he enlisted in the Union army in the same company with his son and sister. His mature judgment and unerring marksmanship brought him under the supervision of the officer, who asked him to volunteer for the account of the extreme danger attendant upon this class of work. men were called to the army, and were called for. Masterman promptly offered his services and became a Union sharpshooter. The nature of the case makes it necessary that a sharpshooter be under less physical restraint than probably any other man in the army, with the exception of the soldier whose life is in constant danger, and his preservation depends entirely upon his own discretion. This is by no means oceans of danger, from among the enemy, but more in ducks with sharpshooters on the other who are his equal in clumbling and still.
It was while the war was raging along the boundary of Tennessee that the wing of the enemy, man-belonged was sorely beaten by the sharpshooters. Most of these Confederates were killed by the Union Soldiers. There was some casualty in mode of operation or sound which distinguished one from the other. The glimpses of them were caught, so that soldiers had a good idea of what there dangerous men were like.
One of the was dubbed "Suredeath," a good reason for giving him the name. He was federated sharppoisoners. At any hour of the day the clear crack of his rife might have been the victim, for there was always one, either killed or mortally injured who the victim was, for there was always a bird his fatal shots at none but officers, between whiles a common "doughboy" between whiles a common "doughboy" than a good opinion the Yankees sent him light an opinion the ability of what an important man's ability that when an important loss was the loss was formidably merged to "Suredeath." One evening the colonel sent an order to the company quarters with instructors to musterman to report at once on his text.
"To th'ism from your little girl, Johnny" Again a and. The Union man, with his stained covering. A curl of brown hair fell to the ground. The dying father died and died before Masterman could raise the canteen to his lips. Masterman had backed Johnston into Atlanta, defeated him, and was in control of the camp. Apparently, granary and a assailant of the 'Confidence' the march to the sed was on.
A small division of the great army that took few days in one spot. Masterman was not a few men, shaperoots were not so much men, shaperoots memorable trip of fifty miles in latitude, memorable trip of fifty miles in latitude, beloved of special duty. The name of his village near by reminded him of a blood-borne haversack. Inspecting it, he found he had been a mailposter from which it had been mailled.
White persons joined the Union army, and from them Masterson learned that a named Brower was living on a farm close and black to take a message to him.
$2.40 PER YEAR.
**ooters' Duel.**
The next day an one man, a rosson mourn-
ing his friend, came to camp and asked for Segeant Masterman. "Foot-
ter was easily found." Masterman dis-
cerned the Confederate sharpshooter, who under the
excipients of war, had died at his hands.
He said he was the deface of the child's death, but told the gray-haired
children to move and gave him the letter he had sent.
"And the little girl!" asked the se-
gencer, the boy and called awhile, "Is he alive and well?"
"Yes, well in body," answered the man, "but many an hour he went out and answered the letters. It been a long time, sir since we know what happened to him. They wrote to me, and we knew he wasn't deserted, and we hoped he wasn't killed. If he'd been taken a prisoner, you know, he might get back to us some-" "Had, the family?" answered the servant "Only his wife and baby. The wife had died since he went and the little gals had been deserted. Every day she wants to know if he a13-comin' home, and when you all come along she made me happy. It was her dad's regular day, in case the army did not move on. No change in location was made, and it was deserted for the day. He was sergeant of the guard. His duties kept him at the outposts. In the middle of the child coming across a wasted field, the child coming across a tattered garin was dressed in tattered clothing, a sum of money was ba-efoot. She walked slowly, and he firm grip upon her grandfather's hand."
The serviceman halted them, passed them, then asked them to guard the guard tent. He found a seat for the man and talked with them about his grandfather, who had a knee knee with curtains behind the tent onboarding at the parking off duty and the quiet camp scenes. She looked into his eyes and looked at the looking man who sat before them. Then her eyes resued upon a rifle leaning on the wall. The weapon unsecured. It was the same weapon that had killed her father. It seemed to fascinate him, but he made no attempt to make an inquiry, but blast-man, an assistant, and later, when he stepped, she asked: "Mister, how did yore gun git broke?" He asked: "How did you not tell her was her own father's bullet had broken the hols in the stock, and the serviceman pretended not to hear. Her insult him. He arose as a lust to the old man that the interview must close. He took the serviceman and disapproved voice the girl said: "As he told me good-boy, the sunbonnet was pushed back down the brown curly hair, and I disapproved voice the girl said: "As he told me how you gur gun got broke."
The pleading voice of the little Southern man in the cave told the old man cipherly: If he should tell you the story, he would have those words. -St. Joseph Globe Democrat.
We have seen poetry which appeared as a memoir, a diary, or a letter to the appended paragraph. Still it is to be hoped that the nameless author would have written better with his rhymes than did the grocer, who had no soul for poetry, and had more joy than for poetry. He enveloped an up envelope in a Pulman sleeper where a certain author, who shall be nameless here, could be found. The envelope he read the following mysteries
He knew there was a poem burning in those rhymes, and he sat him down to write it, and he put on hard labor, he produced the following:
I know somewhere the dashes—nol;
I know the bells in music—ring;
I know the colors on the cloth;
I know a brazen woman.
I see a wild ink on the—wing;
The blitting catfish bends the—rod;
'Tis spring—in all the world 'tis spring;
Let all the mules he—shod;
"Bless me," he exclaimed; "this literary business is the caiting thing going." When he saw the grocery store and whit it into it,"Forward.
Another Colored Poet.
There is considerable force and poetic feeling in this poem. The librarian A. Whitman, the coedged poet of Georgia, born in slavery. Here is a sample stanza:
Ab! she was bored, but her heart was true;
And woman's heart when heart, with earth
Against her, woman's ant, and ever will.
The gods are with a having woman well."
- Alanta Constitution.
She Didn’t Go.
"I will," she exclaimed; "I will not live
with you another day!"
"You'll leave me, will you?" he calmly asked.
"Yes, I will."
"When?"
"Now-sight off - this minute."
"You'll go away!"
"Yes, sir."
"I would hurt! I were you."
"Buck! I will. I defy you. I prevent me. I have suffered at your hands as long as I can put up with you."
"Oh, I shant to try to stop you," he quickly replied. "Till I'm simply report to the police. My mind was mysteriously disappared. They will give your descent and I will give it. You wear No. 5 shoes, you have an extra large mouth, you walk stuff in your knees, your noses up at the end, eyes rather on the ground."
"Wretch! You would not dare to do that." she screamed.
"I certainly will, and the description will go in all the newspapers."
They girded at each other a moment in silence. Then it was plain to be seen that she had changed her mind.-Washington Star
**Bridge's Greavance.**
The wife of an old man I have powers nearly equal to those possessed by my husband. Now she began to judge us as if by magic from the "change jurus." As if by magic from the "small purchase." She was inclined to suspect that she made a spilin girl girl, but was unwilling to take her on a slip of paper. "Not neither bridget nor cella she put into the purse." This she put into the purse with some silver and awarded developments. Later Bridge came to her and gave "warrant" to her. The matter "agreed" her mistress imminently.
"I'll be going to another place," said Bridle-
tively, "and if it doesn't happen, I will not stay in a house where I am accused of stealing money out of a little only-poor worker that always had more than $2 in it, since I took service here." — New Yorker.
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, Minn.
ISSUED SIMULTANEOUSLY IN
Salnt Paul, Napoleas, Chicago,
Washington, Louisville, St. Louis.
ST. PAUL OFFICE,
No. 110 Union Blk. 4th & Cedar,
J. Q. ADAMS, Publisher.
MINNECAPOLIS 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, TREE MONTHS.....60
When substitutions are by any means allowed to run without prepayment, the terms are not redeemable. If substitutions are each old week, or at the rate of $.40 per week, or at the rate of $.80 per month, be made sure to cash in the fractional price of a dollar. Only one silver should never be sent through the mail. It is almost sure to wear a hole through the silver. People who send silver in us in letters do so on their own risk.
Each additional line 10 cents or less. Each additional line 10 cents. Payment strictly advances, and to be announced at the time of publication. No single advertisement less than 10 cents allowed on less than all parties involved in all many orders from parties unknown to our particular partners on application.
Reading advertisements 15 cents per agate line, each insertion. There are fourteen agate lines on each silver. No single advertisement less than 10 cents allowed on less than all parties involved in all many orders from parties unknown to our particular partners on application.
No discounts for time or space. Reading matter is set in brewer type—about 10 cents in each line. All lines含金量 too.
To date on the address label show when substitutions are made. Remainders should made two weeks prior to expiration, so that no paper may be missed, as the paper stops.
