The Appeal
Saturday, January 24, 1903
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
THE APPEAL KEEPS IN FRONT
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.
VOL. 19. NO. 4.
Recent Invasion
During the Present Dramatic Season
True Blue Aristocracy of Our Lay
Bearing Some of the Oldest, Pre
Girls, But Women Whose Lineage
Invasion of the Dr
Fairest am
nt Dramatic Season the Barriers Which
Histocracy of Our Land Have Been Burne
of the Oldest, Proudest and Most High
Women Whose Lineage is a Thing to be F
Recent Invasion of the Drama by Aristocracy's Fairest and Most Noted Daughters
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THE NEW YORK TIMES
THE MUSICIAN
MISS ALIDA CORTELYOU,
Favorite wife of Mr. George B. Cortelyou.
in the player's world, until our oldest and most celebrated man to histrionic fame as they are dear and sacred to the eminent owners thereof.
why not, pray? Ask the actor folks.
Among the most recent and conspicuous men in history, who will renown by their chosen and well loved profession are Miss Alda Corteluyo, the favorite secretary to President Roosevelt, who before long, it is generally believed, will take his place in the president's cabinet, the keller, the cousin of the great Rockefeller, the noted magnate whose name is one for rich conduce by, a household word everywhere; Miss Bessie Stephenson, niece of Mr. Andrew Carnegie, whose name is the name preceding him in every quarter of the globe; Miss Dorothy Tennant, cousin of Stanley, wife of Sir Henry Stanley, the former great explorer of darkest Africa, and Miss Frances the Revolutionary days were colonial officers, who fought with Washington and starved with him because he boast that no bluer blood than theirs in the veins of any of Philadelphia's now has come down to the present generation.
The American Dorothy Tennant, as she is called to distinguish her from her cousins, was born in a small town had a season in society, and then, wanting a change of environment, she made up her mind to go on the stage. She was young and beautiful, and she was not afraid, so that more natural. When she was engaged to play the part of Alice Langham in "Soldiers of Fortune" her manager exclaimed that he had made discovery. And the critics all agreed.
It was in "Soldiers of Fortune" that the American Dorothy Tennant may be said to have made her theoretical debut. Since her first professional appearance it has been one continued success.
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THE
grammatic success being assured from the start.
Because of her, charming personality Miss Tennant has also been spoken of as the California Mary. Anderson, having been born, in the sunniest part of the state, has been a former orphan. The orphania girls are, out-door, in a suburb of San Jose, called Tennantilia, in honor of
THE MUSICIAN
her paternal grandmother, who passed a great deal of his time on American soil and was famous granddaughter was growing up. Miss Harriette Rockefeller Woods, a native of New York and national fame, has chosen the lyric instead of the dramatic stage as the beat and most congenial way of devoting her life to music. She suited, both by birth and her own natural endowment of song. On her father's side Miss Woods is an old and most highly respected Philadelphia Quaker family. Entertained by drawing rooms at Newport and in New York and Philadelphia paved the way for broader one and artistic manner of expression.
Dramatic song recitals by Miss Woores soon became a marked feature in the nine noiseless abroad that she possessed qualities of voice and a dramatic bearing that far surpassed the best known and used gifts for the select few? Possessing a beautiful soprano voice of excellent range and unimaginable faculty the faculty for appreciating intellectually whatever she undertakes to. Miss Woores herself saw no reason to abandon her role all this and henceforth the sweet-voiced young artist will be heard in song which is capable of expressing itself in all the options to which the human heart gives rise.
Miss Frances Rawle Pemberton chose the only channel through which her finely attuned artistic nature could naturally be youngest and most divinely fair of the four beautiful Pemberton sisters, who one after another have budded and grown into a set. Miss Pemberton entered a school of dramatic art and fitted herself for the role she has done. And right from the heart of the Quaker City's most exclusive set.
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PUBLIC TOLERANCE
was shot, a bright and shining light, a star of powerful magnitude. She was also a star for her initial performance, Miss Pemberton's success was assured from the start. Little surprise, therefore, was expressed of the present season that Miss Pemberton had become Joseph Jefferson's new leading lady and that her successes were defined by: Miss Bessie Stephenson, niece of Mr. Carmegie, the youngest of the amabilis, and the most slightest doubt to win for themselves the laurels merit is sure to bestow. Like her exemplary uncle there is not a slightest doubt in his own chosen profession as his has been in the one he has taken such great success. Miss Stephenson is a Pittsburgh girl, and has just contributed her beauty and talent to the stage. Therefore, she has been the most admired and honoured her friends and relatives by her marked dramatic genius. It was the same in her native city and at other fashionable centers, she entered the dramatic profession in earnest.
Miss Ailida Corleyau, the favorite niece of President Roosevelt's private secretary, although, Brooke Barrett made him a friend Wilson Barrett, who when he was last in this country, seeing her great natural gift, urged her to join his company and go to England. She was a teacher and he him a most excellent teacher and before many months her mind was made up.
PUBLIC
UNCLE SAM: W
THE FASHION OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
The American Dorothy Tennant,
Cousin of the noted British Dorothy Tennant.
sne would never leave the stage. She
would never leave the stage. She would
sign of the Cross," given by the Lytic
theater, London. This remarkable piece
ran for two years and during the entire
period of the Cortelytion, played the heavy
season of Berenice. When Mr. William Gillett returned this season from his successful tour abroad,
an event of more than ordinary interest
gave him the opportunity upon Miss Cortelytion to return to her own
native land. And it was under his management that she made her debut on the
professional stage of America a few weeks
This charming young woman has a re-
alistic face and is naturally and effectively the try-
er. She acts naturally and effectively the try-
er.
She acts naturally and effectively the trying role of Madge Larrake, a recent recruits to the theatrical ranks from the haunts of aristocracy who should be mentioned, and cousin of Former Vice President Morton. Miss Morton made her first appearance, and cousin of Former Vice President Morton. Miss Morton made her first appearance, and cousin of Former Vice President Morton. Though her stage debut was made in such a modest way in this musical comedy, Miss Morton has high ideals in a staging sense, and place in grand opera, which she has to ultimately secure. Presence Reservoir of the uncle of another secretary recruit, Former Representative "Dan" Wapugh of Indiana has two nieces who recently created quite a musical comedy, which had previously been devoted to church choir work, in the direction of musical comedy. Her beauty and the distinction of an old plantation to the chorus of a well-known musical comedy. She related to the
Probably the very latest aristocratic young woman to take up the stage is Mrs. Amy Chief Engineer Penn Powell of the United States treasury, niece of the British general, Baden-Powell, and cousin of the late Sir Charles, a close friend of the Willows and the Elkines. She has been a guest at many conferences and has been a member and the various diplomatic functions. She was born in England, but grew in Maryland and Virginia. Her mother is a native of New York and she Miss Powell made a runway match with Capt. Errington. An attache of the British legation, and one of the twelfth-century scholars, she whispered his bride had gone with him.
TOLERANCE
HOOP 'ER UP, BOYS, WHILE THE SL
wien when she returned to America the wideness of her home and re-enter society. This displeased her father, who has practically been a member of Charles Dana Gibson, Howard Chandler Cristy, F. K. Hanna, Bayard Jones, F. C. Hanna, and the general of the Christy illustrations of Winston Churchill's novel, "The Crisis," and the bust of his "bust," The Flower of the Passions.
WHAT KIND OF A WOMAN.
Continued From Seventh Column.
When a Southern man is loved by a woman, he thinks it is his mete, his just man, he makes it suspicious. He wonders what she wants.
To His Profession.
The Southern woman is jealous of nothing except the day's work. She does not want him to be away from her, and, makes works too hard, she grows softly tearful.
The Northern woman, on the other hand, is jealous of that he is "steady", which means that he works, every day in the year. This keeps the professional man busy, but he must be of his strength. But the professional man married to a "Way Down In Dixie" girl is a Sampler of his strength. He is not allowed to work and he must not practice his profession in his books; must not do much thinking. He must sit on the veranda and sip sorbet. Or canibus corn cake at the 5 clocks.
Let the professional man marry a New Yorker. He should have his profession. She expect him to work early and late; she expects him to earn money. She expects him to himself and for her; she expects new carpets, new dresses and a cook. She urges him to help her with the money to him that she can spend the money as fast as he can earn it. She expects him to inherit her wife gets very thin and very pearly, very hollow chested and very hollow eyed. She succeeds. And this is reward enough.
When not busy working he must watch a lot. The Norwegian woman first fills just a little. The Southern woman does her flirting before she is married; the Norwegian woman adds spice and keeps a man guessing. But she makes a man of the professional man and his success, and his picture is unseen outside him, and his picture is in all the papers. He can hold office if he wants to do so, or he can earn money on the second space.
Defective Page
What Kind of a Woman Should a Man Marry
The Professional Man Should Marry the Woman Who Is Desperately in Love With Him and Who Is Willing to Live on Bread and Cheese and Kisses and Who Will Not Miss the Bread and Cheese as Long as the Kisses Hold Out—The Southern Girl Does Her Flirting Before She is Married, the Northern Girl Afterwards—The Southern Girl is Jealous of Her Husband's Work but the Northern Girl Wants the Money.
