The Appeal

Saturday, October 3, 1903

St. Paul, Minnesota

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AFRO-AMERICAN SUFFRAGE JUSTIFIED. WHITE MEN'S ASSAULTS ON WOMEN. SOME ANTHROPOLOGY FOR BEN TILLMAN. 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. 40. (From the Boston Herald.) To the Editor of the Herald: In a letter published in the Herald March 11th, I attempted to show that the incorporation of impartial, or, as it is better known, Afro-American suffrage, in the organic law of the United States was not only an act of justice, but political necessity. It is true that the Dereral southern states, by secession, terrorism, and succeeded to a great ext Afro-Americans from when they have allowed have nullified their vote, stuffing, dishonest count fraudulent methods. You What would have occurred had military rule been established and maintained in the South until social conditions improved and both freedmen and white men were better fitted for self-government is now a matter of pure reflection. It is not the public sentiment North and South, and was necessarily abandoned. The disloyal attitude of the ex-rebels toward the federal government and their passionate determination to deny all civil and political rights by the debates and the acts of the provisional conventions and legislatures, made it impossible for Congress to restore exclusive political power to white men and the resuscitation of their government and existing social and political conditions is ever warranted, it is safe to assert that, that the reorganization of the rebel states been intrusted exclusively to white men, the resuscitation of their government and the practical re-enslavement of the Afro-American would have resulted. In that event the immense waste and destruction of property incident to the civil war, the devastation of a nation, the horrors of Anderssonville and Libby prisons, would have gone for naught. Let us say, rather, they would have stood for all time as the ghastly record of a naive an unholy renewal of the old Union only to be dissolved a second time, and not to be permanently renewed until the fundamental law was made to govern and protect impartially every citizen and to race, color or previous condition. The Afro-American was emancipated from slavery by the war. His enfranchisement was not a "mistake," as you and many others believe. It was the inevitable sequence to his enfranchisement and its necessary confirmation. Neither has it been a "failure" unless in the sense that all suffrage is a failure,—a proposition from which, were it under discussion, I should earnestly dissent. BASE CONDUCT OF A FATHER. Macon Man Behind the Bars on a Shameless Charge. Macon, Ga., Sept. 14.—Fourteen-year-old Pearl Blanche, a well-developed, attractive-faced girl with a wealth of golden hair, when the Bible country grand jury convenes, recite before that body a story telling of the shameful conduct of her father. Sheriff Westcott was sitting in his office when a grown son of Blanche entered—Blanche, it seems, has three children. Blanche, Jones county, from which county the elder Blanche moved to Macon with his wife, daughter and youngest son and asked for a private interview. The sheriff led the way to his private office and without any inquiry, a narrative like of which is rarely heard in a section of the country where morals prevail and where law is upheld. The younger Blanche went into details of the base conduct of his father. It was a story to be recited only before a visitor knew well. With the completion of the complaint Sheriff Westcott convinced of its truth and decided to act at once. Summoning Deputy Stephans to his office the sheriff instructed him to take the once and hold him until accusation panels could be obtained. The arrest was kept quiet for a short time, but when it became known in the section in which Blanche resided there was deep indignation and some decidedly caustic talk. For the mother and girl, however, only expressions of sorrow were heard; the women were heard their failure to have taught the matter to the attention of the neighborhood—Special to Atlanta Constitution. On Serious Charge William M. Marcott, who says he recently came here from Shreveport to enter the employ of an advertising agency, was arrested in a lodging SOME It is in no offensive sense that Senator Tillman may be said to know less about the Negro than he thinks he does. It is our hope to enlighten him on this point and bring him to a more shrinking estimate of what he thinks he knows and of what he knows he thinks. In an address before an Illinois audience last week the South Carolina statesman repeated his familiar remark that "God made the earth and Africa proves it." What it proposed to show is that God did no such thing; on the contrary, that Bent Tillman himself, according to the latest scientific theories, is probably dependent on mankind. If there is scientific authority for such a conclusion, it may be surmised that Senator Ben might feel somewhat frazzled, for he holds no answers to the questions he God did two distinct jobs when white and black men were made. The study of race origin has been emphasized in the book *Race Origin*, surely, not to mention race and mas- sage. THE APPEAL. It is true that the Democrats of several southern states, by a resort to persecution, terrorism, and murder, have succeeded to a great extent in keeping the South from allowing them when they have allowed them to vote, have nullified their votes by ballot-box stuffing, dishonest counting, and other fraudulent methods. You may call this Afro-American suffrage. Afro-American suffrage is a prostitution to criminal uses, the mildest of which would justify the disfranchisement of the guilty parties. Afro-American suffrage in the North is a success. In the South it is not fully successful. With white suffrage in that section, notwithstanding the brutal and senseless obstacles it has encountered, it has justified a hundred-fold the action of the statesmen who are responsible for the murder of a reference to that part of the political history of South Carolina pertinent to this subject, recorded in "Governor Chamberlain's Administration in South Carolina," and other histories of the recon- Under the authority of an act of Congress passed March 2, 1867, and supplemented by an act passed March 23, 1867, the male citizens of the state, not only the white men, but ever race, color or previous condition, were asked to vote for or against calling a convention for the purpose of framing a constitution and civil government. In October, 1867, a total of 12,472, of whom 46,882 were white and 80,550 were Afro-American. The vote was taken in the following November. Exactly 2,350 white men voted; 1,050 were black men; 300 convention; that is, about 90 per cent of the registered white voters sullenly stayed away from the polls, and of the remaining 10 per cent nearly one-half emphasized the importance of the Afro-American as a citizen by opposing the convention. Of those who voted for it a large number, probably a majority, were "Yankee carpet baggers," and of the Afro-American as a citizen by opposing the convention. Of those who voted for it a large number, probably a majority, were "Yankee carpet baggers," and of the Afro-American as a citizen by opposing the convention. Most of the avowed purpose of defeating the convention, for by the act of Congress unanimously provided that such convention shall not be held unless a majority of house at 724 Camp street early this morning, on a serious complaint, pre-camp counselor, nurse, fifteen years of age, employed at the boarding house by Mrs. Marceo, who also recently came here from Shreveport in New Orlean. Those Democrat. CRIMES OF A THIEF. Minister's Wife Intimidated in Her Home by White Man. Birmingham, Ala., Sept. 19.—At 3 o'clock this morning Mrs. William Blackwelder, wife of the Bastard master, visited the Bastard home conducting a revival, was awakened by a crash of glass and saw a well-dressed white man enter her window. She screamed once, but a pistol was put in her face and death to self and children and outrage of her person. She gave the thief her purse, which he opened, and finding only $3 in it, disgust threw it at her head without touching the money. After a vain search for money he emptied a five-gallon can of oil oil, which he found in the house, on the floor. She gave Mrs. Blackwelder and three children with the revolver. When the oil ignited he left on a bicycle. Mrs. Blackwelder was barely able to get herself and children out of the building before it burned to the ground. A $5 reward was offered for the invader. Indignation runs high.—Special to New Orleans Pixayune. CHARGED WITH ASSAULT Brutal White Man Attempts Assault on Young Woman. Jonesville, Va., Sept. 13—Harner Pendergraft, aged thirty, a married man, living eight miles north of her, was placed in jail last night on a warrant sworn out by Williard McLain, charging Pendergraft with attempting to assault McLain's young wife. tional prejudices. In so brief a space no adequate statement of the various theories that have had their day can be presented, and for present purposes no such statement is necessary. Ethnologists and anthropologists have developed their science along a new line which does not make color of skin and eyes, texture of the hair, habitat, or language the supreme tests of racial origins. Shem, Ham and Japhet no longer have the great varieties of human beings. Even the modern classification of Huxley, by which the color of the hair and eyes was made to determine the race of European peoples, has gone into decline in the 19th century. It is likely the more scientific test of race is the shape of the skull, and this furnishes two fundamental divisions, the long heads and the broad heads. By measurements of many thousands of skulls in various countries, the lead authors have established an entirely new classification of races and to indicate their habitats in both ancient and modern all such regenerated voters shall have voted on the question of holding such convention." Of the Afro-Americans 66,418, or about 15 percent, were solidly for the convention. Not a single Afro-American vote was recorded against it. Of the delegates chosen 34 were whites and 63 were Afro-Americans. In other words, 63 were Afro-Americans in their group with 66,418 Afro-Americans called a convention, were accorded over 35 per cent of the entire delegation. This generous allotment certainly does not suggest any conspiracy to secure Afro-Americans from participation. It is frequently said that the significantly small white vote for the convention was due to the disfranchisement of a large number of men by Congress. Let us examine this plea. It is true that the act of disfranchisement was very sweeping, but it is also true that every man could have had the full rights of citizenship restored to him at any time by the law. Such applications were frequently made, and so far as I am able to ascertain, not one of them was ever refused. By an amnesty act passed by Congress May 22, 1872, the disabilities of every one were annulled except in the case of a few leaders, and in the case of a convention was called, the number disfranchised in South Carolina was 8,244. Had all of these men been registered voters and voted for the convention, the total number of whites in favor of it would have been 10,594, or less than one hundred, if admitted that such an assumption is entirely unwarranted, for there is no reason to believe that have a small proportion of them would have sympathized with the Afro-Americans and carpet baggers or pursued any course different from the native whites, who either refused to vote or voted against the convention.* The convention was held and a new constitution framed which compares favorably with that of Massachusetts or any other state. It was adopted by a large majority vote at a popular election in April, 1868, all state officers to initiate its operation being appointed the same time. The majority polled 35.553, the minority polled 27.28, 289 votes for the rejection of the new constitution, but they were of no avail MINISTER IN STRIPES. Divine Who Kidnapped Young Girl Gets Six Years. Central City, Neb., Sept. 19. R. A. Gould, a Free Methodist preacher, who ran away with Eva Flint, a 15-year-old girl, last March, was today sentenced to prison for public testimony. He was tried under the kidnapping law, passed by the state legislature after the Cudahy kidnapping in Omaha and his conviction was the first of its kind. He has a wife and five children. NEWSDEALER From Alabama in on Serious Charge, Dallas, Tex., Sept. 19—Charles G. Stone was committed to the county jail this evening with two charges of criminal assault against him. Affidavits were filed on behalf of the man, Mr. Crow, charging him with assaulting their daughters, about 11 years old. The women and their little girls positively identified Stone, who is accused of having enticed, by various decoy methods, the little girls to different places. The police department has other charges against the prisoner, a white man, 26 years old, and came to Dallas from Huntsville, Ala., last winter. He has been conducting a news stand in one of the hotels. Chief of Police Wintrey states that Stone admitted to him that he had been arrested at Huntsville, Ala., on charges but that the cases he had not pro-posed—Special to New Orleans Pictures. WHITE MAN ASSAULTS CHILD. Sheriff Protecting Alleged Criminal at Greenville, Ga. Greenville, C., Sept. 12.