The Appeal
Saturday, October 14, 1905
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
THE APPEAL KEEPS IN FRONT
BECAUSE:
1-It aims to publish all the news possible.
2-It does so impartially, wasting no words.
3- Its correspondents are able and energetic.
VOL. 21. NO. 41.
HAND-TO-HAND FIGHT
WHITE MAN OVERTHREW ZULU IN SINGLE COMBAT.
Wonderful Deed of Col. Colinblincher Years Ago Is Still Talked Of in the Huts of the Kaffirs—Recalls Pioneer Days of America.
"We have had in our South African country just such fearless and hardy pioneers as you had in America during the war, and we were engaged in constant struggles with your Indians," remarked W. A. Campbell of Natal.
"There are to-day living in our communities men who have matched the exploits of your Boones and Crockets and Codys. I know personally the most daring of them all, the celebrated Col. Colinblincher, whose name is a household word throughout South Africa, and the record of whose desperate fight with the natives wounded the colonel committed some political of fense which put him in disfavor with the Natal government, and he was practically outlawed. With a bold heart he went to Zululand to live, and found speedy favor in the eyes of old Spearbold, one of the greatest of the Kaffir sub-kings. At that time there were a dozen or more petty sovereigns, and they were continually guiding one another's dominions, stealing women, after the fashion of the ancient and likewise driving bards of cattle.
"Shortly after Collinbrander became associated with this Zulu chief a raid was made into his country by a neighboring king, at a time when Spearbald was not suspecting attack. Several towns were laid waste, many men were killed and hundreds of women were captured. Then the assailants beat a retreat, knowing well that Spearbald was invaded territory would soon be on the warpath to get revenge and rescue the prisoners. Here was where Collinbrander's genius for war came in, and he immediately put himself at the head of all the horsemen of his friend Spearbald and started out in pursuit of the fleeing warriors. The battle that ensued was a complete triumph for the pursuing party, but one incident of it is to this day told in every Kauf hurt. The hand to hand fight between the Englishman and a Zulu warrior of herculean strength and desperate courage. The duel was for blood from start to finish. Collinbrander was knocked off his pen by a battleax hurled from a boulder by the savage, the blow also breaking the stock of his rifle and leaving him with no weapon. Before he could rise the stalwart Zulu was upon him brandishing a stabbing assagal, which he thrust into the Englishman as he lay on the ground out which luckily won no vital spot.
"There ensued one of the most terrific battles ever waged between two men. Luckily, Collinbrander was as strong as he was brave, and he had the advantage of scientific athletic training. Grasping the Zulu by the throat he choked him almost to death, and man in man assagel. In this strange encounter, which lasted fully half an hour, the principals were left absolutely alone, their position being such that outside interference was impossible. To this hour the survivor's face shows an enormous scar where the battleax struck, and on his person are still other scars to remembrance. To each he lay in the grip of the black savage—Washington Post.
Origin of Shoe Throwing
Shemailing was a distinct trade as far back as 1600 B. C., and reference is made in scripture to different symbolical usages in connection with sandals or shoes.
The delivery of a shoe was used as a testimony in transferring a possession. A man plucked his shoe and gave it to his nephew and this was "in Israel."
The throwing of a shoe on property was a symbol of new ownership, as "Over Eodom will I cast out my shoe."
From these ancient practices came the old custom in England and Scotland of throwing an old shoe after a bride on her departure to a new home, to signify that the parents gave up all control over their daughter.
In Turkey it is the bridegroom who is pelted by the wedding guests with slippers.-Stray Stories.
Marse Bill.
Yer neber met Marse Testy Bill?
Yer neber met Marse Testy Bill?
Yer neber nehybear de nectar spill
When he staats in ter fuss
When he staats in ter fuss
Permanely up mash Marse Bill?
D stony face, an` shoves `still`
D stony face, an` shoves `still`
Cyartid hde heart de ob mah Marsa Bill
Ner yberbe? Marse, Agh grets fur pours;
De glory ob de Lord
Done pyass he in please ter` scuse
Done pyass he in please ter` scuse
D shouts dat God
Mus` felt right lonesome till
He studied up an 'built Marse Bill. — George Carey in New York Sum.
London Has Fierce Gorilla. Miss Crowther, the largest and fiercest gorilla ever captured, has just arrived at the London zoological gardens. She is five feet six inches in height, measures forty-five inches around the mouth of the Street. Occasionally she has fits of rage, but usually she is very shy and hides her face from visitors with her hands.
WIRE TALK COSTS MUCH MONEY
$19,000 Spent in Cables One Day's Record for the Peace Envoys.
That making peace is an active life is illustrated by the daily programme of work of the peace envoys and their suites, says the New York Telemagnet. "The session every one connected with the work has continuous and taxing occupation with but few hours for rest and practically none for recreation.
An idea of the volume of cables which are daily sent to Europe and the far east may be had from statement that one cable company mandated that all dispatches from both the Russian and Japanese peacemakers, from its headquarters at Portsmouth.
Both sides are very keen in the matter of their facilities for communication. The heavy tax on the local telephone wires made it impossible for them to get quick service between the hotel and their conference rooms in the navy yard, and complaint was made, the reason was that Secretary had to direct telephone systems installed between these points, one for the Russians and one for the Japanese.
Privileged.
Simeon Ford enjoys nothing better than to tell a story of the humors of the hotel business. "A friend in the West," says Mr. Ford, "once related to me the trials and tribulations of the people employed in the office of his hostelry to keep in proper bounds a young man from Chicago, who, as soon as he had regained his freedom to make things lively. The first evening he spent with them he did the proprietor out of a neat sum at poker; the next night he returned to his quarters considerably intoxicated after having whipped his cabby; the third night he gave an impromptu concert in the halls. This was too much for the hotel people; they asked for his key and rendered him a slave. The day of was not to his liking, for he exclaimed, pathetically: "Say, don't you fellows make any discount to the clergy?"-Judge.
An Atchison Welcome
An Atchison woman went to call on a friend. The friend opened the door to greet her, but suddenly an awful glare was seen in the eyes of the hostess. Instead of asking her friend to take a seat she made a leap into the air, with both hands clapping. Then she made a frantic plunge to the floor, followed by a frenzied jump to the lounge, and another throwing up of both hands into the air. This was followed by a wild chase around and around the room over chairs and tables. Then both hands clapping with fright, when suddenly there was a climax. The hostess brought her hands violently together, "I've got it! I've got it!" she screamed in triumphant joy. She had caught a moth. Atchison Globe.
The Chewing Puppy.
What household has not at some time had a puppy, and what woman has not been bothered by their chewing everything within reach? As soon as our puppies begin to want to chew anything we furnish them with a chewing stick, for the same reason we give a baby a rubber ring. This stick is simply a part of a broom handle about 1 inch in length because he chews in length he is punished and then given the stick, and he soon learns to chew that and nothing else. We had one puppy who would even whine for it if it was where he couldn't get it.—Chicago Journal.
Timely Warning.
At a certain high school in this city it is the custom to discuss briefly the morning's news before taking up the regular work of the day. In this connection, an instructor in the school in question tells of a funny incident. One day the teacher ascended to her desk, paper on the desk and spread the paper on the desk and spread at the head that I observed this morning," said she, "is "Foolroom Rated," she then raised her head, and with the utmost feeling in her voice said: "Boys, never, never touch a cue!"—Harper's Weekly.
Enough to Kill Jo.
The Greek room is usually not a place for humor, nor is it. Fitzgerald Tisdall, the professor of Greek at the College of the City of New York, a very humorous person.
Nevertheless, the following joke was sprung on him. The class had just returned from the chemistry room, and was invited a discourse on the elements.
The Greek lesson was commenced with a history of Io and her endless wanderings. Finally Prof. Tisdall asked: "What did io die of?" A student who had been awakened by the question grasped out: "Odidum of potassium."—New York Times.
Never Had Driven a Solicit
The manager of the Doepm laundry had advertised for a man. Early next morning a mild-eyed young chap appeared and referred to the advertisement. He can fill the bill, do you ask the proprietor. "I dunno, boss. I've driv a laundry wagon, but I never driv one o' them other things." "What other things?" "A chimp on the handed him a chimney of the ad, which read: "Wanted—A man to drive laundry wagon and solicit." "Baltimore American."
THE APPEAL.
Increase in Military Efficiency Planned by the General Staff
Comprehensive plans are being made by the general staff of the United States army for placing the military establishment on a more efficient footing. Briefly, they look to the formation of a regular reserve corps of 40,000 trained men, a national reserve of 100,000 and an organized state militia of at least 50,000. It is possible the may be enlisted to present strength of 60,000 men. With these reserves established, the new plan would allow the president to call together an effective fighting force of 250,000 men at very short notice. Officers of the general staff declare that if the plans under consideration are adopted and made effective the United States will head all the world powers, comparatively speaking, in being able to put in the field, thoroughly equipped and trained, at a moment's notice, an army of a quarter of a million. The militia reserve, set at 50,000, could be expanded as states accept the terms of the Dick act, passed in 1903, which provides ways and means for promoting the efficiency of state forces. The organized militia numbers 125,000 officers and enlisted men. As census reports show that the United States could, if pressed, put an army of 125,000 officers in the general staff, believes that the reserves can be filled in very short time.
With a force of 255,000 trained men ready for a call to arms the United States would occupy a low position when this force is compared with other armies of the world. Outside of England military service is generally compulsory in Europe, and this must be taken into consideration in making the officer of the force. France has an active army of 400,000 men in service. Her first reserve corps numbers 1,220,000 men, while there are 2,270,000 men in what is known, as the "territorial reserves." She can easily put 4,000,000 trained men in the field at short notice. Ausra-Hungary can put 1,540,000 men in the field on a war mobilization simply by carrying the reserve forces. The number of which are trained. The peace army is composed of 346,000 officers and men.
100 men in
militation by
e forces,
trained.
of 246.
mobiliza-
f 250,000
d. Upon
many can,
zo 3,000.
shed. Her
v 600,000
Russia
Corps
Compared to Germany's mobilization resources, our army of 250,000 looks like a corporal's guard. Upon the word of the kaiser Germany can, on very short notice, mobilize 3,000,000 trained men, fully equipped. Her regular peace army is only 600,000 strong. Her reserves consist of 2,310,000 infantry, 151,000 cavalry, 320,000 artillery, 78,000 technical troops such as engineers, signalmen, balloonists, automobile corps, etc., and 168,000 troops of other formations. They are in active reserve service. Italy's peace army of 286,000 is almost as great as the number of reserves stationed by the general staff. A trained army of 1,155,000 men can be put in the field at short notice, recruited from the reserve mobile militia, the reserve territorial militia and from the national reserves. Her total war strength is estimated at 2,350,000. One of the features of the new plan, that establishing a militia reserve of 50,000 men, has attracted a great deal of attention among national guardsmen, who are wondering how this number will be selected. The general staff is silent on this point, but it is fair to proclaim that the rating wins in the selection as the most notable feature. It may be that each state will be called upon to furnish its best regiment, the idea being to appeal to state pride and patriotism—Chicago Chronicle.