It occasionally happens that papers sent to subordinates do not receive any number when due, inform us by postal card at the expiration of five days forward or a duplicate of the missing number. Communications to receive attention must be always received only upon one side of the paper; must reach us Tuesday if possible, anyway and only upon the nature of the author. No unanswered request, unless stamps are sent for postage. We do not hold ourselves responsible for the Soliciting agents wanted everywhere. Write for terms. Sample copies are free.忘给你 your vault may fail to give your full address and address, plainly written, post office, county and state. Write separate sheets from letters containing new second class master at Paul, Paul.
AGENTS WANTED.
THE APPEAL wants good reliable agents to canvass for subscribers at points not already covered. Write for our extraordinary inducements. Address,
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1901.
A large number of men and boys have been seriously injured while playing football, on the "gridiron," as they call it, and not a few have met death directly or indirectly in consequence of the game. The most peculiar death we have heard of, however, occurred in Philadelphia Wednes day night when David Wark, aged 20 years, was electrocuted in Fairmount Park.
Wark was playing on one of two scrub teams and the ball was punter into the air and lodged in a large globe of an electric light. The arm on which the lamp was hung was lowered and when it came within reach Wark grasped the ball and fell dead. The spheroid had become wet from the grass and thus formed a conductor of the power of the electric current.
Of course this was a pure unforeseen accident, but many of the other accidents and deaths are brought about by a total disregard for limbs and lives that ought to be stopped. In the days when we played football a few barked shins were about the sum total of the casualties of the most hotly contested games.
President Roosevelt gave new evidences on last Wednesday that he in-
A TRICK OF THE TRADE.
A TRICK OF THE TRADE.
She—What are you doing to that piece
Artist—I'm rubbing a piece of raw br
When Mrs, Moneybags calls and sees her
Bhe-What are you doing to that picture? In rubbing a piece of raw beef or the meat in the ground, When Mr. Brown is putting a raw beef dog smell the matriarch in the ground.
tends to be all the people's president, by inviting Booker T. Washington to dine with him at the White House, and by the pardoning of Eliza Chapman, James Wainwright and Andrew J. Winter, who were sentenced April 18, 1901, at Nashville, Tenn., each to serve a year and ten days in prison for a pension fraud, and pardoned upon recommendation of the district attorney who prosecuted them, so that their sentence will expire on Nov. 1 of the present year. The prisoners are all Afro-Americans, weefully ignorant and credulous and according to the testimony at the trial were imposed upon a man named Braden, who was the chief beneficiary of the fraud. The woman is nearly ninety years old and Winter is seventy-six.
"Claud Duval," "Sixteen String Jack" and all the old timers who were somewhat noted as horse stealers have had their records broken by "Jake" Dowling, who was captured in Chicago a few days since. He is fifty years old and began horse stealing at the age of nineteen and confesses to have stolen horses by the thousands. He had a pendant for blooded horses, too, and sold hundreds of his stolen horses to fashionable people.
We had hoped that the Women's Federation in state convention in session this week at Owatonna, Minn., would prove to be fair enough to set a marker for the National Federation on the admission of Afro-American clubs, but we now very much fear we are doomed to disappointment.
President Roosevelt has completed a portion of his first message, which he has read to his cabinet and 'tis said that, judging from that, the message promises to be one of the best-written and most business-like documents that ever emulated from the White House.
Rumors of cabinet changes constantly fill the air. They are only newspaper echoes of the journeymen cabinet makers. The boss has not spoken yet.
VERY
VERY ACTIVE.
Jones—Were you there when they passed around the chase?
THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER
ure?
let over the partridge in the foreground.
net dog smell the partridge she'll buy it.
RUNAWAY HORSES.
They May be Checked by Very Simple Devices.
The since advent of automobiles and the spreading out of the trolley lines through country roads, not only in this country, but in Europe, the problem of preventing seared horses from running away has especially commended itself to inventors, and all sorts of devices have been evolved for the prevention of carriage accidents caused by skittish animals. In Paris the alarming increase in accidents—many of them fatal—caused by runners who scared by the "tent-feet" has included the experiment with devices for stopping runaways. One device with which they have been experimenting consists of an extra pair of blinders, mounted on the ordinary blinders and kept back by a spring. This spring is controlled by an extra rein, which passes between the cars of the horse and leads back to the hands of the coachman. If the horse becomes restive and shows an inclination to hold the driver quietly the rein and the horse leads back to the hands of the coachman. The most vicious cx nervous steed is supposed to be cowed at once when he finds himself in complete darkness. The experiments to make the use of this appliance compulsory in the French capital. An English invention is more complicated and cumbersome. It consists of a set of friction wheels hung beneath the body of the wagon in such a manner that by pushing a lever they tighten, brought down upon the other wheels and hung on the same time two reins leading from the horse's bolt to the axle of the friction wheels are wound up and pull the horse's head short back. In Stilian cities an appliance which is in general use, and has been for a long time, is an arrangement by which the wind of a horse is shut off when he attempts to run away. Nearly all the carriage horses in Palermo are stallions, and their drivers drive after the manner of lattes, nervously, exertely and as fast as possible be urged. Standing out from the nostrils of the stallions are little leather disks, which the pulling of a little rein by the driver clamps down upon the animal's nose, thus shutting off his wind if he tries to run away.
Bang! He Exploded, and There Was Great Consternation.
Great Consternation.
Snakes seem to be plenty in the neighborhood of Goshen, if the stories that are waffled from over that region are correct, says the Bridgeport Farmer. Dynamite is a sweetish sort of ACTIVE.
stuff and snakes love sweet stuff. A big black snake about seven feet long, was in a man's garden near the forest and crawled under the hog pen just as the man picked up a rock and threw it at the reptile. The rock hit the snake, however, which, probably having swallowed one of the sticks of dynamite, exploded and blew himself into smithereens, demolishing also the entire corner of the hog pen, which gives silent testimony of the truth of the snake. The hog was scared half to death, but it was not otherwise hurt, as he was in the front of the man, who owned the hog and the stick of dynamite was also badly scared, but was not hurt. The man's name is Igney Androsky, a Pole or Prussian, who vouches for the story, but says in extenuation of the act of blowing up a snake by striking him with a stone that he "didn't know dot snake was loaded." The Polander states that he bought a few sticks of dynamite to blow up some stumps that were in his garden.
Sell Butterflies for a Living: Collectors of butterflies in America will be interested to know that there are persons in Europe who are now making an excellent living by selling butterflies. This is a new industry. Please know it is and especially adapted for work with butterflies, which mainly consists in spreading with a cannel's hair brush very thin gum or paste over the wings of ordinary butterflies and then sprinkling over this certain delicate metallic powders of various colors. By this deft manipulation a very common butterfly can in one that is extremely transformed into one that is extremely rare. Recently one of these "fakeres" high price an alleged specimen of a red damal, which is a superb damal and widely noted for its brilliant red and white hues. Sometimes the white specks turn blue and a specimen in which this transformation has taken place is regarded as a great rarity. The "faker" knew this, and naturally his ad hoc had many blue specks. Unfortunately he had many blue specks the purchaser was suspicious, and by the use of a magnifying glass and a damp brush quickly discovered the fraud. As a result European collectors are now resolved not to purchase butterflies except from those dealers whom they know to be thoroughly reliable.
When Grace Was Said.
A Barnard College girl tells in the New York Times of visiting in a household where grace was said at the table—semi-occasionally. Her curiosity led the mistress of her, and she asked them why they didn't observe the rite regularly. "Why," the lady said with some surprise, "we say grace only when we have reason to be thankful. We never dream of giving thanks when we have only roast beef or beefsteak, or some simple thing like that. But whenever we have something really nice, then we say grace, for it's worth while."
THE DRUGGIST WATCHES.
And He Has Good Reason for His Exercise of Vigilance.
Druggists might be supposed to have more than ordinary confidence in the good intentions of the world. Prescriptions in many places are put up behind a framework in the back of the shop, and customers are apparently left to themselves while the compounding is in progress. As a matter of fact, they are watched most of the time. In the framework behind which the drug is being prescribed, they line the place, many peepholes are made, and through them the man out of sight takes frequent observations. "You would be surprised," says one druggist, "to know the class of people who do not mind helping themselves to anything they choose when they think they are not seen. A cake of soap or a bottle of perfumery is slipped into a pocket, evidently without a scrupple. You see this shows, with the finer kinds of scraps and perfumery, is locked. If it were not I could hardly keep anything in it. Sometimes when a small article is taken it is not worth mentioning, if the pilferer is a regular customer whose trade might be lost. But if anything of any value is taken we speak of it, because that we are very careful about leaving a light-fingered customer in the shop alone."—New York Times.
Hight of the Atmosphere.
The hight of the atmosphere above the earth is not definitely known, but it may be approximately estimated in several ways. Judges by barometric data have estimated the hight of about thirty-eight miles, for example, the height the column of mercury in the barometer would tend to disappear. Meteors have been seen, however, at a height of 100 miles, and as their combustion results from friction generated by their passing through a resisting medium, there must be air at that elevation, though very rare. Observation of the duration of twilight, which is due to the reflection of the sun's light, from particles of dust and air, shows that the limit is about fifty miles, and it is fair to assume, therefore, that the atmosphere, in its coherent form, as we know it, ends at that height—Detroit Free Press.
