The Appeal
Saturday, July 12, 1902
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
VOL. 18. NO. 28
A NUISANCE SUPPRESSED.
A Patient Man Rebukes a Know-All a
Theater.
The theater nuisance presents himself in various annoying phases. The late-comer and the man with the unquenchable thirst who doesn't make any effort to secure an end seat have come to be regarded as irresponsible subjects of toleration. They are mild infilctions compared with the "soft" couple that insist on holding an audible tete-dete during the progress of the play, regardless of the annoyance they may be experiencing near them and possibly the players also conscienceless prattlers seemingly care not whether they break into an important denement or climax in the stage proceedings, and how often have we been irritated almost beyond control by the ill-timed senseless titer of the uncultured during the action of a pretty love scene. Then there is the fellow who has seen the play before, and who insists on taking his confidence and outlining its movement between the between acts during its presentation. And more intolerable than the insufferable family of professors to know the family history of every member of the cast, their little eccentricities and fads. He will tell you (while the performance is going on) that Mille, Hoopla was formerly the wife of the dude son of old Joshua Moneybags; that Horatio Haggard the husband of Tile Fewclothes, the soubrette; that Flosse Darell, the woman wears her own diamonds, and the Chica bird imitator, was once a lowly swear dog. That is, if it happens to be a vaudeville performance, as it was in this instance. A certain man who goes to the theater to be amused and not annoyed was unfortunately placed next to one of these bores the other night. The bore had given a running biography of each performer as he or she came on, and the sufferer stood the persecution to the limit of unusual good nature and patience. Finally he was full upon the offender with the annihilator, and they pray, my friend, what do you want me to censure enumerator?" The bore looked grieved for a moment, but he was effectively suppressed.—Detroit Free Press.
THE SALVATION ARMY.
Its Work Has Grown Into Proportions of Surprising Magnitude.
The work or the Salvation Army in the United States may be a surprise to those who have little knowledge of their projects nor realized what benefit is given by the hard-work exhorters who are seen of an evening preaching in the streets to the casual listeners. Small enough seems the reallocation to their labors, but the following article will show the importance and extension of their influence: Seven hundred and thirty-two corps and outposts, 45,000 annual conversions, 2,800 officers, 93,000 weekly circulation War Cry, in English, German, Scandinavian and Chinese, 190 social relief institutions, 545 officers annually spent in poor relief, 7,290 annually accommodated for poor, 2,500,000 beds annual accommodation, 66 working hotels's hotels, 6 women's hotels, 24 food depots, 24 industrial homes for the unemployed, 3 farm colonies, 1,300 acres colonized, 240 colonists, 5 employment bureaus, 13 second-hand stores, 19 rescue homes for fallen women, 450 rescued animals, 15 cared for each year, 24 slum settlements, 80 officers in charge—Detroit Free Press.
Lands Where Women Drudge
Women Bride
Neither women or brides are allowed to loaf in Austria and Hungary. The latter are employed to haul delivery wagons from the shops and markets. Sometimes they are assisted by a woman or a boy, sediment by a grown man. You never see dogs capering about the streets. They are not often so high spirited. Hard work takes out of them, and when you see dog wagons in a town, generally walking along as solitary a tired man going home from his work. The sphere of woman's usefulness has been extended to include hod-carrying, ditch-digging, shovelling gravel on railroads and other heavy labor. I have seen her making mortar and assisting her lay paving stones in the street, but she carries bricks and mortar, she carries bricks and mortar, ladder four stories, but the man at the top does all the work.—Correspondence Chicago Record-Herald.
Flowers and Gardens in Alaska.
Flowers and Gardens in Alaska. We encourage reports have been received on the geography, Georgeson, in charge of the agriculture, and ment stations in Alaska. On a trip into the interior and down the Yukon early in August he found new potatoes, cabbages, cauliflowers and other vegetables ready for the table, and gardens blooming with a variety of animal flowers. At Rampart rye and this year, there was a fair promenade, and wheat. On the lower Yukon extensive tracts were found covered with luxurious grasses, often six feet in height, and apparently well suited to agricultural purposes. Youth's Companion.
Value Received in Family Bride
Value Received in Family Pride.
"What did your son's course in that eastern college cost you, Mr. Rockingham?" "About $11,000, as near as can be rolled off." "Do you think he got the money of the money?" He learned to say "ah" for "in". His mother gets more than $11,000 worth of enjoyment out of that alone every time he hears him talk in company."
WAR AGAINST MOSQUITOES
Campaign Conducted by Private Enterprise in Sierra Leone.
The campaign against mosquitoes in Sierra Leone, as set forth by Major Ross in the progress report of the Liverpool School of Tropical Science, will be instructive to all interested in the public health. The campaign is the first ever carried out on a large scale with the object of ridding an entire town in the tropics of mosquitoes. It is probably the first instance of public sanitary measures being undertaken by the agency and by private funds. Despairing of curing help from the authorities, Major Ross set about the work of extirpating malaria in Sierra Leone by private enterprise. His forces were divided into two gangs, one the culex gang, to collect from private houses all broken bottles, empty tin cans, and old calabashes, in which mosquitoes of the genuses stegomyia and culex breed. The duty of the anopheles gang was to collect from the large rainfall, 160 inches annually, but in a few weeks it made great progress in attacking the pools and puddles, by filling them, draining, sweeping them out, treating them with petroleum, crescoe, etc. The results are described as "unexpectedly engaging." It is too soon to formulate an initiative to tackle the number of cases of the disease. As to yellow Yeer Major Ross expects speedy results because it is not a lingering disease, and as regards the other two mosquito-borne diseases, malaria and filariasis, the good results will not be so immediately manifest. Major Ross does not think there is much evidence that the mosquitoes are carried far by the winds, and hence the utility of destroying the breeding places. He commends the American government and energy with which they have attacked this question, so different from the hesitation and apathy generally shown by the British." A forthcoming work is promised, called "Mosquito Brigades and How to Organize The."-American Medicine.
LIKED IN BROOKLYN
Story of How Dr. Bethune Got a Seat in a Ferryboat.
The Rev. Dr. Cuyler of Brooklyn tells a story, the authenticity of which he yauches for, about Dr. Bethune, who had a successful pastorate, reaching over many years, in one of the Dutch Reformed churches of Brooklyn. Late in his life a flattering offer was made him to take a New York church. After he met a pleasing Dr. Bethune, decided to remain in Brooklyn, and declined the offer, to the great satisfaction of his own parishioners. Some weeks later Dr. Bethune had occasion to cross the East River ferry. It was during the early morning rush hours. There was a great crowd on the boat, and he was obliged to stand up. Presently one of the passengers got up and began to signal to the doctor, by which he was able to come and take his seat. As he noticed that the man was considerably under the influence of liquor, and wished to avoid attracting attention, he took the proffered seat. But the donor was not satisfied then. He put his hand heavily on the doctor's shoulder, and said in a maudlin tone: "I say, 'Doc,' yer don't know how much we think of yer in Brooklyn ever since yer told that he was a big salesman, yer a big salary ter come over to New York and save their souls, that you'd see 'em damned first.'"—New York Tribune.
A Glimpse of Senator Hanns.
Senator Hanna personally sees from fifty to three hundred people a day when he is in his office in Cleveland, and he is said to have the faculty of seeming interested in the little affairs of the caller even when his great political and business interests are demanding his attention. He almost always has a cigar between his teeth, and one who knows him well says: "If the Senator lets his cigar go out while you are presenting your case, you will be surprised that he is interested. If he pulls away at it, in short, quick puffs, you are wasting your eloquence and breath, and if he turns to his desk to relit it or light another, you may conclude the interview is terminated."
Hadn't Borrowed Trouble
Many diffident persons find the beginning of a conversation awkward, especially on ceremonial occasions, and with strangers. Sometimes, however, the beginning is not half so awkward as what comes afterward. A bashful young man on being introduced to a lady at a dinner party said: "I've got to take you in to dinner, Miss Travers, and I'm rather afraid of you, you know. Everyone tells me you're not naturally amused by this display of simplicity. "How absurd!" she exclaimed. "I'm not a bit clever." The young man heaved a sigh of relief and answered: "Well, do you know, I thought you weren't!"—London Tit-Bits.
Keen Observation.
"Do you know anything about the people who have moved next door?" she inquired. "Not much" he answered; "except that their honeymoon is not yet over." "How did you find that out?" "By observing. It was raining when he came home this evening, but she did not make him stop at the front door to wipe his feet."—Washington Star.
THE APPEAL.
POLITICAL
RETIREMENT
GROVER
EDITORIAL
WATTERSON
RIGGS
PHOTOGRAPHING A QUEEN.
Her Royal and Ordinary *Kmiles*—Why
One Likeness Was Soothed.
A London photographer who has probably taken more photographs of kings and queens than any other man in the world has been confiding to the public, under a discreet but not wholly blind incognito, his professional experiences with royalty. "The Queen of Holland," he says, "is, with King Edward, one of the most charmingly easy sitters I ever took. She does not mind to what trouble she puts herself long as she can please you and look at her majesty once said to me, as a queen once. Shortly before her marriage I was summoned to Amsterdam to take you. I was somewhat nervous at first in the royal presence and Queen Wilhelmina quickly noticed this. 'Now I want to look very nice indeed in this photograph,' said her majesty, smiling, 'and if you feel ill at ease I am sure you will not be able to do justice to yourself or to me.' After that I soon lost all my nervousness. I thought her majesty looked rather too dignified and, stately, so I said: 'Will your majesty smile a little? I am sure the photograph will come out much better. Certainly. But I cannot laugh and said: 'Certainly. But I cannot laugh and said: 'Like a queen or like a princess.' The photograph proved to be a fine one and Queen Wilhelmina was delighted with it. 'Oh, you have indeed taken me nicely this time,' she
PO
RET
said some time afterward to me as she examined the picture. "Why, this photograph is far better than the other one you took of me! But then you were not to blame. I remember I had been on at the time, and oh, how they portrayed you can look happy or cheerful with tight boots?" "—New York Sun.
THE RED SEA PASSAGE
Booker Washington's Story of an Old Colored Presser
I remember that in one of his talks Mr. Washington, referring to his belief that the most profitable education of the people of his race required various methods, according to the needs of the people under different conditions, told a story of an old colored preacher who was endeavoring to exert his congregation how it was that the children in a parish passed over the Red sea safely, within the Egyptians, who came after them, drowned. The old man said: "My brethren, it was this way: When the Israelites passed over it was early in the morning, while it was cold, and the ice was strong enough so that they went over all right; but, when the Egyptians came along it was in the middle of the day, and the sun had thawed the ice so that it gave way At this a young man in congregation, had been to saw him and had come home, rose and said: 'I don't see how that explanation can be right, parson. The geography that I have been studying tells us that ice never forms under the equator, and the Red sea is nearly under the equator. "There, now," said the old preacher, "that's all such fool question. The time I see about was before they had any acquaintance with either. "That good old man." Mr. Washington, "was just trying in his simple manner to brush away the cobwebs which stood in the way of his logic. By some such method the mis-
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conceptions which hamper the courses of education for the colored people must be removed before the best results can be attained." - Outlook.