Old Hannah Dayne was of the New England type of thriftiness that could give Mary E. Wilkins' old woman pointers when it comes to putting money in the savings bank on an income of a dollar a month. Old Hannah's income had never been much more than this until she was 65 years old, when she fell heir to $7,500 in spot cash and gilt-security securities.
"An' now I'm goin' to be downright extravagant for once in my life," said Hannah. "All my born days I've wanted to buy, but now I can't. I an' not over had 'em. Now I'm goin' to buy a hull pound an eat 'em all down at once. Exceptin' for that I an' goin' to waste no money foolishness."—Hudge
Defective Page
Downright Extravagant.
FIGHTING FIRE ABOARD SHIP
FIGHTING FIRE ABOARD SHIP
Comment on the Destruction of the Japanese Battleship Mikasa, by a Former United States Naval Officer
The astounding feature of the fire by which the Japanese battleship Mikasa was destroyed is the fact that the magazines were not flooded, although the crew had been fighting the flames for about an hour before the explosion occurred.
In our navy, following the long-established custom of the British service, certain precautions are observed as soon as a fire is reported in a man-of-war.
It seems incredible that the Japanese, who have been trained in the traditions of the American and the British navies, should not have adopted these precautions as a part of their fire.
In an American ship the instant a fire is discovered it is reported to the officer of the deck. The latter immediately orders the sounding of the fire alarm, which is all that is necessary to send every man to his station for fighting the names.
The instant the alarm is sounded the orderly at the cabin calls the captain and gets the keys of the magazine floodcocks from the captain's room, ready to turn the mover to the officer whose duty it is to flood the magazines in case the captain orders him to do so.
Since all magazines and shellrooms are below the water line the space around the cartridges and shells is covered by the magazine and as long as that condition exists an explosion would be impossible.
It is difficult to understand, therefore, how the Mikasa could have been blown up from an ignition resulting from a fire in the hold. If, when the fire was burning in near proximity to
RELATIVE PROPORTIONS OF
Russia Germany France
a magazine, the captain failed to order it flooded his juggled of such an elephant precaution would imply an almost unbelievable negligence.
I had an experience in a fire aboard a man-of-war once that leads me to believe the failure to flood the Mikasa's magazine may have been due to the captain's lack of judgment.
In November, 1868, while serving as watch officer aboard the United States steamship Frolle, flagship of the European station commanded by Commodore A. M. Pennock, I relieved the deck in the harbor of Gibraltar at 4 o'clock in the afternoon. At anchor about a mile away, with no steam up, was the British ironclad Pallas, a large and formidable armored ship commanded by Capt. Palmer, R. N.
After turning over the deck to me the officer whom I relieved said: "The Englishman has been exercising at fire-quarters ever since 5 bells" (2:50 o'clock).
because he was afraid the ruined pot just below the wardroom, and it could be reached only by cutting holes in the wardroom floor and filling the wardroom with water. This work have worked all right but for the fact that the breadroom bulkheads were not water tight; and, after reaching certain high, the water ran out fast as it was poured in. Menwha the fire was smoldering in the cellar of the room, which was lined with very inflammable Georgia pine boards.
Finally one of the Frolic's coal he told me the only way to put out a fire was to chop the hole in a big enough to let a man drive into the breadroom and turn the hole up against the ceiling. It was a plain plan, but already about forty men had been rendered unconscious by a smoke where we were, and it seems
It is customary aboard men-of-war to take notice of everything that is going on in the harbor, and so I took a look at the Pallas through a strong pair of glasses. She was a rop-griped vessel, carrying about 300 men. Presently a peculiar object was roundup up when the ship stopped were "broken" it did not flutter out like a signal, although a fairly fresh breeze was blowing, and it looked like a dirty blanket. Almost simultaneously I saw a puff of smoke come out of her after ports, and I sent word to the captain and commodore that the Pallas was on fire.
Having received word to send assistance to the burning ship, I got another officer to relieve me in charge of the deck of the Frolic and the boat of the ship board the Pallas, who expressed hearty satisfaction at our coming. Half of the ship's company were ashore on liberty, and the other half, after working two hours, were very tired, while a num-
ber of his best men had been overcome by the smoke and were lying on the upper deck in the hands of the surgeons.
Our blue jackets were soon working strenuously at the pumps on the berth deck, and I stood near them talking to the ordinance officer of the ship, a clever and hearty English lieutenant, who had thrown off his coat to keep cool, although the weather was far from warm. Moreover, he was wrigly as an elan, and it occurred to me that he knew the fire was more serious than it had been represented to me.
When a midshipman came flying to him with a message that the captain wished to see him he grabbed his coat out of the ice scruppers, where it was washing about, put it on, streaming with water, and dashed the hatchway to the quarter deck. A moment later he shot past me down the mat, muttered "Thank God! at last!" and disappeared below.
When he rejoined me his manner was so totally different from what it had been that I asked him why he was now so apparently contented when he had been so nervous previously.
"Well, I fancy you would have been nervous, too," he replied, "if you had known you were standing over two tones of powder, with a hot fire burning about two yards away. The captain only just now allowed me to flood the magazine.
"Palmer had me impressed on him that he would be held accountable for any unnecessary waste of the ship's stores or ammunition, and he was reluctant to flood the magazine
because he was afraid the ruined powder would be charged up against him by the admiralty.
The fire was burning in a breadroom just below the wardroom, and it could be reached only by cutting holes in the wardroom floor and filling the breadroom with water. This would be feud that the breadroom bulkheads were not water tight; and after reaching a certain hight, the water ran out as fast as it was poured in. Meanwhile the fire was smoldering in the ceiling of the room, which was lined with very inflammable Georgia pine boards.
Finally one of the Frolics coal heavens told me the only way to put the fire out was to chop the hole in the deck big enough to let a man drop into the breadroom and turn the hose up against the ceiling. It was a plausible plan, but already about forty men into the smoke where we were, and it seemed doubtful whether a man could live in the breadroom.
"Rie a whip over the hole," said the coal heaver, "pay out about six feet of hose into the hole and keep a strong stream going through its nozzle. Then drop me down with a wet handkerchief over my face, and yank it at the end of a minute. I bet I have the fire out in short order.
The English heutener to whom I suggested this plan replied:
"Why, of course. What blank fools we've been not to do it before. Your man is entitled to the credit of the house and he will go down if he wants to but I will alternate with him."
So a Yankee coal heaver and an English lieutenant were whipped up and down in the dense smoke that poured from the enlarged cutting through the floor, one relieving the other at the business end of the hose. And in a few minutes the fire was out—Joseph L. Stickney, in Chicago Post
MINNESOTA
THE APPEAL FOR LEADERS
BBC AFRICA
4-It is the organ of ALL Afro-Americans.
5-It is not controlled by any ring or olique.
6-It does not supply but people.
DROVE EMPEROR FROM CAPITAL.
III-Used Peasant Almost Seized Crown of Hungary.
George Dosza was a Szekler, or peasant of Szekelfyld, a district of Hungary. He was a quiet, law-abiding man, notable only for his great strength and tall stature.
One day, however, an Austrian noble thought he decay away from his father's house Dosza's only daughter, a maiden of 14. The distracted parent sought the abductor far and near, but, failing to find him, journeyed to Vienna and laid his case before the emperor.
The latter only laughed. Whereupon the peasant returned to his own village and pasted upon the door of his little cabin a formal declaration of war against his sovereign. A month later he was marching on Vienna at the head of a huge, but displeased, town and was actually within sight of the capital, whence the emperor had already fled, when he was betrayed into ambush through the trenchery of a guide.
The misfortune constituted the beginning of the end. The bulk of his followers fell away from him and were hunted through the mountains and coasts. All together, it is said, that over 150,000 of them were to the sword.
The "Jack Cade of Hungary," having been taken prisoner, was seated on an iron throne, beneath which a huge fire had previously been kindled. The fire was extinguished and his flesh torn from his bones with red-hot pignets. -Exchange
A Revised Version.
John Alden had just concluded his eloquent praises of Capt. Miles Standish and waited anxiously for Priscilla's answer. Cody she regarded him for an instant, then, blushing, she inquired:
"Why don't you speak for yourself, John?"
"Great Scott!" ejaculated the young puritan, "what do you suppose I am? I ain't workin' no Hoch nor Witchoff game—I'm runnin' a straight, legitimate marital bureau, that's what I want. Go straight, back to Standish and tell him that if he wants that female bunko-steerer at the old man Mullin's house, he'll have to get somebody else to do the job. I'm through."
And, jamming on his hat, he rushed forth, banging the door behind him, while Priscilla wept bitterly—Detroit News.
Sawyer's Description of His House.
Some years ago a church convention was held in Calle, Me., and the church members were to entertain the visitors. A visiting divine was notified that he would be hospitalized cared for with Lemuel T. Sawyer. Not knowing where Mr. Sawyer lived, he was directed to the harbor, where he would happen it happened, when he went in he met Mr. Sawyer, and without knowing him, asked if he could direct him to Lemuel T. Sawyer's residence.
Mr. Sawyer replied: "Oh, yes; go down Main street until you come to Church avenue; turn to the right, go up the avenue, and you can't miss it; you can't miss it, as it has a brick underpinning and two mortgages on
Conditional Piety.
Two Scotch fishermen, Jamie and Sandy, belated and begged on a rough water, were in some trepidation lest they should never get ashore again. At last Jamie said: "Sandy, I'm steering, and I think you'd better put up a bit of prayer." "I don't know how," said Sandy. "If ye don't, I'll chuck ye over board," said Jamie.
Sahdy began: "Oh, Lord, I never asked anything of Ye for fifteen years, and If Ye only'll use us safe back I'll never trouble Ye again, and then I'll never trouble Ye again," the boat's touched shore; don't be beholden to anybody—"New York World.
One of Them.
There were three men sitting together on a seat of the open car, and after they had talked politics for ten minutes one of them observed:
"Excuse me, but here is my card."
The other two scanned it and saw that he was Dr. So-and-So, and then the second man produced his card. It showed that he was Understater Sodal. Then the two looked at the third man, who made no move to produce a card, but who said said:
"Well, I spose I sorter belong to the profession myself."
"Druggist?"
"No. I see to the grave-digging part."
Brown's President Lost a Point.
President Nicholas Brown, for whom Brown university was named, was fond of quizzing small boys. One day while walking in the streets of Providence he came upon a little fellow who attracted his notice.
"How do you do, my boy?" said the president.
"What is your name?"
"My name is Harry, sir," replied the child.
"Harry, is it?" returned President Brown. "And did you know the evil one is often called Old Harry."
"Why, no, sir," answered the boy, "I thought he was called Old Nick."
Subway Carrier Car.
The first parlor car has made its appearance on the New York subway, being intended for the directorate and staff.
MEN WHO DO THINGS
ARE THOSE IN DEMAND BY THE WORLD TO DAY.
Jeeds, Not Intentions, Are the Standard of the Judgment of the World—Results Only Count in Making a Reputation.
Man is judged by his deeds in this world; by his intentions in the next—and the proverb tells us of the use to which good intentions are put in the heated hereafter.
