The Appeal

Saturday, July 5, 1902

St. Paul, Minnesota

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Special National Afro-American Press Association and Council Edition THE APPEAL STEADILY GAINS BECAUSE 1-It aims to publish all the news possible. 2-It does so impartially, wasting no words. 3- Its correspondents are able and energetic. N. A. A. C. Minnesota Historical Society The National Afro-American Council. The Afro-American Council was called into being by the necessities of the people, and its mission is to ameliorate in so far as it can intelligently, wisely and practically do so, the deplorable political and industrial position of a large portion of our brethren, in the South especially, who are living in a shadow of a condition which they did not create and from which they would gladly emerge if encouraged by the Afro-American of the North, who enjoy larger civil and political rights than their brethren of the South. It is the aim and hope of the Afro-American Council, which is neither circumscribed by religious, social or political tests as a condition to the membership therein, to incorporate all existing social, religious, political and benevolent organizations into the body of its membership without interference with the constitutions, rules or by-laws of said organizations, except in so far as they may be willing to be guided in their future course by the great axiom, "To labor for man because he is man, is man's noblest work." In these noble words are com-posed the purpose, aim and object of the Afro-American Council. The uplift and development of the Afro-American people is its central thought and its cherished hope. To do this it must have the cordial and cheerful support and encouragement of every manly Afro-American who has faith in the power and efficacy of numbers and intelligent organization. B. D. B. BISHOP ALEXANDER WALTERS. President National Council. and who has pride in his race and the courage "to do all that does become a man" to give it character, respectability, influence and standing among the native and alien races in this country—who are combining their forces industrially and politically to the prejudice of all Afro-Americans who strive to rise superior to their condition and to assert their rights as men and citizens. The battle of the race is the battle of age and intelligence, and persistently waged until every man having equal rights, whether he be black or whether he be white, shall be an uncrowded king in a Republic of Sovereigns. T. Thomas Fortune, editor of the New York Age, was the first to suggest the Afro-American League, an organization in the interest of the race. This he advocated for several years with the result that a number of local leagues were formed. In 1880 a national convention was called and in response to this call representative men from the African-American League tried in Chicago in February of that year, and as the result of their deliberations the National Afro-American League was born. Mr. Fortune was elected temporary chairman, and in his opening address set forth the reasons which justified the organization, as follows: (1) The universal suppression of our ballot in the South, and consequent "taxation without representation," since the cities, counties and States, where we have undisputed preponderance in the banking institution we have in the main and representation, and therefore no voice in making and enforcing the laws under which we live. (2) The universal and lamentable reign of lynch and mob law, of which we are made the victims, especially in the South, which is all the more aggrating because all the machinery of the law making and law enforcing power is in the hands of those who resort to such outrageous, heinous and murderous violations of the law. (3) The unequal distribution of school funds collected from all tax-payers alike, and to the equal and undivided benefits of which all are alike entitled. (4) The odious and demoralizing penitentiary systems of the South, with its chain-gauge, convict leases and indiscriminate mixing of males and females. (5) The almost universal tyranny of common carrier corporations in the South—railroad, steamboat and others In which the common rights of Afro-American men and women are outraged and denied by the minions of these corporations, acting under ex- plitch orders, in most cases, as well as by common passengers, who take the matter into their own hands as often as they please, and are in no instance pursued and punished by the lawful authorities. (6) The discrimination-practiced by those who conduct places of public accommodation, and are granted a license for this purpose, such as keepers of inns and hotels; and conductors of the theatres and kindred places of amusement, where one man's money, all things being equal, should be as good as another's. The serious question of wages, caused by the main by the vicious industrial system in the South, by general contempt employers feel for employees and by the overcrowded nature of the labor market. This was a terrible arraignment of the South, but it was true then, and it is true now—that is, the conditions are practically the same, although there has been a change in some respects for the worse. For instance, the compulsory vote was abolished that time were acts of the corporations without warrant of law, are now a part of the organic law of the Southern States. The unlawful suppression of the ballots of Afro-Americans eleven years ago is now permitted by legal enactment. The unequal distribution of the school fund has been succeeded, atempting several States to deprive the Afro-American of all educational facilities. . Mr. Fortune refused the presidency of the League, although it was tended to him by a practically unanimous vote. By reason of the lack of interest among those who should have supported it, the League was a failure. In 1896 and 1897 there was a movement started for the purpose of reviving the League, which culminated in its reorganization under the name of the National Afro-American Council, at Rochester, N. Y., in August, 1898. Mr. Fortune was nominated for president, but declined, and Bishop Alexander Walters elected and Mr. Fortune was elected chairman of the Executive Committee, to which office he has been re-elected three successive terms. At the meeting of the National Afro-ophia, Pa., August, 1901, the following officers were elected: President-Alexander Walters, New Jersey. First Vice President—T. Thomas Fortune, New York Second Vice President—W. A. Pledger, Georgia. Lee. District of Columbia. Fifth Vice President—Charles H. Brooks, Pennsylvania. Sixth President—H. T. Johnson, New Jersey. son. New Jersey. Seventh Vice President—George W. Clinton, North Carolina. REV. ERNEST LYON, D. D. Eighth Vice President—E. C. Morris, Arkansas. Ninth Vice President—Mrs. Gertrude Mossell, Pennsylvania. Secretary—Cyrus, Field Adams, Illinois. Financial Secretary—George E. Wibecan, Jr., New York Corresponding Secretary—Jesse Lawson, District of Columbia. THE APPEAL. Assistant Secretary—J. N. Fullilove Oregon. Treasurer—J. W. Thompson, New York. National Organizer—Ernest Lyon. 1. Educational—W. C. Jason, Delaware. Legislative—F. L. McGhee, Minnesota. Business—Emmett J. Scott, Alabama. Bellesiastical—Rev. Walter H. Brooks. Emigration—Dr. A. L. Brown, Massachusetts. Literary—Dr. John McDougald, Pennsylvania. Amal-Lynching—Mrs. I. B. Barnett, Illinois. Newspaper—Chris J. Perry, Pennsylvania. Legislative—F. L. McGhee, Minnesota. Business—Emmett J. Scott, Alabama. Ecclesiastical—Rev. Walter H. Brooks. Emigration—Dr. A. L. Brown, Massachusetts. Literary—Dr. John McDougald, Pennsylvania. Anti-Lynching—Mrs. I. B. Barnett, Illinois. Newspaper—Chris J. Perry, Pennsylvania. Vital Statistics—Dr. J. E. Henderson, Illinois. Executive Committee. Alabama—J. W. Alstork, Emmett J. Scott, Mrs. R. A. Mormsey. Arkansas—E. C. Morris, J. C. Corbin, Mrs. H. E. Carolina. California—T. B. Morton, Lincoln Dennis, Mrs. Minnie Benson. Colorado—E. H. Hackley, P. A. Hubbard, Mrs. Elizabeth P. Enley. Mrs. Elizabeth P. Ensley Connecticut—Walter Scott, S. P. Peaker. Delaware—W. C. Jason, S. B. Elbert, Mrs. E. K. Gruse. District of Columbia—J. A. Taylor, J. H. Hannon, Miss Lucy E. Motere. Florida—M. M. Moore, M. M. Lewey, Mrs. J. Clinton. Georgia—W. A. Pledger, G. W. Gardiner, Mrs. P. G. Simmons. Illinois—Cyrus Field Adams, Ferdi President MRS. JOE President of Nation A. PROF. H. T. KEELING. nand L. Barnett, Mrs. Ida Barnett. Indiana—S. Furnish, George L. Kennedy. Kansas—I. F. Bradley, S. H. Thompson, Mrs. J. J. Bass. Kentucky—W. H. Steward, L. M. Hagood, Miss Martha Webster. Louisiana—P. B. S. Pinchback, James Lewis, Mrs. W. P. Williams. Maryland—Ernest Lyons, Harry S. Cummings, Mrs. Ella Smith. Massachusetts—A. L. Brown, P. J. Smith, Mrs. Josephine St. Pierre. Michigan—C. S. Ruffin, S. M. Grant, Mrs. M. F. McCoy. Minnesota—John Q. Adams, Jasper Gibbs, Mrs. J. H. Hickman. Mississippi—Iasiah T. Montgomery, James Hill, Mrs. E. W. Lampton. Missouri—John F. Moreland, Chas Tandy. Miss Rachel Nolan. Nebraska—F, L. Barnett, Fred L. Smith. New Jersey—H. T. Johnson, Jesse Lawson, Mrs. Florence Randolph. New Mexico—H. O. Flipper. New York—W. A. Alexander, George E. Wibecan. North Carolina, G. F. Frazier. North Carolina—John C. Dancy, J. North Carolina Ohligh, G. H. Smith, W. A. Scarbor Defective Page ough, Miss Amelia Taylor Oklahoma—I. E. Page, E. P. McCabe, Mrs. I. E. Page, Oregon—J. N. Fulllove, W. L. Plummer, Mrs. J. N. Fulllove, Pennsylvania—C. H. Brooks, C. J. A. B. Perry, Mrs. N. F. Mossell, Rhode Island- J. W. Henderson, W H. Coffey, Miss Elizabeth Carter, South Carolina- G. W. Murray, W D. Mrs. J. Jennie Nelson, W Tennessee, N. A. Crosthwait, Mrs. N. L. Napler M. H. H. MRS. JOSEPHINE SILONE YATES. of National Association of Afro-American Texas—J. B. Scott, H. T. Keating, Mrs. Ida B. Luchs, Virginia—John Mitchell, Jr., W. L. Taylor, Mrs. Maggie W. Steward West Virginia—C. H. Barnett, John R. Clifford, Mrs. E. M. Dandridge. Wisconsin—Shelton Minor, J. J. Miles. Washington—H. C. Cotton, C. A. Rideout. Our plan of organization is as follows: Any person who has sufficient interest in the matter can send invitations to leading Afo-American clientele. We will also elaborate on the condition of our race meet in some private house, church or COLLINS ENTERED COL. W. A. PLEDGER. Chrm. State Republican Com. Georgia. hall, according to the number invited. If as many as ten assemble and are willing to subscribe to the objects set forth in the constitution, they can be organized by the election of the following officers: President, Vice-President, Secretary, Assistant Secretary, Treasurer, Chaplain, Sergeant-at-Arms and an Executive Committee consisting of five members—See Constitution, page 22. Affiliated Membership. Religious and secular organizations. Afro-American newspapers, academic schools and colleges, which have for their aim and work the mental and moral elevation of the Afro-American race, are invited to unite with the Council. Such organizations can be identified with the Council by the payment of five dollars, which must be sent to Mr. J. W. Thompson, Box 493, Rochester, New York. TOPICS FOR LOCAL COUNCILS. First Quarter—Organization. The Afro-American Council—Its Alms and Needs. Local Organizations, and how they may be effected. How shall the National and Local Councils be sustained? Second Quarter—Morals. Race conduct in public places: (a) schools. (c) Jails. (d) Penitentiaries. Race Morality and How to Strengthen it. (a) In the home. (b) Social circle, on the street. (b) Public conveyances. (c) Churches. (d) Parks and picnic grounds, etc. Criminal Statistics of the Race. (a) Police courts. (b) Reform (c) Church. Third Quarter—Business. How can we foster business among us? (a) Agriculture, (b) Mercantile pursuits. (c) Manufacture. (d) Horticulture, etc. Fourth Quarter—Lynching. Lynching: Its cause and cure. The effect of public sentiment on the lynching evil, and how to create it. What is the best method to collect funds for the Anti-Lynching and Legislative Bureau? Miscellaneous—Politics. What does the Constitution of the United States guarantee to the Afro-American? How can the Negro secure his Constitutional Rights? Shall the Negro vote for his own best interests? Women. BISHOP C. R. HARRIS. How shall our boys and girls be emploved? Scientific farmers the need of the hour. The necessity of higher education. The necessity of industrial education. Shall we discourage excessive emotional worship among us? Question to be asked at each meeting. Are there any matters of local interest with which we are concerned? These topics have been prepared with the idea that the Local Councils shall hold their meetings once a month. Where the Councils have no regular meeting place, they should, as far as possible, hold their meetings in the churches of different denominations. The second week of July, from the 7th to the 12th, promises to be one of the most notable in the history of the Twin Cities, so far as the Afro-Americans are concerned. For that week there is the 23d annual meeting of the National Afro-American Press Association in Pilgrim Baptist church, corner Cedar and Summit avenue, Monday, July 7th. There will be two business sessions during the day, beginning at 10 a. m. and at 2 p. m., and a Continued on 3rd Page. N. A. A. P. A. CYRUS FIELD ADAMS. President, National Press Association The meeting of the National Afro-American Press Association which takes place at Pilgrim Baptist Church, corner of Cedar street and Summit avenue, St. Paul, Minn., Monday, July 7, will bring together many of the most distinguished newspaper men of the race. The pastor, members and congregation of the church have been very active in arranging for the entertainment of the delegates and visitors, and the ladies of the church will tender a reception to the delegates to the National Afro-American Press Association, the National Afro-American Council, the National Educational Association and the Afro-American State convention. This reception will take place at church parlorors Monday evening next week, where it is cordially invited to come to the church and meet the delegates from all parts of the United States. Before the reception and commencing at 7:30 sharp there will be an excellent musical and literary programme rendered. In many respects it will be one of the most unique ever given in the Northwest. There will be no charge whatever for admission but it will very large attendance is expected it will be well for those who intend to be present to be on hand at 7:30 sharp. The programme opens with "The Appeal" Grand Triumphal March a special piece composed by Professor William A. Weir and dedicated to CYRUS FIELD President National John Quincy Adams, editor of The St. Paul Appeal. The march will be played by the composer. St. James A. M. E. Church Choir, under the direction of Professor J. W. Luca, will render "Hail to the Chief," a boat song by Prout. The names of the members of the choir will be banded and compiled programme which is given in this article. The popular silver-voiced tenor, Mr. Bradley S. Walker, will sing the Toreador Song from the opera of Carmen by Bijet. Cyrus Field Adams, editor of the Chicago Appeal, President of the National Afro-American Press Association, will deliver his annual address. It may also be mentioned in this connection that Mr. Adams is Assistant Register of the United States Treasury. The charming soprano soloist, Mrs. Bertha Heathcock Wilson, will sing Bailey's Carol of the Lark," arranged in D. The Pilgrim Baptist Church Choir, which has been in active rehearsal for some time under the direction of Professor Allen J. French, will render "The Soldier's Chorus," from the opera of Faust by Gounod. A complete list of the members of the choir may be found in the programme which follows. The charming young Misses E. Edna Gray of Minneapolis and Evelyn G. Hickman of St. Paul will play a piano duet, a grand fantasia arranged MRS. FANNIE BARRIER WILLIAMS by Melnotte from Verdi's "Il Troyatore." The most unique and as one might say in referring to a menu, the "piece de resistance" will be the Symposium of distinguished men and women who will deliver rapid fire speeches limited to three minutes each on "The Outlook for the Race." The symposium includes the following persons: Rev. $2.40 PER YEAR. A. P. A. Afro - American association. I. B. Scott, D. D.; Rev. W. T. Vernon, D.; Hon. James H. Guy, J. Madison Vance, Esq.; Hon. I. T. Montgomery, Charles W. Wscrithin, Esq.; W. M. Farmer, Esq.; Mrs. Fannie Barrier Williams; I. F. Bradley, Esq.; Bishop A. Grant, D. D.; Mrs. Mollie Church Terrell; Nelson C. Crews, Esq.; Mrs. Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin; E. E. Brown, Esq.; Mrs. J. Silly Yates; Hon. John C. Dancy; Bishop Alexander Walters, D. D.; Rev. R. C. Ransom, D. D.; Mrs. Ida B. W. Barnett; Miss M. V. Webster; Rev. A. J. Carey, D. D.; Rev. John F. Moreland, D. D; George H. Woodson, Esq.; Rev. J. C. Anderson; Rev. Ernest Lyon, D. D; Rev. J. Johnson, D. D.; Bishop George W. Clinton, D. D; Hon. E. H. Deas; Rev. John W. Lee; Dr. A. L Brown; Rev. John W. Theorem, Esq.; Mrs. R. J. Jeffrey; Dr. J. E. Johnson; Bishop C. S. Smith, D. D; Dr. W. C. Jason; Dr. M. C. B. Mason; Harry Shepherd, Esq.; Rev. J. S. Caldwell; George E. Wibecan, Jr., Esq.; Chplain Allen Allewensworth, U. S. A. PRAYER—Rev. W. D. Carter, D. D. Amani—D. H. Pall, H. P. Hall. The Veteran Editor of The Trade Journal. St. Paul, Minn. RESPONSE—William H. Steward. The Address—William H. Steward. THE ADDRESS—The Press as an Educator. William A. Pledger, The Age, Atlanta. Care. Discussion—O. L. Boyd, The Tribute to the Depression, The Chapman. The Rystander, Des Moines. OLD ADAMS. Press Association. G. W. Gayes, The Union, Greenville, Miss. PAPER "Practical Men in Demand." F. L. Patterson, The Progress, Omaha, Neb. Discussion. M. L. Browne, The Ship, Alexandra, Va.; L. H. Wilson, The Brotherhood, Cincinnati, Ohio; J. Henry O'Connor, The Ship, Louis, Mo. PAPER "How to Make a Pay." Emmett J. Scott, The Student. Emmett Alh., D. C us s i o n - W. H. Noble, Tuxedo, Tex.; W. W. Taylor, the Ship, Lake, Tahir; J. B. McCray, The Gazette Lake, Tahir; J. B. McCray, The Gazette ADDRESS "Women in Journalism." Mrs. Maggie W. Steward, The Ship, Bristol, Tenn. READING OF LETTERS from absent AFTERNOON SESSION—2 O'Clock. PAPER—"A Syndicated News Service our Thomas Fortune, The New York Age. Discussion—M. M. Lewey, The Sentinel, Pensacola, Fla.; John Mitchell, Jr. Thomas Fortune, Afo-American Ledger, Baltimore. ADDRESS—"The Future of the Afro- Perry, The Tribune, Philadelphia, Pa. R. B. Russell, The Blade, Maxton, N. R. C. Johnson, The Bugle, Navasota, Tex. Miner, The Searchlight, Wichita, Kansas. Searchlight, Lynching, Legislation, Harry C. Smith, Lynching, Ohio. Discussion—A. D. Griffin, The New Age, Portland Ore. J. W. Wheeler, Holmes, Louis, Mo.; W. A. Holmes, Ark. ADDRESS—"The Power of the Press, Aflifford, The Pioneer Press, Martinsburg, Pennsylvania. Purdee, West Florida Bugle, Mariana, Fla.; J. H. Jackson, Western Enter- prise, Colo.; G. P. Stubbs, Exponent, Macon. ELECTION OF OFFICERS. PIANO SOLO—"The Apprentice, umphal March—Weir—Dedicated to John W. Adams, St. Paul Minn.) Piano, John W. Adams, Colo. CHORUS—"Hall to the Chief," (Boat Song; Proout. St. James A. M. E. McGill; Director; Miss Mae Williams, Organist.) Soprano Frances De Loe, Mrs. Contratista Lewis, J. C. Anderson, Mrs. Jordy Cooper, J. C. Anderson, Mrs. Tenors--Mr. A. J. Bell, Mr. T. R. Morgan, Mr. C. Alexander. Bassos-Prof. J. W. Luca, Mr. E. J. Murphy. TENOR SOLO—Toreader Song from Carr ANNUAL ADDRESS—President Cyrus FIELD Adams, The Appeal, Chicago. Ill. ANNUAL ADDRESS—President Lark*—Bailey—D-Mrs. Beatha cock Wilson. HORUS—Opera of Faust—Gourd—Pilgrim Bathing Choir. Prof. Allie J. French. Director, Gourd—Packman, Accompanist. Sorensen—Merger. Altos—Mesdames W. D. Carter, W. T. Francis, William Haigh, F. P. Plierre, Precum Navinowski, Addie Peyton, Mise Sadie Nickens. Tenors—Messrs. Bradley S. Walker, C. S. Harrison, Jacob H. Carter, S. Edward Hall, Alex McKenny. Bassos—Messrs. John H. Eckman, Jos. H. Harris, H. Worden Haynes Continued on 3rd Page. HAVE YOU READ THE ARPEAL? ADAMS BROS. EDITORS AND PUBLISHERS 49 E. 4th St., St. Paul, Minn. ISSUED SIMULTANEOUSLY IN Saint Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago, Washington, Louisville, St. Louis. ST. PAUL OFFICE, No.110 Union Blk. 4th & Cedar, J. Q. ADAMS, Publisher. MINNEAPOLIS OFFICE, Guaranty Loan Bldg. Room 811 HENRY ROBERTS, Manager. CHICAGO OFFICE, 823-5 Dearborn St., Suite 310 C. F. ADAMS, Manager. LOUISVILLE OFFICE, No. 312 W. Jefferson St. Room 8 W. V. PENN, Manager. ST. LOUIS OFFICE, No. 1002 Franklin Avenue. J. H. HARRISON, Manager. TERMS, STRICTLY IN ADVANCE: SINGLE COPY, ONE YEAR. $2.80 SINGLE COPY, SIX MONTHS. 1-1.10 SINGLE COPY, THREE MONTHS. 60 When subscriptions are by any means allowed to be made, the prices are $60 for 60 cents for each week, and 5 cents for each odd week, or at the rate of $4.00 per cent. Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Post Office Money Order, Order stamps, or by airmail. Stamps will be received the same as cash in one cent and two cent stamps taken. Only one cent and two cent stamps taken. Silver should never be sent through the mail. It is almost sure to wear a bangle through the silver. People who send silver to us in letters do so at their own risk. 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Must read in Tuesdays if possible, anyway must read in Thursdays if possible, anyway must read in Saturdays if possible, anyway nature of the author. "No manuscript return, unless stamps are sent for postage. We do not hold ourselves responsible for the collecting agents wanted everywhere. Write to us." **every letter that you write us never fall to** give your full name and address, plainly written, post office, county and state. Bus- sistress letters are not required. Separate sheets from letters containing penni- or matter for publication. Entered second class matter at St. Paul, Minn. AGENTS WANTED. THE APPEAL wants good reliable agents to canvass for subscribers as points not already covered. Write for our extraordinary inducements. Address, THE_APPEAL, East 4th St., St. Paul, Minn. SATURDAY, JULY 5, 1902. THE APPEAL welcomes to St. Paul the delegates to the National Afro-American Press Association, the National Afro-American Council, the National Educational Association and the Afro-American State Convention. These meetings will bring together many of the most distinguished men and women of the race and all delegates and visitors are thrice welcome to the Saintly City. Says the Charleston News and Courier: "If the Southern Confederacy had succeeded according to the expectation of the men who established it, we could have had, perhaps, not the greatest and most glorious country the world ever saw, but the purest, the freest and the happiest. A vain ideal, perhaps, but we are sorry, not glad, it failed. None the less, we are good citizens and honest men; we will make the best of a bad bargain, and as far as in us lies, make the nation of which we are a part live up to our ideals to the best of our ability." Live down to our ideals would be a better way of putting it, for the Southern ideal is low. The ideal of --- Mary C. MRS. JOSEPHINE ST. PIERRE RUFFIN President Boston Era Club. true democracy is not strong in the South. The success of the Southern armies in the rebellion would have meant the establishment of an oligarchy based on race and wealth, in which the black man and even the poor white man would have had no part. The idea of a country composed principally of men held in vile servitude being the "purest, freest and happiest country in the world" is one of the most absurd propositions ever stated. this world. He was peace named John H. one of the most united Southern Indiana. for ten years, and married over 6,000 co-whom were elopers. ED Some people object to the word Afro-America makes the colored people are foremost. In his recent work, "The Lower South," the author, Mr. G. W. Brown, seeks to place upon the brow of the Afro-American people of the South this rhetorical stigma: "Africa mocks America from her jungles. Still, she jeers, 'with the dense darkness of my ignorance I confound your enlightenment. Still with my sloth I weigh down the arms of your industry. Still with my sinineness I hang upon the wings of your aspiration. And in the heart of your imperial young republic I have planted, sure and deep, the misery of this ancient curse I bear." Mr. Brown's idea is that the illiterate Afro-Americans of the South should be left in their ignorance; he fears that they are acquiring too much knowledge, and it has been said that "Knowledge is a dangerous thing." Mr. Brown is wrong in flinging this taunt into the faces of the entire race, for the Afro-Americans of the South have, during the forty years of freedom, wiped out a greater percentage of illiteracy than have the Caucasians. Mr. W. P. Calhoun, of Greeneville, S. C., is an advocate of the separation of the races. He thinks that all of the Afro-Americans ought to be taken to one of the Western states, be given full control, and be compelled to live there. This scheme is an old one, and has been advocated for years by various Southern gentlemen. One great trouble about the matter is to decide who are AfroAmericans. The so-called white people have associated so much with their black neighbors that it is hard to tell who is white and who is black. The coming meetings of the National Afro-American Press Association and the National Afro-American Council, which will be held in St. Paul, and the National Educational Association at Minneapolis's, July 7-12, will doubtless bring together the largest number of notable Afro-American men and women this country has ever known. The local committees are making extraordinary efforts to properly entertain the visitors, and a very grand time is generally expected. Final judgment has been rendered at Jefferson City, Mo. by the Court of Appeals, whereby Wyatt Ryans, the old Afro-American body servant of the late Dr. Charles H. Bradford, comes into possession of $7,333. Dr. Bradford was an invalid, and for years before hfs death required the services of a body servant. No regular wages were paid Ryans, who sued after his employer's death. A man died last Monday in Jeffer-sonville, Ind, who is indirectly respon- ing of the National Afro-American sible for a terrible lot of trouble in Council next week. this world. He was a justice of the peace named John H. House, and was one of the most unique characters of Southern Indiana. He held his office for ten years, and during that time married over 6,000 couples, the most of whom were elopers. ED Some people object to the use of the word Afro-American because it makes the colored people seem as if they are foreigners in their own country. In many parts of the country the Afro-Americans are treated as if they were aliens or worse than aliens, for aliens, if they are white, are treated with great consideration. JUDGE M. W. GIBBS, Ex-Consul to Madagascar. The Southern papers continue to harp on President Rossevelt's Arlington speech, in which he denounced lynching. Of course, Southern Caucasians do not admire such a talk, but the Afro-Americans, who constitute about two-fifths of the total population, are greatly pleased threaten. There was no color line in Cuba until the Americans came. With them they brought their hellish color-prejudice and there has been trouble ever since. The Afro-Cubans are, however, a fighting people, and it is certain that they will fight to the death for their God-given rights. The Fifty-eighth Congress will be controlled by the Republicans, and without any great campaign work. The people are with the Republican party. In Europe the Afro-American attracts but little attention on account of his color. He is received everywhere without any discrimination whatever. The fall campaign is essentially one of local conditions, and if the Republicans get out and hustle a little there will be no doubt about the result. The Republican party has kept all of its pledges, and there is no reason for doubt or discouragement in the coming Congressional campaign. It is practically certain that President Roosevelt will visit Tuskegee Institute, Booker Washington's great school, some time this fall. THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER THE BOOK WORLD UP FROM SLAVERY. Up From Slavery. By Booker T. Wash. Industry $1.50. New York: Doubleday IN THE FOREST. In the Forest. By Maximilian For- Page & Co. $1.50. New York: Doubleday. "Up From Slavery" by Prof. Booker T. Washington is a remarkable volume by a former slave. It shows that a dangerous enterprise at best, and should never be undertaken except by the great men of the slave trade, longs to the class of great men of our time, requires neither testimony nor proof, for it In writing of the place and date of his birth he says: "I was born on a plantation, but at any rate I suspect I must have not quite sure of the exact date of my birth, but at any rate I suspect I must have been a plantation. There is conscious humor in this sentence, a spice of witt, and the delicate sarcasm of his words. The institution of slavery—that institution which was impossible for either himself or Frederick Augustus to know the exact day of birth, but he says that he does not know who his father is, but that he knew that he was a white man. And he and its beginning in the midst of the modern world,couraging surroundings" * * * * * "I was living in a log cabin, about sixteen by sixteen feet, lived with my mother and a brother and I were all declared free. JOHN H. HARRIS Up from Slavery has had a large sale worldwide. The work has been translated into Spanish, German, French, Italian, Arabic, and is being prepared in many other languages. A story of the life of the little slave boy who was the recognized leader of 10,000,000 of Afro-Columbian slaves and invigorated narrative although writing and an older style. It truly reveals the unassuming men the world has ever known. **THE NEW BORN CUBA.** The new-Born Cuba. By Franklin Matthews. $25.00. New York and London. **The New-born Cuba** by Franklin Matthews is one of the very interesting works of the great Pearl of the Antilles" since the American occupation, which has been given to the The work of feeding thousands of starving civilians dwell upon by the author, who shows that this was an essential part of the work of the United States in the war, and that done, the sanitation of the large cities would have been incomplete and ineffective. The reconstruction of Cuba by the people of the United States is unique and important to our country, and to our people. Cuba has been taught many lessons of vital importance to her people, and she will profit by them, or sink back into the dark ways of the old Spanish colonies, which remain an independent nationality long. On the 29th of this present month the government to the Cuban people took place. The stars and strips came down in design of the Cuban Republic was unfurled. Esperemos que su bandera quedara siempre la bandera de la libertad y de la libertad. In the Forest. By Maximilian Foster. 150. New York: Doubleday, Page & Clover. CHAPLAIN A. ALLENSWORTH. 25th U. S. Infantry. nectives. For convenience of treatment, the grammars name eight or nine. The "nomena" are the names of the nomena of the physical world may be involved into three manifestations, "mathematical language, is the result of experience with language, is the result of experience with language, verb—motion, composition, formation." The author's discussion of cause and effect, youth, the experimental life, the source of power, and many other subjects treated in a clear and earnest manner. WHAT A WOMAN OUGHT TO KNOW? Women who Women Ought to Know by Mrs. Mary Many women know by Mrs. Publishing Co. 1313 Real Estate Builders. No one who reads this admirable book can be surprised that so many eminent commendations and personal influence to bring the regimes of which this book is one can be read. In this Self and Sex series, the books to boys and men are written by Syliane Van Dyke, a teacher, and those to girls and women, a server, and those to girls and women, a National Superintendent of the Purity Department of the Women's Christian all that has been said in their praise by the educational, medical, religious and cultural, country, and deserve a place in every home. This book addressed to young women the body and its hygiene, the special physiology and laws of maturity, and the love, engagements and marriage. The author brings to her task the training of young women, the tacit and the tact of a wise and judicious officer. We should be glad if every young woman book and profit by it. It will equip young women to meet the dangers and receive to life deeper meanings and tried experiences, make them intelligent and receptive to life's deeper meanings and companion volume to Dr. Stall's book, "What a Young Man Ought to Know," issued by the same company. CARPENTER'S GEOGRAPHICAL READER. Carpenter's Geographical Reader-En-12 mo. 485 pages. With maps and illustrations. Price. 