The Appeal
Saturday, November 8, 1902
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
THE APPEAL STEADILY GAINS
BECAUSE
1-It aims to publish all the news possible.
2-It does so impartially, wasting no words.
3- Its correspondents are able and energetic.
Andrew Ca W
From Five to Ten of His M
cif C
Andrew Carnegie Plans to Wipe Out London Slums
From Five to Ten of His Millions Available for a Starter If the Housing Council Can Show a Desirable Scheme.
ONDON. Andrew Charnie, a bit bored, perhaps, by the effort of his family in the management or working of the. The awful condition of some of the local Carnegie estate would be rightly excluded don slums can be judged from a report of the work done in the management of the conditions in a thorough free libraries, has a new outlet for the administration of its finances. fare incongruity interest. It has had it kept, secret No man whose income is more than $8 street. Thirteen men and six women who work at the house admitted to the house tenant whose income subsequently rises street, thirteen women and six men who long that there can be harm in staying above that figure will be permitted to live in each of the six-room houses, as lishing the facts.
MATTHEW H. NELSON WAS EXHIBITED AT A
T.
ANDREW CARNEGIE
series of articles that had appeared in the New York Times, good he might have done with his wealth by building decent houses that could be rented to him, and that they now pay for invoices in the slums—how much more than free lumber and improvements would count for human welfare. Mr. Carnegie declined to be drawn on the reasons why he went to work in characteristic fashion to see for himself what there was in the city. The result of his investigation has been that he now works in London, body known as the Workmen's National Housing council to show him how $20,000 to $100,000 in buildup programs would it understand that he wasn't definitely promising a penny to the council, and that he would provide him with a plan that would be an improvement on existing attempts at housing reform the cash would be forthcoming.
JONSTE ACKROYD
Albany University's council contains a good many prominent men, such, for instance, as Sir John McDougall, who governs London, it is made up largely of the city's elite like Mr. Carnegie, and who think that the state ought to look after the city, rather than surrender it, supersidely astonished by Mr. Carnegie's brief and casual way of offering a mildly humiliating message of weighty communication more than 150 words long—but they promptly should be provided forthwith, and now plans are about complete London, with American dollars, housing council, at Mr. Carnegie's suggestion, has been disposed to reveal nothing of these big plans on the city, but I can now give the general outline of the scheme, as here, for there is reason to suppose that Mr. Carnegie has designs on his letter to the council about wanting to get the city to work in operation. But the study radicals who run the council are strongly opposed to the council in operation. And they have prepared a plan that is to give the would-be philanthropist the profit of 15 per cent to be used in imminent elimination, they say, the scheme will cause the dawn of a new era for working-class
Exodpa to the Suburbs.
The council will show that primarily the failure of the existing law caused the spirit of the founders is due to the fact that persons having no interest in common with the working classes have been selected to administer the funds. Builders, lawyers and any person who could have a number of interests
VOL. 18. NO. 45.
in the management or working of the finances from all control or participation in the administration of the finances. More than $400 a week will be admitted as tenant, but no more than $100 a week above that figure will be permitted to stay. Ingenious Penalty scheme.
ARNEGIE.
A particularly interesting feature of the tenancy is the years' occupation of any room or number of rooms will entitle the tenant to live, if he should wish to live, but if he should wish to compound his life interest, the trustees will consider they will pay him accordingly, but no longer than to the trustees. The root idea here is that the tenant is providing an old man from the workhouse in his declining years, and should render it necessary for the tenant to remove to another district, he will be entitled to the trustees' house, where it is convenient, and should the trustees be made to provide a sum proportionate to that which he would be entitled to have completed his twenty-five years' occupation would be given to any case where a tenancy would be given to any case where a tenancy would be inside the stipulated time. The houses will be constructed mostly of man and Danish plans as shown in the tenement blocks are not contended.
The Workmen's house council, which, to its own surprise, has been selected by the London Borough of London's new line of money-giving, is a strong body of men who have given a great deal to the city. London slums. Most of its members have been men who have served since it was organized, three years ago, has been W. C. Steadman, a shipwright's apprentice to the Barge Builders' trade union, but who has long been a powerful member of the Barge Builders' trade union, and who has years members of parliament. Another member is based here as the chief architectural authority on workmen's dwellings. Others have similar offices, whose duties have brought them into contact with the big
Although a good many members of the housing council are in charge of the council, the two bodies don't agree at all on the subject of workmen's housing council, the two bodies don't difference are instructive. The housing council says that the council accommodating those they have left homeless by destruction of their money. The county council decided that the people must be accommodated as near originally located, and to satisfy this idea the county council agreed to hire other and other huge business premises in the very heart of the city at exorbitant prices and other next door to the old one. In every case the county council are surrounded by slum property quite as filthy and dilapidated as the saw fit in the interest of sanitation to destroy.
Big Costly Scheme
The County Council has cost the county council as much as $252,000 for land and buildings. The county council worksmen's dwelling when it is estimated will cost over $10,000,000, and which will accommodate all, on the other hand, say that Mr. Carr's number for $5,000,000 in more attractive lower rental to the female.
The London county council are at the county seat of the city, where they regularly acquire. They will accommodate only 230 people at a cost of £200,000. The county council will have to pay a higher rent than he does in the slums, from which the county will evict him. The buildings on the very heart of the city, surrounded on all sides by the worst description and which harbors Hooliganism of the most violent type. The housing of the county council is spending on this site they can accommodate 2,000 persons and the very heart of the city, surrounded on all sides by the worst description and which harbors Hooliganism of the most violent type. The housing of the county council will be forced that the local council maintain that so long as the county council operates of the London county council it can maintain that a high percentage of profit on all undertakings, and according to its present undertakings, and according to its present undertakings, and cannot never hope to solve the housing problem.
Fearful Overwhelming
A Democratic Body.
THE APPEAL.
POPULARITY
1902 ELECTION
AIN'T THAT A FINE PADDLE!
The awful condition of some of the Lon-
gers is being judged from a report. It re-
ceives a new award, fare incongruously named: Nightingale
living in one four-room house in that
street, thirteen women and six men were
living in one of the six-room houses eleven
and twelve women were living. In名
and the largest of the rooms was 12 by 10
feet. One room, a bedroom and children-every night.
The average weekly rent was 65 cents.
The project, Budget Meakin, secretary of the
Industrial Betterment society, which has
homees of the people, said: "According to
my ideas, Mr. Carnegie could make no
change in the building model dwellings for the
working classes. It would be better than
for as conditions now are in London, with
the children of one of sexes herding
boys and girls unlearn when out of school
council is doing the best it can. The
hampered by the fact that its model dwell-
ings must be made to pay.
Curtis Brown
An Economical Man
The native point out to the stranger and ask him, "What man," said the native, "heats
"That man," said the native, "beats the world on close figuring."
"makes on close fighting."
"makes a little money go a long ways, does he?"
"Wolf, rather. Why, last winter he put
him in the basement, where he slept
he swamp and he, never took them,
and they were gone."
"matter of economy?" "Exactly." "Rather small and mean. I should have given him a back back the revolving doors ought not to go to me, or he is giving his tenants and guests utmost access."
POPUL
"just mrs k." explained the native, "to aim for nothing. Why, he stores in the room generated by those doors and uses it to close that door. He doesn't close that he doesn't get mad because he thinks his anger would cause him to give him need in the winter." —Brooklyn Escape.
Homely Floor Coverings Have Come Back Again - Dear 'o the Craft.
FTIER years of undervalue in the industrial world, products of the handicraft industry, Handicrafts are springing up on every side. In competition with the more known edify, but as which has done so much to bring utility, into lives that might otherwise have been ignored, the natural expression of individuality, are voted to hand-made arts threaten to become as formidable as trade journals. Factors in American life, Educaed factors in American life, Educaed factors in American life, it desire to possess exclusive objects to bear the impress of individuality and the chine-made things. Educaed wealth is learning to recognize and appreciate the chine-made things. Educaed wealth is manifested in the various handicrafts.
Ready to meet this taste and demand upon the part of educator, we are awake with the wisdom of best practices who have learned to think and to execute for themselves. We are ready to teach them the salary, the salary they have up their tools under their own roof tree, and from de-
legrams, brass, copper, wood, straw, rags, leather, and other mediums they are making for the speech that is within them. In our way, seniors of large cities in a number of little handicapped shops where a single worker creates and stamps the money for the middle age, the Bennevytu Gellings in the middle age with their personal signature or trade-mark.
Defective Page
"It's the Americans—the rich American—who have set my loom a singing in its old age." When the dean came from Bavaria with a pair of looms, he found in New York more than 1,400 carpet weavers, all doing a matching, sighing the old man with a blink in his merry brown eye. "All the great indies living in fine houses in Bond street and Lafayette place used to bring weave into carpets—up into strips or would have you know, but for their own
Only Three Left.
With the coming of the machine-made carpet, among the first to desert the hand made ones, the deans know of but three hard looms on the East side of New York, and doubts it would be worth the money to broad swinging the shuttle. The machine sold off, and their children would not learn the trade. It was too slow. They followed the trend of the times and took to the machine, and the deans knew it would "the hard, hard work," said the dean's航, threading the loom. "All is done."
so big and heavy, and much heavier than you would give up threading this old lady and sorting out the bobbins out of silk or velvet for the wealth of the Vanderbilt.