It is one of the vices of family life and of sympathetic manhood generally that both have some intentions to be the standard in this world as well. At the moment when every effort should be made to inculcate in the growing child a sense of responsibility as a basis of character, the non-performance of some duty or the commission of some fault is palliated by the statement, "He meant to do right." Generosity and sympathy are fine things; but justice is a finer.
The world, without the home is, taken as a whole, a pretty just one. It, too, can make excuses if they are necessary, but the humanity has discovered for itself that the person who has to have excuses made for him is not the sort of man that succeeds in the struggle for life. In character he is a cripple in the world's estimation, and the world passes him by. It requires performance to convince it.
Many years ago I was with a sister and two brothers. The older boy was capable, even then—he did things. The younger was an ingenious framer of excuses. Both undertook to light a cigar in a gale of wind. The younger failed—and caught his slater laugh at his failure. "I can do that just as well as my brother," he proclaimed, "when another does it," she replied, and there was no further argument. The excuse-maker borrowed a light from the deer of deeds.
The years have proved the earlier fact; the older boy is a success in the game of life, the younger a failure. He is still borrowing a light—he generally has to borrow a cigar first.
It may seem easier to make excuses than to do things—it is still easier to have excuses made for you—but it is fatal to character. However well intentioned the mother, when she learns that another way of a child's learning that duty is something to be done, not something to be tampered with, she is placing herself in his own category by sapping her own character at the same time that she sags his.
If the child will not do a thing of his own will, he must be taught that there are no excuses available. To shirk that duty is to teach him to shirk in turn.
This count is in making a reputation. Form is a fine thing, but it is based upon performance.
Man is judged by deeds in this world; by intentions hereafter.—John J. Holden in Chicago Journal.
Prisoner Looking for Bargains
About three years ago the late Judge Erastus M. Reed of Mansfield, Mass., then presiding at the second session of the first district court of Bristol, at Attleboro, on taking his seat one morning was confronted by a prisoner of the Russian Hebrew type, charged with pedelling without a license.
"Are you guilty or not guilty? asked the judge.
"I didn't do it," moaned the frightened prisoner.
After listening to the evidence, which was conclusive, Judge Reed called out: "Slipperygaski, or whatever your name is, stand up. On the complaint against you for pedelling without a license the court finds you guilty and orders you to a fine of $20."
Oh my goodness gracious! My goodness gracious! I shouldn't do it. I shouldn't do it," cried the distracted prisoner. "I should pay you $2."
"Sit down," yelled the judge. "The next thing I know you'll be asking for trades stamp."
Argument
No use talking, no use preaching
When a man is set.
Let him teach you.
Teach him to teaching;
That's the best he'll get.
Argument will never change him,
you must change him.
Opposition will strangle him.
Let him have his way.
When a woman takes a notion
Talk's more foolish still.
It will make no alight commotion
If you cross her will
Shove the door and not doubt it
More than you to say.
Your consent? She'll do without it.
Let her have her way.
When you get to educating
People in a lump—
Speeching and debating—
Well, you're just a chump.
When our errors you have corrected
Temper you display.
Keep the path that you've selected,
Let us have our way.
First Come First Served
A week before commencement Jones, a senior, who was weary of boarding house fare, was happily engaged in donning his dinner clothes. A smile of delighted anticipation played upon his features when Robbins entered in a dinner coat.
"Hello, Charley!" greeted Jones, cheerily. "What's up?"
"O, nothing up," said Robbins. "I'm just going around to the Clemenses to call—going to see if I can't get asked to dinner."
The smile faded slowly from Jones' features.
"O, I say, Charley," he expostulated, "can't you go somewhere else? I was going there."—Youth's Companion.
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*occasionally happen that papers sent to you do not receive any number when due, inform us by postal card at the expiration of five days from the date of your return. You may forward a duplicate of the missing paper. Communications to receive attention must be written only upon one side of the paper; written only on Wednesday and be the nature of the author. No manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for postage. Written agents wanted everywhere. Write in every letter that you write you never fail to give your full name and address, plainly for your letters. Sample letters free. Mass letters of all kinds must be written on separate sheets from letters containing news or matter for publication.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1905.
THE PITTSBURG RACE WAR.
The Pittsburgh (Pa.) newspapers make no mention of the occurrence of a race war in the Shakespeare public school of that city, but a special journal an opening to say: "There is not a case on record where a Southern community mobbed Afro-American children. There is not a Southern state that has not taxed its white property owners to establish schools for Afro-American children. There is not a Southern community the South where Afro-American children do not attend school in perfect security."
The case is overstated. A Southern community eliminated the Presbyterian school for Afro-American youth at Monticello, Arkansas, last July. We include similar ones, because of the fact that the respectable white lady who promoted the enterprise, published a fall account of the transaction and distributed it throughout the country. Her account showed that the sheriff of Monticello was a nepotist of the transaction, and the county examiner published an article defending it. The transaction at Pittsburgh was the act of some foolish boys; that at Monticello was endorsed by the official representatives of the community, and that at the law offices of the state. Was that the case at Pittsburgh?
President Butler of Columbia raised his voice against "the casuistry of the counting room and the law office" and makes a plea for higher ideals of conduct. Nothing can be more demoralizing than the impression that all a man has to do to earn respect and speaking to keep within the order of the law and scapegoat indictment and conviction.
The counting room and law office are not the only fuel of such casuistry. It permeates all the political agenda, both and through. It manifests itself in all the dealings of the white man with the man of any color. It invades the home, the school, the society and has rammed the ocha at hand now when an national motto should be: "Dimes and dollars, dollars and dimes." An empty pocket the worst of crimes."
---
Dr. Agar Beet, a great English theologian, has cut out hell. He says: "I cannot believe in a material hell and everlasting physical torment." But there must be some fallacy in it, which we refuse to be deprived. It is our conviction that such follows as Tillman and Vardaman and Thomas Dixon, Jr., and Arthur Gorman and the Equitable gang will catch it some
Rev. Julius R. Cox, a brilliant white Baptist minister, has been lodged in jail at Jonesboro, Tenn., on charges of chicken stealing and perjury because it Rev. R. Cox had been an Afro-American, his case would prove the whole race to be chicken theves and perjurers, but as his skin is white, it proves nothing about anyone but himself.
Our old friend, Senator Tillman, is pitchforking the South Carolina ministers as "hypercrites in the cloak of religion and morality." The ministers excited the Senator's wrath by opposing his pet scheme of transforming South Carolina into a congress of gin-mills.
Mr. Dixon "Clansman" has been dramatised and the author anticipates that its success will sweep poor old gin-mills from Uncle Tom and Rev. Tom will be observed with some interest, as the laid laid schemes of mice and men, gang aft agile.
Now come the Bengal colored folk and boycott British goods as a protest against dividing the Province of Bengal. Asla is beginning to be so self-assertive that our brother-in-write scarcely knows which course to steer.
Jonah's Boots Found in a Whale.
It is said that the late Clerk Joseph Willard once told Edward D. Sohier, the eminent lawyer, that he had read in a paper that a dead whale was driven ashore at Nautucket, and that on opening him a pair of boots were found moulded. Mr. Sohier instantly replied: "They probably belonged to Jonah, and he must have left them when he stepped cut."-Boston Herald.
Oldtime Beggars of London.
In the year 1700 John Cary had this to say about London and its beggars: "He that walks the streets and observes the fatigues used by the beggars to make themselves seem objects of charity must conclude that they take more pains than an honest man, and that the beggars is now become an art of mystery, to which children are brought up from their cradles. " Anything that may move compassion is made a livelihood, a sore leg or arm or, for want thereof, a pretended one."
DOING THE MOST FOR OTHERS.
Surest of All Ways to Bring Brightness into Our Lives.
Selfishness is darkness. It shuts us up in the tight little box of our own lives. Unselfishness gives us a wide circle of interest and delight. What we do for others has as much to do with our happiness as what we get for ourselves. Just think how many joys a man may have who is not confined to his own reasons for rejoicing! Remember how Jeanie Deans blessed the good lady who helped her, saying: "When the hour of trouble comes—and seldom may it visit your leadership—and when the day of death comes, that comes to high and low—lang and late may it be yours, O my lady! then it isna what we have done for our lives, and when the day of death comes, that we think of most pleasantly." And this truth is for all hours, though it be most clearly manifested in the hour of extremity. Doing the most for others is doing the best for ourselves. If you have never made another life bright, you know not how much brightness can come into your own—Montreal Herald.
NEAT AND PRETTY COMPLIMENT.
Englishman's Tribute to Genius of Scottish Divine.
A tribute which was at the same time both gratifying and clever was once paid to the genius of Dr. Hugh Blair, the famous Scottish divine and author.
Dr. Blair had collected a considerable party to meet an English clergyman at dinner. A Scotchman present, proud of the doctor's fame, indiscreetly asked the stranger what was thought of "the sermons" by his professional brethren.
To his horror, and to the mortification of Mrs. Blair, the Englishman answered:
"Why, they are not partial to them at all."
"How so?" faltered the querist; "how could that be?"
"Why," replied the southron, "because they're too much read, and so generally known that they can't borrow from them."
The whole company, hitherto in a state of embarrassment, were, at this ingenious compliment put at their ease once more.
Wide Responsibility in China.
In China the whole family is held responsible for the acts of any of its members and for certain offenses, such as an attempt on the life of the emperor, all are executed, even to the babe in arms. The teapom, or dean of the village, elected by universal surrogate is responsible for the conduct of the militias of this domain. The subprefect, prefect, governor and viceroy are all responsible in different degrees. An inundation and a famine are laid at the door of the governor or the viceroy, who are "father and mother to the people." About thirty years ago a mandarin was murdered by soldiers. As a result thirty-three functionaries — prefect, subprefects — were killed, and the governor responsible and beheaded and the governor and treasurer of the province were exiled.
Curod Youngster of Smoking
Curred Youngster of Smoking.
A wise mother caught her little boy smoking a cigarette the other day. Instead of inverting him over her knee she bent over him, he said: "Johnny, dear. I see you are getting quite a big little man. Come away in and I'll give you one of papa's great big black cigars to smoke." So she marched Johnny into papa's study and set him down to smoke one of papa's cigars. She sat down opposite and watched while his lips grew white and his eyes yellow and his hands drooped hopelessly, and a little later, as she ministered to him with a basin, he received a vouchment promise that would never, never smoke a cigarette in his life.
WASHINGTON
THE CITY OF MAGNIFICENT DIS TANCES.
A Collection of Events Occurring Among Afro-Americans of the Capital of this Great and Glorious Nation for our Many Readers.
Special Correspondence THE APPEAL Washington, Oct. 12—Mr. Emmet J. Scott, private secretary to Dr. Booker T. Washington, called at the White House and had a conference with the President, relative his it to Tuskegee, the latter part of this month. An interesting feature of the President's entertainment, aside from the address he will deliver, will be a series of seventy-five float, Chief of Staff, Chief Executive, illustrative of the academic, mechanical and agricultural departments of the school and the development of the Afro-American race. During the fest, Mr. Scott, in the capital, the recalculated among his many friends and was the recipient of many attentions.