TOO BAD.
Tom-Jackson threatens to kih Johnson on sight for starting t4 run away with his wife.
BASEBALL AS IT IS PLAYED IN THE SUBURBS
ONE.
TWO.
THREE.
from Missouri has $12,571,467.80.
This is an increase of almost $500,000 over the previous year. The state labor bureau has made some comparisons with these figures as a basis. Aggregating the shipments of wheat, corn, oats, flax seed, rye, bale, timothy seed, clover seed, millet seed, cane seed, castor beans, broom corn, hay, straw and apples, and the Missouri hen beats the aggregation $75,000.-Chicago Journal.
The tallest men in Great Britain are to be found in the district of Galloway, in the south of Scotland, comprising the counties of Wigton and Kirkcudbright, where the records of stature give an average height of 5 feet 10% inches without shoes; while the northernmost or border counties of England and Wales are over the rest of England and Wales, the spect to the British Isles, the order of superiority in stature is: Scotland, 68.71 inches; Ireland, 67.90 inches; England, 67.35 inches, and Wales, 66.66 inches. The shortest stature is found in Wales, the Welsh border counties, in England, and England. The midland and eastern counties occupied by people of more purely Saxon descent, are of medium size.
Oral Lesson Book in Hygiene, for Use*s in the School. Heurtietta mollia Mirick, A. B. (Wellesley) School Physiology Journal, Boston, Cloth Book Company, New York, Chicago, American Book Company, New York, Chicago. This book is intended for the Chicago. It is one of the New Century Series of Physiologies. It can be used to advantage in school. It shows by its suggested oral lesse
sons for the first three years of school life that as much knowledge of the body and the mind as possible can be made to comprehend can be made interesting as well as of educational and practical value.
A Text-Book of Psychology by James Putnam, LL.D., Professor of Psychology and Pedagogy in the Michigan State Normal School, and pages, Price: $10.00, American Book, $14.00, York, Cincinnati and Chicago. This work is adapted for the general reader and for the student. It presents accepted principles of psychology in simple and direct language a clear explanation of the accepted principles of psychology. The entity which may properly be called the psychologist may be called the same time, the psychological aspects of psychology receive due attention, an appended directions for psychological experiments and the necessary apparatus therefor.
A. Woman's Life Work.—This is a story of a wonderful life. The author was an uber-creative woman, who worked her underground railroad work assisted hundreds of sails to escape from bondage, and took care of the sick and wounded. She was a soldier, a nurse, and a soldier, soldiers were liberated. She accomplished a great work in providing for the Free State. She was the founder of the state public school, at Coldwater, Mich., an institution she was known as the outgrowth of a woman's world. The Prince of Wales having heard her story, she outgrowth of a woman's plan and work was found. To find out if such were really the fact, she visited the town in which she was named in her honor, also the town in which it is located. Her whole family was named in her honor, also the good of others. At the World's Fair Palmer was "The Mother of Philadelphia," she deserves the title. Her experience as a woman has given her interest. It is a plain, simple purportation of her very busy, useful life, but of a more interesting story. She has have pronounced it equal to "Upcults Town" Cabin. Aunt Laura is now in her nile cottage. Aunt Laura has worked a work. S. R. Shaw, Publishers, 74
THE HALL
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
AIMS AND METHODS
MRS AND METHODS
The aim of this school is to do practical work in the toward success in the ministry. Its course is broad and practical; its ideas are high; its methods are fresh, systematic and clear; its courses are COURSE OF SCIENCE.
The regular course of study occupies three years, and covers the lines of work of the faculty. Instruction usually pursued in the leading theology institute in the country.
EXPENSES AND AID:
Tuition and room rent are free. The dormitories for students are plainly furnished. Students pay $120 per month. Dollar per month. Buildings heated by steam from loans without interest, and gifts of friends, are granted to deserving students. Students are given a line of self-help. No young man with grace, gifts, and energy, need be deprived in this Seminary. For further information address RBW WILBUR P THIRKLIND, D. D., President Atlanta, GA.
**ECKSTEIN NORTON UNIVERSITY**
CARKE SPRING, BUILDING COUNTY, N.Y.
"Industrial training will set to record ten thousand weeks." RV, WM. J. SIMMONS, D. L. LL. D., Co-founder and first Chancellor.
**THE LOCATION**
The Edwardsville campus is located at Spring, KY, twenty-one miles from Louvain, Ky. In quiet quarters in the state-county being the home of the county for many years. The building and grounds are surrounded by scenic mountains, dealing miniature courses, and side by side mountain streams, dealing miniature courses. In this quiet retreat away from the bounds of the city, the unfathomable education and admirable place of life, recreation helpful, and the physical development of people, is a reward, and a joy to all people to prepare for the future.
DEPARTMENTS.
Library, Photography, Photographer, Blacksmithing, Crayon Work, Telegraph, Telegrapher, Printer, Cutter, Apparel Shop, Painting, Painting, Painting, Dressing, Barber Shop, Workshops in Woods and Kcans, Workshops in Oil and Water, Painting in Oil and Water, Museum Conservancy.
The museum offers computer training workshops and instructors—graduates and specialists at the University of California, San Francisco, State University, Chicago Manual Training schools, San Francisco, Rhode Island, and other of 62 other institutions.
Our classes are业题se are arranged that students recruit their health or finances, and return to occupy the course as any future time. The time to finish work in all department is approximately 4 PERM.
Board, room, fuel, tuition and warning, $8.00 per month, students may enter at any time in the year.
Decaring students may have the privilege of extra reduction in proportion to the work they are willing to do. Students may be required to rate but on account of the very high character of the work to侣 both areas.
Decaring students may have the privilege of extra reduction in proportion to the work they are willing to do. Students may be required to rate but on account of the very high character of the work to侣 both areas.
For cataloging and all business address the Press Req.
REV. C. H. PARRISH, A. M.
CANE SPRING, F. V.
PHILANJER SMITH COLLEGE
offering superior advantages to those seeking
their education. Strong, strong faculty, extensive
courses, reasonable expenses. Students
are from States and from 43 counties of
Arkansas.
NEXT SESSION BEGINS OCT. 1, 1901.
For catalog or further information address
REV. J. M. COX, D. D.
HAMILTON ACADEMY
College Preparatory,
Normal Department,
English Course,
Biblical Department,
Night School, Music Department,
First Session Begins Sept. 25, 1901.
Total cash expenses $8.50 per month. All bills payable in advance.
REV. CORNELIUS JOHNSON, A. M. B. D.
Principal.
Government Street, BATON ROUGE, LA
Clark University
Is a Christian school. It offers the best facili-
ties for academic and industrial education.
Evening classes. Great facilities.
Higher Normal, Normal College Preparatory,
the head, the hand and the heart, to train the
Girl Child. For full information address the President.
For both sexes, Departments of Law, Medical, and Missionary Training, College, College Press. Industrial, Year begins Oct. 7. For catalogues, circulars and other information adhere to PRES. CHAS. S. MESERVE, RALEICH, N. C.
FIFTY DOLLARS IN ADVANCE
Will pay for board room light, fuel, tuition and supplies; College Preparatory, Normal Industrial Training
THE MEDICAL SCHOOL
—OF THE—
NEW ORLEANS UNIVERSITY
Admits Men and Women of All Races.
WELL EQUIPED, THOROUGH INSTRUCTION.
Address 5318 St. Charles,
NEW OBLEANS, LOUISIANA.
ST. PAUL.
A WEEKS RECORD IN MINNESOTA'S CAPIT.
The Saintly City and Sainty City Folks—Neway Items of Social, Religious and General Matters Among the People, Bollied Down.
Don't fail to secure a copy of THE APPEAL next week.
Mr. Thomas H. Lucas is serving on the pet jury in the District Court.
Miss Mamie Combs is still ill with rheumatism at her home on Minneahah street.
The hour for the sessions of St. James' Sunday school has been changed to 2:30 p.m.
For Rent—Two furnished rooms for gentlemen. Apply to Mrs. D. E. Talbert, 553 Sibley street.
One or two gentlemen roomers wanted. Apply at 527 St. Anthony avenue, or at THE APPEAL office.
Miss Birdie Dodd leaves' Saturday for Red Wing, Minn., where she will be the guest of Miss Hattie Taylor.