"Wealth is all very good," continued the
philobacterium lightstaphylae as a boy die-
CARITY
1902 ELEC
"he be," he said, the clawed frueh ing great bells of rags sent in by an upw rost hospital. "Money, cannot buy it." But it sends us customers, and the very poor. "Turning to the long bin behind his seat at the loom, he bobbles in to be woven into the bobbin for to catch the tapestries of children of the ministry of the surviving hand looms are the charitable institutions. To employ, cast-off farms are given to the weaver, for rug carpeting is more useful in large institutions. Where useful in large institutions. Where more skilled to buy machine-made carpets, since old rax brought prices almost
"I give you your money," said my
weaver to the rich man. "I keep my
---
equivalent to cash asses for the machine carpenter, which suggested luxury, they find to use in the manufacture of rugs. rug manage, no importance has the price gallery, but rug manage is good for rugs in the manufacture of paper. Vanities Under Foot. On the other hand, ready-made garments in the making and at so small a scale, are not available. We wealth found it profitable to dispose of cast-off garments to second-hand dealers, to sell them to other companies, poor relations or sending them to institutions, they are, in compliance with regulations, cutting them up into rug carpets.
WHAT WE ARE HERE.
What we, when face to face we see
The Father of our souls, shall be
The Lord of our souls, shall be
Ah! did tell what we are here!
A mind for thoughts to be thought
Gives senses to be thought through,
Gives senses to be detected things near,
Gives senses to be detected things near,
Squash bells, distract-instinct, outer;
When men are bad-and good are good,
When women are bad-and good are good,
Comfort, comfort, vain appearance.
PUBLIC OPINION
TION
) may we for assurance' sake.
Some culinary judgment taken.
For this or that 'is we are here?
Or is it right, and will it be?
To pace the confusion through,
And say: it doth not yet appear.
What we shall be, what we are here.
Ah, when it all is thought and made,
Still what we hope we must believe,
And what is given us receive.
Glaciers Passing Away.
According to Prof. Forel, who has made a
research career at the tast twenty-five years, the day of
the last glacier melt, the glacier will stand
with steady persistence, and diminution
becomes more marked from year to year.
The glacier, in the valley of Entrenon, which
is the famous glacier of the continuous green
pump, will melt in the year. Many have so changed
glacier to the point that it will not recognize
then. Many hotels once standing in the im-
pression of the glacier have disappeared
considerable distance from them so the seri-
ous loss of the propiters. -Pall Mall Gasette.
On Warren's island, off the coast of Maine, is being erected, what is property of William H. Willeman Jr., a long time owner of spruce logs, and costs the city fifty thousand dollars to build, which this summer palace is erected was purchased by the late William H. Willeman Jr. Following the completion of the house, the work is now superintended by his son, William H. Willeman Jr., who is the size of the "cabin," may be gained from the order of bidding and a sample of twenty-two sleeping rooms on the second floor. On the ground floor there is a fireplace, in width and depth, pieces being of marble, twelve feet in length, in width and depth, nine inches in width, the whole piece of work weighing some forty tons. New York Tribune.
MINNESOTA
HISTORICAL
SOCIETY.
THE APPEAL KEEPS IN FRONT
BECAUSE:
6- It is the organ of ALL Are.
7- It is not controlled by any ring or elbow.
8- It asks no support but the people's.
THE MEMORIAL
SENATOR W. A. CLARK, "THE COPPER RING."
Aerial Flight.
Aerial Flight.
Man's Limitations in Solving This Old,
(BF Prof. Simon Newcomb, LL.D. F. R. K. 81. At first sight it may seem to detract from the usefulness of males far beneath him in intelligence can soar in mildness, while he has to content himself in the way on the ground. If nature did not give him wings, why should not the genius which has produced the telegraph be so useful to him? The wings for him? We may be sure he will not be satisfied until he has solved this problem or found out that no solution can be reasoned.
In an imperfect way they can. He is mounted in a bobbin above the highest flight of a plane, and he is proud of; but when he does it he cannot progress with the speed of the bird, or he cannot offer great resistance to the air. When M. Santon-Dumont recently flew round the earth, he may lead which may lead us to hope for something yet better. But to improve on this, we must have more powerful machinery, and its it is carried much further will require a much larger engine to keep it atattc. So as we gain in one direction we lose in another. It is hopeless to keep with the speed of a highway train. If we would fly with the speed of a bird he must
What he can do with wings is limited by inexorable and well-established physical laws. By a profound investigation of these laws, he has enabled to construct a machine which rose into the air and flew half a mile away, allowing any one to ride on the machine; as the latter had to be left to take a direction which soon after the start became its own. The physical laws to which I have referred show that there is nothing inherently in impossible in aerial flight, but there are problems squaring the circle. Upon one of these laws all hope of solving the problem must be explained, of sufficient importance to be explained.
We know that if a man in falling off a roof will be slower the larger the spread of the supporting surface. We also have that fall will suffice to make the fall so slow that one may drop with impunity from a balloon in an help to the law to which yards will suffice to make the fall so slow, surface, and if it is forced edgewise through the air at the same time that it is dropped edgewise the flower will be its descent. By giving a sufficiently rapid motion the flower is the greatest secret of the same bird which must change scoring to fly as a horizontal flat surface, like a stiff rib or a thin rigid plane, and start him flying forward with a speed of a few hundred seconds, and his fall will be slow, indirect.
T. You this principle is based the idea of flight. But a difficulty arises at the outset: How can we fly? However slow the fall, the man must of necessity come to the ground sooner or, as it is, even result the aeroplane, as it is, in a higher position. Horizon and propelled forward in a direction opposite to the fall, a higher edict must the forward one. It was for this reason that Langley was a propeller to his aeroplane with the wing. Langley also claims, and I think he is right, that if we leave out of consideration the air and consider only the pressure
$2.40 PER YEAR.
o it then the raser the aeroplane files the less the power required to keep supported it. however, with a vehicle that must carry its weight and its load then the power required to overcome the resistance of the air will increase as the power of the speed as in the case of a steamship during the trip may here explain that while the resistance in pounds varies only as the square of the speed, yet the engine power is measured in pounds, the speed, and the resistance, into the resistance, and this produces the cube. To double the speed of a steamer we must multiply the horse power by the total consumption and increase her daily consumption of the same proportion. In the meantime, since she completes her voyage in half the total consumption for the trip will only
Both the laws and the facts governing the experiment and well understood. This inventor has only to bring these laws and facts to his aid to save himself a life, but he might otherwise be expended in making machines that could not fly. Let him put his machine on paper, giving machines to him, and then call in the aid of the expert physicist. The latter can determine in addition what will have. If this prove equal to the weight of the machine plus that of the machine, the problem will be solved. If this power is found to be only a little greater than the weight of the machine we shall have something that would be impossible.
Again, the best possible machine will require a certain horse power, and the most powerful or petroleum required to produce this horse power can be determined.
We are also at met at every point by the law that, while the horse power machine increases as the cuse of its dimensions, the power which it can generate will increase as the horse power. It is important the latter is extended to every detail, strength of boiler, steam producing capacity and centrifugal forces. It follows that the small our own weight which it can possible carry and, make it as effective as we please, when it cannot carry more than its weight. I has been suggested to the writer that by making a number of small machines a combination may be effected when it cannot carry more than a single machine that could be constructed. This idea is a very interesting one, which some inventor may amuse blims if in which some inventor may appreciate our present methods of transmitting our power at all concentrations. Washington St.
Highly inconsistent.
"The Prohibition party doesn't seem likely to cut much cut this campaign." No. I believe there's some bitter fomentable trouble in the ranks? How inconsistent for teetotalers to be at loggershed." -Philadelphia Press.
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THE APPEAL.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1902
The non-forgetting and unforgiving spirit which seems to be characteristic of the Southern whites, it seems, is again to be put in evidence on the occasion of the contemplated visit of President Roosevelt to Memphis, Tenn., on October 20th, when he goes to that God-forsaken city to participate in the welcome of General Luke E. Wright. The Evening Scimitar, a detestable local daily, has editorially called upon its readers to refrain from attending the banquet which will be given upon that occasion, because, forsooth, the President, who will be present, of course, once invited Dr. Booker T. Washington to dine with him. And it is stated that a number of prominent exrebels have announced that they will not go. There will, however, be present, perhaps not a few, who have broken bread with Afro-Americans many a time, and not a few who derived their infantile sustenance entirely from Afro-American breasts. There is one thing we will bet the cook on, and that is that the pusillanimous editor of the Scimateter will never get the same courtey accorded to him that was extended to Booker Washington by the President.
Another instance which verifies this same characteristic feeling, comes from Atlanta, Ga, where a few days
ago one Thomas E. Watson, in a lecture on "The South," said "Neither honor nor valor existed north of Mason and Dixon's line," and attacked Benjamin Franklin, Paul Revere, and other Northern heroes. We think, in view of the sound trouncing the North gave the South during the Rebellion, ought to have gotten the ante-bellion idea that "one southerner could lick ten yankees" out of every southerner's head. Poor fools! They are joined to their idols.