70 cents. American Book Company, New York, Cincinnati and Chil- Defective Page Knowles Building. Boys' Hall. Stone Hall. Girls' Hall. Model Home. ATLANTA UNIVERSITY, Atlanta, Ga. An unsectarian Christian Institution, devoted especially to advanced education. College, Normal College Preparatory and boys shall get scholed courses, with Industrial Training. Some advantages in Music and Printing. Athletic for boys. Physical culture for girls. Home life and recreation. Also includes secondary students. Term begins the first Wednesday in October. For catalog and information, address READ THIS BOOK!! "The PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL NEGRO BUSINESS LEAGUE" Which held its first convention in Boston, Mass., August 23-24, 1900. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON. President and Founder. This convention was the first National Convention of colored business men ever held in this or any other country. Every line of business was represented: the farmer, the banker, the educator, the doctor, the lawyer, the manufacturer, the author, the merchant and rulers of municipalities. The addresses delivered and papers read are all in this book besides over fifty cuts of delegates and others, which makes it a valuable souvenir of the convention. BOUND JN CLOTH ONLY. PRICE, $1.00. Send Express or Post Office Money Order to J. R. HAMM, PUBLISHER, 46 HOWARD ST., BOSTON, MASS. Pabst beer is always pure HOTEL TUSKEGEE Normal and Industrial Institute Organized July 4, 1881, by the State Legislature State Normal School Exempt from taxation BOOKER T. WASHINGTON, Priscipal. WARREN LOGAN, Tresser. LOCATION UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA where the blacks occupy 10 percent of the ENROLLMENT AND FACULTY Enrollment last year 1.25I; males, 1.82I; females, 371. Average attendance, 182I; Instructors, 88. COURSE OF STUDY Englelish combined with industrial training; 28 industries in constant operation. VALUE OF PROPERTY Property consisting of 2,207 acres of land, 5 buildings almost wholly built with student labor, is valued at $38,000, and no mortgage. $50 annually for the education of each student; $200 enables one to finish the course; $100 enables one to own their own board on your own board in cash and labor. Money in any amount for current expenses Beides the work done by graduates as class room and industrial leaders, thousands are reached through the Tuskegee Negro Conference. Tuskegee is 40 miles cast of Montgomery and 120 miles west of Atlanta, on the Western Railroad of Alabama. Tuskegee is a quiet, beautiful old Southern town and is an ideal place for vity. The gentle man is at all times mill and perform, thus making the place an excellent winter resort. The aim of this school is to do pro- cessing in the ministry. Its course of study is broad and practical; its ideas are high and fresh. The curriculum is fresh, systematic, clear and simple. COURSE OF STUDY The regular course of study occupies the years, and covers the work in the work in the department of theofoolie, instruction usually pursued in the lead- ing school of theology and ministry. EXPENSES AND AID Tuition and room rent are free. The apartments for students are plainly fur- nished, and the department usually seven dollars per month. Buildings he aid from loans without interest, and gifts of friends, are granted to des- erving students. The self-help. No young man with grace, gifts and energy, need be deprived of the necessary resources in this Seminary. For further particulars address L. G. ADKINSON, D. D. Pres. Gammon Theological Seminary, ATLANTA, GEORGIA College Preparatory, Normal Department Middle School, Night School, Music Department School, Music Department All bills payable in advance. Session begins October 1st. Rosemary J. Johnson, A.M. B.M. O. PRINCIPAL, BATON ROUGE, LA. Send your Sons and Daughters to WESTERN UNIVERSITY QUINDANO, KANSAS A great school for our youth. Preparatory, Normals, Musical, Industrial and Theological Departments, only $2.39 per item for all exa- tle. Write at an email for information or catalogue to: PRESIDENT WILLIAM T. VERNON. QUINDARO, KANSAS. Coral is a shell of carbonate of lime, inhabited by an animal, which can be readily detected under the microscope in any piece of live coral freshly taken from the water. READ THIS "The PROCEEDINGS OF TIONAL NEGRO BUSINESS" Which held its first convention in Boston, M. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON. Pres This convention was the first National business men ever held in this or a line of business was represented: the educator, the doctor, the lawyer, the merchant and rulers of municipality Departments-Normal and Collegiate instrumental Music, Theoretical Agrarian instrumental Music, Theoretical Agrarian Healthy Location; heated by steam; lighted by electricity; room, board, bed; kitchen; office; For Catalog and Particulars write to J. H. JOHNSON President. "Industrial training will set to motion ten thousand wheels." WWM, W.J. MIMONS, D. L., LL.D., Co-founder and first Chancellor. **THE LOCATION.** The Ekkenberg School is located at St. Cary Spring, Ky., twenty miles from Louisville, Ky., in the heart of the Appalachian Mountains—the country where what is known as a prohibition zone can be a fifty mile of rich, rolling land with mountain streams, climbing miniature caves, and ground cover. The school offers a variety of species. In this quiet retreat away from the battle of the Civil War, students can enjoy amusements of places of peace and "wonder," amusements of places of work and "work." Students develop and advance. All this playful part is part of the student's life, and is apply to all auditions. **DEPARTMENT'S.** Library Photography Park Mining Making Flat Painting Business College tailoring Poultry Making Dress Making Agriculture The above departments are under competent proxies in the state. We are also in charge of training branches they teach. They hail from Gouwaz, for instance, State University, Chicago Manual Training School, Notre Dame School, Rhode Island, and other of our education institutions. PHILANDER SMITH COLLEGE An institution of a steady and solid growth. An institution of many images to those seeking a thorough education. hailworth location, strong faculty, extensive courses, reasonable expenses. Students from nine States and from 45 counties of Arkansas. SESSION BEGINS OCT. 1. For catalogue or further information access REV. J. M. COX, D. D. PRESIDENT. Shaw University For both sexes, Departments of Law, Medical, Pharmacy, Music, Missionary Training, College, Engineering, and Industrial. Year begins Oct. 7. For catalogs, circulars and other information address PRES. CHAS. S. MESFEVE, RALEIGH, N.C. Morristown Normal College Fourteen teachers. Elegant and commodious buildings. Climate unsurpassed. Department: College Preparatory Normal, Engg. Music School, Typewriting and Industrial Training. FIFTY DOLLARS IN ADVANCE Pay for board, equipment, pay and incidentals for the entire year. Board per month: tuition $2.00 per term. Thoughts on the course. Department Seed for circuits to the president. REV. JUDSON S. HILL, D. D., Merristown, Teen. IS BOOK!! AGES OF THE NASINESS LEAGUE" Boston, Mass., August 29, 1900. ON. President and Founder. First National Convention of colorism or any other country. Every: the farmer, the banker, the, the manufacturer, the author, civilization. T. THOMAS FORTUNE T. THOMAS FORTUNE. ditor N. Y. Age, Chrm. Ex. Committee. (Continued From First Purs.) musical-literary session at night, to all of which the public will be admitted and is cordially invited to attend. A goodly number of the thought moulders of the country is expected to be present and the sessions will doubtless be fraught with much that is interesting, instructive and beneficial. On Tuesday, July 8th, a Republican state convention will be held in Masonic Hall, 317 and 319 Wabasha street, which will doubtless attract a large number of the politicians of the state. From July 9th to 11th the fifth annual meeting of the National Afro-American Council will be held in St. Paul, and it bids fair to be the largest and, it is hoped, the most successful meeting the Council has held. Bishop Alexander Walters, of the A. M. E. Zion church, is President of the Council, and Mr. Cyrus Field Adams, assistant register of the U. S. treasury, is General Secretary. The business sessions of the Council will be held morning and afternoon in the senate chamber of the state capitol. 1910 M. B. F. L. McGHEE. Chrm. Local Committee. The evening meetings, on Wednesday and Thursday, are to be held in House of Hope Presbyterian Church, corner of Fifth and Exchange streets. The APPEAL man visited the wire grass twine plants, this week, and found that the Afro-Americans had pleased the managers so well with their department and work that they have in contemplation bringing a lot of people from the South to work for them. The program for the day and evening meetings is given in full below: ACCOMODATIONS COMMITTEE. George W. James, chairman, T. H Lyies, Mrs. R. C. Howard, Chas E James, Miss Fannie Dodd, John Wright, J. H. Dillingham, George Wills, Dr. V. D. Turner, Sidney Cunbert, Mrs. Lulu H. King, Robert Lee. J. B. Johnson, Sergei J. W. Harper. ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE. Rev. Timothy Reeves, chairman. Rev. Thos. A. Printon, Ralph Grey. Miss Rumie Dodd, Mrs. T. H. Lyles. Henry Roberts, Chas. Miller, W. R. Morris, Prof L. E. Allen, Mrs. J. V. Kemp, Allen French, Sr., Mrs. R. C. Howard, Miss Mary Morgan, Mrs. J. V. Kemp, Chas. F. Coleman, Miss Scottie Davis, Jasper Gibbs, Mrs. M. Plummer. Rev. D. E Butler, Rev. M. W. Withers, George Brady, Chas. Yancey, S. E. Hall, ISAIAH MONTGOMERY. Receiver Public Money, Jackson, Miss. N. A. A. C. Dr. R. S. Brown, R. C. Marshall, Cassius Harper. PROGRAM COMMITTEE. Dr. W. T. Francis, chairman, Rev. J. C. Anderson, Mrs. J. E. Porter, Mrs. T. H. Lyle, Robt. C. Minor, Mrs. J. V. Kemp, Dr. Val. Do Turner, Gibbs cellent programs are prepared for these evening meetings and the public is cordially invited to attend. On the evening of Friday, July 11th, a reception will be given by the citizens of the Twin Cities in honor of the delegates to the various gatherings at the Armory Hall of the State University, which will be specially decorated for the occasion in a most elaborate style. This social function will be, by the most superb one we have given in a decade and is looked forward to with pleasurable anticipations. The arrangements for the coming of the conventions have been planned and perfected by the following local committee, that has been at work for the last three months: Fredrick L. McGhawk, chairman. Mrs. George Barnett, vice chairman. J. Q. Adams, secretary, Geo. W. Day, treasurer. FINANCE COMMITTEE. Dr. O. D. Howard, chairman. Rev 1920 Thos. A. Printon, Rev. Timothy Reeves, Rev. J. C. Anderson, Thos. H. Lyles, D. E. Beasley, Mrs. Lulu H. King, Mrs. M. Plummer, Miss Scott Davis, Sidney Cuthbert, F. D. Parker, John Wright, Henry Moseley, Rev. M. W. Pleasants, Rev. M. W. Withers, Chas. E. James, W. R. Morris, Miss Mayne Weir, F. D. Parker, Dr. R. S. Brown, Wm. A. Hilyard. HALLS COMMITTEE. George E. Lowe, chairman, W. E. Beasley, D. E. Moseley, George Brady, J. H. Loomis, D. E. P. W. Scott, Davis, Chap. H. Miller, A. A. Pope, Scott R. Walker, S. E. Hall. PRESS COMMITTEE. Rev. W. D. Carter, chairman, Miss Fannie Dodd, J. V. Kemp, M. Lulu H. King, John Allison, J. C. Reid, Gibbs Pleasants, J. H. Loomis, Harry Shepherd, M. W. J. Utley, Harvey Burke, E. P. Wade, Henry Roberts. TRANSPORTATION COMMITTEE. Harry Shepherd, Chairman, Harry Howard, C. E. James, J. C. Reid, Z. A. Pope, Geo. W. Nelson, W. A. Hilvard, Prof. L. E. Allen, T. H. Lyles, F. D. Parker, J. B. Johnson, Rev. J. C. Anderson, J. H. Dillingham, Henry Roberts. The officers of the general committee and the chairman of the various subcommittees constitute the executive committee. THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER PROGRAMME. Wednesday, July 9th, 10 A. M. Doxology.....The Council. Invocation.....Rev. J. S. Caldwell, Chaplain, Penn. Addresses of Welcome. The State.....Hon. Sam'l R. Van Sant, Governor, State of Minnesota. The City.....Hon. Robert A. Smith, Mayor, City of St. Paul. Citizens.....Harris Shepherd. The Ladies.....Mrs. Dr. J. E. Porter. The Churches.....Rev. Timothy Reeves, Minneapolis. Responses. Rt. Rev. H. C. Smith, Michigan; Hon. T. Thos. Fortune, Chr. Executive Committee, N. Y.; Mrs. R. J. J Jeffrey, N. Y.; Col. Wm. A. Pledger, Ga., 2nd Vice Pres. The State.....Hon. Sam'i R. Van Saut, Governor, State of Minnesota. Rt. Rev. H. C. Smith, Michigan; Hon. T. Thos Fortune, Chr. Executive Committee, N. Y.; Mrs. R. J. J Jeffrey, N. Y.; Col. Wm. A. Pledger, G. 2nd Vice Pres Order of Business. 1. Roll Call. 2. Announcements of Committees. 3. Fraternal Greetings. 2 O'Clock P. M. Rt. Rev. C. R. Harris, N. C. Presiding. Hymn. Prayer..... Rev. J. C. Anderson, St. Paul. Order of Business 1. Report of Committee on Credentials. 2. President's Address. Rt. Rev. Alexander Walters, D. D., N. J. 3. Reports of Officers— (a) Report of Secretary.Cyrus Field Adams, Ill. (b) Report of Financial Secretary. Geo. E. Wibecan, Jr., N. Y. (c) Report of Treasurer.J. W. Thompson, N. Y. (d) Report of Corresponding Secretary. Jesse Lawson, N. J. Report of National Organizer. Rev. Earnest Lyons, D. D., Md., Director. 4. Appointment of Committees. Paper—"The Best Means of Organizing the Afro- American Council"... J. R. Clifford, Esq. W. Va. Report of Newspaper Bureau. Chris. J. Perry, Pa., Director. EVENING MEETINGS. House of Hope Church, 5th and Exchange Sts. Wednesday Evening, 8 P. M. Chorus—Hallelujah Chorus..... Handel. Sopranos— Mrs. J. S. Harris, Mrs. A. S. Weber. Tenors— Mr. W. T. Francis, Mr. S. Edward Hall. Contraltois— Basses— Mr. W. T. Francis, Mr. C. H. Miller, Mrs. F. L. McGhee, Mr. J. S. Harris, Mrs. J. C. Anderson, Mr. M. Haine, D. Jackson, Director. Mrs. Luki King, Accompanist. Quartette—Come Holy Spirit..... Millard. Invocation..... Rev. R. C. Ransom, Ill. Introductory Address. Rev. Dr. H. T. Johnson, N. J., Presiding. Solo—The Rosary. In English, French and German. Mr. Cyrus. Field Adams, Ill. Instrumental—Polonaise in C-shaft Minor (Op. 26, No. 1). Chopin Miss Hattie Grissom Address—"The Twentieth Century Negro: His Opportunities for Success." Mrs. J. Sillope-Yates, Kansas City, Mo. Instrumental—Overture. Mr. L. F. Mason, Minneapolis. Address—"The Problem of Work." Prof. W. E. B. Dubois, Atlanta, Ga. Chorus—The Lost Chord. Proctor-Sullivan. Address.Hon. T. Thos, Fortune, New York City, N. Y. Benediction..... Rt. Rev. W. W. Clinton. 3. Reports of Officers— (a) Report of Secretary. Cyrus Field Adams, Ill. (b) Report of Financial Secretary. ..... Geo. E. Wibecan, Jr., N. Y. Paper—"The Best Means of Organizing the Afro- American Council"... J. R. Clifford, Esq, W. Va. Report of Newspaper Bureau..... Chris. J. Perry, Pa., Director. Prof. W. E. B. Dubois, Atlanta, Ga. Chorus—The Lost Chord Proctor-Sullivan Address.Hon. T. Thos Fortune, New York City, N. Y. Benediction Rt. Rev. G. W. Clinton Thursday Morning. 9 A. M. Prayer.....Rev. M. W. Withers, Minneapolis. Order of Business. 