The Wm. E. Nagel Undertaking Co. Wabasha street, between Third and Fourth streets. Telephone 508 day or Miss Mayne G. Williams, of 314 Summit Place, has gone to Valdosta, Ga., where she has secured a position as stenographer. The Elk Express Co. now has a large, commodious store house, where furniture or other household goods may be stored at reasonable rates. Miss Grace Bell has returned to an extended and very pleasant visit among friends and relatives at Kansas and Kansas City Junction. Have that please move your moving van of the Elk Express Co.? Well, it a corker. Don't forget them when you need an express done. Any customers who wish work done or those who have hair work which has not been called for will please call at 553 Shelby street, Mrs. E. J. Allen. Mr. Fred McCracken, left the week for Washington to take a position in one of the departments which he had through Congressman P. C. Stevens.
The most popular place for people who take their meals down town is John Godfrey's, No. 552 Wabasha street. Everything neat, clean and well cooked.
Is your hair straight? If not, send 561 Wabasha street, Ox Marmora, Co. 76 Wabasha avenue, Chicago, Ill., 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, 569 Michigan Ave, Buffalo, N.Y.
Quarterly meeting St. James A. M. E. Church, Presiding Elder Thompson, will teach morning and evening, and Rev. Timothy Reeves, of Minaeapolis, will present at 3 o'clock.
Pilgrim Baptist, Cedar and Mission. Services, 10:45 a. m.; 8 p. m. Rev. W. D. Carter, pastor. Morning: "In here is Strength." Evening: "Friendship." Christmas: "Christ." Sunday school at 12:30 p. m.
Mrs. F. D. Parker received the sad intelligence Thursday evening than the day before. Orleans, had died during the day from the effects of a paralytic stroke, which was the fourth she had had. If you wish a good shave, hair cut or shampoo at Richard Cousby's First-class workmen only. Satisfaction guaranteed. 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' "froquois."
Write to Rilev 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.
Elk Express, G. D. Caraistron, prop, packing and shipping; hauling of all kinds; coal and wood; large or small quantities. When you wish anything in his line give him a call. Those of our parents who desire to have matter published must get the same in this office not later than Thursday afternoon, otherwise it may be crowded out. No notice will be taken of any communication that is not signed by the author.
Mr. J. F. Pringle and Mr. J. C. McGlin, who for so many years were at the Plymouth Clothing House, have again connected themselves with that company, and come their old friends and serve their greatest interests as in days past.
The members and. friends of St. James' Church will tender a benefit concert to Prof. J. W. Luca at the church in Chicago. An ex-convict program has been developed and as the cause is a good one it is hoped the church will be crowded. 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. 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. Main. Main. Main. 1728 - I. Residence, 4501 tall street. Telephone, Dale, 464 - LS. Mrs. A. E. Owens, bee Bee Edmons, formerly of New Albany, Ind. but at present residing in Helena. Mont., was is the city Thursday enroute to the Buffalo exposition and the month's visit. She was the guest of M. J. Q. Adams during her short stay. Messrs. J. I. Johnson and A. Williams have started a new enterprise in the form of a night lunch wagon, which they have named the "Froquois." They have a stand on Minneapolis Sixth and Seventh, and are prepared to serve all comers. Give them a call.
The entertainment given by Howards K. P. Band at Sherman Hall last Monday, evening, was a corker. There was an immense and immensely jolly crowd present, and everybody who just looked like he was not having a backpack was called to "Go way back, and sit down."
The Literary Society of Pilgrim Baptist Church will resume its Mon-
1—Tom is so absent-minded that he always forgets to mail my letters; so I'll just fix them in his hatband, so!
TOUGH LUCK.
The Hunter—De feller dat lent me dis gun said she'd shoot good at! hard. I guess she does all right, cause dere wux five holds in de flock I just shot at.
day night meetings at the church
Monday, Oct. 21. The opening meet-
ing promises to be very interesting as
curtains. Mrs. Addie
Crawford-Mindell will sing and a very
instructive address from our attorney,
F. L. McGhee.
The famous chef, John Godfrid, has
moved his boarding house to No. 523 Wa-
ley College, where he has all the moud
College entrance, and is better than ever
prepared to serve his guests to the
rooms by the day, week or month at re-
staurants, 25 cents. Sunday
dinners from 1:00 to 4:00 a specialty.
Transients accommodated.
The biggest bevy of beauties that
has graced the Star Theater known as
"The Theater," are the performers on
this popular amusement resort week
commencing with Sunday matinee.
An attractive olo including
performers in the profession will
don't miss it, or you'll miss it.
The reasons why you should buy your coal, wood, flour, feed, hay, etc., from C. W. Stahleh, rice Carr, C. W. Hiltenthal street, is you can generally get full measure, the best of goods, prompt delivery and in large or small quantities. It will pay you to try him with Soft Coal, Coke, Sawed and Split Wood. Best Hard Coal. Telephone Main 1446. Mrs J. E. Porter and Mrs V. D. Turner attended the meeting of the State Federation of Women's Clubs at Owatonna Thursday as representatives from the Adelphi Club to be present when the action was taken upon its application for admission into the F.A. A good fight was put up by the friends of right, but the color prejudices were in the majority and the application was tabled. Mrs Porter added to meeting after the vote was taken and was accorded a gracious hearing.
Sheriff P. C. Jusht has appointed J. Q. Adams as one of his deputies, the appointment being made last Saturday. When Mr. Jusht was to be nominated to give the Afro-American a senator, men were candidates for the place, all with good backing. There were two candidates who were especially endorsed by the two Afro-American Republican clubs, one by one club and the other by a third. Sending to have some one agreed upon by both clubs held up the appointment until it was evident that no agreement between the clubs could be arrived at and so he made the appointment as stated and redeemed his promise.
Bishop Walters was the guest of
THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER
GRAND
CONCERT AND SOIREE
AT
SHERMAN HALL, ST. PAUL,
Thursday Evening, October 24th.
BLACK PATTI
AND HER COMPANY
—WILL BE IN ATTENDANCE.—
Music by BROSE ORCHESTRA AND
HOWARD'S K. P. BAND
Concert 8-30: Grand March 10-30.
PROCEEDS FOR ST. PAUL JUVENILE BAND.
C. H. Miller, Director. Arthur Lowe, Manager.
Admission, 35 Cents.
Mr. F. C. McGhee during his stay in
london last week after evening for
READING TO INVALIDS.
Difficulty in Finding Voices Soothing to Nervous Patients.
"There is one accomplishment that self-supporting women would do well to have in their lives: that is reading aloud. For people who are convalescing or suffering from a
GRAD
CONCERT A
A
SHERMAN HA
Thursday Evening
BLACK
AND HER
-WILL BE IN
Music by BROSE
HOWAR
Concert 8-30:
PROCEEDS FOR ST. R.
C. H. Miller, Director.
Admission,
slow, tedious aliment, I know of no attention more beneficial than occasional entertainment of this kind. I recommend it for all my patients, but I have often trouble in filling my own perscription for the simple reason that it is hard to find a person whose voice is soothing to hypersensitive nerves or an invalid. In the homes of who-do one would naturally expect that their reading would be a pleasure to the ear, but in reality such is seldom the case. In invariably, when I prescribe a course of light reading as an antidote to pain and weariness, the patient replies with the question, "But who is going to do the reading?" The upshot of the matter is that I volunteer to send somebody in to read for an hour or so each day, and then it is up to me to provide the reader. This is to do for, while very few native-born Americans are there still fewer who are fitted to dispel the tedium of a sick room by turning the tedium into professional readers. Not infrequently I find voices whose tones are agreeable, but when I put the owners to the test, of reading I find that that they pronounce badly, infect still worse, and, in short, fail to mean any meaning out of the article given them. They probably get at the tones for themselves, but they totally fail to convey it to another. It behooves you express it to another, a combination of the graces of a pleasant expressive voice, correct pronunciation of a phrase. If they will accomplish this task they shall find agreeable work to do."-New York Sun.
Put not thy soul in Satan's hands, in
hope to have it back again by Christ.
Curse is he who sins in hope—Clark.
LUCK.
The Plymouth Established 1882. Head to Foot Clothiers. Correct Dress for Everybody Boys' and Children's GLOTHING
Leadership compels the best, and so when there are boys to cloth it is only natural that if you want the best for the least, you must turn to this store—the leading outfitting establishment.
"Plymouth" Clothing is such that the boy will be proud of—that the mother will be proud to see on her boy—because it has not only good looks and style to commend it—but careful workmanship, so that clothes will last through months of wear.
Boys' Vest Suits, ages 9 to 16; a choice lot to select from; $3.50 to $10.00.
Boys' two-piece suits, ages 8 to 16, double beasted, all wool, remember, at $1.95 and up to $8.50.
Manly Vestee Suits, ages 3 to 10, Sailor Suits, ages 4 to 12, $3.50 $2.50 and $7.50, to $8.50.
Boys' Flannel Blouse Waists, new this season, 50c, 75c and $1.00.
The Plymouth Corner, Seventh and Robert.