The death from heart disease a few days ago of Mrs. Emaline Owens, a white woman near Columbia, S. C. ended the story of a somewhat peculiar romance in real life. Owens many years ago, then a belle in her neighborhood, ran away with and married Ed Owens, who was formerly her father's slave. They returned to the scene of her childhood after the war, and in defiance of the sentiment of the neighborhood, they lived together and raised a family of children. Owens was killed by lightning while standing under a tree on his plantation a little over a year ago. They leave considerable property, which the children will inherit. This is another instance showing that "Love goes where it is sent." Mrs. Owens' sons will not be disfranchised by the "grandfather" clause, as their grandfather was allowed to vote in 1860.
The federal grand jury, while in session in Louisville, Ky., last week, did something which seems to indicate that this government can do something toward preventing the disfranchisement of Afro-Americans. It returned indictments against ten white citizens of Bowling Green, Ky., who conspired to prevent the registration of Afro-American voters in a precinct in that city. Among those indicted is Judge Henry B. Hines, state inspector and examiner, and one of the most prominent Democrats in Kentucky. One noticeable fact might also be noted in this connection, and that is that it is always Democrats who desire and attempt to disfranchise the Afro-American. Is it any wonder, then, that Afro-Americans are generally Republicans?
Miss Porta Washington, daughter of Dr. Booker, T. Washington, denies the reports which have been published to the effect that she was forced to leave Wellesley College on account of color prejudice. She says she did not have to take examinations in music, and consequently that was not a cause of her leaving, and she most emphatically denies that any hint as to her race being in any way objectionable had ever been given there.
She left of her own volition, and the advice of her father, she said, principally because her health would not permit her to take a college course there, and it was the desire of her father that she take some academic instruction with her music which she was pursuing alone at Wellesley.
For many, many years many unsuccessful attempts have been made in the South to get a substitute for the hands for picking cotton. And the most successful cotton pickers were the Afro-Americans. But it seems their occupation will soon be gone, if the cotton picking machine recently tested near Nortonville, Miss., proves to be the success it was declared to be by thirty prominent planters who witnessed it. When the Afro-American ceases to be indispensable for successful cotton raising in the South, his lot will be a deplorable one indeed.
The slogan, "Stand by the President," it seems, worked wonders last Tuesday, as all over this country the people went to the polls and gave him their indorsement. We will have six years more of Republicanism for a certainty.
Mirabile dictu, a white policeman in Reading, Pa., was sentenced to the penitentiary for eighteen months for killing an Afro-American, despite petition signed by 2,800 citizens asking that sentence be deferred.
The Democratic party has never had any fixed principles or policies. It has ever been the blind instrument of every bad element that might for the timbre be uppermost or seem to promise party success.
The "Jim Crow" street car law won into effect in New Orleans this weel the better class of Afro-Americans boy cotted them, and the most dissatisfe ones were the whites themselves.
President Roosevelt was given handsome indorsement last Tuesday. We may count on a Republican congress for the next six years beyond question.
THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER
THE BOOK WORLD
Lost M
A Simple Home
Fails to Resto
Great Mistake
Many women are "down" on washing
bathroom and all times, on washing
hair and claim that all powders are poor. This is
wrong. PEARLINE is not like other powders.
Test it for washing. Compare the soap paste
made from PEARLINE with that made from
any other soap powder or washing powder.
Ask Your Neighbor 672
In the Forest, By Maximilian Foster,
H. 50. New York; Doubleday, Pago &
Pago.
"in the Forest" is a contribution that the author makes to the positive value. This volume contains wood-life, wherein the stately deer, the cunning coyote, the fleece and rudged fur, the not-in the language of men, but in the significant speech of nature "in her nature," a collection of many stories of forest life, and unlike King Solomon's imperial law of nature, and do not take.
The volume is profusely illustrated by Caitlin Carr's ideas with an art striking and engaging style.
THE AMERICAN WALTER
The American, Colored Walter, by John B. Goins. The Hotel Monthly, Chicago. This is a really useful little book by an eminent employed in the West Baden hotel. The book will be found useful by Caucasian as well.
The following list of suggestions is given
to report for duty without
permission.
"Don't carry packages from hotel.
"Don't play to get familiar with female
hotel."
"Don't get in the steward's path."
"Don't refuse to accept your order in kitchen."
"Don't complain about your work."
"Don't strike."
"Don't play in the kitchen."
"Don't play with cooks."
"Don't use tobacco or gum in dining room."
"Don't make disturbance because you are going to quit."
"Don't pour your heading "Don'ts'."
"Don't pull your mustache."
"Don't clean your finger nails in dining-room.
EDUCATION AND THE LARGER LIFE.
Education and the Larger Life. By C. J. Henderson, pp. 388, 130 net. Boston. This is the title of a book by C. J. Henderson, once this year. The title suggests a reation on philosophy, and one does not want to stumble before discovering original ideas before it is clear, striking and conducive manners.
Education and ethics, theoretical and practical, are aided by the world's greatest philosopher, theologian and encyclopedist to encounter in our lives any new encounters, unless from a word-tamed thinker.
Aristotle, Plato, Thomas Aquinas, Rousseau, Ibpsew or Emerson, Mr. Henderson, and others, have about the significance of language, which in our opinion, lays the foundation which in our opinion, lays the foundation of simplicity and strength. He says: We know that just as human consciousness is the result of our experience, we have only three classes of words, the nouns, the verbs, and the nouns. For convenience of treatment, we author then says that the entire phrasal world may be resolved into three material world may be resolved into three motion and relation", and that since the material world, "nouns represent the material world, "nouns represent the verb, "verbs, connectives-relation.
The author's discussion of cause and effect, the power of power, and many other subjects are treated in a clear and earnest manifold. WHAT A WOMAN NIGHT TO KNOW. What a Young Woman Ought to Be: By Mrs. Mary Wood-Allen, M. D. $1. Win; by Mrs. Mary Wood-Allen, M. D. $131. Real Estate Building, Philadelphia. No one who reads this admirable book can men and women have given their hearty commendation to a personal influence to the general attention of the public. To the general attention of the public, boys and men are written by Sylvanus H. Wood, the author of the Lutheran Observer, and those by Mrs. Mary Wood-Allen, M. D. $2. Department of the Women's Christian Temperance Union. These writings merit the educational, medical, religious and educational, medical, country, and deserve a thorough review.
. . .
THE CHANTICLEER.
Quotations are literary, fragments gathered from many sources, chosen because of their beauty, meaning, expression, or because they embody a starry appearance. They are the thought provoked. Many persons enjoy a comfortable sense of being sustained in their own life, and they can be taught the ability can be cited as having voiced the same sentiments. The book contains many choice lines. . . .
The Lothrop Publishing Company, of Boston, has just brought out a strong book, *The Lothrop of Boston*. The story is full of incident and excitement, and the national motive. The hero is a titled young Englishman, who comes to America, and is sent to fortune and to the winning of a charming girl, and the deeper suggestion of the Americanising of this British peer.
Lost Manhood
A Simple Home Treatment Which Never Fails to Restore Full Strength and Vigor of Youth.
THE WORLD'S FINEST FASHION
INSURES LOVE AND A HAPPY HOME.
COLLEGES AND
Knowles Building. Boys' Hall. Stone Hall.
ATLANTA UNIVERSITY
An unsectarian Christian Institution, devoted especially
mal, College Preparatory and English High School course
advantages in Music and Printing. Athletic for boys
and training. Aid given to needy and deserving students
in October. For catalogue and information, address
President
Knowles Building. Boys' Hall. Stone Hall. Girls' Hall. Model Home.
ATLANTA UNIVERSITY, Atlanta, Ga.
An unsectarian Christian Institution, devoted especially to advanced education, College, Normal, College Preparatory and English High School courses, with Industrial Training, Supervised courses for instituted Training, athletic for boys. Physical culture for girls. Home Laundry and training. Aid given to needy and deserving students. Term begins the first Wednesday in October. For catalogue and information, address
President HORACE BUMSTEAD. D.D.
Virginia Normal Collegiate Institute.
PETERSBURG, VA.
Departments-Normal and Collegiate; Special attention to Vocal and Estrumental Models; Theoretical Agriculture, Sewing and Cooking.
Healthy Location; heated by steam; litrated by humidity, room, board, tuition, light and heat. $90.
For Catalog and Particulars write to J. H. JOHNSON.
President.
READ THIS
THE PROCEEDINGS OF
TIONAL NEGRO BUSINES
Which held its first convention in Boston, M
READ THIS BOOK!!
"THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL NEGRO BUSINESS LEAGUE"
Which held its first convention in Boston, Mass., August 22, 1900.
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON, President and Founder.
This convention was the first National Convention of colored business men ever held in this or any other country. Every line of business was represented: the farmer, the banker, the educator, the doctor, the lawyer, the manufacturer, the author, the merchant and rulers of municipalities. The addresses delivered and papers read are all in this book besides over fifty cuts of delegates and others, which makes it a valuable souvenir of the convention.
BOUND IN CLOTH ONLY. PRICE, $1.00.
Send Express or Postoffice Money Order to
Pabst beer is always pure
Brewed from carefully selected barley and hops — never permitted to leave the brewery until properly aged.
HOWARD UNIVERSITY Medical Department
Including Medical, Dental and Pharmacetic Colleges.
Training (1902-1903) will begin October 1, 1902, and continue seven (7) months.
Tuition fee in Medical and Dental Colleges, each $30. Pharmacetic Colleges.
All students must register before October 12, 1902.