—Last night, in West Greenville, about sun-down, Robert Gunnelis, white, criminally assaulted a 4-year-old Negro girl in the yard where the girl was play- times. Thus it happens that to-day the most advanced scientists divide the inhabitants of Europe, which we have been studying for centuries, into three races—the Teutonic, the Alpine and the Mediterranean. As these are all either long-headed or broad-headed, speaking in averages, according to the most fundamental classification, it is obvious that some subsidiary test comes into play in esculpting the Alpine race. The Alpine race, which resides chiefly in central Europe in countries around the Alps, is predominantly broad-headed, while both the Teutonic and the Mediterranean races are predominantly long-headed. The scientific discipline of the Mediterranean races thereupon is based mainly upon color of skin, eyes and hair and the physical stature—the northern Europeans being predominantly blondes and large-sized, and the southern Europeans being modest and comparatively diminutive. In working out the origin of these three great races of Europe, conclu- against the 70,758 ballots in favor of it, of which it is safe to say 90 per cent were cast by Afro-Americans. The new state officers, most, if not all of whom were white men, took office July 9, 1868, and the first legislature assembled on the same day. The senate, then, included seven Democrat, were white men, and only nine Afro-Americans. This gave the whites a majority of 15. The house of representatives consisted of 124 members; 48 of them, including 14 Democrat, were white men and 78 were Afro-Americans—an Afro-Canan minority of 29%. A joint ballot Afro-Americans had a majority of 18.* Thus ended the first chapter in the history of impartial manhood suffrage in South Carolina. The ballot restored the right to vote, but failure for the purposes of reconstruction. Out of a registration of 46,832 only about five per cent for a constitutional convention! Does not this tell us why the South Carolina dom of Afro-American suffrage was completely vindicated. The first use made of it was to put South Carolina back into the place made vacant when the rebellion was ratified the rebellion. The southern confederacy was destroyed by force of arms in the hands of federal soldiers. The Union was restored by the force of the ballot in the hands of the loyal white people. Had the intelligent and educated white men of South Carolina loyalty accepted the invitation of Congress to aid in the formation of a new government, the record of the six years following the establishment of the institution might have made one of the brightest pages in the history of the state, but they refused. They either sulked or actively opposed every effort to accomplish a reconstruction that did not recognize the old fetish of state rights and restrict the Afro-American to social mobility. The government they could easily have won and retained the confidence of the Afro-American, but by harsh, cruel and contemptuous treatment they taught him to fear and distrust them. Easily and naturally, very many of the freedmen adopted the standard of political morality set for them by the government, and scrupulous white men who entered the political field. The state government SSAUL ing, under the protonse of giving the child some fruit, took her to a nearby body of woods, where he accomplished his object. The child was found later in an unconscious condition and sufferig. he police and the sheriff were notified and a search for the guilty party began. He was found about 11 o'clock lying asleep in an old mill building 200 yards from where, the deed was committed. Gunnelis was arrested and placed in the county jail.—Special Dispatch to Atlanta Constitution. DEVILISH DAVEY Niagara Falls, N. V., Sept. 12—W. H. Davey, a well-known business man, was arrested tonight on a charge of attempting assault on Elise Christie, Lizzie Sacht, Lizzie Maloney and other little girls between 8 and 13 years of age. Lizzie Maloney is the daughter of the Chief of Police. Charged With Serious Grin Alexandria, La., Sept. 21—Deputy Sheriff J. T. Yawn of Tioa brought to this city last night and placed in jail a white man named Frank Killins, who is charged by Mrs. Lillie Harrison, of Ball, La., with attempted criminal assault on the 18th of this month. Killins is a brother of Henry Killins, who was a temporary tary for this parish for murder. Special Dispatch to New Orleans Times-Democrat. CHARGED WITH ASSAULT. White Man Attempts Assault on 10- Year-Old White Girl. Watkinsville, Ga. Sept. 26.—James Edison, a white man 30 years old, charged with attempted assault on Mabel, the 10-year-old daughter of Sophia Branch of Bishop, had a committal trial here to-day and was released on a $200 bond.—Special Dispatch to Atlanta Journal. sions that ought to prove deeply interesting, if not profoundly shocking, to Senator Tillman have been suggested by leading modern anthropologists and ethnologists and has been directly as possible, and with due regard to the South Carolina statesman's nerves. The Alpine or broad-headed race is supposed to have entered Europe from Asia and have cut like a wedge through the primitive inhabitants of the region. The primitive races of Europe were long-headed, as appears from the skulls found in many prehistoric graves dating from the stone age. It is believed that the present Teutonic and Mediterranean races are the survival of that primitivism, and the evidence in two by the broad-heads from the East; and that the blondness of the Teutonic peoples, as well as their exceptional stature, which now make them appear so different from the Mediterranean race, has been deemed "having been acquired" according to Prof. Ripley, in the relative isolation of Scandinavia through the modifying influences of from 1888 to 1874 was composed of honest and dishonest men of both races. Some of the whites were from the North and others were of the South, and the latter were prevailed, and for a few years extravagant expenditure, bribery, corruption and robbery were the rule rather than the exception. During the four years' administration of Gov. R. K. Scott the funded debt increased, and the importance of importance had been begun or completed. The increase largely represented theft, profit current expenditures, and, as a consequence, oppressive taxation. The succeeding administration of Gov. F. J. Moses, Jr., is said to have been a native of South Carolina and was known to be a thief. His election was opposed by the Republican bolters, by Hon. Reuben Tomlinson, a Philadelphia Quaker and as honest a man as such. He was a native of Quakerism. Here was another opportunity for the native whites to help redeem the state, but such their hatred of the Republican carpet bagger that they openly said they "preferred a native thief to an honest Yankee." Tomlinson received 25,000 In 1873, during the Moses administration, the public funded debt, amounting to $17,445,000, was divided into two parts; $11,480,000, called valid, was scaled 50 per cent upon the ground of a legal obligation to have "put on the market without any authority of law and to be 'absolutely null and void.' Apparently, public sentiment, without regard to race or party, approved this measure, is unnecessary to give an account here of the corruption under what was known as Afro-American rule down to 1874 inclusive. As has been shown, the whites had a majority in the Senate and a large majority in the house. The corruption was shared by whites and blacks. The whites, yet not blacks, were the more guilty. it is manifestly unfair to ascribe this political degradation to Afro-American suffrage and not to admit that white suffrage was fully as responsible. In my judgment it was in part due to the disloyal failure to vote in the 1873 election. The state that enabled scoundrels to obtain political control for a time and FOR BRUTAL CRIMES. Russell Bolles Is Being Taken from Westminster, B. C., to Denver Jennifer B. White, to Russell Bell who is being brought from Westminster, B. C., to stand trial in Denver for the murder of Harold Fridborn, was a huckster in this city when the ermes of which he stands accented on his life. On the evening of Dec. 31, 1901, Florence Fridborn, then 16 years old, went to a pond in North Denver to skate, accompanied by her brother Jennifer B. White, on their skies they were approached by a man, who pretended to search the boy's clothes for money and then turned to assault the girl. Harold, who was in the knocked down car, was told to the aid of his sister, who was fighting desperately. Thereupon the man struck the boy on the head with an axe, the blow killing him. The murderer then brutally assaults the girl beside her dead brother. Bolles left the city within a month after the crime was committed. After long search he was arrested at Westminster, B. C., through the efforts of Town Marshal Willis, of Sullivan, Ind., who accompanied him. Bolles was Westminster, where she yesterday positively identified the prisoner as her assailant and her brother's murder. A special from Vancouver says that Bolles bears a scar on his thumb where Miss Fridborn says she bit him when he assaulted her. In British Columbia the male was Bolles. Willis positively identified him as Bolles, whom he had known all his life. YOUNG GIRL ASSAULTED. Unknown Man Attacks Daughter of Buffalo Jones at Yellowstone. Helena, Mont. Sept. 23. A report just received from Yellowstone Park says that the 14-year-old daughter of environment and artificial selection." The more Tillmann part of the question is now presented: Where did those primitive long-skilled inhabitants of Europe, who gave to us out of their ancestry, ever long-skilled "Anglo-Saxons," come from? What was their ancestry? The answer is that probably they came from Africa. Follow the path of the long heads, and it will take you down the Iberian peninsula, where the ancestry of the land of the black races, who are overwhelmingly long-skilled. Senator Tillman shall not escape us, and, consequently, it is desirable to quote directly our authority for the claim that as an "Anglo-Saxon" he is directly descended from the German nation whose attention is directed to the chapter on European origins in Prof. Kipley's "The Races of Europe," and particularly to the following passages: "It would seem as if if the earliest race in Europe must have been very ancient." "The European aborigines of the stone are not Mongoloid like the to practice fraud only less disgraceful to our American civilization than the slave-driver's whip and the human auction block that had so recently been abolished. Daniel H. Chamberlain succeeded Moses as governor in December, 1874. He was a Republican carpet bagger, and had held the office of attorney, and was a member of the government. With the advent of Gov. Chamberlain a new legislature was elected. The Democratic vote was much larger than at any previous election. The House had 124 members, the Senate had 116, the Democrats, were white, and 61 were Afro-Americans, the latter all Republicans; a white majority of two. The Senate had 33 members. Of these 17, including 11 Democrats, were whites and 16 were blacks. Of the remaining of one. Thus, it will be seen that the two races were about equally represented in both branches. In point of intelligence and ability the Afro-American leaders were quite equal and often party. Gov. Chamberlain was a man of splendid ability, of absolute integrity and great resolution. In his inaugural address, referring to the reform efforts of his party, in particular campaign, he appealed to the Legislature to redeem them and promised his hearty co-operation. From the very beginning and down to the end of his administration, the corrupt wing of his party posed him, but it was generally defeated, sometimes by his use of the veto power, and at others by the majority votes of the Legislature. During his tenure, the party warmly indored by the entire Democratic press of the state. The Charleston News and Courier, which then had a larger circulation and greater or influence than perhaps all of the other newspapers, was his especial champion. In the month of July, 1876, it published a series of very long articles, ten in number, in which, in glowing terms, it named specifically the many reforms that had been proposed. The list was, in part, as follows: The contingent funds of the executive department, legislative expenses, legislative contingent expenses, cost of services, officers, tax levy for the current year, Buffalo Jones was assaulted by an unknown man at Mammoth Hot springs. "Buffalo" Jones is the caretaker of government bison in the park. He left the camp when he went to attend the herd of buffalo. Upon returning home he he found his daughter in an unconscious condition, as the result of severe treatment at the hands of an unknown man, who had attempted to assault her. She was attended by Fort Worth police. It is believed that when she regains consciousness she will be able to give some description of her assailant. On the discovery of the crime, both troops of cavalry were called out, and made a thorough search of the entire surrounding country. Two men were found at the resting place, who is direct evidence connecting them with the crime. PENSACOLA. Serious Charge against Stevedore. Serious charge against Pensacola, Fla., Sept. 22—James Watson, a woman who has hauteforce an excellent reputation, was arrested early this morning by Sherif Van Pelt on the charge of having committed criminal assault on Mrs. Sam Texas, a white woman, residing in the western portion of the city. The alleged crime is said to have been committed late Sunday afternoon, when Mrs. Texas was at her home. Spencer was held pending a trial in the courtroom with take place this week. The affidavit against Spencer was made by Mrs. Texas.