The Two Blind Chaplains
The Two Blind Chapkins.
Across the broad plaza in front of the Capitol the other day walked two blind men. The two chapkins of the House and Senate. These two blind men are among the most esteemed personalities in Congress. The Rev. Dr. Milburn, with his long gray whiskers and his black slouch hat, is a familiar figure. He walks upon the arm of his daughter, gently feeling his way with a cane, and is always in his appointed place, at the hour of noon, no matter whether it rains or snows or blows. His prayers are models of exquisite expression, and are uttered in a dee dee, musical, impressive newspapers are read to him every morning, going to the Capitol, so that if there is an great event which needs to be mentioned in his prayer it is not overlooked. The Rev. Mr. Couden, the chapain of the House, hides his eyes beneath dark blue glasses. He is tall and dignified, and, like his colleague in the Senate, is very eloquent.—Washington Post.
The Actor Secured.
Some years ago an actor now famous made his first appearance on the stage in a provincial town where the theater-goers were accustomed to make
POLITICAL
IREMENT
EDITUAL
GROVER
WATTERSON: "GET BACK INSIDE!"
their unsupproval rett when an entertainer did not succeed in pleasing them. He was young and nervous, and failed dismally in the part he was endeavoring to present, and soon encountered an assortment of missiles. When the roar was at its height one of his disgusted auditors funga a cabbage-head at him. As it fell on the stage the actor picked it up and steppeed forward to the footlights. He raised his hand to command alliance, and when his tormentors paused to hear what he had to say, exclaimed, pointing to the cabbage-head: "Ladies and gentlemen, I must please you with my acting, but I confess I did not know anyone in the audience would lose his head over it." He was allowed to proceed without further molestation—Toronto News.
OLD-TIME STATESMAN FORGOTTEN
Yet Oliver Eilsworth Rendered Valuphis Services to the Nation.
Why is it that Oliver Elsworth has received so little attention from blographers and historians? ask Gaylord Cook in the April Atlantic. He was not born in Mas-achusets or Virginia. In Connecticut, like Pennsylvania, the historic field has been meagerly tilled. Moreover, the dramatic and opportune quality of his work has been perceived only through the perspective of subsequent years. To accommodate an unpunched convention for a jury just retiring from office in the 1970s and ignominy is not conduct to immature fame. Nevertheless he has not been made a subsequent statement. Webster said of him: "For strength of wisdom, for sagacity, wisdom and sound good sense in the conduct of affairs, for moderation of temper, and general ability, it may be doubted if New England has yet produced his superior." What he said, as chief justice of the United States, to the gury and jury at Savannah, in 1796, was the aim of his: "So let us rear an emprise sacred to the rights of men; and command a degree of reason to the nations of the earth."
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CRYSTAL GAZING.
Andrew Lang Recommends It as a New
Disaster for Los Angeles
Society, using the word in the fairy common sense of people having nothing else to do, take up a pastime so thoroughly for a short time that it is called a "crase," may follow Andrew Lang's advice and go in for "crystal gazing." Mr. Lang, in an article in the Monthly Review, has been recommending his readers to purchase crystal balls from the Psychical Research Society, peer into them earnestly, and see what they shall see, then send along the result to him. In his instructions to crystal-gazing novices Mr. Lang says: "It is best to go alone a room at sit down with the back to the door, and sit there, focus in the lap on a dark dress, on dark piece of cloth, try to exclude reflections, think of anything you please, and stare for, say, five minutes at the ball. That is all." The crystal is a spherical ball of solid glass, about two inches in diameter. Mr. Lang has known people who have seen in a crystal things that are actually happening miles away. More wonderful, he has known two persons, gazing into separate crystals at the same moment, to see the same picture. Why can people see pictures of real persons and real things that he was? Mr. Lang hints that it might be a survival of some organ that was useful to man when his ancestors were other kinds of animals." The secret
WATTERSON
REISE
tary of the Psychical Research Society says that as a result of Mr. Lang's article he has been having more orders for crystals than he can execute. The only trouble is that Mr. Lang held out the false hope that a crystal could be bought for as little as half price at which the price is price at which they can be furnished. lings each—London Correspondence New York Sun.
DUTCH PROVERBS
All clouds do not rain.
Death keeps no almanac.
Virtue consists in action.
Black hens lay white eggs.
Better be envied than plitted.
There is a fool at every feast.
Poverty is the reward of idleness.
A dog with a bone knows no friend.
A threatened man lives seven years.
The most learned are not the wisest.
Little is done where many command.
Better lose the anchor than the whole ship.
When cats are mousing they do not mew.
Fools make feasts and wise men eat them.
The morning hour has gold in its mouth.
Who serves the public serves a fickle master.
Talk of the devil and you hear his bones rattle.
A man without money is like a ship without sails.
Before you make a friend, eat a peck of salt with him.
Nobility of soul is more honorable than nobility of birth.
Deep swimmers and high climbers seldom die in their beds.
To marry once is a duty; twice, a lolly; thrice is madness.
The devil's in the cards, said Sam; four aces and not a single trump.
Oil is best at the beginning, honey at the end and wine in the middle.
All beginnings are hard, said the thief, and began by stealing an anvil.
One Fooled by Red Shirt and Another
by Epicure Hardlight
"When a man's sitting in an engine cab, looking up the track with a constant watch for danger a burden on his mind," said an engineer, "things sometimes look different from what they really are. This is especially true if after long service his eyes begin to be a little affected. I used to know an old engineer who was one of the most careful men on the road. In fact, he was always worried, and fear of an accident to be almost a mania with him. Opposite to that, he was long freight down a pretty fair grade, when he suddenly clapped on the air, and gave the 'highball' with the whistle, sending the brakemen out over the train setting the hand brakes as fast as they could. Finally they brought the train to a stop, and everybody ran up to see what the matter. Among the men who came up was a red-shirted section man. When the fellow got rip out the big engine, began to rip out the big string of cues I ever heard. He damned it. The man who would wear a red shirt while working on the section, for Jack had seen that shirt and thought was a red flag and stopped his train.
"I had an experience myself not long ago," spoke up another engineer, "It was since the new electric headlights were put in. You know how they look coming up the track. They are so bright you can't see anything else, and its hard to tell whether they are flaring or not. I was running a freight car and I didn't see anything. We were coming around a curve just before making a sliding to pass another train, when one of those electric headlights flashed on me. I thought it was all over with me, but I stopped to put on the brakes and reverse, and hung on just a minute in the hope of getting the train stopped before I jumped. The grade wasn't very heavy and I got the train stopped all right. Before I started to jump I looked and I discovered then that the light didn't seem to be clear, and investigated and found that the other train was at a standstill and waiting for me at the switch."—Salt Lake Herald.
HOW HE TIPPED THE PORTER:
An American Who Got Even with French Hotel Tricksters.
"Powelson, the pioneer of American photography in a business sense, was a born humorist," said W. A. Cooper, the photographer, the other day. "I believe he might have been a rival of Mark Twain if he had turned his attention that way. Many years ago I went over to Europe with him on a business trip, which turned out to be one of the pleasantest jaunts I ever had. They have a custom—or had—one of the sticks of sticking a number of candles to your room and charging you one franc each for them, whether you light them or not. Powelson never got recruited to that. One day just before we left a certain hotel he said to me, looking round our room, 'Cooper, do we have to pay a franc each for all these candies?' "I said that was the usual charge. "And all those porters and waiters down-stairs will expect to be tipped, too." "I believe they will," I said. "How much?" "Oh, about a franc, I suppose." "All right, then."
"He didn't say any more at the time. But next morning, when we were getting ready to start, I saw him taking the candies out of the candlesticks and putting them in his pocket. When he got down-stairs Powelson pulled one of the candies out of his pocket and handed it to me. He was ready for a tip from him. 'Here's a franc for you. You can cash it in the office.'"—New York Times.
Wall Street's "Kangaroo."
There is a class of operators in Wall street. They are called "Kangaroos." What is a Kangaroo? Well, a Kangaroo is a man who jumps in and out of the market, fearful lest he has made a mistake in going in and equally distrustful as to his judgment in selling out. He has all the characteristics of a kangaroo—a quick jumper either way. Meantime, he exhausts his wind, his legs, and not least of all, his margin. From time immemorial there have bulls and bears and lams in Wall street, but only recently has Wall street observed this new class of operators, the Kangaroos. He can serve as a nerve in any direction. He is flighty, erratic, and of no use to himself or his friends, but then it must be said in justice to the Kangaroo that only in times like those of the last few weeks have there been opportunities to display kangaroo characteristics.—Chicago Journal.
Classified.
Stories of Father Taylor, the sailors' friend, are perennial in their warm human interest. He was a man who at all times spoke with an engaging frankness which sometimes became more bruise than was desirable. A banker from the West End of Boston once visited Father Taylor's church during a fervid revival, and varied the usual character of the meeting by a rather pompous address. Its purport was that the merchant princes of Boston were a very beneficent set of men, whose wealth and enterprise gave employment to thousands of sailors, the duty of seamen to show their merchant's the merchants. At the close of his speech the banker was somewhat taken aback when Father Taylor rose and asked simply: "Is this any other sinner from uptown who mild like to say a word?" Youth's _mansion_
$2.40 PER YEAR.
A Mistake of Nature Revealed by the Telegraph.
A woman's Morse is as feminine as her voice or her handwriting. I have often put to the test my ability to distinguish between the Morse of a man and that of a woman, and only once have I been 'deceived', says L. C. Hall in McClure's Magazine. On this same Washington "circuit" I one day encountered a sender at the other end, a stranger, who for hours 'roasted' at me. I seldom had been in my telegraphic desk the dote and dashed poured from the desk into bewildering torrent, and I had the hardest kind of work to keep up in copying. With all its fearful swiftness the Morse was clean-clipped and musical, though it had a barsh, staccato ring which indicated a lack of sentiment and feeling in the transmitter. From this, and from a certain swagger, I gathered, before the day of the event a pretty distinct impression of the transmitter, I conceived him to be of a hard-kept, aggressively clean appearance, with a shining red complexion and close-cropped hair; in brief, whose whole manner and make-up bespoke the self-satisfied sport. That he wore a diamond in his loudly striped shirt front I considered extremely likely, and that he carried a thick between his lips was morally correct, took occasion to make some inquiries of the operator at Washington. "Oh, you met T. Y," he said, laughing. "Yes, for a girl, she is a fly sender." It was a mertifying find that I had mistaken the sex of the sender, but I was consoled when I met the young woman. The high coloring was there, and the self-satisfied air; so also were the masculine tie, the man's vest and the striped shirt. Nor were the diamond pin and the writing. When she introduced herself by calling me "Cully" and said I was "a cracked jack receiver." I was convinced that it was nature, and not I, that had made the mistake as to her sex.