NEW YORK, January 17.—Some men seem to have been born married. Some have been married after patient courtship, the woman they love. Some have marriage thrust upon them. The professional man does not belong to any of these classes. He must marry, not the woman he loves, but the woman who loves him. Yet the professional man, no matter whom he marries, is wedded to the girl of his dreams. From time to time he dreams out a new life; and, then, he is
would become a virgory wife to try hard from the straight and narrow path as bests a professional man and a genius—she would be transformed into a tenacious man. No I cannot marry the girl I love. But I can remember her. I will marry the girl I do not love and forget her.
The professional man who marries Southern girl says goodbye to his profession. She will not let him work.
He is a man of imagination, and, no matter what sort of a woman he may marry, he is not a woman of imagination, or dead, real or imaginary, near at hand, seated on the North Pole. The professional man begins to look for a woman who loves him. She should admire him thoroughly, and in ways, his income and his manner of spending it, should all be agreeable to her. The professional man should reason this way: "I know I am a very mortal man, full of weakness, a fully man, neither am I a business man, I live by my brains; and if my supply of brains give out, I have nothing." This being the case I must choose a woman who is satisfied with something or nothing. She must be one who will love me, when I have my brains; and will love me when my brains fall and my income goes. "I would like," reasons the professional man, would be a bad plan. She does not love me enough. She is extravagant, petulant, cool and adorable but, when she feels like it.
"Were I to forget to come home she
EIGHING LASTS.
A
Miss Frances Rawle Pemberton,
In whose veins flows the bluest blood of
the Philadelphia sieet.
THE LADY OF THE ROOM
DON'T MARRY A GIRL WHO LOOKS AT YOU DISDAINFULLY, LIKE THIS.
THE FASHION WEEK
would become a vrag; were x to mpose a little from the straight and narrow path of a professional who, instead, she would be transformed into a termagant. 'No. I cannot carry the girl I love, I cannot carry the girl I love, I will marry the girl I do not love and forget her.
DON'T MARRY A GIRL WHO LOOKS
"or in a sunny little street, in a sunny little house, there lives a woman who will love me always, no matter what I do. This is the girl who loves me. I will wed him. If we gave bread and cheese for dinner she will think them very fine served up with cheese and cheese for cheese fries she will still hold out. She will not miss the bread and cheese." The Girl Who Loves You. The professional man must select a dish. When things do not go right and his brow is cloudy the girl who loves him hover around like a dear little angel; when he go just right she will still be hovering.
She will sit and look at him as though she loved him—which she does.
The other girl, the capricious fascinator will toss her heart to the reader she reads when she ought to talk to him and laughs when she ought to cry. The professional man ruins his career when he marries the girl he loves. He loves her and it makes him happy. He loves her and it makes him and to dare; and he sits in her gaze, trembling lest he do something she will not like. His love makes him a slave. He loves him and it makes him and genius. Geniuses get moody sometimes and irritable at others. They are always coming; and they are particular at meals.
Unless a woman is very much in love she will not stand these and there is trouble. There would be fewer unhappy marriages himself away from the woman he loves marry the woman who loves him and set him alight. It will all be the same after ten years, whether he married the girl he loved him, or married the girl he saved his life, he can't tell which he did.
The professional man should not marry
him, because all the others, will
not make him a good wife.
It is very seldom that the professional man can get the Southern girl to marry
$2.40 PER YEAR.
I a Man Marry
Love With Him and Who Is Willing
Bread and Cheese as Long as the
Married, the Northern Girl After-
hern Girl Wants the Money.
The southern girl loves money in
a sweetheart and the professional man
has not got it. He may get her by his
hair but within a month he will be
sorry he did.
The professional man who marriage a
Southern girl says good bye to his pro-
fession. She will not let him work. She
AT YOU DISDAINFULLY, LIKE THIS.
when there are no girls, the most cute sorbet on the plaza; drive Old Billy to the violet meadow; play croquet; and turn in at nine o'clock. There are there are only six successful professional men. The others came North where they would not be coddled; and, with teeth set, they climbed a rugged path that leads to professional success.
Marrying a Southern Girl.
The Southern girl is peculiar in that she does her flirting before marriage. The Southern girl says that she wants a man with money; a man with good looks; a woman with good speech; a man who knows how to make a bow. But she does not care how he looks, whether blonde or brunette. When a man comes wooing a Southern girl she says to herself, "She has a soft speech?" "Is he as nice asapa?" "Single 'Not' would ruin the whole combination and the Southern girl will decide that she cannot leave home, getting herself, and if you want to get her, you have got to be an expert at the game. Of pretending, you go along pretty well. And unless you persuade her that your soul is a snow-white sheet, it is all day with you. He can make a bow and whisper words in a gentle manner. As for his soul, he can paint it snow-white order. But his trouble comes after they are married. He has a wife who loves him
From the minute the Southern 'girl says "I will," and "I do," from that minute she is transformed from a critical miss into an adoring matron.
"The Southern man is loved with an in-
terest. He is a man of great
smith. He would need a Knight's
sword that would be worth a thousand
dollars."
Continued in Fourth Column.
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‘THE APPEAL,
AA RATIONAL AFRO- AMERICAN NEWSPAPER
‘vans wt. EoTORS AND PUBLISHERS
sn as ous u Panton
oowe sorearorear i
Satot ‘Paul; Minneapolis, CERO,
Weohington, Lourie, S8.Loaie
ST. [ AUL OFFICE,
No. 110 Union Blk. 4th & Cedar,
ee Reus: ountee
MINNEAPOLIS OFFICE,
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HENRY ROBERTS, Manager.
CHICAGO OFFICE,
823-5 Dearborn St., Suite 810,
C.F, ADAMS, Manager.
LOUISVILLE OFFICE,
No. 312 W. Jefferson St. Room 3
W. V. PENN, Manager.
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No. 1002 Franklin Avenue.
JH. HARRISON, Manager.
—
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AGENTS WANTED.
THE APPEAL wants good rellable
agents to canvass for subscribers at
points mot already covered. Write
for our extraordinary inducements.
Address,
. THE APPEAL,
49 East 4th St., ‘St. Paul, Minn.
GATURDAY, JAN. 34,1903,
‘We have just received the “Souvenir
Number" of the Seattle Republican, fe
sued January 9th, consisting of twenty
pages and a four paged illuminated
cover, printed on white enamel paper
It is one of the most creditable pro-
ductions we have seen, and is entirels
different from anything usually ofterec
by an Afro-American paper. ‘The en
vironment of Brother Cayton 1s un
‘questionably unlike that of other pub
lishers which makes his artistic up-to
date issue possible. However, if the
spirit of conception, progress, push
and perseverance were not in the man,
we would not have enjoyed the ocular,
tangible evidence thereof.
Many years ago THE APPEAL is
sued @ 40-page paper, which was’ the
biggest thing ever produced by an At
ro-American paper. It contained over
three hundred illustrations, which
were the best available at that time
some thirteen years ago, but it was
not to be compared with the Issuo of
Brother Cayton’s for artistic illustra
i :
‘We extend congratulations to Broth
er Cayton and hope he may long con-
tinue to enjoy the era of prosperity
which seems to surround him. He
deserves it.
The receivers of the defunct Capital
Savings Bank of Washington, D. C.,
haye made their first report, and at
thelr request ‘an examination of the
hank’s books will be made by an off-
cial bank examiner. ‘They set forth in
tho report that “the investigation by
the receivers has 60 far progressed as
to enable them 6 say that the condf-
tion of the affairs of the bank is most
ugatisfactory and discouraging. The
notes representing loans are in most
instances of very doubtful value. The
real estae «8 heavlty Incumbered, and
ba a number of instances foreclosures
ave tmminent.”
‘The indebtedness of the bank is over
$100,000, In their report the recetvers’
note the coliection of $601.
| ‘The Southern disfranchisement
‘schemes are marching Northward and
‘have reached Missourl, Represents
tive Brown of the leglslature of that
state has introduced a concurrent res
olution to the effect that at the next
‘general election it shall pe submitted
{fo the voters that no person shall be
‘allowed <o vote in Missourl unless he
can read and write the English lan-
guage. “rhe resolution 1s Intended to
ustranchise Afro-Americans, but un-
tess it {s amended it will dlsfranchise
about as many whites as blacks. It
‘wil probably be amended on the Lou-
Isiana plan, making an exception to
those whose grandfathers were voters.
‘vhis will Tet in the literate whites
amd shut out the Ignorant Afro-Amert
cans.