For catalogue or further information apply to
F. J. SHADD, A. M., M.D.
Secretary.
001 R Street, Northwest.
and the benefit has been extraordinary,
and the benefit has been extraordinary,
just as vigorous as when a boy, and you
are as vigorous as when a boy, and you
"Dear Sirs...Your method worked beautifully. We were exactly what I needed. Strength and determination completely returned and enlargement is enabling." "Dear Sirs...Yours was received and I had no trouble in making use of the rehearsal space. It is a boon to ween men." "Dear Sirs...Now they afford to do all this, but send to-day; the offer is genuine, and the prescription will be given." "Dear Sirs...Please plain envelope absolutely free just as stated. Write to-day and soon you'll be satisfied."
AND SCHOOLS.
East Hall. Girls' Hall. Model Home.
RSITY, Atlanta, Ga.
especially to advanced education. College, Nor-
north courses, with Industrial Training. Super-
ior boys. Physical culture for girls. Home
for students. Term begins the first Wednesdays
President HORACE BUMSTEAD, D.D.
Virginia Normal Collegiate
Institute.
PETERSBURG, VA.
Departmentes: Normal and College Special Attention Use Instrumental Music, Theoretical Agriculture and Cooking and Cooking.
Healthy Location for Heavy steam, lighted by electricity; room, board, furniture.
For Catalog and Particulars
write to J. H. JOHNSTON.
President.
Send your Sons and Daughters to
WESTERN UNIVERSITY
QUINDARO, KANAS
Departments
A great company. Professional, Normal, Musical, Industrial and Theological Departments, only $7.25 per month for all ex-tenants. For information or cata logue to:
PRESIDENT WILLIAM T. VERNON.
QUINDARO, KANSAS
Virginia Normal Collegiate Institute
PETERSBURG, VA.
Departments—Normal and Collegiate; Special
attention to voc. and H. art and Music. Theor-
ic Agriculture, Sewing and Cooking.
Healthy Location; heated by steam; lighted by
electrical; room, board, tuition, light and
heat, $60.
For Catalog and Particular write to
J. H. JOENSTON, President.
IS BOOK!!
INGS OF THE NA-
BUSINESS LEAGUE"
TUSKEGEE
Normal and Industrial Institute
TUSKEGEE ALARAMA
Organized July 4, 1881. by the State Legislature and the Normal School Except from taxation.
BOOKER T. WASHINGTON, Principal.
WARREN LOGAN, Treasurer.
LOCATION
In the Black Belt of Alabama where the
ENROLLMENT AND FACULTY
Enrollment last year 1,253; males 882;
females 1,081. Average attendance, 101-
instructors. 8s.
COURSE OF STUDY
English education combined with industrial training; 25 industries in constant operation.
VALUE OF PROPERTY
Property consisting of 2,267 acres of land.
50 buildings almost fully built with student
buildings, is valued $350,000 and no mortgage.
NEEDS
Besides the work done by graduates as class
roommates in the original Tuskegee Negro Confi-
rence, Tuskegee is 40 miles east of Montgomery and
136 miles west of Atlanta, on the Western Rail-
road. Tuskegee is a quiet, beautiful old Southern
town, and is an ideal place for study. The climate
is at all times mild and uniform, thus
making the place an excellent winter resort.
The aim of this school is to do practical work in the process in the ministry. Its course of study is broad and practical; its ideas are high; its students are well prepared; and are fresh, systematic, clear and accurate.
COURSE OF STUDY
The regular course of study occupies the majority of the time in the several departments of theological instruction and is pursued in the leading theological school and AID country.
Tuition and room rent are free. The regular students are plainly furnished. Good books and seven dollars per month. Buildings heated by aid from loans without interest, and gifts of friends, are granted to deserving students. No young man with the mind of self-help. No young man with the mind of the advantages now opened to him in this Seminary. For further particular address.
L. G. ADKINSON, D. D., Pres. Gammon Theological Seminary, ATLANTA GEORGIA.
EGKSTEIN NORTON UNIVERSITY
OF THE
NEW ORLEANS UNIVERSITY
WELL EQUIPPED. THROUGH INSTRUCTION
Address 5318 St. Charles,
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA
PHILANDER SMITH COLLEGE
of a steady and solid growth,
offering superior education to those seeking
a thorough education.
location, strong faculty, extensive courses, location from nine states and from 45 counties of northeastern
SESSION BEGINS OCT. I.
For catalogue or further information address
REV. J. M. COX, D. D.
PRESIDENT.
Shaw University
RALEIGH, N. C.
For both sexes, Departments of Law, Medicine, Pharmacy, Music, Missionary Training College, College Preparatory, English and Music. Year begins Oct. 1. For catalogues, curricula and other information ad dress
PRES. CHAS. S. MESFRVE,
RALEICH, N. C.
Morristown Normal College
Fourteen teachers. Elegant and commodious buildings. Climate unsurpassed. Department: College Preservation, Education, Music, Shortland, Typewriting and industrial Training.
**$499 DOLLARS IN ADVANCE**
Will pay for board, room light and tuition and chnddens for the entire year. Board 200 per month; tuition $2.00 per term. Through work days in each department. Send $200 for circuit to the president.
**REV. JUDSON M. HILL, D.D.**
Marristown, Tenn.
if YCSCOdCO
ST. PAUL.
‘A WEEKS RECORD IN MINNESO-
TAS CAPITAL.
‘The Haindly Clty and Salntly City Polke
ewer Items of Social, Religions amd
Genera utters Among tke People, Bell
JRE
Son Wedtesdan, with all, sipecbes:-divger
Fach Wednesday, with all: expenses, direct
from headquarters.» Money advanced for
Sipenses Sisnager, 240 Caxton ‘Bigs Ch
Don’t forget the Men's Sunday’ Club
at St. James Church tomorrow after-
“I hiaven't paid $5.00 for a hat since
{began wearing the Gordon and I buy
‘the best.”
Dr. J.B. Porter has moved his res-
idence from Carroll street to 569 Igle
hart street.
‘The annual falr at Pilgrim Baptist
chureh begins Dec. 22nd and continues
until Dee. 27th. /
‘That we have had an election there
‘aro not a few Democrats who are sat-
isfied on that point.
‘The original-and world-tamed. Fisk
Jubilee Singers will give a concert at
Pilgrim Baptist chureh, Nov. 12.
Mrs, C. H. Brown will have charge
of the ‘Thankagiving dinner at Pil-
grim Baptist church which is a guar-
antee It will be up-to-date.
‘The most popular place for people
who take their.meals down town 1s
Gobn Godfrey's, No. 552 Wabasha
“street. Everything neat, clean and
well cooked.
Mrs. Ella Day of Minneapolis has
returned from a two months’ visit in
Ohio, and. ie now the guest of her
daughter, Mrs. H. B."Rogers of 612
West Central Ave.
Is your hair straight? If not, sud
60 cents to Ozonized Ox Marrow Co.,
76 Wabash avenue, Chicago, IN, for a
bottle of Ozonized Ox Marrow and you
can easily straighten it.
Gentlemen wishing nice furnished
rooms, with all conveniences, by the
week or month, at reasonabie rates,
‘should apply at the Benton House, 228
West Thitd street, up stairs,
FURNISHED ROOMS.—Nicely fur-
ished rooms for rent by the day, week
‘or month, at No. 60 West Ninth street,
between” St. Peter and Exchange
streets, ‘Transients accommodated.
Pligrim Baptist, Cedar and Summit.
Services 10:45 a, mj 8 p.m. Rev.
W. D. Carter pastor. Morning, The
Mind of Chirst In the Church; even-
ing. Christ's Prayer for His Enemies.
‘The public schools will be closed for
the Christmas holidays from Decem-
ber 19th to January Sth. There will
also be an extra hollday on Friday,
November 28th, the day after Thanks:
WANTED—Girls and women trom
16 years to 35 for Feeders, Cop wind-
ers and Weavers. Nice work, good
wages. Apply. at American ' Grass
Twine Co. Front and Mackubin
streets,
Bryants Burlesquers will be the at-
traction at the Star theater next
week following the Tiger Lilles, who
close their engagement with a’ matl-
nee this afternoon and a performance
tonight.
If its quality, purity, variety, ete.,
you care for very particularly in gro:
erles, ‘call on’ Michaud Bros., cor.
Sevontn and Wabasha atrocte,, direct
Importers of Fine Groceries, "Wines,
Liguors and Cigars,
‘The Excelsior Night Lunch Wagon fs
the place to go to get good sandwiches
and coffee. Open from 5:00 p. m. to
2:30 a. m. Wagon stand at the cor-
ner of Sixth and Jackson streets. J.
8. Mills, proprietor.
‘The testimonial which was tendered
to Prof. J. W. Luca, cholr master at
SU James church, Thursday night, was
2 decided artistic and financial’ suc-
cess. A delighted audience of large
proportions was present.
Lot youe object In Ufe pe that you
wil, be somebody in fact or nobody
tm lot, [Never allow yourselt to bo
your secret life gives you the ile, for
you only destroy yourself.
Mr, John S. Mills, who formerly
had his might lunch wagon on Wesl
‘Third street, has moved to the carint
of Sixth and Jackson, where he is pre
pared to serve all comers. Give him a
call when yor wish a lunch.
‘The Hallowen carnival which was
given last wet by the Booker T.