CHEAP LIVING IN MICHIGAN
Its Beet Sugar Makers Appear to Live
on $34.09 a Year.
We comply willingly with the request of Mr. Henry B. Joy of Detroit to print a statement by him as to the extent of the beet sugar industry in Michigan, and the effect thereupon of a reduction of the duties on Cuban sugar, or of free sugar from Cuba through the annexation of the island. It is quite fair that Mr. Joy's side of the question should have a public hearing. Mr. Joy estimates that about men, women and children in Michigan alone are dependent upon adequate government protection to beet sugar. He the families of the farmers raising the beet food for the families of the operators in the industries making the sugar, allowing five persons to a family. This is a somewhat loose mathematical process, but we suppose it will answer. At the same time Mr. Joy predicts that Michigan will produce this year a tonnage of beet sugar "approaching" 75,000. That is to say, with sugar at 3 cents a pound, 122,000 persons in Michigan would depend for their income the producers share of the $4,500,000 representing the gross product. Yet if producers got every cent of it, then they only $34.00 a year for each individual, 122,000. But the farmers and the nonmeets need every cent of it on the one hand or the other, there is apparently something wrong with Mr. Joy's figures. We infer that the statistical part of his interesting has not been prepared with the thoroughness devoted to the politico-economical and the politico-emotional parts.-New York Sun.
Work the Secret of Success.
The more I learn concerning the careers of great operatists, the more I am convinced that their success is due to the union of extraordinary talent with extraordinary perseverance, says a writer in the Woman's Home Companion. Work, work, work! In the gilded, brilliantly illuminated realm of the stage, where everything seems so easy to the listener and beholder, work, unceasing work, is as necessary to success as in the most prosaic of occupations. "I was never idle," Mme. Nordica said to me, in speaking of her early career. "Nor," she added, "have I ever been since. I am always singing or studying." Only summer ago, after a strentuous season in London, Mme. Nordica went another in London, Mme. Nordica went to Zurich, where Mme. Cosima, Wagner's widow was stopping, and with her studied Sieglinde, in "die Walkure." I may never sing it," were her words, in telling me about it, "but I wanted to study, and the experience was fine."—Boston Herald.
Looting in Peking.
Stories of looting in Peking continue to filter through, and a high official of the Straits Settlements who happened to be in Peking during the troubles of last year tells of a Chinese servant, a Christian telltown, who was sent out, when the legations were re-arranged, to obtain provisions. He begged for them as protection. The pair returned with the provisions in a magnificent equilap, Christian Chinaman and heathen Sikh imperturbable as ever. Asked how he had come by so valuable a vehicle, the Chinamen replied that he had met a countryman, who had "persuaded him to make the exchange." From the sales of Chinese goods, the Chinamen it may be inferred that such manners were frequently exercised by natives of generous impulses—London Chronicle.
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Address,
THE, APPEAL,
tokast ath St, St. Pani, atta,
—_—_——
SATURDAY, JULY 12, 1902.
Says the Charleston News and Cour-
fer: “It the Southern Confederacy
had succeeded according to the ex-
pectation of the men who established
it, we could have had, perhaps, not
the ‘greatest and most glorious’ coun-
try the world ever saw, but the pur-
est, the freest and the happiest. A
vain ideal, perhaps, but we are sorry,
not glad, it failed. None the less, we
aro good citizens and honest men; we
will make the best of a bad bargain,
and as far as in us les, make the na-
tion of which we are a part live up to
our ideals to the best of our ability.”
Live down to our ideals would be
& better way of putting it, for the
Southern ideal ie low. The ideal of
true democracy is not strong in the
South. ‘The success of the Southern
armies in the rebellion would have
meant the establishment of an oll
garchy 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
prinelpally of men held in vile servi-
tude being the “purest, freest and hap-
plest cduntry in the world” ts ono of
‘the most absurd propositions ever
‘In “his ‘recent’ work,” “The Lower
South.” tie author, Mr G. W. Brown,
seeks ‘to plaes ‘pon the brow of the
Afro-American people of the.South this
rhetorical stigma; “Afriea mocks
‘America from her jungles. Still” shé
Jeers, “with the dente’ darkness of my
‘gnoranee T confound. your “enlighten:
ment. Stil with my sloth I welgh
down the arms of your industry. sui
with my supineneas I hang upon the
wings of your aspiration. And In’the
heart of Sour Imperial young repubit
have planted, sure and deep, the mis
ery of this ancient curse I bear”
Mr. Brown's idea 1s that the Mlterat
ot Of the South should be
Jott in thelr ignorance; he fears tha
they are acquiring too much kpow!
edge, and it has besn sald that “Know!
edge is a dangerous thing.” Mr. Brow
fs wrong in flinging this taunt int
the faces of the entire race, for th
Afro-Americans of the South have, dur
Ing the forty years of freedom, wiped
out a greater percentage of iliterac
than bave’the!Gauasians:
Mr. W. P: Calhoun, of Greeneville
S.C. 1s an advocate of the separation
of the raées. He thinks that all of
the Afro-Americans, ought to be taken
to one of the Western states, be given
full-cohtrol, and be compelfed to tiv
thete. This scheme 8 an old one, and
has-been advocated for years By vari
ous Southern gentlemen. One grea
trouble about the matter is: to deci
‘who are Afro-Americans. The so-call
ed white people have associated 5
much with thelr black neighbors tha
it is hard to tell who is white and whe
is black,
Final judgment bas een rendered
at Jetlerson City, Mo., by the Court o
Appeals, whereby Wyatt Ryans, the
old Afro-American body servant of th
late Dr. Charles H. Bradford, come:
into possession of $7,938. Dr. Brad
ford was an invalid, and for years be
fore Is death required the service
of a body servant. No regular wage
were paid Ryans, who sued after his
éacloreee tie.
A man died last Monday in Jefter-
sonvilie, Ind, who is indirectly respon
sible for a terrible lot of trouble in
this world, He was a. fustlce of the
peace named John H. House, and was
ee S¢ the most unique characters of
Southern Indiana, He Held is ofteg
for ten years, and during that time
married over 6,000 couples, the most a
‘whom were elopers.
=D
| ——
‘Some people Sbject to the use of
the word Afro-American because. it
makes the colored people seem as if
they ave foreigners in thelr own coun
ty. In many parte of the country the
Atvo-Americans are treated as if they
were aliens or worse than allens, for
lions, If they are white, are treated
with great consideration.
‘The Southern papers continue to
herp on Presidpnt Rossevel’s Arling
ton speech, in which he denounced
utes. OF ones‘ eotinter Gem
‘casians do not admire such a talk, but
the Afro-Americans, who constitute
aboit twosiths of the total popula:
‘ta;varergrentiy: plomelthareaks
‘There was no color line in Cuba un-
they brought their hellish colorpresu
dice and there has been trouble ever
since, ‘The Afro-Cubans are, however,
8 fighting people, and it is certain that
thay will ght to the death for their
God-given rights, :
| The Fittyeighth Congress will be
‘controlled ‘by the Republicans, and
without any great campaign work.
‘The people are with the. Republican
party. 4 :
In Europe the Afro-American at-
tracts but ttle attention on account
of Mis color. He fs received every-
where without any discrimination
whatever.
‘The fall campaign is essentially one
Of local conditions, and if the Repub-
licans get out and hustle @ ittle there
sill be no doubt about the result.
‘The Republican party has kept all
of its pledges, and there Is no reason
for doubt or aiscouragenient in the
‘comipg Congressional campaign.
Tt is practically certain that Prest-
deat Roneest wi vit Tusegee Us
‘stitute, Booker Washington's great
sol se tne hl
is oe ay geen of gr
Fase no cage ge
ier oy Satin! Anema
eee
THE aPPEAIc A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSYAYER.
Aric
TO REDUCE THE ABDOMEN. (0 ——————————————
Mie Apeatya® Mise: Iaiisade’ Lamy by Cae
‘The Apparent (alee ot the stone
my eh aga corres
tue positon. A jouging pose
Beatle toast a
heap at the walst lino, relaxes the
muscles and favors a fatty depostt Just
‘where ie fa most detrimental to tho
eauty of comtouy-of a\woman's, gure
In standing, draw in the abdomen’ and
throw out-the chest letting the. welght
of the body fall upon the ball of. the
foot. ‘This will tusure a. perfect pols
and teach the abdominal muscles to
be sélf-stipporting. ~ If these muscles
tre not permitted to become relaxed,
but are held Armly in position yf
fort of wil, there will be an apparent
eduction ta flesh ubout the Bipe aad
and. abdomen belore even a sins
Pound is taken of An exercise which
‘Should be taken every night and morn-
ing for abdominal reductlon.and whlch
reqiires no apparatus, will seldom or
fever fa, e persisted in, Usually ther
is 'a very apparent. reduction of flesh
within & month, so that. the. akie
Teams have to be altered, Lie” fat
‘opon the floor. face downward, arms
folded. "Raise the body ‘ope trom th
floor upon the elbows-and tips of the
toes, "At frst the local muscles may
beso weak that it will be & dimeul
feat. Rest, then try again. Repeat
until tired, resting between whiles, A
Sralghtront, comfortably Atting £0
fet reduces the apparent slze of ti
figure." Tight laclag is grievous
ron. Billows “of, fat overflowing
tbove and belbw 1 constricted. wala
never tend to diminish the size Bxag-
erated curves serve only. to tende
besity more prominent.” The mor
evenly distributed the excess of fat, Eb
Toast attracts notice, "Massage Toler
fnd a plat of hot Water forma power
ful and Narmlesy antl-at combination,
Vichy and seltzer are also excallent t
drink “Jn place of water to. quench
thirst Stella Stuart In Ledger Month
A MANILA BEAN.
