The Appeal

Saturday, February 15, 1902

St. Paul, Minnesota

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VOL. 18. NO. 7. Subma Her O CAPTAIN·FR COMMANDER T is now the intention to send the submarine boat across the ocean, the sea, and three thousand miles over and under the ocean, in contempt for the audacious little Fulton. Should it be carried out successfully the navies of the world again will be electrified. The torpedo boat is only 634 feet over all and the intention is to send her under her own power. Such a seat would have been unreamed of even a year ago, her captain and crew spoken of it as being neither impertinent nor perilous. She proved herself so stable that there will not be to make her difficulty in getting it. "I would sooner go in her than in a boat," the captain. "A storm can be sank at will it is over." This statement, showing perfect confidence in the stability of the boat, will be the reason she can sink the Sunday Pioneer Press who was permitted to go aboard and inspect the little marvel on her recent trip, when she made the purpose of trying a new and more powerful propulsion trip she gave a new performance that showed she possessed a merit that was unmistakable owners So impressive was the performance and so successful was the Fulton in a work that was so important, which was attempted merely as a slide issue that Capt. Arthur MacArthur, the second bothasted and pleased, a son of Gen. MacArthur and will be in command of the Adder, another Holland submarine bothasted and pleased, a son of New Suffolk yards in a couple of weeks. Though the Fulton is not owned by the government, and is commissioned as a private vessel in steadily experimenting so as to get the ship to work in the trip to Washington about the last of February will be the first step taken to show that she is perfectly able to cross the ocean in a submarine, whether or not submarine boats are of her size or of a harbor. This trip will all be made entirely in the open sea, and has been ordered to be completed only for harbor defense, but their designers believe they also have great sealing ability. The trip to Washington will be only the first step in the enterprise to terpise—the trip across the ocean, as the fuel carrying capacity of the marvelous little craft must be increased largely for the purpose. Great secrecy is maintained regarding the building of the submarine torpedo boats in the works in New Suffolk. To comply with the British foreign governments away from the Holland boats detectives investigate the secrecy. The correspondent of the Sunday Ploner Press had to furnish credentiales to the captain and the board was permitted to observe the work, board the Fulton, go over her interior from bow to stern and then study the assistance of the captain and Capt. Mackran were found at 10 clock on the night preceding the test on board the handsome steam yacht Grinla, in Greenport where she was to be boarded or tripping boards underfoot. "There she is," said Capt. Rich, pointing upward to a weird-looking thing in the water. "She is a night sky to be clear-shaped, with the forward end blunter than the stern. What is that boat next to her?" was asked the painted white, with the graceful lines." "That's the old Viglant—the one that didn't do a thing to Vakylie II, and the grand old cup defender was in the company indeed. He fine taper. "The old man finished up the last war neatly and quickly," said Capt. MacAAR, a minor officer during the war, "it looks as if young men will have something to do with the next one, should it be him?" He did not, on the Windsor getting in training, and there isn't a man of them more than twenty-eight. The oldest man in Capt. MacAAR's years, and it looks as if all the other men for the submarines will be young men. "Probably in the latter part of February. We will go outside all the way. I intend to carry men on that trip. In addition, we will make a report on it as an expert for the government." "Well, said the trip aboard." "Well, said the captain slowly, 'it is being considered seriously. The Fulton, you know, is not owned by the government.' I wouldn't have the slightest hesitation in taking her. I would sooner come up we can submerge at will until it is over. Before that trip is under capacity. As able to grower fuel carrying 500 miles under her own power, both electric and gasoline. We put it at 500 miles under her own power, but she really can go further." THE APPEAL. "I won't say a European trip is impossible," said Capt. Macarthur; "but I would call it improbable. Still, we thought she started for home, but she came all right as I seem to remember. More room could be made by taking out the thirty-two chairs she started for home, and either putting in an improved and more compact battery, or more gasoline enthusiastic about these sunsets, I am absolutely have full confidence in them; and if Cabre says they can go across the ocean, I be sure they can do a very easy thing to do. All we would have to do would be to seal them up, then tow them to a place of action or to get them to a beach, save the crews, and put them on board absolutely fresh when their services are needed. Of course a trip across under her apartment would be merely for exhibition purposes." "That is what the ocean trip to Washington is for," said her commander. "If submarines aren’t seaworthy, though they really are intended for harbor defense, they are going to carry on men. In case of a pitfall, two cannon men would insure more safety, so if it is ever found necessary to remain submerged for twenty miles on Sandy Hook, I intend to lie below the surface. Even at that depth in looking out of the conning tower, that we need not be the electric lights. So because the water is so clear. Of course I can’t see anything below there. And the compass. We will travel twenty miles under water before rising again, then take the surface. We may not always said "submerge," not "sink" a. The water of that river is always and when submerged there it darks Egypt until we turn on the electric lights. "What if you should strike a submerged derelict on your trip?" "What if an ocean liner should strike a submerged derelict? I think we would have the better chance, because the submarine is much more stable than glance or slide off many objects. But that contingency is so remote that it "we expect to make that twenty-five miles under water in a short time, and, we remind me of the way a supermarine would under water. They have insisted that we can't travel beneath the surface as fast we can travel awash. The contrary is that we can swim under water when under water (as with the same power when submerged. That's where the designer of the ship is. We can then under way on the surface the propeller is a hollow at either side of the stern into which the water is constantly trying to flow. We can hold her back. When we are submerged, say at the best depth of thirteen feet, we hold her back. When we are submerged, there are no hollows made by the propeller to put us astern, and we go straight through a solid body of water. The Fulton doesn't snort that word is used ordinarily. Let me explain this. "Through the five Kingston ships, the Fulton snorted into the compartments to bring her in the point of sinking. She has a HAND ON THE DIAL SHOWS DEPTH AT WHICH FULTON IS SUBMERGED FINGER ON BAR TELLS THE POSITION OF THE HORIZONTAL RUDDER AIR BUBBLE IN SPIRIT BULB AT BOTTOM OF DIAL SHOWS WHETHER VESSEL IS ASCENDING OR DESCENDING THE FULTON RUNNING ON THE SURFACE uoyancy of thirteen tons—that is, to lift a boat to the bottom, but she is only sent there for experimental purposes, as she was in that recent fifteen-hour test. By the time she was in the water, she were not called on in that experiment? They were not needed, as the air in the body of the boat was sufficient for the "but about this submerging. All of the water is left to give her the very slightest inclination to rise; so if left alone she gradually leaves her absolutely under control of the horizontal rudder. If it is raised it brings her nose up, so this imaginary inclined plane. If it is lowered, her nose lowers and she obeys so quickly that it has her rise and disappear in her famous perpendicular "what else can this submarine wonder do?" Capt. Cable was asked. "Well," he said, with one of his rare smiles. "Give me the submarines for safety, Holland, and the Fulton can do anything except climb trees. We are going to cut ice with her to-morrow. Come, it's time to do the next morning nothing was done early or in a hurry, and the launching attracted no more attention among the course of a new sailboat shipped, from the harbor, they had looked upon the submarines with wonder and incredulity, but this has all stained with custom and little attention is left. The Fulton may give up performances. The Fulton may give like a loon and dart about like a perforate for new crews, and speedy grew to a fact, with them, and presence in the bay does not even cause a remark. About the most interesting of new crews, for the men just need the ways of the different boats. Each has its own own, it is impossible to build twins. Though perfect twins in appearance and construction, each has her peculiarities." anove. As she moved quickly out or nerd dock under electric power and pointed up to the ripples to the feet of the men standing on the floor. Below, a hatchway just widely open, only the electric and gas engineers were needed. The boat seems decidedly room at first glance, but that is only because the stern is open, and one can see from her bow to her stern from the end of the stern. There is no space on the stern. Despite the fact that owing to a blunder she had sued long ago, bright and clean as a new pin. And, by the way, the mate, James Wilson, had a sank that he or she had no fight for, that sank that he or she told until on this trip. He told about it in a modest way, but it There he stood until the boat had filled as much as she could, the air cushions, the floor, the floor, the floor, completely. Then in darkness when believed she had taken all in the water could he startle for the ladder. He could he startle for the ladder. where it was, but never was there such a dive under such circumstances. He easily rised, as pressure had been enveloped, through solid water and in a few moments was being congratulated by his friend. He could cover on what he would do, and decided not to send down after him, for fear of injury to his friend. He did not wear a straped Bechtel mast, his dive was with little trouble closed the "torpedo valve. The raising of the beat then was so hucklely ended the only accident. After the hero of the story had told it to the reporter, he mittened the reporter to stand in the coming tower, to—see how, the boat is one can see plainly through the small, thick glisures in the tiny tower, which is the head and shoulders of one man, and when submerged he stays only by a rope, and when he is inched to the side of the boat he is a queer Goes First to Washington from New York, and Will Cover a Good Part of that Voyage While Submerged at a Depth of 35 Feet and the perforated mechanism told of sterns and the torpedo tube and air cylinders in the bow, there is not much quarters for the men in the bow, except the quarters for the men in the bow, or hull itself. The lines are graceful, each being an arc of a circle. But the "quarterers" are somewhat annoying, except perhaps, to the ten men who must occupy them on that trip; they bent twenty-five feet long and only eighteen inches wide. While they are annoying, they look like them, in that they have just been punks and the men stretching after the other on the long, narrow cans. Capt. Cable says he is pinching them, but if so it means a support with a canshed dish. However, no one ever carpets a submarine tector was built for $2.40 PER YEAR. c Under to Washington park, and Will good Part of the While Sub- at a Depth of TON'S·INDICATORS· M·THE·DIAL·SHOWS·DEPTH H·FULTON·IS·SUBMERGED· ON·BAR·TELLS·THE POSITION HORIZONTAL·RUDDER· BUBBLE·IN·SPIRIT·BULB· OM·OF DIAL·SHOWS·WHETHER ASCENDING·OR·DESCENDING But the men on deck weren't thinking of ducks and it is possible they didn't even changed to gasoline and instead increased instantly, as the Fulton swung under the stronger force. The elec-tric power boat was under water, given a speed of about six knots. The more powerful gasoline engine can't be used long when the boat is under water, and the more powerful engine one part of gasoline with every explosion in the cylinders. Gasoline is chomp air, is most precise when submerged, and the men need a little of it for themselves. The speed had increased so rapidly that the boat was awash with a vengeance, and the men need a little of it in impulsing at the captain. He didn't ask what the speed was, nor did Cap. Mae, as they are making public their reports, that the old propeller had given a speed of eight and a half knots awash, but he didn't advance an easy ten knots. The Fulton ahead at an easy ten knots. The Kelpie was fast being gained on, but the Giraffa, that had cut loose and knot gait, was overhauling