When the Russian serf was emanct-
pated he was at ance recognized by
the title class as an equal, No bar
sors were raised to prevent his social
or elvil advancement. Many of the
most distinguished Russians of today
are the sons of serfs, Since the eman-
cipation of the Afro-American in this
country gvery conceivable obstacte
hhas been placed in his way by. the
Southern caucasians. And yet, “We's
amaate:
What a how! would old bentiliman
nave raised hd an AtrorAmerica
one Sut what hls nephew bas done—
wiled a white. man-and the ste
Iynehing had not yo taken pase. We
are opposed to Iynehing on gener
principe, but-we wouldnt Kick i th
Mtoreputable Houteant. governor wa
administered a dose of his own medi-
tne,
|e appointment of an AtroAmert
fan wastantatlorney at Boston
‘brings to mind thac in Chicago, we
have an Afro-American assistant
sates tforuer, at’AtrorAmeroah a
distant county attorney and an Aft
American asitant tothe corportion
ceunsek No objection to. thelr ap
potntuents wore ever sande
Now theres more trouble dows
out, 1: 4. Pers was rcelly 0
pofnted postmaster of Bay St. Louie
Sno, an aistocatieauburb of New
Ovtene, va. Mr. Pern was stone
tndorst by Paul Candi, te Dem
orate mayor of Now Oreans, an
the despatch sage: "The indignant
nile-purnlo arg ereatiy exelbad™
Some Afro-Americans held a meet-
ing in Washington recently established
a “Civil Liberty Party” and indorsed
the course of Senator Pritchard who
has done all in his power to deprive
the race of its liberties. Some people
4o not deserve the rights they enjoy.
An Afro-American. who recently vis-
{ted the president and asked him to
pension ex-laves, claims that he con-
trols 320,000 votes.. Judging from the
Interviews given out by the distin-
gulshed gentleman it is quite lkely
that he does not control his own vote.
Euitor Wiiliam Calvin Chase of the
Washington Bee 1s out ina letter to
the Star, in whien he claims that more
intelligent~and best educated Afro-
Americans are to be found in the
South, f
‘The Atlanta Constitution acknowi-
edges that there are several millions
of desirable worthy Afro-Americans in
the South, If this be true why do.not
the Southern people treat them fairly?
‘The Atlanta Constitution has dis-
covered an {deal Afro-American, He
{a the Alabama man who refused a
federal office to look after the affairs
of bis old mistréss: Mirablle dictu!
‘The appointment of Walter S. Stan-
difer to be postmaster at Gadsden,
Ala, is regarded “as another victory
for the “Black and Tan” Republicans,
Alexandre Dumas Atkins, the only
Afro-American who has ever acted in
‘the capacity of instructor in Princeton
University ts dead.
‘The mind which ignores all else but
noble thoughts is the only way: in
life's progress,’ :f 5
THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL APRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPEB. \
‘The Letters of Dantel Webster. Edited
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“t is probably true of most women that
inet ar ahr rt ee i
eek OG Beare tes ene aa
SP ene anes lee cere
De ae
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ie cu ener er en eee
ideal is the man she can do most for—
‘ain end Monae bare
deat member of ane bey Deli ol
SOLU a
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pect sn gates err it
POT, Stearate
in meats fe tte ae
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Seu ities ee ter ae
Rare Pees
“hedioatng Repti Boe
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"Aidan eee
crassa ae aT
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‘The innumerable” funny situations
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foe et wea
spout nits per tar
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brighten Christendaes with: the, memory
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Eons a’ bibliography andan index of
her Interesting "works upon art, and this
Epa pee artnet
Eaii arate cen.
oe Sn as eet
“the "Philosophy of Despalr." by David
Reinga
Aeneid ty eee
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fey ene mec ars
seen Baer Pert
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Bey Satiaays By etme
etre ear tar aetna
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het, "Now Yorke, #2. Resell
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see dear ace Gate
vi Tus noe been made to the fiterature
than Sie Prahiation Bays.”
ie ar Suet te
Bice de oek ak Stak
at nee
MepaIeay oF GNAR SHAYYAN. 2,
panna. oF SPAR, MATRA 2
By Wallace Irvin. 60 cents. “San ‘Fran-
ihe, “Rtubaivat of Omar Khayyam, Tn.
by Watlace Tie ‘nothin Tae ‘a
Ie Oraea Aats a Shs
ES eserves
‘as Boeraten eld of poets in general when
me
Continued From First Page.
pensatibny Veale those of achievement.
Becht eto" iwc orn ees
‘He can sit in his office at night, with
one ig Spectten ‘of "ihe anys” wore
"aieding St ine rose niing Cottage ‘waten
fo doce ‘not “owns "and Not tha” sweet
Hood "adcring sit ‘who sits outalds the
habe Proud eplicns ping around hel
‘phe Land of His Dreams, at
in alvaye itt nthe, fund of
eee ae ae aa
faied wi Glug aiwape Yate Sua, rare
cae ee male
EFA orocotrat sgn ir,
nie ‘Northern tarriage, happy in Botting
Rifyoinass who" keepe the spurs of bint
bappy toy winning the Same and. the
ESET aEE Spa catee Mattel
ut gel hapoy te hie ambien
Wor? fe ptefbional tonne Whe une
nappies aia. int the worl.” He is
Spears chwhline, endl tomperenont
Sfothe yon ait ‘of tie nelghvors”
“che professional mean iy sever” MADDy
gloss Me has womething tobe Sahagey
SBout, ever appr utless Bo a 'Vory
mebebs
"He has glad spells but he does not ens
them, Defatise The ‘thine be Duet
Joey gnoy. teen for ‘fo Balak things
"fhe froteenonal, man never ken if
neve Rice Miman Ease ata pets
is satiofied. It is his penalty for being
Srnbtious, for ambition ta the one Chine
Bhat ars She protatalopal ma
Made neds Saige’ whe co keep bins
ieieoam ne ras wee i fess
who a so unhappy’ that he dare not brood
Inhat reson? “one who no artical
pelts "ao:seinanding, so exsravagant
Ena go hietereal that Re etl toupee al
Ni Ween heat Rome the ir to
Biase Wor
Meutd IMS xorthern et wil sn
role, Big. vil Keep “him. Jumping.
EAE ake tor aa her cottperen
tne upper acy and goes fo pieces tn het
lds she will rise to the emergency aud
Bott at the fim
What awite Gam De
tne Nowghom aft wil entn the fam
uving ‘and pretend ‘she tikes Tt. Be
fr oudeny appear otare aston
ies Feehan cobaea ae!
Fes tier in Ber’ true angels role
“She "wit 'ro' tp boarding’ ver taxa in
soatteta cet do ether sith aeet
Fatig "She" wtl'a> Gut sowing of take it
Sheen Carpenter sign painter ofa:
sanith, ‘do it’ wit’ credit. She will
Tereng he pode, Sed pesentonal mtn
ain all the Beeuten of er 'uaeh with
Sipe. ana ‘pitcnerpeaide. i, and: Sook
I Phanle RR RMT ween the Bea
Nule’paatpered' woman at were taking
dhe pot boll
PedO' Re your cholée it you are @
PRICEY REY ne gt you love
(arry the girl who loves you. |
Serie tenet any
i cael a ol |
RR 0
Lost Manhood
A Simple Home Treatment Which Never
Fails to Restore Full Strength and
Vigor of Youth.
SENT FREE TO ALL.
i EN
Ui Ze SS _
soe ix Se
ene Ll = de ae
. LAGI ASS ss
CF OY
Lege Oe
‘i ==
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, i i hn lyf yy)
INSURES LOVE AND A HAPPY HOME.
‘There is uo longer any need for men to {74 1" Te ataly brace
suffer from lost vitallty, hight losses, va> Shot's Gtgurous as whe
Nicorette when it can, be outed al tagnot jealze bow hab
Mt tlie asle tn the"privacs" of your “""Bem'SirarFour med
Gin homo aif restore small weak organs cifully.” igesults wet
ierhal’atengan' aia vigor’ youth bya wteaed.. Strength a
Sraple feanedy whic ny: manecan ‘use: Plstely” returned apd en
Siinple ‘send your mame and addresg. tq Hrehy eatletactors.”
Te Raabe Medical Gay Ha HA Dear Sires Fours wu
dime etre Mitch snd they "will nad notable In mal
FiadNend'Soa tno Beato’ fn eae Fp ends a
fion free gnd everything necessary for & it fo-a boan to weak me
‘tule and“lagtine eure, Donte stop. and won
“ite “Pohowing™ taksh from thelr dally adtrd to de all thiay ut
rma shows "What nen "cay, ‘who ave iter ig genuine, andthe
Tith Aevantagelor thie qrava free oer: bes nent oy return mal
“Star Shy ebieage Scene gay necre Plain envelope -abeolite
nant cor yours of wetent adtey Whave Hatea. "Write tarday” a
Gor ote treatemeht a ‘Uhorough est, happy
COLLEGES AND E°RdOoOLS.
BOS Re en eee
ic Lea ae
ee
at ee em ho
ATLANTA UNIVERSITY, Atlanta, Ga.
EE eee ee eee ele for over Phytieal culture for #1 ls © Howe tk
sed nniile «Ald heen 80 corey cis oeeaT adressen: Teves beeine ‘She hive Wesnandp
ach ssi Fm Virginia Normal Coltegiate
he ar ee Institute,
1 ees bod SEM , ~apartments—¥: :
RTI A SE BERS cianc! Special aviention to Vocal aed
Meee Sgn aaa antic erat art
| bps se eeceaer ka ROM NE Sirrechs cy wea
EUR Sie PPLE! sition gst aed entaeae
<a ONION EON,
| TUSKEGEE ALABAMA.