‘A Traveling Stan Afrali. to Trost a Pee
feulonal Porat
Quite an excitement has been created
in Kensington by oo small a matter as
bean. ‘The bean was brought trom
Manila two. years ago by a traveling
agent. for a large manufactory, who
hal seen a tree covered with beautiful
flowers and/Keang while traveling in
Luzon and had secured one of the pods
Fearing that ithe confided It to 2 pro-
fessional florist he would lose the hon
fo and glory of introducing a new flow
fr to Philadelphia, ho turned over. the
bean to a Kensington woman, sree
ing to pay $1 a month for its care and
culture’ until it produced flowers, The
ean has been two years growing, but
itis not yet over two Inches In height
Local botanists say it 48 uot a bean,
but a date seed, whieh has been plant.
ed in mistake.” ‘The owner, who patd
$12 for one year’s board for the bean,
thinks the caretaker show'd now keep
it for company, but she says she has
had threo doorbells worn out by ett
ous visitors, Recently the owner dus
the plant up to see what the root took
ed like, and found that while there
‘vere only’ three inches of stem. and
Teaves, a largo 26-inch. pot was. fled
with fAbrous roots. He thought It
‘would be a food plan to clip the roots,
since which time the Manila bean has
been but a little faded Aower. The
caretaker asserts that in two year
she has served the bean with 1400 gal
lons of water, and taken 20,000‘steps in
carrying it around the house to give
it the fOll benefit of sunshine, Tt Was
a8 much trowible and care as a. baby
aly it did not ery at might Philadel
hia Record.
Sg Nc
It would seem that first born chil-
dren excel, later-born ebildren In
height and weight. This may be due
to the greater vigor of the mother at
the birth of the first child. We are re-
minded of a fact, mentioned later, that
out of fifty great men of this country
80 per cent were the youngest sons. In
England it was found that.growth de-
generates as we go lower 1a the social
scale, there being a difference of even
5 Inches in height between the best and
worst-fed classes in the community,
An investigation of 10,000 children in
Switzerland showed that children born
in summer are taller for their age than
those born in winter; as a majority of
children in the publi¢ schools are poor,
in winter thelr parents are forced to
economize more on acount of expense
of heating: thefr rooms are also liable
to be small and poorly ventilated,
while in the summer they are out in
the fresh air; food is also cheaper and
‘more varied, The influence of un-
healthy conditions on a very young
child would be ‘much greater than
when it is older and better able:to re-
sist them,—Everybody's Magazine.
Ne ae ee ya
In the Cincinnati Zoo dwelt two gi-
raffes, Giraffes are not noted for thels
affection, yet these two exhibited every
evidence of true devotion to each oth.
er. The male never seemed..to, tire, of
caressing the long, slender neck of his
partner, and, what was more unusual,
would frequently leave for her the
softest and choicest bits of food, On
one occasion when she was removed
from’ the pen for a short time and
‘quartered near by, he seemed to find
consolation in some bits of cloth that
‘had been used to bind her throat; al-
‘ways lying/beside. them, no - matter
where they happoned to be placed. And
during the temporary separation the
two would spend hours gazing long-
ingly at each otter across the space
that divided them. When they were
‘again united they made manifest their
supreme happiness by frolicking about
Uke frisky colts, blissfully unmindful
‘of the fact that euch behavior was any-
thing’ but picturesque in creatures of
‘thelr bulld.—Ladies’ Hom» Journal,
—____.
Sie Wabiicke ob ae baad ot
‘Sir Henry Keppel, who wasi91 years
of age in Juno; has beon passing the
winter in Cairo, Of him an old friend
of his who is also there recently wrote:
“Herr Keppel'ts hete, full of life and
energy. If I am at 7 aa strong and
Well a5 he appears'to!be now J shall be
quite satisfied that time has treated
me with leniency, ‘To hear ‘Harry Kep-
pel tell his sea—and land—yarns al.
Most fills one with envy. The Duoy-
fancy of the distinguished old sailor's
humor reminds one of tho sea talee of
‘angi ‘pen iee London West:
Le eso
Up From Slarery. By, Booker 7. Wash-
spain, 9190, “Sew orks Doubleday
Stig: tom Slavery” by Prot, Booker
Wantngion ig a soastaule Youu ty
Pinpeabe mtn! Aurbgrepta tng
oer Be undestaten ‘eicope by the neat
men of earth, ‘That Prof” Washington be:
eho te Cass of grest monet ine,
feslres nether festiony gor" prot ton
ise on ine seceped acto
sod Reine oF Oe nice and date of
thon’ tn: Yrankitn ‘County, Virginie. "Tags
SeaTtat Peay A ane a
Been’ bora somewhere and "at sometime.”
Paneer aeaetltaa rae
4 greet fot, proteating aga. the inal
fullou of lavers-ethae feautense witch
ed’ mede ft hposeile, ether for nltwsit
oF eederiok ‘Dougie to anow te oxte Sy
Ener’ on he saya that he dose not know
qlee fate as “bat tha Be ww fa
*vRH fe Hed TES petaing in te mat
of ost sera, dpe, ahd ai
fSuraging surroundings’ t's SS a
form far pleat tog abi: about torte
Tred with my mother anda ‘brocsor tnd
aisles "ait atte fie leit Wat, when Wwe
‘An jaceyant of hls boyhood, days--ahe
site of tle "mothee "and atte” bret
Sore crn, aecestien of fe tate
rent” cae oar ‘Wasnington' terary
Ghia, higher’ than’ that’ of any’ atyler fot
te portrays the kaleidoscope changes Ti the
Hated oC aiath iy ef Sth
Tintptom tuusntia Sfpateate, ia Seated
og a Ghogton wh Bandi oe th
Simest Sadat patience ax his only "apes
Gn this dnnown voyage over bill and dale
the Sanit unas Aunty reach
ity “called 'Richmonds ware” ber arsed
ilgesfeeadicay ‘peutic He ays
Sahat have watsel Que attests ti atte
algaighetNt Tout pete" atic
hae Sook wal m loager pasties
touruyeas aust. shout the ‘Nme that
Rach eitone’ gnc! ertounony
iGoata ‘side wali was cooriderabiy" elevate
{Prvateed fot a ten infoutes Cl Twas aus
Seam rail Sane, te ee
po beged avatar ae
Ittes thet the wesc day\ he want dows
the" eee, toa "obtalnea “not ean ok
Sapeal oc ‘Sanip, who. wis unfosdlog
Ther captale dist bg! ontinsedto bal te
him t?aumber of days, sleeping” under th
sidbwauk very ght, canola nde
farstve money co elp a seaet itamotae
fie"Sapethat pany” years afterwaras he
Waa “tendered a pile secenion Wy" te
Moneta Hla tn cei, ne ft
Hvind® Hit elie ati i
‘St trends een a guest oa Sacatopa hotel
there be'was (ormerly employed as 4 wait
j ile writes a very entertaining ebapter on
gue coats Pao td a
In'y sors comprehensive aad practi as
her che race problem ‘at the Souths Tt
Bree is wig of bine tnd of
fariF atiusyie tine gd Mee Washing
fon lat bi bes and note gintnctiy “tha
Sha optiolsm of'2 rarely encountered cha’
ace he alley Mee aye
Borate the Suess wile has attended
‘forts of the tow‘ wbou Walter Tose, cat
{ero evar Wark prasoncl “th
‘oat ushtur wana Sho eepushee®
ip rom Slater ‘hae Ghd a Iange_ sa
aot loatte ‘hin “puntty se ‘ulate
Horde "rpe wore har been ramaited at
Spain. German, Wa" rattan “Arab
‘Mfadontan ad ations se beng peepee
jotieyaony ge the feof, the ete sta
Pen toa
fee aetna Std OUR, Sat Pe
Suamlog Sovest, worthof one tue srestan
‘nun Ck wend bee eens eee o
‘Sere preweleneks smc:
Matthews. $2.50, New York ‘and Lon-
we eae Bae
sates AO Sa
Booey, hep. ben ten aot th
TRS ai a eg
esa oem lee
Sects acacia, Se
than “eteaning the sirects, purifying the
Sanat “ee, ren, PAU ee
Proper ofder fn Havana, was the task Ol
Saree eee Cem at rae, ue
Fae i Bae ean of ea
AT athens then tls ofthe siene
SOME Ema teg Seana, oes
Seah t at darn a oe a
Sees tearm een
Potter eg
Pose reese et te peeie Pe
Ghioride of itme ‘were’ daed.” ‘Phen ‘came
SR Sa oe
nit alered arenes dete ate
Wg (uate! etre oF salon ter
reamutty Reraeites sites Be
rt aikdee Anerceeaaeeatioe
see gee ohana cae ear
ace
ing edge ot ind ewan a gar
ipa pope ibe ie eat
Sag ae eases ca ea ae teeta
ectnaiananihee hel fst
aeemrnetahantsthas Me Auge: tee
$otta Me hale ans a Late
“Phe reconstruction of Cubs oy the péo-
perae BOURNE che sl
ity-of our people. Cuba has been taught
It eerie elates pe
Tene it pode hho oe tg eek
Hate ane Sax Shyla
EEdipendnt atoning’
fe a oc ea roeae mente
cobb 2 ot Poa ant
fiers alta metas aor
and ee ‘ensign of the Cuban Republic was
SRR Up cols ae contin
Para ee aerate
eee a ie
winds Fomor
Tn, abp Foret iy Mesiian, Foster
RS Wao” Bama: Se
“in the Forest 19 a contribution, tc
nether natu
Sia eemars oue Suns
Boeri utah Sea ane
Tea aay Rent the heart of the. wilds
SER a Ie rc ot
Hg sae ner ee aR ci eae
ame aeern aaa ae ae
anticarteg etait cnt ae Miee
BE ek Sea ine cae tal
ance ait, tng, teperious Taw of ature
Oe play m your es by elo-
ee bateeh ge eh nek Mate
Bi fetes fer see ee
SONS TAMER to aralan. tn the: ches
SUPE at, Goes on apa
och ar ey oer ea nent
2, GRU eee aa Aisa
ie Meat ney oe atoch ta
Sis Fast eee Seah Rs ae
His Se cate ia tatatitoct ie
inevitable finish had to arrive, when
foe nn Pas aN i woe
aire creas ee!