the Fulton, when the little wonder took to the ice, which had formed three and four inches of ice and Hog's Neck Point and at a place opposite the upper end of Robbin's island. Seeing the ice ahead, the Kelpie hung on the pathway and pace, while the dignified Giraffa hauled off and swung in a wide circle to open water, preferring to lose time while her hierarchical slides broken哭. The Fulton's accomplishment in her first ice-breaking experience evidently was a source of amusement to the men, and of interest to the women. She interested and observing government expert, though they said little, except that the Fulton's performance was wonderful. She was in a long and serious report, both to the government and the gratified Holland people. The nose of the little wonder uplifted the ice, which immediately cracked, broke into pieces in falling off the rounded bow, her captain ordered half speed. Even at that she went fast, with absolutely no resistance, almost to constant 240 feet. VOL. 18. NO. 7. MIDNIGHTS Submarine Her Ow CAPTAIN·FRANK COMMANDER T is now the intention to send the american student a mass that takes the trip of more than three thousand miles over and under the sea is contemplated for the summer. Should it be carried out successfully the navies of the world again will be electrified by Yankee spirit and daring, as the men of the world again will be ago, her captain and crew speak of it as being neither improper nor ever startling. She has proved herself so stable that there will be no trouble in getting her crew to make the trip. "I would sooner go in her than in a plane, and I would never be a storm come up we can sink at will until it is over." This statement, showing perfect confidence in the stability of the air, will have permitted her to purpose of trying a new and more powerful propeller. and on and on she gave a new performance that showed she possessed a merit that even her enthusiastic owners never gave her credit for. She provided wonderful ice going through four inches of solid ice as if it were paper and at the same time losing little speed, to the delight of her captain and her owners. The little Fulton traveled full tilt for the ice field she lifted up the ice. She lifted up the ice, hurting it on either side as a plow would overturn soft soil. As she lifted the ice further, she waded up the ice,ward from the submerged nose toward the conning tower, it breaks into cakes, which either fall on top of the ice further or crumble into the ice field and broke up a snowbank. She makes a cleaner path for herself and does not waste as much power as if she cranched into the ice field and broke up a snowbank, which was attempted merely as a side issue that Capt. Arthur MacArthur, the head of the bothasted and pleased. He is a son of Gen. MacArthur and will be in command of the Adder, another Holland submarine, and will be experimenting in steadily experimenting so as to get the highest possible grade of efficiency, her furry will be the first step taken to show that she is perfectly able to cross the ocean with safety and then on to the open sea, and has been ordered to settle the question whether or not submarines are of use only in the still water. They are being built only for harborades and also have great seasong ability. The trip to Washington will be only the first step after the trip to the Arctic, the trip across the ocean, as the fuel carrying capacity of the marvelous little craft must be increased largely for the Great seacry is maintained regarding the building of the submarine torpedo on the seas in New South Wales. To keep the government's away from the Holland boats, the crew of whom they are suspicious. The correspondent of the Sunday Flower Press had so furious credentions that it was permitted to observe the works, board the Fulton, go over her interior from her deck, and observe a demonstration of her excellent litte torpedo boat in action from her own deck in the trip which unexcitedly have great seasong ability. Capt. Frank Cabie and Capt. MacArthur were found at 10 o'clock on the night preceding the test on board the hand-held aircraft, the first time the plane basin. To reach the yacht it was necessary to pass through the shipyard. Capt. Rich of the Glirda acting as an escort vessel, also in the basin, timbers overhead or tripping boards underfoot. "There she is," said Capt. Rich, pointing upward to the cockpit where made out against the night sky to be clear-shaped, with the forward end blunter than the stern. "What is that boat next to her?" was the phrase painted on white, with the graceful lines." "That's the old Vigant- the one that didn't do a thing to Valkyrie II, and the bride company." The grand old cup defender was in her company indeed. Her fine tapered THE APPEAL. ing lines slowed plainly in the mug. Always at ease, her white sides rested on her knees, and her stocks as they pressed up lightly against her bones. Two mats showed that her present owner, Percy Chub, had rigged her knee to the stockle of her mother to bed on the stocks lee ice or storm distress, and she lay there, a white thing of peaceful victory, and dosed an arm to her knee. So close beside her that they almost touched was the Fulton. The dark red of her sides showed black in the light of the sun, but her great propeller fleared from the stern and she seemed an uncootbird of prey. poised by the bird of peace for protection or destruction, whichever way her pregnant mind might A cheerful party of two was found in the saloon of the Giraldra—Captains Col. John and the Fulton, who is a relative of the novice, is clean shaven and has a sad and serious face. Though young, deep lines emphasize an expression of confidence, and of whom one can believe it is often said: "Well, if Cant, Cable says so it is all right." The captain, who six feet, was Cap. MacArthur, the ideal handsome young naval officer. With such a father he might have had prefered to be on his own, but was not to his liking, and on leaving Annapolis he volunteered immediately to take command of the sinister Adder men, who volunteered to men who volunteer for the duty are shacled on board of a submarine boat. This service is the "extra hazardous" world as a scared life insurance agent would MacArthur and Cable have become great friends during their few months on the ship, and they take life as seriously as the other, but Cable's smiles are frequent when his crew is busy. Their conversation was devoid almost entirely to the totable of submarine boats; the crew was dressed in insulated in New York's Porpoise, Shark and Plunger at Nixon's, and the crew in Union iron works. San Francisco, Work on all of these boats is on an annual basis, and the Union iron works. Of course they also talked of the probable commanders of the other boats and wars and rumors of wars and might be called upon to play some day. "The old men finished up the last war," he said. "I was a captain, thur, who had served on the Xionan as a minor officer during the war, "but it looks as if young men will have some experience, and we will come. My crew for the Adder is on now the Windsor getting in training, and we will be training twenty-eight. The oldest man in Capt. Cable's crew is only thirty-one years, and the youngest man in capt. for the submarines will be young men. Though it was late the steward of the ship, it was not the steward of the several applauding courses being sweet frod scallops, for which the entire crew would be applauded. "When do you expect to make that Washington trip?" Capt. Cable was asked. "We will go outside all the way. I intend to carry ten men on that trip. In order to make a report on it as an expert for the government." "How about that trip abroad?" "Well," said the captain slowly. "It is not easy to travel by boat, you know, is not owned by the government, and could go under yachting papers. I wouldn't have the slightest hesitation on her, than on a liner. Should a storm come up we can submerge it will until it is over. But before that trip is under capacity. As she is now, she can travel 500 miles under her own power, both electric and gasoline. We put it at 600 miles on a margin, but she really can go further." remain under water. Washington trip, when about wenty miles off Sandy, I intend to submerge the Fulton about thirty-five feet deep in looking out of the conning tow- rere is a fair light, so good that we can look at the water because the water is so clear. Of course I can't see anything below there except green water, and I steer entirely down the river. I have five miles under water before rising again, then take the surface. We may submerge again in the Potomac, the cap- acity of the river is "sink" the water of that river is always bad, and when submerged there it will be until we turn on the "electric lights." "What if you should strike a submerged derelict on your trip?" "What if an ocean liner should strike a submerged derelict? I think we would have the better chance, because the submarines are built so that they would be able to sink. But that contingency is so remote that it isn't even thought of. "We expect to make that twenty-five miles under water in a short time, and, if we don't make it, we expect have hars." "fooled regarding travel under water. They have insisted that we can't travel beneath the surface as fast as we can," the case is. We can travel half again as fast with the same power when submerged. That's where the engineer of the ship was. When we go way on the surface the propeller makes a hollow at either side of the stern into which the water is constantly trying to flow. We can hold it in boat and holds her back. When we are submerged, say at the depth of thirty-five feet, there no such action on us as we can do. We go straight the propeller to pull us astern, and we go straight through a solid body of water. With the same power we can go "Another thing," interrupted Capt. MacArthur, the Fulton doesn't snik, that word is used ordinarily. Let me explain, this word means "to be in the bottom enough water is admitted into the compartments to bring beer to the point of shaking. She has a HAND ON THE DIAL SHOWS DEPTH AT WHICH FULTON IS SUBMERGED FINGER ON BAR TELLS THE POSITION OF THE HORIZONTAL RUDDER AIR BUBBLE IN SPIRIT BULB AT BOTTOM OF DIAL SHOWS WHETHER VESSEL IS ASCENDING OR DESCENDING THE FULTON RUNNING ON THE SURFACE Goes First to Washington from New York, and Will Cover a Good Part of that Voyage While Submerged at a Depth of 35 Feet But the "quinteters," are somewhat unusual, except perhaps, to the ten man who must occupy them on that trip to Washington. They consist of cushioned skinless children wide. While they are not benches, they look like them. In reality they cover a part of the tank in boot its power of tiring and sniffing. They are not even benks and the men stretching after the other on the long, narrow cushions. Capt. Cable says he is a chinlid. But if so it means a award with a submarine tector was built for $2.40 PER YEAR. Under Washington Park, and Willard Part of the White Suburb a Depth of ON'S·INDICATORS· THE·DIAL·SHOWS·DEPTH FULTON·IS·SUBMERGED ON·BAR·TELLS·THEPOSITION ORIZONTAL·RUDDER BIBLE·IN·SPIRIT·BULB M.OF·DIAL·SHOWS·WHETHER ASCENDING·OR·DESCENDING But the men on deck weren't thinking of ducks and it is possible they didn't even glance at them. The power suddenly was on, and the crew instantly became instantly, as the Futon spring away under the stronger force. The electric motor is for use when submerged, and it consumes about ten percent more powerful gasoline engine can be used long when the boat is under water, as it consumes about ten percent more explosive in the cylinders. Gasoline is cheap enough, but air is most precious when the deck was awash with a vengeance, and it is the men need a little of it for themselves. The speed had increased so rapidly that the deck was awash with a vengeance, and it is inimulating at the captain. He didn't ask what the speed was, nor did Cap. Macarthur, as they are making mistakes, ever said that the odor propeller had given a speed of eight and a half knots awash, but he never said that the Futon ahead at an easy ten knots. The Kelpie was fast being gained on, but the Girlanda, which had cut loose and knotged, was overhauling the Fulton, when the little wonder took to the ice, which had formed three and four inches and Hog's Neck Point and at a place opposite the upper end of Robbin's island. Seeing the ice ahead, the Kelpie hung on the pathway and pace, while the dignified Girlanda hauled off and swung in a wide circle to open water, preferring to lose time with her aristocratic sizer broken free. The Fulton's accomplishment in her first ice-breaking-experience evidently was a keenest delight to Capt. Cable and the interested and observing government expert who was the Fulton's performance was wonderful. But that part, of course, will be contained in a long and serious report, both to the government and the grafted Holland peo- As the nose of the little wonder upfilled the mouth, she could see into pieces in falling off the rounded box her captain ordered half speed. Even at a speed of 100 km/h, she could see countless excretes except the almost HAVE YOU READ THE APPEAL? THE APPEAL, A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY ADAMS BROS. EDITORS AND PUBLISHERS 40 E. 4th St., St. Paul, Minn. ISSUED BIMIL/AMOUSEL 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 811 HENRY ROBERTS, Manager. CHICAGO OFFICE, 823-5 Dearborn St., Suite 310, C. F. ADAMS, 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, BIX MONTHS.....1.10 SINGLE COPY, THREE MONTHS.....69 When subscriptions are by any means allowed to run without prepayment, the terms are the same. Each subscription, each odd week, or at the rate of $4.00 per month should be made by Express Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Post Office Money Order, Registered Mail, or the rate of $4.00 per stamp will be received the same as cash for the fractional parts of a dollar. Only one can be sent to you. Silver should never be sent through the mail. It is almost sure to wear a hole through the silver. Persons who send silver to us in letters do so at their own risk. Each Additional line 10 cents. Payment strictly the advance and is bound to be amounted at the rate of $1.00. Advertising rates, 15 cents per agate line, insertion. There are fourteen agate lines on each line. Advertising rates on agate line. 