—Special to New Orleans Piscayne. Arson, Insult and Robbery. Birmingham, Ala. Sept. 24—Mrs. W. M. Blackwelder's residence has been destroyed by fire. She declares that an unknown white robber set fire to the house after robbing it and insulting her. Lapps after all, but the exact opposite. In every detail they resembled rather the dolichocephalic (long-headed) Negroes of Africa." (Page 463). The increasing long-headedness and extremaity of the African race led us * ** to derive it from some type parent to that of the African Negro." (Page 474). "It is certain that, after the partial occupation of western Europe by a dolichocephalic Africanoid type in the dolichocephalic population, the headed race of decidedly Africanities took place." (Page 470). There are numerous indications today that the primitive inhabitants of Europe were Africans. Thus in Sardinia, which has been ethnologically different from the rest of the population betrays to-day strongly African characteristics, such as the flattened nose and thick lips. It is an old saying that Africa begins with the Pyrenees; and Prof. Ripley asserts that the inhabitants of the Spanish mainland are "rarely important anthropological respects with the peoples inhabiting Africa north of the Sahara from the red (ta $2.40 PER YEAR. IFIED. etc., etc., have been reduced. In the expenditure of contingent funds accountability and publicity have been secrect. The issue of the pardoning power has been corrected. The character of the officers of the government appointed by the executive has been improved. The tax laws have been amended so as to secure substantial uniformity and equality in the assessment of property for taxation. The settlement of the public debt has been maintained unchanged, and taken with the public creditor, so far as dependent upon the executive and legislative action, has been fully kept. Gov. Chamberlain richly deserved all the praise awarded him. The Legislature, however, was deserved by the corrupt and demagogical as any of its predecessors." This charge cannot be sustained. Unquestionably the legislative leaders of the corrupt wing of the Republican scrupulous men, and had a powerful influence over the rank and file. This was especially true of some of the Aro-American leaders, but by the confession of the News and Courier "back door" of the Democratic Democrats and stanch Republicans. In its list of the misdeeds of this Legislature there is not one charge of robbery. Most of them were deeds of omission rather than commissioning a crime in a party sense worse than crimes." Under the intelligent, honest and courageous leadership of Gov. Chamberlain the political atmosphere of South Carolina was fast being cleared. The governor, a former American suffrage was being rapidly vindicated. The Bourbon or "straight-out" section of the Democratic party was confounded by the prospect of a successful and prosperous administration of political affairs by the Republican party, composed as it was so largely of Afro-American voters, and popular indignation over the appointment by the Legislature to judicial office of two very irrelevant men, one an Afro-American named Whipper, and the other, ex-Gov. Moses (they never became judges, for the Governor refused to sign their commissions), it determined to reorganize the party and OMEN. WHITE BRUTE. Outrages Afro-American Girl But Escapes Moh and Gallows. Columbia, S. C., Sept. 25—A few days ago an 'Arto-American girl was brutally assaulted near Greenville by Robert T. Gunnells, who has just returned from three years service as a soldier in the Philippines. The assault was committed near Greenville. He was arrested and a jury found him guilty of attempted rape only. The penalty for this is imprisonment for not more than ten years. When he was arrested the judge told him to abide by the sheriff got him out of the county. GIRL DYING FROM ASSAULT Brutally Treated by Claude Tichnell at Little Falls, WI Morgantown, W. Va—Justice of the Peace Joliffe, of Little Falls, this county, reported to the county constabulary that Miss Elizabeth Austen, of Little Falls, had been assaulted in a most horrible manner. She is lying at the point of death at the home of Capt. Eldridge Austen, her father. The officers at once started in pursuit of Claude Tichnel, who is accused of killing a woman in the crime. She says Tichnel, while intoxicated, seized her in a woods near her home, and accomplished his purpose after a desperate struggle. BRUTAL DEED OF WHITE MEN. Katie Cowan, Aged 14, Drugged and Abused by Drinking Party. Katie Cowan in her statement says she was taken to a dance on Stewart street Saturday night by Lon Norris, and when he was escorting her home they sent her to a crowd of men who were drinking whisky from a bottle. The men made her drink until she was drunk or nearly so and then assaulted her—Local Item in Atlanta Constitution. Continued on Second Page. LMAN. to the Atlantic." But it is not necessary to go farther. Having shown, on scientific authority, that the Mediterranean and Teutonic races are probably descended from an early African-old type, we have carried the position that Stewart Williams himself if he is "Anglo-Saxon," is in a real sense, descended in no inconsiderable degree from the "nigger." The Senator is in error, finally, insaying that "God made a Negro inferior to a white man." What God did was to make a man; the various kinds of men have been the product of natural, earthly conditions. It has so happened that the man who entered the developed world in Africa, the man left in Africa, particularly that part of tropical Africa isolated from the rest of the world by the desert of Sahara and the oceans. A scientific writer named Marshall has the truth in his statement that "the white man and the Negro have been differentiation of selection and environment." Give the black race a chance, Mr. Tillman, and it will leap forward. Springfield Republican. Defective Page i i ite ee “or SRS Savon 7 Hye APOE BH eB A, FANON” a ee Saga Ma MY » ee EEF Aeneas 7 THE APPEAL, <AMUATIOHAL AFRO-AMERIGAN NEWSPAPER FonusmeD WEEEGY. BY ADAMS BROS. EDITORS AND PUBLISHERS 1 Bath St St Path ng soe STU TAROUALE at “Saint Paul, Minneapolis, Chlcaro, “washington, Louisville, St.Louls. ST. [ AUL OFFICE, ‘No. 110 Union Blk. 4th & Cedar, 7 AGAMS, Publishes. MINNEAPOLIS OFFICE, Guaranty Loan Bldg. Room 1020 HARVEY B. BURK, Manager. CHICAGO OFFICE, 823-5 Dearborn St., Suite 310, C.F. ADAMS, Manager. LOUISVILLE OFFICE, ‘No. 312 W. Jefferson St. Room 3 LILLIAN L. MOPRIS, Manager. ST. LOUIS OFFICE, No. 1002 Franklin Avenue. ‘J. H. HARRISON, Manager. —————————————— TERMS. STRICTLY IH ADVANCE: SBINGLE COPY, ONE YEAR. | -...-..--.$2.08 Siem steps rot ur vee 3 Sa eee encarta fe Se ec oie a ee ae agi, wets her carts tte, oP ihe Sete a Near Oras eure lie ot Ba Oat Sesto ac ie “Ca oe Se Se aa seatraere, ot ees ra sergeant ee te Ewer eae ee neces lg and eth gies les ee Ea ta ee etoe sour aaa ee Pe rotenone a sung cs ee ees" es ieee chao shee Stee sz ln, nave eee ie sue cia dorasteenne Fic gennics musta sneer mit pertonentiation co er gure oh aia seat oan gore fs: ae te stron hi wae Pearle Serengeti or oom seein carps ce pease canny Repro Sar Seeonmy ne ine eae from thatdate, and we will cheerfully for- Been Soom: carte conenetans cao a Gee ee eee Sonne Headly Was sae Seats eg Merce Bis ie caries ie eae eae es Soe el ce a? ee aan aaa Wt eee re anes ene ere a ney eaters eagle id ae Mal Sra tol c. sega Sep ey oa aaa seas tenieraew pars Sermon for publenign Bate AGENTS WANTED. ‘THE APPEAL wants good rellable ‘agents to canvass for subscribers at points not already covered. Write dor our extraordiaary inducements. ‘Address, THE APPEAL, 4p East 4th St, St. Paul, Mam 3 Uwe ask Thee, Lord, that Thea 9 STC ANSTI araa the eal S Sa ere athe sf 2 Santas salary aneemee S Berg stes biases toc the Suet mek,” malas ee atoms 3 RSSUAS ER NM tte task ers Tinieg the Since Sieve ot tecesy 2 “hot fcom the ahacklesoftron, 2 eset oattesRsckias of prele! 3 SHAtita Siva the bso race 2 HSER Save'thewhiteman 3 Gamble tupereltions contemen s 2 RPA REE tals 3 Z love, ‘fis followmen framed in 5 feeds tenitmagen nS + Crayer by Rees Newall Dwight 3 or RES, Ma Seyosth 3 UGE Sm “SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1908. ‘A DAMNABLE CONSPIRACY. The pages of history: fail to. show “a more horrible scheme than the at tempts made in recent years by a num: der of Cattcasians all over the countrs to prove to the world that the Atro ‘Americans are a race of rapists. ‘There is every reason to belleve that tt Is @ carefully concocted plan tc make Afro-Americans appear a a 10 ‘of brates by charging them with ‘crimes of which they are often not ‘guilty. ‘That members of the race commit assaults on women cannot-be dented, ‘but the percentage of crimes against ‘women is greater for the Caucasian than for the Afro-American. Tt must ‘be remembered that many black ‘mon ‘who are charged with asault with ‘Intent to commit rape are really guilty a nothing moro than, simplg’ assault ‘certain sections of the country Finsolent”. Negroes have / been: ac: Se eer ae hed. In many cases white men have black- ened their faces, assaulted women and then poor black men have been charged with the crime and have been murdered by mobs. The Chicago Inter-Ocean has shown by, the court records that white men Im’ Chicago, last year, committed twice as many rapes as were charged to the entire Afro-American race. There are 1,038 conviets in Sing-Sing prison, New York. Of these 61 whites td 2 Afro-Americans were sentenced for rape; that Is 6 per cent of the whies and but 1 per cent ot the Aivo-Americans were guilty of assaults on women. Senator McEnery of Louisiana said recently in the Independent that “few white men are gullty of rape.” The attention of the senator and others. ot hhis race who have misrepresented the ‘Afro-American is called to the first page of this Issue of THE APPEAL. ‘The matter presented ought to prove instructive reading. The items aré taken from the dally press and wheré no eredit is given.they are associated press despatehes. ‘The headlines ar¢ About the same as they were printed in the New Orleans Times-Democrat New Orleans Picayune, St. Loui Globe Democrat, Atlanta Journal and other papers, There was no attemp' to give the stories "scare heads” a: is almost invariably the case wher an Afro-American is charged wit} crime. ‘Recently in Minneapolis a black mat was accused of abducting a whit girl, and although physicians testifie that the girl had not been outrage there was a great hue and cry abou the matter. ‘The black man Is nov serving a twenty-five year sentenc for his crime. The next week a whit. man actually raped a girl of thirtee years, yet the papers scarcely notice: the ease and there was no excitemen whatever, and the incident is abou forgotten. ‘The worst story in the list of crime committed by Caucasian brutes come from North Carolina, where a whit man has been sentenced to death fo raping his own nine-year-old daughter ‘The evidence presented proves tha white men are guilty of crimes agains women and children and during th past month they have been especiall | detive in the nefarious work. During the slave holders’ rebellio black slaves guarded the wives an children of the men who were figh ing to rivet their chains more firmly yet there is no record that a whit Woman or child was ever assaulted. "The Afro-American is neither ange nor devil; he is a plain human bein Just like the Caucasian; he has hi virtues and his vices just like th Caucasian he 1s no worse, no bette than his white brother, though a rec ord of all the assaults in the countr would show that white men commi more offenses proportionately agains jvomen than black men are guilty of ‘ue HAS MADE GOOD. Se ee eee ares aca western copperhead paper says in a long editorial: “The Negro Must Make Good” and the howl has been taken up'by the Southern press. Ta the darkest hour of the slavehold: fers" rebellion 200,000 Afro-Americans feame to. the assistance of Northern farms ard after saving the Nation pro ceeded to “make good.” Tgnorant, they took up the spelling book and in 35 years the percentage of illiteracy’ had dropped from 95 yer cent. to 48 per cent, ‘That's making ‘00d! ‘Without property of any kind the race began to accumulate and in one generation the assessed value of per- Sonal and real property as shown by Statistics had mounted to $1,000,000, 000, Isr't that making good? Cotton is still king and two-thirds of all the cotton raised in the world fs produced by the black labor of the South, That's making good! ‘One of the assistant librariansgin the Library of Congress after years of investigation finds that Afro-Amer feané are the authors of more than 2100 books and if those written by mien of “colored” blood in other coun tries were included, the number would reach atleast 2,600, It is evident that the Afro-American author has made good. Betore the war, there were not hall ‘a dozen Afro-American surgeons and physicians even among the free Afro Americans of the North; now there fare thousands commanding incomes ‘of from $1,000 to $10,000 per annum. One of these a surgeon who lives i Chicago was the first to sew up the heart of a living man. ‘The Afro ‘American surgeon and physician has made good. ‘An Afro-American artist has paint ed pictures so well that several o! his productions have been purchased by the French government and nov hang in the Louvre. That's making good. ‘When a message comes over the telephone, its transmission is facil tated by an Improvement on the orig inal Bell recelver, invented by a pure Negro. Isn't that making good? ‘The lightning express comes thun aering- by, drawn by @ powerful loco motive whose working parts are I Dricated by an oll cup invented by @ black man, ‘That's making good. ‘An "Afro-American lawyer who makes $20,000 per year is a rara avis, Dut he exists. ‘There are no others in his class but hundreds of the race are practicing law making fair in- comes and “making good.” ‘thirty thousand Afro-Americans are teaching in the separate schools of the South and about a thousand in the mixed schools of the North. ‘They are all making g00d. ‘The Afro-Americans of Richmond, Virginia have more than $1,000,000 de posited in the four banks in that clty Owned and controlied by Afro-Amerl cans, and there are banks controlled by the race in other cities. ‘The Afro: ‘American banker is making good. “The 400 newspapers and periodicals issued by Afro-Americans have a com- bined circulation of more than, 1,000. 