ie GH hata ated He tc ea
ee aie tel eet” Sey re
on, Pim gnaw, Novuse- Je must {urn
gi gyne ana againat whet cas. Ore
the bag ean de ease aoe, malcat of
the baying Rounds: waa” fignting bat
ened othe iat ana nee Ste yack
Sauer qhetste diag Pe a
Bnding’ pleasure “and seereation an. the
the outcast and ‘parlahy GbLans our 99%i-
Bathe Sone hie Suma Qormencons mer
Rothe” But averion “oni aascetiog®
"The gimopses "at "Pores ae etain,
sureem, nd Peolated deny wiers five and
Feamin softode bktn "ately yy WRG
Footer man the fos on tir Rat
ewe "are! paindady" at" ‘Runa
Eitauass Safomne Wot"tnetgiear
wegen aging ih Renee
Tilda andl ‘wehea" anal" Ze atoes ts
Tig sige" tit The" Moone qi eal
SER TaT sins eo, eae
Pibteh, were the terror ‘and'emy Of th
‘The volume {s profusely iflustrated by
carla a? he ce interprated he
thors fess “wien ana SeBibe ans
ictredaue™* " *
EDUCATION ANB Tike LARGRR-LIRR
Bilteation and tha target Gia By
ai Henderson pp i861 get" Hoston
ang Now Zonk, Houghton, aiitin a Ge
"Enis We the tlle of 6 book by 6. HE
Hendergen which hes nate ape
thee ihis Sear" BMG "Ue. MegdlS
Wreatise on philosophy, and’ one does not
Volume “before aleesvering original 1aees
| Slaborated in a clear, striking and ‘con
‘Education and ethles, theoretical and
popes fae outst ho hare bern
Bend push ana os dota nat ce
Kean ‘on auch mubjects unieas feo a
Rond-famed "wien inthe class °C)
Risto Maco Htoimas_ owas Robe
Sent Spencer or Binurson” Mi Hrender
bout the signifeaines of language whieh
| So far ua we know is entirely original, and
hih I Stepan. ly te foun
forse mew grammar of great smile
Gnd ‘strength, He saya: “We ‘mas’ say
ie HUGO hut! Simao Be
9f this reality fe to be found in language
Yostaily"spaing ‘we have’ "only tate
iegees ot words hous, "verbs ana ‘con
feeven (or coaenils of teatmet
soe ey eget ing. Enie, phe
folved “into thfee maniieetations: "mat
fecal aud ralon and tha sn
thes material “world. “nouns represent
Race Verbs—eotin, comesuee wie
reThe author's dlscuasion of cause and et
sec youth ie penta We
Soutee of power and many ether sublet
Bre Wetted Ina Wear and wonest ia
WHAT 4 wostaN otic 70 KxOW.
What 4 Young Woman Ougnt to, enon
By irs ary Woog-Alen Web sk Wh
Bivlihing Go 990 Went Botaio' Bu
Joy Prise:
Ko, one Jaa thls admieae boo
fen and women have given thelr heart
fommendations apd personal influence
Seige of RE iy To
In this But'ang Sex seen te ook
Hoot ‘and’ tate are writen, ee Bova
Seah, Bes eater oF the" cetneran Oe
Serge an” Stoae’ eis and "Wome
BP Mia Many Wood-Alien, “Me Boh
Nasional Superintendent ot the, Boris
Department the foment
il that has Ween sald in thelr praise U3
ihe ducationai ene oh
SRT meee erm
"This book addressed’ to young. women
sp ated tnaa three pants "She alee a
therigay and is awiene, tho spec
Phpallogy and ina ‘oeeatir atl th
{ia bean’ Susilo cet
Sik REIN Ah Ta
fiat the tact ofa wine and judicious. wit
S28 We Shocle” we giad it" esesy vain
oman in our whole lana might read tt
Took prolt oie "Ht wi eal
Pate went’ Gs eet a aatstes te
Simesides which He fore thei ine
tHledcxperlonces, mae them intllige
{Eno higher ‘powsollitien itis worth
SSmpation Qohume tS" De slalts” Book
SRF" voung tat Gught to Kao:
Sete he he ease
CARPENTER'S GEOGRAPHICAL
THRE ABER
Saroegtg Geomotlal Reader.
he a aE ip RN na
ea eit, Ue i ins
NYs have oes sen a mre attactig
eager gate witty ana Sod Se
Ee go eo
Shak teeth of pegs
Bern cau tia thereat tena
brea eaten a a deo
Ie Rea ah doce te
Hae csi ere ae at
perl it'd tie theese
EBreae egr eg, the ses
Bikbsaiees. wee Phe Ming'tine 8
‘The whoie treatment ts in keeping with
cot Beis ana ga ese i
GE salted Corl aaherete wo Rake
ib ahncaah Stance
EE AG.com ane
aunty erect Dieppe DY Che
ma ES tae
Sa, NE Eth sn
Beads Ree LS
akg latnt WiSectite o Me
Buch Pope aha oat
ant maemo
cage tt ae taetob any “nce
Saeed ee
cee Ta lh ae
ier pbaett ear ee
i ee eerie ae
hae ae al ead ae
ie Ia ete aaa aa
ocd th ced ata ili
Hie aoe del Sereera i
Peder aden Pan Beara 8
poner
REPEEI we soresh nao
cea, Fat Tus arth
ae iat sea Wo aa
Space eat a
Sede atte ae a
ie hoc praia ne Ci ra
Soren Ginter
Bini ahr Ric itesat as sae
Sie SA ile aes ea
ee Sale eae
Hence Geek ear 2
Haus Sate Biche aes set Hs
ihegs Pie ta ane FS
ihe
cundM ESR QEREENORTSD,
ee EPA lle
ieee
PASTE trary ot tl re
se ae at
iota Rae eee as
i tae the tn a
Has Seis, the ee he
paae eet Seca cts
Pea ecte
prow apm
nsO cents. Philadelpbiae Pens Pob:
fon,” 00 cents, Philadelphia Peau’ Pub-
vQuoations are lterary. fragments nth
sega oe eure
soak Wea e'zagmny he nto of
feces Wenner | yon
fee cua, Meat as |
‘le sense-of being sustained in thelr own | 4
Soerceespe ree enc oe Raa
SBGPean™N cre having oc ie
Su ete mead eoalnermaes| 49
ee — Ht
intial aliialiie aT are Se i
ieee er ene rastes cata
PRA aes ah
ous Defective Page
Po Pare SS sera
Pea se MT Do Em gd
Ce ee en eee
ie Re ws
ATLANTA’ UNIVERSITY, Atlanta, Ga.
nectar coon tran dees ete acne asta tiga ne
ah rae che nat erik mol tree ecm, Sth We
Sener Semesters hee ae ne eae a
{2 October.” For catalogue and information, uadrers. a oa oun a
Ci See, \ Virginia Normal Collegiate
om laste,
Go ea eS a Tas
ited =| De serene tren ft
Pe cme ob «em ys os
(le ee
ene Mn TES SMM? 2 tree ge
an SSIECTAPTOAon,
TUSKEGEE ALABAMA.
(oommongee
onanism he tLe
PERRIS oh Si tie
sues ieee
BOOKER T.WASHINCTON, Principat.
Wwarix hogate, tare
Location
taghs mace BOON An star ti
slnste Rath 2 tise rane
ENROLLMENT AND FACULTY
acne fost aa Nese he
ee
inom
COURSE OF sTupy
ety ts opis ae
VALUE OF PROPERTY
OST, SRA at ares as
iabor, ts valued at S382.000) and no-mortgage:
news
Wags ta ane lor caren estes
‘seer Oise of Monitors td
satan rts area
cchanesv ieee a eam Sere
hate fa At alt times’ ont and pmiform. tau
ELE a Ta
ee ae
eer (a UPL gy AS) Eset.
Leu
GAMMON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY
# ATLANTA, GEORGIA,
AIMS AND METHODS
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“THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE NA-
TIONAL NEGRO BUSINESS. LEAGUE”
Win Wie Sonera ae fete.
BOOKER T, WastintON Pelee see
This convention was the first National Convention of color-
2d business men ever held in this or any other country. Every
line of business was Tepresented:' the farmer, the banker, the
@ducator, the doctor, the lawyer, the manufacturer, the author,
8 the merchant and ralers of munkipaltien He thre es
ered and papers read are all in this book besides over fifty cuts
of delegates and others, which makes it a valuable souvenit of
the convention. .
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‘LANTA’ UNIVERSITY, Atlanta, Ga.
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NEW ORLEANS UNIVERSITY
Admits Men and Women of ll Races.
YWHIs-nQoirPED, sconovoM mesraveTION,
Address 5318 St. Charles,
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA
PHILANOER SMITH
| COLLEGE
| LITTLE ROCK, ARK.
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| SESSION BEGINS Oct. I.
| REV. J. M. COX, D. D..
| PRESIDENT.
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A WEEKS RECORD IN MINNESOTA'S CAPIT
The baltic City and Satish City Folks-News Item of Social, Religious and General Matters Among the People, Bolded Down.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry High left Tuesday night for a trip to Spokane, Portland and the Pacific coast.
Mrs. Elizabeth Allen and Mr. C. Smith spent the Fourth visiting Miss Florence Drake in Stillwater.
Mesdames Samuel and Joseph Perry, of Chicago, is visiting Mr. Perry. E. J. Williams, of 415 Charles street.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Steward, of Louisville, Ky., were the guests of Mesdames J. B. Turner and J. W. Hackerny.
Mr. E. G. Rogers, the present clerk of courts of Ramsey county, has filed for the Republican nomination for the same office.
Messrs. J. J. Miles and M. Brooks and M. Underwood of Milwaukee, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Williams at dinner Wednesday.
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 221 East Thirteenth street at reasonable rates by the week or month. Apply to J. J. Johnson or W. A. Williams.
The Elite Shoe Shining Parlor, No. 12 West Sixth street, B. J. Johnson, propriet.: Shoes shined or polished. Special chairs for ladies. Shoe dying a specialty.
The most popular place for people who take their meals down town is John Godfrey's. No. 552 Isaiah street. Everything neat, clean and well cooked.
A lady's wrap was found in the senate chamber during the sessions of the owner may obtain upon proving the property. Call at THE APPEAL office.
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
gift it to a gentleman.
Gentlemen wishing nice furnished
rooms, with all conveniences, by the
week or month, at reasonable rates,
should apply to the bent House, 223
West Third street, up stairs.
FURNISHED ROOMS—Nicely furnished
rooms for rent by the day, week
or month, at No. 50 West Ninth street,
between St. Peter and Exchange
streets. Transients accommodated.
In the basement, by the daughter
of Chicago; Mrs. James and daughter
of Xenia; Mrs. Martin Green and Miss
Olive Henderson, of Chicago, were the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. R. White,
of Iglehart street, last week.
Let your object in life be that you
will be somebody in fact or nobody
in fact. Never, allow yourself to be
threatened. In your secret life give 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. 274% Minnesota street. First call 202-622-6444. Satisfaction guaranteed. Music for all occasions furnished on short notice.
Eik Express, G. D. Carriacot, packaging and shipping; hauling of all kinds; coal and wood; large or small quantities. When you wish anything in his line give him a call. Telephone, Main 1920- J. 1. Office 62 East Sixth street.
WILLIAM E. NAGEL—Funeral director and embaler, former on Wabasha street, is now located at 208 Wabasha Street. Open day and night. Telephone M 1504. 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.
The issue of next week will contain a full account of many things which were doubtless looked for in this, but owing to a combination of circumstances could not be published this week. The reader will contain what you wish to see.