---
Tuskegee is the richest and most powerful institution of learning in the South. It is a monument to the wisdom of Booker T. Washington.
R. J. Collier, who recently purchased the Lincoln farm in Larue county, Kentucky, has announced that he intends to present the property to the United States government for a national park.
While working in the composing room of the industrial Enterprise, an Afro-American writer, published by Thomas Leatherwood, William Branson, became angry with his employer, and during the latter's absence, pied the forms and prevented the issue of the paper.
Washington has a larger Afro-American population than any other city in the country at 35,000. The Afro-American institution of Chicago is 35,000; New York has 70,000 and Philadelphia 69,000.
. . .
The "grand old man" of Illinois, Senator Shelby M. Cullom, has returned to Washington and will remain here until the close of Congress next spring. When seen at his home on Massachusetts avenue, he said: "I feel that the people of Illinois are with me, and I am proud of them." I said four years ago that if the people of the State were with me the legislature would re-elect me. I think that the sentiment in my favor is even stronger this time.
At the beginning of the campaign I announced that there would be no scrambling for the place, that I should conduct my campaign on a higher plane than I did in the past, and I came here to Washington to go to work. I shall remain until next June, with one interruption; I shall attend the installation of President James at the University of Illinois during this month. As for Gov. Deeneen's position in this campaign, he will keep his hands off. He has said that he will remain on neutral ground and will throw his entire strength to my one.
Speaking of rate legislation, Senator Culom said: "A meeting of the Senate Committee on Interstate Commerce will be held late a report to Congress as a result of the recent rate-bearing. The report will recommend amendments to the interstate commerce law.
Surgeon General R. M. O'Reilly of the army has submitted an exhaustive report on the health conditions of the army to the secretary of war. The report says that the sick and death rate is higher than those of all other armes.
The public debt of the United States now amounts to about $896,000,000, including a considerable number of bonds which have matured and are redeemable upon presentation, excluding gold and silver certificates and Treasury notes.
Mr. T. Thomas Fortune, editor of the New York Age, passed away last Saturday on route to the South. He was met at the train by a number of his friends and admirers and given an ovation.
Mr. J. Harry Harris, who graduated from the law department of Howard University in June, is preparing to return to Illinois and begin the practice of his profession. Mr. Harris will locate in Peoria.
Strong appeals have been made to the President to take a hand in the several state controversies now on, but in accordance with his established policy, he will keep aloof from state politics.
Many of the schools foster the idea that a man should make a living without work. This is erroneous and is politely injurious to the country. The Tusteekse idea is that a man and hand should be educated in the correct one and it is gaining strength day by day in the North as well as the South.
Dr. A. M. Atwood, who preferred the charges against Mrs. A. J. Cooper, principal of the M street High School, some time ago, appeared before the Board of Education, when the case came up Tuesday night, as the principal witness for the prosecution. The Board denied that Miss Cooper failed on several occasions to report severe breaches of discipline, and that ineligible students were admitted from the graded schools. The entire body of pupils and the majority of the teachers and pupils are for Mrs. Cooper.
The trial by the police board of former Detective Henry Lacy continues. At a recent session Lacy and Attorney W. Calvin Chase became involved in heated words and Chase arose and defended Lacy to "come outside."
The Afro-Americans are pleased to learn that the reelection of Senator Cullom to represent Illinois in the upper house of Congress is especially important. He has been a staunch friend of the race ever since he entered public life, more than fifty years ago. He was the friend of the race before the war; he is the Afro-American's friend today.
Mrs. Coral Franklin Cook addressed a large and fashionable audience at the event on "Some Afro-American Authors and Some Things They Have Written."
LANDMARK WILL BOON BE GONE
Destruction Threatens Survival of Pre-
historic England.
An interesting survival of prehistoric England is threatened with destruction owing to neglect. This is the "Cerde Giant," a colossal human figure cut on the side of a lofty hill that overlooks the picturesque village of Cerne Abbas, eight miles north of Dorchester. It is several years since the furrows which outline the giant's figure were scoured and re-lined with chalk. Gradually the latter has been filled in, and the hills it now barely visible, Grass has so encausted on the channels that, seen from a distance, the details of the gigantic figure are hard to trace, though the uncouth human form is still recognizable. The "Old Man, as he is styled by the artist of Cerne Abbas, is built on high heroic lines. He stands 180 feet high, and his right hand grasps a knotted club 121 feet long. The unknown artist had his own notions of the just proportions of the human frame, as will be seen from the following further measurements: Length of body, 77 feet; legs, 80; ect. head, 22 feet; right arm, 109 feet; nose, 6 feet; diameter of eyes, 2¼ feet. The antiquity of the figure is accepted by all archaeologists. The Celtic riot, whome he some once held that it represents an idol once worshipped by the Pagan West Saxons. Another view is that it was the work of the monks of the then newly founded Benedictine abbey of Cerne. Some color is given to this theory by the existence of a similar figure at Wilmington, in Sussex, where once stood a Benedictine priory
GERMAN CRITICISM OF ENGLISH
Visitor Thinks Islanders Dwell Too Much on Physical Ills.
A German publicist who spent a part of the summer in a boarding house at Teleglmouth, England, says: "We have remarkable ingenuity in sustaining a lengthy conversation founded on no other tople than the weather. When this is exhausted they turn to their aches and pain; each individual adduces some striking examples of bodily suffering on his or her part and combined aliments of the company afford themes for endless discussion.
"Next in popularity to the remark, 'Hotter than ever,' came the question, 'How your lumbago?' and the lumbago of most of the visitors was, I regret to say, very bad. I must, however, warn my traveling fellow-countrymen that English anatomy ends with the stomach, even, is not permissible in polite circles. There is, however, one striking exception to this rule—the liver may be discussed at all and sundry seasons. "Full advantage is taken of the concession and the vagaries of this organ supply the basis of many a lengthy if somewhat monotonous discourse. Half the ills of the Anglo-Saxon race are attributed to the liver and where pop-up vertirements are clearly vertirements of nostrums to correct that portion of the human frame."
Help Your Vife.
A man ain'd got much droubles
Hero pellew.
Der pathetic sheen up couples
Dot you know.
Bud id is der husband's vife,
Who is burdened in dits lie.
She must tuck her meals avay
seas.
She must comb Louis' hair-
Baby's shust fell from his chaf-
Becle has chased der cat somewhere
Mit a shick.
Vine apples his coffee not
On his clothes.
Heirliness into a knot.
Minnie's bows.
In his nose Hana stuffed a pill-
Albert's sighting brudder Bill-
Fritz fell into window sill.
On his nose.
No id ain'd all bread and butter,
Married life.
Tain't all joy to be a mudder-
Fritz fell into window sill.
Could be made, I'm sure, more sweet,
if at night you did eat.
'Shtread ov lying down to read-
HELP YOUR VIFE'
-New York News.
Against the Bell.
The young man, who was making a call, had said he would have to be going and they were standing just outside the front door having a final little chat. He was leaning against the house talking in subdued tones. It was then 11:30 o'clock. They had been there ten minutes perhaps, when suddenly a man in pajamas appeared at the door.
"Father," the girl in a tone that showed mortification, "why are you down here looking that way? Are you walking in your sleep?" The father looked at the young man. "George," he said, "I've never complained about how late you have staid here talking to Mary, and I'm not going to kick about that to-tight, but for goodness' sake stop leaning against that doorbell! You've got the whole family awake!"—Kansas City Times.
The Hardships of Childhood. Little Howard, who celebrates his fourth birthday in April, entered the house the other day and sadly said to his mother:
"There's nobody for me to play wiyl. I wish they wouldn't have any school." "But Thomas hasn't gone to school," answered the little boy's mother. "He's not going to school." "No." Howard said with intense disgust, "he's too young."
Thomas wasn't 4 until August.
Feeding the Lagoone.
At the St. Louis Exposition a guard of one of the bridges that lead to the lagoons was approached by a well-dressed lady who asked him where the lagoons were. He replied that they were at the other end of the bridge. Her next question was, "What time did you feed them?" "Princess of Peace." The Grand Duchess Olga of Russia is known as "The Princess of Peace." She is the Czar's youngest sister, is 24 years of age, and was married four years ago to Prince Peter, Duke of Oldenburg.
MEN WHO DO THINGS
ARE THOSE IN DEMAND BY THE
WORLD TO-DAY.
Jeeds, Not Intentions, Are the Standard of the Judgment of the World—Results Only Count in Making a Reputation.
Man is judged by his deeds in this world; by his intentions in the next—and the proverbs tell us of the use of these intentions are put in the heated hereafter.
It is one of the vices of family life and of sympathetic womanhood generally that both assume intentions to be the standard in this world as well. At the moment when every effort should be made to inculcate in the growing child a sense of responsibility as a basis of character, the non-performance of some duty or the com- punction of some faults is palpably by the statement, "He meant to do right."
Generosity and sympathy are fine things; but justice is a finer.
The world, without the home is taken as a whole, a pretty just one. It, too, can make excuses if they are necessary, but it dislikes to. In the long run humanity has discovered for itself that the person who has to have excuses made for him is not the sort of man that succeeds in the struggle for life. In character he is a cripple, in the world's estimation, and the most passable person it requires performance to convince it.
Many years ago I was with a sister and two brothers. The older boy was capable, even then—he did things. The younger was an ingenious fram of excuses. Both undertook to light a cigar in a gale of wind. The younger failed—and caught his sister laughing at his failure. "I can do that just as well as my brother," he said in protest. "But your brother does it," she replied, and there was no further argument. The excuse-maker borrowed a cigar. The years have proved the fact; the older boy is a success in the game of life, the younger a failure. He is still borrowing a light—he generally has to borrow a cigar first.
It may seem easier to make excuses than to do things—it is still easier to have excuses made for you—but it is fatal to character. However well-intentioned the mother, when she lets her sympathy stand in the way of a child's learning that duty is something to be done, not something to be tampered with, she is placing herself in his own category by sapping her own character at the same time that she saps his. If the child will not do a thing of his own will, he must be taught that there are no excuses available. She shirk that duty is to teach him to shirk in turn.
Results count in making a reputation. Form is a fine thing, but it is based upon performance.
Man is judged by deeds in this world; by intentions hereafter.—John H. Holden in Chicago Journal.
A New Hampshire Samaritan.
My wife and children are spending the summer up in the southern part of New Hampshire, where the following story comes from, says a writer in the New York Times. A short time ago the lady with whom my wife is staying and her mother went berrying. It was a torrid day, and, becoming thirsty, they called at a farmhouse, and when an old farmer came out of one of the ladies asked for some water to drink. The farmer said he was very sorry, but he could not give them any, as his well was very low, and he had had to drink. The farmer replied: "Well, you ought to have been here when Jesus was on earth, as you would have made a good Samaritan."
Sam Wanted to Save Thee
Sam wanted to Save them.
Sam Willie was messed up to a firm of collectors in Salem. One thing which puzzled Sam greatly was the telephone. How the wonderful apparatus worked was more than he could fathom.
-.Recently a fire broke out in one of the offices, and soon became so serious that everybody was ordered out of the building. Sam went with the rest, but suddenly an idea struck him and he rushed to the telephone room. Franchely he knocked on the mahogany box. "Hi! H! Come out of that!" he cried, "the place is all on fire, and you'll be roasted alive if you don't hustle out."