000 copies. ‘The Afro-American ‘pub- Uisher 1s helping the race to: “make ‘g000.” Cotton mills, factories and’ indus- tries owned by Afro-Americans and operated by men of the race, are mak- ing wealth for the proprietors and the workers and “making 00d.” Yn every evocation busiess and profession in the country. the Afro: American has his part and he ts “mak- ing 5008.” "tho Afro-American has already’ ee sabe: et MR: GWINNETT, OF-CHIGAGO: ince eg aru Sn odin de NERO eater 9 Betis Sens tse a oo a 3 Si Ee Sata Bon ht Geeta he Baeble nea Wat i AE AS eth ne tet Sergi ee Se eae Ose Sore ead tae Sey a os than. to permit Suen. assgoiation. | Thee THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER) Ne et eee eV auicen eae Romar oc atauche pb Peach Spe 2 alos data at Ee ortetstrts thd ie seks Sata Reuter eS SLL a pel es Botts lle anette ate Ent the dime is coming wen there Wil be eerie et aati aceite ‘he above i a apelin ofthe 7 onthe racs question given” oti 2h Drool of ang sntine Gusts PUI e American peopl FE Soy ven was eign mad ont of te Sole iam “Nhros alter Ott Seta sepeteating "Te A BaP went We Rate hte Washington sad pqured for at Graete back ase che bat Ge Sia Caso pormon by ta Ske SE atthe holt er nad oo THOS dingleSnoeth of september ae Mate hes ot apne rma Bow Cheng city erect To i Say 3508 etl: Gdinnt eldest Cen etietendeny sow comet wh Maled the ey since Su bu TH TSBOUAL'G Yee ‘cole hl [McPhee ‘one eaamed by an |soy SP tat tk ateton i fore | £2 hase ace antago | ite et persone in cage isu sts the fa | see ated co Sie ewnna | SU trie erent em to menace the race harmony whic! | Sow preva ee avg SSE SE RIBUNE. ‘There can be no doubt that ‘Hay- mond,” the Chicago Tribune corre: ‘spondent, who has been writing letters from the South on the “race problem." has told some truth, but he has not told the whole truth, In the first place he was not the proper person to send on such a mis sion, for his references to “darkles,’ "saddle colored darkies” and the “tone” of his writings prove conelt sively that he entered upon his work with a prejudice against one side o the problem’ (2) he is endeavoring td solve. Raymond's pictures have been of the ‘most degraded class of the race in the black belt. He made no attempt td ‘give to the world the story of the in Gependent farmers, the thrifty mechan fes, the well-to-do business and. pro. fessional men of the race. Raymond ‘was in Charleston but he failed to set the many beautiful homes, nicely fur nished, presided over by educated and refined mothers—homes in which th¢ “problem” has already been solved. In Atlanta, Raymond interviewed Prof Du Bois, but he was described as au ‘intellectual abnormality,” when as matter of fact there are in the South hundreds, yes thousands, of Afro ‘Americans who will measure well with Prof, Du Bois in education and cul ture. Like the average Caucasian |"Raymond” regards Washington, Du Bols, Council and a few others as peo ple apart from the masses, and so they ‘are, but there are thousands of Afro ‘American teachers, preachers, doctors lawyers and plain men of business wh¢ fare equal to the leaders in general in telligence, education and culture. ‘Some of Raymond's statements ar¢ ridiculous, for instance, he wrote: "Ror every Booker Washington ther¢ are 500,000 debased Negroes.” Ac cording’ to that, as there are about {10,000,000 Afro-Americans in the coun try, only, 20 are nét debased. “Raymiond” ought to cut out the word “darky” and look up a few moré of the Intelligent, well-to-do Afro americans of the South. MR. NANCE OF ATLANTA. ‘Wade H. Nance, who claimed to be a leading merchant of Atlanta, Ga. went to the police headquarters at Washington, D. C., recently with a sensational story “of having been @rugged and robbed of $80 in money, a watch which was an heirloom, and 3 diamond ring worth $250. Of course fhe said the robbery was committed by fa Negro, After having been fleeced. he said he was placed on a train and ejected in an unconscious condition at Alexandria, @x., across the river from Washington, where he was taken to a hospital. It now turns out that Wade was 6 plain ar. Detectives wero assigned to the case, and soon learned that Nance came with a woman named Mrs. San derson, and there was reason to be Meve that If Nance had any money ‘or property, the woman had taken i from him for safekeeping while he was drinking, The chief of police therefore wired to AtJanta making in quiries about the woman. A reply [came saying there was absolutely noth. ing in Nance’s story. When Mrs. San derson left him he had nothing of value but his ticket to Atlanta and never had a diamond ring. ‘Nance still had his ticket and when he found the police were going to in vestigate his story he quietly took his departure. “The story has a lesson. When Nance told his lie the papers came out with black head lines—one paper had it: NEGRO DRUGS ATLANTA MAN. [Prominent Atlanta Merchant Robbed of His Cash and Diamond Ring by Vinkt Cotered Nenie. It is but one of many cases in which the’ senvational papers of the countrs injure ail Afro-Americans by printing in flaming headiines accounts of erimes wnich were never committed. Nance ip not ‘8 prominent. merchant. but a mais anu Gealer on Decatur street, the Toafing place of the toughest characters the elty affords, ‘The Louisyilie Gourfer-Journal in an editorial on “The Negro in the North,” says: “In what city in the North is fthere any avenue of employment ex- cept of the menial kind? There ts Stil a. iimited service for them as cooks, walters in hotels or in apart. ment ‘elevators. But no one can find fa Nesro plying a trowel, a plane or a handsaw, driving @ pubile vehicle br Dursting a trade higher than that of Whitewasher. They could not attempt it with safety to thelr lives.” Now that’s amusing. As a matter of fact [Afro-Americans are working at all the trades inthe country and {many} leases are members of the labor untons.| ‘There are hundreds of wnfon laborers| among the Afro-Americans of Chicaso| and ‘numbers get employment as Slork®, Blenographors, typswriters and| other, histor ‘occupations, trom which hey would be barred in the South. ‘The Afro-American lawyers, doctors| and dentists of Chicago number, more| ian’ one hundred, nd the bull of their practice fs among, white, people. One lawyer as an Income of $20,000] perannum: a physician makes not les fa #10,00, and» dentist, who lected | P unGa GHAGAT asedeine tion, of which all the 1,200 members, ‘but ey ar "white, and whose clientage ‘1s almost wholly confined to the most aristocratic Caucagians, (1s credited ‘with an annual Iacofae of $9,000. These three men represaie ihe top notch tn ‘Afro-American. professional incomes, ‘but hundreds of othr men of the race are practicing thelf, professions, mak- ing from $1,000 to 45,000, and they are not in danger of tteir lives, either. award W. Carmack, the junior senator rom’ Tennessee threatens to {ny his hand. at solving the so-called [Negro problem,” by offering ‘a, bill fm the senate asking the repeat of the fifteenth amendment to the federal constitution. ‘The St. Paul Globe (Dem.) saya: "One of the greatest eivil wars the world has ever known resulted in the passing of the amend- ment. With a bill Senator Carmack hopes to wipe It off the constitution, 2°78" e° And doubtless: the fifteenth amendment will remain on the con- stitution since it was written there in the blood of the North. * * * Sen: ‘ator Carmack and the Southern Dem ccracy had better give it another try ipefore they ask Uncle Sam to gc back on his word. For this bad habit of going back on his. word fe one that Unele' Sam has never acquired and you cannot teach an old dog new fricks. Les us hope that Mr. Car tuack: will do with his bill what tet Bo Peop's sheep ld with their tails Reet behicd Sia? While, the white people generally Im this “land of the free and home of the brave” seem to have gone stark, staring mad on thelr Idea of draw: ing the color line, it is quite refresh ing to note the action ofgthe Presb. terlan church on that .Abject. The committee on territorial limits of pres byterles appointed by the last gen eral assembly has decided that the word “Negro”. will not be used as a qualification of any.of the church laws or regulations. By this action the 15,000 Afro-American members of the denomination will not be set apart as a separate organization. This is the proper sort of Christian spirit which should prevail among CHRIST. TANS of. all denominations, for o one blood God created all mankind. “Then Peter opened his mouth and said, of-a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons: But in every nation he that feareth Him, and Worketh righteousness, is accepted wih Him” Acts, X34, 35. ‘The Nashville Americans says: ‘There will be no repeal of the Fit teenth Amendment, and if its repeal were accomplished ‘a reduction of the South's representation would follow But there are many Democrats wh¢ hold that even that “would not be toc ‘great a price for the South to pay for the elimination of the Negro as a po jlitieal factor.” Or in other words many Southerners would be willing t¢ give up some of their power in Con Eress it the Afro-American could b¢ Feduced to slavery, for that’s just what the repeal of the Fifteentt ‘Amendment would mean. All thinking persons look at_ me acportation. proposition of John Tem fia Graves from about the same foct Rie Goine of view as did. Bushyltead, tfamous {adian ehiet, who while vis fing Washington years ago, was asked Ait Wo thoughtot the same scheme Whiten was then fathered. by Senator Morgan. viteate ght thing to do, Zauthe.