Cmconensrt)
dorsi 2a ye, Sts ee
REEL te tear iets
BOOKER. WASHINGTON, Pcs
inte 2oGa Ne
LOCATION
stabi BLS, dion se
EnmotimenT” ano FACULTY
reer ge foe eye
cosines Mg 2 mane
ee
COURSE OF STUDY
2 EE ST a ae
latte ten sopien ch eet
Vauue oF Prorenty
reagh cominieg geeeane fat
gence sted ea
NEEDS
senna ig ron of x
oSeraueaseata tera tee
$e ed a ten
Bidaey"ia Say" atoune for carreat expraser
and britdiog =
cana ait ecco
Feached through the Tuskegee Negro Conter-
‘Tuskegee is 40 mites east of Montgomery au:
slate rate emer
aaron
BEL, sean le Seer
topaneah dat arlene
gee a an atelier orice
SEE c lm aitalecs
‘end yout Sons and Daseters to
WESTERN UNIVERSITY
a CUD ERG ANSAS P
er acter,
‘Normal, Musical, tedustrial and 7} ical
BAe Ss lass teat
as Wate aeration
nes
Phone winusan 7, vERYOR,
6. VERNON,
Pabst beer
is always pure
Fig egrets ait eration art
haw ‘completely braced meeupe Eat
Just s Slgdrovs ax when 2 bey and YOU
‘annot realize how happy Tam"
“MBenr’Sirs—Your method worked beau
ufos,” ‘Results were exactly whae
heeded. ‘Strength and. ‘igor have, com=
Piste’ retumed apd ‘enlarsemen te cn=
Finely watletuctory.
SBear Sinss—Yours wus received and T
had ‘no troubio In making Woo or the tee
Paipe ag directed, and ‘eah, teutiiylly say
1B boon to weale men.”
Dost stop. and wone® how "ey ean
afford to'de ail this, Wit Fert tasday; the
Sffer ts. genuine, and the pn eription wi
Be sent by return. mail in <a pertcouye
Blain envelope -abrolutely ‘tree "Just as
Hatea. "Waite to-day’ and soon yout be
ice
"GOD HATH MADE OF ONE BI00B
ALL NATIONS OF MEN."
¢
BereaColles:
ereaLollege
BERDA,EY_
Siloonns 9a) white and 2iy atrovAmerican ane:
Bini foci on Rc re Be
e0e ga Watts Phoey, Ui. p, 2104, Ee
mabe one
prhntaacr, sane, ‘Mair rang oe,
Secret, Becht te
PRES. CHAS. S. MESERVE ;
Raleigh Nc.
Yorristown” Normal Colloge.
FOUNDED 1M \oet
lanes ieee sonatas operons
Gosbnnd, Hypematiag sod induc ot trating.
"ITY DOLLARS 1H) ADVARCE
ndldonbale forthe: eating yee’, Soced way SS
REV, JUDSON 8. HILL D. D.
Morrlaiowm, Tenn.
A WEEKS RECORD IN MINNESO
The Saintly City and Saintly City Folk-
way Items of Social, Religious and
General Matters Among the People, Belt-
Down.
"I haven't paid $5.00 for a hat since
I began wearing the Gordon and I buy
the best."
Richard Farr is an applicant for a
position as an employee in the new
county jail.
Dr. J. E. Porter has moved his resi-
dence from Carroll street to 569 Igle-
hart street.
Look-out for the grand mask ball
by the Carling waiters on Feb. 5th. It
will be a corker.
Mr. J. D. Wells, of Anoka, has been
appointed keeper of committee rooms
in the legislature.
The Men's Sunday Club will meet
at Pilgrim Baptist Church to-morrow
afternoon at 4 o'clock p. m. Public
cordially invited.
Those wishing hair work of any kind done at reasonable rates should call on Mrs. E. J. Allen, room 12. No. 165 E. 7th street.
Miss Mary L. Harwell has associated with Miss B. M. Foley, in hair-dressing, manicuring and facial treatments, in the Chamber of Commerce building.
The most popular place for people who take their meals down town is John Godrey's, No. 552 Washburn, everything neat, clean and well cooked.
Is your hair straight? If not, send 80 cents to Ozonized Ox Marrow Co., 76 Wabash avenue, Chicago, Ill., for a bottle of Ozonized Ox Marrow and you can easily straighten it.
Gentlemen wishing nice furnished rooms, with all conveniences, by the week or month, at reasonable rates, should apply at the Benton House, 228 West Third street, up stairs.
FURNISHED ROOMS—Nicely furnished rooms for rent by the week or month, at West Ninth street, St. Peter and Exchange streets. Transients accommodated.
The Excelsior Night Lunch Wagon is the place to go to get good sandwiches and coffee. Open from 5:00 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. m. Wagon stand at the corner of Sixth and Jackson streets. J. S. Mills, proprietor.
If you wish a good shave, hair cut or shampoo call at Richard Cousby's neat shop. No. 274% Minnesota street. First-class workmen only. Satisfaction guaranteed. Music for all occasions furnished on short notice.
For good home cooking go to the Metropolitan restaurant. No. 378 nesota street. First-class meals at all hours. Baking supplies 20 cents Meals order at moderate prices Mrs. Lou McLaughlin proprietor.
Ida Moore was arrested Wednesday night, charged with robbing one R. E. Lewis of $25. The robber was on patrol. The Lewis could not identify the money while drunk. The woman was discharged.
If you continue to spend all you make, you'll be poor all your life. Every one should have a savings account. Accounts opened of $1 and upward at the State Savings Bank, Gerber, Minnesota. Fourth and Minnesota streets. Silk Express, G. D. Cartesian, prop. packing and shipping; hauling of all kinds; coal and wood in large or small quantities. When you wish anything in his line give him a call. Telephone, Maj. 120 21. i. Office East Sixth street. Dr. John E. Porter, physician and surgeon, office suite 410 Bradley building. Office hours: 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 m. 9:00 to 4:00 p. m. Telephone, Main: 1738-11. Residence, 569 Iglehart street. Telephone, Dale: 589-21. Owen Howell, No. 156 E. Sixth st. fashionable tailor. Gentlemen wishing suits or overcorts of the latest cuts and patterns should call on them. Ladies' work also done. Clothing cleaned and worn. Short notice. Moderate prices. Goods called for and delivered.
Mrs. E. L. Johnson gave a very pretty lunch on Tuesday afternoon, in honor of Mrs. W. M. Payne, of Washington, D. C. The other guests were Medama A. French, M. J. Brown, F. D. Parker, J. R. White, H. B. Rogers, W. W. McCoy, J. P. Anderson and Miss Marion French of Chicago.
SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE vanities.—We invite your inspection, it costs little to place your papers, cash securities and valuables in absolute safety. Boxes in our vanuats can be had for $4.00. Store your boxes, boxes, etc., with us. St. Paul Trust Co., 138 Endcott Arcade.
The reason why you should buy your Coal, Wood, Flour, Feed, Hay, etc., from C. W. STAHELH. Rice and carrol streets, is because you can get prompt delivery. Fuel of all kinds, and saved and split wood in large or small quantities. Everything at the right price. Both telephones 1446.
Visitors to the city, and residents also, who wish to get first class meals should call at John Godfreys, No. 552 Wabasa street, between Tenth street and College avenue. Board and rooms are available. Best meals in the city. Regular meals 25 cents. Sunday dinners from 1:00 to 5:00 n. m. a specky. A fire occurred in the home of Mr. and Mrs. George R. King, 126 W. arch street, between three and four o'clock Thursday morning. It is presumed that the fire originated from a lamp applause in the dining room and Mrs. King and their little boy, who were sleeping at the time, were almost suffocated by the smoke. The fire department was promptly on hand and the fire was confined to the dining room, though some damage was not reported to the pastor. The loss will amount to about $320, fully covered by insurance.
The largest as well as one of the most enjoyable social functions of the week was a reception given by the Misses Combs at their residence, 629 E. Minnehaha street, Thursday night, in honor of Miss Mae Shivers of Chicago. The large house was hand- decorated with greens, the decorations being especially elaborate in the dining room. Dancing and cards were the amuse-
THE MUSICIAN
MRS_*MINNIE M_-OXO.
The Postmierst and Liaison Dept. to the Postoffice at Indiana
Miae, Miae, by Order of President Roosevelt.
THESE NARROW-CHESTED FLATS.
Justwed (showing cancer their new hat)—well, old man, what do you think of our new quarters?
Caller—I'd hardly call 'em or yours.
Justwed—What would you call 'em?
Caller—Eighths or sixteenths.
Courtesy of Daily News.
ment features. Toothsome vials were served in the living room. Very much favored by guests, the vials were presented to each guest. Fully one hundred persons, including most of the society people of the city, were present. The vials were present, and all had a delightful time.