"Carrot Jam."
Our best carrots are sold to jam makers. We have made from 30s. to 45s. per ton, according to season. The carrots are washed clean in the field, taken to the station in our bags; at the station we drop them into clean sugar bags, and who hut ourselves know what the bags contain? Why. If any one saw consignment of carrots in the factory the firm would be in ill repute. It would not do i say emphatically jam—the very best jam—can be and is made from carrots and vegetable marrows.—Letter to London Mall.
What Gov. Bates Was After
Ex-Gov. Bates, when he first entered politics, made a speech one night in East Boston. His father sat on the platform directly behind. After he had spoken a long time his father pulled his coat-tail and said in an undertone: "Why don't you say a good thing and then sit up." And what if I am trying to do, father," was the reply—Boston Herald.
Shipping at Hong Kong.
Hong Kong has hitherto been spoken of as the third shipping port in the world. The figures for 1904 are not yet available, but the official returns of vessels, entered at London, Hong Kong and New York in 1903 are: London, 10,568,739 tons; Hong Kong, 10,738,502 tons, and New York, 9,371,545 tons.—London Enquirer.
Woman Runs Trade School.
Miss Pauling, daughter of the late illustrious admiral, has for ten years kept a trade school running at Huntington, L, L., where their home was, and hundreds of children have been helped to learn trades.
MEN
St. Paul, Sept. 14th, 1905.
I. Thomas D. O'Brien, Insurance Company
bureby certify that I have caused to be
compared the annexed copy of Articles
of Confederation and the Mutual Casualty Company, and annexed
copy of certificate of the Attorney Gen-
Department, and that the same is a
correct copy of the document and of the
sold originals.
IN WITNESS WHENEOP, he have
in Witness the official
official at the city, at the
St. Brant, on the
western side of the city.
OFFICE OF ATTORNEY GENERAL,
ST. PAIL,
September 14, 1906.
I. Edward T. Young, Attorney General of
the State of Minnesota, do hereby
referral to me and that I have
carefully examined the attached Arti-
tician Mutual Casualty Company, together with the sworn statement thereto attesting
same conform to the requirements of
that certain act of the Legislature of
the State of Minnesota, entitled An Act to
Life and Co-operating on associat-
ion Enforcement Casualty Associations
Associations and Societies, approved
March 3, 1985, as amended, and are not
subjected to the Complaint Laws of the United States, or of the
State of Minnesota.
(Signed)
EDWARD T. YOUNG,
Attorney General.
GEORGE J. HIPPON,
Assistant Attorney General.
ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION OF
THE STATE OF MINNESOTA
CAUSALTY COMPANY.
We, the undersigned citizens of the United States and of the State of Minnesota, together and become a body corporate, vested with all the powers rights, imputed to us by Chapter 184 of the Laws of Minnesota, for the year A. D., 1885, and by Chapter 184 of the Laws of Minnesota, for the year A. D., 1885, to make, adopt, and establish the following Articles of Incorporation, to-wit:
The name of this corporation shall be the name of the firm from its principal place of business shall be the City of St. Paul in the County of Ramsey, and the State of Minnesota.
II.
The object of this corporation shall be the collection of benefits bers by membership fees and premium dues to be used for the mutual benefits families, heirs or other beneficiaries, and the collection of benefits beneficiaries, of such indemnity and benefits as shall be provided under the law of the respective policies held by them.
This corporation shall have power and power policies of insurance in the manner and form, and in accordance with the policies of insurance in the manner and contained in the by-laws, as same shall be made or amended by the Board of Directors. It shall have power to adopt an amount and manner of collecting membership fees and perimium dues; to fix density and benefits; to fix, determine and classify the occupations of its members; to determine what shall constitute the corporation between this corporation and its members.
IV.
The affairs and property of this corporation, and the management of some of nine Directors, who shall be elected at the annual meeting of the corporation to fill terms of from one to three years, and the property belonging to the corporation; for the transaction of business.
The directors shall have a charge of the corporation and the property belonging to the corporation; such premium calls as may be necessary to carry out the aims and objects of this corporation and determine the policies of insurance for membership, proofs of death, injury or sickness, and to perform such other duties as may require, and such as usually devolve the Board of Directors of like corporations.
The annual meeting of this corporation for the election of its Board of Directors St. Paul, County of Ramsey and State of Minnesota, on the last Monday in May. In voting, each holder of a policy in force shall be entitled to one vote. The corporation to be held on the last Monday in May, 1906, the following persons, all members of the Board of Directors, sey and State of Minnesota, shall constitute the first Board of Directors, and they shall all office for the term of Charleston and J. Q. Adams, one year later. The Board of Directors, Reid, two years; and J. S. Strong, T. R. Morgan and W. T. Francis, three years. The Board of Directors shall have appointed the said Board during the interim between the IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned have hereunto severally set their hands and seals, by the date of May A. D. 1906, eighty-fourth day of May J. B. MINTRE (SEAL) J. F. MINTRE (SEAL) J. H. MINTRE (SEAL) J. J. MINTRE (SEAL) J. J. MINTRE (SEAL) J. T. R. MORGAN (SEAL) J. S. STRONG (SEAL) E. H. MURPHY (SEAL) E. H. MURPHY (SEAL) In the presence of F. L. Callan, H. L. Mills. Clifford A. Smith, H. L. Mills as to J. Q. ADAMS (SEAL)
STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF
RAMSEY—ss.
On this 8th day of May, A. D. 1905,
personally appeared before me J. H.
Juniper, M. H. McCarthy, J. R.
Morgan, M. T. Francis, J. S.
Strong, E. J. Murphy, Philip R.
Strong, E. J. Murphy, Philip R.
Strong, E. J. Murphy, Philip R.
the same persons who executed
the foregoing articles of incorporation,
and each acknowledged that he executed
the requisite articles of incorporation
for the uses and purposes therein mentioned.
H. I. MILLS,
Justice of the Peace, Ramsey County.
Minc.
STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF
RAMSEY--88
each being duly sworn, deposes and says
that he CONFIDENTIALITY COMPANY,
and that at least
fifty persons eligible under the proposed
laws of such corporation to membership
would be sworn in writing
for such membership in accordance
with the law.
J. S. STRONG.
MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF
SUBSERBED and sworn to before me
this 8th day of May, A. D. 1905.
Justice of the Peace, Ramsey County.
St. Paul, Minn.
STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF
RAMSEY--88
This QR code to certify the wiki information
argument is filed for record in this office
archiving system. A. D. 1905, at 12:50 o'clock in m.
Book M of line page 18. Only recently recycles
in Book M of line page 18.
Plans for the Future.
An old lady visiting the prisoners in a certain prison recently was chatting pleasantly with a burglar who had been sentenced to serve a long term; she thought she detected signs of reform in him. "And, now," she said, "have you any plans made for the tilture, on the expiration of your sentence?" "Oh, yes, madam," he said, hopefully. "I've got the plans of two banks and a postoffice." The old lady collapsed.
Defective Page
HOWARD'S
Shoe Polishes
NEW YORK A.C.HOWARD, CHICAGO
W. EVANS, GEN'L AGT.
337j Wabasha St., St. Paul,
and also on sale at the
Golden Rule.
The Popular Price,
The Popular Shoe,
The Latest Style,
The Sorensen Shoe.
Same as other dollars
ask $3.50 for
S. T. SORENSEN
Nicollet, Mvlt.
$125 Nicolllet, Mvlt.
IN REACH OF ALL
Lamb Lumber Co.
WEST 5TH AND 7TH STREETS.
SHOES
THAT
SMILE
STANLEY SHOE CO.
421 ROBERT ST.
COLLARS and CUFFS 11
SHIRTS 10 UNDERWEAR 8
STATE STEAM LAUNDRY
292 W. 7TH ST. BOTH PHONES.
H. MOSLEY, MON.
VISIT THE
Jesamine Club
POOL AND
BILLIARDS
REAR 245 NICOLLEY AVE.
TEL. 2420-J 1 MAIN.
TOWLE'S Log Cabin Maple Syrup
TONNELS
LOG CABIN
MAPLE STOOP
Was awarded the GOLD
MEDAL at the World's Fair,
St. Louis, 1904, for absolute purity and richness of flavor.
The Approval of Millions of
People Confirmed by the
World's Greatest Exposition.
Don't throw away your OLD SHOES BEFORE AFTER Have them made new while you wait. JAVIN, 85 K. 10th St. Both Phones.
DR. W. J. HURD,
91 E. SEVENTH ST.
Painless Extracting, Filling,
Presses, Crown and Grips
a Specialty.
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
P. B. REID.
J. J. HIRSHPIELE.
Wines, Liquors
and Cigars . .
SAINT PAUL
WEEK'S RECORD IN MINNESOTA
TA'S CAPITAL.
In "Saintly City" and Saintly City
Folks—Newy items of Social, Religious and general Matters Among
The People.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1905.
If it's Hamm's, it's all right.
"I haven't paid $5.00 for a hat since
I began wearing the Gordon, and I buy
the best."
There are telegrams at this office
for Mrs. Strawder Gray and Mr. Edw.
Browns.
Have you seen the new magazine,
"THE VOICE OF THE NEIGHBOR?"
See notice elsewhere in this issue.
Mr. W. B. W. Wright of Sioux Falls,
S. D. was in the city this week the
guest of Mr. W. L. Burton of Charles
street.
Invitations have been issued for the
marriage of Mr. William A. Fry and
Miss Crystal V. Teabeau Oct. 24 at
Keokau, Iowa.
Is your hair straight? If not, send 60 cents to Ozonized Ox Marrow Co. 76 Wabash avenue, Chicago, Ill., for a bottle of Ozonized Ox Marrow and you can easily straighten it.
The Appeal has purchased the press and outfit of the Richardson Printing Company and added the same to the plant. Bring in your job printing. Best work at home.
Gentlemen wishing nice furnished rooms, with all conveniences, by 12x10 or month, at reasonable rates, should apply at the Benton House, 228 West Third street, up stairs.
THE NAGEL UNDERSTAKING CO., Wm. E. Nagel Manager, 208 West Third street, Telephone, Main 1504. Latest equipments in every line. Lady assistant when desired.
Mrs. Ella Smith has handsomely reftitted, newly papered and painted her dining room and is furnishing most excellent meals. Call to see her when hungry. No. 352 Cedar street.
Shoes resold in 15 minutes at S. T. Sorensen's, 153 East Seward street, Shoes resold in 15 minutes 50 cents. New shoes, latest styles, $2.50. S. T. Sorensen's, 153 Eight Seventh.
BOARDING HOUSE. Mrs. Ella Smith, prop. 532 Cedar street. Breakfast, 6:30 to 9:00 a.m. Regular dinner, 12:00 m. to 2:30 p. Mme. at other hours to order. Regular dinner 25 cents.
L. F. Lyons and Annie Brown, white were arrested for being found asleep in a bedway on South Wabasha St. at 2:00clock Tuesday morning, Lyons fortecled $10 ball and the womanpaid $10 fine.