‘seng_all the Negroes. back te rnica, where they belong, and the white folks to Burope, where they Belong. “ana leave Ameriea. for che red mien to whom it properly belongs.” ‘The Roman Gatholies of the country ought to feel Kindly toward the Afro aaeatican, for two Negroes have oceu pled’ the ‘papal throne. Pope Victor Pho reigned in A. D. 190 (Antiquates RRestoteal by Rev. Wm, Cave, D. D. Pop 6, distinguished himselt Tor zeal'in an effort to effect eccles: Seulcal_ uniformity In the matter ol Sgepratng. Baster. The 2d Pope Sfechiades’ was also an afriean (Cave tives Vou 1, p30, chairman Dick of the Oblo State Republican Committee “hit the, nail Petey on tke head in his. letter Gian Balen of the Democratic Gets "Committes when he sald. that: Sut? signne’s party. has ut one se of principles, while Bir. Clarke's party fade vast assortment of principles, teseding the entire gamut trom doe ine tor dogma-Democratle, Populis SHIRG 10 GOCE emamatla.” The New Orleans eames any says: OA’ Negro may commit 333 SAPS trom pout larceny to ermina SEhuue on murder without lotng cast Seong ie fellow” Diacks.” "This Amore ander and the man who penned pave tw that he was tying. "Tho good ea macricane—and hey, oWtaumbe ‘the bad by a large majority—have no Sompathy for erimiaals ‘This week the mighty city of Chi cart'har bon pelobrating ita one hur ceSgeh"tanivarsary, but ae a matte are “tne Grek ettler was, a Set Sega! Neste, Jean Baptiate Pola fo’ seibe, who ioestea i107? wher Ghreato sow stands. Cieago now, ha Shoodo0 uuanitante and. the “Afro ano ee, onlgents own property ae Soave at 4200.00. it te sald Ghat there Iv ome discus sion over the question of admitting Aio-Amerlcam soldiers to the federal aitiar home: to be opened. at John Son Clty; en, im November. its a 307 Go whcb ougdt not be-dlscussed giettien Ingood exugh to Tak is life for his country he ought not Re old Woe he tho vieign of hellish prejudices, Seventylive por cont of the world’s cova raed, inthe, South and seein ninety per cont of the actual iiSor a proagetng, the cotton 1s per formed by" Afro-Americans. In otter wore. the “lagy niggers” a0 thoy are Tiled by men or the bontullman stripe Sealy produce tworthlrds ofall the cot ton raised on the earth. President Roosevelt has put a quice tus to. the story. that he considered the Washington public schools ‘a. fal jure” by. giving the system the bigh- ‘oot praise. ar American father can five tHe bas entered his. young: Ext‘ con Quintin in the Force school senere his brother Arehlo. was a pupil ast your ‘The Charleston News. and Courier continues to how! about the “crime against civilization,” “the greatest mls- fake of modern, times,” etectera. ad nauseam, ‘The attention, of the. et teamed News and Cousot Is called to the article on our first page, “Afro- American Suffrage Justified.” ——— Marriage brokers are having no ‘robe “‘naion hilg mone, s owilling to 1 Choc: few. girl, cekh one ot whom ig to Defective Page Tecoive $20 acres of be app acy tn caak from ‘Whe United (States treas- ‘ury. Money breaks the color line. ip he Socialis of Loulslae resent. ly held thelr state conventida in New, Orleans. In thelr platform |absolute equality for all men Is deglared & fundamental principle, but further on they: demand @ complete separation of the whites and the blacks. Bishop Candler in bis recent de- nunelation of mob law, referred to the “cheap talk" of Tillman, Graves et al. Judging by the quality of the shift for which these gentlemen (2) are paid 3100 per talk It sems to us tt iy rather high priced. ‘The Cear of Russia sayg that the yar elt against them; some of] the South: ern Caucasians who hate / Afro-Amer- {cans claim that the race fs respons!- Die for the hatred which blackens thelr souls. i Col, Youngblood of Alabama says that 90 per cent. of the Republicans of the South are opposed to Roose- |velt. ‘The statement ts absurd. A Tow ily whites” are. qpposed to the President but they cut ito foe. Although the United States mints- ter to Santo Domingo, the Hon. Alex- ander Powell, is an Afro-American, he seems to be representing this coun- ity in a very sceeptable manner. We suppose he is anothér “freak.” ‘The evidence at the trial of the Dan- ville Iynchers showed that five of the ‘mob were wife bedters, while they claimed through thefr acts to be pro- tacking tha sanreduebe of womanhood. ‘The Boston Trangeript calls Bishop ‘Turner a ‘Mistaken ffoses,” and that’s what any man is/who attempts to Tead away from thgir native land any class of American (itizens. Representative Rpdenberg of Hast Saint Louis, Minolf, says that there is a strong desire if Ilinois and West for the nominatiox and election of President Roosevel| ‘There are bad Afro-Americans as well as bad Caucdsians, but it is monstrous injustice to hold an entire people responsible for the misdoings of individuals. Bishop Brown, the latest apologist for mob murders, should read Emer- son, To Brown we say: ‘Go put your creed into your deed Nor" spenke with double tongue. ‘The Fifteenth Amendment was written in the Constitution with the blood of Northern patriots white and black. It will never be repealed. ‘The suffrage cases brought by the Afro-Americans of Virginia will come before the supreme court of the Unit: ed States this month. Harry Loomis Nelson writes that the great Northwest is enthusiastic: ally for Theodore Roosevelt for Pres- Ident in 1904, Race prejudice must go, and go it will when the American people con- elude to accept true Christianity. MYSTERIOUS ASSAULT. Made Upon a White Woman—Attempt sense Spurn Her House Aree. ‘About two weeks ago an altempt was made to burn the house of Me. Emma Mussel, clairvoyant. and for tune teller, 42 Seventh strect ‘South, Minneapolis. The fre was discovered and extingulshed before. it gained much headway. Last Saturday night, Shortly afterti otlock, a tall heavily butte man ‘with dark hair and’ mous tache entered her room and insisted on remaining. She attempted to leave the room, witen he grabbed her, threw hor on a’ couch and choked het. His foot Slipped and sho escaped from his fold and. succeeded “in_rousing” her lundiord and his wife fa another Toom. ‘The man caught her again and drag. ged ter back into her Toom, sweating fe would kill her, Finally” the three Sieceeded in getting the man out of the nouse and he caught 3fre. Russel and tried to drag her out of the house, He finally went away. ‘Sanday night snother man came and insisted upon seeing Mrs. Russell, He wes ‘small, slight and. amooth-faced. The landlord sent him away but he Rilurned: ond was again chased aay. The Wdentity and the motives. of the Fisliors sill remain a mystery. De Ueetives Rave been put upon the case. Oconomowoc, Wi-—George Dally shot nig. wite and brotheriniaw, set fire to his house and barn and Kept {he firemen at bay while they burned to ‘tue ground then committed suicide by ‘shooting Jetsey City, N. J—John D, B. Dun! var, aman with a wife and four chil dren, married Marlo Lovell and then Steuret” $10,000 from her mother on ee eee rsiias tak $04. South Northfield, Vt Mrs. Stephen siombler and het ehid wore, found Jean Sito nsenaity with ct te aksowa san, ‘he mother il Behe may reaver. Pitsburg, PROG W, Oarwaod age aiehve, wi ita. seiken Sno an hea ns mistress hideous, aged twenty, the filed impede Mankato, iign—Bmil Grams ctr nies Duta ofropente, haat S86 Te ethitwite te death. He. com milled hele oy’ banging afer Bs aren ta. Crosse, Wiese Rostow ang nits ces des fata oe et Sterne earch oor Seal BE HSS tempted to i th Eo : epgemer, Mich =a Mak dh aot ead hante,Wowera he former SaeCeaSa then italy sot nse align, N_G=—ROW, John Hyloek au ot loping wit mast Tomei ound to Have sk wives stanford, iy—0ol Adama under coat il as alter ot oe gat he ‘Ebb So" salah nn Sond Martnyile iad-—Sam Grady tn» ait lous chet Mina Core Beate See Sigler San Francisco, Cal—Edward de Ie prot ast art Jordan dead, then }shot Bimself perhaps fatally. Omaha.:Ncb—I. 5 Reet Mle bie sweetheart, Glenna Hynes, by shoot- ing her four times. =a] Loutsville, Ky — William Bullett ts {indleted for detaining = woman against preg x ‘THE ANGLO-SAXON. The Most Debased of All American ‘Citizens. ‘A-writer in the New York Sun, a Caucasian, says: “1. A study of Dr. Walter Latdlaw’s statistics and conclusions, as set forth In today's Sun editorial, leads ono more aurely and directly to the source of ‘the poisoning of the wells” of our moral and politieal life. than do Com- missioner Sargent’s statistics. ‘The criminal acts of husbands and wives, such as immorality, cruelty and others of a simflar character, which have to be proved before divorces are granted, and are doing so much to debase the nation, are almost entirely confined to the. Anglo-Saxon or native American element. "2, ‘That the Anglo-Saxon element is criminal and decadent ts proved by the fact that the race in this country is not reproducing itself. From an aver age of six children per family 10¢ years ago to none at all, or but on child, now, and that a regretable ac cident, Is proof positive of degrading and demoralizing practices. Seg, More than 95 per cent of the lawless criminal participants in lynch ings and burnings, North as well a South, are native American Anglo Saxons, “4, The debauchers of the franchis¢ (the purity of which your correspond ents desire to preserve), the men wh trade on the poverty, weakness and Ignorance of the poor man and temp! him with money to give his votes tc them, are, as a rule, of the Anglo Saxon race, and, being educated, they are the greater criminals against the moral well-being of the nation. "5, ‘Those of our people who bough! and sold human beings and lived by their labor were ail Anglo-Saxons. "6. Those of our people who sough to destroy our republic and its insti tutions were almost all Anglo-Saxons “Tin the cities of the country North and South, where the Anglo Saxon element constitutes the grea majority, there will be found the leas ‘material’ and moral progress and th least effort. Z “g, In the cities, North and South where the perceniage of the Anglo Saxon is smallest and European immi grants since the '50s the greatest there will be found the greatest progress material and moral. “9, The greatest. and most porsisten enemies of our religious and politica institutions who have done most tc pull them down are mainly of th Anglo-Saxon race, themselves relaps toe tata the ractionn of paganiam. WHITE BRUTE Rapes and Horribly Mistreats a Lit ‘tle Girl, Portland, Me., Sept. 21—The av- thorities have stcceeded in tracing to this city the man wanted In Gorham for criminal assault on the 9-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ham- bien Saturday. ‘The crime was horrible, almost be- yond belief, ‘The man met his vic Um on a lonely road, picked her up and carried her into the woods. He then poured whiskey down her throat until she was insensible. He was ‘with her all the afternoon, and then left her bleeding and senseless on the ground, The man came out to Gor- ham village from Portland on the car from Portland, arriving ¢here at noon, and Js believed to have returned early jn the evening. “He is-described -ax about 25 years old and fairly wel Gressed.—Special Dispatch to Boston ‘Herald. AFRO-AMERICAN SUFFRAGE JUS ; TIFIED. Shiinaiin en Pik Pa to make party nominations for the in- coming state government with the hope of recovering control of the state Fortunately for the Democrats, the presidential election was at hand, and they had the support of their northern allies, who regarded the electoral vote of South Carolina as necessary to the election of Samuel J. Tilden, the Dem: ceratle candidate for the Presidency. ‘They were vigorously opposed. by the conservative Democrats, led by the Charleston ‘News and Courier, who pleaded. with thom’ in Dehalf of ‘the honor and the best interests of the state not to oppose but to support Mr. Chiamberlain, whose nomination for a second term’ by the Republicans. was assured. ‘The Bourbon strength. com: dined with that of the national Demo: leratic party, overpowered the conser%- atives, and Wade Hampton was nom hated for the Governorehip. Unequal to the occasion, the conservatives, in- cluding the powerful News and Cour- ier, fell into line, and maintained thetr party allegiance. Race hatred, fraud, Brutality, terrorism and murder were revived.’ Alluding: to the campaign Gov. Chamberlain sald: “I denounce the conduct of the recent election on the part of our political opponents in this state as avast brutal outrage. Fraud, proscription, tntimidation In ali forms, violence—ranging ¢hrough ail ite degrees up to wanton murder— were its effective methods.” ‘Notwithstanding the infamous meth- ods of the Democrats, they were un- able to overcome entirely the majority ff 80,000, that under honest and peace- ful conditions belonged to the Repub ean party, and the state remained in the Republican column. The elec- toral. vote. went, to Rutherford B. Hayes, the Republican candidate for the presidency, and the gubernatorial yote to Gov. Chamberlain, ‘The Dem- oerats, however, claimed the election, and. the bitter contest that, followed resulted in a compromise. The elec- toral vote was given to Hayes. Gov. Chamberlain and the Republican par- ty of South Carolina. were betrayed and sacrificed, it is alleged, by Hayes through the mediation of his political friends. At all events, soon after the Inauguration of President Hayes, all federal support of Chamberlain ‘was withdrawn, He ‘was compelled "to yield, and Wade Hampton was duly recognized as Governor. It was under. stood that Hampton had 20,000 armed men behind him, eager to overthrow the Republican state government the moment it was deserted by the newly elected Republican President.