At the Grand Opera House, St. Paul.
The famous Black Patti Troubadours will appear at the Grand Opera House the coming week, commencing next Sunday night, won the prize this year, but the history of this now famous organization from its inception. Imitation has been inevitable, but the theater-going public has not been so keen to "just as good" and the weakened "No. 2 Company"—there is but one "Black Patti Troubadours" and that one supreme and incomparable. This success for this company under the able management of Voelekel and Nolan,
BLACK PATTI.
who have conducted the tour from the first: new features have been constantly introduced and new performers of merit have been engaged when ever discovered. The company for this year is one of great excellence with all new splendid scenery, and
AND
AND SOIREE
T
ALL, ST. PAUL,
ing, October 24th.
PATTI
COMPANY
ATTENDANCE.—
ORCHESTRA AND
LORD'S K. P. BAND
Grand March 10-30.
PAUL JUVENILE BAND.
Arthur Lowe, Manager.
- 35 Cents.
The Plymouth
Boys' and
Leadership co-
are boys to cloth,
the best for the le-
leading outfitting,
"Plymouth"
proud of that the
boy—because it le-
comment it—but
will last through
the Boys' Vest Suits
from; $3.50 to $10.
Boys' two-piece
wool, remember, a
Manly Vestee Suits, ages 3 to 10,
$2.50 to $7.50.
Boys' Flannel Blouse Waists, new
gorgeous costumes, and a spanking,
new and lively symposium of fun and
frolic called "A Filipino Mi-Fit."
The company to appear in this joyous frivolity and in the shorter sketches is headed, of course, by the one and only Black Pattii (Sissiretta donna), the world famous prima donna of the Black Pattii. The Black Pattii—is not the whole show, is too often the case among steller organizations.
First among her support is John Rucker, an inimitable comic, the Alabama bassist *Slosson* - singer and comedian. When he meets the Goddess Laughter gets upon her throne and holds both her sides. There is no "weep and you weep alone" around where this get your money's worth. There is weeping tears of merriment. Other unckers of the lacrymose glands are Leslie Triplette and James Crosby, delightful duplex artists; Mattei Pillars, four beauties; Stokes trio, the greatest buck and wing dancers that ever stirred up the dust; a smiling rosebud just out of old Pompton; Vera Valin, the girl who whispers kelly to third; W. M. Owley, tenor toter and musical melangr; Will Cooke, just one of him despite the name, and a cyclone of comicality; W. M. Owley, mirrore of merriment; and music's minion; Anthony Byrd, renowned Edward de Reske's replica; J. P. Road, bassi bravura, from Easttown; Sarah Greene, pride of the Wabast; Laura Bailey, with a thrift's throat; Carle Cooke, the "Pride of the Crown"; bravura, from Easttown; slack woe phenomenon and a lot more erosus to meation-cake walkers, singers and dancers.
"So you are going to be a poet, young man?" queried the ex-editor, in whose voice there was a note of cynicism. Well, there is always room in the up-
b. 100g
Mrs. Grasshopper—Wake up, my dear! Get up quick and catch a lightning bug! I am sure there is some one down stairs!
HIS IDEA.
Mugsy—Aw, say, dat guy's savin' up his coin fer a rainy day.
MINNEAPOLIS.
DOINGS IN AND ABOUT THE
GREAT "FLOUR CITY."
Matters Social, Religious and General
Which Have Happened and are to Happen.
Among the People of the City on the
Falls.
Room for rent; excellently furnished.
Apply at 707 E. 18th St.
Little Joe Reid, son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. C. Reid, is on the sick list.
Mr. William R. Morris has been
elected chairman of St. James' new
trustee board.
Pride of Minnesota, K. of P. No.
5 meets first and third Thursday
at 104 Hennepin avenue south.
Mrs. Adie Wilkins has a nice furnished
room for rent, corner of 17th
street and Third avenue so.
People who send advertisements to
a newspaper should remember that it
costs a newspaper.
Want to rent for room centrally
located; will pay $8.00 per month. Apply to H. Roberts at West Hotel Drug Store.
St. James secured the services of one of Minneapolis' leading mistresses of music and hereafter will afford splendid choir service.
Dr. R. S. Brown has moved his office to Fourth street south, rooms 405 and 406 Office 'phone, N. W., 3271-J-1 Main.
The Mistfit Clothing Parlors is the place to get the best clothes at the lowest prices. They will make them fit you, too. No. 241 Nicollet Ave.
Le Roy Roberts will call on all delinquent subscribers of THE APPEAL. Please don't disappoint him if his first attempt at collecting money.
The Appeal is mailed to most of the homes of the people in the Cities, and if you wish matters to reach
Established 1882. Head to Foot Clothiers. Correct Dress for Everybody.
Children's
OTHING
compels the best, and so when there it is only natural that if you want last, you must turn to this store—the establishment. clothing is such that the boy will be mother will be proud to see on her as not only good looks and style to careful workmanship, so that clothes months of wear.
as ages 9 to 16; a choice lot to select 10.
suits, ages 8 to 16, double breasted, all $1.95 and up to $8.50.
Sailor Suits, ages 4 to 12, $3.50 to $8.50.
this season, 50c, 75c and $1.00.
Seventh and Robert.
these homes you must publish them in the Appeal.
Revival meetings are being held at St. James' Church, 4th street and 6th avenue south. Next week Rev. H. H. Thompson, the new presiding elder, will preach there.
Rev. T. Reeves is working hard to build up the attendance at St. Peter's Church. Every Sunday he should attend the morning and evening services and send the children to Sunday school.
Ladies' Day, upon which occasion Dr. T. Reeves, one of the most elo-
HIS
quent and forceful speakers of the race, will deliver the address. Orchestral music. Special invitation extended to the ladies.
At the Men's Literary Coagress, St. John's Church, Sunday 4:00 p.m. m. the subject: "Their Remedies" will be introduced by Mr. Jno. S. Wright. Good program of music. All men are invited.
For Rent—1-room flat; neatly arranged; in excellent condition; all water convenience inside; within seven on car line; rest of the church; directly on car line; rest of the church; App. Henry Roberts, West Hotel. Drug Store.
The chartered car that carried the Pride of Minnesota band and company to St. Paul last Monday evening was due to owning, the honor of the success of the entertainers due to the untiring efforts of B. Mocen, V. Rogers and Prof. Howard.
Bethseda Baptist church, Eighth between Eleventh and Twelfth avenue South. Rev. M. W. Witers, pastor. Residence, 1117 South Sixth st. All are invited to come and worship. The lively singers are made welcome. Sunday school 12:30 p. m. Classes for all ages.
SOLUTION OF A MYSTERY.
Alarming Appearance of Words in
Spider Webs at Toledo
Spider Webs at Toledo.
Toledo's wonderful spider-web mystery has at last been cleared up. Seven people flocked to point on Carnegie, near the courthouse, where in plain letters on a spider web appeared the words "My Jim" and "Murder." What made the denizens of that locality骚动 every time they looked at it or thought about it was the fact that the web was spun a the corner of a house in which Jim Lee, a colored man, had been murdered a day or two, while the euthers were of white, while the man was darker. Yet it was the belief of everybody who saw it that it could not have been the work of human hands. Names appeared on other spider webs, but the mystery remained unsolved until today, when a Mrs. Leggett, who came here from Detroit, said her husband made the letters. She made the admission to ease the mind of a servant girl who had shown signs of insanity because of the web on the house, and said she made a statement said her husband makes the letters from fleurs he takes from spider webs. Armed with a string of letters, he has but to put them on a web that strikes his fancy. The letters are slightly moistened, and then Leggett, by a gentle breath, blows them upon the web, and they cling there as though placed there by the spider itself. Of course a stirring breeze soon destroys the letters or blows them together. He is a cognizant of the method employed, would suspect the deception. He spread the names about to call attention to his invention, expecting to use it for advertising purposes.-Toledo Correspondence Cincinnati Enquirer.
A Westerner now settled for life in New York says: "I have not yet mastered up sufficient courage to buy a home. I want a home the worst sort, but the trouble is I am afraid to buy, because there is no telling who will be my neighbors to-morrow, next month or next year. Look at these Brooklyn folk, for instance, who get mad, with each other on slight provocation and sell or rent tael houses for a song to objectionable people in order to scandalize the neighborhood. A disgruntled neighbor thinks nothing of advertising for a negro tenant or purchase, and makes his house off his hands and makes things disagreeable for those who live next door—New York Times.
The Uninvited Guests
Hamm's Beer is supplied by = Agents everywhere.
Hamm's Beer
is an excellent table drink!
THEO. HAMM BREWING CO.
Saint Paul, 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.
Call on or Write at Once to
SW
RAUDENBUSH
WEST BIRTH, SYPTIER AND MARKET STS.
ST. PAUL., MINN.