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Write in every letter that you write us never fail to give your full name and address, plainly stating your identity. Necessity letters of all kinds must be written on separate sheets from letters containing new information any second class master at St. Paul, Minn. AGENTS WANTED. THE APPEAL wants good reliable agents to canvass for subscribers at points not already covered. Write for our extraordinary inducements. Address. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1902. HELP THE ALTON FUND. EVERY AFRO-AMERICAN IN IL LINOIS OUGHT TO GIVE SOME THING TO HELP IN THE ALTON SCHOOL FIGHT. THE RIGHTS OF THE RACE ARE AT STAKE. THE APPEAL GIVES $10. HOW MUCH WILL YOU GIVE, READER? The weight of a statement is always guaged by the standing of its author. If John Doe or Richard Roe makes a statement, although it may contain all the elements of beauty, logic, strength, truth or what not, that is possible, it does not weigh near so much as if uttered by some person of known ability or standing or some one of prominence or authority. Alfred Cecil, the noted writer, recently had an article in one of the 'prominent dailies on "Gambling in Society," in which he mentions the fact of a woman winning $40,000 in one year and says: "Naturally enough, she has not many equals, yet she is but one of a large class. It is not to be wondered at that high play is indulged in because the prevailing sentiment and --- UCAS Miss Tea Pot was so very mad— Her friend gave her a hug— And she was boiling as she said "I do not like your mug!" thought of the rich is money, money, money. Indeed, society is money mad. "This craze is not new to the millionaires or to the fashionable. In Queen Anne's time the nobility of England did little else, and during the long and stupid reign of George III., and the gay regency of George IV., the young men of England lost fortunes on dice. Those were the days when the mercantile wealth of England was making a new crop of millionaires, and speculation in lotteries and stocks made men rich over night. ANGLO-SAXONS ARE NATURAL GAMBLERS. IT IS IN THEIR BLOOD. It can be traced to the medieval German days as described by Gibbon, when drunken Teutons staked their wives at play. It has come out in the transplanted stock on this side of the Atlantic, and our best society has become a class of habitual gamblers. And after this excitement what?" Now, don't let us hear any more about the Afro-Americans "characteristic game" or their gambling propensities, they are not in it with the Anglo-Saxon according to Alfred Cecil. We were bred in old Kentucky, where the meadow grass is blue, where the people were supposed to have the sunshine of the country in their faces and manner too, and we had come to believe that they of the once "dark and bloody ground" were civilized. We were taught to believe that Kentucky could boast of producing not only the finest and best whiskey, the finest and best horses, but the finest and best women to be found anywhere. Perhaps that might have been the case some years ago when women were women and womanly in their natures, before evolution had made ladies of them. But now, how will the really civilized portion of humanity judge these LADIES, who were present last week in Nicholasville, when Tom Brown, a youth of nineteen years, was lynched in the court house yard and, according to the published account, "ALL THE LADIES APPLAUED AT THE END?" It matters not that the victim of this inhuman, barbarous, illegal spectacle was an Afro-American and accused of rape upon a white girl. It is a sad commentary upon their womanhood, that they could witness the murder of a human being in such a terrible manner, and give evidence of no other emotion than that of pleasure. To what a state has lynching, the national crime, brought this country? "Vice is a monster of such hideous mien. That, to be hated, needs but to be seen. Tho' seen too oft, familiar with its face. We first endure, then pity, then embrace." The birthday of the martyr Abraham Lincoln, was generally observed all over this country last Wednesday. The most notable among the acts of Lincoln was his emancipation proclamation, which set 4,000,000 slaves free, and, for this act, more than any other, his memory is revived. If Lincoln is entitled to such reverence for setting these people free there is a chance for somebody to be entitled to twice as much reverence by keeping twice as many of the same class of people free in the true sense of the word. Free to enjoy the benefits of the rights vouchsafed by the bill of rights to the citizens of this country—life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Free to worship God under their own vine and fig tree, with none to molest them or make them afraid. Free to live, move and have their being without reference or restriction on account of race, color or previous condition. Who will out-Lincoln Lincoln? Death hurks in many strange places, and one never knows just where, and how, and when he will claim his victim. The latest peculiar attack that has come to our notice, is in the case of Andrew Teeter, a barber at Akron. Ind., who is dying, or may even at this time be dead, from a very peculiar cause. He has followed his trade for years, and some time ago his lungs became affected. A specialist made an examination last week, and found the patient's throat and bronchial tubes full of short hairs imbedded in the membrane. It is thought the hairs were inhaled while Teeter clipped the hair of his customers and the irritation brought on tuberculosis. Congressman Morrell has introduced a bill in Congress that p provides a penalty of $5,000, or a term not exceeding two years in prison, or both, against officers, directors or employees of railroads who shall make or enforce any rules discriminating against passengers on account of race or color. We hope it will pass, as it should do, as traveling in the South under existing rules and regulations is extremely uncomfortable and embarrassing for Afro-Americans. We do not object to first, second, third or fourth class accommodations at corresponding prices, but we wish the almighty dollar to get for one person just as much as it does for the other. RIGHT HIGHWAY CASE WON. Bemidji, Minn., Special, Feb. 11—To judge Dudge rendered a decision in the case of Scratchin vs. Eugene Smith case,aint hardwired theft $$ damages. Scratchin is a lawyer of Bemidji and the defendant, a barber of Black Duck, refused to shave him on account of his color. Scratchin $100 damages, but the jury disagreed that the defendant consented to the court's decision, with the result stated. SUBMARINE BOAT HER OWN POWER. (Continued From First Page.) musical sound given out by "the idea" as in parted. Atern the puffing Kelp found a track almost clear, as she came along in solemn process close enough to see and admire one of the newest attributes of the marvelous submarines. Hard Luck in the West. The court went down on the ground, fingered a roll of bills at his court. "Bill," he said, "it's no use. I can't go to 'Why?' said Bill. THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER THE BOOK WORLD LIFE OF CARDINAL WOLSEY. Thomas Wolsey, Legate and Reformer. By Richard Tauhton. $5 net. New York: John Lane. hip who stood beside their leaders, by resisting oppression. This differed by social conditions is of great importance. Ehlehard L. Taunton is an English Renaissance scholar, the author of "History of Jesuits in England," and this volume, presents Cardinal Wolsey in a new way, with a new emphasis on the permeated with an evident desire for the church, in the estimate of the carriage in great atay, and the Shakespeare, who in his "Henry VIII" repulses. Had I but served my God with half the I serve my king. He would not in mine age Have I met my naked to make curses." The author claims that Shakespeare would not have dared to write the truth of Cardinal Wolsey in the time of Elizabeth. If the several propositions of this latest book are not however, Wolsey's truest enlightenment is entirely that of the churchman—ambitual, studious, and wise. He is represented as ambitious, cheeky, his church's sake. The splendor of his church's history of his office. His luthery with Henry, if due to a love of power, was due to his ambition. He had a higher dignity of the earthly veneration of his Master. Finally, in the negotiation of his voice. Henry's ambassador fell because Henry's desires suffered through the lethargy to preserve intact the power of Rome. One thing is, however, certain. That is his gift of education. The institution which is attested by the historic Christian College at Oxford, commends Wolsey for the suppression of Luther's writings in England and for his debathed advice to Henry: "For his grace, in God's name, that he has been taught the truth of persecuted sect of Lutherans, that it do not have its dominions through his negligence, in such a way that he be fair at length to put harness upon his sons." Regarding the liberality of mind of the "The Wife of His Youth" is another novel by the author, though not to tell with the same degree of skill as his other stories, yet remains a classic. The novel is set in Afro-American man, nearly white for women who was his mental physical oppression, and in a time of stress and poverty; educated him and was the result of his success in life—he and what he forsakes by him in his hour of triumph. Chesnut books are published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. The Compete Woman, $1.25; The Woman, $1.50; The House Behind the Cedars, $1.50. AMERICAN POLITICAL HISTORY. American Political History to the Death of Lincoln, $1.25; 12 mo. $1.50. New York: Henry Holt & Co. Instead of the dry facts usual to most histories we find in this book the charm of not simply of bloody wars, but a review of a restless upward movement of mankind. The town meeting is the keynote of the political townships in New England have been townships in New England have been devised by the wit of man for its preservation. Just One thing: prejudice keeps some women from using PEARLINE. They think, if it acts on dirt so strongly, it must hurt the clothes. Soap and rubbing act on dirt, and the fabric is rubbed away. PEARLINE loosens the dirt better than any soap, and bundles it out with little or no rubbing, and no injury. 656 Proved by Millions ing, who stood behind their leaders, boldly resisting oppression. This difference in the nature of great importance in determining the order of battle between the North and the South which culminated in the Civil War, for in the very last things the South was foreclosed to defeat. The book is a concise account of our position in the author hopes "that it may prove value to readers and the woman who often influences the voter." **INIS FAIL THE FILE OF DESTINY** Ireland, Historic and Picturesque, by Charles Johnston. Beautifully illustrated and sumptuously bound. $3. Philadelphia: Ireland is a land with a wonderful past. It is a country of great beauty, and the book contains twenty-six choice photo-gravures of Irish scenery, and the book contains descriptions are of never ending interest. STRAY PAPERS "God be thanked for books! They make us think of the great works they give to all, who will faithfully use them the spiritual presence of the best books, and not poor I am; no matter though the prosperous own time will not enter my obscure dawn and take up their abode under my enter and take up their abode under my Shakespeare open to the Paradise, and imagination and the workings of the human imagination and the workings of the human practical wisdom.—I shall not pine for want of intellectual companionship, and I may have a better place where is called the best society in the place where I live."