Mesdames J. E. and M. L. Cloak, of 561 Thomas street, gave a reception in honor of Mrs. Marian French, of Chicago, on last Wednesday, which proved to be one of the most delightful functions of the season. The hostess, Amanda Green, were all attention to the guests, and the evening was delightfully spent. Elegant refreshments were served in the spacious dining room from a buffet table which was handsomely decorated with fruits and flowers. Cards and dancing furnished the room, and thus while away the time. Very pretty little souvenirs consisting of tiny places, dust pans, bells, whistles, fans, etc., attached to Miss Marian French's cards by pink ribbons, were distributed as the guests were served. Among those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Amanda Moore, Mrs. and Marie C. A. Mason, S. Burnaugh, F. Mills, W. Green, D. Thompson; Mesdames French, N. Brown, G. W. Wills, V. J. Henley; Misses Marian French and Mae Shivers of Chicago, Charles Ilion Verry Berry, Jenile Combs; Messrs. A. Combs, J. Gles, C. Smith, C. Charleston, J. Gles, C. Smith, B. Hewan, W. Alston, J. Q. Adams, Dr. O. D. Howard, Dr. A. J. French.
New Tailoring Firm
Mr. Owen Howell of 156 East Sixth street, has associated with him Mr. B. Robins and they have opened a new tailoring establishment at the corner of 156 East Sixth street, where they are prepared to make suits, overcoats and anything in the line of tailoring in first class style, at lowest possible prices for good goods and good workman's equipment. They will be pleased to have the gentlemen call and inspect their stock and learn prices whether they wish to purchase or not. For cleaning and repair, they are called by Goods called for and delivered. Work first class and on short notice.
"A LITTLE OUTCAST."
At Grand Opera House, St. Paul.
"A Little Outcast," which has been making a sort of royal progress into the country, begins a week's engagement at the Grand Opera House, which has made a record which is tremendously complimentary and is one of the most conspicuous successes of the season. Mr. Geo. E. Gill, one of the owners, practically adopted "A Little Outcast" at the start, and the result of his success, the piece has made. Mr. Gill, who learned his profession in the severe old school of England, has never ceased in his persistent invention, his watchful instinct of comedy or ardent interest in the piece, has her forgotten to strengthen and general beautifying of the ensembles, and the result is gratifying. The story is a fascinating one of New York City, and carries the scenes with swift action, from exclusive mansions to crime-hunted villains with thrilling climaxes and unique situations. There is a wealth or gorgeous scenery, the most prominent store pictures being one of Five Points, Cooper Union, a brilliant Chinese restaurant, with gorgeous Oriental draperies and smokers, a fashionable woman's private apartments, and the great are scene, which is a revelation to American theatre-goers.
A GREAT SWORD CONTEST.
After a verbal warfare which has
extended to the battlefield, the sword, F. P. R.
and the sword of the sword, F. P. R.
THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER
Le Roux, of Minneapolis, and A. B. Mallette, of St. Paul, are to meet at last. They have signed articles for the bout and the date has been set. They will cross swords Monday evening in Minneapolis. Being as it is an argument between the foremost swordmen of the Northwest, it will be the greatest exhibition of fencing ever seen in this part of the country. It will be the largest exhibition of the partnership of the Northwest, for the past ten years these two creeds in the royal art of fencing have met and defeated local and visiting swordmen, and each has earned for himself an enviable record in the handling of swordsmanship. The Association of Fencers will govern the contest. The referee will be George Heilzt, one of Chicago's best known fencing masters, and prominent as an instructor throughout the country. He will be the credit innumerable victories with experts. Theo. L. Hays, manager of the Grand Opera House, who has been for years a fencing enthusiast, and who has in the past appeared as principal in several public fencing contests, will manage the mutual consent of each contestant.
Friends of both contestants are confident of their ability to win. The fact that each man will be in the pink of condition will be sufficient to bring out the many fencing enthusiasts of the two cities.
Turkish Institute Notes
A large school-school for colored teachers will be in session six weeks, June 29th to August 7th, at the Tuskegee University. Full information can be obtained by writing to Principal Washing-on. The poultry raising division is progressing nicely, and we are great at it, taken to the development of this department this year.
The 'girl's a new bath room is now in use and is a great improvement over the old bath room. It supplies a long amount of water. It costs $8,500. The one being constructed for the boys will cost when completed, $3,500.
REV. IRL R. HICKS 1903 ALMANAC.
To this saintlid work of science and art is finer and better than ever, is stating it mildly. The demand for it is far beyond all previous years. Say, may the students through THIRTY YEARS, are not based upon sound sense and usefulness, is an insult to the intelligence of the millions. Prof. Hicks, through this great Almanac, and his 'amous family and scientific journal, WORK ALMANAC, are the whole people not approached by any other man or publication. A fair test will prove this to any reasonable person. Added to the most luminous course in astronomy for 1903, forecasts of storms and weather are given, as ever, all charmingly illustrated with nearly two hundred engravings. The price of single Almanac, in cluding postage and mailing, is THIRTY CENTS. WORK AND WORKS with the Almanac, WORK AND WORKS PUBLISHING CO., 2201 Locust Street, St. Louis, Mo., and prove to yourself their great value.
A WILD NIGHT IN BEARDSTOWN. Design tonight.
Beardstown circle No. 154, Royal circle.
Protection lodge No. 22, A. O. U. W.
Prayer meeting.
Congregations
Prayer meeting, German Methodist
Episcopal church.
Prayer meeting, First Methodist Episcopal church—Beardstown Illinoan-Star.
BULL CALM ALWAYS LANDS 'EM. When a man is complenied, he may not swallow it all, but he thinks there is something in it.—Atchison Globe.
CHESTED FLATS.
—well, old man, what do you think of
Defective Page
Matters Social, Religious and General
Which Have Happened and are to Happen
Among the People of the City on the
Falls.
Mrs. M. Cheeney is on the sick list.
Mr. A. W. Larance is in the city from St. Louis to study ministry.
Mr. Burke has been confined to her home for three weeks with the rheumatism.
Mr. Wind was greatly hurt last Sunday day evening by a runaway horse at 1st Ave. and Third.St.
Mr. Scott Blake is making preparations to attend the K. P. encampment in St. Louis next August.
Mr. E. J. Allen of St. Paul was in the city this week, the day of Mrs. B. Walker, of Second Avenue South.
Miss Maggie Freeman was removed Saturday to the Northwestern Hospital, where she is doing nicely.
The Christian Endeavor meets every Sunday at 3:0 p. m. at Bethesda Baptist church. You are most cordially invited.
Miss M. Jackson, milliner and modiste, ladies' tailoring. French cleaning and curling feathers a speciality. No. 1409 South Fifth street.
DR. WM. DEMAS CRUM.
Recently Appointed Collector of the Port, Charleston, S. C.
The grand jury returned an indictment against Thomas Nodlin, who was accused of highway robbery. Trial has been set for next Tuesday.
Dr. R. S. Brown has moved his office into the Century Building, No. 4 fourth street south, rooms 405 and 406. Office phone, N. 3271-712-1111. The Appeal is meant to most of the people of the Twin Cities, and if you wish matters to reach these homes you must publish them in the Appeal.
Miss Mae Williams' name was unintentionally omitted in last week's issue as one of the ladies who assisted in receiving at the reception Jan. 6th in honor of Miss Mae Shivers.
Mrs. Celestine Brown has opened her kitchen "Hilton" boarding-house rooms at 405-047 Fifth ave. S. Regular meals. 25 cents. Short orders served. First-class furnished rooms in connection. N. W. Tel. 3434-72. Minneapolis
Soldiers' Addresses Wanted.
Henry N. Copp, attorney-at-law
Washington. D. C., wants the addresses
of below named Afro-American soli-
diers, who served in the Civil War; if
dead, their heirs. Information will be
John W. Dent, 3rd Cavalry; Jerry
ROBERT B. ARMSTRONG.
Private Secretary to Secretary of the
Treasury Will Be Aust. Sec. of
Treasury.
Smith, 3rd Artillery; Daniel Banks, Alain Bates, Peter Broddy, Pat Gibes, Anderson Hoffman, George Nally, George Nickels, William Robbins, Joseph Roney, Brown Samuels, and Andrew Babb. William Robbins, Charles Cantwell, Jesse Darnell, Louis Darbine, John Gault, Frank McFarland, John Price, Dennis Roberts, and Washington Smith, 13th Artillery; Charles Browne, George W Harmon and Simon Balless, 11th Infantry; Huston Balless, Ellis Brown, well Hunt; Ellis Brown, Ellis Brown, Edward Washington, and John C. Louis, 28th Infantry; William A. Bates, George Cooper, Henry Crench, Henry Harrison, Patrick Henry, and George Sizemore, 43rd Infantry; Henry Elliott, Matthew Feltz, David Hunt, Abercrombie, and William Winn, 59th Infantry; Roger Edwards, 107th Infantry; Moses Able, Moses Ballard, Harrington Butler, Robert Bardette, John A. Cecil, Simon Cook, David Wilmot, Moses Etheridge, Squire Garrison, Henry Hamilton, John W. Hopkins, Jerry Morris, Grandison Smith, Beverly Joins, John J. Jones, Timothy Fillan and Patrick McCormick, 185th Infantry.