* ‘Thus ended the second chapter of the history of Afro-American or. fm- partial suffrage in South Carolina. Its successes and its failures are to be eredited and charged allke to both races. ‘The Afro-American can well af- ford to chalienge a comparison of his record during that period, as & voter, a legislator, and an oflce-holder, with the record of the white man. It is true they shared the responsibility for fraud and corruption, and for bis part tn dt the Afro-ameriean must stand con demned. But the fraud. and corrup- tion, and theft, of which he was gullty, were mere poiltical finesse and pet larceny when compared with the colos. sal fraud and wholesale robbery that are now the rule rather than the ex: ception in so many of our state and, munteipal. governments. Judged 1 the same tests, ‘he was then and fs. Sell Atted for. the suffrage: es 1 OC ELEC Be Conca SCrreence of his incapacity for self-government. iahe South Caroling treeaman’s. Po: utdeal record, questionable as some’ ot Mice ores Tully as good as any one Hy ght to oxpect, and was better had Mune of many, white communities (aaa ie ‘certainly was 8_go0d. a2 today do white men of th alate dure inet fhe same ‘period and waa better tik that of the whites since then. The Kito-American used his politcal power tornentore South, Caroline to the Un- ton He annuliea bonds issted by the wehier Stato government to maintain the'repeltion. He abolished the whip: pine post and other ‘barbarous forms Br bunishment whieh. previous white State governmento. had. established. Ho eauced capital felonies from about twenty to two or three. He amended tnd Iaproved the marriage laws with feference to Atro-Amerieans passed by the white legislature in 1865 and 1868, His "amendments legalizing former Slave marriages were wise and import fant contributions to the ‘development find mafatonance of social order. fe ehanged or modified laws controlling artes by opening the jury box to thow ands of white mien as well as to Afro: ‘Americans. who had. been" debarred from it by property qualifications. He tmended laws under which town s0v- femments could borrow money at any fate of interest the cout saw ft to pay, “Some of the towns paid as high 2% ‘per cent. “He promibited. chem from borrowing at a greater rate of fheerest than sper cents He limited the control ot the state treasurer over the ‘state funds. by" passing an act making specie fevies and collections or taxes for specie appropriations. By Rislacts of Ananclal veform he (and. muitted to the Hampton government Ih Tit an indebtedness which was only $2 5001000" greater, than ‘the’ bonded dept of the state before the: Republi: can party took charge. of the tate government in 1868. During the few Sears of iis active political career ho But schoot-houses, “established. char- Hable institutions, bulle and: maintain: fel the penitentiary system, provided for te? edueation” of he” deat” ‘and dumb, rebutte the ‘Jals and court lonses, rebuilt the bridges and fees: tablished the ferries. ‘The whites iad tiways regarded the public school sys femvof the North with contempt, The Freedman introduced and established Re‘and it stands today Iiving testi ony to. is faith that. education. Is eceseary “to socal. welfare “AS Bogilator ‘he “never discriminated Aauinet either race or clase, Hts legis Tation, good or bad, applied equally to very ctizen of the slate., Whatever politcal power he ha he’ shared fair Friwith white men, and there is not a shred. of ovidence. that he ver ser. foualy ‘attompted’ to establish” Afro. ‘Amevican supremacy’ as is 80 frequent alleged § AU ihe close of 1875 Gov. Chamber: tain declared ‘bis, confidence not only inthe “eupaelty of the Atro-Anerk Can, but in his loyaty “Yo the demants tnd necessity gf good government in South Carolita’’ ‘The Afro-Americans fully: joatiNed, that confidence by. in: toning Gow. Chanoerlains reform ‘innit, and ty nofoatag a tlecting ini Governor fora second orm notvithstanding, the feree op- position of the corrupt wing of the Re Bubtican porty-ane-tho-brutay tnd cae erous earmpatge methods of tre Dom. erate, ‘The downfall of Chamberlain and the restoration of wiite supremacy sound td tte deatirknell of personal and po: Itical berty in South Carolina, Un. dar white supremacy the 19th Amend: tment of the constitution of the Unit: ti States Hes been nullified by aishon She ana trieky tepisation andthe Atta. Stmeriean has’ been ‘practlealy dis: dwenisod, regardless of character or quatification, “No white man today, 23 T'ynow, from peteonal experience, cau visi that state and, habitually: iseat the Afreatmeriean as an ordiuchy cit fen of the United States without mak ing himeelt lable to tasult and cow Brdiy avsautt, ‘Having vindicated Mis ent to the suffrage, the Afro-arcert fan for over thingy Sours has-earriet nan uequal struggle to maintain I agalnat force and fraud and race preitr diee. "The outlook at the moment | fark and” discouraging, but he. will iuecph tp. the ens is rapid ‘ad ianee in the develoripet of characte Ja bis acquisition of a the quailies GEA Conde to good itzensalp area guarantee of hietuitinate success. Ex Svelve white eulfrase ts doomed, I must fall" before the demand. for Higher and. more humane civilization How much lower down it will drag the Hate before Ie 1s relegated to the list of polltcal and ‘octal talaulties, who an tell te placed James Hitman fn tne second offee of the state, from fhich, he has recently. resigned. be- causa he silt to death aa unermed be Utical opponent in the open street. It has sent to the United States ‘Senate fe poltical boss of the state, an un- Serupulous and’ brutal politician, the Honorable Benjamin’ Re Titman. ‘ne would think tee’ lowest depth nad already been reached Richard P. Hallowell. the tlstakes ade Uy the wives ald Rae Mota mage Putte, Rate he aston Tena ceenall otter, wad ae ME ae Seas eat Aimee te Heater antes ero tah Sppteton’h Anaad American Cyelopuedl eomagbin eins Reng te eos he freveding statistic, tctuding thre oats aati aetna Sher Se SERN oe” aeeomadTacio 52. “some af tee er ft te i tec oe a arte ner elites Othe" bic ifthe Ot South Setar ene acted AoE RT ES ote Shaeerinints Sangin we ssh Carolina, pp, 6 and 6. Mr, Allen reports Good Morning! Have You Got Your Buck's Range and Heater WEEKS RECORD IN MINNESOTA'S CAPITAL. The Saintly City and Saintly City Folk—way Items of Social, Religious and General Matters Among the People, Bolled Down. Two rooms for rent for gentlemen only at 569 Iglehart street. Mrs. E. P. Frierson of Ft. Robinson, Neb. is visiting Mrs. E. Johnson. Half sewed, sewed, 75c; rubber heels, 40c; Phone 1556-J2. Jarvis, 83 E. 4th. The Ivy Leavy Dancing Club meets next Thursday evening. Strictly private. Men's hand-sewed, custom-made shoes to order for $5.00 at Geo. A. Smith's 443 Rondo street. Mrs. M. A. Davis and daughter, Miss Georgia, of Portland, Ore., are guests of Mrs. F. D. Parker. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Baldwin, who have been on an extended visit to Billings, Mont., returned last week. If you wish the Indianapolis Freeman you may get it every week at the Peoples' Barber Shop, 366 Minnesota street. You can get those old shoes mended at G. A. Smith, 443 Rondo street, near Arundel. Repairing neatly done. Ladies' shoes a specialty. The North Star Lodge, U. B. F., contemplate giving a swell entertainment in the near future. Look out for further announcements. When you wish to get a nice hot lunch or up-to-date sandwich, call at Mills' sandwich room, No. 444 Robert street, between 7th and 8th streets. Open day and night. Gentlemen wishing nice furnished room, with all conveniences, by the week or month, at reasonable rates, should apply at the Benton House, 228 West Third street, up stairs. Mrs. E. J. Allen has opened a hair store at 363 W. Seventh street near Forbes, where she is prepared to fill orders in all branches of hair work. Scalp treatment a specialty. Lately opened, a restaurant and coffee house at 309 Washington St. near Third. Meals at all house at reasonable rates. Public cordially invited to call. Mrs. Mattie Brown, proprietor. For good home cooking go to the Metropolitan restaurant, No. 378 Minnesota street. First-class meals at all Good Morning WE'LL TAKE YOUR O FOR A BUCK'S F During the past week we have had a department. A double crew has FOR A BUCK'S RANGE or HEATER During the past week we have had an unprecedented rush in our stove department. A double crew has been kept busy every minute of the working day blackening and BUCK'S LOVES&BRANDS THE FRANCE SHOP BUGK'S RADIANT HIGH GLASS HARD COAL BASE BURNER hours. Regular meals, 20 cents. Meals ra to order at moderate prices. Mrs. Lou McLaughlan, proprietor. ELK EXPRESS CO. G. D. Charleston, Proprietor; G. J. Charleston, Manager. Packing, shipping and storing. Piano moving a speciality. No. 39 E. Seventh street, cor. Cedar (basement). Telephone Main 2514 J 2. If you wish a good shave, hair cut or shampoo call at Richard Cousby's neat shop. No. 374½ Minnesota street. First class workmen only. Satisfaction guaranteed. Music for all occasions furnished on short notice. Shoes mended while you wait at Jarvis, 83 East Fourth street. Hal'soles, 50 and 75 cents. Prices reasonable for all kinds of repairing. Remember if they can be mended, Jarvis can do it on short notice. Jarvis, 83 Eh st. CREOLE KITCHEN—"Meals like mother used to cook" 25 cents. Teebone steak served in short orders. Furnished rooms for gentlemen in connection. No. 378 Cedar street. Telephone. Main 1786—J 1. H. Barber, proprietor. If you wish a dainty meal or lunch, night or day, just try Benton's Cafe. 351 Fort street — Seven corners — meals from 25 cents up. Private rooms for ladies. Regular dinner 25 cents. Lunch counter. Everything first class and up-to-date. Mrs. Geo. H. Wade of Knoxville, Ill., is in the city enroute to her home in West Superior, Wis., where her husband, Rev. G. H. Wade, has been appointed as pastor of the A. M. E. church. She is the guest of her mother, Mrs. W. J. Adkerson, 124 W. Fourth street. When you wish a sandwich or cup of coffee call at Mills' Sandwich Room, 444 Robert street, between Seventh and Eighth, opposite Golden Rule, open from 5:00 p. m. to 2:30 a. m. Sandwiches delivered by messenger 10 cents extra. N. W. Telephone, main 2004 J. J. S. Mills, proprietor. Owen Howell, No. 156 E.-Sixth St. fashionable tailor. Gentleman wishing suits or overcoats of the latest cuts and patterns should call on them. Ladies' work also done. Clothing cleaned, repaired, sponged and pressed on short notice. Moderate prices. Goods called for and delivered. Anything the matter with your stove, Entire Stock on Sale at Half-Price 1 Tremendous Tremendous Sacrifice Men's Clothing. Half-price clothes on special tables Warning! Have YOUR OLD STOVE T PAYMENT FOR RANGE or HEATER And an unprecedented rush in our stove has been kept busy every minute of the working day blackening and delivering We will have extra salesmen here Monday morning so that no one will be asked to wait their turn. We suggest that you come in the morning, if in any way possible, both as a favor to ourselves and for your own comfort. We thank our patrons who so kindly bore with us during the unavoidable delays of the past week. With our increased force we promise for the coming week Instant attention at our store, Promptest Deliveries. — EESIDES EASIEST TERMS and the BEST STOVERS and RANGES ON EARTH. range or furnace? If there is, just call at the St. Paul Stove Repair Works. 126 West Seventh street, between Fifth and Exchange, and get it repaired. Any part of stove or range furnished. A number of good second-hand stoves for sale cheap. Both telephones 242-32. Visitors to the city, and residents also, who wish to get first class meals should call at John Godfrey's, no. 552 Wabasha street, between Tenth street and College avenue. Board and rooms by the day, week or month at reasonable rates. Best meals in the city. Regular meals 25 cents. Sunday dinners from 1:00 to 5:00 p. m. a specialy. On to-morrow morning at Pilgrim Baptist church Rev. W. D. Carter will give an account of the recent, National Baptist Convention at Philadelphia and its work; in the evening he will tell of his travels during his six weeks' vacation and what he saw among the people. His text in the evening will be "Ethiopia shall yet stretch forth her hands unto God." The public cordially invited. Mr. Joseph Combs and Miss Ida M. Shappard were united in marriage on Wednesday evening at the residence of the bride's father, Mr. C. Shappard. No. — Edmond street. The ceremony was performed by Rev. W. D. Carter in the presence of a large number of their friends. After the ceremony refreshed, we were and the young couple left the good time was had. The young couple left the same evening for Duluth, where they will reside for the present. The popular Star theatre will have for its next attraction Fulton's Jolly Grass Widows, always voted the swellest thing on the road, and this season the production is on a scale of magnificence which outshines all previous efforts. They will present "One Night and Gone," a topical tropical extravaganza in two acts, in which are introduced various musical numbers and comedy situations, which afford a hilarious two and a half hours of entertainment. The chorus consists of twenty-four blonde and brunette beauties with forms fair and faultless and faces as bright as the rosy dawn. Magnificent scenery, gorgeous costumes, electrical mechanical effects. A red letter event. A high-class production. Ladies' matinee Friday afternoon. The members and friends of Pilgrim Baptist church tendered a re Big Purchase of Minneapolis Dealer's Clothing Stock. (O. C. INGRAM, 218 Hennepin Ave.) $12,000 worth of Men's Clothing purchased at 50c on the Dollar. Buck's Stoves and Ranges THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER. This stock of Men's Clothing (Suits, Overcoats and Trousers) is the product of reliable manufacturers. We have examined the stock and found it desirable and in every essential worthy of the price he placed upon it. Men's Suits-In a large variety of worsteds, cheviots, serges, black clays, etc., which Men's Pants-In worsteds, cheviots and cassimeres, which The Plymouth Clothing House. Seventh and Robert Streets. CARPETS & RUGS BUCKS HANDMAKER OUR SMALL, PRICES on Carpets, Rugs and Draperies are the secret of the great popularity of these departments. We want you to see our astounding values, our pretty patterns, our bewildering array of colors. We can please you. Won't cost you anything to look us over anyway, so come with the bargain-seekers—you won't be disappointed ST. PAUL'S MAINSTAR EASY PAYMENT HOUSE NORTHSTAR HOUSE FURNISHING C? 434~436 WABASHA ST.