—William Ellery Channing Lillian Whiting's "The World Beautiful seets to which it belongs." The book looks set to which it belongs. The book looks into which it belongs. One point of view—the between the immortal souls of men. "Food for Life" shows the intimate association of books with the images of character and intellectual evolution. The second part, "Opening Golden Dreams," begins the beginnings of culture, quoting many of the articles of great power and beauty to raise the sense of susceptibility to thought and feeling, to capacity to receive impressions and transference, to express what confines that confines the highest purpose of culture. In the third division, "The Rise of Moral Liberation," describes the novelist with especial approval to pose that throw the searchlight upon Renaissance and fifth divisions are along the same lines. "pure and simple." His rise from errand in the employ of a newspaper to condemn the injustice of his traced in interest detail by the author must have known something about the subjec- tive, but not the author. Devi, better known as "Jimmy," breaks with Brady and "sets up on his wrings and wrings concession after concession from his erstwhile "boss," all the time by methods diametrically opposite to the brutality of "Bess Brady." rulers" to wrest his person's 'vengeance' from the enemy, and hence the cause of the war, and hence the cause of them "Jimmy" grew in local power until he determined the political destiny of the city. The author shows that the successful politician must be able to balance body and that relieving distress and skeletal, not entirely foreign to his mission, is shown in his reliability in financial matters, where as the president of a bank he is putting up his own personal securities. ```markdown ``` One of the most interesting chapters in the war is one which takes up the leading role in the campaign. Filipinos in Luna, who was assassinated by order of a German soldier, is described as the greatest military leaders in the States. He had visited the leading militias in Europe and had made a close study of their tactics, sense, and that he was ambitious to have a war with the American army and stake all on the Filipinos. Aguinaldo dissembled, and he commenced an arrangement which finally culminated in the war. ... ACFINAEDS instrument of the Roman Catholic Church. He says: "Convince not for all the people, but for some, of your physical, pretending it is the same law as the license that overcomes. As a beautiful earl license is a spite of reason so no reasoning can save you from the pain of fascinated Home." compromising the two religions the author asks to join, and the author Rome lies and knows she is "ugly." The new book by Mrs. Emmy F. A. Drake, M. D. entitled, "What a Woman a Young Woman," a sequel to her one thousand dollar prize book, is a young Woman, WOught to Know," is promised to be ready March 16th. The depths, to be ready March 16th, are the purity books in the Self and Sex Series. THE HOTEL ATLANTA G. ORGIA. AIMS AND METHODS The aim of this school is to do practical work in order to succeed the ministry, the course of study and the ideas are high; its work is thorough, fresh, systematic and clear. Simple. COURSE OF STUDY The course of study of occupies three years, and is taught in the several departments of theological and leading theological seminaries of the country. EXPENSES AND AID Tuition and room rent are free. The books are well furnished. Good board can be bad for seven dollars per month. Buildings heated by aid. Aid from loans without interest, and gifts of friends, are granted to deserving students. The need of self-help. No young man with the advantages not deprived of the advantages not in this Seminary. For further particulars, see KERNELD, D. D. President Atlanta, Ga. EGKSTEIN NORTON UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF STUDY The above departments are under competent new branches they teach. They hail from Queens, N.Y. State University, Chicago Manual Training School, State University, Rhode Island, and Island, and of 622 new Institutions. Our classes and studies are so arranged that students receive their health or finances, and return to complete the course at any future time. The time to do many of the tasks is consistent, consistent with a thorough work in all departments. MELP FOR STUDENTS. Deserving students may have the privilege of exam work. We will accept only one exam per day. Do not placard any not on account of our low res- rue but on account of the very high character of t. and the fact that we are offered a double alike to both exams. Spring Eg., v. Louisiana, may find free accommodation in No. 81, Laurel Street, for catalogues and all business addresses the Free- tress, REV. C. H. PARRISH, A. M., CANE SPRING, C. F. PHI LANDER SMITH COLLEGE hardly need and solid growth, offering superior advantages to those seeking a thorough education. To reach good faculty, extensive courses, reasonable faculty from nine States and from 43 countries of Arkansas. NEXT SESSION BEGINS OCT. 1, 1901. For catalogs or further information address REV. J. M. COX, D. D. HAMILTON ACADEMY College Preparatory Normal Department. English Course Total cash expenses 86.50 per month. All bill's payable in advance. REV. CORMELIUS JOHNSON, A. M. B. D. Principal. Government Street, BATON BOUGE, LA. 1 is a Christian school. It offers the best facility in the state. Seven Departments: Classical, Scientific, Mathematics, Industrial, Grades, Industrial. Our aim is to train the students to form an information address the President, the Governor, the State Governor, the State Judge. For both sexes. Departments of Law, Medical Arts, Music, Missionary Training, College, College of Engineering, Industrial. Year begins on Oct. 7. For class logues, circulate and other information ad- missible. PRES. CHAS. S. MESEVE, RALEIGH. N. C. Fourteen teachers. Elegant and commodious buildings. Climate unsurpassed. Departments: Preparatory Normal, English Music, Music, and Typewriting. An industrial Training. FIFTY DOLLARS IN ADVANCE Will pay for board room, light, fast, tuition, and residence for the year. Send direct calls to your department. $0.00 per month, tuition $2.00 per department. Through work done in each department. Seen last circuit to be completed. REV. JUDSON S. HILL, D. D. Morristown, Teal MEDICAL SCHOOL OF THE NEW ORLEANS UNIVERSITY admits Men and Women of All Races. WELL EQUIPPED. THROUGH INSTRUCTION. Address 5318 St. Charles, NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA. NEW ORLEANS, HEALTHY, SHARP FEET EYE FOOD 9 A WEEKS RECORD IN MINNESOTA'S CAPIT The Saint City and Saint City Folks—Newy Items of Social, Religious and General Matters Among the People, Holded Down. Did you get a valentine? One or two gentlemen roomers wanted. Apply at 527 St. Anthony avenue, or at the APPEAL office. Jan Kubelik, greatest of living violinists, will appear at the Metropolitan Opera House Wednesday evening, Feb. 26th. Remember the Men's Sunday Club at St. James's church to-morrow afternoon at 4 P. M. An excellent program. How many brilliant men will Minnesota present to the Afro-American council when it meets in St. Paul next year? Mr. and Mrs. Artrudoe Lee, who are for the present sojourning in Helena, Mont. were in the city this week a couple of days, visiting friends and relatives. 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. "The Girl from Maxim's," a lively farce comedy, is underlined for the Metropolitan for four nights and a wedding engagement opening Sunday, Feb. 16. Is your hair straight? If not, send 50 cents to Ozonized Ox Marrow Co. 76 Wabash avenue, Chicago, Ill., for a bottle of Ozonized Ox Marrow and you can easily straighten it. The big Eastern hit, Harry Martell's "Brigadier Burlesquers," including high class specialty and vaudeville acts, special features and effects, will be the attraction at the Star next week. Anyone who can give any information regarding the whereabouts of Mr. Martell, will be invited to the Ryan Hotel, will confer a favor by sending the same to THE APPEAL office at once. Mr. Harry Shepherd has decided to try for the nomination as alderman in the Fourth ward, and has filed his pa- sition. He proposes to make a fight to the finish and we all know that he is a fighter. Let your object in life be that you will be somebody in fact or nobody in fact. Never allow yourself to believe that you are somebody when you are not. He lie, for you only destroy yourself. "The Strollers" with a strong company headed by John E. Henshaw and Marie George, and including Eddie Foy and a host of clever entertainers, comes to the Metropolitan for a half week beginning Thursday, Feb. 20. If you wish a good shave, hair cut or shampoo call Richard Coussay's 47% only. The First-class workmen will 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 JOY, The first-class workmen will And you'll get the best show At Johnson & Williams' "Irroquois." 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 crowded out. No notice will be taken of any communication that is made to us. DR. J. E. PORTER, Aquydian and Room 410 Washburn building, Fifth street, opposite Court House. Office hours: 10 a.m. to 12 a.m. 2 p. m. 1 p. m. 7 to 8 p. m. m. Telephone m. a. 1738-1 J. Residence, 453 Carroll street. Telephone Dale, 464-1S. The famous chef, John Godfrey, has a basin street, between Tenth street and basin street, between Tenth street and College avenue, where he has all the modular furniture he prepares to serve his guests. Board and rooms by the day, week or month at rooms durning from 1:00 to 5:00. A specially Transients accommodated. Elk Express, G. D. Carteson, prop, packing and shipping; hauling of all kinds; coal and wood in large or small quantities. When you wish telephone line give him a call. Telephone, Main 1928 J. 1. Office at East Sixth street. Another great band will be heard in St. Paul Sunday, Feb. 23, when Innes and his band will give two concerts at the Museum of Art, Opera House, and the band, in band. A trio of grand opera singers, including Miss Frances Boyden, soprano; Signor Edgardo Zerni, tenor; and Signor Achille Albert, baritone. E. E. Waldron, who was thrown from a tally-ho a week ago and broke his arm, will begin an action against the clan and plays in local salons during the day and parties at night. He had been out in a tally-ho attending a country dance. On the way back he claimed, because of a rough pavement. There was a well-attended and enthusiastic meeting of the Colored Men's Republican Club at No. 477 Wabasha street, Thursday night. D. E. Beasley presided and F. D. Parker acted as secretary. Strong resolutions indorsed the Fourth ward were unanimously passed. St. Paul has 164 churches and mission stations, representing nearly every Christian denomination and many creeds not classed as orthodox. The Lutherans lead with thirty-one congregations not classed as orthodox. The Lutherans lead in twenty-four churches. Methodism follows with twenty-one places of worship. The Presbyterians have eighten churches and the Episcopalians seventeen. While not known as a city of churches, St. Paul has a church or mission for each 1,000 inhabitants. For Feb. 16, 17, 18 and 19 at the Metropolitan, blue, blazing witchery! The biggest laughing success that ever happened to him's. The saintest girl that ever winked across the footlights. That bedroom scene is the richest thing ever put on the stage. Beginning Thursday night, Nixon & Zimmerman's "The Strollers", which is said to be full of amusing things; always something to laugh at, to tickle the ear, or delight the eye. The Lincoln Republican Club gave its annual banquet on Wednesday, Lincoln's birthday, at the Windsor Hotel. There were 275 of the stalwart Repub- VERY POOR. Colonel Sourmash-I see that corn is selling at five dollars a barrel, suh. Colonel Bloodgood-Must be an inferior quality of Iguar, suh. HE BELIEVED IN IT. Sue—Do you believe, in Spiritualism? He—I should say I do. My aunt is a medium and makes $300 a month out of it. licens present, including J. H. Dillingham, E. P. Wade, W. T. Frances, J. B. Johnson, R. C. Minor and J. Q. Adams, President of the Club J. F. Adams, President of the toastmaster, and Senator H. F. Stevens was the principal speaker. Everybody enjoyed the occasion very much, and incidentally the champagne and the toothsome vials. E. H. Brown and William Freeman, AroAmericanes, Joe Hartman, Henry Mielse, were arrested last Monday night by Officer Blonek, charged with disorderly conduct. The community in the neighborhood of Nash and Temperance streets was disturbed and gagged. A stovepipe in the Brown residence was knocked over, and Minnie Smith had her right hand bitten. William Freeman, who "had simply thrown a house" was discharged and the rest was to the workhouse for fifteen days each. "The whole city is bowed with sorrow and sympathy for Mr. and Mrs. Harry Howard, who have within a few days lost two of their children—Henrietta, aged 12, and Cecelia, aged 7 from black diphtheria. Mrs. Howard Gordturth, daughter and Gerdturth Howard, daughter and grandmother but all are getting better at this time. The funeral of 