Washington Club, was an immense
success in every ‘way, ‘The spacious
Darlors of airs. Patker’s were jammed
and everybody was delighted,
if you wisn a gong shave, nair cut
for shampoo call at Richard’ Cousby's
eat shop. No, 374% Mlinuesota strove
First-class workmen only. Satistac-
tion guaranteed. Muste for all ocea-
slons furnished on short notice.
For good home cooking go to the
Metropolitan restaurant, No. 378 Min-
nesota street. First-class. meals. at
All hours. Rogular ‘meals 20 ‘cents
Meals to order at moderate. prices.
Mrs. Low MeLaughlan proprietor:
sik Express, @. D. Charieston,-prop.,
packing and shipping; hauling’ of ali
inds; coal and wood fr large or
‘mall’ quantities, When you wish
ansthing in his line give him a call.
Telephone, Malo 1020-3 1. Oflos ts
‘Bast Sixth street.
Those of out patrons! who desire to
‘have matter published must get the
same in this offce not later than
‘Thureday afternoon, otherwise it may
de crowded out. No notice will be
taken of any communication that 1s
not signed by the author,
Dr. John B. Porter, physician and
‘surgeon, office suite 410 Bradley bulld-
ing, Fitth street, opposite court house.
Office hours: 16:00 a. m. to 12:00 m.,
2:00 to 4:00 p.m. ‘Telephone, Main:
VESII. “Residence, 569 Telehart
street. Telephone, Dale: 589J2.
SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE
‘yaults—We invite your inspection.
Ht costs little to place your papers,
ah: agarbtien ena aTikidaetins bas,
| ‘A FRIENDLY SUGGESTION.
B Zoe
pp fh iP as rk tes |
a lt NG
_¥ We it
A LU Nel
ELLY
ZI
ET SS me
Mn ef Ga
S ‘e ay dl VW
Y Vy; 7
Y A
Re (PSOE
Jarrlet—Oh Harry, T heard something dreadfully funny: about the Woozletons,
Dutt can’t recall June what ie wa :
Harry—tlareet, think 116 high time for ¥outo tap telling gaexlp when you
‘cane recnember It troneons hotee:tocthe moet:
Regular meals 25 cents. Sunday din-
ners from 1:00 to 5:00 m. m. a spect-
alty. i
Now, gentlemen, its up to yout You
may get suits made to order in latest
‘cuts and patterns with fit guaranteed
by calling upon our tailors, Messrs.
Howell, Martin & Payne, No. 156 East
6th and 636 Selby avenue. Also cloth-
ing cleaned, repaired, sponged and
pressed on ‘short notice. Moderate
Prices. “Goods called for and deliv:
‘red.
The Fiste Jubilee Singers were in
the clty this week, giving concerts at
Park Congregational church. Misses
Washington and Crawley were guests
of Mrs. J. Q. Adams; Mr. and Mrs,
Greenlay, guests of Mr. Val Do Tur-
ner; Mr. and Mrs. Work, guests of
Mrs, T. J. Irvin; Messrs. Ryder and
Meyers, guests of Mrs. F. D. Parker;
Pres. J. G. Merrill, guest of Mrs, F. L.
MoGhee; Miss Grant, guest of Mrs.
J.B. Porter.
Biddle Circle, No. 88, Ladies of the
GA. R,, will give a “dime social” at
Masonic Hall, 319 Wabasha street, be-
tween Fourth and ‘Third on. next
‘Thursday evening. ‘The ladies are
using their utmost endeavors to make
this a most enjoyable occasion and
everyone is invited to come and have
@ good.time. There will be réfresh-
‘ments, music and a grand promenade,
Don't forget, next Thursday, a bushel
of fun for ten cents.
Miss Mabel’ Harrison was very
agrecably surprised at, her home 699
last’ week. ‘The young people spent
the evening in dancing and card play-
ing, and during the course of the even-
ing, organized a whist club giving it
the stltable name of “The Alpha.”
‘Those present were Misses Mabel Har-
rison, Blanche Branham, Sadie Whit-
field,’ Jewell Harrison and Marguerite
‘Branham. Messrs. John Robinson,
James Godette, Augustus Jones, Her:
bert Elliott and Edgar DeBaptiste.
ELECTION RESULTS. eee
RAMSEY COUNTY. Pee
|, District Court Judges—Olin B. Lew-|) Peg
we WO ence ae On ty, ge}
Provate Judge—Edmund W. Bezille é
(R). U
‘Auditor—Baward G, Krahmer (R).
‘Trensurer—Peter J. Metzdort (D).
| Register of Deods—M. W. Pitzgor 2
aia). 25)
SAere—Philip'C: Juntua (>. ro Deby Rt
agen Mtormey—Thoman Re Kane) fi Sf ants
D).
"County Surveyor—John B. Irvine Fleeced-Lin
Oe, : with eotton or
Coroner—-Dr: Arthur W. Miller (D).
Clerk of Court—Edward G. Rog: Che Pi
ors (B. \ ecm
‘Abstract Clerk—Albert Schuetz (R). "
County Commissioners—David - W.
Gray: (2), George A. Nash (R), Rob:|nces Wednesday a
ere H, Song (i), Nicholas Potiglesor| will doubtlen rope
Dh iamen rotcrs Oe bee eEE | Ente aye tee eee
®. tun on forever. Its
Superintendent of Schools—Thomas | imagined by the tit
Montgomery (R). and. its. story py
SENATORS. of originality and y
‘nirty-third Distriet—W. W. Dunn] itke unto the sweat
cD. holla. permeating t
"Piiry-fourth District—R. $, MeNa‘| the play. Its car
mee (D), possibilities, but
‘Thirty-aixth District—John C. Har-| Southern elime in +
ay (D). the lay revolves.
‘Thirty-sixth District—Hller H. Hor-| classed as a melodr
ton (8). the necessary amou
rilsts-aevonth District—A. T. ao-| mation faves “toot
Gilt (R). Heart interest is its
REPRESENTATIVES. a clearly followed,
‘Thirty-third District—Joel E. Greg-|is entwined with a
ory (B), Walter r. Lemon (R). so strongly that t
Fuireyfourth Disteiee Newry Me: | tiroty. hela pecal
| HER GREAT ATTRACTION
AEN AS :
7 bys Xe
oy s
y i \ if I
ay Pe
‘Chollte—What a wealth of hah Miss Fortesgae hast”. >)” :
‘Wilie—Xes; T believe that pompedour and switch were guite expensive,
Coll (D), William Butler (D), James
Handian (D).
‘Thirty Distrlet James R, Hick
oy D), Ambrone ighe CB).
‘Thirty-sixth District—Renville Chin-
nock (R), Charles S: Schurman (R).
‘Thirtyseventh Distriet—Louls A.
Normandin (R), ‘Thomas ©. Fulton
a.
Ramsey county went Republican
like’ the Fest of them. And Ie wasn't
yen close, Van Smit and. tho ‘rent
of the Republican ticket swept St.
Paul like a whirlwind, and the Repub-
licans carried the county by at least
41,800 plurality. ‘Two years ago John
Lind carried Ramsey county by over
41,800.
ON THE SUWANEE RIVER.
‘At the Grand Opera House, St. Paul.
“On the Suwanee River” which has
had an Unprecedented run of five
years in the popular priced theaters
of this country, 1s announced as the
Dill at the Grand Opera-House. week
opening Sanday night Nov. oth (math,
g Established 1382
‘= {
SF °
wae
fhe eae °
442 Fine Overcoats $15
ee -
ed a es There is a daily increasing demand for Suits and Overcoats
“ie oe E? at this price. ‘The real worth of our lines warrants us in claim-
/¥ 4.) ing for them unquestioned superiority, The important ossen-
oo tials—serviceable fabrics, latest styles and faultless tailoring—
Sh 4 are combined in a degree seldom found in garments at this
ae | -4aq price, assuring perfect satisfaction, both in appyarancy and in
by sorvies.
‘conn acne Overcoats—Those offered at tho above price are the long ‘“Fullmore” coat, the
cn. medium length “Wilton,”> and the Topeost. "
MEN Gre ffPsoror. ona BURNS Sale cane tale wy Mean ete Ba
Nockwoar—Ex'ra Spscial Sale.
Underwear soph sagltn mo Poin dund a
-xira. Special Sale. mparials, tho latest goloriags, heavy Stik,
Derby Ribbed Allovol Sbivs aod drawers, in | OF ABH values, is spe AGC
brown and salmon colon, sold. everywhere wea ters—Hest $2.00 Wool Sweater on
el at Sand $1.25. Hore Tuesday ats” Z5C | surche Tooday Sposa eno” BE 5D
Fleeond-Lined Uaderiear, inthres colors Hosiery—Hxtra heavy woo! hose for winter
with eotton or woot fleecing.” Speciat.------ SOC | Ppairiar. nn creer? Noel hese Ge winter MEE
Ghe Plymouth Clothing Hous2, Corner Ssventh and Robert Strests.
nees Wednesday and Saturday). and
HIN! doubtless ropeat tte past, success.