SMOKE
Straiton & Storm Co's
NEW
FIVE
CENT
OWL
CIGAR!
ROCHE'S
WINES
Dinner Wines.
Pontet Claret $1.00
Per quart.....
Medoc Claret 75c
Per quart.....
Chesterfield 50c
Per quart.....
Good Fair Wine 25c
Per quart.....
Telephone Main 1401
ST. PAUL
367
ROBERT ST.
JOHN C
ROCHE
MINNEAPOLIS
44
3RD ST. S.
THE MERCHANT
PRINCE OF CORNVILLE
A COMEDY BY
SAMUEL
EBERLY
GROSS
FOR SALE BY
All Booksellers.
Dr. W. J. HURD,
81 E. 7th, St. Paul.
Pat. system of an
tracting teeth
without pain. 25
years' successful
use in
thousands of
cases. Plates.
Bridges.
Crown, Filling.
Popular
gadgets.
L. M. BEVANS,
Electrotyping and Stereotyping.
51 East Fifth Street,
Belfast, 1476-8. ST. PAUL, BERK.
---
ATTICA
SAICAGO.
VHE“WORLD'SIEAIR CITY” VIEW-
ED BY THE APPEAL MAN.
‘4 Complation of a Number of appentngs
Social and Otherwise, Among. the Afro.
Americana of the Second City. of Ths
‘Giéctows Usa =
‘Mrs, Rachel Ally and daugnter are
‘visiting friends this week at Irvington,
Ind,
‘The new pastor comes from Spring
fleld, Mass., and is a graduate of New-
ton ‘Pheologteal Seminary.
‘The Bethesda congregation is. a
present worshiping In Arlington Hall
‘Thirty-Arst street and Indiana avenue
‘THE APPEAL 1s without questior
the best advertising medium throug
‘which to Teach the Afro-Americans ot
Chicago.
Mr, Rastus Taylor, second waiter at
the Hyde Park hotel, left yesterday tc
spend a week or ten days at the Pan:
American at Bumtalo,
Subseribers for THE APPEAL who
‘wish to discontinue the paper must
send written notice to the olfice, prop-
erly dated and egned.
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
Do you want to preach? Learn at
home, Send two-eent stamp to Prof.
R. B. Hewitt for catalogue of Corre:
spondence Bible School, 2908 Maga-
ino street, New Orleans. La.
The first anniversary of the Institn-
tional Church and Social Settlement,
3825 Dearborn street, will take place on
Sunday, Nov. 3, and the Rey. Dr. Ran-
som, the warden, having just returned
from Europe, promises a most enter:
taining and highly spiritual meeting,
Do not fail to attend.
Marvied at Parkersburg, W, Va. 01
‘Wednesday. Mr. William. F. Taylor, 0}
Chicago, to Miss Marie Madison, "he
wedding receptioa was eld at the
home of Mr. Taylor's parents In Phila-
delphia on riday afternoon, Mr, and
Mrs. Taylor will be at home to thel
friends at 208% Dearborn street, next
week.
Mrs. M. Anderson Quigley 3115 Dear:
horn. wave a dinner Monday evening
Oct. U4, in honor of Mrs. T. Snerriman
of indianapolis, Ind., at her residence
Among the ladies present at the dlnwes
were: Mis, T. Sperriman, Mrs. C
Spevtiman, Mis, 8. Smith, Mrs, 1
Bure, Indisnapelis, ind., sad Mes. W
Gilbert and Mrs, B. Walton.
Excvmmissioner — aatward
Wright’ can be found by his client
and friends at his new office, suite 421
260 South Clark street. A visit to the
commod'ous offees of Mr. Wright wil
aplendid law business. Mr BP
Mosely has opened a branch ofiee wit
Mr. Wright and ean be found. ther
between the hours of 12 m. and-2 p. m
linn acerca 107
ie Oia ite iW
vy HART & MU riba ro
Co TT RE Oe
OUR COLLEGE POPULATION.
early 150.090 Students Taking Courses
In tthgis Sstttattons,
‘To-day there are 629 universities and
colleges and 43 scligols of technology:
in the United States. ‘The total value
‘of the property possessed by institu
Hions for higher education amounts to
$342.898.361, a gain of abont $31,000,000
over the amount for the preceding
year. The endowment fuind amounts to
'$154,120590, ‘The total income for the
Year, exeluding bonefacti-ns, amoanted
to $27,129,154, ‘The value of gifts and
hequests during the year 1898-1899
amounted to $21,925,426, Some $2.500 Is
invested for each stiilent who is now
enjoying the advantage af any of the
institutions of learning. Classieal
courses claim by far the greater mum=
ber of studonts—25,595 students ont of
the 147.16i—while 21,860 were taking
the gencral culture conrses, 9,858 zen-
eral sefenee courses, 2.59% instruction
in agricylture, 4.376 in mechanteal en-
sincering. 2.550 in elvil engineering,
and 2.320 in electrieal engincering:
1.022 ‘students were stndying mining
engineering, 627 architecture, 9.501
pedagogy, and 6698 were taking bnsi-
hess courses. The munber of degrees
conferred duringthe year fa* wor'k done
was 15,087—10.754 on men aind 4.298 On
women, Thirty-eight different varieties
of degrees were conferred, and In some
caser only one candidate seetved a de-
ree, musical doctor, for example. $ev-
en fnundred and thirty-five honorary*de-
grees were conferred, In 1872 tho num-
ber of students to each 1,009,009 of por-
lation was 572; in 1880 Ht had” in-
creased to 770, fn 1890 to 850, in 1898
to 1087, while in 1899 the number was
1.196,
OVERPLAYING HER HAND.
Cpetaet Weurn
One of the shimmer stories from
Nowyort ing for its hevoine & woma
who went there to matte new frlends
find not to. remember old ones intess
they were of the kin that she wanted
to include tn tho revised. visiting Is
fn which she 1s employed at present.
Tt Rappened that head tot, recall
an oldish woman wy eae up to her
at a recent gathering with te Mea 0!
Feealting that she had tet her masy
Years before and. she had “long, been
a frlend of her mather's 1¢ the nek:
omer at Newport had known sho ts
Woman was and that she hada right
her acquaintance. sls. would. Tong
hotare tive presented” hecaet to tae
advantage of It, For the pisla-lookine
itt woman fea porary eoriety and
might have been just the kind of ally
that the other was seosine, But. eh
‘sas unfortunately enorant ofthe fess
Jn the cage, When the older matroa
approached het. he'd out her tnd, sid
Called her cordially by nas.” the
Stranger grew ‘rid ant if with dis
itys thine” she eat, np condotean
Inly as possibie, staring blake, "that
yeu have the advantage of ta" Her
{one coula not have been more insilt-
Ing and tt excused tho retort of the
other. “am sure thet thie." she
answered. blendly, “not only in nfem-
fry buE Ia manners az well” ‘The chit
rin of the younger woman at this e-
tort Was as nothing in comprrison wits
Ker distress when oho leased who the
womast was that cho had rebel.
New. York Sun. d
Te ebide in Chriac te. to\ bo always nigh
nto Chrlat, tn the spiritual company. of
heist. ara in communteation with Christ
Shera “ia sometatng gf an. eareeln
spiritual ,aecivity, of the goitiad. Owen,
Dp ee x
SEE APEnam a NATIONAL AFRO-AMERIC!N NEWSPAPER.
’s Store News,
Field, Scbhlick & Zompany’s Store News.
eM 2 ‘ me #.
; — i oe
Choice flannelettes. . | Good gloves, 1,00,
Flannelettes that have the fine styles and choice | ‘The most satisfactory glove we have been ‘able to
eglorfngs of materials costing many times as much. | find at 1.00 is Our Own. ‘They are made trom soft,
Four complete lines suitable for shirt whists, house | pliable skins, fit perfectly and wear well. All colors
Sacques, wrappers and lounging robes. 10c, 1240, 15e | and sizes, 1.00. < 4
mate :
; 1 | iestaade geen tenge aie an
Outing flannel special—Heavy teasled outing | shaves for stteot and calling wears, We5O
Lshosly sityes, ios a Visiee Od Sloe ae eee :
piece 160 yard.” ‘On sui Thursday 6c Fall goods for men.
One of the biggest underwear bargains possible
—_ Te tis Sou Hovey Winer feinis Sees we aoe
: Srotee wll tiled eee
Underwear bargains. | (sr yelivsied ant worm 5 sees to. 39.6
Here's a line. of vests’ and pants and union | Special at 1.00—Here are two of xs good lines of
suits at bargain prices., They’ are just. the woight | shirts and drawers as we haveever sold -at 1.00. One
Matted now and are etrviely fine risbed with Donut: | deol Ment cet ae a a em One
ful silk crochet trimmings—union suits $1.50. ter weight, and both sold all last season at
Double fleeced—winter weight, ribbed maco 50c Wool shirts—Fine ribbed yoo! flesh color shirts and
yarn vests and pants—double fleeced ....4..,.... drawers. Just onecase of them—it’s all the mill had.