1. General Business 2. Reports of Burgus (b) Anti-Lytnching—Mrs. Ida B. Wells, Barnett, Ill. Director, (c) Business Bureau.....Emmett J. Scott, Ala., Director Paper—"Economic Status of the Negro in the South".....Hon. Isiah T. Montgomery, Miss. Paper.....Hon. E. H. Deas, South Carolina Paper—"Anti-Lynching Legislation".....Hon. H. C. Smith, Ohio. Thursday, July 9th, 2 P. M. 1st Vice Pres. Hon. T. Thomas Fortune, N. Y. Presiding. Hymn Prayer..... Rev. W. D. Carter, St. Paul. Reports of Bureaus. a. Educational. W. C. Jason, Delaware, Director. b. Ecclesiastical Reform. Rev. Walter H. Brooks, D. C., Director. Paper—"The Church as a Factor in Solving the Race Problem".....Rev. W. Bishop Johnson, D. D., D. C. Paper—"The Needs of the Negro Ministry".....Dr. W. T. Vernon, Kansas. Discussion of paper.....Rev. J. F. Moreland, Ill. c. Emigration. Dr. A. L. Brown, Mass., Director. d. Literary. Dr. John McDougall, Pae., Director Paper—"The Value of Literature in Fashion. Development"..Mrs. Fannie Barrier Williams, Ill. e. Legal. Fredrick L. McGhee, Esq., Minn. Director. Report by Prof. Jesse Lawson, N. J., Sec. Finance Committee. Paper—"The Undoing of the 14th and 15th Amendment".....Hon. Jas. H. Guy, Kansas. Discussion of Paper. Geo. H. Woodson, Esq., Iowa. Chas. W. Sculchins, Esq., Minn. EVENING MEETING. House of Church. Paper-"Economic Status of the Negro in the South".....Hon. Isiah T. Montgomery, Miss. Paper-"Hon. E. J. Beas, South Carolina. Paper-"Anti-Lynching Hon. H. C. Smith, Ohio a. Educational, W. C. Jason, Delaware, Director. b. Ecclesiastical, Rev. Walter H. Brooks, D. C., Director. Paper—"The Church as a Factor in Solving the Race Problem" c. N. C. Rev, W. Bishop Johnson, D. D. D. C. Paper—"The Needs of the Negro Ministry" ..... Dr. W. W. V. Pernon, Kansas, Discussion of paper.....Rev. J. F. Moreland, Ill. c. Emigration..Dr. A. L. Brown, Mass, Director. d. Literary.....Dr. John McDougall, Pa. Director Paper—"The Value of Literature in Race Development" .Mrs. Fannie Barrier Williams, Ill. e. Legal.....Fredrick L. McGhee, Esq., Minn. Director, Report by Prof. Jesse Lawson, N. J., Sec. Finance Committee. Paper—"The Undoing of the 14th and 15th Amendment's"...Hon. Jas. H. Guy, Kansas. Discussion of Paper... Geo. H. Woodson, Esq., Iowa. Chas. W. Scutchins, Esq., Minn. Thursday, July 10th, 8 P.M. Chorus—The Heavens are Telling.....Haydn. Instrumental—The Midsummer Night's Dream (Paraphrase).....Smith. Miss Mae Williams. Solo.....Mr. Claudie D. Jackson. Quartette—Lead, Kindly Light.....Dudley Buck. Invocation.....Rev. Dr. M. C. B. Mason. Ohio. Chorus—Achieved is the Glorious Love.....Haydn. Introductory Address.....Rev. Geo. W. Lee. D. D. Washington, D. C. Presiding. Instrumental.....Prof. Weir. Address.....Rev. Dr. I. B. Scott. Louisiana. Chorus—A Spring Song.....Pinsul. Address—"Moral Courage as a Factor for Social Regeneration". Mrs. Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin. Boston, Mass. Violin Solo—Scene De Ballet.....Chas De Beriot. Mr. W. A. Robinson. Miss Grissom. Accompanist. Address. Hon. Geo. H. White, Ex-member Congress. N. C. Benediction.....Rt. Rev. C. R. Harris. Friday, July 11th, 9 A. M. Rt. Rev. G. W. Clinton, presiding. Hymn. Invocation.....Father Printon. Order of Business. General Business—Reports of Committees. a. Executive Committee. Hon. T. Thos. Fortune. Chr. b. Auditing Committee. Paper—"Power of the National Government With Respect to the Protection of Citizens".....Hon. J. Madison Vance. La. Discussion of Paper.....Edward E. Brown, Esq., Mass. Walter M. Farmer, Esq., Missouri. Hon. I. F. Bradley, Esq., Kas. Paper—"Political Future of the Negro".....Hon. J. C. Dancy, N. C. Friday, July 11th, 2 P. M. Hymn.....Guide Me, Oh. Thon Great Jehovah. Invocation.....Rev. S. W. Bocote, Mo. Order of Business. 1. General Business. 2. Report of Nominating Committee. 3. Election of Officers. Hymn.....God be With You Till We Meet Again. Friday Evening, July 11th. Reception in honor of Delegates, 8 P. M. to 9 P. M. at Armory Hall, Minnesota State University. 9 P. M. Programme. 10 P. M. Promenade. Chorus—The Heavens are Telling.....Haydn Instrumental—The Midsummer Night's Dream (Paraphrase).....Smith Miss Mae Williams. Solo.....Mr. Claude D. Jackson Quartette—Lead, Kindy Light.....Dudley Buck. Invocation.....Dr. Rev. M. C. B. Mason the Chorus—Achieved is the Glorious Work.....Haydn Introductory Address.....Rev. Geo. W. Lee, D. D. Washington, D. C., Presiding. Instrumental.....Prof. Weir. Address.....Rev. Dr. I. B. Scott, Louisiana Chorus—A Spring Song.....Pinsutl. Address—"Moral Courage as a Factor for Social Regeneration". Mrs. Josephine St. Pierre Ruffin, Boston, Mass. Violin Solo—Scene De Ballet.....Chas De Beriot. Mr. W. A. Robinson. Miss Grissom, Accompanist. Address. Hon. Geo. H. White, ex-member Congress, N. C. Benediction.....Rt. Rev. C. R. Harris. Friday, July 11th, 9 A. M. Rt. Rev. G. W. Clinton, presiding. Defective Page H. C. SMITH. Editor Cleveland Gazette. H. C. SMITH. Editor Cleveland Gazette. The many stirring questions of race in inspiration, inspiration, every Afro-American 1930 王志刚 $\bullet J.$ Q. ADAMS. Secv. Local Committee. Church, College, Benevolent Society and other Race Organization to send representatives accompanied by the annual tax of the organization. We have every reason to believe that the meeting will be largely attended. BASIS OF MEMBERSHIP. (Article III of Constitution.) Section 1. The Afro-American Council shall be composed of members of like follows: all persons who hold life membership. 2d. Council Delegates, representing duly accredited Local Councils. 3d. Affiliated Delegates, representing organizations of similar plans and purpose, co-operating with Afro-American Council. Sec. 2. Every Local Afro-American Council shall be entitled to representate delegates on a basis of one delegate elected on a basis of one delegate every fifty (50) members, said delegates will be represented. Provided, how many delegates and payment of ten cents for each member so represented. Provided, how many delegates and payment of than fifty (50) members shall be entitled to one vote, upon presentation of credentials and payment of the annual tax of $5.00. Sec. 3. Religious and secular organizations which have for their aim and purpose elevated the race, and which desire to be represented with the National Council may be represented by affiliated delegates, not more than two delegates to each organization. Sec. 4. Editors of Afro-American newsletters, Schools and Colleges, may be admitted to membership in the National Council and vote upon presentation of credentials and payment of the annual tax of $5.00. --- MRS. MARY SHUTCHKER CALL FOR MEETING HALF FARE RATES ON RAILROADS. Delegates can secure half rates by purchasing tickets to the National Educational Association, which meets at Minneapolis (Street car fare from Minneapolis to St. Paul is only 10 cents), July 7th to 11th. The following extract from letter from letter from E. A., secretary of the N. E. A., gives the instructions for the rate which has been made by all railroad lines in the United States for the purpose of sending a round trip, plus $2 membership fee in N. E. A. This membership fee is included in the rate attached, to be exchanged at the register in Minneapolis for membership certification. The prepaid in case request for the copy is made in face before September 1. The N. E. A. no objection to the members of the National Council using railroad rate which has been created this association. It will be necessary to send the tickets to be presented to be validated at the Minneapolis office of the General Agent. ESPECIAL CAUTION. Be careful to buy tickets to the N. E. A. association at Minneapolis. Tickets will be coupon railroad ticket offices in the United States three days before July 7. Let the N. E. A. elect their delegates as soon as possible and send their names to Cyrus Field 844. 844 S. Street N. W. Washington, D. G. 于东洲 The citizens of St. Paul are preparing to entertain the Council in first-class style and the trip promises to be a delightful one. (Signed) ALEXANDER WALTERS. President. T. THOMAS FORTUNE. Chancellor, Special Secretary. CYRUS FIELD ADAMS. General Secretary. You will miss a great meeting, if you do not go to St. Paul, Minn., to the National Afro-American Council, July 9-10-11, 1902. You must ask for tickets to the National Educational Association at Minneapolis. The rate will be one fare plus $2 for the round trip. You ride on street cars from Minneapolis to St. Paul for ten cents. An excellent program has been prepared. Mrs. Ida B. Wells-Barnett, the famous 'anti-lynching agitator, will speak on that subject. Mr. Jas. H. Guy, County Attorney at large, will discuss on the subject "The Undoing of the 14th and 15th Amendments." Mr. Guy is a strong lawyer and a forcible talker and a clear reasoner. His subject will be discussed by I. H. Bradley, Kan., Chas. W. Scratchin, Esq., Minn., and Geo. H. Woodson of the National Government. He will discuss the discussion on the question "The Power of the National Government THE WORLD'S FIRST WOMEN'S HISTORY MUSEUM DON'T FAIL TO GO! to Protect its Citizens." It will be discussed by J. Madison Vance, New Orleans, and Walter M. Farm, Earbo. Mo. Dr. W. T. Vernon, President of the Western University, will read the paper "Needs of the Negro Ministry," which will be discussed by Dr. Jno. Dr. M. C. Dr. LeLadt, of Chicago. Dr. M. C. Mason will deliver one of the addresses of theception. Hon. L. T. Montgomery, Miss., will discuss the status of the Negro in the South. Chas, B. Farr, M. Duncan, J. H. Chas, J. Ern, Jr. Walker, William Franch. DELPHI - II "Trovatore" -Verdi- Grand Fashion Miss E. Edna Grace, Minneapolis; Miss Evelyn G. Hickman, St. Paul. BIRMINGHAM - The Outlook for The Fashion St. Paul. RECEPTION TO DELEGATES. At 10:30 P. M. there will be a reception to the Dameses to the Press Convention, the National Afro-American Council and the National Educational Association by the ladies of the Church in the Church Partors. PRESS ASSOCIATION. The twenty-third annual meeting of the National Afro-American Press Association will be held in Pilgrim Baptist church, Cedar street and Summit avenue, St. Paul, Minn., Monday, July 7, 1902, commencing at 10 a.m. All editors and publishers of bona fide newspapers and periodicals published in the interest of the Afro-American race are entitled to membership in the association. Each publication has but one vote. The time selected for the meeting is just prior to the meeting of the National Afro-American Council, so it will be convenient for editors who attend that meeting to be present at the Press Association. A rate of one fare plus $2 for the round trip may be obtained by purchasing tickets to the National Educational Association at Minneapolis. The trip from Minneapolis to St. Paul is by street car, and costs 10 cents. BE SURE TO ATTEND: The meeting of the National Afro-American Council at St. Paul, Minn., July 9-10, promises to be the largest yet held. All railroads in the United States have made a rate of one fare plus $2 for the round trip to the National Educational Association which meets in Minneapolis during the same week, and persons wishing to attend the MISS IDA WELLS BARNETT. Council meeting can purchase tickets to the N. E. A. at Minneapolis and ride over to St. Paul on street car for 10 cents. There is no color line in St. Paul. Every hotel in the city will receive American and accommodations may also be secured with many private families at reasonable rates. An excellent programme has been prepared. The present status of the race and the best means of improving conditions will be discussed by such eloquent speakers as Mrs. Mollie Church Terrell, ex-Representative George B. White, Mrs. J. Silome Yatee Archie, Mrs. J. B. Scott, H. H. C. Smith, W. H. Pledger, John C. Dancy, C. J. Perry, and a host of other silver-tongued orators. Just the Opposite. The papers have had something to say about the alleged discovery, by Chicago investigators, of a process for developing a form of a combination of certain chemicals. A stranger who was visiting the stock- parks in that city was shown a laboratory in that city, and asked about it, and was informed that some wonderful results had been achieved by the experiments in that department of chemistry. "Is this where they make animals out of chemicals?" he asked. "Oh, no," replied the employee who was shaken up. "What is where they make chemicals out of animals." Plausible. "Deliver has proven," said the professor of astronomy, "that the moon is the moon. Now, Mr. Frisch, what do we do de- duce from that?" HOME BRAND Goods and you will always be happy. The New Process Flame Roasted Coffee better strength and finer flavor than any other. GS, COOPER & CO., IMPORTERS and MANUFA WHOLESALE GROCER ST. PAUL, MINN. Sharood Shoes Are Good Shoes" INUFACTURING PROCERS, YO Wha $18.00, Rogers- IMPORTERS and MANUFACTURING WHOLESALE GROCERS, ST. PAUL, MINN Made only by Sharood Shoe Co. Aristo TRADE MARK ST. PAUL MINN. I have for sale over 80,000 acres of choice farming lands Minnesota and in the Red River Valley of North Dakota $11. to $30 per acre, as good farming lands as any in the world. I also want to call attention to the 20,000 acres of the grazing lands in Western North Dakota at $2.75 to $4.50 acre. This is the place—if you love to keep stock—that you should invest your money in. Call on or address. HENRY P. UPHAM, President. E. H. BAILEY, Vice Pres. WM. A. MILLER, Cashier. The First National Bank, ST. PAUL, MINN. U. S. DEPOSITORY. CAPITAL $1,000,000. SURPLUS $800,000. DIRECTORS. UPHAM. T. L. SCHURMEIER. JAMES N. HILL. E. W. WINTER. ILL. D. C. SHEPARD. E. H. CUTLER. H. E. THOMPSON. NLEAF CLARK. C. D. GILFILLAN. F. B. CLARKE. W. A. MILLER. E. H. BAILEY. E. N. SAUNDERS. F. P. SHEPARD. STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF The National German American Bank; Of Saint Paul Minnesota New We're Real Every one of these to merchant tail terns are handsom quality. There are line, so don't dela $28 Su $7,972,667.30 DEDUCTORS JOHN A. HUMBRED A. H. LINDEKE JOHN H. ALLEN JEFFERSON O. P. LANPHER THOMAS WILSON J. W. LUSK JOREPH LOCKIE DEPOSITS December 17, 189% - $1,870,306.96 December 12, 1900 - $5,207,122.32 February 20, 1902 - $8,806,245.71 OFFICERS W. LUSK, Pres. F. WEYERHAEUSER, Vice Pres. DSEPH LOCKEY, Cashier. THEO DRAZ, Ass't Cashier. TRADE SECURITIES BOUGHT AND SOLD. RAFE DEPORIT VAULTS T VAUILT "A good cigar is a smoke." Rudyard Kipling The YELLOW KING 5¢CIGAR is a good cigar. The best that can be said of it falls short of the reality. Smoke the cigar. At all dealers. HART & MURPHY, MAKERS. BANNING ADUCO. The New Process Blue Flame Roasted Coffee is better strength and finer flavor than any other. GRIGGS, COOPER & CO., "Sharood Shoes Are Good Shoes" And the more they are worn the more it is demonstrated that such is the fact. If everybody will try a pair of "C K S" or "R E Z" shoes, they will be convinced that they are the cheapest and best $3.50 value they ever wore, and will try it again. WESTERN FARM LANDS FOR SALE. I have for sale over 80,000 acres of choice farming lands in Minnesota and in the Red River Valley of North Dakota at $11. to $30 per acre, as good farming lands as any in the world. I also want to call attention to the 20,000 acres of fine grazing lands in Western North Dakota at $2.75 to $4.50 per acre. This is the place—if you love to keep stock—that you should invest your money in. Call on or address. E. G. MELLEM. Cor. 6th and Jackson, - ST. PAUL, MINN. HENRY P. UPHAM, President. E. H. BAILEY, Vice Pres. WM. A. MILLER, Cashier. P. U. PUHAM. T. L. SCHURMIER. JAMES N. HILL. E. W. WINTER. H. J HILL. D. C. SHEPARD. E. H. CUTLER. E. H. THOMPSON. GREENLEAF CLARK. C. D. GILFILLAN. F. B. CLARKE. W. A. MILLER. E. H. BAILLEY. E. N. SAUNDERS. F. P. SHEPARD. The National German American Bank Capital Stock - - Surplus and Profits Circulation - - - Deposits - - - J. W. LUSK, Pres. JOSEPH LOCKEY, Cashier. THEO DRAZ, Asst' Cashier. HIGH GRade SECURITIES' BOUGHT AND SOLD. F. WEYERHAEUSER, Vice Pres. RAFE DEPORTE VAU! THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL APPEAL-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER YOU! Mr. Man, Read This What Do You Think of Buying $18.00, $20.00 and $25.0 Rogers-Peet and Stein-Bloch Suits At a Special Price of $15 Never Mind "Why." We're Ready to Deliver the Good Every one of these Suits is of the highest quality and ed to merchant tailors $ 30.00 to $40.00 creations. The terns are handsome, the styles correct, the fabrics of the quality. There are only from one to three of a style in e line, so don't delay. We're Ready to Deliver the Goods. Every one of these Suits is of the highest quality and equal to merchant tailors $ 30.00 to $40.00 creations. The patterns are handsome, the styles correct, the fabrics of the best quality. There are only from one to three of a style in each line, so don't delay. season that we are willing to sell at cost in order to close out at once. The Great Home Store. St. Paul GOLDEN BELL --- $350 Aristo TRADE MARK ST. PAUL, MINN. $1,000,000.00 116,421.59 50,000.00 6,806,245.71 P.J. BOWLIN LOUGHR CO WHOLESALEER EXCLUSIVELY ST. PAUL, MINN. PART OF A BOTTLE OF HUMBOLT PURE 188D RYE WHISKEY IS BETTER THAN A WHOLE BOTTLE OF ORDINARY KINDS SOLD BY DEALERS. Several lines of the finest creations of Rogers: Peet that we received so late in the Cigars and Tobacco OUR MOTTO Live and