'Betta' occurred last Monday and that of 'Celia' yesterday. The many friends of the family have done all they could to show their interest, sorrow and sympathy in the distress, and it is sincerely hoped that no more may occur and that all will soon be well again." At the Grand Opera House. St. Paul. GEORGIA MINSTRES McINTYRE AND HEATH. Following the engagement of "Yon Yonson" the stage of the Grand Opera House will be given over to high class vaudeville, a style of amusement which has been the focus of many goers. The occasion will serve to introduce here for the first time the famous Orpheum Show, under the direction of Martin Beck. To those who may enjoy the theatrical dances, in many of the vaudeville with the best in this line of vaudeville. This firm controls vaudeville houses in all the large cities of the western, central and southern port cities, and offers an excellent operation of its theatres and in the splendid selection of the vaudeville talent for the performances presented therein the Orpheum management has received a great deal of support. The management decided to combine a number of high class acts and under its name send out a performance of a vaudeville character that would be sure to find favor with the immense audience. Joy this style of dramatic diversion. Among the acts included in this stellar aggregation are Joe-Welch in his "Study from Life." Mr. Welch is one of the most popular of Jewish impersonators. There is also McIntyre and Heath, two very comical comedians, in their newest creation, "The Man from Montana." The list also mentions Elizabeth Murray, with whom he has been seen here before and will be remembered for the decided hit she THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER made on the occasion of her last appearance. There is also in the company W. C. Fields, a comedian of unique talents who, by his comicalities, tickles the Flabblers of the audience and Nan Engleton, travesty stars, introduce the famous war scene from "Virginius." Those who enjoy acrobatic features are catered to in the batsuits and batsuits bristle supreme, who do some of the most astounding features imaginable. Those who are musically inclined will find much enjoyment in the performance of the "Serenaders" in the latest feature of the performance features of the performance is the act of the "Union Gatling Guards" in their realistic battle scene, introducing the latest improve Gatling gun in action. The commendatory feature of the performance cleanliness and the entire absence of Correct Dress From Head to Foot. Ladies' Norfolk Suits—Come in of heavy cheviot, short skirts, regular On sale now, only. Ladies' Suits at $5.00—Brown, and 36 sizes; regular; $10.00 and $ Now only. Short Coats, 27 inches long, com of pebble cheviot; storm collar; regular value. Now only. 27-inch Coats—All the $18 and satin lined. Big value; now, only. Children's Long Coats—Sizes 3 and blue, regular price. $5.00 and $ Your choice now only. The Plymouth any suggestiveness. It is a performance that the ladies and children may safely see and one they will much enjoy from its novelty and entertaining thrills. It is safe to predict that the Orpheum Show, with its numerous high class features, will meet with splendid reception at the hands of local theatre-goers. The service of Christ is of all others the most just, necessary, easy, profitable, honorable.-Sanderson. It is one thing to preach the crucifixion of Christ; it is another thing to preach "Christ crucified."-United Presbyterian. VED IN IT. Extra Special Sale Suits, Cloaks, Skirts & Furs To insure the immediate sale of every high-grade garment in our immense stock, the former selling prices have been greatly reduced. It is our endeavor at all times to place for your choosing only strictly stylish and reliable, serviceable goods at the lowest possible prices, along with The Plymouth's guarantee, which goes with every purchase you make. You'll have to hurry, though, and be quick to take advantage of these exceptional offerings. Dressing Sacques—Ladies' Eiderdown Sacques, blue, gray, red and pink, regular $1.50, $1.75 and $2.00. On sale now only. LINCOLN REVERED. F. L. M'GHEE, PAVS TRIBUTEO THE MEMORY OF LINCOLN. The Lincoln League Holds its Annual Ban- quet at the Nichelot Hotel and our Eloi- cant lawyer Tells of Lincoln as a com- meron in his Macleish Style. Our oratorical lawyer, F. L. McGhee, was the principal speaker at a banquet in Minneapolis given by the Lincoln League on Lincoln's birthday. His theme was "Lincoln the Commomer." as usual made quite a hit, and among other things said the following: J. Established 1882. The Plymouth Extra Special Suits, Cl Skirts To insure the immediate sale of our immense stock, the former selling duced. It is our endeavor at all time only strictly stylish and reliable, servi- sible prices, along with The Plymouth every purchase you make. You'll be quick to take advantage of these excec Goods Just A black and blue, made $15. $9.50 blue and gray; 34 2.00. $5.00 in black only; made $10 $5.00 $20 Coats, Skinner $9.50 to 6 years, tan, red 7.50. $3.00 Dressing Sack, gray, red and pink, $2.00. On sale n Eiderdown Lo Robes at just Long Coats—I tan and black, half- $20 and $25 values Ladies' Fleece 75c for the $1. 90c for the $1. $2.25 for the $1.50 for the $2.00 for the This is the best eva- made and well fit Thr Clothing House, Cor. 71 Only a man who was of the people, and not of the race, had out regard to race or color, the same rights he required of others for himself, such a man was indeed a compassor. JUSTIFIED. WINES BEER. TOM BARCLY CLOSED THE DISCUSSION. "I've had an offer of $3,000 for my book." "Heavens, you're no author." "I know it. I'm publishing your lere letters." Mail Orders Filled Same Day as Received. Special Sale Cloaks, & Furs every high-grade garment in prices have been greatly re- ses to place for your choosing receable goods at the lowest pos- tion's guarantee, which goes with have to hurry, though, and be optional offerings. As Advertised. Queries—Ladies' Eiderdown Sacques, blue, regular $1.50, $1.75 and now only..... Mangling' Half-Price Fine, all-wool kersays and cheviots, gray, lined back, storm collar, Now only..... Back Wrappers: $2.50 Wrappers. $5.00 Wrappers. $1.75 Wrappers. $2.00 Wrappers. $2.75 Wrappers. Offered at the price—attractive, well girling garments. Beth and Robert. CLOSED THE 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. Never venture out of your own sphere of thought. People will call you ignorant. Never criticize unless you know what you are talking about. People will snicker at you slyly. Miss Etta Gibson has left Minnesota and gone to the country to remain for several months. THE APPEAL'S new office is at 610 Northwestern Building. Please call and pay your subscription. Pride of Minnesota, K. of P. No. 5, meets first and third Thursday at 104 Hemepin avenue south. The Christian Endeavor meets every Sunday 6:30 p. m. at Bethesda Baptist church. You are most cordially Miss M. Jackson millner and modiste, ladies' taffiner, French cleaning and curling feathers's, specialy. No. 1409 South Fifth street. Dr. R. S. Brown has moved his office into the Century Building. No. 404 Fourth street south, rooms 405 and 406 phone 'phone, N. W., 3271-J-1 Main. Bethesda Baptist church, Eighth street, between Eleventh and Twelfth streets. Rev. M. W. Withers, pastor. Preaching 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. All are invited. St. James church, Minneapolis (Rev. D. E. Butler, pastor) has moved from 405 Sixth avenue south: to Eighth avenue, near Washington avenue south. Services as usual. Lincoln's birthday was very generally observed in this city—except, perhaps, of people who were most benefited by the supreme act of the martyrs' life. There have been many deaths among us the past year, but very few notices of the deaths have been published in the press, and in such notices many friends of the deceased would be made acquainted with the facts. The office of the APHEAL has been moved from room No. 610 Northwestern Building. The local staff now converse with the deceased, Jackson, secretary and treasurer; A. J. Ford, reporter. The office will be open to visitors from 10:00 to 12:00 a. m. from 3:00 to 5:00 p. m. All communications will receive due consideration. Mrs. C. T. Pointer contemplates leaving the "Flour City" in the near future to take up her abode in the idea of giving her a favored idea of giving her a favored idea of assisting by Mrs. W. R. Morris, at her elegant residence, No. 3417 Pleasant Ave. Monday night. The hostesses were assisted in receiving their guests Richardson, George Brady, Ralph Gray, Misses Mayne Weir and Bessie Farr. The color scheme carried out in the parlor was in the dining-room and the table decoration and Dainty refreshments were served and libitum in the dining-room. The costumes of the ladies were superb, and the function in every particular was were; Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Neen Cassius Harper, Geo. Lillard, G. W. Brady, C. R. Richardson, Dr. and Mrs. Brown; Medamesa Jennie Watson, M. Brown; Patricia J. F. Winston, W. Colter, annie Clark, J. D. Neen, Barnass, Chass, J. D. Neen, Elen Dutton, Jennie Kemp, Ralph Gray; Messina Edna Grey, Engenia Colter, Messina Ralph Grey, Roht Lee, Chass, Calloway, Harbur Kay, W. R. Morris of Minneapolis; Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Lyles, F. D. Parker, J. Q. Adams; Messina Merrick, Grey King, A. N. Howard, N. W. T. W. D. Howard, M. D. Underwood, V. J. Henley; Misses Minnie and Bessie Farr, Nellie Brown, Scottie Davis, Marge Armstrong, Marion French; Messina Farr, A. and W. French of St. Paul. CANDIDATES Subject to the action of the REPUBLICAN PRIMARIES to be held March 18, 1902. Robert C. Hine FOR Judge of Municipal Court. John W. Finehout Judge of Municipal Court. Robert H. Seng FOR Mayor of St. Paul. Harry Shepherd Alderman 4th Ward. Andrew R. Kiefer Mayor of St. Paul. Fenton G. Warner Mayor of St. Paul. Frank B. Doran Mayor of St. Paul. F. E. Baker Justice of the Peace. Arthur Caines CONSTABLE. H. R. Denny FOR ASSEMBLYMAN. Chas. S. Hoff Justice of the Peace. Great Special Sale of PIANOS Some that have been used. Other only shopworn. ALL UPRIGHTS. 1 Mahogany Ernest Gabler. .$225 many new. .$195 1 Mahogany Kimball. .$195 1 Chickering. .$175 1 Steilaway. .$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 MARTIN STREET JAMESNEY DIST. ST. PAUL, MIN. Time Is Money You save time and therefore money by using Twin City Telephones. Our thoroughly modern equipment enables us to give more prompt and satisfactory service than the Twin Cities have here-too often enjoyed. RATES: $2.50 per month for residence $4.00 per month for office. TWIN CITY TELEPHONE CO. Phoenix Building. CHICAGO. THE "WORLD'S APPEIRITY" VIEWED BY THE APPEAL MAN. Compilation of a Number of Happenings, Social and Otherwise, Among the Afro-Americans of the Second City of This Glorious Union. THE APPEAL is without question the best advertising medium through which to reach the Afro-Americans of Chicago. Mr. B. F. Moseley, the hustling Englewood attorney, is able to be up and about again after an illness of several weeks. Subscribers for THE APPEAL who wish to discontinue the paper must send written notice to the office, properly dated and signed. Miss Rosa E. Scott of 366 Twenty-seventh street, who has been confined to her home by illness for some time, is able to be up again. James A. Scott, attorney-at-law, can be found at THE APPEAL office during business hours. Prompt attention given all legal business entrusted to THE APPEAL has fixed advertising rates, and will not cut them in order to secure advertising. However, if you want to reach the people, advertise in THE APPEAL. A crusade against policy shops has been started in this city by the chief of police, many arrests of agents and writers have been made during the week. Seward French of the West Side is in evidence at Senator Mason's headquarters, assisting in the management of the latter's campaign for re-election to the U. S. Senate. Do you want to preach? Learn at home. Send two cent-stamp to Prof R. O. M. C. catalogue of Correspondence binder magazine Maga zine street, New Orleans, La. Miss M. Grainger, 2340 Dearborn street, has opened a news and stationery store at the above number. THE APPEAL can be found on sale each week at Miss Grainger's place. Hon. Jone. G. Jones of the three Illinois Legislature, returned from a three-day visit to Springfield on March 1. He reports the capital city as enjoying its usual share of prosperity. CHICAGOS AFRO-AMERICAN POPULATION. The rapid increase of the Afro-American population of Chicago has been a subject of considerable comment lately. The following from a Wash-ington correspondent of the Record-Herd of this city will doubtless prove interesting. CASH OR CREDIT The Negro population of the United States is migrating northward. From their homes amid the cotton blossoms and the magnolias they are seeking the northern cities. If the present moment allows the Negro will cease to be associated with the sunny South and Dixie land, Washington, the capital of