Shoes mended while you wait, at Jarvis, $3 East Fourth street. Halfsoles, 50 and 75 cents. Prices reasonable for all kinds of reparing. He can do it on short notice. Jarvis, $3 E.4th street.
THE PEOPLES SHINING PARLORS, Walters Porter, Prop. No. 95% E.4th and 127 E.5th streets. When you wish a good shine give him a call. Shines 5 cents. First class work. Special chairs for ladies.
The Savings Bank, corner Fourth and Minnesota streets, is open Monday evenings from 6 to 8. Accounts with $1 with $1. A little cash saved every week may some day stand between you and want.
ELK EXPRESS CO., G. J. Charleson, manager, corner St. Peter and Ninth streets. Packing, shipping and storing of furniture and household goods. Piano renting, residentiality. House renting, real estate handled. Mr. George Nichols has started in the business of commercial photography as he is prepared to take exterior, interiors, groups and views. All orders will receive prompt and careful attention if left at 319 Wabasha street, second flat. Those of our patrons who desire to have matter published must get the same in this office later than in the other otherwise it may be crowded out. No notice will be taken of any communication that is not signed by the author. Mr. Walter Porter, the enterprising proprietor of the People's Shining Parlor, No. 114 E. 4th street, got a chance to sell his lease for a good price and has now opened his shining parlor, one at 195% E. 4th street, and 127 E. 6th street.
Persons desiring to rent Wagner hall, corner Charles and Western avenues for lodge meetings, parties, dances, meetings or for any occasion may obtain the same at reasonable rates upon application to J. H. Charleston, 632 University avenue.
Monday night the Star Laundry at 413 Carroll street was destroyed by fire. There was a loss of about $2,000 it is said, and the laundry was set on fire by some one. This is quite a set back to the enterprise which had just about got started good.
While their building is being altered, St. Philips Mission will hold services in the Church of the Messiah, on Friday 8c, between Kent and Dale Sts., Sunday school, 3 p.m.; services, 4 p.m. It is hoped that all members and friends of the Mission will attend.
FOURTH AND MINNESOTA STREETS
ST. PAUL MINN.
THE ONLY BANK IN ST PAUL
EXCLUSIVELY FOR SAVINGS.
Deposits received in sums of $1, and
upwards.
DEPOSITS OVER $2,375,000.00
SURPLUS FUND 50,000.00
W, B. Dean,
Ferdinand Wilius,
Gustav Wilius,
Thomas Fitzpatrick,
Harris Richardson,
Chaer G. Lawrence.
Charles P. Noyes,
John D. Ludden,
Kenneth Clark,
John D. O'Brien,
William Constans,
Jule M. Hannafor
Defective Page
Jarvis, the heeler and saver of soles, at 83 E. Fourth street, says, in one his street car sign: "I can mend shoes better than I can write," and, if the sign is a fair specimen of his work as a writer, he's right, as he can mend shoes all right if he cannot write all right.
If you wish a good shave, hair cut, or shave in the torsional line, call at Richard Cousby's neat barber shop, No. 374% Minnesota street. First class workmen only. Satisfaction guaranteed. Music for dances and all occasions furnished on short notice.
You ought to see the "Knapp Shade Adjusters," advertised in this issue, "fill a long felt want," and when you see them you'll want to. He and them to them to you. A postcard sent to P. O. Box 132, White Bear Lake, Minn., will bring him.
William A. Robison, concert violinist. Teacher of violin, cornet and mandolin. Studio 322 Bradley building, Fifth, between Wabasa and Cedar streets. Hours: 8:30 to 11:00 to music mandolin and piano, furnished for receptions and parties.
FIRST CLASS MEALS, like mother used to cook may be had at Mrs. Elsa Smith's. No. 352 Cedar street. Breakfast from 7 to 11 a.m.; lunch from 12 to 2:30 p.m.; dinner from 5 to 8 p.m. Meals to order when desired. Sunday dinners a speciality. Regular meals 25 cents.
Hamm's New Beer. This beer is so decidedly superior to any draught ever ever before brewed, that within a week it has already attained a fixed place in public favor. Call for it. Hamm's New Brew. 100,000 barrels in stock: On draught from now on.
SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE VAULTS - We invite your inspection. It costs little to place your papers, cash securities and valuables in adequate safety. Boxes in our valuables can be stored in boxes, trunks, etc., with us. Northwestern Trust Co. 138 Endicott Arcade.
Anything the matter with your stove range or furnace? If there is, just call at the St. Paul Stove Repair Works, 126 West Seventh street, between Fifth and Exchange streets, and they can make the repairs on short notice. You can make a make of stove or range supplied. Telephone, N. W. nished. Tel. N. W. 2831-L.
The reason why you should buy your Coal, Wood, Flour, Feed, Hay, etc., from C. W. STAELH, Rice and Carrol streets, is because you can get prompt delivery, best goods, full measure, and split wood in large or small quantities. Everything at the right prices. Both telephone 1446.
What is nicer than a pretty picture for a gift to a friend? You can get all sorts of pictures and frames at the Lowe Picture Frame Co. 475 Wabasha an am framed pictures; special prices for the holiday trade. Also make a speciality of oil portraits at moderate prices. Pictures framed to order.
The Colonade Dancing School had its usual good crowd present last Wednesday evening. The usual good time may be counted on for next Wednesday evening. Come early and stay at Woolley Hall, W. W. corner University and Farrington Aves. Entrance on Farrington. Lessons 25 cents.
The Valet Tailoring Co. Owen Howell, manager, has taken the place of Howell & Davis, tailors, at 156 East Sixth street. They have a new delivery wagon and have inaugurated a monthly scheme in which they agree to keep your clothes sponged and clean. They will do 60 per month. Go see them about it.
Ladies who wish a beautiful complexion will use Mrs. Howard's Royal delicacy for softening and healing roughness, pimples, tan and freckles; also a perfect vegetable tissue food for wrinkles and hollows in cheeks, skin texture. Manufacture only by Mrs. R. C. Howard, 662 W. Central avenue, St. Paul, Minn. Phone, Dale 918 J 2.
Mr. G. H. Evans lately from the East has opened a well, appointed restaurant at 449 Jackson street beehive 7th and 8th. All pastry, bread and rolls served are home made. Oysters and sandwiches are specialties Open from 6 a.m. to 12 p.m. Tel. N. W. Main 3466 1. When you are hungry to the Virginia Restaurant and Lunch Room.
Henry, Murphy, who recently came from Des Moines and secured a situation as porter in Geo. Gundlach's barber shop on East Seventh street on Wednesday morning filled a bath with a bottle of wine and fired a bullet into his brain killing himself instantly. Drink and despondency are supposed to be the cause for his rash act.
A business man, who often has on hand a considerable amount of clothing (tailor made) which he discards when slightly worn, will give the same to some deserving boy or young man who is attending school. Address at the AP104A4 office. This clothing can all be used to advantage and with slight repairs can be made almost as good as new.
Here is a statement of a fact that is very much to the credit of the Afro-Americans of St. Paul: Morguekeeper De Lance Richardson says that during the ten years he has had charge of the morgue no Afro-American has been interred at the expense of the morgue, the recent suicide, if so interred, will be the second instance of the kind in history of Ramsey县
The Colonaden Dancing Academy and a splendid crowd on last Wednesday evening and all enjoyed themselves. The splendid music by Prof. Lafayette Mason and Armand's orchestra gave the usual satisfaction. Armand's orchestra all the splendid music of the Colonaden Dancing Academy, corner of University and Farrington Aves. Be sure to attend next Wednesday evening. Arthur Winstead, principal.
The Colonaden Dancing Academy seems to be pleasing the public immensely as the number of patrons is constantly on the increase. The hall is a very nice one, has a fine floor and everything is as snug as can be. Despite all counter attractions every Wednesday night the usual large and well-decorated Colonaden Winstead is constantly on the lookout to please his patrons and especial attention is paid to beginners.
WILL. E. MATHIES CO.
SIXTH AND CEDAR* STREETS
HAS REORGANIZED AND WILL
CONTINUE IN BUSINESS IN SAME
LOCATION. MR. WM. F. ZIMMER-
MANN RETIRES AND MR. THEO.
SWANSON IS NEW MEMBER OF
FIRM. MR. MATHEIS WILL MAN-
AGE STORE AS HERETOFORE,
AND WILL BE PLEASED TO HAVE
ALL HIS FRIENDS CALL AND
MEET HIM AND MR. SWANSON.
GOODS WILL BE SOLD ON CASH
OR CREDIT PLAN.
Biddle Circle No. 38 Ladies of G. A. R. will hold a house warming and ice cream social in their new Lodge room, the Supreme Court Room in the old State Capitol next Tuesday evening from 8:00 to 11:30 o'clock. Dancing will be free of charge for all adults invited to come and spend the evening. Mrs. M. J. Leavitt, president; Mrs. Tearne E. White, secretary. Dont forget next Tuesday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Anderson Crump have recently moved to St. Paul from Wichita, Kan, and have bought out the Mansion House on the corner of 8th and Minnesota streets which they have fixed up nicely for a boarding and lodging house. They have a number of nice rooms, bath with hot and cold water, a kitchen, and a boarding room for 15 cents transient at 25 cents. Dinner from 11:30 to 1:00 Supper from 5:30 to 7:30 o'clock. Everything is to be run first class and up to date.
Beautiful hand made rugs may be made out of your old carpet, no matter how dirty or worn out it may be. Rugs made any size desired and out of any sort of old carpet which will be cleaned and disinfected free of charge. Just call up the Simonez Rug Company. N. W. phone main line 909-2982 and they will call for your old carpet. Rates reasonable. Office 90 West Seventh street where the beautiful rugs may be seen.
The meeting called at Pilgrim Baptist church last Friday for the purpose of organizing a musical association attracted a number of people who are interested in the event, who were invited to Mr. W. T. Francis acted as secretary. A number of short speeches were made by both ladies and gentlemen in encouragement of the plan. The follow-up meeting was also attended by a board of directors: J. Q. Adams, W. T. Francis, Joseph Harris, J. H. Hickman, Sr., G. W. James, J. W. Luca, J. Hoomis, F. L. McGhee, C. H. Miller, T. R. Morgan, G. C. Sleet, H. H. Warren, J. W. Williams, W. I. Williams. The roll of members had about 75 names added to it. There will be a meeting of the board of directors recently appointed for the new musical organization at the residence of the president of the street. Monday evening at 8 o'clock. Every member is earnestly urged to be present.
The people of St. Paul doubtless remember with pleasure the public installation and excellent program and delightful entertainment which was given by North Star Lodge No. 138 U. B. F. last December, also the very delightful program rendered on the occasion of the annual anniversary of the school. During spring, Well, this Lodge now proposes to spring an innovation, and will shortly issue invitations for an entertainment to be given by its members assisted by some outside talent, at Holcob Hall in Minneapolis early in November. This is to be made a swell society event. Holcob Hall is the best hall that can be obtained in Minneapolis. The school refreshment room and will be specially decorated for the occasion. The ladies will wear their new gowns and the gentlemen will appear in full dress. Chartered cars will be arranged for to take the St. Paul folks in a body. Watch for other announcement.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Dunn gave a very pleasant birthday party at their home 804 Sherburne Ave. on last Saturday in afternoon in honor of their little daughter Henrietta's twentyth birthday, and gave them a little present and spent a delightful afternoon. A nice little game was rendered; several little Misses played selection; there were games also, Little Henrietta received a handsome plane from her parents. The tables were pretty decorated with Nasturtiums and Autumn leaves. A large birthday cake sat in the center surrounded by twelve Candles. Each candle souvenir spoon which was given as a token of Henrietta's esteem for her little friends.