Corset covers—Natuval gray woo} corset cov Rogular price is 1.50. This ease, special here
ea with long sleeves--requeod from 860 00, OC | Wenn ee ee IO
Wool union suits—3.75 ana 4.00 heaty im- Socks—Heavy black cotton socks, seamless and
ported natural gray wool union suits reduced to Sg | Seinieas-yood wearing Ios kind, for... AOC
Norway's Administrative Methods,
For administrative purposes Norway
is divided into eighteon countries,’ or
provinces, which coincide with the di6-
cese of the church, and there fs a very
close relation between the ecclesias-
tical and the civil adthorities. The
chief magistrate in each of the coun-
trles, nominated by the king, is known
as a° perfect. Hig duties are similar to
those, of the. French prefects, although
the theory of home rule and selt-gov-
ernment is carried into ech county
and each municipality and parish,
where every magistrate is responsi-
ble fo a counell elected by the people
trom the laws for the magistrate to ad-
minister. There are few countries in
which the theory: of seif-government
is carried to such an extent as in Nor-
way. ‘The sovereignty of the people is
absolute, and thelr vight: and fealous-
ly guarded.—Correspondence Chicago
Record-Herald.
‘The ritual of the cere and ‘the
solemnity wherowith it is practiced by
tho devout, is. refreshingly: humorous,
At Carlsbad, if we remember aright,
the first glass of water: has to be im-
bibed sitting. down, ‘the secord stand:
ing up, the third during a soiemn pro-
cossion of exactly a quarter of a mile:
‘the fourth, for all we know to the con:
trary, standing on one’s head. The cel-
ebrated Kneipp cure, one feature of
which is to make the'patlents padato
about barefoot in’ deW-soaked grass,
and the “sunbath curo"—the latest
Berlin idea—in which the bathers sit
about in the sunlight in what ‘Trilby
would describe ag “the altogether," are
some of the quainter manifestations
‘of the “cure” craze—The Oiitlooker,
Larter ei
Patina
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.
Literal Coin Hynting.
One of the most eurious of the many
citrious trades of Paris 1s that of the
coin hunter. Many, coins must, of
course, be dropped by inadvertence
each day in a big ‘city like Paris, and
the business of the “lonne=:," or coin
hunter, 1s to find as many of them as
he can. Sometimes, according to the
confession of one of them, these poor
creatures pick up as much as 3 francs
a day, but thelr average takings
mont to 1 franc 50. centimes.
Wretched looking creatures they aro
‘as they walk-in- Indian Mle, with thelr
eyes fixed on the, gound, and they say
sthat thelr trade is a very tiring one—
“London ‘Lady's Pictorial,
ye Da Se RRS ass Re PS 1, 0
>. é
In the Great
he Mymouth? Shoe Salesroom.
) ‘The “Emperor” is 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’
i It is a pleasure to guarantee a shoe that will uphold
Re) every claim made for it, giving the utmost comfort and
Eat a. satisfaction. We claim that 2 Shoe of equal value
: eannot 93 had for equal money. no matter where you
RASREMD) co. A now pair for any pair that goes wrong.
ee} ry,
Ee: New Fall Styles Ready.
Wee) The “Empress” fs likewise the best of all the $3.50
See ‘Shoes for women.
We are Sole Agents for Hanan & Sons’ - 3
Fine Shoes. .
The Plymouth Clothing House, Seventh and Robert.
oy i
LONG-LIVED ASTRONONIERS.
Se Gk ae ae REE et lden ee cey tk
Prolonging of Existence.
According to. M. Camille “Plam-
tharion, the celebrated astronomer,
star-gazing would appear to be produe-
tive of longevity. at any rate, he has
een laying stress, at a meeting of the
French Astronomfeal soclety, ‘on: the
marvelous ages attained by members
of the association. af. Francois Micha,
for instance was 19 abiout the time of
"Waterloo. Just before that great. bat~
tHe, in June, 1815, and while Napoleon
was still in Parls, Mf, Mlchaw had, wo
are told, placed his telescope near the
Pont Royal, where it was knocked over
bythe excited crowd, who carried the
emperor on theln shoulders to. ts
‘Tuileries after che had exeaped from
Biba. This M. Mfenau is the doyen ot
the Freuich Astronomical society, and
hie still relatos that, afte: having tem-
Porarily, abandoned’ his telescape and
his. sky-starching ‘operations, he {01-
slowed the people who were Fushing to
the Tuileries, The doyeane of-the 83°
loty ls Mlle. de Viste du Flet, sho ts
now in her one hundred aud Sth yes.
having heen horn at Nantes om Apilt
7, 1297. She was In her youth admitted
0 the entourage ‘ot the Duchesse: de
Berry, Members fost approachins, oF
who liave passed; tho ago of 00 ave 1¢-
markably nugerous. in the ‘ocicty.
Amon them tho snost noteworthy ave
Mite. Bessamet, who iy early. a can-
tenariaa: 31. "Masselotte of Juvisy
(ehere Camille Flammarion has an
obsersatory), who hag-turned 90 and
“Dr. Mouties ‘aleo' a ‘nonagenarian wo
Was medical advises to Mme. Dude-
vant, Detter known as Georg» S:fa,
and to the elder Damas-Paris Corr-
‘spondence London Telegraph.”
, ee
HAVE FA you.
ate THE
ordontHat
Bowlby & Co., YLodlor., 6th & Robert.
Headquarters for the Gordon’
WOMEN ON THE TRAIN.
Lavlest Way of Traveling Proven so.
‘Mont Tiresome. *
‘Are’ women good) travelere?- If one
belleves the average man, they are pot
iC one belioves his own sight. they are
—far better even! that the detractors
wg erties Sem, wi 80 Bish und
mighty am-aln:) fhe ayerage women
Feade her hooky. with. # patiener: bean.
tifal to BebOId. hovamatter what the diz.
ne |
Last Month
Orr HE
Exposition
‘The Pan-American Expo-
sition at Buffalo closes
October 31.. You must
go this month if you go
atall. Via St. Paul and
Chicago thé most com-
fortable line is the Bur-
ington,
| ASK YOUR HOME AGENT |
fon TICKETS VIA THE
BURLINGTON Gs aoe
EVERY
‘Mole
be
fered en ajardo slo and 160 pice
EVERY CHILD NEEDS SHOES,
ring silos for $1.28, SL38 ok
Si. Cree
Children’s Tan Shoes, new leathers |
Sool Seaside”
SEE OUR WINDOWS.
Laem
Payee ae
et a
WONDERFUL DISCOVERY;
isc poe 3
[ea ‘ <<
; OZONIZED OX MARROW
Scere eae ceaeat nes
GRR donate ees
Sekirei enna ag
Bin, sites ene ala is
Sea aires Tee
Saints oxatonreos fewanat ase ees
Comeneeecccee!
i ey We gl
PO
Did Bes i
[PPTe 2 x
Blossom iy
Flour
ff sans :
= /fe-aione,
aA
A.
None Better—Many Worse
fen ae abeds
Men's Shoes :
$350
fice the whole {
ee |
= ee
TREAT BROS BZ?
0 1068, 4th st: gees
Defective Page
coniforts of the journey, and ‘moves not
at-all untill she alights immaculately
clean and: composed’ ‘at the enid of her
fAve-hour trip. “A mon, his wife and
two ‘children entered a day coach. in
which the writer sat recently and gave
an apt tMlustration of tho’ difference in
the way the sexes travel. The man, as
Soon as he had soated his charges,
washed his hands of responsibility and
bolted for the smoking ear. ‘The wom-
an. set to work quietly to amuse the
Nttle ones and keep them aulet. She
whispered a story to them; she pinned
a handkerchfet out of the window and
made a flag of it; she made balls of
another handkerchief, and rabbits, and
80 Kept. those bablesiaulet and con-
tented for six hours. At the end of
that time back came the husband,
breathless. “Are you. ready. to get
off?” he asked. “Hiere we are at Chi-
cago. It’s been a terrible trip, hasn't
it? So hot. I'm tired to death.” “F
rather enjoyed it," replied the woman.
“Was it warm? You see, I was too
busy to notice. Yes, everything is
ready. I'm sorry you're tired." And
there wasn't even a tree of sarcasm
tn her tones.—Chicago News,
Seacaniter ewe.