the nation, according to the census of 1890, had the distinction of sheltering the largest Negro population of any city in the United States, although at that time it ranked fourteenth among all cities in size. The last census dethrones Washington in the matter of black inhabitants, Chicago having surpassed the nation's capital in the ratio of gain, having re-released the Negro population in the last decade that year, and of 4,749 more blacks than this city. Philadelphia, if it maintains its present ratio of gains, will show a heavier Negro population than Washington in 1920 and may be in 1910. New Orleans years had the largest Negro population in the United States, holding the record until 1890, when displaced by Washington. ATTENTION. The first number of the Reconstructive Review, "The Voice of the Carpet Bagger," has just been isamed. It is for sale by the AntLynching Museum of the Fiction avenue, Chicago. The author, who name is not yet made public, proposes to continue the work in a regular series. He is evidently familiar with the history of the Reconstruction and exposes the slanders ventured by the Ku Klux Klan, blacken the character and destroy the influence of the loyal men, white and black, who tried to maintain the cause of justice and equal rights in the South when they were nobody when the Ku Klux Klan gained power by deliberate and systematic murder will be to come in future issues. The high standard of civilization of which the South boasts is of which the horrible scenes where American citizens / without rulers, without proof, are shot or hung, / burned alive. NAME CARS The Wabash road car placed in service on its fast day last week between Chicago and St. Louis very handsome new observation library cars. Meals are served a la carte. Train leaves Chicago at 11:08 a. m. daily and arrives at 6:42 p. m. Ticket office, 97 Adams St. Chicago. CHANGE OF CHICAGO PASSENGER DE POT. Beginning December 29th, all passenger trains of the Nickel Plate Road will arrive at and depart from Grand Central Station, 5th Ave, and Harrison St. Chicago, instead of Van Buren St. Station, as formerly. AFRICA A NATIONAL AFRICAN AMERICAN NEWSPAPER GINTER GROCERY CO. 23 SIXTH STREET SOUTH, MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. WE ARE THE FIRST AND ONLY FIRM IN THIS COUNTRY THAT SELLS GOODS DIRECT TO CONSUMERS AT WHOLESA Corn Starch, 7 packages.....25c Baking Soda, 7 packages.....25c Tea Leaf, 7 packages.....40c Cacao Carolina Rice, 5 pounds.....3 3 pound packages imported Macaroni.....22c Shred Coconut, 3 pounds.....40c 1 quart bottle imported Olive Oil.....65c 1 quart bottle Olive Oil.....65c Cherry Stuffed Olives, plums.....25c Pint bottle Catsup, 3 bottles.....25c Quart bottle Chow Chow.....23c % Pint bottle Worcestershire Sauce.....17c % Pint bottle Worcestershire Sauce.....17c 5 pounds new Mixed Nuts.....69c 2 pound box Cream Candy Mixture, box.....38c 5 pound box Good Mixture, box.....45c Matches, 36 boxes, 200 per box.....35c Just received, can extra fancy Apples, Hushpuppies, per box, $150.....1.05 Hand picked Navy Beans, peck.....55c Baker's Chocolate, lb.....32c Baker's Cocoa, lb.....30c 3 cakes Sapollo.....23c SOAP—Fairbanks' Plymouth Rock. 100 bars.....$3.10 50 bars.....$1.55 100 bars.....$1.55 Santa Claus Soap, per box 100 bars.....$3.50 Santa Claus Soap, per box 50 bars.....$1.75 Fancy Creamery, 5-lb. jars ..... $1.25 Choice Creamery, 5-lb. jars ..... $1.15 Good Cooking Butter, 5-lb. jars ..... $8.50 10, 20, 32 and 60-lb. tubs, same as above prices. Fancy Full Cream Cheese, 2 lbs ..... $2.50 Good Cream Cheese, 2 lbs ..... $2.00 New Edam Cheese, each ..... $8.50 COFFEES. Our Mocha and Java brands famous throughout the United States. 5-lb. jars ..... $5.00 5-lb. canns..... $1.00 | 2½ lb. canns..... 50c Our No. 2 Blend— 7-lb. canns..... $1.00 3½ lb. canns..... 50c This coffee is a very fine quality and cannot be bought at retail for less than 20c to 25c lb. 8-lb. canns, good blend..... $1.00 We will send Free a generous sample of our Tea or Coffee to any one who will lask for it. We know they will sell from the sample. Pure Spices and Extracts. 14 oz. canns Black Pepper . . . 18c 14 oz. canns Cinnamon . . . 18c 14 oz. canns Ginger . . . 20c 14 oz. canns Allspice . . . 20c 14 oz. canns Cloves . . . 20c 14 oz. canns Mustard . . . 20c 14 oz. canns Cream Tarter . . . 38c 14 oz. canns Nutmeg . . . 38c pound can Price's Baking Powder . . . 38c pound can Royal Baking Powder . . . 38c lb. can Ginter's Pride Baking Powder . . 15c 5 lb. can Ginter's Pride Baking Powder . . 15c Our brand of Powder is warranted as good as Price's or Royal or money refunded. ½ pint bottle Vapillum . . . 25c ½ pint lemon . . . 20c SUGAR. Best Granulated, 100 pound bags. $5.10 All other goods not quoted equally as cheap Country Orders packed and delivered to Express press or money order. PRICES SUBJECT TO O ally as cheap as above p to Express or Freight OBJECT TO CHANGE. All other goods not quoted equally as cheap as above prices. A charge of 20 cents will be made for any delivery in the city. Counties may charge up to 10 cents Depot free of charge. Mail orders must be accompanied by check, express or money order. PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE. CASH OR CREDIT WE WANT NO MONEY! Get one of our Original Monitor Ranges or Heat-net monitors for it until you are satisfied. Monitor Ranges are the most economical in the market and guaranteed 15 years. Why do we make this liberal offer? Because in a period extending over 20 years the Monitor Range has been used by thousands of St. people and not a single company has been registered against it. We are liberal with our customers in cases of misfortune in family, loss of position, or other reverses, and extend liberal time to those who will take your old estate. your old st change for part payment on a new one. The amou pay down on a stove elsewhere you can include here of furniture, carpets or other necessary household g payment will answer on the whole purchase. St. Paul Housefurnishing 133-135 East Seventh Street CASH OR CREDIT change for part payment on a new one. The amount you will pay down on a stove elsewhere you can include on your bill of furniture, carpets or other necessary household goods—Same payment will answer on the whole purchase. e. The amount you will in include here on your bill ly household goods—Same phase. Furnishing Co., North Street. REDIT "GOOD ENOUGH FOR ANYBODY" "CHEAP ENOUGH FOR EVERYBODY" PRIVATE SMITH CIGAR KUHLES & STOCK, MAKERS, ST. PAUL, MINN. IT'S ONLY 5¢ Known the World Over. MISCELLANEOUS BUTTER. COFFEES. Pure Spices and Extracts. ```markdown ``` We handle only the choicest pickings, direct from the finest gardens. Many who could not, have the facility can now do so. Flinest sun dried— 2½ lbs | $1.00 | 1¼ lbs | .50c flinest garden | $2.00 | Floroma Oolong— 2½ lbs | $1.00 | 1¼ lbs | .50c flinest English Breakfast— 2½ lbs ..... $1.00 | 1¼ lbs ..... 50c 2 lbs. Fancy Pekee Ceylon ..$1.00 | 1 lb ..... 50c 12 lbs. cheets Basket Fireed Oolong or English Breakfast ..$3.90 Sugar Cured Hams 10%c Choice Bacon, lb 12c Armour's Gold Brand Bacon, lb 16c Fancy Shoulders, lb 7/1c Fancy Dried Beef, lb 14c 10lb- and 14lb Lard, lb 30c Pork, clear bean, lb 8/1c Boneless Cod, 3 1lb, pkgs 22c Herring, per box 20c 2-lb. canns Corn Beef, 3 canns 60c 2-lb. canns Roast Beef, 3 canns 60c 1-lb. canns Lunch Tongue, 35c 1-lb. canns Plum Pudding, 3 canns 30c 1-lb. canns Chicken Loaf, 6 canns 55c ½-lb. canns Chicken Loaf, 6 canns 80c ½-lb. canns Dattel Ham and Tongue, per dozen 45c Holland Herring, 10-lb. kegs 60c 98-pound bags ..... $1.80 45-pound bags ..... 90c Best Rye Flour, 25 pounds ..... 40c Best Corn Meal, 25 pounds ..... 40c Best Grisham Flour, 25 pounds ..... 40c Best New Buckwheat Flour, 25 pounds ..... 75c Best Whole Wheat Flour, 25 pounds ..... 65c Best Rolled Oats, 10 pounds ..... 25c Rolled Wheat, 10 lbs ..... 38c Split Peas, 10 pounds ..... 35c Pearl Barley, 10 pounds ..... 35c Pettjohn's Food, 2 packages ..... 25c Yokos, 2 packages ..... 23c Quaker Oats, 3 2lb. packages ..... 27c EGGS. 4-dozen boxes, strictly fresh ..... 80c 4-dozen Good Western ..... 75c heap as above prices. A charge of xo cent less or Freight Depots free of charge. MA NO CHANGE. amount you will be on your bill old goods—Same ING Co., street. HART & MURP RAMSEY CO. Afro-American SOCIA 378 Cedar St., St. OFFICER J. W. WOODFORK, Pre J. L. PHELPS, Su JOHN MORGAN F. D. McCracken, S. ANDY COMBS, Asso C. E. CHARLE WM. GIBBS, Chef. Tel. Main 178 374 A. S. W. R. MO Attorney a PRACTICE IN ALL C 517 Guaranty Loan BF Over. Kowson—Is your daughter clean? Yorkrode—Not yet, but th making threats—Baltimore MEATS AND FISH CRACKER LIST A good cigar is a smoke" Rudyard Kipling The YELLOW KING 5¢CIGAR Scott R. Walker FINE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS, 374 Minnesota St. Tel. 1818 J12 ST. PAUL, MINN. TEAS FLOUR EGGS WHOLESALE PRICES **Syrups. Molasses. Jellies and Jams** 5 gallon kgs Maple Syrup, per kg. $2.50 4 gallon kgs Crystal drip Syrup. $1.25 4 gallon kgs No. 1 N. O. Molasses. $1.25 1 gallon cans Crystal Drip Syrup. $35 1 gallon cans No. 1 N. O. Molasses. $40 1 gallon cans No. 1 N. O. Molasses. $40 1 quart bottles pure Maple Syrup. $23 1 quart bottles Choice Syrup. $23 15-bl. pails Jelly. $35 1-pails Jelly. $14 5-bl. pails Apples, very fine. $4 10-bl. pails Apple Butter. $50 10-bl. pails Pear Butter. $50 Very finest unpared Evap. Peaches, 5 lbs. .50c Very finest unpared Evap. Pears, 5 lbs. .50c Very finest unpared Evap. Apricots, 5 lbs. .45c Very finest Boxed Apples, 1 lbs. .50c Prunes, sizes 80, 90 .10 lbs. .50c Prunes, sizes 100, 110 .10 lbs. .35c Prunes, sizes 120, 130 .10 lbs. .35c Prunes, 25 lbs, boxes, very large per box. $1.75c Seedless Raisins, 4-crown, new, 3 lb, pks.25c Extra large California Flicks, 3 lb, pks. 30c Clover Muscatel Raisins, 10 lbs. .70c Clover Muscatel Raisins, 10 lbs. .70c Cake Curants, 3 lb, pks.25c Port Rican, 100 in a box.....$3.75 Cu-Be-Tas, 25 in a box.....85c Quaker Maid, 50 in a box.....$1.50 Wild Rose, 50 in a box.....95c CANNED GOODS. Finest California Peaches, heavy syrup, 3-bcans, per dozen.....$1.90 Choice California Peaches, heavy syrup, 3-bcans, per dozen.....$1.65 Good Table Peaches, per dozen.....$1.40 California Egg Plums, heavy syrup, doz. $1.65 California Green Gages, heavy syrup, doz. $1.65 Good Cans, per dozen.....$1.25 Preserved Strawberries, cany fins, fine Preserved Blackberries, 3-bcans, capy DRIED FRUITS. CIGARS. CANNED GOODS THE MASTER THE Allright Shoe For Men and Women $3.50 Allright IN STYLE IN FIT IN PACE IN NAME IN QUALITY For Sale By TREADWELL SHOE CO. 129-131 E. Seventh St. ST. PAUL MINN KINKY HAIR. Can easily be made straight, pliable and beautiful by using the Original Ozonized Ox Marrow (copyrighted). Sold over forty years. Never fails. Warranted hardy. Beware of imitations. Give it a trial. Send us 50 mails to Ozonized Ox Marrow Express, address Ozonized Ox Marrow Company, 76 Wabash avenue, Chicago, Illinois. Canada's Principal Production. Canada has never liked the image in which Kipling presented her as "Our Lady of the Snow," thinking that it might be held to cast reproach on her immigration. Wilkes's female admirer, defended from the reproach of squinting, said that he did not squint more than a gentleman and a man of honor ought to squint, and Canadians in general stand up for their territory as not a bit more wintry than it ought to be. recently told the London Institute about it, but failed to mention the principal production of the country is emigrants to the United States, found on arrival to be particularly intelligent and useful.—New York Tribune. From an Author's Journal Following is an extract from the journal of an author who has not been fortunate enough to write a successful novel: "Rose at 5 and thought out plot for a short story. At 8 I rang the breakfast bell, moved the chairs around the table and rattled the knives to fool the neighbors. Wrote two poems on the world as a great place to fast in; also a short article to prove that appetite is a mere delusion. I then went to the postoffice to hear the news, when a wreck on the road and my check on a late manuscript wouldn't arrive in a week. Christmas. The clerk observing that it was a 'beautiful day,' I went out and dined sumptuously on the climate."