Tho play, lke the Brooks bids tie to
run on forever. Its locale, ae-may be
Imagined by the title, is in the South-
land, Its story possesses no mark
of originality and yet there is a charm
ke unto the sweet scent of the mag:
nolia. permeating the atmosphere of
the play. Its characters are not im-
possibilities, but are true to the
Southern clime in which the action of
the ‘play’ revolves. It can hardly. be
classed as a melodrama and yet it has
the necessary amount of the melodra-
matic flavor to. bo. wall seasoned,
Heart interest 1s its great strength and
a clearly followed, thread of romance
is entwined with @ rich vein of humor
so strongly that the play, as an en
rety, Doten papalldecene coe dee len
THK APPL ATIONAL AFRO-AMERT( NEWSPAPEI
rere ae tes ae meee ree Se :
‘rs of the arama whorein virtue ts
TION. trlumphant and’ villainy put under : ABOU
Ne foot.” The scenic ‘embellishment’ is : :
i complete andthe Southern. locale. of is
tho play provides unlimited scope tor
Lea the artets bait, ‘The company is i
practically the same as ft has been in pred
the past and ineludes Stella Mayhew,
Katherine Miller, Marie Haynes, Lew a
A-Warnor, Pred ‘Truesdell, Bart Atkin: (o>
son, Allan’ H. Bailey, Harrison Sted
man and the Clover Leat Quartet. ce
y AN ADDRESS ON EDUCATION. D~
‘ By Dr. Frank Powell (“White Beav- -
41 Me | amy ce OA N
‘When arrangements were being
made for the program to be rendered
during the meeting of the Afro-Amer!-
can Council last July, Dr. Frank. Pow.
ell of St.Paul was © sked -to inake
an address. For some reason or oth’
er it was not. delivered and as the
manuscript “has been furnished to
‘THE APPEAL, and as it possesses
so much merit it 1s published for the
denefit of our readers—Ed.]
It seems hardly a fair proposition
to single out the people of any one
particular race as most requiring that
which Is absolutely essential to all
who aim to be on a level with their
fellow beings in the intelligent world;
0 I touch the subject, not unwilling.
Jy, but with hesitation. History
teaches us that long years of servitude
ag a race, either as bondmen, serfs or
slaves, has had the invariable tenden-
ey to destroy ambition, to kill the
hopes and aspirations, and to. blunt
the-moral sensibilities of the rffte en-
thralled. This is no more true of the
blacks than of the whites. When
civilization was in its dawn, wo learn
from Herodotus, Pliny, Plutarch and
others—aye, from even’ the hardly de-
‘eipherable hieroglyphics upon mono-
liths and tablets found imbedded in
the sands of Asia, the cradle of the
human race, that Power was wielded
only by those whose acquired know!-
edge. made them the rulers of their
fellows. When the means of learning
were in the hands of a few, and oral
traditions were tediously imparted to
the select, the most highly reverenced
were the ‘possessers of that which in
those earlier days passed for learning
or education, which was in reality but
a knowledge of such things, unnatural,
real, historical, legendary and mys-
tical as had been linked together by
generations of priests, * soothsayers
and so called magicians, whose sole
aim was to mystify the masses by
parading before their credulous fan-
cles the unreal, but plausible appear.
ance of actual ‘knowledge.
‘The intellectual development of man
was in the beginning slow and tedious.
Books, or the papyros scrolls which
for ages, recorded, actual events. as
ful ianguage portrayed the imaginary
deeds of gods and heroes, were not
accessible to the ordinary person, and
ignorance, dense and deep pervaded
the massés; designing priests sought
carefully to perpetrate thelr own pow:
er by making mysterlous and unlearn-
Able the actual: knowledge possessed
by them, and fostered and cultivated
the universal belief that none but
such as were selected by the gods
could over master thesecrets of nature
or loarn more than their tnteliectual
masters deemed safe or wise {or them
to know. ‘
Again I refer to the ‘titter hopeless-
ess of the task of specially showing
Siuot why the colored man or tie Celok
ed woman should above others be sin-
gled out as the fittest persons to be
edueated. With all my heart in the
cause of advancement fon the Negro
aco I find it Impossible to apply any
rule or to find any reason way they
more than. people of other colors
shoula ‘exceptionally “seek education,
except, perhaps, for the circumscribed
causes due to the conditions existing
for a brief period in the history of our
own country.
"To illustrate the evils’ of ignorance
{in all times and in all nations, Iwill
briefly—because of the brevity of this
Secaslon—apeak of the conditions ex
isting” at more remote periods, in
countries other than ours, and by sug:
gesting that education hey aad much
to do with modifying the evils of such
[countries, will with an apology for the
Suggestion that the moral taught by
referring to the abject poverty and
depenidence of the unlettered ad the
tyranical mastery over them by those
Possessed of knowledge, be applied to
Show the necessity or “the need of
education’” as applied to the colored
ace, the subject upon which T have
een requested to speak,
In India caste originated in the dim
mists of @ fathomles: past. War
traditional and. remote, made. Con
Guerors and despots; then followec
slavery; next conflict between the
‘warrioy and: the ‘priest. ‘The pries
Became ‘the victor because of hi
knowledge more than by force of
arms, and then sprang into life th
Hindo religion. ‘This nedrly a thou
and. yeats_or to be | exact—elgn
ae Semen Solow cers eoetine
that -Christ upon whose beautiful
teachings our. religion is founded
Gradually education, ‘or an inférlo:
ade aera
‘there until caste. bas. bean
‘and the a...of the
ABOUT ALL HE WON.
aah) | ERO By
MSY oh
Sh - Nea”
Woy
f
ge ee iy
‘Masses bettered amazingly as com-
pared with more distant times. That
this improvement is strictly due to
the enlightenment born of even the
small degree of education made pos-
sible by the introduction of teachers
into India by the English, 1s an indis-
Dutable fact. The four’ universities
Of India upheta aud supported by the
English Government at Lahore, Ma-
dras, Calcutta and Bombay, are rapidly
sowing the seeds of education among
the masses, and in time the effect will
be seen in the moral and. social Sn:
provement of that great body of now
comparatively unlettered men and wo-
men.
This history of all nations point to
one fact, viz, the undisputable eu
ermacy of the educated over the un-
Tearned,. and the determined efforts
of a selfish minority to keep the
masses in ignorance.
Greece owed her glory to the culti-
vation, among the priviliged, of the
arts and sciences. Her Pericles, that
finn ‘wit a face gg hideous tate
mavked with the lascivious deen et
2 wanton mother, was educated. To
his education was due the almost im)
Perishables mouumente ‘to the great
ean of bie country, Composed f the
magnificent ‘publi’ bullaing. never
ince successfully rivalta by mss
But hey the eduetted, permitted naze
to become: abarers ct hie imowledge:
Phoonicia boasted of the Tyre Wises
massive walle outtvalled tioce af 3
don. Boil these lies were forthe
Ss Ghee case, tere oes
becaute ofthe "Education of he fow,
74nd 40 on and on | might speak ot
those: things tat have mene nations
famous for a time only to tad then,
eee ec ee art a ee
Tance. of the. multtade fom "whos
Knowledge was Kept }
But thank God the time has passed
ly NATUI
oD
dado
aire
Ss
s cr
: Cay
SI,
rand eee
——
GS fy
s o> s
‘eA
“Way AAD
till WY \
“A MAAN ANY
aks Mo
es Be)
When a favored few ‘can dominate the
world. Now on every hand are scheols
and teachers. The high, the low, the
child in rags, or the pampered’ off
spring clad in velvet and jewels, can
equally share the benefits of an ad-
vanced civilization manifest In educa-
tlonal institutions | of every” grade
from xindergarden to. university,
‘And as I plead for “education,” let
the example of the Douglasses and the
Booker Washingtons, and the long
Ust of the educated ‘men and women
of the Black race be as stars in the
firmament of education, leading others
by thelr bright lights to that only
which make them the equals of any—
the inferlors of none. i
‘The well thinking of this Nation ap-
plaud the efforts of Booker Washing.
ton to elevate his race to a higher
educational plane.
France honors her Dumas, and all
nations can point to some man or wo-
man bora black who have made coun-
tries better for having lived in them
and thelr fellows happier for having
followed their teachings and examples.
‘No man can say, and history does not
state whether God made Adam black
or Adam white—that the Caueasian
‘assumes that he alone was made {n
God's own image, in form, color, com:
plexion or brain, is no proof of any-
thing exeept his arrogance in. claim:
ing such a superior and exclusive ori
gin. That souls are all alike and that
God made man, we are assured by Di-
wine Writ, wad ‘that the black ina
‘has it within himself to become the
mental equal of any we have reason
to know, because examples by the
Score have demonstrated that fact.
‘Then to the colored man. and. wo-
man I say; seek that which ennobles;
that which will raise you to an eleva.
Hon ambitiousy sought with’ onor
able intent; that which coupled ‘with
probity, ‘morality, justice and right
doing, will make you peers among
your fair skinned asgociates—and that
1s Maducation.
JOSEPH G. CANNON.