DR. JOHN E. PORTER, physician and surgeon, office suite 410 Bradley Building, Fifth street, opposite Court House. Office hours: 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 m., 2:00 to 4:00 p. m. Telephone main 1728 J.1. Residence, 453 Carroll street. Telephone, Dale, 464 L.3.
The APPEAL man visited the wire grass twine plants this week, and found that the Afro-Americans had been using the wire grass twine for their department and work that they have in contemplation bringing a lot of people from the South to work for them.
Ladies who were present at the reception at the Armory Friday evening, and who did not give the APPEAL man full descriptions of their costumes may get the same into the account of the finer details that will appear in next issue if sent to this office on or before next Thursday.
SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE vaults. *We* invite your inspection. It costs little to place your papers, cash securities and valuables in absolute safety. Boxes in our vaults can contain your books, your boxes, trunkets, ete, with us, St. Paul Trust Co. 138 Endicott Arcade.
Visitors to the city, and residents also, who wish to get first class meals should call at Iloan 101. Wabasha street, between Tenth street, and College avenue. Board and rooms 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 special. Pilgrim Baptist, Goder and Summit. Services, 10:45 m. p. m. D. Carter, pastor. Rev R. B. Montgomery, editor Wisconsin Weekly Advocate, will preach at morning service on the subject, "The Problems of the Present." Rev. J. E. Macon, D. D. professor of sociology and political science, University bury, N. C, will preach at evening service on "The Power of the Goo-
pel." The "Hallelujah Chorus" will be sung by the choir.
The Frawley season in St. Paul will open at the Grand Opera House Sunday evening, July 13th, when the company will present an elaborate production of "Mme. Sans Gloire," masterful drama, "Mme. Sans Gloire," which is country by a country Kidder and played at various times by Rejane and Ellen Terry as well.
It is an ambitious undertaking to take the company to popular prices, but "Mme. Sans Gloire," one of the best liked dramas in the Frawley repertoire, and, consequently it has been retained despite the fact that it calls for an elaborate scenic environment. However, the chief appeal of the play is not to the eye, but to the imagination.
It suggests to the auditor the inconstructions of Napoleon's court. It tells of the attitudes of character, and like all Sassons's dramas, it tells an interesting story.
Produced in this country at a time when Napoleon was the literary fad of the day, "Mime, Sans Gene" has surged. It has been used by the leading players of the three countries, and in all of them have made palpable hits. Ellen Terry's "Sans Gene" will be re-released in 2015, and other roles have faded from recollection. Rejane is still "Sans Gene" to her countrymen, and in this country the names of Katheryn Kilder cannot be forgotten. French blancheuse. It is easy to realize, therefore, that Miss Mary Van Buren, who will play the title role in the forthcoming production, has no interest in the part is not a new one so far as Miss Van Buren is concerned. On the contrary, she has scored in it the greatest success of her career, and may be required to duplicate her triumph here.
FINE SHOWING OF BANKS OF ST.
BAU
The healthy condition of St. Paul's finances is demonstrated by the abstract issued by the comptroller of the currency, taken from the returns of national banks of date April 30. The position in the matter of increase of bank deposits, the comparison between 1892—one of the biggest and best business years the country has even known—and the current year shows an increase of 70 per cent in deposits, in contrast to the increase in $24,780,000 for the present year.
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 178 per cent, giving total deposits at the time of publication to $2,425,748.30. This is by far the best showing made by any of the St. Paul national banks, and is therefore worthy of especial comment. Among the other national banks an instance is shown by each, the smallest being per cent. Altogether St. Paul's shows an increase in the indicative of an extremely healthy condition of mercantile affairs.
May 25th, 1902, at 6:30 a.m., m. passed from the joys and sorrows of this life, into the perfect life, Mrs. Harriett Louisa (Chesley) Mackey. She was a teacher in the school, O. Md., June, 1836, and was married Robert Mackey, October, 1852. Age 66 years.
Since early childhood she has been a resident of Wagerstown, Md., and had lived in the house where she died in 1902. She came a Christian, and joined Ebenezer A. M. E. Church, of which she was a faithful member until death.
The church and community suffers a great loss by her death, which touches her heart. She has been loved, respected and honored for her sterling integrity as a Christian of personal piety and genuine benevolence, and as a wife and mother, in the sacred precinct of a cultured and beautiful home life. She is a woman of great manliness, ever ready to help the needy, and to assist in every good work, a kind and loving wife and mother, and thoughtful of others, full of sympathy for all suffering, keenly responsive to the life of the church, a lovely friend, and a humble disciple of the Lord Jesus.
The last hours of her life were quiet rest, from which she went out gently, without struggle. Her face was srilling, with tears. Her face content and satisfaction written upon it.
IN THESE UP-T
Applicant for Cook's Place—What is the Mistress of the House—Why do you Applicant—I want to yet your refer
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—I want to yet your reference from her.
Defective Page
IN MEMORIAM
The slight trace, which the years had made was removed, and the look of youthful days returned.
She was a member of "Perseverance Lodge No. 3." Independent Order of God Sisters, and Daughters of Samaria, also of "The Laboring Sons and Daughters."
She leaves to mourn their great loss a husband, two daughters, Cora L. at home, Mrs. Martha Cautonpum of Hamburg, Penn., one son, Wm. K. St. Thomas, four grandchildren, one at home, earl Webster, and three in Harrisburg.
But they mourn not as those without hope. They feel that she has only gone a little before, and is waiting with other loved ones, to welcome them. They too, shall have crossed over and blessed the dead that die in the Lord.
The family wishes to thank all friends for their kindness to her during her illness, and pray God's blessing upon them.
"He is hard to break the tender cord." We wish to house the heart.
"Tis hard, so hard to speak the words. We must forever part."
E
THE CITY OF BAYSIDE
Dearest loved one we must lay the
In the, peaceful grave's embrace,
But thy memory will be cherished
Till we see the heavenly face."
But not in "Peace."
By a Friend,
MRS. HATTIE NEWMAN.
Hamm's New Velvet Beer
The Theo. Hamm Brewing Co. of St. Paul, notwithstanding the excellent brews of beer that it now furrowly a new extra pale beer on the market, promises to surpass anything in the line of bottle beer. This new beer is called "Velvet." It is an extra pale beer, having a rich, agreeable hop flavor and just the right amount of chocolate to make it an ideal beverage. This beer is guaranteed to be absolutely pure and wholesome and to be made of the very best selected malt and imported hops. Telephone the Big Home Brewery, at 519 535, for a case.
What He Wanted.
"Your honor," said the prisoner, who had been brought in for a preliminary hearing, after six weeks in the county jail. "I want a change of menu." He mean, "said the judge, kindly, that you want to change of venue. Now, the proper course—
"No. I don't mean that. I want a change of menu. That sherif seems to be tried to corner the corned beef and the world." -Baltimore American.
TO-DATE DAYS.
the address of your last cook?
want to know that?
ence from her.
THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER
MINNEAPOLIS.
DOINGS IN AND ABOUT 17 THE GREAT "FLOUR CITY."
Matters Social, Religious and General Which Have Happened and are to Happen Among the People of the City on the Falls.
Query—Why not subscribe for The Appeal and stop borrowing your neighbor's paper?
The Christian Endeavor meets every Sunday 6:30 p. m. at Bethesda Baptist church. You are most cordially invited.
Mrs. Charles Turner and little son, Clay Turner, of Madison, Wis. is the guest of Mrs. Robertson, of Twenty-eighth street.
Miss M. Jackson, milliner and modiste, ladies' tailoring. French cleaning and curling feathers a speciality. No. 1409 South Fifth street.
Mrs. Nellie Hale has opened a studio for an auction Room 52 Eastman block. Special attention given beginners. Terms reasonable.
The Appeal is mailed to most of the homes of the people of the Twice Cities, and if you wish matters to reach the homes you must publish them in the Apeal.
Dr. R. S. Brown has moved his office into the Century Building. No. 4 fourth street south, rooms 405 and 406 Office 'phone, N. W. 3271-J1 Main.
The kindergarten hour at St. James Church has been changed from 9 a.m. on Wednesday and Saturdays to noon on the same days. The school can accommodate five more children.
Mrs. Jennie Hilary, formerly of Minneapolis, but now a teacher in the High School in the southern part of Minneapolis, is a city girl of a friends. She is the guest of Miss Maggie Freeman.
Mrs. Celestine Brown has opened the "Creole Kitchen," boarding-house style, at 405-407 Fifth ave. S. Regular meals, 25 cents. Short orders served. First-class furnished rooms in connection. N. W. Tel. 343-412. Minneapolis.
Mr. Robert Ernest and daughter, Mr. Roberter, Mrs. Williamson and son, Mr. Roberter, Mrs. Mudge Thompson, all of Decatur, Ill., are in the city on a three-week's visit
THE FACTORY
FAMILIAR SCENE AT WILDW00 D.
to their relatives, Mr. and Mrs. J. L.
Neal, 1832 Fifth avenue south.
LEARN HOW TO BREATHE.
Exercises That Should Be Practiced
Night and Morning.
BULL CON ALWAYS LANDS 'EM.
When a man is complimened, he may not swallow it all, but he thinks there is something in it—Atchison Globe.
THIS TIME IT'S YE EDITRESS.
There will be no preachment from ye editress this week. She is too busy eating strawberries. The mothers may raise their children just as they please.—Newton (iowa) Journal.
HIS PREFERENCE.
Billy and Nan had wandered about all over the lot so bare.
There were posters and gum shoes in plenty around.
But nothing that pleased this pair.
"I'd like to find something soothing to sit."
He said to his partner Nan:
"There's nothing can tickle my palate so much.
As a big fat oyster can."
bushels of wheat passing through the Soo canal was 1,376,705, while last year the number of bushels was 60-.. 60-.. but forty times as much as in 1871.
LITTLE ADVANCEMENT IN CANADA
Population Increases Only Through Influx of Undesirable Immigrants
Not only has there been but little increase in the total population of Canada during the last twenty years, as is shown by the latest census, but according to the Montreal Star, what increase there has been is due largely to the influx of Chinese, Japanese, Scandinavian Russians, Italians, Galicians and Poles. These replace people of British, Irish and other non-essent who migrate to the United States. Furthermore, Canada is serving as a dumping ground for immigrants excluded from the United States because of their undesirability. Within six months, some 4,000 immigrants or this sort, unable to cross the border, have been left stranded in Canada, and what this means is explained by the Robert Watchhorn, special United States immigration inspector at Saul Kirk, director to the effect that 98 per cent of peasant emigrants are suffering from infectious diseases, the direct result of filth and lack of sanitary method.
"Did you the foundation Tell me about the ill will and he deter bided his chance for him a $2 change in place took them home of mind. The ing around she thought that. Then get them out that she wore She did so them in. The check with sure on it." penny saved $50,000 that her when she —Cleveland
ODD THEN
While in 000 people are try, in America 000 were not there is which the traced. The descended fowl.