Ministers of the gospel and secretaries of lodges, and others interested, will be present at the public announcement of the above list and posting it in conspicuous places.
President Fortune Formulates it on
To the Officers and Members of *the*
To the Officers and Members of *the*
National Afro-American Cou-cur: As I shall, leave the United St- as shortly for the far East, to be ab- perhaps six months, my last thought
HIS DEFINITION.
ORPHAN
ASYLUM
Sallie—What is an orfling asylum, Horatio? Horatio—It's a place for kids what's shy on ancestors, see?
THE LOVE OF A WOMAN
in doing so is the Afro-American Council and its future well-being, as the one organization of the race whose primal object is the preservation and proper defense of the civil and political rights. My best thought, sympathy and effort have been devoted, during the past twelve years,—dating from the organization of the National Afro-American League, at Chicago, January 15, 1890, to the paramount necessity of education and live up to this principle and defense of civil rights and mutual interests. Effective organization is the only supreme power in modern society. The greatest misfortune of the race has been its refusal to recognize and live up to this principle. We have depended too much upon others to do for us what we could and should do for ourselves. Mankind is selfish by nature and the enforced conditions of social life; and the man or men who neglect their own interests will have to busy to attend to them for them. What is everybody's business is nobody's business, is a faithful old saw. The main difficulty with and drawback to the National Afro-American Council today is that the organization has to do its own organization. The masses of the people do not belong to it or support it with their sympathy and money. Its annual sympathy and delegates are represented business and professional interests, who are willing to pay $5 for participation in the organization and who cease to be active members when the organization adjoins sine die. The official board of the organization really constitutes the only membership of the National Council from the adjustment of one member of another; with the exception, of course, of the state council in California, which has changed from the Afro-American League of California to the Afro-American Council of California at a state convention held since the adjournment of the last August.
No organization constituted as the National Afro-American Council is today, as to its basic membership, can do the important work mapped out by its founders and expected by the people larger than itself, the latter will be approved by the next annual convention, and hoping that it will result in a basic membership of the council, and basing my action primarily on Article VI of the plan of state organization of the constitution of the council, I submit the following plan of local organization:
1. Ten persons shall be competent to organize a local council circle to be offered as provided for in Article II of the by-laws for local organization the local council to ten persons, such local circle to ten persons, such local circle to be entitled to one delegate in state conventions upon payment of assessment provided in Article XVIII of plan of state organization and to one delegate in annual National Council conventions upon payment of tax assessment in Article III section 2. The constitution of the National Afro-American Council.
2. Women may organize separate local circles upon precisely the same conditions prescribed for men in specification 1 herewith. Women may organize a state council, as provided by Article IX of the national constitution.
I sincerely hope, in every community where there are ten persons congenial to each other and interested in the race, will all once organize a local council circle. I are reasonably certain that the women of the race will take hold of the work. When the council meets next year at Louisville there should be at least five hundred circles reported and represented. William A. Pledger, first vice-president.
dent of the National Afro-American act as president during my absence.
Dated at Redbank, N. J., December 1902.
REWARDS BRAVE ACT.
Grateful Woman Gives Elevator Boy a City Lot.
Sioux City, Iowa. Jan. 21.—Because of the heroic act of Roy Kline, an elevator boy in the Security Department, a woman seventy-five years old, from being crushed to death last summer, the woman has just filed a deed here conveying a handsome lot in Springdale addition to the young man. The deed states that the conveyance is made "in consideration of the impending death of the griever to save the life of the grantor in an elevator accident, the receipt of which brave and hmane气气 is hereby gratefully acknowledged." The woman's skirts in the door of the cage last summer and while the elevator descended, permitting her skirts to be torn off, but saving her from being crushed against the top of the cage.
A SYMPOSIUM ON L1AR$
The following symposium on "Liar" is worth reading, even if it fails to do the subject complete justice:
The liar whom the editor hates worst of all is th. man, who, when duned all by his subscription, says he received two or three copies during the year, and refuses to pay—Clarksville Graphite.
Next to, if not above this one, the editor hates a liar who takes the paper seven or eight years, and when finally cornered for settlement, says he never ordered the paper at all—praying. But the worst liar of the whole outfit is the man who takes the paper several years; then moves away without paying or saying anything about it, and yet he is an honest man—Elsbury Advance.
Brehren, you will fail short of the truth that the worst liar in the lot is the editor who publishes the obituary of these aforesaid liars and intimates that they have gone to heaven—Plymouth Independent.
Keeping Up War's Memories.
Ladysmith is preparing to make herself another such center for the historic scenes around her as Brussels is for Waterloo. A regular coach service, it seems, is to be organized to Spion Kop, and when the passengers have walked over the fatal summit they will find refreshment and lodging at a "Spion Kop Hotel" which is to be built forthwith on Three-Tree Hill.
Fish at 21,000 Feet
The statistician has been at work again. On the arrival of the United States Fish Commission steamship Albatross, which recently explored the ocean to a depth of 23,000 feet, the man of figures has calculated that the pressure of water is so great at that depth that a fish ten feet in length must support a weight equal to a large building.
About the Super Ailing
"Do you think that our civilization tends to lengthen men's lives?"
"I don't know about that," answered the practical man; "but, with the increased facilities for travel and communication, a man can come preen near living twice as much in a given year as he used to." -Washington Star.
Eyes Kurt You?
Likely you need
alternatives to opaque
nothing to find out.
F. H. Harm
& Bro.
RELIABLE
OPTICIANS
109 E. 7th St.
ST. PAUL.
RAMSEY COUNTY
Afro-AmericanClub.
SOCIAL
378 Cedar St., St. Paul, Minn.
OFFICERS
J. W. WOODFORK, Pres.
A. COMBS, Supt.
JOHN MORGAN, Asst. Supt.
F. D. McCRACKEN, Sec.
E. P. WADE, Asst. Sec.
C. E. CHARLESTON, Trea
Tel. Main 1786-J1.
Burlington Route
St. Louis and the South
Are conveniently and comfortably reached by our two trains a day.
The Limited, leaving Minneapolis at 7:35, St. Paul 8:00 p. m., daily, arrives in St. Louis the following afternoon. Combination Compartment and Standard Sleepers and Reclining Chair Cars.
The Scenic Express, leaving Minneapolis at 7:30, St. Paul 8:05 a. m., except Sunday, arrives in St. Louis early next morning. Sleeping cars from Rock Island south.
This is the first direct route from Minneapolis and St. Paul to Clinton, Davenport, Rock Island, and all Mississippi River cities.
Passengers by either train make close connections with lines south, southeast and southwest in St. Louis Union Station.
ASK YOUR HOME AGENT FOR
TICKETS VIA THE BURLING-
TON ROUTE
Grace, 7-10-1902
Rent a Piano...
If not quite ready to buy,
We have a few assortment
at very small prices. Our plan of ap-
plications rent on a purcha-
se to be made later
is very popular. For-
hands it will just suit your
present needs. Let us
talk it over today.
Perfect Piano Tuning . . .
Is a specialty of ours,
Satisfaction guaranteed.
Pieces on Main St./both lines,
or otherwise make known
your wishes, and prompt
attention will be given.
Stetson
Mendellos,
Banjo,
Are like Steinway Pianos.
"The World's Best."
W. J. Dyer & Bro,
Largest Music House in the Northeast.
Sale Agents for Steinway and
Knabe Pianos.
17 Dyer Building. . . St. Paul, Minn.
Tel. 1949-J1. ST. PAUL.
WESTES
FINEST
Dinner Wines.
Pontet Claret $1.00
Per quart.....
Medec Claret 75c
Per quart.....
Chesterfield 50c
Per quart.....
Good Fair Wine 25c
Per quart.....
Telephone Main 1401
ST. PAUL
367
ROBERT ST.
JOHN G.
ROCHE
MINNEAPOLIS
44
3RD ST. S.
A Complaint of a Number of Happenings,
Social and Otherwise, Among the Afro-
Americans of the Second City of This
Glorious Unite.
Mrs. H. T. Elby is quite ill.
Miss Lilly Lewis of Boston is in the
city.
H. D. Norris, Esq., of Columbus is in
the city.
Mr. Joseph C. Wood, Jr., is on the
sick list.
If you wish everybody to see it put
it in THE APPEAL.
Mrs. Darnell died Friday, Jan. 16th,
at the residence of Mrs. R. M. Hancock.
The Appeal is on sale at Faulkner's
Afro-American news stand, 3104 State
street.
Miss Martha Smalls of Rochester,
N. Y., is visiting Mrs. Keith, 3115
Dearborn St.
Rev. Murray preached on "The Handwriting on the Wall" Sunday, evening at Bethel.
Senator Bell is spending a few days in our city. The senator is as jovial and good matured as ever.