Let Live. OUR PRINCIPLE Equal Rights for All. OUR TRADE-MARK "GOLDEN BELL" Very Truly, JOS. P. WHITWELL Great Wash Goods Sacrifice It's time to talk of reducing stocks. We never carry goods over from one season to another, but start each season with a fresh, new stock. In keeping with this policy we have inaugurated the greatest clearing-out sale of Wash Goods the town has ever known. And it's not a sale of undesirable, passe patterns, but an offering of the season's choicest productions—the most wanted styles—at unheard-of low prices. If You Have a Wash Goods Want Attend to it A table of good Bastistes in floral designs and neat small figures—styles equal to the high-priced goods. a yard. 30-inch Yarn Combed Lawn.....9c 30-inch Fine Batistes.....9c 30-inch Dresden Dimities.....9c 30-inch Fast Black Lawns. Take your pick Friday for.....19c All our Egyptian Tissues, Silk-finished Chambrays, plain and striped; all our Glasgow Tissues and Plumeties, Marvel Lenos and Sheer Zephyrs; all our Scotch Ginghams—none reserved—go at the special price, a yard.....10c 50 pieces Duck Suitings, plain colors, black, navy, white and red; also all colors and sizes of dots.....Bring This For the flight of Time but we do want you to know that we can furnish you the leading Pianos of the world at Prices and Terms that will meet with your favor. STEINWAY, KNABE, KRANICH & BACH, IVERS & POND, EMERSON, LUDWIG. KENNETH CLARK, President C. H. BIGELOW, Vice-President GEO. H. PRINCE, Cashier H. W. PARKER, Asst. Cashier The Merchants National Bank OF SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA. Capital One Million UNITED STATES DEPOSITARY. DIRECTORS CRAWFORD LIVINGSTONE J. H. SKINNER D. R. NOYES F. B. KELLOGG KENNETH CLARK LOUIS W. HILL V. M. WATKINS C. H. BIGELOW E. N. SAUNDERS GEO. H. PRINCE L. P. ORDWAY CRAWFORD LIVINGSTONE J. H. SKINNER D. R. NOYES F. B. KELLOGG KENNETH CLARK LOUIS W. HILL V. M. WATKINS C. H. BIGELOW E. N. SAUNDERS GEO. H. PRINCE L. P. ORDWAY THE STATE SAVING BANK GERMANIA LIFE BUILDING, Fourth and Minnesota Sts. ST. PAUL. The only Bank in St. Paul exclusively for savings doing business under the savings bank law of the state as amended to date. TAKES DEPOSITS OF $1.00 AND UPWARD. TRUSTEES Ferdinand Willius, C. G. Lawrence, John D. Ludden, Gustav Willius, John D. O'Brien, William Constans, Harris Richardson, John B. Sanborn, Thomas Fitzpatrick, C. P. Noyes, W. B. Dean, Jul. M. Goldsmith. DEALERS IN Gents' Fine Clothing, Gents' Fine Clothing, WEST SUPER ELL AGING Hamm's B only modern The air is perature never This refr WEST SUPERIOR WIS. ST. PAUL, MINN. AGING BEER WEST SUPERIOR WIS. Hamm's Beer is stored and aged in the only modern refrigerating plant in St. Paul. The air is pure and sweet and the temperature never varies. This refrigerator plant has a capacity double the actual wants, so that Hamm's Beer is older than any other beer on the market. One of the precautions of Honest Brewing that makes Hamm's Beer absolutely pure and properly aged. Hamm's Beer ELL --- The Northwest's Greatest Store. 250 pieces of Scotch corded Batistes and Belford Cords, priced for at less than half ..... C. B. BOWLBY, PRESIDENT. H. W. FAGLEY, VICE-PRES. AND TREAS. C. $20 AND $22 Sixth and Robert Sts. WINE 150 pieces 36-inch Per all new patterns, purchased from a city jobber at a great concession. Price less than half. Yd. 5c 6c Fine Embroidered Swisses, white and linen dots and lace stripes — New Pineapple big variety, lots of white groundwork with black stripes, figures and foulard patterns — Fine Imported Dimities—all specially prepared for cellophane Fine Embroidered Swissies, white and linen colors, with dots and lace stripes — New Pineapple Batistes, a big variety, lots of white groundwork with black stripes, figures and foulard patterns — Fine Imported Dimities—all specially priced for selling ..... 15c Tow Sha—A fine linen-colored fabric with rich satin stripes, interspersed with dainty colored figures, very sheer—Just out and the leading New York fad. 39c a yard ..... Extra Special—Mousselline de Soie, all plain colors, the 50c quality. ..... 29c We Don't Want Wings but we do want you to know that we can furnish you the leading Pianos of the world at Prices and Terms that will meet with your favor. STEINWAY, KNABE, KRANICH & BACH, IVERS & POND, EMERSON, LUDWIG. Everything in the music line at W. J. DYER & BRO. 21-23 W. 5th St. GEO. H. PRINCE, Cashier H. W. PARKER, Asst. Cashier DIRECTORS KENNETH CLARK LOUIS W. HILL C. H. BIGLOW C. H. BIGLOW E. N. SAUNDERS GEO. H. PRINCE L. P. ORDWAY GERMANIA LIFE BUILDING, Fourth and Minnesota Sts. ST. PAUL. The only Bank in St. Paul exclusively for savings doing business under the savings bank law of the state as amended to date. TAKES DEPOSITS OF $1.00 AND UPWARD. TRUSTEES Ferdinand Willius, C. G. Lawrence, John D. Ludden, Gustav Willius, John D. O'Brien, William Constans, Harris Richardson, John B. Sanborn, Thomas Fitzpatrick, C. P. Noyes, W. B. Dean, Jul. M. Goldsmith. FLOAN & LEVEROOS, Furnishing Goces, Hats, Caps, Shoes, Etc. Cor. Seventh and Jackson Sts., UPERIOR WIS. ST. PAUL. MINN. We keep ourselves in the van of progress as regards the getting of most appropiate and popular things for the home. And we are equally progressive in the making of low prices and easy terms. Try us. Maple, Mahogany or Oak finish. Strong, well-made Dresser, worth $13.50. Our price, only $9.85 Serviceable Porch, Lawn or Inside Rocker, Rush seat, only $1.48 Splint seat Porch or Lawn Chair, white maple, only $89c THE CARPET SEASON IS BY NO MEANS OVER with us. Our Carpet business has been very heavy, but we were prepared for it. Our assortment is very complete and we can, even now, please any taste as regards colors and designs. CASH OR CREDIT. FULL-SIZED IRON BED. Any color, brass Rods and Thin mings, only... $5.85 ST. PAULS MAMMOTH BAY PAYMENT HOUSE NORTH STAR HOUSE FURNISHING CO. 434-436 WABASHA ST. ST. PAUL 1 WINECKE AND DOERR'S RED BOX GUARANTEES QUALITY Each Label of Good Cigars. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT Agents for the Ss Stoves and A Rs Sen and Thatcher Furnaces. Dealers in ware, Tools, Tinware, Paints, Oil's, Glass. Sheet Iron and Copper Workers. University Ave., ST. PAUL. MINN. "GOOD ENOUGH FOR ANYBODY" "CHEAP ENOUGH FOR EVERYBODY" KUHLES & STOCK, MAKERS, ST. PAUL, MNN. PRIVATE SMITH CIGAR IT'S ONLY 5¢ Known the World Over. --- ```markdown ``` THIS TRADE MARK WINECKE AND DOERR'S HED BOX GUARANTEES QUALITY In Red on Each Label of Good Cigars. L. L. May & Co.'s Is the Place to Get Your ... FLOWERS ... 64 East Sixth Street. St. Paul. MODERN DRUGGISTS OPEN DAY AND NIGHT A. D. THOMPSON DRUG CO. COR. THIRD ST. AND FIRST AVE. SOUTH, OPPOSITE POST OFFICE MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. HERTZ BROS. Agents for the Red Cross Stoves and aRs Seng And Thatcher Furnaces. Dealers in Builders' Hardware, Tools, Tinware, Paints, Oil's, Glass. Tin, Sheet Iron and Copper Workers. 519-521 University Ave., ST. PAUL. MINN. --- THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER. Lindeke's Apple & Blossom Flour STANDS ALONE. Clothes the Whole Family from Head to Foot, and does it well and for the least money. No one does more. Money refunded or purchases gladly exchanged. The "Plymouth" is as good as a bank. THE PLYMOUTH CLOTHING HOUSE, ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS MINNEAPOLIS. ICE C Foot, BOHN SIPH BOHN SIPHON SYSTEM Refrigerator Cut the ice bill The ice bill—not the first cost—is the expense of a refrigerator. Perfect circulation, using all the cold air, is possible only with our siphon system. The ice compartment is food cold when also be chamber, then up through the food compartment. It is drawn by the siphon back to the ice chamber. Here all the impurities and odors are contained in the food compartment. The air passing into the food compartment is pure—not taint of fruits or vegetables. The walls are of extra thickness and filled with our own pressure not too compressible. They cost more than any refrigerator with made, and are the best non-conductors and cold retainers. This system gives average temperature of 38 to 42 degrees. Ordinary refrigerators or ice boxes 52 perfectly easily with a consumption. Enmeled removable shelves cleans perfectly easily with a consumption. To 2 pphod-qualition cleaners. ```markdown ``` --- --- LEAD THE WORLD SMOKE THE LEADERS "EL PATERNO" Ten Cent Cigar. "SIGHT DRAFT" Five Cent Cigar. W. S. CONRAD, Distributor MINNEAPOLIS. ST. PAUL. ICE CREAM Frozen from CREAM. SPECIAL DISCOUNTS TO LODGES AND CHURCHES. The Crescent Creamery Co., BOTH 'PHONES. 3rd and Minnesota. North Star Shoe Co. MANUFACTURERS OF FINE SHOES MINNEAPOLIS, - MINN. WEISKOPF PAINT & WALL PAPER CO. JOBBERS AND RETAILERS 54 East Seventh St. ST. PAUL, MINN. Telephone Main 1588-4. ON SYSTEM Refrigerators Cut the ice bill in two. nursery, 7 W. Fifteenth Bl. W. Wilkinson St. gem Refrigerators in our five new dining cars have now been in constant use for the past four months. During this time, have made innumerable experiments jected them to many severe tests, the results of which have only grown their great value from our self- standpoint, but have thoroughly convinced us what Oxygen, dry, even temperature, and perfect refrigeration, which is very essential in preserving perishable things, are very essential in preserving perishable things, they have no equiv. They are certainly all you claim for them, and they give great satisfaction in doing so, they are entirely satisfactory to us in every particular. You really. R. WHITE, Commissary. Adopted by the Pullman Company, Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry; Northern Pacific Ry; Green Northern Ry; Southern Ry; Illinois Central; Pacific Railroad Pennsylvania R. B; Burlington & Quincy; Chicago & Alton and others. Booklet is full of valuable information on care and economy of a refrigerator, and the details of the equipment and equipment depon to receipt of this price, and if in feet does you are not satisfied it is all it is represented to be, we will refund your money. Write today. WHITE ENAMEL REFrigerATOR CO. 401 Jackson St. St. Paul, Minn. The image provided does not contain any text or content. It appears to be a blank or empty space with no visible elements. PILLSBURY'S Flaked Wheat Food PILLSBURY'S VITOS WHEAT FOOD STERILIZED PILLSBURY WASTBURY FLOUR WHEAT CO. GOVERNOR 18 RENOMINATED BY REPUBLICAN STATE CON- 3 VENTION. GOES TO HIM BY ACCLAMATION. IVERSON WINS FOR AUDITOR’ AND REESE LOSES FOR CLERK or count. __ SENATOR NELSON IS CHAIRMAN PLATFORM INDORSES THE STATE AND NATIONAL ADMINIS- ‘TRATIONS, For Governor—Samuel R, Van Sant of Winona, For Lieutenant Governor — Ray W. Jones of Minueapolis, — ~ For Secretary of State—Peter B, Han- son of Litchflela, For State Auditor—Samuel G. Iverson of Fillmore county. For State ‘Treasurer—Sullus H, Block of St. Peter. : For Attorney General — Wallace B. Douglas of Moorhead, For Clerk of :he Supreme Court—C, A. Pidgeon of Butfalo. For Railroad and Warehouse Commis. sloner—C. B. Stap'es of Dakota coun- ty, St. Paul, July 3. — The Republican state convention yesterday. ronominated Gov. Yan Sant by acclamation, The ‘only conterts In completing the. tieket Were for the aitiees of state auditor and ‘clerk of the supreme court. 8. G, Iver- son developed surprising strength on ‘Uhe first ballot, and before the reeult Was figured up by the secretaries, the nomination was made unanimous, His opponents were J.P. Jacobson and Odin Halden. ‘The frst ballot for clerk of court found PD. B, Teose, 0, A. Plageon and AJ. Rverett well grouped with Gish close ‘behind, but before I ws announced counties began chang Sinz their votes and one of Rease’s su9- Porters waved to make the nomination Of 6. A. Pidmoon unanimous, Tha convention wea ealled to order ww W, ©. Masteroan. cheieman of the slate Gentwal commetttce, who present Senator Knute Nelson as. temporary chairman, Senator Neteon rag. given ‘an enthusiastic receotion, “He made a Scorers phcnt ane ane Horst ferger now before the Reubite- fan party. Tn the course-of bla. re- asks he: sa: = “We have federal and state legisla- Mion azate=t the consolidation of, poral- Yor and. onneting vailroxd ines, and neither Prosident. Rostovelt nor Gov. Nan Sant has nernitted theve lawe to Iie obsolete. ‘They have not acted in iy aonen of Bostility to the rallronds, Tor front a. high gente of public duty. he hutders pnd managers of out Novthweetyn trunk Hines have done @ pebls ond imcortant service. We are Pat opvosed to the “consolidation ‘0 uch theoneh fear of what these men would ilo, but they. ate getting well Mons in years, and soon we would be vite ferey of @ non-reskdent cornor- tian meee foemoeetea in RESh alle cots Onan fo Tes rates, “The constitutional amendment pro- nosed to aive congress :power to als- holve mononoiles failed because of Democratic apposition. “Under Resublican prosperity. the xurplus of cur product over the home Aemand ie Invading all the markets of the world, white countries of the old world suffer from industrial depression fd stoangton. “Under the leadership of Washington we gained our political Indenondenes under the Teadershin of MoKinley and Roosevelt we have rained ote financial and Industrial in= eererdenes, “rhe eutvency law of 1900. extin- mulshed the aver Roreey ond ansale- mented the taift Taye of 1897 as a factor far tha gers) 00M, Sparing Cheelind's, administration wh wore 9 dettor nathan: ander -Re- fublican legizJation we. have become Ube finaisiat center of the world, “there war only one course—to ac- ‘cent the cession of the Spanish Islands, etablish low and order and eive them A stable form of government, Any coiher course would have stamped the United States as moral fmbectle among the nations of the world.” ‘AL the conclusion bf Senator Nelson's ‘speech the convention took a recess, reassembling: shortly atter 3 o'ctock, ‘The committee on permnnent organ Seqtion loottod on James . Wernan of Minnieapotia for permanent chairman, and the temporary secretaries were eontinued, "The work of nominating a tleket was token up withont deloy. C. A. Morey fof Winans nresenth {he name of Gov. Yon Sent, sconces resent Ruane fond the nosfration weg rude be aes clamation. Ray W. Jones was nom- inated for Ucutenent governor also: hy acclamation before the committee Ab- pointed to notify Gov. Van Sant of his Romination escorted the governor .to the platform, Gov. Van Sant thanked the conven- Vow for his renomination, and reviewed st Teneth (he faaues Iely to be prom- nent inv the {atl cameaten, Sreseiary of State Peter B, Hanson, Slate ‘Treastrer Jullue H, Block Ate tomey. General “Douslas and C.F. Staples, raliroad and warehouse com- rlasioner, were renominated by ac- clamation. ‘The resolutions committes made its report and presented its platform a8 soon as the nomination of the ticket ‘nhd been completed, and after kome Aiscussion as to the advisability of stronger declaration In. favor of the ‘Cuban Feclorocity ursed by President Roosevelt, the committee's report was adopted without change. "The. resolutions “commend Gov.’ Van Sant for his course against the merger: favor equalization of the burdens of taxes; adhere to the polley of protes- on: indorse the administration Phillp- pine polley: favor” reelprocity with Gubaz urge represeion of monopoly: favor legislation against anarchy; In- elorse fenators ond vepresentatives Mm congress: favor elective senate; mourn McKinley: Indorse Roosevelt. ‘ne Platform. ‘The following is the platform fo fail: ca See cee oe et eye eee ea ‘Tho Republicans of Minnesota, assembled fa state contention” restart Ine’ platters maepte ty tue" Republi nations” convention.» a Phuaderphin ta 100, "ana" pledge anew thet lat mupor fot babel ee dont, William StcKinioy. "Ax. cieeen, soe $51 team het yielded ia beat ere tonscen af the world kat ie enshsine® ts the tarts of hin countermen “We cordially Ingres the able and. patriot adekininteation of President Ronsevsit. We te proud of Bie'manly courage, his purity and Als Mlevotion "to "the toterente” ofthe. entre gual. and, biodew nlm the earnest aapport at" the ‘Republicans ot "AUnnesota inal Bia Me Pitney org i t Tt T ‘cues alaols an conidons- of ine, Called: ses. ca ree ce iii, ete Sainte Nts Sek Svc Shdte "ae ot tetiat: Be Ta KEancd sata nlad ne ote Sedteed ae ete ae he en Sceide 5 Sete ate al et "ve" cone the people of Ml "Gr" Seti tm, ppl ot Minna aout SEMIN 5 eel Maa Eilat See andi eee ane sae sat Genny ac He Bhaha tne Mitte SE Stes oa nie anal Gat Giscn Sopra an Merger. * is tena ns lig ole ating thea Races Leta Geet et Bide dite an pont cet Ss Ercan ey ones Soe Eig Me ttata loce ae eb Ba ee se Gan ere ia meee Taxation, Raye ip seer tm ein tw al fae att SERIE Sea ass Sh tate et Sed eine! SES ee a TEER, Pom ta fe mera Examen tan ache it ahr edi en adi ae Sie seeiimes oe ees tee Eeitota tiets tact bs te ‘Gillett Panta "yp an, ihc batppinel ‘g.indome the osteo te nisin eT sranas te cas ote aarti BS eet i eh at oR eer ofweatie eae Hat ad acai Sten Sie See Se el ea enh Slate scat aa dei ene eam Iie Army and Kavy. sis cotens, tear ons gute tain heey temas sans, tegiee dole tits tir Bhugtar EAs cesar capa, Ui aaa Sot SPR? aha G atm act Bagh gt Gis Sa SE " Protection, Sryostery tet mer pication ayes hiarins came Seed RO tie Seat ee Bed aetna atl Rotatoy gt ad"Want a a SSR A aay ara, i Soe PU ota ats under tate goeteine we itor, wach, malities om tint time be sequed by chanktag Cone Set ie remy ane oe eels Recinrostty. Ys tury eo ye xem fo Barats a Aron ames 2 Shave" eae nba teen al tena SS sea cet Our fiat duty ts to ace that the protection seo ati et ee Ege rth rr ea mies eohaee Oe Gan Ry Se etal Ae Sha ae omental pre a CBE a inca ew atta olf aa etaatae Se that etm ae ce Se ee aa sae tagceaanant ae a "The New Republic ot Cuba, se Gnttann t tre soe oa oot Se Bee mana eMac amin eae ot Cah oan Eien eta intent ret Insure tothe aavantane ot Souk Sations: help oleate nis chat nat steal trier Sette at i SSH le eB lan” 53> ernie th ney of eenerien ociy Someats semas srmommtn item ii’ poaeon” ot and especially when they raise the prices of ge ee ee ade es RSried Weer Ay one techn Tee we we ed a aa Sa et Serena ee als Senn aa oo ee ars eee, Su Stes Geet aeaiaa eet Henne at ais stp ea See nh ead nt ne Aste itr et Sree ede Raat Sh setae nt TEL ft ana olan Dentieas! eXtra Lows cate & PAS ass fe ar iy Ss i Puts Soe We Ap ae aa a Stet k teas een arti afritea yeaa oad et Staal etoeat ities eas ita SRS i es Sie a eae aa tne os Sats Mindctoia Delegation. ‘pe Require fr yeat Weiadtincs eke altar sane Moa ie ol i Ms Et Ser mere ee Ee Sale Me fn noe wa oh "Sapien nat af nena indore vr rie, te 8 Meson are SORT Ore i a oe Sabet oft Saar ace fnilae opin ie rience of fen members and ee ee Eek ee | ‘eaten ee ota Maa Rs Sea ae Lae ca nae ae ren SPS one ieee et Bah aler GAC acd He dn neces tes eter a Sana Meee ct rc @ BEGIN FIGHT ov TRUST. Colorado {ate Omiclats Would Din- Se obese Denver, July % — James D. Grant general. manager of the America’ Sineting “ands” Retiing. company’s plants in Colorado, waa served yester fay with notice of the sult to be com: Inenced In the supreme court for a dls folution of the trust and for the ap. Polntment of a receiver for Its property Yesterday ‘sfternoon. Assistant Attor hey General. George Post. left for Pusbio and. Leadville (0. servernotie on the ofcers of pie Colorado, Phila Aeiphia and Bimetditic emelters, whieh fire also alleged to be in the trust, Tt iekely that the. supreme. court wil Geclds Saturday wether to allow the Hate (0. fle, ite sult. ‘The supreme ourt Is due to “adjourn for. the-term Saturday, and arguments In behalf of ‘the state's case may not be Beard De {ore September. KILLED AT ADANCE, Participants Tadulge’th ‘Too Muen ndulse Guthrie, Okta., July & — During ¢ ance at the home of Judge W. 8. Pet. tit in Pawhuska, George Dickey; ar Osage graduate of Carlisle was eho! and. killed by Pettit. ‘Dickey. wa Grinking. He was rebuked by Petti ard immefiately shot Pettlt. Pett then shot Dickey four times, killing him instantly. Pettlt Jo a high Indias ‘oficial and the finest attorney tn th ‘tribe. Behe (a aa i. oo wo oo lec THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER. Rose in Eight Years from Poverty to Immense Wealth bias ee We r zn > oe . Zaid =2 FFA ee ee ae ae Se 20 ni Sa ie, “ Bei wah Beak a, Siena Pile Ye a 2s ae EO / 2 |, From the poor debtor's oath, to a Tortie of $20,000,000 in tess. than elght. years isa good deal ot a jump, Dut Mev Alboté ©. Burrage has cleared tho lesp. successfully and today is jone of the.tichest mon in Boston’ and ‘head of the copper business in that alty. ee Mr,' Burrage’ is now forty-one years of age. Bight years ago he was strug: ling along on a very meagre income Salned by his efforts as a lawyer, But he:fs one of two things—elther # man of destiny or the possessor of great ‘brain power. He prefers to be called the latter, Haq any one prophesied that he would become within seven years a multimillionaire, he would have had nothing but the deepest pity forthe prophet, yet the financial ro: mance of this" young lawyer \ reads more brilliantly than an Arablan Night's tale, To learn how very poor Mr. Bur- sage really was tén years ago; oné has ‘only to turn to the records of thé poor debtors’ court for the years of 1891 fand.1892, which shows threo Yeases where he had defaulted in jtdgments obtained against him. Mr. Burrage owes his god fortune tn the: very beginning to: his indus- trlous reading of the newspapers. Tt ‘was ten years ago that he saw an ac- count of the legal fight in Brookline, Mase., between Henry H. Rogers and Edwatd Addicks, who had conflicting gas inteyests in that town. Mr.Ad- dicks, in addition, had a lacge gad in- terest in Boston. "Boing interested in this fight as an outsider, Mr. Burrage looked up the charter of the old Brookline gas company merely out of curiosity, and learned, to his surprise, that. the company had, by legislative enactment, the ‘right to extend its pipes into Boston at wil, Mr. Burrage saw his opportunity. Hoping for much, but never dream- ing of all that was to come of that ttle notice, he made himself known to Mr. Rogers and revealed his discov- Jery, together with the statement that ‘an option for the purchase of the Brookline gas company could be ob- tained. Mr. Rogers was delighted. It gave him a weapon against Mr. Addicks, and the Brookline gas company pass: ed into the hands of the Standard Ol company. ‘To make matters clear it mst be explained that Mr. Addicks had for years been enjoying a virtual mon- poly of all the. gas business in Boston. ‘The pedple were protesting against the’ high prices charged. ‘The contract:for lighting the streets ‘of Boston was about to expire and the mayor invited Nir. Addicks to meet ‘him and consider @ proposition for a reduction of-rates... Mr. Addicks did not seo the mayor. - ‘This little incident and the’ reor- ganization of the Brookline Gag com- pany were almost coincident... Mayor Mathewa realized that tho greatest {foe to monopoly was competition, and when the Brookline Gas company came forward and offered to ight the ‘elty for far less than the Addicks Jcompany {ts offer was gladly accepted. ‘Mr. Addicks was thus pushed to the wall and gladly came to terms in the lend.’ As counsel for the Brookline Gas company and the Standard Oil company Mr. Burrage was given the SIGNAL IN MUTE LANGUAGE. System Used by Stock Brokers While Trading on ‘Change. On the floor of the stock exchange ‘there has been in vogue for years and 4g still in-use a’mute system of lan- guage by which telegraph operators convey’ orders to brokers whom they represent. It Is done by movements of the fingers and the purpose, isto hhido the nature of orders from other brokers. The plan is after,this fash: fon: ‘When telegraph operator receives an order to transmit to a broker he ‘will raise ‘his index singer if the or- der 16 to uy at an eighth; reverse tt if the order is to sell. Should the ‘operator: want to indicate other trac: tons, ‘each additional finger raises the limit an eighth. The fist clinched ‘nd thumb: uplifted tells the broker that thtee-quarters:is meant. When tt-comes to seven-eighths that fraction 18 made by forming a right angle with the thimb and first finger, and, f- ally, if the even figure 18 wanted, a ‘waving movement of the hand is used, ‘This fs the system agopted by near. Ae : Seine Pe a ™ Sept LE . ee YO ae # Wi eae — ei Lyk ‘ Vy Bia ecg a Ea | Pon el ie in iP — Se a a. >, mT Nee eS te ee, ti ie 3 D2 eM Se. a * og fi ah oe Re Te feACBimage eon ef a a a Siar’) ™~ 2S “i (a 87 in ar pe Zohd le ied i ORs ma Om ea - fs it es in = ua” Cer PRuarage- ae enormous fee of $800,000, said to be the largest ever known-in legal his- tory anywhere in the world, ‘This was'the beginning of his Alad- ainlike wealth. Tho Stdndard Oi people appreciated the worth of s0 dralay @ man to such an extent that they not only invited him to embark with them in some of thelr copper deals, but wien the Amalgamated ‘Copper company was formed, he was ‘appofinted ‘to represent. New’ England in the directorate, a position which he holds to-day. 3 ‘And that is how Mr. Burrage made his millions. He was born in Ash burnham, Mass,, but went with his parents to California at the age, of three years, returning: when seightoen years.old to enter Harvard. He gradu ated four years later and commenced the study of law, being admitted to the Woreester county bar. In 1885 he married Alice H. Haskell of Roxbury, near Boston, avery pret ty girl, of humble parentage, like Mr. Burrage himself, and she made pleasant home for him on his meager salary and shared. his. poverty with fortitude. é |. Today they live in the most lordly ‘mansion in all New England, a supert palaco on Commonwealth’ avenue which was bullt at vast cost and fur ished with the best that Europe and America could afford. He has a beautiful Itallan villa at ‘Cohasset and a’ palatial home in Red Jands,, Gal, surroundéd by thousands of acres. Here he spends his winters with his family, traveling in his pala tial private train, with numerous ser vants and the costliest of appoint ments. ‘Mrs. Burrage is a pretty woman, tall and slender, who is as yet bewild: fered with the vast wealth that has ‘come to her. ‘Sho has no social ambi tions. Her husband Ioads her with Jewels and fine clothes, and she drives about in very splendid carriages. He is as much her lover as ever. They have four children, who, once’ forced to Know poverty, now Fevol in the glory of riches. ‘They have the mos! superb playrooms and toys and ar¢ Keen in thelr énjoyment of the fairy: ‘ihe: things that come tothem, ly every active broker in making. Caeicdgne tet privet “othars trees ollwae tp We orders won hays an iideteadaat notation device fergie ence a Sas frill ais Reowa only w tre pare fos ak td tepaee desea casero If you ever visit the gallery of the Haak eachango't tbe Leonel banging Fon wl crete ea active aor toe ands’ of shaves bousht od wold ia {hls queer talon, Patudelpuls ‘ret ora. 7 A Double Application er. Dr. Swallow, who haa recently ‘been very much in ‘the eye of the feortd Sacaane oe us Cates be Vie Mamie eect coe, ing tht. of aeccations agetant ine ints President Matisigy ois a nore boot. Gootge: alta’ Rowasend, wa Bate orate none cialis a? Sau "Wat doesthat name mean?” Dr. ‘Swallow was asked by a young lady of his parish, *. ~ “Why,. the ee a the author's ihitnle, acayersdthe- clergyman “a. a: downsead" Rt, Ss pepe. Bech a in. + OO SE Mr. Burrage’s ‘steam yacht Aztec, which was launched from the Cres. cent Shipyards at Elizabethport re cently, 18 the largest. steamer: built this season, and when flnished will be one of the most elaborate azoat. It was bull for Henry Clay Pierce of St. Louis. “Mr. Plerce finally decided that the yacht was not as large as he wanted, and she was purchased for Mr. Burrage, for whom she is being completed. | The yacht cost about $340,000 to bulld’ and equip. She ts to be ready by Aug. 1. LAWYER WAS PERSPICUOUS. Eloquent and Amusing Déclaration of ‘a Oounkey Attecae’ in Ohta: When Congressman Tompkins of Ohlo was practicing law in his young er days im the buckeye state and was winning Kis spurs he. oécasionally found it profitable to accept a case In justice's court in the country. He tells the following story of the argu ment made by a tural barrister before such a magistrate. : The case was one in which the plaintift sought: to recover damages from a railroad company for the Kil: ing of a cow. During the course_of his argument the country lawyer used this. expressive sentence: ‘if the train had been,ran ag {t sould have been ran, or if the bel had been rung as it should have been rang, or if the whistle had been blown as it should have been blew, both of which they did neither, the cow would not have been injured when she was Killed.” ‘ Mr. ‘Tompkins does not state whether the man recovered damages for his bovine. Two Waa to Yaa Piste “There are two ways,” said a bird dealer, “of feaching a parrot to talk, One way fs to put him in a darkened room, to sit in a comer and to re peat ‘over and over again the word you want him to acquire. A clover parrot will learn a word or a phrase after some four hundred or five hun- dred repetitions; while for some it takes a week or more. You must Keep still in the room. No sounds from within or without the house, save your voice monotonously repeat ing the phrase to be acquired, must reach the pairot’s ear. Some people teach their birds'in a welllighted room, speaking from ‘a place of con: Cealment in a closet or behind a door. ‘This method 1s not 80 good, because, in the Hght the parrot’s attention ‘1 alstracted.” 2 The Title of “Doctor.” ‘The title’ of “doctor” was invented in.the twelfth century and conferred for the first time upon Inerlus, of the University of Bologna. The firat “doc tot of medicine” was Gullelmo Gorde nlo, whoSrecelved the nonor from the College of Aosti, also in ftaly, in 2220. —Metaphysical Magazine, nanny nn “But what does tho H stand for?” the other persisted. “That's where he {s:going when he les,” came from the doctor. ‘The questioner was visibly _im- pressed. “Is he such a very. bad man?” she asked, almost in a “Whisper. “Certainly not,” replied Dr, Swal low. “The H stands “for Heaven.” New York Times. One Gh G58 Cui ‘On one occasion Col. Wintersmith met Gen. Custer and a party of Tlends, ho. goueral aha maton of cirlous mochaniaa which he’ had toon showing to hs fiends and whieh Colonel” Wintrsmith asked ta" me Gen. Coster banded him the watch fd: then Grow i back, with the or fark that he feared "tb trust thy Yrateh in tho hands of an ld ‘rebel "Yes, T understand. ‘You sre ‘trate { might rcognie it” Tespondad ‘Col ‘Winteromith quiets, ‘The poet-says that “once to every san an nation comes the moment © decide.” As for woman, the more of them the merten : Ra tists ee CHANGE IN CUSTOMS TOMBSTONES DISPLAY FEWER TOKENS OF AFFECTION. Tributes to the Memory of Departed Loved Ones Are Commonplace Com pared to Those of the Past Genera ‘Gena: o An old sexton in one of the down town burial grounds was arranging plaxits in the old yard where he has deen for many years, Coddied a bit he talked, and this is part of what ho sald: “It seems to mo that tho living of today are not quite so. affectionate about their dead as thelr forefathers used to be. Leastwise they don't ‘show it on the tombstones. “If you will examine closely you ‘will find on every tombstone in this yard some tender words, ‘Here Iles the beloved wifo;’ there, ‘At rest in the bosom of God;’ over yonder, ‘Fel asleep in Jesus;’ again, “In loving ro membrance, of a deyoted wife;’ sast beyond, ‘In the blessed hope of a glo rious ttamortality.” “There is'a tribute to every one of the dead in this yard. You will find around the corner a monument erect. ed ‘To the memory of a beloved aunt’ ‘You see it made no difference a long time ago what the kinship was. All these stotes are not {n memory of » husband, or wife, or aon, or daughter, “Do you remember the inscription on that monument away up on River side Drive, in the shadow of Grant's tomb? ‘Erected to the memory of an amiable child’ is the reading, although few people ever quote it correctly. “You will wander about the ceme terles of New York a long time befare you will find an inscription like that. ‘AL suppose amiable chiuaren still live Ghd die, but who ever thinks of say: ing 30 on a tombstone after the child is dead?” "In the newer cemetoriés are many costly monuments and tablets and mausoleums. ‘They are erected, no doubt, with as much affection az those old stones were. But you don't find any of tue tender tributes cut on them which you find here, granting that you have to look pretty closely for some of these. “The ‘beloved aunt’ rasn’t anything of that kind to her meméry on the modern tombstone. On some of the costly shafts I have seen in the newer cemeteries I read the name of the dead, his birth and death. Nothing to tell whether the dead was a father, # husband; a brother ora son,” “They say it makes no difference to the dead. Well; that’s so, I suppose, But I can't help thinking that it kind of interests the living. “It makes you-think’a little better of the world to read that it has re membered a devoted wife; that it has missed a man who has passed away {im the hope of better things; that the loved aunt was not forgotten. “As you pass out through the east gate, sir, you will see a slab on which there is hardly a letter to be de- clphered. But before the’ cuttings wore away they read, ‘Hie jacet a Noble Friend.’ Does’ any modern stonecutter ever cut “Hic jacet?” And where will you find a slab or mont ment to a ‘Noble Friend? “The slab’s ‘to the left as you go ‘Gut"—New ‘York ‘Sun. Where Morality Is Unknown. “After two years of life in the Quar tier Latin,” says Charles Theodore Murray, “where I got my stuaies of French character for ‘Mile. Fouchetto,’ T may freely say that it 1s the worst place in the world to send a young man or woman If you entertain any hope of meeting him or her in heaven, Thave had much experience in the role of journalist and have investigated the slums of London and Liverpool, know the ‘Tenderloin’ of New York, and the ‘attractions’ at Berlin and Vienna, but for downright satanic ingenuity and viclousness and giltedged debauchery you must go to the Quartier Latin, For it is here that immorality is ac cepted as a virtue, and real virtue hae no line of demarcation to distinguish it from immorality. No young man or young woman can survive such envir onment untarnished, and many are ruined for life, That which, like Lon don slums, Is repulsive is not danger ons—it is attractive: vice, sugar-coated immortality, wich is dangerous—and that is what young men and women find in the Quartier Latin.” sas as eiacaaeal” Wireman: A’ man from North Carolina, who was visiting in. Philadelphia the other day during the cold snap, ex Dressed surprise that nothing’ was Said about’ the dogwood winter “What do you mean by ‘dogwood winter?” asked is host. “Don't you really know what dogwood winter ist” demanded the man from Hick ory, N.C. “Why, we've been having fe for the last three or four days Thre tm always a spell of it in May, when the dogwood treo is tn bisom. For several days there, 8 cold, dis agreeable, cloudy weather, and often touch of frost. "Down our way 3 Reyer fails, and we call It. dogwood winter. I’ thought the phrase was general some Valuable Orchids. ‘There ‘arb a number of orchids worth: from. $2,000. to. $4,000. apiece ‘hoy row fn te malarial minal jungles of Africa, and there ato men ‘whose only. business in lite fe orci hunting. ‘They only gather the root fn the dry-season, when they are shriveled and apparently dead. Gath fred. inthe wet seanon, when they fare blooming, the least rough handl- Ing would kill them. Some orchids do not bloom till they are eighteen years old. Others. grow fn’ the cold "anc tarified alr of mountain tope. No Longer a Siang Phrase. “at there is nothing doing?” sald Seustor Warren of Wyoming, during lull in the debate one day recently sr have a Uttlé mattor that 1 woul like to bring t tho attention of the senate.” “And ‘so the phrase “noth ing-doing” {a embalmed in tho Con ‘gressional Record. It isn't slang any fonger——Washington Post. Fine feathers may not make ‘fine binds, but they show oR 9p the Wi Bu WHAT THE INSECTS CoST U ‘Enormous Mofey Losses Produced in This Country by: Thoir lavaces. Tne chinch-bug caused loss “of 420,000,000 in. 1871, upward of $100, 009,000 in 1874, and in 1887, $50,000. (00, says. Dr. HL C. MeCook fa Har. per's Magazine. ‘The Rocky Mocatain locust, or grasshopper, in 1874 des- troyed $100,000,0000f thecrops of Kan- sas, Missouri, Nebraska and lowa, and the indirect’ loss was: probably as much more. For many years the cot- tén caterpillar caused an annval av erage loss in. tho southern statos of $25,000,000,-while in 1868 and 1873'the oss reached $20,000,000. The fly- ‘weevil, our most destructive enemy to stored’ grains, particularly throughout the south, infilets an annual toss in the whole country of $40,000,000. The coddiing-moth, the chief ravager of tho apple and pear erops, destroys ‘very year fruit valued at $80,000,000 to $40,000,000. ‘This damage to live stock inflicted by the ox-aot, oF Ox warble, amounts to $26,000,000. “These are f2ir samples of the enor- mous money losses. produced in one country by a few of the pismy cap- tains of pernicioud industry whose hosts operate in. the graneries, fields, stock farms and the stock yards of our country. What is the grand total? Mr. B.'D. Walsh, one of the entomolo- sists of his day, in 1867, estimated the total yearly loss in the United States from insects to bo from $200, 000,000 to $40,000,000. tn 1890, C. V. Riloy, long chict of the division of entomology estimated the loss at $80,000,000. Dr. James Fletcher in 1891 footed up the loss to about one tenth of our agricultural products— $820,000,0001 In 1899 B. Dwight San- ergon, after careful consideration of the whole field, put the annual lose ‘at- $309,000.00." LACK OF CONSISTENCY. Pleasure Driving Tabooed; but Whisky Plentifut on Sunday. ‘The jewel of consistency is about as rare in Scotland as in other lands, it would seem, As a case in point, J. Fred Burns, of St. Louls, at the Grand hotel, yesterday related an experience of his while staying in the country district of Scotland. “Twas: putting up,” he said, “at & small country house, Kept by a women, « typical Scot, ‘religiously pious, so it turned out.” When the first Sabbath came round I decfded I would have = drive; sof asked my landlady if she would accommodate me with « team. She threw up her hands In horror, inform- ing me in & dialect that I could’ not re- produce for you even if I were in a golt sult, that it was impious: to go driving on the Sabbath; she would not allow me the use of her team. There seemed no way for it, but 1 should go to the kirk with my landlady and a crowd of villagers, After the service we returned to the inn, minister and all (by the way, he was not little). ‘When the house was reached the land- Jady led the way in by a door that T had not before entered. I went in with the rest, and when we were in- sido 1 was treated to the spectacle of my pious landlady dealing out Scotch whisky to all hands, including the minister, I told her there seemed to be more than one way-to serve the Lord on the Sabbath day, but the shot passed over her head."—New York ‘Tribune. * ie Sl Dee ek At is pointed out that if Leo XIIl.is spared to see the year 1903, that year will be to him one of quite exceptional interest, a veritable “annus mirabilis.” As everybody knows it will be his ‘il- ver jubilee of papacy (elected Pope, February 20, 1878:) but more than that it will also be his golden jubilee as cardinal (proclaimed by Plus IX in the Consistory of December 19, 1853,) and his diamond jubilee of epicopacy (preconized Archbishop of Damletta by Gregory XVI on January 27, 1843, and consecrated February’ 19). Such a triple jubilee, if His Holiness lives to celebrate it will probably’ be unique in history.—London Tablet. Practical’ Philanthropy. Thave heard of a woman in @ coun- try town, says a correspondent, who every morning and night fills a bucket with fresh water and stands it at the gate of her Ilttle wayside house. Hor fdea {s to give vagrant dogs « drink, and a mighty good idea it is, for-alons. the road travel many teams. and’ they are seldom unaccompanied by a dog, of some sort. In hot weather the ca nine's distress was often noticed by this Samaritan, and she has adopted’ this measure for alleviating some poor fellow’s thirst, becanse, as she says, “There are no drinking foun tains for dogs in this neighborhood.” Wsuas Gheaee ab tecnica. Henry Thomas Buckle’s thoughts and conversation were always on a high level. Once he remarked: “Sen and women range themseivex into three classes or orders of Intell gence; you can tell the lowest class by thelr habit of always talking about persons; the next by the fact that fhoir habit is always to converse about things: the highest by. thelr preference. for the discussion of {deas.” Odd Customs in China. China is certainly a land of topsy- turvydom, and therefore it is hardly strange to find the men wearing skirts and the women trousers, the men wearing thelr hair long and the women wearing it shert, the men acting as dressmakers and the wom. fen dolag heavy manual labor. “Chi ‘hese, bridesmaids are” always. old ‘women and in China dinner begins with dessert and ends with soup and sh; books are read. backward, and ‘the ‘hands of the clock remain star tionary while their dials revoive. Blamarck's Appetite. Prince Bismarck waa a large eater and always had a most voracious ap. petite. One day the prince was din {ing with Bancrote. and thoroughly en poyed the excellent menu set before him. Banctote noticed his. trlend twice partaking largely of the frst course. “Dear Count,” ho remarked ‘with @ world of anslety in kis voleo, “I believe, there'is more to come.” “I ghould hove 90,” replied Blamasck, sorts and Tenowed his terrytying ‘urection atthe eet teucia ®t fo A WEEKS RECORD IN MINNESOTA'S CAPIT. The Saintly City and Saintly City Folk-Neway Items of Social, Religious and General Matters Among the People, Brolled Down. Mr. V. J. Henley of Chicago was in the city this week visiting his family. Mrs. Samuel Perry of Chicago is visiting Mrs. Ed Williams, 415 Charles street. Perfect Ashler Lodge has selected Rev. W. D. Carver as a delegate to the National Council. Messrs. W. H. French and M. Hickman are for Chicago Thursday to spend a few days. Mrs. Ida M. Johnson has been selected by Household of Ruth as a delegate to the Council. Mrs. Georgia Underwood of Chicago is in the city visiting Mrs. P. H. Anderson, 881 Marion street. The people generally are fixing up in great shape for expected infux of visitors the first week in July. Mr. E. G. Rogers, the present clerk of courts of Ramsey county, has filed for the Republican nomination for the same office. Mr. George Roper who recently lost an railroad accident, has been discharged from the hospital and is getting on finely Miss Gertrude Imogene Palmer, the distinguished violinist of Chicago, will be the guest of Miss Leola Moker of 454 Rondo street, for two weeks. Mr. Marcellus L. Countryman, a prominent lawyer, has filed for the Republican nomination for Judge of the District Court of Ramsey county. Nice furnished rooms for rent at 224 East Thirteenth street at reasonable price by the week in month. Apply to 3 by Johnson or W. A. Williams. The Elite Shoe Shining Parlor. No. 12 West Sixth street, J. B. Johnson, propriete. Shoes shined or polished. Special chairs for ladies. Shoe dying a speciality. The most popular place for people who take their meals down town is people’s street. No. 552 Wabasha street. Everything neat, clean and well cooked. Hon. Cyrus Field Adams, assistant register of the United States Treasury, is in the city the guest of his brother, Mrs. Q. Adams, of 527 St. Anthony avenue. 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. Gentlemen wishing nice furnished rooms, with all conveniences, by the week or month, at reasonable rates, 285 West Third street, 228 West Third street. FURNISHED ROOSES—Noisy furnished rooms for rent by the day, week or month, at No. 50 West Ninth street, between St. Peter and Exchange streets. Transients accommodated. Pilgrim Baptist, Cedar and Summit; services, 10:45 a.m. and 8 p.m.; Rev. v. B. C. B. and F. B. F. About Many Things? Evening: "The Flesh Pot of Egypt" Communion at morning services. Let your object in life be that you will be somebody in fact or nobody in fact. Never allow yourself to be alone. Never allow yourself to be the secret life gives you the lie, for you only destroy yourself. If you wish a good shave, hair cut or shampoo call at Richard Cousby's neat shop. No. 374% Minnesota street. First-class workmen only. Satisfaction guaranteed. Music for all occasions furnished on short notice. St. James A. M. E. Church, Fuller and Jay streets. Presiding Elder Thompson will conduct quarterly services and preach morning and evening. A special 1-3 Worlds of the infinite nature is expected to preach at 3 o'clock. The Men's Sunday Club hold a fine meeting last Sunday in the interest of the Council. Report were made from all the committees and a very satisfactory showing was made. The club will send two delegates to the Council. Elk Express, G. D. Charleston, packing and shipping; hauling of all kinds; coal and wood in large or small quantities. When you wish telephone, Main 192- J. 1. Office Telephone, Main 192- J. 1. Office East Sixth street WILLIAM E. NAGEL—Funeral director and embaler, former on Wabasha street, is now located at 208 West Third street, Seven Corners, Wabasha, Wisconsin, 5164. Lady assistant on all calls where one is required. Those of our patrons who desire to have matter published must get the same in this office not later than Thursday afternoon, otherwise it may be taken of any communication that is not signed by the author. DR. JOHN E. PORTER, physician and surgeon, office suite 410 Bradley Bufding. Fifth street, opposite Court House. Office hours: 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 m. 2:00 to 4:00 p. m. Telephone: 718-273-8523. Residence 463 Carroll street. Telephone, Dale, 404 L. 3. Sherman Ford, a laborer, at 484 Jackson street, was injured under a falling pile of wood in a fuel yard at Washington and Chestnut streets. Saturday morning. He was hurt about 10:00 a.m. and traumatized scalp wounds. He was taken to the city hospital by the police. SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE vaults. - We invite your inspection. It costs little to place your papers, cash securities and valuations in a absconder, but it is better be had for $4.00 per year. Store your boxes, trunks, etc. with us. St. Paul Trust Co., 138 Endicott Arcade. Remember that the feast of reason and now of soul begins with the meeting of the Press association at Pilgrim Baptist church Monday morning at 10 o'clock. Then comes the musical, literary, social and gastronomic entertainment at the same place in the event of admission free and everybody welcome. Visitors to the city, and residents also, who wish to get first class meals should call at John Godfreys' No. 552 Wabasha street, between Tenth street and College avenue. Board and rooms Tailoring, Cleaning and Repairing. Applicant for Cook's Place—What is the address of your last cook? Mistress of the House—Why do you want to know that? Applicant-1 want to yet your reference from any Get Ready for the Fourth of July. BLANKS, REVOLYERS, POWDER. Hammocks for long, and chests by the day, week or month at reasonable rates. Best meals in the city. Regular meals 25 cents. Sunday dinners from 1:00 to 5:00 p. m. a. spectacle. A number of the citizens of the city met last week and formed Nauturna Council. The following were selected as officers: W. A. Hilyard, president; H. A. Kurtley, vice president; J. H. Hickman, recording secretary; A. H. Kirkman, treasurer; C. H. Harrison, treasurer. Executive committee, J. Adams, W. Adams, W. A. Weir, O. S. Sanders, Steve-Hopkins, A. Smith. J. Q. Adams was selected as the delegate to represent the council in the National Council. T. Thomas Fortune, Esq., editor of the New York Age; Hon John C. Dancy, recorder of deeds at Washington; Hon William A. Pledger, chairman of the Republican state central committee of Georgia; Mr. Emmitt J. Scott, private secretary to Booker T. Washington; Hon William A. Pledger, stenographer to Speaker Henderson of the House of Representatives, and John R. Clifford, Esq., editor of the Pioneer-Press, Martinburg, W. Va., The APPEAL, next week, at his residence. No. 527 St. Anthony avenue. The people of the Twin Cities have invited the members of the National Afro-American Council and the National Afro-American Press Association to attend the week when the National Teacup Association will be held in Minneapolis. This should bring together the largest number of prominent men and women only a few weeks left for the preparations and a general awakening should be had. Much work is to be done and must begin now. This is a matter in the foreground and is the interested. LET US GET TOGETHER AND STICK TOGETHER. There was an excellent meeting of the executive committee of arrangements at Dr. O. D. Howard's office Thursday evening. The contract for the university would be made State University next Friday evening was let to C. W. & M. A. Dorsett of Minnesotaapolis, which insures the best the market affords. Messrs. C. S. Harward and M. A. Dorsett of Bismark Archer of St. Paul and Messrs. Harvey Burk and John Allison of Minnesotaapolis were selected as ushers for the evening meeting of the council House of Hope church. It would be decided that the would be sold after next Wednesday. It was reported that arrangements had been perfected whereby chartered cars will be had to take all guests to the ceremony and Wabasha school would be sold after next Wednesday. It the cars will leave the Ryan Hotel at 7:15 and 7:45 and will attend at Tenth and Wabasha, Rice, Farrington, Mackubin and Dale streets. Who do not take these cars must appear before the University. The cars will return at the will of the guests. A CARD OF THANKS. I desire to thank the many friends for their kindness while my mother was sick and for the many flowers that were contributed to MIS. JOSEPH ADAMS and Family. LIST OF EXPECTED EXPERIENTS Visitors who are appointed to serve city during the next week are to be the guests of our citizens as follows: Mrs. H. Harding and daughter Nellie, Chicago; Mrs. J. Bushe and daughter, Xenia; Mrs. J. Martin Green, Chicago; Mrs. J. Martin Green, Chicago; of Mrs. J. R. White, 659 Iglehart. Mr. and Mrs. James H. Guy, Topeka; Jas. M. Vance, M. Scott, New Orleans, of Mrs. F. D. Parker, 659 Iglehart. Hon. H. C. Smith, Cleveland; Mrs. Thomas, Boston of, Mrs. Rankings, 422 St. Anthony. Mrs. Chas, Scrercium, of C. S. Tyler, 503 St. Anthony. Bishop Alex, Walters, Mrs. Josephine S. P. Ruffin, Bishop G. W. Clinton, Rev. J. L. Moreland, of Mrs. F. L. Prof. W. E. B. Duo, Prof. Allen, Mr. Jesse Lawson, of Dr. O. D. Howard, 447 Carroll. Rev. Geo. W. Lee, Washington, Rev. Geo. W. Lee, Washington, Rev. St. Louis; Rev. W. T. Vernon D. D.; Rev. M. C. B. Mason, of Mrs. Chass. H. Brown, 800 Rice. Dr. J. T. Caston, of Rev. W. D. Carter. 