The hotter was on the of Persia, days in July.
"Did you hear how Mrs. Biffles said the foundation of her fortune?" "No. Tell me about it." "She had aroused the ill will of a street-car conductor and he determined to get even. He bided his time and pretty soon his chance for revenge came. She offered him a $2 bill and he gave her the change in pennies. "Go on." "She told me that she would get out of mind. There was a toy bank knocking around on one of the mantels and she thoughtlessly dropped them in that. Then she found she couldn't get them out, so it occurred to her that she would drop some more in. She did so. She kept on dropping them in. To-day she can draw a cheek on it. She can draw the fig on it." "What! All for free! penny savings?" "Yes, all except $50,000 that her husband settled on her when she let him have a divorce." —Cleveland Plain Dealer.
While in Europe only ten in each 1,000 people are living out of their country, in America 137 out of every 1,000 were not born on this continent. There is no wild breed of fowl to which the Brahma or Cochin can be traced. The gamecock seems to be descended from the Cingalese jungle fowl. The hottest place on earth last year was on the Persian side of the Gulf of Persia. During ten consecutive days in July and August the temperature never fell below 100 degrees. In case of a cold-wave warning 100,-000 telegrams are often distributed with no hours, and the weather bureau claims that in no instance $3,400,000 worth of property was saved. A transatlantic steamer carrying what is called a "full mall" usually brings 200,000 letters and 300 sacks of newspapers for London, to say nothing of the 500 and odd sacks for other places.
Divers are able to converse under water by placing their helmets, which are invariably made of copper, together and shouting to one another. The sound, they say, is swiftly and distinctly conveved.
SENTIMENT OF AUTHORS.
Love is to be taken as we find it, without philosophy, science, analysis, or even much description—Shacklett, by Walter Barr.
Trudl's friends always thought her delightful, and she never had any old ones—The Benefactress, by the author of Elizabeth and Her German Garden.
If a man is seated, a woman who intends to get the better of him generally stands; but if he loses his temper, he may be seated. He immediately seats herself and assumes an exasperating calmness of manner.
Marietta—F. Marion Crawford.
A
A
She—I believe in eating my bread upon the waters.
He—No wonder the ocean rolls.
---
Billy and Nan had wandered about
there. There were posters and gum shoes
in plenty around.
But nothing that pleased this pair.
"SHADOW AND LIGHT."
This is the title of an interesting volume of 372 pages, the author of which is Hon. Mifflin Winstar Glab, of this country, and leading Afro-American citizen of Arkansas, but is regarded as one of the most prominent representatives of his race in the South. He is an entertaining and charming man of varied experience. He is self-made, full of energy and has been pushing himself forward for the past half century. He has filled several posts of distinction, and all creditably, has been a member of the court of this city, afterward register of United States lands, receiver of public monies for the United States, and recently, United States consul to Madagascar. His admirable work, "The History of the Autobiography with reminiscences of the last and present century. The introduction was written by Prof. Booker T. Washington, in which a high-quality essay was written. "It is seldom," says Prof. Washington, "that one man, even if he has lived as long as Judge M. W. Gibbs, is able to record his impressions of so man, widely separated parts of the world, and to recall personal experiences in so many-important occurrences." The volume is embellished with many por-
traits of distinguished individuals who are subjects of the author's fruitful pen. There is not a single dull page in the book. It is highly commended by the press and is meeting with a wide sale.-little Rock (Ark). Gazette
CHICAGO IS FOURTH GREAT PORT
Exceeded in Tonnage York by London.
New York and Hamburg.
In the thirty years since 1870 Chicago's shipping has more than quadrupled and in the tonnage of arrivals and clearances Chicago now ranks among the ports of the world, following London, New York and Hamburg.
The latest figures relating to this matter are: London, 16,529,055 tons; New York, 16,445,320; Hamburg, 14,188,817; Michigan, 14,766,100; Antwerp, 13,573,472; Liverpool, 11,818,000, and Marselles, 9,629,114.
Chicago leads all United States ports except New York in tonnage, and the constant extension of lake traffic has added not only to the commerce of Chicago, but likewise very largely to the commerce of Cleveland, now a very important port of entry; Buffalo, Milwaukee and Toledo.
The chief articles of commerce on the lakes are wheat, flour, coal, iron and timber. In 1871, the number of
A Fairy Tale.
ODD THINGS IN EXCHANGES
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.
ASL. YOUR HOME AGENT
FOR TICKETS VIA THE
BURLINGTON
A Happy Combination of Comfort
Luxurious Travel and
Perfect Accomodations
IS VIA
THE
NORTH-WESTERN
LINE
C.S.T.P.M. & O.R.Y
Inquire for rates and information
should you contemplate a trip well
rounded out with pleasure. : : :
T. W. TFASDALE, Gon. Pas. Agt.,
St. Paul, Minn.
S.W.
RAUDENBUSH
BIRTH 67 PETER AND MARKET OTS.
ST. PAUL, MINN.
STATE STEAM
LAUNDRY
222 W. 78 ST. Phone 1609.
SMIRTS 101
DOLLARS CUFFS
RAMSEY COUNTY Afro-American Club. SOCIAL
OFFICERS
J. W. WOODFORK, Pres.
J. L. PHELPS, Supt.
JOHN MORGAN, Asst. Supt.
F. D. McCRACKEN, Sec.
ANDY COMBS, Asst. Sec.
C. E. CHARLSTON, Treas.
WM. GIBBS, Chef.
Tel. Main 1786-11.
Else Pearson publishing Co.
43.45 E.19th St. <br> NEW YORK
THE ST. PAUL DAILY NEWS
Every day in the year except Sunday for,
per year. $1.00
Outside the City of St. Paul.
Nothing succeeds like distress.
The bigger a little man is, the less he amounts to.
Birds of a feather occasionally prefer to flock apart.
The man who has a large heart cannot have a light one.
What is sauce for the gander may be saucy for the goose.
One who knows does not talk; one who talks does not know.
If you mind your own business you won't work more than eight hours a day.
"They belong to the landed aristocracy." "Indeed! when did they land?"
The average woman wishes to be idealized and strongly objects to being understood.
A disciple is a man who does not understand. He thinks that he is on, but he isn't.
A woman may be a mystery to a man and to herself, but never to another woman.
People who take pains never to do any more than they are paid for never get paid for any more than they do.
If you have a wife and love her, tell her so—tell her half a dozen times a day. This was said by a bachelor.
Some writers are famous for the books they have written; others for the books they ought to have written.
There is a subtle sympathy produced by marked passages. Put faint pencil marks, then lend the volume, and you will know your fate.
It may be that there is a bigger bit of political clap-trap than the statement that all men are born free and equal, but I cannot just recall it at the moment.
"My son," said the philosopher, on his death-bed, "My son, two things you should never do. First, do not endeavor to pry into the future, for if you will only wait you shall know all. And, second, do not chase after women, for if you do not they will chase after you. Farewell."
Relieved of the presence of that social pacemaker, the chaperon, the disciples of Plato are wont to take long walks, and further on, they spend whole days in the country—The Critic.
NEW-FOUND PHILOSOPHY.
Some people cannot see a joke even after they cut their eyeteeth.
He is a wise man who takes some other's umbrella, though it be not raining.
He who would rid himself of relatives needs only to fall from prosperity to poverty.
A collar button is a small thing and yet there are those who charge it with being the root of all evil.
The man who holds his tongue gets credit for being brainy, while he may merely be deaf and dumb.
One can never tell how much brains a man has by the size of his hat; the man's head may be swollen.
If our ambitions panned out according to our hopes, there would be no small potatoes in this world. A man who has little money is justified in saying that happiness does not consist in having wealth. If you talk back to a woman she will tell you you are no gentleman; if you remain silent she will call you a coward. Many a man who is a Chesterfield in the presence of another's wife, is a rude boor to his own wife behind his own doors.
PHILOSOPHIC MAUNDERINGS
The best way to win on a horse race is to forget to take any money to the poolroom with you.
Work is a great thing to keep man's mind off his troubles, unless work happens to be his trouble.
The chimp-y sweep, anyway, is always ready to admit that he is just as black as he is sooted.
Atlas may have held the world in his shoulders, but Mr. Morgan wasn't standing on the world then.
No matter what else may clamor for recognition, it's always safe to bank on uncertainty as a sure thing.
The general who hesitates long at the possibility of losing a battle will not realize his one hope of winning.
It isn't really necessary or quite conventional for the ex-convict to engrave his number on his visiting cards.
A phrenologist would have a hard time to determine the character of the average prize fighter by the bumps on his head.
Not once in a lifetime does man get out of range of the possible calamity.—Baltimore News.
MISTAKES OF LIFE.
To take off heavy underclothing because you become overheated.
are not in a lie condition to do so.
To conclude that the smallest room in the house is large enough to sleep in.
To imagine that if a little work or exercise is good, violent or prolonged exercise is better.
To go to bed late at night and rise at daybreak, and imagine that every hour taken from sleep is an hour gained.
To give unnecessary time to a certain established routine of housekeeping when it could be more profitably spent in rest or recreation.
To eat as if you had only a minute in which to finish the meal and to eat without an appetite, or to continue after it has been satisfied to gratify the taste.
POINTED PARAGRAPHS
Vanity is the daughter of selfishness.
The mornings seem to be getting up earlier of late.
Unrequited love soon acquires a job lot of wrinkles.
Sweetening one's coffee is the first stirring event of the day.
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Sixth and Cedar Sts.
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OUR GUARANTEE—Perfect-fitting garments only, and better at the price than can be had elsewhere.
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C. C. C. Co., NEW YORK.
A lot of time is wasted by clocks that run too fast and by fast young men.
Woman's idea of worldly wisdom is to know the fallings of her neighbors.
There is nothing original about Wall street, which is noted for its quotations.
The absent may be at fault, but those present are always supplied with excuses.
If silence is golden the woman who is deaf and dumb must be twenty-four carets fine.
Some men seem to think that the milk of human kindness flows only from bottles.
The man who makes the best of everything should have no trouble in disposing of his wares.
When a man orders spring lamb in a cheap restaurant he begins to realize how tough it is to die young.
The patience of the average man doesn't get a chance to rest until after he has acquired a monument.
It sometimes happens that a domestic explosion is the result of a lot of theories getting into a man's head. Before being taught how to shoot it might be well for the young idea to learn how to know when it is loaded. A woman wants to see everything that goes on. That is probably the reason why she stands in front of a mirror while dressing—Chicago Daily News.
SCRAPS.
On March 23, 1,545 cases of smallpox were under treatment in London.
In Russia factories are usually near forests, wood being still the chief fuel.