~ St. PAUL ception to welcome home Rev. and Mrs. W. D. Carter from a six weeks' vacation at the church Tuesday evening. There was a large crowd present. Dr. Val Do Turner acted as chairman and made the welcoming speech. Rev. and Mrs. Carter responded. Misses Effie Manning and Jimlou Smith rendered piano solos. Mr. F. D. McCracken made a fine address on "The Men of the Hour." Mr. J. H. Loomas made a short speech. Mr. Koven Thompson said "When I Gave to Thy Soft Eyes." A fine supper was furnished and every present had a delightful time. The affair showed the high esteem in which Rev. and Mrs. Carter are justly held. Messrs. S. D. Kemp and E. J. Williams Start a New Enterprise. Messrs. S. D. Kemp and E. J. Williams have started a new barber shop at 74 E. Fifth street, which opens for business to-day. They have three up-to-date hydraulic chairs and the latest style of furnishings also two neat bath rooms and a boot black chair. They are prepared to do anything in the tonsorial line with neatness and dispatch. They will make a specialty of cutting children's hair. The shop will be under the management of Mr. William Liggins; who will have as his assistants Messrs. Jackson and Walker. The public cordially invited. John Smith unnecessarily and unmercifully clubbed Fred Thredwell over the head, knocking him senseless Thursday night. There had been some trouble in the neighborhood when Smith appeared upon the scene. He arrested Mr. and Mrs. Thredwell on the charge of disorderly conduct. To Whom It May Concern. The Ivy Leaf Dancing Club never intended to cater to the general public, and it would be impossible for the club to entrain in the several hundred respectable citizens in St. Paul. The directors of the club issued 150 cards to their friends and acquaintances whom they preferred to assist them in conducting a dancing class and this will be the limit without favor to any intruder. J. H. Vincent, C. M. Tibbs, Directors. A Progressive Young Man Goes Into Business for Himself. Mr. Clifford A. Smith was born, reared and educated in Chicago. He learned the tailor trade and came to St. Paul some years ago, and for the last four years held the position of regular tailor. Reid Brothers, Believing that he can use his knowledge to a better advantage by doing business for himself Clifford A. Smith. he nas opened a neat tallor shop in room 412 Bradley Building, on Fifth street between Wabasha and Cedar, where he is prepared to do anything in the line of his business. Gentlemen wishing stylish garments made to order will do well to give him an order for their fall and winter suits and overcoats. Suit or overcoat finished in five days after order is placed. Quality, fit and finish guaranteed. Monday evening was the anniversary of the birthday of Mrs. G. H. Slaughter of 224 Granite street and though the fact may have slipped her memory, it has held on. And a number of their friends, and they put their heads together and arranged a little surprise party for her. About nine o'clock the Big Bargains in Scores of Parlor Suites We have one entire floor devoted to the newest things in Parlor Furniture. This is a new pattern, nicely carved and well finished. The entire three pieces for only..... $10.65 Kuppenheimer Clothes Gordon Hats ng Stock. on the Dollar. Half-Price 4 Clothing. The above clothing will be shown on separate tables k's Range a Big Bargain We have one Finely finished and prettily embossed saddle-seat Rock.....$1.98 on, only Couch Bargains We have lots of them. This is upholstered in pretty velours, on steel springs, and is worth $8.00. Just now, only..... $5.35 party, which had gathered at a neighbor's house, came trooping in laden with a number of good things to eat, Chinese lanterns, etc., and took complete possession of the house. The surprise was a genuine one to Mrs. Slaughter, but she was equal to the occasion and at once proceeded to make her unbidden guests welcome. Music was started and a general good time was indulged until three o'clock the next morning, when the guests left, wishing the hostess many happy returns of the day. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. S. Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. A. Payne, Mr. and Mrs. A. Younger, Mr. and M. E. Kane, Mr. and Mrs. G. Robinson, Mr. and Mrs. H. Hart, Medames R. Leavitt, W. Martin, P. Mills, Chicago; Misses Matthes, Lucas, Young, Phillips, Williams, Pace, Leavitt and Martin, Messrs. Robinson, Blackburn, Shelby, McLendon, Dills, Dodds, Burrs and Davis. "SIS HOPKINS." Rose Melville, that talented and artistic comedienne, in her unique characterization of the awkward country girl "Sis Hopkins," with her pigtails, fancy stockings and her mania for borrowing things, will be the attraction at the Grand following the engagement of "Across the Pacific." Theatre goers would complain if Sis failed to pay them a visit each season, and the bookings would not be complete if this attraction was not among them. This will be the fifth year of this successful comedy drama and it has been presented all over the United States and Canada to immense business. The story of Sis is too well known and no extended account is necessary. Suffice it to say that the laughter commences from the moment Sis Hopkins makes her appearance climbing over the fence to borrow all her neighbors household goods, and the laughter never lags until the curtain drops. The play abounds in strong drama and dramatic qualities. The presentation of the play this season will be the largest and best that has ever been given. A new scenic dress has been provided and the company selected this year is by all odds the most expensive one in the history of the play. The engagement is for the entire week with the usual Wednesday and Saturday matines. --- First-Class Laundry Work. Best In Every Respect. 509-511 Second Ave. 509-511 Second Ave., So., - Minneapolis. MINNEAPOLIS. DOINGS IN AND ABOUT THE GREAT "FLOUR CITY." Matters Social, Religious and General Which Have Happened and are to Happen Among the People of the City on the Falls. Rev. E. Daniels is expected home soon. Mrs. R. Butler has gone to Chicago to spend several weeks. Rev. Case has organized a class in psychology at St. James church. There will be a reception tendered to Rev. Reeves next Monday evening. There will be a reception enclosed to Rev. Reeves next Monday evening. Mrs. J. W. Koger entertained Mrs. Frank Johnson, Mrs. Luther Abby and Mrs. John Joyce last Monday evening. First class rooms and board, regular meals 25 cents. Sunday dinner, 35 cents. Hotel De Temple, 411 Second Ave. S. The Preachers' Aid Society met at the home of Mrs. Fannie Pierre last week. The election of officers was postponed for a week. Miss M. Jackson, milliner and modiste, lady's tailoring. French cleaning and curling feathers a specialty. No. 1409 South Fifth street. Madam Pierre is agent for the Magnetic hair straightener. She would be pleased to call on any who may choose to drop her a postal. Address 1127 3d Ave. S. The Appeal is mailed to most of the homes of the people of the Twin Cities, and if you wish matters to reach these homes you must publish them in the Appeal. Mrs. Celestine Brown has opened boarding-house firms, 485-405-107 FIRM, 673-615-107 FIRM. and Heater ains in Scores of Parlor Suites one entire floor devoted to the newest Parlor Furniture. This is a new pat- y carved and well fin- e entire three pieces $10.65 Solid oak Folding Bed; quartered oak, paneled front, best Fine orrass-trimmed Iron Bed, full size, any color, only meals, 25 cents. Short orders served. First-class furnished rooms in connection. N. W. Tel. 3434-L2, Minneapolis John McClendon, who married a white woman about seven years ago, but who had left her, appeared at her home Thursday in a hack. He rushed into the house, snatched up his three-year-old daughter, lumped into the church, lumped in. Mrs. McClendon is frantic over the kidnapping. McClendon has done nothing for the support of wife or child in the past three years. Before leaving the city Mr. Chas. H. Calloway, who represents the Montana copper industry, left a few shares of stock in the company he is agent for, that can be disposed of. Any one interested in this kind of stock can obtain information on the subject from the assayer. The company represents Mr. Calloway, who is in Montana for a few days and will be pleased to meet those interested any afternoon after Oct. 4th, 1903, between the hours of 3 and 5 at 1020 Garanty Loan Building. Each measuring six feet four inches in height, slim and erect, both ex-volunteers of a Philippine campaign, William Ward, Afro-American, and Daniel Evans, white, will go to the penitentiary together. Both met by chance and their army experience made them travel on a drinking boute. They stole some clothing from 727 Washington avenue south after breaking into the house. Ward admitted his guilt and was given two years by Judge Simpson, and a jury convicted Evans. This just goes to show that human nature is just the same no matter the color of the skin. STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF Ramsey, -ss. The State of Minnesota to Swan Swed- Given under my hand this 5th day of September, A. D. 1803. CHARLES S. HOFF Justice of the Peace. COMMUNITY ```markdown ``` H. MOSLEY, MGR. VISIT THE POOL AND BILLIARDS REAR 245 NICOLLET AVE TEL. 2429-J 1 MAIN. We sponge and press pants for 10 cents, suits 25 cents. We clean suits for 50 cents. French Dry Cleaned $1.00. Repairing at Lowest Possible Prices. We also carry a first-class line of the best suitings and overcoatings. You can get the best suit or overcoat for $20.—Elsewhere, $25 or $30. Call and Examine our Stock. JOS. SILVERMAN, Prop. 606 Hemepaite Ave., Minneapolis. SUPERIOR STAR BRAND Always the Best Always Reliable MILTON DAIRY CO. COR. 9th & WABASHA STS. McKibbin Hats NONE BETTER MADE RD Specialty — Painless extracting, crown and bridge work. wed- and the sald office unison- fession tion m of urse- will be sald, you plain- hem or you plain- hem or price. Stoklester's English Wizard Brent PENNYROYAL PILLS Original and Only Guest and the sald office unison- fession tion m of urse- will be sald, you plain- hem or price. THE ST. PAUL DAILY NEWS Every day in the year ex- cept Sunday for, per year..... $1.00 Outside the City of St. Paul. Defective Page THE "WORLD'S FAIRCITY" 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. Visit The "Novello," 359 31st street, and hear the music. Miss Clara Slye of St. Louis was in the city last week. If you wish everybody to see it, put it in THE APPEAL. Mrs. Geneva Smith, who has been sick, is convalescing. Miss Effie James, of Kansas City, Mo., is visiting our city. Mr. A. Richardson, of Evansville, Wis., is visiting in the city. Mrs. G. W. Lacy of Springfield is the guest of Mrs. Solomon Taylor. Mr. F. D. Lewis of Cincinnati is visiting his aunt Mrs. R. Nelson. The funeral of Friday S. Moore took place from Bethel church Sunday. Mr. David Bland of 3111 Prairie avenue has recovered from his recent illness. The Appeal is on sale at Faulkner's Afro-American news stand, 3104 State street. Mr. Frank George will leave shortly to give a series of recitals in the Twin Cities. Mrs. Ida M. Payne of Dayton, Ohio, is the guest of Mrs. Ida May Dempcy of Dearborn street. Mr. Irving Williams, now of St. Paul, formerly of our city, paid Chicago a visit on business. The Colored Physicians and Surgeons of America will meet at Nashville, Tenn., November 7th. Miss Estella Brazley, who spent the summer in this city left for her home, New Orleans, last Tuesday. Mr. Ed. Alexander, of the Jacksonville, Fla., postoffice has been transferred to the Chicago office. Mr. Joe Jenkins, who has been ill with rheumatism for some time, is able to be out on the street. Miss Bertha Jenifer, of Baltimore, Md., is visiting in the city the guest of Dr. and Mrs. Norman Croker. Mr. James Alexander, of Jacksonville, Fla., has entered the Dental department of Northwestern University. Dr. Harry York, a young Afro-American dentist of Springfield, has charge of the Illinois Dental Laboratory in this city. THE APPEAL is without question the best advertising medium through which to reach the Afro-Americans of Chicago. GERTRUDE IMOGENE PALMER, violinist. Concerts, musicals, instruction. Room 86 Auditorium, and 680 Austin Ave. Subscribers for THE APPEAL, who wish to discontinue the paper must send written notice to the office, properly dated and signed. Mrs. Ada Ford, 6250 Sangamon St., who has, for some time, been visiting friends and relatives at Indianapolis returned home last Tuesday. Mr. Ben D. Bagby, agent of THE APPEAL in Chicago, may be found at the office, 323-325 Dearborn street. from 12 to 1 o'clock every business day. 