The APPEAL is on sale at C. C. McLain's cigar store and cut-rate ticket office, 428 Bearnborn street.
The Institutional Church gave the first New England dinner Wednesday evening at Brotherhood Hall.
Miss Aad Tardy, of Memphis, Tennessee, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Mattle Paynei 3118 Dearborn St.
Mr. Julius Blackwell, of Indianapolis, spent last week in the city the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Webb.
The members of Herman Baptist church have presented a fine suit of clothes to Rev. Jordan Chavis, the pastor.
Miss Jessie Lucas, 517 Fulton St., spent last Sunday visiting Miss Lutia Jackson and several South Side friends.
THE APPEAL is without question the best advertising medium through which to reach the Afro-Americans of Chicago.
Mr. Nebblack left Monday, Jan. 19th, for Florida, where he will remain a couple of weeks, visiting friends and relatives.
GERTRUDE IMOGENE PALMER, rv-linste. Concerts, musicales, instruction. Room 86 Auditorium, and 680 Austin Ave.
Rev. Dr. Parker preached at Quinn Chapel Sunday night, and stirred the good members deeply with his eloquence and truth.
Subscribers for THE APPEAL who wish to discontinue the paper must send written notice to the office, properly dated and signed.
Mr. Ben D. Bagly, of THE APPEAL, was suddenly called to Indianapolis Tuesday, by the serious illnes of a brother, who is not expected to recover.
THE APPEAL has fixed advertising, and will not cut them to secure advertising. However, if you wish to reach the people you must use THE APPEAL.
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.
It is rumored that Mr. Morris Marshall, the well known president of the Metropolitan club, is soon to lead a enarming young lady of the West Side to the alter.
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.
Miss Alice Steckman and Mr. Julius Branch will be married Sunday afternoon, Jan. 25, at the residence of Mrs. Cooper, 3128 Wabash avenue. Reception from 5 to 10:30 p. m.
The Bachelor Club gave Mr. D. Weil a very pleasant surprise party Monday night, at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Brown, 2908 Calmet ave A very pleasant evening was spent by all.
JAMES JOHNSON, Teacher of vix in room 86 Auditorium building, Vita Gentrude Imogene Palmer and Mr. Felix Weir, assistant teachers. Wednesday and Saturday, Tuesday and Friday.
If you wish a loan on household furniture, horse, wagon, amuonds, jewelry or real estate and are holding salaried position, call on John Grant & Co. Room 311, No 36 South Clark street.
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 percent per month on all money left with them to be loaned on above securities.
Information is wanted of Miss or Mrs. Kate White, who left Omaha a few years ago and is supposed to be Chicago. She is a bright mutate weighing about 125 pounds. Miss White's parents live at Ackman, Kan Any information will be gladly received by Dr. P. C. Kebble, Pittsburg Texas.
Mr. E. H. Faulkner and Mr. P. H. Hixon, proprietors of the Afro-American news office and shoe shining atlion 3104 State street, deserve much credit for the energetic manner in which they have conducted their business. All the Afro-American papers are on sale there, besides cigars, candles, bootblack supplies, an artistic shine and good treatment from proprietors and employees.
Tuesday evening, January 20, Mr. P. E. Long and Mr. Lacey Crosby entertained a party of friends at the residence of Mrs. Wm. Hill, 3000 State st. Quite a pleasant time was had and the company was also highly entertained with several piano selections. The audience were: Miss Helen Weaver of Three Rivers, Mich.; Mrs. Daisy Coyor of New Orleans, La.; Messrs. Green, Smith, P. E. Long, Lacey Crosby, Arthur Anderson and Mr. Valle.
Now, all who have the time spare, To read THE APPRAISALS news so rare.
Age counts
We have the largest
Storage Capacity
on basis of sales
of any beer on
the market.
Our beer is
perfectly aged.
Call for
Hamm's
THE LABOR OF THE LABORER
Lowest Prices on Flat Work SHIRTS, 10o. COLLARS and OUFFS, 1o.
New Moulded Records
Talking Machines.
ALL PENNY AND NICKEL-IN-SLOT MACHINES.
EDISON PHONOGRAPH PARLOR, 376 WABASHA ST.,
F. L. GETCHELL, Mgr.
Tel. M. 2104 L-2.
FLOAN & LEVEROOS,
Furnishing Goods, Hats, Caps, Shoes, Etc.
T. L. Blood & Co.'s READY-MIXED
PAINTS ARE THOROUGHLY RELIABLE. ST. PAUL, MINI.
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,
E. G. MELLEM.
```markdown
```
New Moulded Records
ALL PENNY AND
EDISON PHONOGRAPH
Tel. M. 2104-L 2.
FLOAN
Gents' Fi
Furnishing Goo
WEST SUPERIOR WIS.
KENNETH CLARK, President
C. H. BIGELOW, Vice-President
T. L. Blo
EVERY STYLE OF MACHINE.
From $10 TO $150
The New Zonophone!
Edison Phonographs!
Talking Machines.
AND NICKEL-IN-SLOT MACHINES.
TH PARLOR, 376 WABASHA ST., P. L. GETCHELL, Mg'r.
XXX ST. PAUL, MINN.
& LEVEROOS,
DEALERS IN
Time Clothing,
Goods, Hats, Caps, Shoes, Etc.
Cor. Seventh and Jackson Sts.,
SEO. H. PRINCE, Cashier
H. W. PARKER, Asst. Cashier
food & Co.'s
Should to Faulkner's, 3104 State repair,
And leave the price of the paper there.
Then, homeward with your prize please
go.
Read THE APPEAL yourself and to friends show,
And when the news they wish to know,
They'll know where to get it—aint that so?
TROCADERO THEATER.
The Trocadero Stock Company, which is presenting the very best of attractions these days, is keeping its patrons in a well-valued with new laughs, in wholesale quantities, will give, exceptionally strong and enjoyable snow during the coming week a great revival of that laughable travesty, "Barbara Fidgety." This skit, a laughable burlesque on "Barbara Fletchie," was a hit when first produced in New York, was the biggest kind of a success when staged in this city, and will undoubtedly score another hit of even bigger size this time. The cast will be the same fine stock which has been delighting the crowds so. thoroughly of late, with Nat and Sol Fields, the great German humorists, in the forefront, Alex. Carr as the Yidish jester, May Howard, as the star of the gay girls, and the finest kind of assistance to them, Frank Damsel, Billy Sheridan, May Belle and the Connolly sisters. Between the acts of the burlesque core will be a great travesty on the Florodora sextette, a new set of living pictures, and a first class set of vaudeville specialists. Do not forget that there will be a big benefit to Fields and Fields', the popular Germans, on February 4.
BIRTHS
Mrs. Wm Harthmon. female, 721
72nd street, Dr. E. R. Reynolds.
Mrs. Henry Starks, male, 2800 La
Salle street, Mrs. L. Glover.
Noted Character Gone.
Thomas Gay, an aged man, said to have been employed by Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War and previous to that, about 1840, by William E. Gladstone, was found frozen on the floor of his basement home, 35 Chicago avenue, this morning.
Gay was a well-known character in
HON. A. J. HOPKINS.
Our New Republican United States
Senator.
the neighborhood where he lived, and never tired of telling of his experiences in the services of the two men, whom he believed to be the greatest that ever lived. When last seen alive—Dec. 29—Gay appeared to be in good health. This morning he was found dead, near a stove, wrapped in a bed quilt. The cause of his death is unknown, although it is supposed that he froze to death while asleep. He was eighty-two years old, and leaves no relatives within the knowledge of the police and those who were acquainted with him.
DEATHS
Lilly Hughes, age 30, 2974 Armour
Ave.
Allena Revels, age 38, 47 Gauld
Court.
Comouore Hardy, age 80, 3510
Dearborn street.
Evandre Conrad, age 65, 673 E. 64th
street.
Richard Husley, age 30, 3521 Armour avenue.
Celebrates 102d Anniversary.
Mrs. S. H. Lomax of Rosslyn, Va., Saturday celebrated the one hundred and second anniversary of her birth at her home in that place. She held a reception from 1 o'clock until 8 o'clock in the evening, and had the unusual privilege of greeting forty-five children, thirty-four grandchildren, nine great-grandchildren and four great-great-grandchildren. A large number of friends of the aged woman also called and extended congratulations.
Mrs. Lomax's oldest child is eighty-five years of age. Her youngest son is Samuel Lomax, sixty years old, a clerk in the War Department at Washington, D. C. Mrs. Lomax is said to be highly reverenced by the people of Rosslyn, who seek her advice frequently on important ques-
Concerning Shoes.
WITH every step, the sole of your shoe must bend. The proper place for it to bend is at the "ball" of the foot—never at the instep.
To make it bend at the "ball" things are necessary:—the sole must be extremely flexible while the shank or arch must be extremely rigid.
Most shoes bend at the shank, thus losing their shapeliness and tiring the weak arch of the foot. That is what makes walking for most women so fatiguing.