—New York Telegram. IN OLD BILBAO. Most Enterprising Spaniels Except the Catalans. Among other places along the Spanish coast the queen regent of Spain visited recently on board the royal yacht was Bilbao. This very important town is the capital of Biscay, one of the four sister provinces. It is beautifully situated along the banks of the river Nervion and surrounded by high and partly wooded hills. The old town is very uninteresting, with its ugly houses, many stories high, and badly paved streets. There are one or two fine churches, and the quaint, much-venerated shrine of Begonya, perched high up on one of the hills. The Bilbamous would never forgive Maria Christina if she did not take your youthful son to hear mass in that miraculous "mastilica." The new suburb of Bilbao is a very modern and can vie with any other European capital, with its fine buildings and well laid out parks. STATE OF MINNESOTA COUNTY OF RAMSEY, ss. Probate Court In the Matter of the Estate of Margaret Lynch, Decreased. On reading and lining the petition of Little Lyle, representing that Margaret Lynch has sated safely intestate, a resident of the county and State of Minnesota, leaving good chatties and estate within this County, be estate to herself granted. It is ordered. That said petition be heard at the Court House, in the City of St. Paul, in said Court, on Monday, the 17th day of January, in the moon, and that notice of such hearing be given to all persons interested, by publication in the newspaper, in the City of St. Paul for three successive weeks prior to said hearing. In the Appell, a legal newspaper printed and published in said County. Dated at St. Paul, this 21st day of Januar- ary, 1902. By the Court. E. W. BAZILLE. Judge of Probate. (L. S.) F. L. McGhee. Atty. for Pettitioner. Burlington Route All the comforts and conveniences of a good club or your home are found in LIBRARY BUFFET SMOKING CARS in daily use on Bur- lington limited trains between the Twin Cities and Chicago. Supplied with card tables, easy chairs and the latest periodicals. ASK YOUR HOME AGENT FOR TICKETS VIA THE BURLINGTON STATE STERM LAUNDRY 222 W. 70th St. Phone 1609 SMIRTS 10 DOLLARS and CUFFS DR. HURD 91 E. Seventh St. Specialty — Pain- ness extracting, strown and bridge work. SOCIETY DIRECTORY. ST. PAUL MOST WORSHIPFUL GRAND LODGE OF— MINNESOLA, A. F. AND A. M. JOHN N. NAIL, Grand Master. 623 Boston Blk., Minneapolis, Mins. Wm. R. Monna, Grand Secretary. 617 Guaranty Blvd., Minneapolis, Mn. PIONEER LODGE NO. 1, A. F. AND A. M., meets first and third Mondays of each month at Masonic Hall, No. 318 Wabasha street, at 500 F. M., H. G. Johnson, W. M.; W. A. Hillyard, Sec. 124 Atwater St. PERFECT ASHLIAR LODGE NO. 2, F. F. and A. F., meets second and fourth Tuesdays at Masonic Hall, No. 318 Wabasha street, at 500 F. M., H. G. Johnson, W. M.; W. A. Hillyard, Sec. 124 Atwater St. PAST GRAND MASTERS COUNCIL No. 123. A. F. and A. M. meets the second building, Minneapolis. All visiting P. G. M. in good standing cordially invited to attend. W. R. Morris. W| G. M. Thomas. W. S. No. 422. St. Paul. St. No. 421. ST. PHILIP'S EHPCISOPAL MISSION-corner Aurora avenue and Mackinab street. Sunday services: Early celebration of Hof Holly Eucharist first and third Sunday, 11:00 a.m. m. Matins, second and fourth Sunday. Holy Eucharist first and third Sunday, 12:30 a.m. Brotherhood of St. Joseph m. Vespers, 7:30 p.m. Week services: n-cnesdays, confirmation class, 8:00 p.m. m. Vespers, 9:00 p.m. Holy Eucharist, 9 a.m. REV. A. C. V. CARTER, Rector, 570 central Avenue MINNEAPOLIS J. K. H. , A. AND LOPON, N. moe. 6212 fts and Tuesday in each month at Mascall Hall 291 m street between Hennephe and Nicollet Awl Masons in good stock at Mascall Hall 291 J. G. GNATWERK, W. K. HARVY BURKE, See Medical block. AMBROOK LONDON A. P. and A. W. in 10. 14. 16. AMBROOK LONDON A. P. and A. W. in 10. 14. 16. MASON Hall Second street between Towne MASON Hall Second street between Towne B. Mason in good shape. WELCOME WELCOME. Q. U. O. O. C. A. The Pearson publishing Co. 43-45 E.19th St., NEW YORK 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE PATENTS TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS & C. Ayzen seeks a sales associate our opinion free from fees quickly ascertain our opinion free from communities tions strictly confined to the booklet and not sent free. Great agency for securing patent. Yasen Isaac, Chang M. and Co. recorder special notices, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsonly illustrated weekly. Large cost of any scientific journal. Terms: $3 a month. Mail to: MUNN & Co. 3816 Broadway, New York — fe lt SHECAGO. ‘VHE“WORLD'SIFAIR CITY” ViEW- ED BY ‘THE APPEAL MAN. Boclal and Otherwise, Among the Afro- Americans of the Second City of This @torious Caton. ‘Messrs, A. A. Wells and Chas, Jor dan are spending the winter at Thom asville, Ga. THE APPEAL is without question the best advertising medium *hrough which to reach the Afro-Americans of Chicago. Subscribers for THE APPEAL who wish to discontine the paper must send writtea notles to the office, prop: erly dated and signed. James A. Scott, sttorney-atJaw, can te fouud at THE APPEAL office dur- yng business hours, Prompt attention kiven all legal business entrusted to Mr. George Kelley, 9531 Armour av- enue, had the misfortune to fall from a street car Monday and is now con- fined to his home by reason of the in- Jury. Mrs. Carrle “H. Moseley and son, Master Burton, will soon leave for Jackson, Miss., where they will spend ‘the remainder of the winter in search. of health, Mrs. Thompson, 157 EB. 18th street, nas the sympathy’ of’a host of friends caused by the sad and untimely death of Little Jessie, who was buried on jast Sunday. Mrs. 0, N, Linchcome, 5018 Armour avenue, formerly of Louisville, Ky., ‘will leave in the course of next’ week for Portland, Ore., which she will make her future home.” Miss Fannie Nelson, who has been attending school at ' Cincinnati for some time, has returned to her home, 3652 Wabash avenue, to the delight of hier many friends. Mr. Stephen T. Brooks, of Brooklyn, N.Y. who spent a few days in the clty Jast ‘week, was entertained at dinner Friday evening by Mr. and Mrs, Ju: tins N. Avendorph. ‘THE APPEAL has xed advertising rates, and will not cut them in order to secure advertising. However, if you want to reach the people, adver Use in THE APPEAL. ‘The Rt. Rev. Wim. B. Derrick, pre- siding Bishop of the A. M. 5. church ‘of New York, one of the ablest divines of the country, will speak at Quinn Chapel on Sunday morning. Do you want to preach? Learn at home. Send two-cent stamp to Prot. R. B. Hewitt for catalogue of Corre. spondence Bible School, 2908 Maga- tine street, New Orleans, La. ‘Miss -M. Grainger, 2940 Dearborn street, has opened a news and station- ery store at the above number. THE APPEAL can be found on sale each week at Miss Grainger's place. It you wish a loan on household fur- niture, horse, wagon, diamonds, jew- elry or veal estate and are holding a salaried position, call on John Q. Grant & Co, Room 311, No 36 South Clark street. Mrs. J. Silone. Yates; of Kansas City, president of the Federation of Colored Women’s Clubs, will spend a few days In Chicago the guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Roberts, 2405 Dear horn street. Parties having mone¥ to invest’ on chattels, diamonds, ete., call on John Q. Grant & Co., Suite 311, No. 36 South Clark street. “They will’ give two per cent per month on all moneys left with them to be Joaned on above se eurities. ‘The Wayman A. M. E, church on the North Side, under the leadership of its excellent pastor, Rev. I. N.. Dan- jets, is conducting a’most successful revival. Many young men and women are professing religion, May the good work continue. Postmaster F. E, Coyne addressed ‘the members of the South End Sunday School Club yesterday afternoon in St. Mark's Methodist Church, 47th and State streets, on the theme, “Abraham Lincoln,” Stuart D. Fowler, president of the club, made a short address. ‘The Men’s Sunday Ciub of Quinn Chapel, will on Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock, discuss the “Primary Wrong of Private Ownership of Land.” This club is making a splendid record for itself in bringing forward and discuss- ing live and progressive subjects. Mrs, Sallie Butler, one of Chicago's oldest’ Afro-American residents, dled at the Old Folks’ Home last Stinday. She was 2 member of Olivet Baptist ehureh and the United Sisters Benev- lent Society. A large number of her Sriends were present at her funeral, ‘The Men's Sunday Club of Quinn Chapel” will banquet a number of guests at the Sherman House on ‘Thursday evening, 20th inst. Among the speakers will be the Hon. Law: rence ¥, Sherman, Judge Hanecy, Clarence ‘Darrow, B. F. Moseley, E. H. Wright, States Attorney Deneen and Dr. C. B, Bentley. ‘The officers and members of Shiioh | Baptist church of Englewood, under the pastorate of Rev. Dr. D. H. Harris, were the recipients of a rich and rare. treat Tuesday evening, the occasion being the celebration of Lincoln's, Birthday. The speakers were Hon. Jno. F. Patty, Dr. Harris, 8. J, Man: ning and B. F. Moseley. Mr, Eugene Drew, of Alton, IIL, spent several days in Chicago. last week in the interest of the “fight fund,” which the Afro-Americans of Alton are rais- ing to continue the fight against sep- arate schools in that part of the state. Through the offorts of Hon, Jno, @, Jones, Dr. G. C. Hall, Rev. J. F. Thom: as and others Mr. Drew met with fair suecess. ‘Ex-Commisstoner E. H. Wright, at torney for Mrs. M. E. Duncan, whose husband, Ell B. Duncan, was killed in the wreck on the G, & N. W. R. BR. X——-CASH OR CREDIT——) Git Sos of ox Organ usta get Oat Be Path oa cae ai saul Jou sre ca ee ates anes Ee fuel, "quick bakers and | E Taser et a Te ee, wn |B Mberai offer? Because in |G Wl & period extending over 20 | a years the Monitor Range ieee aan ee 0} sands of St. Paul people |€ | trata Shee omtt |S po uae el Sa rs cat se ceeeaen le Sear cee ee = fanily, Joss of ponition, or n a ne ude at nas, |B < y tn need. Wo will take [© é ae be change for pars parma on unum one atts pay eee nt perenne yon. BPharele® tgs crea sone gates 8 fone Sl Payment will answer on the whole purchase. St. Paul ishin i. Paul Housefurnishing Co., 133-135 East Seventh Street. X ———CASH OR CREDIT——_—) —— CASH OR CREDIT——— og ye ve PRIVATE - og ad AS re on, ae. SMITH we (Cli, CIGAR wusesnc, Aas ‘ST. PAUL, MINN, ads . lee ence. Sen hk Rs 5° Be fc : “S i ee _ Known the World Over. - ey z 23 SIXTH STREET SOUTH, MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. Ra nin WE ARE THE FIRST AND ONLY FIRM IN THIS COUN- © TRY THAT SELLS GOODS DIRECT TO CONSUMERS AT ‘MISCELLANEOUS. ‘TEAS. i Syrups, Molasses, Jelltes and Jams Gorn Starch, 7 packages.........0+5¢0.+4-256 We handle only the choicest plekings, direct b 5 cation kegs Ma ve Baking Soda, 7 packages ..101.001.01..1:20e | from the finest gardens. Many who could not | § Sallon Keg Graal SURO Tapioca, 10 pounds... - seis: ise | Bota the best_quallty can ‘now doo, 4 gallon kegs No. 1 N. 0, Molassea:..0.$135 Ghoiee Caroline Wicé, § pounds. 21.1.1. [gps | Finest sun dried— dean ari Goat Doe ea eae 8 pound packages Imported Macaronl......226 [| 2/5 Ibe... +;-----91.00 | 1% Ibs.....-...-.506 | 1 Sation cans NO. LN. O- Moloseeae ae Shred Cocanut, J pornds......-----.-.+--40e | Rinest Garden Slower Formosa Oolong 1 gallon cans choice Maple Syrup. ...211.68e 1 quart bottle imported Olive Ofl..........€5e 2% tbs......-.. $100 | 1% Ibs...........806 A quart bottles pure Maple Syrup........28¢ A quart bottle Queen Ollves.....2000101)!136e | Binest Engitsh Breakfast — 2 square button’ Choles Between Cherry Stuffed Oltves, pints. ..............25¢ 2% Ibe..........$100 | 1% Ibs...........60e 61D. pails Jelly........eeeeesoscscceee SBC Pint bottle Catsup, 2 votsles.............:256 | 2 tbs, Fancy Pekoo Ceylon. $1.00 | 1 Ib..--60¢. | Bin “paile Telly oe Quart bottle Chow Chow... s...c.s..cs01 288 | 22408, cheste Basket. Fired, Oolong. or Sih, pails Proserves, very find. /20.000002-808 % Pint bottle Worcestershire, Sauce...-.- 172 Fee arate cee geeetersnety AOS) A61N pale Apple Butter’ =. ¢sss 70. oo F608 © pkgs Yeast Foam. -...-...2.-2....021<186 RUE Co sem des 201d. pails Pear Butter 000.000.0012 [80e. § outs now Mixed tg 00000000 ete Shines 2 pound box Cream Candy’ Mixture, box. 286 $ E : pound box Good Mixture, box... -.-48© Y sucar Corea mee a ‘DRIED FRUITS Matches, 86 boxes, 200 por box...1-....4.-38 | Choice Tincom, Ieee eae | Very finest unpared’ Evap. Peactice, § Iba..500 Just received. a car extra fancy’ Apples, ‘Armour's Gold Brand ‘Bacon, ib1.20.0020c46e) | Vere finest unpared iavap: Pears, 6 tbs. 17.800 Bushel boxes, per box, $1.80 to.....1---$185 9 Armour Gold Brand SLIEIEEGHE | very nest unpared Beap. Apricots, 6 ibs:-4se Hand picked Navy Beans, peck...........58¢ Fancy Dried boef, 1b.0..222,.[01II2 “fe Very finest Evap. Apples, 6 Ibs,...........506 Baker's Chocolate, Ib....--..-c+0ie1c10+-828 YP i0dbs pall Larder nee See fp BPUNes, alge, 800900 oO. IBS. 22122 le0e Baker's Cocoa, 1... 000000 IIIT 806 | Bone law bea ios S LEI TeSeee PP rues, eleee 300096. 77 ao tbe! 2222788 BS eakes Sapolio....000.0/0 III 2ae Fee a ee eee Prunes, sizes, 80,°10..000730 Toe. e22.200/1.80e sear ied ca ah ee cic | Pree Be BO Ae SOAP--Fairbanks’ Plymouth Rock. | Hering. yor’ box... co2200c0Lc1.c cane Banos, 461B, bakes, very large, per bes. $175 100 DANE veeeeseeeeeseesceeseesssevens $310 | 5yp: Cons Rom Beet, J cans. +-.--+++..-+--606 | otra iarge California Figer9 Gib. phen aoe WO bere. siccascvsycccgsessceaveoeas sees wif Ste et sass: Loose Muscatel Raising, 10 Ibs.....++s...70e Oo hare, fae | Lib. cans Lunch ‘Tonge, 9 cana (21.2. 1<ase | Leose Muscatel: Rats 70 Santa Claus Soap, per box 100 bars......g260 | 31%, cans Plum Pudding, @ cans.........-.300 | Co Moccants, @ Lib. pkgs 222.2 ae Santa Claus Soap, por box 60 bara..:..._gu7s | fp cane Veal Loat, 6 cans. =. ....0.2-.556 BUTTER, Yb. cans Deviled Ham and Tongue, CIGLES. - ,| Fancy Creamery, 6-lb. jars..........