559 Elfelt. Mrs. J. Sillone Yates, Mrs. Fannie THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER Tel. 1949-J1. ST. PAUL. Barrier Williams, of Dr. J. E. Porter, Prof. C. G. Williams, wife and daugh- ter, Miss B. Berry, Miss Johnson, Mrs Louis, Louis Louis, Mrs of, J. A. Anderson, TO THE PUBLIC Owing to much misunderstanding regarding the reception to be tendered in honor of the conventions to be held in the city, the committee felt to suit. That all officers of General Committee and chairmen of subcommittees with the following persons were appointed: Mr. Butler, Messrs. Harvey Burke, M. A. Allison, Anderson White and William Redmond are authorized to take part in the convention and receive the money for the game. Officers of General Committee are: F. L. McGhee, Mrs. Geo. Barnett, J. Q. Adams, Geo. W. Day; chairmen of committees, Harry Shepherd, O. D, W. T. Frances, Geo. W. James, Rev. W. D. Carter, Rev. Thos. Reeves. 3 THE RIVER THE CITY OF BROOKLYN. On account of such misunderstanding the committee has decided to extend the time within which tickets may be requested and procured until Wednesday, July 9. Of the Committee of Arrangements. FINE SHOWING OF BANKS OF ST. PAUL. The healthy condition of St. Paul's finances is demonstrated by the abstract issued by the comptroller of the department of national banks of date April 30. St. Paul occupies an enviable position in the matter of increase of bank deposits, the comparison between 1892 and 1897 is the biggest and best business years the country has ever seen, and the current year shows an increase of 70 per cent in deposits, 1892 being $1,45,121.52 as against $2,424.00 in 1891. One of the phenomenal instances of individual growth is that of the St Paul National bank, which shows a gain over the year 1892 of 117 per cent of issuing the latest statement of issuing the latest statement of $2,425,748.30. This is by far the best showing made by any of the St Paul national banks, and is therefore among the other national banks an example is shown by each, the smallest being 40 per cent. Allotleger St. Paul's showing is decidedly creditable and the healthy condition of mercantile affections. TO-DATE DAYS. he address of your last cook? want to know that? ence from her. DAYS. our last cook? what? AFROVO Believe be done for tence as a part o and recr talize o citizens a massa conveni licans to Minn. o a unth Masoni street, streets. Defective Page 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 Rails. Mrs. McKinzie is on the sick list. Mrs. Robert True of Milwaukee, Wis., is visiting Mrs. Luther Abby. If you won't boost, don't knock. The council banquet is an assured success. Rumor has it that Edward Truesdale will take to himself a wife in the near future. Query - Why not subscribe for The Appeal and stop borrowing your neighbor's paper? Mrs. Br. F. Pier will sing at the Pilgrim Baptist church in St. Paul Monday evening. Mrs. Nip. Nip. Washington and Miss Grace McMahon are visiting in Newport, Minn. Mrs. Henry Richardson has returned from a six weeks' visit with relatives in Louisville, Ky. Miss Gertrude Harper of Port Hall, Idaho, is a guest of Mrs. George Barrett, 519 Tenth avenue south. The Christian Endeavor meets every Sunday 6:30 p. m. at Bethesda Baptist Church. You are most cordially invited. Miss M. Jackson, milliner and modiste, ladies' tailoring. French cleaning and curling feathers, a specialty. No. 1409 South Fifth street. Nella Melle Hale has opened a studio for piano instruction, Room $2. Eastman block. Special attention given to the appeal. The Appeal is mailed to most $1 the homes of the people of the Twin Cities, and if you wish matters to reach these homes you must publish them in the Appeal. M. S. Brooks, formerly pastor of St. Peter's church, notorious Chicago, recently had the degree of doctor of divinity conferred upon him by Wilberforce university. Dr. R. S. Brown has moved his office into the Century Building, No. THE CINEMA FAMILIAR SCENE AT WILDWOOD D. Fourth street south, rooms 405 and 406 Office 'phone, N. W., 2271-J-1 Main. The kindergarten hour at St. James' church has been changed from 9 a.m. Wednesday and Saturdays to noon of the same days. The school can accommodate five more children. The reception given by the Dunbar Literary society at the residence of Mrs. Dawson, son of Mrs. Dawner, Kanner, who is to leave for Lovisville, KY, was a very enjoyable affair. Mrs. Celestine Brown has opened the "Creele Kitchen," boarding-house meals, 405-407 Fifth ave. S. Regular meals, 25, 26th street. First-class furnished rooms in connection. N. W. Tel. 3434-L2, Minneapolis. Rev. W. S. Brooks, formerly of St. Peter's church, is now St. Stephen's church, Chicago, and the degree of D. D. conferred upon him. The Afro-American Roosevelt club gave a smoker in the municipal court room at the court house last Wednesday evening, July 2. More than 150 smokers were applauded and enthusiastically applauded the court's sentiments voiced by the speakers. The club quartet sang several selections in response to repeated encores. Speeches were made by E. L. Trussell on behalf of the nominee for lieutenant governor; Hon. J. W. Peterson and Hon. Eugene G. Hay, candidates for the congressional nomination from the Fifth district; E. J. Davenport and James L. Curtis. The president Rufus D. De Leo, read a speech from the Roosevelt. Refreshments and cigars were passed as a compliment of the executive board. AFRO-AMERICAN REPUBLICAN VOTERS OF MINNESOTA Believing that our elevation must be done largely through our own efforts; that we can make our influence as a race and our importance as a part of the citizenship strongly felt and recognized, if we weite and certify our power as a number of the citizens of the city of St. Paul, mass assembled, voted to call a state convention of Afro-American Republicans to meet in the city of St. Paul, Minn. on the 6th day of July at 10:30 a.m., the convention to be held at the Masonic Hall, 317 and 319 Wabasha street, between Third and Fourth streets. HIS PREFERENCE. A woman sits in a chair, resting her head on a table, while a man sits in a chair, looking at her. Billy and Nan had wandered about There were posters and gum shoes in plenty around. But nothing that pleased this pair. The apportionment of delegates to be as follows: Any Afro-American Republican who is at this time a member of a Republican club in the state of Minnesota is entitled to attend the convention as a delegate, upon presentation of proper credentials from the club of which he is a member; or any Republican re- servant in the state of Minnesota where there is no Republican club where he resides. The persons interested in the future of the race in the state of Minnesota are earnestly requested to be present on this occasion and assist in effecting an organization that will accomplish good for the race. (Signed) HARRY HOWARD, Chairman, F. D. PARKER, Secretary, HARRY SHEPHERD, D. E. BEARLEY, W. T. FRANCIS, REV. W. D. CARTER, Committee on Call. ATTENTION The citizens of St. Paul who can accommodate delegates and visitors at D. tending the Afro-American Council are requested to communicate with the chairman of the accommodation committee, advising the number they will be able to entertain. The committee desires to urge the citizens to exert themselves to treat the large number of guests who will attend that our city will not lose its reputation for hospitality. Terms for lodging and two meals, $1.00 per day. GEO. W. JAMES, Chairman, 582 St. Anthony Ave, "ROMEO AND JULIET." At the Grand Opera House, St. Paul. Next week will be the farewell week of the Percy Haswell Company in St. Paul, and for the final production of this company at the Grand Opera House, Shakespeare's immortal love tragedy, "Romeo and Juliet," has been more than three centuries this wonderful play, reigned supreme in literature. The tragic tale of the lovely maid of Verona and her Montague lover has served as the inspiration of countless other stories of a similar nature. The play is the purest and most beautiful type of heroine in distress. Small wonder, then, that the play has endured and remained forever popular, for all the world loves a lover and sympathizes with a maid in love. The Percy Haswell Company has this great classic on an elaborate costumes and atmosphere will be correctly reproduced. Miss Haswell is 10 "I'd like to find something soothing to He said to his partner Nan: "There nothing can tickle my palate As a big fat oyster can." said to make an ideal Juliet. She plays the role in a natural and convincing manner, girlish and charming up to the point where Tybalt's death Romeo forth into banishment. Proof that time on until the tragic end in the tomb of the Capulets, Miss Hassell strikes the proper tragic key. The poets will be beautifully and equally done, with hidden depth in such a splendid role. He is said to dashing and impetuous Romeo. The rest of the company will appear to advantage. George Fawcett will play the killer of Romea. He played this role in the play "Romeo and Juliet" and will be seen as a old Capulet, and Miss Alice Butter will be the nurse. Regan Hughston will be the Tybalt, and Mr. Lewis has been highlighted. The east for his Mercutio. The scenic settings will be rich and elaborate, and the entire will be a memorable one. The prices will remain as Romeo and Juliet "the Percy Perse Company" leave St. Paul to finish the summer season in Minneapolis. **BULL CON ALWAYS LANDS 'EM.** When a man is compliended, he man is not swallow it all, but he thinks that is something in it—Atchison Globe. Hamm's New Velvet Beer. The Theo. Hamm Brewing Co. of St. Paul, notwithstanding the excellent brews, of beer that it now furnishes, has just put a new extra pale beer on the market that promises to anything in the line of bottle beer. The beer is called "vet." it is an extra pale beer, having a rich, agreeable hop flavor and just the right amount of malt strength to make it an ideal tonic beverage. This beer is guaranteed to be absolutely wholesome and to be made of the very best ingredients and imported hops. Telephone the Big Brewery, main 935, for a case. "SHADOW AND LIGHT." A WILD NIGHT IN BEARDSTOWN. Douglas tonight. Beardtown circle No. 154, Royal circle. Protection lodge No. 22, A. O. U. W. Prayer meeting, Congregational church chapel. Prayer meeting, German Methodist Episcopal church. Prayer meeting, First Methodist Episcopal church.—Beardtown Illinoian-Star. THIS TIME IT'S YE EDITRESS. There will be no preachment from ye address this week. She is too busy and strumbers the mothers may raise their children just as they please.—Newton ( Iowa) Journal. Burlington Route By providing the best of everything and paying close attention to details the Dining Cars a la Carte in service on Burlington Routetrains have gained an international reputation. The "pay-for-what-you-order" plan is much more acceptable than the "dollar-a-meal" charge. ASK YOUR HOME AGENT FOR TICKETS VIA THE PURLINGTON A Happy Combination of Comfort Luxurious Travel and Perfect Accomodations THE NORTH-WESTERN LINE CST.PM&ORY Inquire for rates and information should you contemplate a trip well rounded out with pleasure. : : : T. W. TFASDALE, Gon. Pas. Agt., St. Paul, Minn. ROCHES WINES Dinner Wines. Ponfet Glaret $1.00 Per quart..... Medoc Glaret 75c Per quart..... Chesterfield 50c Per quart..... Good Fair Wine 25c Per quart..... Telephone Main 1401 ST. PAUL 367 ROBERT St. ROCHE JOHN C. MINNEAPOLIS 44 3RD St. S. STATE STEAM LAUNDRY 222 W. 79 ST Phone 1609. SMIRTS 10f DOLLARS CUFFS RAMSEY COUNTY Afro-American Club. SOCIAL 378 Cedar St., St. Paul, Minn. OFFICERS J. W. WOODFORK, Pres. J. L. PHELPS, Supt JOHN MORGAN, Asst. Supt. F. D. McCRAKEN, Sec. ANDY COMBS, Asst. Sec. C. E. CHARLETON, Trea- WM. GIBBS, Chef. THE ST. PAUL DAILY NEWS. Every day in the year'except Sunday for, per year..... $1.00 Outside the City of St. Paul. THE APPEAL A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER E·LENNON annual Sale ne Suits $690 es Worth $10. 12.$14. $975 Worth $15.$18.$20. $15. Worth $25.$30.$35. its to Select from GEORGE E. LENNON Great Annual Sale Mens Fine Suits one of the many new styles $690 Worth $10. 12.$14. Entire new stock of Suits just purchased at our own price $975 Worth $15.$18.$20. $15. Worth $25.$30.$35. 5000 New Style Suits to Select from The bread awarded first prize at the last State Fair was made from YERXA'S EXTRA FLOUR. It's the best in the country. It costs you less than the ordinary grade of flour. It's put up in heavy twilled sacks, they are good for towels when emptied. Burlington Route Compartment Sleeping Cars Wessel & Noble Fashion Leaders, Sixth and Cedar Sts. The most delightful creations in Midsummer Gowns, Dresses, Separate Skirts and Waists have been received during the past few days. All new and most exclusive designs. The proper thing is to be had here always, for no matter what the occasion. Rich, Dressy and Exclusive Gowns, Tailor-made Dresses and Traveling Suits at very reasonable prices. SFECIAL—35 Etamine Suits, all Taffeta silk lined, colors black, navy, gray and tan. Choice. $20.00 OUR GUARANTEE—Perfect-fitting garments only, and better at the price than can be had elsewhere. ARE THOROUGHLY RELIABLE. ST.PAUL, MINN. YERXA F. R. YERXA & CO., 7th and Cedar ts. ST. PAUL, MINN. SWIFT'S PREMIUM BRAND Sugar-Cured Hams, Breakfast Bacon, Kettle-Rendered Lard the very finest money and experience can produce. Swift's products receive best awards at the Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition, Omaha SWIFT & COMPAN CHICAGO, KANSAS CITY, OMAH E. ST. LOUIS, ST. JOSEPH, ST. PA SWIFT&COMPANY CHICAGO, KANSAS CITY, OMAHA, E. ST. LOUIS, ST. JOSEPH, ST. PAUL. UNMATCHABLE OFFERINGS! AT RIGHT PRICES. ..CASH OR CREDIT.. The Wallblom FURNITURE & CARPET CO. 398-410 Jackson Street, ST. PAUL. The Best Fuel Furnaces, Crates or Base Burners Gas House Coke ASK YOUR DEALER ABOUT IT. ESTIMATES FURNISHED ON APPLICATION. JOHN J. BAILEY SANITARY Plumbing and Gas Fitting, JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. Telephone Main 1214. 187-189, East Sixth Street, - - St. Paul, Minn The Clean, Up-to-Date, Finest MEAT MARKET In the Northwest. LOWEST PRICES for GOOD MEATS PROVISION CO. 447-449 Wabasha St., St. Paul. TREADWELL SHOE CO. 129-131 EAST SEVENTH ST. MIDVILLE JACKSON KOBERT THE ALL-RIGHT SHOE HOUSE. OXFORDS—HELPS TO COMFORT, Cool feet make the whole body comfortable. Oxfords give air to the ankles and make the feet easy. Wear a pair of All-Right Oxfords and be convinced. 100