Joseph G; Cannon ot Daal
sors mogicaanae ot Duarte,
1 vgae vas Stee tora
Mlinois March, 1861, to December
ISsy watched te uo Renee
Fortydoura “Sorte” Forgas
roraserenth, ene
Bint Pitot, eae Bee
input verdis and
Sat Congronen and reteiea
Bi sevenh arraa Seite 3
S23 ota to 368 Ter OR Be
Boma
organ op wisiaaoa, Como am
"7 probate Court.
inte nau eo cn
pee ae
coat aur hae ch have
County of ‘Rambey, and State of Minne:
tn ne wy atc aa
We Sea ae aah
ical acai cuter ete
aaa SS Be te
Wet titel ca tacts Ba
Sergei asta oresar ae!
fas our etmaaiier ea
Serta iad dat hd ae
And ils, Burthor Ordered. That note
saab gets me arts
ab Rei tamale ec
ihtarnulstinnids ihe
Bengt Saale sclera
Seater caring
PN ES sca cee
‘By the Court:
“ew am
a Ki RAZILLE,
pee
TE -
ic
Library
Buffet
Smoking
Cars
On Burlington Route Limited
trains afford the traveler all the
comforts of a good club, Easy
chairs, a writing desk, current peri-
odicals and duplicate whist are
provided.
People f the ind youike
to moot are th patrons of
these cars. That means
a pleasant evening before
retiring to the sleeping car.
A competent attendant serves light
lunches and refreshments from a
well-stocked buffet at moderate
oe
ASE YOUR HoME AGENT To
seer oun AST Te
Drrmstine 22s see
| A Happy
Combination
of Comfort
Luxurious Travel ami
Perfect Accomodations,
| ee
SL
mee
eas
Taguies tor sotee aus fates
eee
Se shea eccrine,
nan Som
eeU RS Nealon mae
Eicthe creator banvaine svor bows i
Geet New Uprizhtey 6158-
isysianhueeateh na mies =
ood, Gblekering Beles isch, Frank:
ne Sohomacke® and others “ab peices
Heine fou
$85 to $215
ALput fm first-class condition anon
payments otoniy $3.00 por month
Square Pianos |
Almost Civen Away: ;
A885, 65, 825, 995, 8455 855, 90 |
ut onorwiitoatonceto |
phiipusH
UpENBUSH
ieee Ree neon
Serene
RRR ARANRURT ATO
oneengave THIS}
Mode! lelter writer for lace sod gen
| ina entre cape aS |
Jeter melting, ae; book of and take,
‘5c; parlor amanerente, Se; hypootie:
$e eteqette. ae: Gppey ream book,
stb Iooky mawbein, Bey est on rept
ot pce 5
RELIABLE SUPPLY CO.Pos.ti.s:"g
RAMSEY COUNTY
Afro-American Club.
SOCIAL
. 378 Cedar St., St. Paul, Mina.
OFFICERS
J.W. Wooorome, Pree
SLs Pears, Sept
Joun Morcan, Asst, Supt.
¥.D. Mecuscemn Se
‘ANDY Couns, Aust Ses.
C.E, CHARLESYON, Treas,
‘Wis. Grnps. Chef.
Tel, Mela 170631,
Sec edn ae
We Will Pay You |
ADOLLARADay},
FOR LIFE! |:
La aaeaee
foe ihe eee
Sees eee
Peeeaaneecee
aie ree eevee
riaoors ie senmecs oe
eee ere
Soe
Seas aes
Senne eet
THE "WORLD'S SPAIRCITY" VIEWED BY THE APPEAL MAN.
A Compilation of a Number of Happenings, Social and Otherwise, Among the Afro-Americans of the Second City of This Glorious Union.
The state ticket got there in great shap.
This is not a Democratic year in Illinois.
If you wish everybody to see it put it in THE APPEAL.
Cook county elects six Republican congressmen out of ten.
Senator R. F. Bell, of Lexington, is visiting friends in the city.
Mrs. Julius N. Avendorch has gone to Marquette, Mich., to visit her mother.
Our state legislature, like the national one, is overwhelmingly Republican.
Hon. Edward H. Morris followed his usual successful style and won out nicely.
We did pretty well on last Tuesday, but regret that we did not elect Healey for sherrif.
Of course we favor our own Cannon for speaker of the National House of Representatives.
Mr. W. H. Harris, of Washington, D. C., in the city visiting his old Chicago friends.
Cyrus Field Adams, assistant register of the treasury, is very sick at his Washington residence.
Hon. Edward H. Morris will go East shortly to attend a banquet being arranged for him by the Odd Fellows.
THE APEALB is without question the best advertising medium through which to reach the Afro-Americans of Chicago.
GERTRUDE IMOGENE PALMER, violinist. Concertes, musicales, instructional. Room 86 Auditorium, and 680 Austin Ave.
Subscribers for THE APPEALB who wish to discontinue the paper must send written notice to the office, properly dated and signed.
C. J. Chambers & Co., manufacturers and wholesale and retail dealers in fine cigars, are doing a rushing business at 2958 State St. Pluck and push will tell.
Special attention will hereafter be given in the Appeal of all parties, balls and public entertainments. If you want to know what is going on watch The Appeal.
THE APPEAL has fixed advertising rates, and will not cut them in order to secure advertising. However, if you want to reach the people, advertise in THE APPEAL.
Do you want to preach? Learn at home. Send two-cent stamp to Prof. R. B. Hewitt for catalogue of Correspondence Bible School, 2908 Magazine street, New Orleans, La.
Gallant Col. John R. Marshall wins out as County Commissioner with a vote of 121,163 votes. There is a tote of eleven Republicans on the majority one more on a working majority.
JAMES JOHNSON, Teacher of violin, room 86 Auditorium building. Miss Gertrude Imogene Palmer and Mr. Felix Weir, assistant teachers. Wed, June and Saturday, Tuesday and Friday.
If you wish a loan on household furniture, wagon, diamonds, jewelry or real estate and are holding a salaried position, call on John Q. Grant & Co., Room 311, No 36 South Clark street.
The Sloan Bros., carriage makers and repairers, at 3538 State street, who were honored by the Armour family last week in getting a contract to repair their fine automobile.
Parties having money to invest on chattels, diamonds, etc., call on John Q. Grant & Co., Suite 311, No 36 South Clark street. They will give two per cent per month on all money left them to be loaned on above curtails.
Information is wanted of Miss or Mrs. Kate White, who left Omaha a few years ago and is supposed to be in Chicago. She is a bright mutato weighing about 125 pounds. Miss White's parents live at Attica, Kan. Information will be gladly received by Dr. P. C. Kebble, Pittsgau, Texas.
THE GOSPEL OF SUCCESS.
I preach the gospel of hope to you
I men of the West, who, in thought and
life, embody this gospel of hope, this
gospel of resolute and confident relief
in your own powers and in the destiny
of your life. We are the future, not in a spirit which will sit down and look for the future to
work itself cut, but with a determination
each of us to do his part in making
the future what it can and shall be
made. We are optimists. We spurn the
teachings of despair and distrust. We
have an abiding faith in the growing
strength, the growing future, of the
mighty young nation, still in the flush
of its youth, and yet already with the
power which stands on a continent
and grasps an ocean with either hand.
Succeed? Of course we shall succeed! How can success fail to come to a race of masterful energy and resolute character, which has a continent for the base of its domain and which comes to generous souls when their strength stirs in them and they know that the future is theirs? No great destiny ever yet came to a nation whose people were laggards or faint-hearted. No great destiny ever yet came to a people walking with their eyes on the ground and their faces shrouded in gloom. No great destiny ever yet came to a people who feared the future more than they hoped for success.
With such as these we have no part. We know there are dangers ahead, as we know there are evils to fight and the dangers are full the pulse of the prosperity which the joy. Stout of heart, we see across the dangers the great future that lies beyond, and we rejoice as a giant treasure, and we rejoice as a race; and we go down into the arena where the nations strive for mastery, our hearts lifted with the faith that to us and to our children and to our children to make this republic the greatest of all the peoples of mankind—President Roosevelt's Detroit Speech.
KABO CORSETS
NO BRASS EYELETS
THE LABELLING MACHINE
Lowest Prices on Flat Work SHIRTS, 10o. COLLARS and OUFFS, 1o.
It Touches the Spot!
PICKWICK
RYE
GEO.
BENZ
& SONS.
ST. PAUL,
MINNEAPOLIS.
DISTILLERIES AT
EMINENCE, KY.
AND
BALTIMORE, MD.
PAINTS
IN
Design,
Accomplishment,
Finish
102 MODELS
OP MARVELOUS
MERIT, INCLUDING 20
STRAIGHT-FRONT
AND BOX EFFECT.
Creations of
Fascinating Grace.
BIAS-GORED
LONG SKIRT,
LOW BUST,
DEEP HIP,
PARIS CLASP,
HAND-FINISHED.
At $1.00 to $5.00.
Our New Am
THE BEST AND
FIRST ONE
Lowest Price
SHIRTS, 10o.
State Stea
Phone, Main 1609
It Touches
PICK
RYE
GEO.
BENZ
& SONS.
ST. PAUL.
MINNEAPOLIS.
DISTILLERIES AT
EMINENCE, KY.
AND
BALTIMORE, MD.
UNMATCHABLE
AT RIC
..CASH
The Wallbl
398-410 Ja
ST.
THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFFAIR-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER
10 W. W. Third St.
Send your orders to us.
We guarantee all prices.
Camping Outfits for Rent
Telephone Connections.
D. W. BURKE, Mgr.
Because it reduces too high abdomen from 4 to 6 inches without harm or discomfort, lending a sincerte touch of elegance and making possible the true straight-front pince.
Price, $2.50.
Long or Short Waist
At all dealers or write for
STYLE ALBUM.
C. C. Co., NEW YORK.
ammoth
GLE
at Work
BUFFS, 10.
andry,
at Seventh Street
t!