Olive Howard Note paper, Idell Blackburn cup and saucer; Ernie Valley Cup and Saucer, Albreta Bell Alco, lamp, Adina and Margaret Adams cut flowers, Eunice, Glass Note paper, Silk Hand bag, Crimo Heineck China Vase, Flossle Utley Note paper, Ruth and Edna Lawrence Book, Lyle Utley Cup and Saucer, Olle Beard picture Study, Willa Bell handkerchief Blanch Walker Blique Statue, Bessle Low Cup and Saucer, Rebecca Low Triple Mirror, Comla Combs Laca handkerchief Clilla Mowe Cup and Cup, Carrie and Cora Howard Pin tray, Hattie Petter Book Gertrude Howard Book Bessle Hodge and J Puteau Jewel Case Thressa Dunn Henegetra Dunn Ima Mc Johnson handkerchiefs, Mrs E. J. Hoston Birthday Cake Mrs. Chas, Morgan Book Mrs. Geo. W. Paterson handkerchief, Miss L. M. Bannfl played several very fine selections, Mrs Dunn was able assisted by Mrs. Patterson Miss L. M. Bannfl and Miss J. Proteau.
$2. Down AND
$1. Per Mo.
WILL BRING
$40.00
PER MONTH
WHEN YOU NEED THE
MONEY
You NEED Money When
You Are Sick or Disabled
THAT IS WHEN WE PAY
The Cosmopolitan Mutual
Casualty Company
421-2 Bradley Bldg., St. Paul, Minn.
Hustling Agent Wanted
VIRGINIA RESTAURANT
AND
LUNCH ROOM
All Pastry, Bread and Rolls Home-made
Oysters and Sandwiches, Specialties
449 Jackson St. ST. PAUL, MINN
Tel. N. W. M. Main, 3468-L
THE WEIR RECITAL.
On last Tuesday evening St. James A. M. E. church was comfortably filled with a critical audience the occasion being the violin recital given by Mr. Fieler Fowler Weir the brilliant young violinist of Chicago Musical College and also of the Royal Conservatory of Music. Mr. Weir was assisted by his老师 Mr. C. R. Minor, soprano solist. Mrs. O. C. Hall, teacher and Prof. W. A. Weir.
The singing of Mrs. Minor was as it always is delightful, the reading of Mrs. Hail was exotically fine, the playing of Prof. Weir was superb and each was heartily applauded and both Mrs. Minor and Mrs. Hall graciously responded to encores. The principal violinist of Prof. Weir, who had spent a year in Germany since his last visit to our city and while he was good then he had wonderfully improved during his absence, he so moved to throw so much soul and expression into his execution that his audition were spell-bound. His modern dance company, coupled with his music, made him a delightful performer. That he will make his mark in the musical world is a certainty.
Mrs. Blankmark Archer was to have assisted but was unable to do so on account of illness. Her number on the program was ably filled by Prof. Weir.
The recital throughout was most delightful. Palmer in the program:
Piano solo "Last Hour"
Piano MUSIC HISMARCK ARCHER
"Hondo "Murpeltion"
MR. FELIX WEIR
Bernese Opera "Love of Love"
MR. R. C. MINOR.
"Hallade in the Garden"
MR. Viexterspe
FELIX WEIR
Reading-Selected ... Anonymous
MR. O. C. HALL.
Sorranpo Solo - Freeting Day ..... Balloy
- Paust Fault ..... Neil WORL
- Sarasteo FELIX WEIR,
Means the Cosmopolitan Mutual
Casualty Company.
The Cosmopolitan Mutual Casualty
Prepared to do business. Investigate
by calling at the office No. 421 Bradd
Building. Fifth street, between
MINNEAPOLIS
DOINGS IN AND ABOUT THE GREAT IN "FLOUR CITY."
Matters Social, Religious and General Which Have Happened and Are to Happen Among the People of the City.
Rev. J. H. Bingaman of Omaha, Neb, will fill the pulpit at Bathessa Baptist church morning and evening tomorrow.
North Star Lodge, No. 138 U. B. F. of St. Paul contemplates giving a swell entertainment at Holcomb's Hall on November 8th. Look out for it.
Shoes rescoled in 15 minutes at S. T. Sorensen's, 3123 Nicole avenue. Sewed sores 75 cts, nailed soles 50 cts. New up-to-date shoes, all styles, $2.50.
In St. Paul and you wish to get FIRST CLASS MEALS, like you used to get at home call on Mrs.ella Smith, No. 352 Cedar street. Breakfast from 7 to 11 a. m.; lunch from 12 to 14 a. m.; dinner from 5 to 8 p. m. Meals to order when desired.
Sunday dinners a specialty. Regular meals 25 cents.
The "Birthday Rally" to be given by Bethesda Sunday School will take place at the church Friday and children will furnish a pleasing program. Each man, woman or child who brings in as many pennies as he or she is years old will be given ice cream and cake or be given Everybody invited. Admission free.
N. B. MARSHALL.
Carpenter and Builder, 554 Aurora Avenue.
We have in our midst a first class carpenter and builder in the person of Mr. N. B. Marshall of 554 Aurora Ave. He will also give prompt attention to jobbing and general repairing, painting, plumbing, and furnishings furnished upon application. Telephone N. W. Dale 381 J-2. He has 50 lots on University avenue for sale on a cash payment of $25, and a monthly payment of $10. Will build houses on these to suit purchasers on monthly payment. DON'T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY.
THE ELK EXPRESS CO. now has its office corner Ninth and St. Peter streets.
THE VALET TAILORING CO. O. HOWELL, MGR.
Renovating, cleaning and repairing. Will call for and deliver free of charge. Monthly contracts $1.00 per month. Suits pressed while you wait, 50c. Your patronnel. All work required. Tel. N. W. Main 2768-1, L56. East 6th street.
MILLS' LUNCH AND SANDWICH
ROOM
J. S. Mills, proprietor, 444 Robert street, between Seventh and Eighth streets. Open from 6:00 a. m. to 2:30 a. m. Tel. orders delivered free. Telephone. N. W. Main 3082 L. This is the place to get your favorite sandwich or a good lunch. The best grade of coffee is used and the cook knows what to serve. You will sure of excellent coffee. An epicure will find all of the delicacies of the season here. Soup and stews are always kept on hand and such sandwiches as the New York, Pork Tenderloin Chicken, St. Paul, Hamburger, Eggs are served at any time. If you try this place once you will be satisfied with the quality, service and price and you will be sure to call again.
THE ELK EXPRESS CO.
Has Moved to Larger and Better Quarters#
The Elk Express Co. is growing and spreading out now that spring is here. The company has leased the building on the corner of St. Peter and Ninth streets, No. 467 St. Peter for its office and storage. There has also been added to the campus to mont one large wagon and two small ones. The company is now prepared to move any one as quickly as any other firm in the business and at as low rates. Only competent men are employed to handle the goods. G. J. Charleston, Manager.
Mr. S. D. Kem has been appointed agent for "The Voice of the Negro" a monthly magazine published in Atlanta, Ga., and the only magazine now being edited and published by Afro-Americans in this country. Messrs. J. W. E. Bowen and J. Max Barber are editors. Among those who have pledged their support to the magazine as contributors are: Prof. W. E. B. Johnson, Prof. E. B. Booker, T. Washington, Mrs. Mary Church Tervill, Mrs. Pannie Barrier Williams and a score of others prominent among the leading writers. The price of the magazine is only $1 per year. Persons desiring to subscribe should send their subscriptions to B. D. Kemp, Cosmopolitan barber shop, 74 Mast Pitch street, or Army Foot, foot of Robert street, St. Paul.
NOTICE
The Colonnade Dancing Academy made quite an improvement for their patrons. They have built a skylift twelve feet long, six feet wide and two stories high, a preliter of the building, said that Mr. Winston has the finest crowd of sociable people he ever saw. The Colonnade Dancing School is a regular summer resort for dancers. All patrons are invited to attend each Wednesday in the week.
To Whom This May Concern.
Should this reach the notice of anyone who knows any relative of W. A. Spears such person will confer a favor by notifying Pride of Montana Lodge No. 4 K. of P. at Helena, M. This lodge has a building in 8300 would like to hear from Spears' sister. Yours in F. C. and B., L. L. Grissom, C. C., 9 Main St. Jas. H. Howard, K. of R. and S., 1008 Ninth Ave. Helena, Mor. T.
Have you seen the new magazine, "THE VOICE OF THE NEGRO?" See notice elsewhere in this issue.
You have no right to complain that the sermon is thin if you are keeping the preacher on a water gruel salary.
Knowles Building. Boys' Hall. Stone Hall. Girls' Hall. Model Home.
ATLANTA UNIVERSITY, Atlanta, Ga.
An unsectarian Christian Institution, devoted especially to advanced education. College, New
real, College Preparatory and English High School courses, with Industrial Training. Supervise
workers. Music and Writing. Athletics for boys. Physical culture for girls. Home
and training. Ads given to needy and deserving students. Term begins the first Wednesday
in October. For catalogue and information, address
Knoxville College, Classical, Scientific, Agricultural, Mechanical, Normal and Common
Broad College, together with Theological, and Medical Schools. Fifty-two dollars a year
will cover full expenses of board, tuition, fuel, light and furnished room. Separate home
and matron for little girls and another for little boys from 6 to 15 years. Term begins last
Monday in September. Send for catalogue to President of Knoxville College, & norville
BALTIMORE & OHIO R. R.
ALL TRAINS VIA WASHINGTON
TEN DAY STOPOVER
ALLOWED
AT
WASHINGTON
BALTIMORE
PHILADELPHIA
DEPOSIT TICKETS
IN MEDIVATEY ON
ARRIVAL AT
EITHER CITY
Knoxville College, Classical Science, Agriculture
School Co-arries, together with Theological and Medical
will cover all expenses of board, tuition, fuel, light
and matron for little girls and another for little boy
Monday in September. Send sur catalogue to Knoxville
Tenn.
TUSKEGEE
Normal and Industrial Institute
TUSKEGEE ALABAMA.
UNIFORMATED
Organized July 4, 1881, by the State Legislature as the Trinketee State Normal School Exempt from taxation.
BORN IN WINSTON, Principal.
BORN LOGAN, TANSAH.
LOCATION
In the Black Belt of Alabama where the
blacks counter the white three to one.
In the White Belt of Alabama where
Enrollment last year 1,235; males, 884;
females, 371. Average attendance, 1,105~
instructors, 88.