‘The baby of normal weight tips
down at birth the tiny scales at the
seven-pound mark. If he or she is
much heavier or much lighter, he or
she is at war with the average.” A pe-
‘culiar feature of baby welght Is that,
Guring the first“days of Its Ife, the
youngster—that fs, the perfectly “nor-
mal youngster—loses one pound, ‘Thus,
‘examination on the second and fourth
day will show a weight of six pounds
only. But, after the first week, at the
end of which time the lost ” pound
should be regained, there-is a steady
advance. in the Infant avolrdupos,
‘Ten pounds should have been reached
by the time the baby is eight weeks
old and when it is twenty weeks old
the weight should be fourteen pounds.
At seven months the figures should be
Sixteen pounds, and the year-old baby
should have . | mark of twenty-one
pounds to its credit. And so the future
citizen or eltizeness goes on building
sip, until, at the ago of two years it is
‘able to point with pride (0 a record of
twenty-seven younds—New York Her.
ald.
‘acid New Ghat,
“t's never too late to learn,” said a
rural sehool teacher the other day.
“Why, you will hardly eredlt me when
Tsay that Lhave.snong my pupils five
old men whose ages are respectively
81, 79, 64, 53 and 44, and they're the
best scholars T have, None of them
contd read or welte when they came to
me, Three of them wanted to learn
so Wat they could read the Bible for
themsleves, and the other two decided
late In life they would embarie on. 2
Hterary career. Think of it! But
they're in dead earnest, and I'm teach-
ing them: right along!"—Atlanta Con-
stitution. _
teitdacar Waamclind (eile Wiceatice nie.
Some of the downtown contractors
have lost faith In the weather fore-
casts and have provided rainproof stilt
for their workmen, says the New York
Sun. A few days ago While Broadway
was being drenched by a downpour a
sang of workmen in yellow ofled suits
Including hats of the fisherman's style
continued their labor on a building on
Broadway just below John, street. ‘The
timekeeper sald that where work is
under contract to be finished in a
given time, as most work {sin New
York, many eontractors have rain suits
for thet men,
VENICE ON THE MAINE COAST.
Splendid Summer Resort Mrojected by
“Independence Lawsow.
‘Thomas W. ‘Lasson, yachtsman,
copper king, multimiitionaire, horse
Dveeder, dog fancier, and gas agitator,
fs going to build a’ miniature Venice
on the rugged coast of Maine. “He has
bought two islands off Stonington on
Deer Isle, and has an option on twelve
others, which he will pay for when
the titles are proved to his satisfac-
tion. ‘These Islands aro situated in
Isle Au Taut bay, and are about 15
miles from the mainland. His plans
contemplate the building of the most
remarkable summer resort in the Unt-
ted Statee, The islands are all close
together and many of them can be con-
nected with bridges. On Saddie Back,
the largest of the group, about forty
acres in extent, Mr. Lawson will erect
a magnificent palace for himself. ‘The
whole matter will be placed in the
hands of a landscape artist, who wil
furnish plans whieh will transform the
islands into a “Venice of America."
‘The smaller islands will be cleared of
everything unsightly, but everything
Which shows the rugged beauty of the
group will be left untouched: On some
of the larger Islands there will be con-
servatories and vine-covered . vesti-
Dules. Miniature parks will be filled
with deer, bears, gray squirrels, part-
ridges, and every’ game animal that
lives in Maine. The whole cost of the
project will be above $1,000,000.—Ros-
fon Correspondence Philadelphia
North, American.
ek mia eraaa’ Suncast
‘The hot spell which visited Europe
ast summer was felt by the tab write
[a corfespondent fron Malmo. When
Hue temperature was at. ts highest
‘a number of dead fish were observed
Moating about near Ronneaa. ‘The
fishermen sa thal the water Was too
hot for the sh, They state as the
fish approach the surface of the water
‘diey hecome more and more sluggish,
‘and lose the power of ‘motion, inti
‘coming directly under the sun’s rays
‘hoy roll over dead—sunstrnek, in fact
HORN rsWaNTed
Wo are Western Neadquarters to
high’ grade. subseription books an
Tagazines by. Afro-American, auchors
Our agents are doing well because ot
people want 00d books. For partie
lars addrese ;
ISAIAH BURRELL.
159 S. Desplaines St.,
: Chicago, Hi,
Dally Excariose ts Welfpoond New Sor
‘via Nickel Plate Roed. Through tratn
to New York Citf without euange
‘Vestibule sleepers Chicago to Boston;
ee
[on ‘American club. plan, :
cents to $100. Write Join Yo Ghig
pa ae tse 1 Adama Bt
Chicago, for pins.
SUEIETY WIRELTURY.
— eee
0) eT. Pau
: 4 a
. 9MSLAXE C
Gore |
M28)
Hed Ra
AN RS (Wes
« rr ene
| e741" as
| xosn wonsmprcy onaxD Lopoa
or
MINNEROFA, 4.7. Am 3
Soe Xa, Grad ane
| eto it, tvspale ate
Was None. Ornd Sera
|, PIONEER LODGE NO. 1. A. F. AND A.
ndhae Mani ats OME fee
Baddtycae Wate eal, So Gee
0b ret gore
STARS LODGE, NO. 2202, mects second
qua) fourth Weedeatet peach Ssoneh foe
Srvetion Sat Oda‘ Vghomss Waly 295 'E
‘Seventh SE" ysl bo furor, RUG. IC
Hicks, B.S BS de Rsthoay Aver
HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH, XO. 653, 0. v,
‘ouiot G. Femeets aeet aud Uilnd Stowany
fh Sch’ month for business; eecong Mo
diay for instrvcion, 9 O40 ielows Hal
235 Ee seventn Se” Mew Faun russe
ALN. Gu Me ida At, Sobasoay Weis
No, bie ee thee
Sn YAMES A.M. E, CHURCH, cor
llr ‘ahd day “Sincels. sundae wera:
11500 a. ine 730 pk” Wededay" pres
keting, Si pe "Pastor visit Sb
fly ana Tooadis’ ae home Wednesday sei
‘heedars'" Weddlage; uneea andthe
Siok automa gn notige, Ren 3 co Anne
Sone Bacto 288 HOMES se
PILGRIM Raptisr. cHURer, Co:
yeah Cour.” Buanny. Services! Pees
seliool at 12:80" o'clock. Weanckaay ‘ever.
tog general: prases necting. aay Seek
Aid, weddings ompule attended, Sew.
Dercarter, Pastor, OO) Etcte Se. .
St, PHILIPS EPISCOPAL wissio”.
gue Atop vey a iu te
acter, agua fe
Haig ieecnaete “ant. pied Saag,
Hd ane Matton, Second an Cough
Suing, TH00 a. aS schon,
fine Shrothernead ot St" Auden, aN pe
Thea enpersy tage un” Weck hares
Weaueidpe'naricon aie 8:09
Pridana, «veg brass, S00 me hunt
days, Hole Hucbatist, fa. m. HEV. AL te
WGanMIa tetas, 385 Cental avenue
MINNEAPOLIS
4m Lane Laven, Mo mpeta tn oa oe
end Tucnday In cock month allies apy
Seisreseisenees Henzepig end'wsiec wal?
Mascae's ford Siem GSreeaeen WS
Hanesr Boner Gee telat Bice
gens Geant apres
MEWGitetdvetss Manne ta good mange
ba thar uaie Gro, W. Dax, W. o
in emia bibs Sone eels:
MUNNEAPOWIn,
ane acd
Se Anton: anos, So. rh mire (a6 tre
eM aT Wen cei nel et etacte
Herfonmractans ater hols secene wired SF
‘foes Nicolle sod icoheynrnte nas ee
S iifia se
Jane seseorr. roa. v6 tbntis
| ENIGHTS OF PYTHIAS
mas, Tonvan anon, 0.8 Gof iete
eer epwepreeee ata
poFons and Bank Moe
TH sacenn. c.0
Jor A Oser,¢. Raid
aerate tlhe
MD. Wank mee EY
+
oan
Drones cyncen No. 88 Lapite 07 Tan 4.
Soe
| Karur Meni Gro. 2 Cearky.
{The Monarch of Them All, 7
las
ES Bie ee
| SPD aoe |
Sie eo Ge {
tease uke
R.A. LANPHER & G0, fs02-
t ener
THE ¢-s
|eiielecesraewe SSE |
com OF MYSTERY IS “=
iomroogs tele fet tent ae
{itnke wiiaot sour. pretence Devribe
disemeneine neue ten
Mies meer oh Coeeacies. poeta
{ronben, eres lk 18, marvases ee ty
paces aaa ca ae
Ip Rpsper MELAS wed inet lta
ete ciedinee none aa
BS deg toecas bas a char
ena tpl mre o> enaatarea, coca
seth E06 Oe are veaatics nea
dine ans Ye ane tt ye es
lect, tama Onis
50 YEARS’
Parents
“Taape Manse
, e eeDeerns
e Soprniaurs &c.
atau secant gar creep
Se oe
oe ic fine 5
ime
; MOLE aoieees
MAURER Ep aetoenn, New York