The "Dorothy Dodd" shoe has a shank that supports the weak arch firmly. It will not bend. The method of sewing the shank is different from the ordinary—it is sewn through and through—making a strong, firm shank than cannot be obtained any other way. It has a sole that is extremely flexible and will bend.
WITH every step, the sole of your shoe must bend. The proper place for it to bend is at the "ball" of the foot—never at the instep.
To make it bend at the "ball" things are necessary; the sole must be extremely flexible while the shank or arch must be extremely rigid.
Most shoes bend at the shank, thus losing their shapeliness and tiring the weak arch of the foot. That is what makes walking for most women so fatiguing.
WITH every step, the sole of your shoe must bend. The proper place for it to bend is at the "ball" of the foot—never at the instep.
To make it bend at the "ball" things are necessary: the sole must be extremely flexible while the shank or arch must be extremely rigid.
Most shoes bend at the shank, thus losing their shapeliness and tiring the weak arch of the foot. That is what makes walking for most women so fatiguing.
The "Dorothy Dodd" shoe has a shank that supports the weak arch firmly. It will not bend. The method of sewing the shank is different from the ordinary—it is sewn through and through—making a strong, firm shank than cannot be obtained any other way. It has a sole that is extremely flexible and will bend.
Every step in such shoes is a delight.
They cost $3.
A few special styles, $3.50.
Every step in such shoes is a delight.
They cost $3.
A few special styles, $3.50.
Established 1882.
The Plymouth
The Plymouth Corner, Seventh and Robert,
Established 1882
The Plymouth
The Plymouth Corner, Seventh and Robert,
HERTZ BROS.
Agents for the Red Cross Stoves and Ranges And Thatcher Furnaces.
Dealers in
Builders' Hardware, Tools, Tinware, Paints, Oils, Glass.
Tin, Sheet Iron and Copper Workers.
519- 521 University Ave., ST. PAUL, MINN.
ICE CREAM
Red Cross Stoves and Ranges
And Thatcher Furnaces.
Dealers in
Builders' Hardware, Tools, Tinware, Paints, Oils, Glass.
Tin, Sheet Iron and Copper Workers.
519-521 University Ave., ST. PAUL, MINN.
ICE CREAM
Frozen from CREAM.
SPECIAL DISCOUNTS TO LODGES AND CHURCHES.
The Crescent Creamery Co.,
SPECIAL DISCOUNTS TO LODGES AND CHURCHES. The Crescent Creamery Co., BOTH PHONES. 3rd and Minnesota.
BOTH 'PHONES.
MODERN DRUGGISTS OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
OPEN DAY AND NIGHT
A. D. THOMPSON DRUG CO.
PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS
COR. THIRD ST. AND FIRST AVE. SOUTH, OPPOSITE POST OFFICE
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.
COR. THIRD ST. AND FIRST AVE. SOUTH, OPPOSITE POST OFFICE
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.
Elk Express Company.
G. D. CHARLESTON, PROP.
Packing, Shipping and Storing.
WOOD AND COAL.
63 East Sixth Street,
ST. PAUL, PINN
Tel. Main 1920-J1.
E.lk Express Company.
G. D. CHARLESTON, PROP.
Packing, Shipping and Storing.
WOOD AND COAL.
63 East Sixth Street,
ST. PAUL, MINN.
Tel. Main 1920-J1.
"We, a jury composed of men who know cigar values, find that the plaintiff, the Judge Harlan Cigar, is entitled to recover 10 cents from every smoker"
Judge Harlan
5¢ Cigar
HART & MURPHY, MAKERS, ST. PAUL, MINN.
It Touches the Spot!
PICKWICK RYE
GEO. BENZ
& SONS.
ST. PAUL.
MINNEAPOLIS.
DISTILLERIES AT EMINENCE, KY.
AND
BALTIMORE, MD.
"We, a jury composed of men who know cigar values, find that the plaintiff, the Judge Harlan Cigar, is entitled to recover 10 cents from every smoker"
Judge Harlan 5¢ Cigar HART & MURPHY, MAKERS, ST. PAUL, MINN.
It Touches the Spot!
PICKWICK
RYE
GEO.
BENZ
& SONS.
ST. PAUL.
MINNEAPOLIS.
DISTILLERIES AT
EMINENCE, KY.
AND
BALTIMORE, MD.
Defective Page
A Happy
Combination
of Comfort
Luxurious Travel and
Perfect Accomodations
IS VIA
THE
NORTH-WESTERN
LINE
C. S. P. M. & O. RY
Inquire for rates and information
should you contemplate a trip well
rounded out with pleasure. : : :
T. W. TFASDALE, Gon. Pas. Agt.,
St. Paul, Minn.
SUGIETY DIRECTORY.
MOST WORKSHIPFUL GRAND LODGE
OF
MINNEAPOLIS, F. AND A. M.
R. L. DEW, GRAND MASTER,
419 E. 18th St., Minneapolis, Minn.
W. R. MORRIS, GRAND SECRETARY,
1020 Guaranty Loan Bldg., Minneapolis,
Minn.
PIONEER LODGE NO. 1, A. F. AND A.
meets first and third Mondays of each
south at Mason Hall, 319 Woolshire
street, at 8:00 P. M. H. G. Johnson, W.
M.; A. H. Hilyard, Sec., 124 Atwater St.
PERFECT ASHLAR LODGE NO. 40,
A. F. and A. Hilyard, second and fourth
Tuesdays at Mason Hall, No. 319 Wabbs
sha St. at 8:00 P. M. E. J. Brack. W. M
652 Farrington Ave.; J. E. Porter, Sec.
PAST GRAND 'MASTER'S COUNCIL'
No. 123. A. F. and A. M., meets the secon-
d building, Minneapolis. All visiting P.
G. M. in good standing cordially invited
to attend the conference. Both
B. Hickman, G. S., No. 422
Anthony avenue, St. Paul.
MARS LODGE, NO. 2202, MEETS
for business and the third Monday for
instruction at Odd Fellows' Hall, 258 E.
Seventh street. L. P. Downey, N. G.;
Hickman St. P. 422 St. Anthony Ave.
HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH, NO. 553, G. U.
O. F. C. meets first and third Monday
in each month for business; second Mon.
in each month for business; third Mon.
in each month for business; N. G.; F. C.
253 E. Seventh街. M. N. G.; Mrs. Ida M. Johnson, W. R.
No. 592 Rice street.
ST. JAMES' CHURCH, NO. 114,
meets the second Monday in each month
at Odd Fellows' Hall, No. 263 E. Seventh
street. All Patriarchs in good standing
W. P. V.; Thos. R. Hickman, R. V.; W. P.
Francis, V. P.; Geo. B. Lowe, W. P. R.
478½ Wabasha.
ST. JAMES' A. M. E. CHURCH, con-
fult and Jay streets. Sunday services:
11:00 a. m.; 7:30 p. m. Wednesday prayer
at home and Tuesday; at home Wednesday and
Thursday. Weddings, funerals and see
sketched on notice. Rev. J. C. A. Cohen.
PLIGHRM BAPTIST CHURCH, Cor. 12th and Cedar. Sunday services: Preach at 12:30 o'clock. Sunday school at 12:30 o'clock. Wednesday evening general prayer meeting. Friday evening study school. Sunday school. FuneralsWednesday apply attended. Rev. W. D. Carter, Pastor, 659 Eiffel St. ST. PHILIP'S EPHCOPAL MISSION center Aurora avenue and Mackublin street Sunday services: Early celebration of Holy Eucharist, 7:30 a.m. High celebration of Holy Eucharist, 8:30 a.m. Mass, second and fourth Sundays, 11:00 a.m. Sunday school, 12:30 p. Brotherhood of St. Andrew, 6:30 p. Brotherhood of St. Matthew, 7:30 p. Wesnethon, confirmation class, 8:30 p. Fridays, evening prayer, 8:00 p. m. Saturdays, Holy Eucharist, 9 A. M. Evard. Everard Daniels, Rector.
A. S. WILLAMAN MANOLES
374
EQ YEARS
EXPERIENCE
PATENTS
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHT & C.
Anyone sending a sketch and description may
quickly ascertain our copyright. Communications
are strictly confidential. Handbook on Patent
Communications strictly confidential. Handbook on Patent
Communications taken through Munn & Co. receive
special notices, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
A handsomely illustrated weekly. Lawcrow's
calculation of months. $1. Sold by all newsletters.
MUNN & Co. 361 Broadway. New York
Empire Office. 212-765-5200.
WONDERFUL DISCOVERY
BEFORE AND AFTER TREATMENT.
OZONIZED OX MARROW
THE ORIGINAL -COPYRIGHTED.
The only safe preparation in the world that makes hair fall, dries out, and stains against above. It nourishes the scalp, prevents hair from falling, and provides a smooth, shiny appearance. The hair grows long, fold over 40 years and used in all applications. Get the Original Ozonized Ox Marrow before it falls. It is the best hair straight, soft and beautiful. Only 50 cents. Sold by druggists per ounce. You may express changes. Send post or expire money to OZONIZED OX MARROW, 70 S. 1st Ave. Chicago, IL 60611.