Ping-pong punch is the very newest thing in soda water fountain concoctions.
Tierra del Fuego is full "if minerals, among which is no small proportion of gold.
There is one dentist to a few more than 4,000 people in the thickly settled states.
The gimlet screw, the idea of a little girl, brought many millions of dollars to its inventor.
London bridge, when widened, will be lighted from the center and not from the sides.
"I noticed you hoeing your garden yesterday. What are you raising?" "Blisters, mostly."
Germay has imported as much as $10,000,000 worth of apples in one year and $2,500,000 worth of pears.
Although ordinary wood alcohol is a poison, Ohio is the only state which prohibits its sale on that account.
William Bucher of Baltimore, who is still living, made the first screwhead banjo in 1847. It is now in the National Museum.
BITS OF LEARNING
In some districts of China pigs are barned to small wagons and made to draw them.
Meteors almost invariably contain a large quantity of iron and a smaller amount of nickel.
Most of the hotels in Egypt and Algiers are in the hands of Germans, and most of the servants are Germans, too.
The ancient historians say that over one thousand miles of the lower Nile were protected by artificial embankments and other works of engineering skill.
The living species of animals now tabulated number 366,000 distinct species, but hundreds of fresh species—especially of insects—are being added yearly to this list.
The biggest pump in the world is used in an American zinc mine at Fieldensville. It pumps 20,000 gallons a minute, or 30,000,000 a day, and uses a ton of coal an hour.
A fancy dress ball was recently given in Munich, in which all the guests came dressed as notorious criminals, while the walls were hung with pictures illustrating the most famous crimes.
THOUGHTS OF GREAT MEN.
"Tyrants never sleep."—Voltaire.
"Architecture is petrified music."—Goethe.
"In peace prepare for war."—Washington.
"Don't give up the ship!"—Captain James Lawrence.
"Blood is thicker than water."—Commodore Tatallm.
"Nothing is certain but death and taxes."—Franklin.
"If this be treason, make the most of it."—Patrick Henry.
"Above all things—liberty."—John Selden, English lawyer and statesman.
"I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country."—Nathan Hale.
"Liberty and union, one and inseparable, now and forever!"—Daniel Webster.
"God reigns, and the government at Washington still lives."—James A. Garfield, in a brief speech in New York the day of President Lincoln's death.
"Silent in seven languages."-Said to Schleiermacher of the eminent philologist, Emmanuel Bekher, a scholar whose modesty equaled his learning.
Highly Moral Country.
Simple honesty is one of the striking characteristics of the people of Newfoundland—that piety and honesty which accompany an austere religion. Doors are not locked; property lies exposed everywhere, no watch is kept on the fish when they lie drying on the flakes. No man takes advantage of his neighbor, no man quarrels with his brother, no man appeals to the law, nobody is arrested. "If you leave these lying here," said the writer to a man of Birch Bay, pointing to a magnificent set of caribou antlers. "you'll lose them. These can be sold, you know." "An' who'd take them, sure?" said Jonathan. "Well, I might." "But that would be stealing," he exclaimed. "But you would never know that I was the thief." "Suppose," said he cunningly, "that I went round asking people if they took 'um. Suppose I comes 't you an' says. Did you have any? What could you do? I'd have you then, sure? " "Oh, that's simple. I'd say no." "Oh, he cried in horror, 'but that would be a lie'!"—Ainslee's Magazine
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ST. PAUL
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MINNEAPOLIS
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PARAGRAPHS ABOUT PEOPLE.
One of the most decorated men in Europe is Count von Eulenberg, master of the German emperor's household. He is a great favorite with his sovereign, who has conferred on him no fewer than sixty-three decorations. The youngest peeress at the coronation will be Baroness Clifton of Leighton Bronswold, who is two and a half years old. Her diminutive robes, which will be exact representations of those prescribed for peeresses attending the coronation, have already been ordered.
It is not generally known that Lord Kitchener, once seriously contemplated going on the stage. It was while he was a lieutenant in the royal engineers. Not taking very quickly to the army, he consulted the late George Honey, the actor. That gentleman dropped him a note of kindly advice, in which he said: "Stick to the army, Mr. Kitchener; it is a far better shop than the boards. You will be sure to make your mark."
The khekidiv had never seen snow in her life and remained this winter in Constantinople to see it. The winter has been mild, and she was growing disappointed, when one day a heavy fall came. She at once ordered out her carriage and drive through her park to have a good look. When she got home she sent out for large trays of snow, with which she and her ladies made snow balls and pelted the little black slaves. Florizel von Reuter, a lad of nine, has been for the past two years a striking figure in Geneva, for his wonderful talents have attracted the attention of all Switzerland. He is called "the little Mozart" and the "second Paganini." The Conservatoire of Geneva, where for some time he was a pupil, granted him a diploma as virtuoso last June. At the age of three a baby violin was put into his hands, and at four he began the serious study of the violin.
PASSING FANCIES.
It takes the editor to make a long story short.
The pickpocket keeps in close touch with the public.
The man who is long on wheat may be short on dough.
Charity sometimes begins at home, but frequently nowhere. When one borrows trouble the interest is usually pretty heavy. Few persons are as easily fooled by others as they are by themselves. The man who goes all the gaits will-become unhunged after a while. The man who is ashamed of his religion hasn't much to be ashamed of. Artists and poets frequently get their high ideals by living up close to the roof. The man who is in the middle of a bad fix is said to be on the ragged edge. It is easy to see through the man who is fond of making a spectacle of himself. While the under dog usually has the sympathy of the crowd, the one on top gets the gate receipts. People like jolliness, but not being jollied—New York Sun.
POOR BICHARD'S ALMANAC
Dr. Franklin himself in one of the last numbers of his almanac gathered together all the best sayings of Poor Richard, which for twenty-five years had amused and edified the country. These sayings are in constant use at this day. For example:
"Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise."
"Drive thy business; let it not drive thee."
"Help hands, for I have no lands."
"No gains without pains."
"Constant dropping wears away stones."
Three removes are as bad as a fire.
"He that by the plow would thrive must either hold or drive."
"A fat kitchen makes a lean will."
"Experience keeps a dear school, but fools will learn in no other."
It was such homely maxims as these, inserted in all the little gaps of the almanac, that made it so popular. Franklin said he sometimes sold 10,000 copies in a year, a wonderful sale for that day. The first number of Poor Richard's Almanac appeared in 1782.
CURRENT WISDOM.
One touch of humor makes the whole world grin.
An inch of performance is worth a yard of promise.
When a lazy man stops to think he is seldom able to start again.
The trouble with a great many actors is that they are only imitation actors. Some individuals are so persistent in trying to do their best that they even do their best friends
THOUGHTS FOR EVERY DAY.
Home keeping hearts are happiest.—Longtellow.
The woman with tact is the salvation of problematic situations. You'll be glad if you cultivate her acquaintance.
Let him scatter his flowers as he goes along, since he will never go over the same road again.—Orison Switt Marden.
BUBBLES
A train hand—the dressmaker.
Running in debt—the instalment watch.
An idle jest—the one the humorist can't sell.
In the waitz some people are sure to get all turned around.
A child who is "a bad egg" cannot easily be whipped into shape.
Even people who are wrapped up in themselves may get "undone."
SOCIETY DIRECTION:
ST. PAUL.
MOST WORSHIPFUL GRAND LODGE
OF
MINNESOTA, A. P. AND A. M.
JOHN N. NEAL, Grand Master.
622 Boston Rik., Minneapolis, Min.
WM. R. MONDA, Grand Secrara.
617 Guaranty Bldg., Minneapolis, Mn.
MARS LODGE, NO. 2202, MEETS MCA for business and the third Wednesday for instruction at Odd Fellows' Hall, 253 E Seventh street, J. E. "Oorter, N. G.; Thos R. Fleman, P. S. 22 St. Anthony Ave. HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH, NO. 555, U. O. of C. F. meets first and third Monday in each month for business; second Mon. in business; fourth Mon. in E. Seventh street, Mrs. Sarah E. Hall, M. N. G.; Mrs. Ida M. Johnson, W. K. No. 552 Rice street. CHRIARCHY NO. 114 meets the second Monday in each month at Odd Fellows' Hall, No. 263 E. Seventh street. All Patriarchs in good standing at Odd Fellows' Hall, W. W. T. Francis, V. P.; Geo. B. Lowe, W. P. R. 47815 Wabasha.
ST. JAMES' A. M. E. CHURCH, cor-fuller and AJ. street. Services: 11:00 a. m. 7:30 p. m. Wednesday prayer 11:00 a. m. 7:30 p. m. Tuesday and tuesday; at home Wednesday and Thursday. Weddings, funerals and the skid streaks notice. Rev. J. C. Ander tuesday; at home 380.
PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH, Cor. 12 a.m. edar. sundays services: Breaching at 12 a.m. school at 12:30 o'clock. Wednesday evening general prayer meeting. Friday evening, weddings promptly attended. Rev. W. D. Carter, Pastor, 559 Eldert St.
ST. PHILIP'S EPISCOPAL MISSION corner Aurora avenue and Mackublin street: Sunday services: Early celebration of Holy Holy Eucharist first and third Sundays, 11:00 a. m. Matins, second and fourth Sundays, 11:00 a. m. Brotherhood of St. Andrew, 6:30 a. m. Vespers, 7:30 p. m. Week services: weddings, confirmation class, 8:00 p. m. Holy Eucharist, 9 a. m. REV. A. C. V. CARTIER, Rector, 750 central avenue
MINNEAPOLIS
EAPO
A. D. B. C. 4.
AT ANNEX LONDON, No 2877, creates the first and third Wednesday in each month for the weekend, a second and fourth Wednesday for intermission, a fourth Wednesday for the night, and Nestollet and Honeypot in each month.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAAS
N. TURNER Lodge No. 8, L. 1, of F. Faucett
houses and fourth Welcome. Last month
houses in and fourth Welcome. Last month
Fourth and S. 4th Ave. No.
JOHN A. CAGE, C. R. and B.
FRIED OF MINNESOTA No. 1, R. 1, of F. Faucett
first and third Thursday in each month.
Fried at 10 a.m. at Hall A. Hall
Hall second street between Herndon and
Hist Ave.
A. S. WILLIAMS MANAGER
Scott R. Walker
FINE WINES. LIJQUORS AND CIGARS,
374 Minnesota St.
Tel. 1818 115 ST. PAUL, MN.
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Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly obtain a patentable. Compound invention is probably patentable. Compound invention is probably patentable. Handed in and sent free. Oldest agency for securing patent. Public makes tender. Handed in and sent free. Special notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A handsome illustrated journal. Public declaration of any scientific journal. Terms: 3 years: four months. £1. Sold by all new dealers.
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