CK
IT & AWNING CO.
, St. Paul, Minn.
AWNING,
TOWNS, UPS,
WAGON COVERS
COTTON DUCK,
UMBRILLA,
HORSE COVERS.
ERINGS!
NITURE &
CARPET GO.
treet,
First Quarterly of the Men's Forum
Season 1002.
The meetings of the Men's Forum
are held every Sunday afternoon at
4 o'clock at the institution church,
3825 Dearborn street.
PROCADAM.
Oct. 26th. Afro-American Mechanics
North and South. J. D. Smith.
Nov. 2nd. Afro-American Republicans
North and South. E. E. Wilson.
Nov. 9th. Property Holding.
Nov. 8th. Afro-American Temper-
ment in literature.
Nov. 23rd. The Afro-American Business League.
Nov. 30th. Attitude of the Trades Union.
Dec. 28th: "Forty Years After," Symposium.
OFFICERS.
President, S. Laing Williams; secretary, W. L. Davis; treasurer, M. F. Hussle; executive committee, E. E. Wilson, W. H. A. Moore, Dr. Jeffrey, S. Laing Williams.
ALTON SCHOOL CASE-NOTICE
All persons who promised to contribute to the Alton school case fund through the corresponding secretary, while he was in Chicago last February, will please send in their contribution to carry on the case that will be tried again October 30th, 1902, in the Madison county circuit court of Illinois. The secretary has several names of Chicago's better class of citizens. He don't care to publish any one as each person who promised knows whom he is supposed to carry on every one who contributes toward this fight will be published in big red letters. The contribution list is open for any and all citizens who are in sympathy with our race in this fight that will settle all discriminations in this state for all time to come. Please ask us to send you what we have this outrageous burden in the heat of some bad days.
Promoted, and Will go to San Francisco to Live.
Mr. Richard B. Harrison, who has been a clerk in the auditor's department of the Pullman Palace Car Co., will soon remove to San Francisco, Cal., where he will be given an im- portant place in the new offices of the company in that city.
Mr. Harrison has achieved a national reputation as an elocutionist. For this reason, he is the editor of The Appeal, doing good service.
Mr. Harrison has many friends among Chicago's people, and they, together with The Appeal, wish him God signed.
READ THIS CAREFULLY.
If you are troubled with kinky or curly hair use Ozonized Ox Marrow; it will make your hair straight, soft and shiny. With hair falling out, Ozonized Ox Marrow will stop it. If you have dandruff and itching in the head, Ozonized Ox Marrow will give you instant relief, and make the hair grow. Ozonized Ox Marrow imparts to the hair that healthy, like appearance, so much desired. Sold over 40 years. Never fails. Warranted hammerless. Send us 50 cents. Pad with Ozonized Ox hair body paste and pad with Ozonized Ox Marrow Co. 70 Wabash Ave, Chicago, Ill.
Congressman—John Lind. Democrat by 1,901.
District Judge—David F. Simpson,
Republican.
Auditor—Hugh Scott, Repugnican
Register—George C. Merrill, Republi
can
Attorney—Fred H. Boardman, Republican.
Sheriff—J. W. Driger, Republican.
Treasurer—David C. Bell, Republican.
Probate Judge—Frederick C. Harvey, Republican.
Coroner—U., G. Williams, Republi can
ca
Surveyor—George W. Cooley, Re
publican.
County Commissioners—Second Disc
trict, C. Miller, Republican; Fourth
District, E. P. Sweet, Republican.
Legislative:
Senators
38th District—John T. McGowan,
Democrat.
39th—E. F. Comstock, Republican,
40th—J. F. Calhoun, Republican.
41st—George P. Wilson, Republican.
42d—Henry J. Geijen, Republican.
43d—E. E. Smith, Republican.
Representatives.
38th District—P. F. Herbert, Democr
t; C. Fust, Democrat.
39th District—George M. Gillette,
Republican; P. C. Deming, Republican.
40th District—C. B. Shove, Republican;
J. D. Shearer, Republican.
41st District—L. C. Stevenson, Republican;
H. E. Fryberger, Republican;
W. B. Republican; W. B. Bardwell, Republican.
42d District—M. S. Rosseau, Republ
42d District—M. S. Fossen, Republ-
cation, republcan, Republcan.
42d Nirkhan—M. S. Fossen, Republcan.
43d District—L. H. Johnson, Republican; J. A. Shepherd, Republican. 44th District—T. H. Giring, Republican; G. W. Armstrong, Republican. Republicans—Senate; 6, house; 14; to the Senate. Democrats—Senate; 1, house; 2, total; 3. Hennepin on Governor—Van Sant, 21,034; Rosing, 15,160.
The line of demography we draw must always be on conduct, not on wealth. Our objection to any given corporation must not be the belief it is big, the belief it is free, the belief it is powerful.
Hamm's
Extra Pale and
Extra Fine
VELVET
TREADWELL SHOE CO.
129-131 EAST SEVENTH ST.
BETWEEN JACKSON C. ROBERT
THE
ALLRIGHT
SHOE $3.50
"You too?"
Everyone smokes the
strictly High Grade
DUKE OF
PARMA
CIGARS
HART & MURPHY,
MNFRS. ST.PAUL, MINN.
WESTERN FARM LANDSFOR SALE.
WESTERN FARM LANDSFOR SALE.
I have for sale over 80,000 acres of choice farming lands in Minnesota and in the Red River Valley of North Dakota at $11, to $30 per acre, as good farming lands as any in the world. I also want to call attention to the 20,000 acres of fine grazing lands in Western North Dakota at $2.75 to $4.50 per acre. This is the place—if you love to keep stock—that you should invest your money in. Call on or address,
Ladies' violet kid and box calf
heavy sole shoes, Worth $1.95
Men's patent leather lace
shoes, Worth $1.50
Men's worth box calf and size
men's box calf and velour
shoes, Worth $10.00
Wednesday's
"You to
Everyone so
strictly H
DUK
PAR
CIGA
HART & M
MNFRS. ST.
$1.00 A WEEK FOR THE
MILK COOKER
R. N. CARDOZO WESTERN FARM LA
10
"OO?"
smokes the
high Grade
KE OF
CRA
ARS
MURPHY,
A. PAUL, MINN.
HIS HIGH-GRADE STEEL RANGE,
THE
HOME PRIDE STEELRANGE
Is the finest range for baking and the most economical in fuel of any made and sold anywhere. Under equal conditions, The Home Pride Steel Range does better and more satisfactory work than can be obtained from other kinds. In fact, as a baker, a better range cannot be bought for any amount of money.
THE HOUSE OF BARGAINS.
140-144 East Seventh Street,
ST. PAUL.
ANDSFOR SALE.
acres of choice farming lands over Valley of North Dakota farming lands as any in the station to the 20,000 acres of North Dakota at $2.75 to $4.50
MOST WORSHIPFUL GRAND LODGE
OF
MINNESOTA, F.A. M.
R. L. DE LEO, GRAND MASTER,
419 E. 18th St. Minneapolis, Minn.
W. R. MORRIS, GRAND SECRETARY,
1020 Guaranty Law Blog, Minneapolis,
Minn.
PIONEER LODGE NO. J. A. F. AND M.
meets first and third Mondays of eack
month at Masonic Hall. No. 319 Wahsha
street at Masonic Hall. No. 319 Wahsha
street at Masonic Hall. No. 319 Wahsha
street at Masonic Hall. No. 319 Wahsha
street at 8:00 P. M. E. J. Bruck. W. M.
454 Fowler Ave. ; J. E. Porter. See
453 Carroll St.
ST. JAMES A. M. E. CHURCH, cor. Pierer and Jay streets; Sunday services: 1:00 p.m. on Monday, 8:00 p.m. on meeting, 8:00 p.m. on Pastor visits on Monday, Tuesday; at home on Wednesday and Thursday, skitted on notice. Rev. J. C. A. PLGRIM BASTISTT CHURCH, Cor. 12th and Cedar, Sunday services: Preachermond school at 12:00 o'clock. Wednesday general prayer meeting. Friday evening general prayer meeting. Wednesday weddings and weddings prominently attended. Rev. W. D. Carter, Pastor, 559 Belflet St.
ST. PHILIPS EPCIPAL MOSCOLA center Aurora avenue and Mackubin street; Sunday church, 7:30 a.m. m. High celebration of Holy Eucharist first and third Sundays, Sunday, 11:00 a.m. m. Sunday school, 12:00 p.m. brotherhood of St. Andrew, 6:30 p.m. m. Wesndnes confirmation class, 8:00 p.m. m. Fridays, evening prayer, 8:00 p.m. m. Saturnus church, 9 A. M. E. Everard Daniels, Reverend
MINNEAPOLIS
J. K. R. . ABD. LARON. N. mc. matts farm and sea
street between Hemingway and Nicolas Hall
and street between Hemingway and Nicolas
Masons in good standing. always welcome.
JOIN ANTERREW, W. K.
HARVEY LARON. A. F. and A. I. mc. i. m. m. m.
the first and second Monday is each month
the first and second street between Hemingway
and Nicolel Are. N. Masons in good standing.
ways welcome.
A. S. WILLIAMS MANAGER
Scott R. Walker
FINE WINES: LIQUORS AND CIGARS,
374 Minnesota St.