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. Mr. Chas. Hall, a former Chicagoan, now of the Hall, Department, Washington, D. C. spend a few days in the city this week. He is the same "Charlie." JAMES JOHNSON, Teacher of violin, room 86 Auditorium building. Miss Gertrude Imogene Palmer and Mr. Felix Weir, assistant teachers. Wednesday and Stursday, Tuesday and Friday. The "Novello" Music Hall at 339 Thirty-First street, is the costiest resort of the kind in the city. It is open for the entertainment of those who, in a quiet way, enjoy a good song and classic music. Persons having money to invest on chattles, diamonds, etc., call on John Q. Grant & Co., suite 311, 36 South Clark street. They will give two per cent per month on all money's left with them to be loaned on above securities. Mr. Taylor, who was graduated in law last year from Northwestern University has received and accepted a call to the chair of physics in Clark University, Atlanta, Ga. Mr. Taylor was the first Afro-American ever graduated from Northwestern. Information is wanted of Miss or Mrs. Kate White, who left Omaha a few years ago and is supposed to be in weighing about 125 pounds. Miss Chicago. She is a bright mutuato, White's parents live at Atchison, Kan. Any information will be gladly received by Dr. P. C. Kebble, Pittsburgh, Texas. The attention of the gentlemen is called to the advertisement of the SIX LITTLE TAILORS, which appears in this issue. They will suit you with suits that should suit you hardest to suit a price that suits the pocket of a woman. Give them a call before leaving an order elsewhere. No trouble to show goods and quote prices that cannot be duplicated for same styles and classes of goods. Mr. Will Dixon, with his company, appeared in his new play "A Married Bachelor" before an Aurora audience Tuesday night and scored a big success. The play was written by Messrs. Anderson and Dixon. The company consists of Misses Edna Alexander, Carrie Washington, Florence Smiley, Hattie Hobb, Messrs. Joe Shoecraft and Will H. Dixon. They will tour the eastern states for 40 weeks. The Afro-American waiters, who lost their places during the recent strike are, gradually, being restored to their positions but not as unhappy. It is claimed that they were not fairly treated by the main organization and are now out of the union. The Hensner Baking Co. State and Quincy streets has dispensed with girl waiters and has taken back the old crew that they employed before the recent strike. reat Shoe Bargains Lot No. 1—Men's Lace Shoes, in box calf, velour calf, vici kid and kanga- roo. Union made, regular $3.50 values. Now, per pair miles an hour This is the latest Auto record. It takes 3 months for our brew to go from the kettle to you. Hamm's HOYTS SURE CURE FOR PILES les and Piles of People have been cured of Piles. IT REACHES THE SPOT. Incent tube may cure you. Used and recommended with each tube. If your druggist don't have it. Meddy Co., SUPERRED IN TWO WEEKS. Liberty Centre, O. February 15, 1894. Born: I most heartily recommend "Hoyt's Sure to suffer from this annoying disease. I suffered terrible various remedies, none of which afforded it." About six months ago I procured one tube of it according to directions two weeks, at the end of appeared and have not since returned. I believe the D. S. MIRES. composed of men who know* find that the plaintiff, the Cigar, is entitled to recover on every smoker." Ge Harlan Cigar MRPHY, MAKERS, ST. PAUL, MINN. OZMUN KIRK & CO., GENERAL HARDWARE, Lot No. 2—Men's guaranteed patent colt Oxford Ties; also velour calf and vici kid, union made, regular $3.00 values. Now..... Lot No. 3—Men's High and Low Shoes, Goodyear welt, all leathers except patent. Values up to $3.00. Now..... 84 miles an hour This is the latest Auto record. It takes 3 months for our brew to go from the kettle to you. Hamm's HOYTS SURE CURE FOR PILES Piles of People have Piles and Piles of People have been cured of Piles with Hoyt's Pile Cure. IT REACHES THE SPOT. Why suffer when a 50 cent tube may cure you. Used and recommended by physicians. A booklet with each tube. If your druggist don't have it send 50 cents by mail. To whom it may concern: I most heartily recommend "Hoyt's Sure Cure for Piles" to all who suffer from this annoying disease. I suffered with Piles for years, and tried various remedies, none of which afforded more than temporary relief. About six months ago I procured one tube of Hoyt's Sure Cure and used it according to directions two weeks, at the end of which time the ulcers disappeared and have not since returned. I believe the cure is complete. D. S. MIRES. "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¢ Cişar HART & MURPHY, MAKERS, ST. PAUL, MINN. THE MUSEUM OF THE ARTS AND CULTURE Blood & Co.'s ADY-MIXED AINTS DOUGHLY RELIABLE. PAUL, MINN. ARE THOROUGHLY RELIABLE. ST.PAUL, MINN. THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL PRE-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER Clothing House. $2.39 GENERAL HARDWARE, Cutlery, Crawford Bicycles, Guns and Sporting Goods, Builders' Hard ware, Favorite Stoves. Tinware, Fishing Tackle. WHOLESALE HARDWARE. St. Paul, Minn. HOME BRAND Goods and you will always be happy. The New Process Blue Flame Roasted Coffee is better strength and finer flavor than any other. IMPORTERS and MANUFACTURING WHOLESALE GROCERS, ST. PAUL, MINN. WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS We furnish the house complete. Furniture, Carpets, Rugs, Curtains, Stoves, Ranges, Refrigerators & Housefurnishings. Will E. Mathels Go. PAUL LAWRENCE DUNBAR. Who Has Just Published a New Volume of Poems. SURPRISES HIS FRIENDS. Invitations to Play Whist but a Wedding Takes Place. Invitations were sent out last Tuesday evening to a few friends to play whist at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. M. Scott, 3146 Cottage Grove Ave. When the small circle of friends had assembled however, a number was announced that had not previously appeared on the program. The whist players were informed that there was to be a wedding, and that the contracting parties were Miss Imogene D. Scott, daughter of the host and hostess, and Mr. Addison Robinson. The wedding being an informal affair the bride and groom were unattended. The ceremony was performed by Rev. J. F. Ford, of Denver, Colo. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Cook, of Elgin, Ill., and Mrs. Cobb, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Bell, Mrs. George Gaines, Miss Russell, Miss D. Hogget, Messrs. Robert Perry, L. Ward, W. Sloan, L. Richardson and Mr. Davis. Congratulations were tendered the newly married couple after which an elegant lunch was served. Mr. Robinson is a popular employee of the Santa Fe Railroad and his bride is a prominent south side belle. Mr. and Mrs. Robinson will hereafter be at home at 5516 Ingleside Ave. BIRTHS. Mrs. William Falls, male, 3801 Dearborn St., Dr. C. H. Bryan. Mrs. Alice Short, male, 5701 Grove Ave., Dr. G. C. Hall. Mrs. Geo. Harris, male, 3617 Armour Ave., Mrs. L. Glover. Mrs. Picket Williams, male, 6241 May St., Mrs. A. Reist. Celeste Jackson, age 40, 52 Smart street. Cora May Keith, age 5, 566 27th street. Ella A. Thomas, age 37, 368 27th street. Thomas Wilson, age 29, 3127 State street. Mattie Royal, age 24, 2727 Armour Ave. Charles Allen, age 39, 2970 State street. John Dixon, age 29, 6648 Armour Ave. Attorney Wilson Goes Free. A nonsuit was taken by the police in the case of Edward Wilson, the attorney, who was charged with being disorderly in the Harrison street police court last week, after the testimony had been heard in Justice Wolff's court yesterday. Ex-Church Treasurer Held. Henry T. Elby, formerly treasurer of the Olivet Baptist church, Twenty-seventh and Dearborn streets, was held in bonds of $1,500 to the grand jury by Justice Bradwell yesterday. He was charged with embezzling $5,000 of the church funds. RS and MANUFACTURER HOLESALE GROCERS, ST. PAUL, MINN. SHAROOD MAKES UNION MADE SHOES FOR SHOES THAT ARE STYLISH—UP-TO ARE WEARERS AND RIGHT GOOD FOR ANY O BEST. SHOE SHAROOD MAKES UNION MADE SHOES FOR ALL THE FAMILY SHOES THAT ARE STYLISH—UP-TO-DATE, FIT AND ARE WEARERS AND RIGHT IN PRICE. GOOD FOR ANY ONE THAT WANTS THE BEST. ASK FOR SHAROOD'S SHOES. P.J. BUTLER W. L. KIDDER BUTLER Heavy Piano BUTLER TRANS Heavy Draying, Safes, A SPECIALT Piano and Furniture Heavy Draying, Safes, Boilers, Etc, A SPECIALTY. Piano and Furniture Moving. 385 SIBLEY STREET ST. PAUL, PHIPPS Catarrh Cure IT'S VERY DISGUSTING TO YO UR FRI shawking and spitting. There is no need of it. Phipp's Catarrh Cure. It is pleasant a and easy. Price with nasal tube on, 50 cents at drug st other. Prussian Remedy Co., DONE SO MUCH GO OD WA Barn Prussian Remedy Co., St. Paul, Mi nn.: Go your medicine for Catarrh while at Saulk Cent that I want to take an agency, as it is not for of my friends seeing the good it has d one me, erms, etc., if you want an agent here. ALLRIG SHO LADIES AND C PRICE $350 FOR SALE BY TREADWELL SHOE CO. PR CO. ST. PAUL. IT'S VERY DISGUSTING TO YOUR FRIENDS and others to hear you hawking and spitting. There is no need of it. You can cure yourself with Philipp's Catarnt Cure. It is pleasant and easy to use. You get relief at once, with nasal tube on, 50 cents at drug store or by mail. Don't take any other. Prussian Remedy Co. St. Paul, Minn.: Gentlemen—I obtained some of your medicine for Cataratch while at Saul Centre, and it did me so much good that I want to take an agency, as it is not for sale here, and a great many of my friends seeing the good it has done me, want to trv it; also send me terms, etc., if you want an agent here. Yours truly, "ALLRIGHT" SHOE LADIES AND GENTS PRICE $350 FOR SALE BY E.7th ST TREADWELL SHOE CO. PA CO. S. PAUL. Agents for the Red Cross Stoves and And Thatcher Furnace Dealers Builders' Hardware, Tools, Tinware, Tin, Sheet Iron and Copper 519-521 Uniersity Ave., ST, PA 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. ```markdown ``` MANUFACTURING GROCERS, MINN. GOOD MATION MADE SHOES FOR ALL THE FAMILIES ES T ARE STYLISH—UP-TO-DATE, FIT AND RE WEARERS AND RIGHT IN PRICE. GOOD FOR ANY ONE THAT WANTS THE BEST. ASK FOR SHAROOK SHOES. N. W. TEL. TWIN CITY ER TRANSFER CO Draying, Safes, Boilers, Etc, A SPECIALTY. and Furniture Moving BUSTING TO YO UR FRIENDS and others to There is no need of it. You can cure you it. It is pleasant a and easy to use. You get relic e on, 50 cents at drug store or by mail. Don't Remedy Co., SO MUCH GO OD WANTS AGENCY. Barnum, Minn., March 14, Co., St. Paul, Minn.: Gentlemen—I obtained tarrh while at Saulk Centre, and it did me so m agency, as it is not for sale here, and a gre the good it has d one me, want to trv it; also ant an agent here. Yours truly G. E. JOHN LLRIGHT SHOE DIES AND GENTS $350 WELL SHOE CO. HERTZ BROS. Agents for the Stoves and Ranges and Thatcher Furnaces. Dealer in Ware, Tools, Tinware, Paints, Oils, Glass, Sheet Iron and Copper Workers. University Ave., ST, PAUL, MINN. ALL THE FAMILY DATE, FIT AND T IN PRICE. WE THAT WANTS THE ASK FOR SHAROOD'S S. N. W. TEL. MAIN 1467 TWIN CITY 1467 SFER CO. Boilers, Etc, Y. re Moving. ST. PAUL, MINN. Cure Yourself of CATARRH. ENDS and others to hear you You can cure yourself with to use. You get relief at once. re or by mail. Don't take any St. Paul, Minn. ITS AGENCY. Mm, Minn., March 14, 1897. tlemen—I obtained some of e, and it did me so much good sale here, and a great many want to trv it; also send me Yours truly, G. E. JOHNSON. St. Paul, Minn. Luxurious Travel and Perfect Accomodations IS VIA THE NORTH-WESTERN LINE C. S. P. M. & O R Y Inquire for rates and information should you contemplate a trip well rounded out with pleasure. : : : T. W. TFASDALE, Gen. Pas. Agt. St. Paul, Minn. SUCIRTY DIRECTORY. ST. PAUL. MASONIC MOST WORSHIPFUL GRAND LODGE OF MINNESOTA A. F. AND A. M. W. R. MORRIS, GRAND MASTER, 1020 Guaranty Loan Bldg.. Minneapolis, Minn. B. R. DURANT, GRAND SECRETARY, 831 Payne Ave. St. Paul, Minn. PIONEER LODGE NO. 1. A. F. and A. M. meets first and third Mondays of each month at Masonic Hall. A. S. W. W. M. street at 8:00 p.m. A. R. Myers, W. M. J. Charleston, Sec. 416 St. Anthony Ave. PERFECT ASHILAR LODGE NO. 40, A. F. and A. M. meets second and fourth Tuesdays at Masonic Hall. No. 319 Wabasha street at 8:00 p.m. A. R. Myers, W. M. 524 Farrington Ave. J. E. Forter, Sec. Bradley Bldg. PAST GRAIN MASTER'S COUNCIL No. 123, A. F. and A. M. meets the see and Friday at Masonic Hall. W. M. 524 Farrington Ave. J. E. Forter, Sec. Bradley Bldg. MINNEAPOLIS. All visiting P. G. M. in good standing cordially invited and Friday at Masonic Hall. W. M. 524 Farrington Ave. J. E. Forter, Sec. Bradley Bldg. ODD FELLOWS. MARS LODGE, No. 2202, MEETS on and fourth Wednesday in each month for business and the third Wednesday for business at 7:00 p.m. Seventh street, J. E. Porter, N. G.; thurs. R. Hickman, P. S.; 422 St. Anthony re. HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH. NO. 553. *1* O. of C. F. meets first and third Monday of the year. F. meets second and fourth day for instruction, at Odd Fellows Juth. 253 East Seventh St. Mrs. Margarce Shepherd. M. N. G.; Mrs. Ida M. Johnson, W. R. No. 916 Marion St. ST. PAUL PATRIARCHY NO. 114. meets the second day of school. 252 E. F. Soe street. All Patriarchs in good staring are invited to attend. W. R. Moore. M. P.; Thos. R. Hickman. R. V.; W. F. Fraser. R. B. Lowe. W. J. R. 1516 Wabsha. UNITED BROTHERS OF FRIENDSHIP 50 YEARS EXPERIENCE PATENTS TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS & C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may qualify for patent. The invention is probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. Handbook on Patent sent for Oleast agency for receiving patent. Patents taken through January 20, 2024, special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest on- cation of any scientific journal. Serious $3 a year; four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & Co. 3618 Broadway, New York WONDERFUL DISCOVERY BEFORE AND AFTER TREATMENT. OZONIZED OX MARROW