+...$125 POL“ MOZEM. 65 oes es es eee eee ee ees ene ABS Porto Ricans, 100 in @ box...........+.-.$3.75 Good Cooking Butter, Gib. jars.e.0..2 J... 85e : juaker Maid, 60 in a box.sesssscssesss8480 30, 20, 82 and Gob. tubs, same ae above prices, CRACKER List, ik ae th nak Lanne ahha LED Fancy Full Cream Cheese, 2 Ibs...........256 | Sodas 18 to 20 Ibs. per BOX. ....+ss+ee...7e 1D Good Cream Cheese, 2 Ths........24..7.1+.20 | Frosted Creams, 12'to 1b Ib, boxes.._-ajze bY, CANNED Goons, New tain hess, Sais crsecotetere S| Ormare, SF te elie tet lei iste I | prude clits hater torre ayes COFFEES. Sree elas a eer BO oases 70a | I cana, par Mdaene eee eee 880 Our Mocha and Java brands famous through | Pited Viewns, 18 and 19 2. boxes.."-bigo 1 | cytyh, AME DOE Menem out the United States. Cooklon eb ea arenas ee eseosees Sot IS aah canny per Goren: fence cece ALES Bab, cans... $1.00 | 246 tb, cans......,50¢ | Cookies. 16 and 27 Ib. boxes ..---.-.2-.7e 1 4 cod ‘table’ Fonchew, por desea. 220..0. Sto ‘Our No. 3 Blena— P'Sib package K Be Sodas: 27222202.°%20 | Calltomnia ‘egg Plums, heavy syrap, doz. $108 TID: CADE esevversessesesseseevesseeeanH1.00 | 2 SUB pacliage A BO Sodas.....----:-2..286 | California Green Gages, ueavy aylup, GOL STSs Sop Abe cane: oes veens a ewenei-n= 800 | 3 Cartoons “Grahamne eee. | Good Pears, 2b, cans, per dozen...... $125 ‘Tals eoftes is & vary ne quality and cannot | j Cartoons .Gramame.----ee:.e+s2+++.-"-250 | Drenorved Strawberies, bib, cuas,ver) fiacsLeB Bayete tel ff ess than te to 26618; | cartoon Punt Oraer eraccrs "cage | Pawerved Mickborie, 2 cata, very Sb, cams, good Diend...s-..cue.-.0-..$1.00- | $° v1 eerie fine, per dozens ss.eseceenscoen ses - $130 We will send Free a generous sample of our J Udeeda Biscuit, per dozen packages....:..85¢ ‘Silced Pineapples, 2-Ib. cans, very fine, doz.$1.70 Tea or Coffee to any one who wil lask for it ai Grated . Pineappies.2‘b. cana,very fine, 07.51.90 ‘We know they will sell from the sample. cates UR. és Yory Fine Corn, 2b. cans, per oc . Sunlight Patent, made from the finest min- | Telephone Peas, per doze’ v-sserccesee Pure Spices and Extracts, nesota wheat: and guaranteed as good as any. Good Peas. 2Ib. can, per doz.s.visssc- 780" 44 of. cans Black Pepper.......+-,.ce+esvet8e | om the market: Fine Golden Wax Beane, 21b, cans, doz..$1.05 44 ‘oz. cans Cinnamon.....ccsclevccseses2ae | S8POUNE DAES ....seseesesesesessese+s-$400 | Good String Beans, 2ibe-cans, per don. ye 14 oz cans Ginger..../200020IINI oe | aS pound pags aoe | Sgoash, lb, cane, per dors, esses 206s ¥4 oe, cans Allapiee: 2202/0 ,ITIIIIIZae | Best Rye ‘Flour, 35° pounds. S00 Moe ] Pumpking, por done oe III eee ¥4 on, cans Cloves. 200000 TH III Zae | Best Corm steal, 25 pounde,.2212210012112%40e | Batra Cold Packed ‘Teiaaioss, per doa../$420 14 ox, cans Mustard. 2102020001 IIIIIIIIU20e | Best Granam Flour, 25 pounds, 12011111 a3e_] Alaska Salmon, red, per dors seo1. $138 44 oz, ans Croam Tarters..0.10I0IIIIIgBe | Best New Buckwheat Flour, 26 pounds. ...7se" | Mallard Brand ‘Columbia River’ ‘Salmon, M4 on, cans Nutmege ss 20000 00UIITIIIaBe | Best Whole Wheat Flour, 25 pounds......65e | red, extra Bue, per dozen. esses enn. .$1.50 1 pound can Price's Baking Powder.......38¢ | Best Rolled Oats, 10 pounds..............25¢ | Mallard Brand Steak Salmon, red, per doz$1.75 1 pound can, Royal Baking Powder....1,..38¢ | Rolled Wheat, 10 Ibs.........c.lcsc1001.38e | Mustard Sardines, large boxes, per dor 800 1 Ib, can Oliter’s Pride Baking Powder. .18e | Split Peas, 10 pounds..2102202.0020102112/38e | Good American Sardince, per Goes. /. 806 5 Ib. can Ginter’s Pride Baking Powder. .c8e | Pearl Barley, 10 poundas2.2220202I0110/g86 | xtra fancy Imported Surdines: per dot. .$178 Our brand of Powder is waranted as good as | Pettijohn's Food, 2 packaged.....1.......28e | Good Imported Sardines, per doven.-. 1. $138 sg. eae et Powder Je. arate Yokos, 2 packages (.....0c-..cssesc0..2.28¢ | Best Imported Mushrooms, per dozen....$2.00/ 4% pint bottle Vanilla..---ccsnrescsee.s-+.250 | Quaker Oats, 3 21b.’ packages..-.........276 | Best Imported French Peas, per dozen. $1.60, % dint bottle Lemon. 12020100 L0IITIIIT abe Best 1b. can Lobsters, per dozen....~...$850 EaGs. Galion Apples, per dozen...........0++.$3.55 SUGAR. fozen boxes, strictly freah...........-.80¢ | Gallon Tomatoes, per dozen... 27.11.1888 Best Granulated, 100 pound bags........$5.10 | ‘dozen Good "Western.......2.0ccissssss.78¢ | No leas than half dozen caus of & iad sola, {il etter pods not quoted auatly as cheap as above, prices. A charge of zo cente will be made for any delivery in the city. Country Orders packed and delivered to Express or, Prcight Depota free of charge. Mail ordere. must be accompanied by check, e2- press or money order. PRICES SUBJECT 10 CHANGE, Oy (CASH OR CREDIT——— X i "A ee OS Tt: ot 7 Pippa 71 ‘A good cigar Wie | tee ones i oN othe The gard Nolte \ 1. SE ales | SARS ) wa YELLOW || “sci e: ae KING | gq . yes Pat ae 5¢CIGAR| 7 aw is a good cigar. The Las ] thateee be eo eae are 4 short of the reality, (A= ‘Smoke the cigar. |i | Hy At all dealers. . AA E {HART 8 MURPHY,MAKERS. [Vg N y i ‘RAMSEY COUNTY Afro-American Club. SOCIAL 378 Cedar St., St. Paul, Minn. OFFICERS $.10, Wooorone Fre Dts Pum, Supe Sen Novena Aint Spe .D. MeGuscean See oe case nee os C. E, Cuarruston, Treas. vu cask that 4-00 em So0tt R. Walker FINE WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS, 374 Minnesota St. x recane a 82, PAUL ONS. WR MORRIS > Attorney at Baw 17 oe Ghee orem | THE a Allright Sos For Men and Women $3.50 Allright. ic ae | eee TREADWELL SHOE CO, eneaue Tt nen eo | F eee 3.4,nimemrint Wines, Liquors and Cigars, 40 East 3rd Street, Fel. 1949-J1, = ST. PAUL. | | a he tole omer LAL LUNPHER 6 00. Sexe find Interesting address on “Abraham Lincoln.” Miss Gertrude Harrison and Mr. W. W. Doyle sang and elicited many/words of commendation, Mise Lizzio Williams favored those present with an instrumental solo. Armant’s Forohestra furnished muste for the oc- ‘easion, ‘The informal soiree given’ by the Appomattox Club on Tuesday evening at Oakland Mustc Hall was.a splendid success. In @ blaze of beauty the ‘grand march was on at 10 o'clock— Popular club members and may beau tiful ladies formed the grand. proces. sion, and thus was inauagurated the first’ public entertainment of the Ap. Pomatox. Society was brilliantly rep- resented and all present passed an en- Joyable evening. An informal Tunch was served at the club rooms on Wa Dash avenue after the exercises had ended at the Music Hall. ‘Mrs. Herbert Johnson, of. 6518 Ev. ans Ave., entertained in honor of Mrs. Fred Burnett of Hartman, Mich., last Wednesday afternoon, The ladies played whist, which was the feature from 2 to 5 o'clock, when refreshments were served. Little Juanita enter tained the guests by her graceful im personation of “King Dodo” and Wit Hams and Walker. Those present were: Mesdames Fred Burnett, Ju MusoN. Avendorph, Joseph B. Crum, Jack Turnley, J. Haney, B. F. Mosely, L. B, Hubble, B. H. Wright, J. G. Jack son, Smith and the, Misses Eesie An nold, Shreve, Hadith Burney and John ‘A SYMPOSIUM ON LIARS. Lior wp piiideow dig pomp oye Pier paid is worth reading, even if it falls to do the subject. complete justice: ‘The lar whom. the editor hates worst of all is the man” who, when dunned for a year's subscription, says he only received two or three copies during the year, and refuses to pay.— Clarksville Graphic. Next to, if not above this one, the ‘editor hates a lar who takes the ‘pa per seven or elght years, and when finally tornered for settiement, "says he never ordered the paper at’ all Pike County Post. But the worst liar of the whole out- fit is the man who takes the paper Sev- eral years, then moves. away. ‘without payiig oF saying anything about i, and yet says he is an honest. man~ Elsbury Advance, Brethren, you all fall short of the truth, ‘The biggest. lar in the lot Is the editor who publishes the obituary of these aforesaid Hlars and intimate that they have gone to heaven.— Plymouth Independent. ‘oz0N0 Don't ‘neglect your hair; beauty i never complete without a thick luxu- lant growth of soft glossy hair, which in truth is woman's. crowning. glory. ‘The faithful use of Ozono-never fails t produce hain of this nature, for” i destroys the deadly germs that feed up: fon the off of thelt roots, kills dan- ruff, cures scalp diveate and promotes A new growth to replace the dead, brit We hair. "Thos, J. Davis, agent in the Northwest for the Boston’ Chemical Co, ‘will make-a house to house solicit, sell ing both the Ozono and skin rede, Which ts unsurpassed. Minneapolis, -Minn., No. 2021 Clinton aveune Removes, 2x Probate Court. > In, the, Matter of the Estate of Margure ‘Lyn, Deceased. On reading aud ale the petition of La He Eyneb. representing "that Margate suc ae ata ded Magestate, a resident aid Tobabieant of the County of Ranse aun State ‘at Stinnesota. teaving goods hattels fn estate "within thls County and prasing ‘that administeation of ‘her tate be to Rervelt granted: Te be otderedy iat sald petition be heard ae Special tera of thts Court to be hel tthe Covet ows iy the Gly oft Pl iy said Cantyvon Monday, te 413 of Febraary. 103, nf 10 o'clock In the fore yom an nat ote of atch earn fog tte oradeat Teast ‘once ta euch weet fer ths, sivcenlne weeks ior to al diay “of ucaringy io the Appeste 8° jee Rewspaper printed and pabileted in ‘sad Sonus {Dated at St. Paul, thls 21st day of Jann ang, Toe" By the Court, dehy By, Baan, ED) sreonce, ve ae ‘Atty, for Petitioner, ca rote ° All the comforts and con- yeniences of a good club or your home are found in Lisrary Burret Smoxine Cars in daily use on Bur- lington limited trains between the Twin Cities and Chicago. Supplied with! card. tables, easy chairs and the latest periodicals.’ . : _ . ‘Ask oun nome Acrnt Pon TCRESO UTS ERE BURLINGTDNes eens eo E- STEAM —~<od FOPAunonr S| OV 22 W.ZW-ST “Phone i609. 4 ) SHIRTS 10f | Ee Guiags on Grr! E SS —— DR.HURD A _9NE. Seventh St. ae Specialty — Paio- ie am i 35 ed Lec Jeroa aad Daag: ODL an prom aud Did gh. OAD Tests SUEIETY DIREETUR:. a 6. PAUL. i y Vsle¥. Raa | adh Pe i i oe fie iy rah ee most WousHi?70z GRAND LoDax ee MISNESOA, ALF an@ ALM. owe N. Nest, rend Mast. 21 orion Bik Mioneapls, Mine ‘Wa. Mornin. Grand Secrecy sur acnnsy Dds Moeegola sn. PIONEER LODGE NO, 4 A, E. AND A ‘M., meets first and third Mondays of each Gonth at Masonte all. No. 31g. Wabaabs Bae aE Ss°R aS, Johmaoo we BE. a isa sees a Rtwater Se PERFECT ASHLAR LODGE NO. 40, 4 pee aot ats Mabe aan tet mueSerat'S00 BMC HER Dorant, We Be sas aieewoaa wee, io aastia Se * fasr “GMAND MASTER'S "COUNCIL SOMME, SEEN Dua Sate nets the see Se Fra Incgtch att a eae eee Fee oa atuning” cordially ited fo attend. °W. "Ke Moria, WI Ga Mt Petts Bisuman tens, No, Se RE trent Spa Ubp FEL Lowe MARS LODGE. NO. 2202, MEETS SEC. oni ant foorth Wednesday ia each month 208 fiance nha he thied Weanesaay tor fehetueion ae "Ball vatlows” Sate Se E Benth Sher, OF we Porter, NG. Pho RUMickinais B, &, Ss! StNafhony ave HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH, XO, S38, Gt re HO eet ata ana tied Monany Ghat hondhPr ‘sites; necond Hon thy"tor fisttueton, gt O80 Bellows ial BF Latent Ae eae Maen Bares AER Se iad Se Sehton, Wee Bi. Bie ice ato RP. JAMES’ A. At. B._CHURCH, cor. ee pee eee Rectiag, Sb0 pm: “Bastar vishee be Moe ay and Toeediy; at home Wedeoday #00 Sra nie peek Bon, Hanaege Pouie sete 2 Bick “barrisn CHURCH, cor. s2ht soa Geant Slay Services beessh: feat it aah and 6p me Soatay teboal ae Hid cock, sWeaneadey ‘ey Be Seady sunday school lesson Boveraie Psu “SR, PHILIPS EPISCOPAL MiGSIOw. sean Ate sep ve Rast ee Buchaviet, 7290 a, m. High. celebration Holy Wochacigt ‘arst and” wird Sundase, BO0 ae Sladue setond “and fone Bonaays, Hoo asm | Sanday schvon, 12 D. m. "Brotherhood of St. Andrew, 6:30 p. fe," verpers fia pe mt Weck pervtec: Wemmendaya coonmmatios cites 880°p a. Belderg, ereping pager 0 pie Sect See al Beck eters a ay. AM Cantey Mectos, 995 Central Gveive: -_ MINNEAPOLIG ZEB, 002 lagen, Re mevta te ot we nd Taceday’ in exch month at Masenic Ball Soe Eis erpen een hue Ment et si tae te a Ranear Boneh bec Medial Sey agra even £88 2, ne We, piensa ech oS "eae? Se ee halons ia pose sanity maremlccne SHOW Dar WP ws kaeran bce Seat meine? GinehAtOth shee cy eel otis Jorimnsractin at set Weil soecnt attest OO —“gmoure oF primase 1h Ree aeee PRE Een Sra Agus ats Renee Se ae Jom 5. Oxon, C. Baad. Preron apes pen teat ars SETA ae ES ESS coy RD. Wasa K Rate - ee eres | We Will Pay You JADOLLARADAY | “FOR LIFE! Srrinmsy SSR Ge ct scare [aS Ria tee Erne sees cere ok gee Bhe Pearson ublishing Co. eerie, Sellehing Co: 50 YEARS’ exXPeaience Par ‘Tepe Manne oy fecremgess teres, See eres. arene Scientific American, Galeton ee akyesentiog Dore Meas ear four months 1. Sold by all nrwedeere HUN & Cosme New York SSEAAAIASENAANANEN NINES % WONDERFUL DISCOVERY: ; aed q G OZONIZED OX MARROW} arn aS oleh ata Grae creme! (eee: etree. st G crpowe acre ed geaal saps eee ¢