**COURSE OF STUDY**
English education combined with industrial
training. Includes information on
VALUE OF PROPERTY
Property consisting of 2,267 acres of land, 50 buildings almost wholly built with student labor, is valued at $100,000 and no mortgage. NEEDS $100 annually for the education of each student; ($200 enables one to finish the course; $100 enables one to pay their own bank in cash and labor); money in any amount for current expenses. Besides the work done by graduate as class assistants, the students reached through the Tuskegee Nrg Conference. Tuskegee is 40 miles east of Montgomery and 135 miles west of Atlanta, on the Western Railroad. Tuskegee is a quiet, beautiful old Southern town, and is an ideal place for study. The college makes the place a excellent winter resort.
SCOTIA SEMINARY
CONCORD, N. C.
This well known school, established for the higher education of girls, will open in the next term. October, will be made to provide for the comfort, health and through education of students. Expense for board, light, fuel, washing, $15, for term of eight months. Address
RV. D. J. Batterfield, D. D., Concord, N. C.
AVERY COLLEGE
TRADES SCHOOL
ALLEGEMONY P. A.
A Practical, Literary and Industrial Trades School for Afro-American Boys and Girls and girls and a separate building. Address
JOSHEN D. MARONY, Principal, Allerheay, Pa.
Morristown Normal College
FOUNDED in 1881.
Fourteen colleges in the state, commodo buildings. Climate unassured. Departments: College Preparatory Normal, Engineering, Art, Standard, Typing and in industrial Training.
FIFTY DOLLARS IN ADVANCE
Will pay for board, room, light, fuel, tuition $8.00 per month, tuition $2.00 per month, department sand for circulation to the president.
REV. JUDSON S. HILL, D. D.
Mertown, TN
New England CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC
BOSTON, Mass.
All the advantages of the font and most completely equipped Conservatory training are offered by the Conservatory, which is affiliated with the master's in Art and Music and associated with the master's in the Production and Music. Through work with all departments of music, the Conservatory offers a variety of Music. GEORGE R. CHADWICK, Musical Director.
BALTIMORE & O
CHICAGO
COLUMBIA
PITTSBURG
ST. LOUIS
LOUISVILLE
ALL TRAINS VIA
Departments--Normal and Collegiate; Special attention to Vocal and Enthusiastic Models; Technical Agriculture, Sewing and Cooking.
Healthy Location; heated by steam, tilted to securely a room, boar tition, light and Seat, 800.
For Catalog and Particlass
write to J. H. JOHNSTON.
President:
Agricultural, Mechanical, Normal and Common and Medical Schools. Fifty-five Dollars a Year. Must have little boys from 6 to 25 years. Term begins last to President of Knoxville College, Knoxville.
DAMMON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
AIMS AND METHODS
The aim of this school is to do practical work in the ministry. Its course of study is broad and practical; its ideas are high in its work. The courses are neat, systematic clear and simple.
COURSE OF STUDY
The regular course of study occupies the first half of the year in the several departments of theological instruction usually pursued in the leading theological seminaries of the country.
EXPENSES AND AID
Tuition fees. The apartments for students are plainly furnished. Good board can be had for students per month. Buildings heated by steam. Aid from loans without interest, and giving students who do their utmost in the line of self-help. No young man with a degree can afford the advantages now opened to him in this Seminary. For further particulars, L. G. ADKINSON, D. D., Pres. Gammon Theological Seminary, ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
HOWARD UNIVERSITY
(Including Medical, Dental and Pharmaceutical Colleges) INCORPORATED 1867
Thirty-eighth session will begin October 2, 1865, and continue eight months students matriculate for Day Instruction.
4-Years' Graded Course in Medicine.
3-Years' Graded Course in Dental Surgery.
Instructors' Graded Course in Pharmacy.
Maturizes clinics and practical laboratory demonstrations. Well-equipped laboratories in all departments, nexcel laboratory students must register before October 14, 1865. For further information or catalog, M. D. Secy, 910 R Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
TILLOTSON COLLEGE.
AUSTIN, TEXAS,
The Oldest and Best School in Texas for
Colored Students. Faculty mostly grades
of well known colleges in the north.
Reputation unimpaired. Manual train
ing a part of the regular course. Music
special feature of the school. Special advantages for earnest students seeking to help themselves. Send for catalogue and circular to
REV. MARSHALL R. GAINES, A.M.
PRESIDENT,
Austin.
A CHRISTIAN SCHOOL Experienced Faculty
Progressive in all departments, best Methods
of teaching, most students looked after
Students taught to do manasse
labor as well as think. For catalogue
and other information, write to the president,
R. B. LOVINGGOOD, AUBTIN, TXAQ.
BRAINERD INSTITUTE
A normal and industrial school with a
graded course of study, designed to give
students the knowledge, English education, and lay a solid foundation for success and usefulness in every
vocation of the school or boarding hall
CHESTER, B. C.
OHIO R. R.
NEW YORK
PHILADELPHIA
BALTIMORE
WASHINGTON
GREAT PREACHER’S FINE TACT.
Henty Ward Beecher Drew Lesson
Edam Humorous Incident.
'g Very Uttle girl was taken by her
parents to a prayer mecting at Plym:
‘outh church presided over by Mr.
Beecher. In giving out a hymn Mr.
Beecher requested every person pres.
‘ent who could sing to do so.
‘Tho response ynot having been suf
ficiently hearty Yuring the first verse,
Mr. Beecher before the second again
exhorted all to sing.
“Come, brethren, if you have the
grace of God in your hearts, let tt
come out in your volces. “Sing! All
together now! Sing!”
The little girl took this as person.
al appeal and hastily bethought herself
of the song dearest to the heart; the
cry of a fruit vender who often
drought frult to her home. Accord-
itigly, when the verse began she let
forth’ her voice in a shrill ery of
“Straw-ber-ries! Straw-ber-ries! Straw.
veries! ~The congregation faltered.
stopped and laughed. but Mr. Beecher,
not at all diseoneerted, called out,
“that's right, little girl. "That's right.
It you can't praise God in anything
due strawberries, then sing strawber
ries.”
STORY OF NAPOLEON REVIVED.
Assertion Again Made That He Or
Wecest™ Micke ‘Géldiecs” Poloanéd.
A grim story of Napoleon is told
by Christian Waas In a Frankfort re-
view under the title of “Napoleon at
Jaffa.” A great number of the sol-
diers were down with the plague, and
‘one day Bonaparte sert for his chief
surgeon, Larrey. “If I were you,” he
said to him, “I should put our plague
patients out of their misery; it would
save (hem from having recourse to
opium to soothe them.” “But my duty
is to make them live,” replied Lar-
rey. Bonaparte then’ revealed the
grim truth, He and his staff were re-
duced to traveling on foot because the
horses were all being used for the
transportation of the sick. He must,
therefore, either abandon the plague:
stricken to the cruelty of the enemy
or get rid of them. Mr. Waas main-
tains’ that the order was carried out
acecordingly. There is an end, ob-
serves the Journal des Debats, to the
iMlusion of the famous picture in the
Louvre of “Bonaparte Visiting the
Plague-Stricken Soldiers at Jaffa.”
Matrimony vs. Female Labor.
One objection to trained female la-
bor, says the Medical Press and Cir-
culator, is that the service Is Hable
to be disorgunized by epidemics of
matrimony among the employes.
Nurses are by no means exempt from
this weakness, and of late a dispost
tlon has shown Itucl? In certain heat
tals to discourage the admission of
young women who are “engaged,” on
the ground that the fact of their fu-
ture being thus mortgaged indisposes
them’ to that selabnegation and
single minded devotion to duty which
are held to constitute the stock in
trade of those who propose to take up
nursing as a profession. Some of the
young women may prefer the indepen:
dence of the single state, but the ma-
jority assuredly only await the oppor
tunity to disqualify themselves for
the nursing profession.
How They Told Time.
‘Three boys were told to go and take
the exact time by the town clock. The
first came back and said: “It is 12
o'clock.” He became in after life a
bookseller. ‘The second was more ex-
act, He said it was three minutes
after 12. He became a doctor. The
third looked at the clock, found out
how tong It took Bim to walle back to
the house, returned to the clock, then
added the time of his walk to the time
shown, and reported the result thus:
“It is at this moment 12 hours, 10
minites and 19 seconds.” That boy
came to distinction as Helmholtz, the
tontiat:— iw Yoru Taibews:
Popularity of Yiddish.
Yiddish is an archafe and corrupt
form of German extensively spoken
by Jews in many countries besides
Germany tteell. A Startling instance
of its popularity is given by a writer.
In Jerusalem he met “a worthy man
who denounced me for being unable to
converse with him in Yiddish. ‘You
are no Jew,’ he protested, ‘Tor you do
not know the Jewish language.’ I an-
swered that Hebrew was the Jewish
language and that I was quite willing
to try to speak to him in it, His re
Joinder was: ‘I have no patience with
this new-fangled idea of speaking He-
brew in Jerusalem.”
Kind of Men Who Make Doctors.
iteason for the cheerfut tempers
ment whieh characterizes so. many
doctors probably is to be found in the
type of the man entering the medical
profession, says the Indian Medica
Record. ‘The nervous. the timid, the
Gyspepiie and the Invalld do not read
ily take to the doctor's calling. Only
those endowed with strong and virile
temperaments are fitted for the pro-
fession or likely to embrace it. It is
Tocause medical mon are, as 4 class,
of a peculiar virile nature that’ thes
are cheerful and resourceful.
ee
‘Transport the penniless little 1olk ot
the arid soils to fertile lands and they
will grow big and opulent. This has
been done. Holland is but one of
many countries that testify to this
fact. After prodigious effort this re-
doubtable little nation reclaimed its
soll from sterility and in seventeen
years after this had been accomplished
an average Increase of four inches
was officially noted in the stature of
the population.
Did it ever occur to you—that this
4s the time of the year to put your
stoves and ranges in repair for win-
ter? THE ST. PAUL STOVE RE-
PAIR WORKS, 126 W. Seventh street,
Jas the best workmen and the best
equipment in the city, and can fur-
nish any part,of any stove or range
at any time and any place. A card
will bring us, or you may ‘phone N.
W., Main 1206-L1, or T. C. 242. Bear
in'mind that we can do your work
now better and cheaper than when
cold weather sets in and we are
rushed with orders. Time is short so
DO IT NOW. - se
CHICAGO
AMERICA’S GREAT CITY VIEWED
BY THE APPEAL MAN.
A Compilation of a Number of Happen:
ings, Social and Sthorwise/iamang
the Afro-Americans of the Second
City of This Glorious Union.
hain anil gin vi eae ht
It you, wish everybody to see it, put
it in THE APPEAL.
‘Mr. Chas, J. Pickett left for Wash-
ington, D. C. last Saturday.
‘The Chicago Sub-Treasury. contains
$55,000,000.00 of the nation’s ‘money.
Mrs. Gus Williams and daughter
have returned from their vacation trip.
Edward H, Wright, lawyer, 2963 We.
bash avenue. Telephdne Douglass 3002.
J. Gray Lucas, the attorney, may be
found at 59 Dearborn street, Suite 412.
‘The Appeal is on sale at Faulkner's
Afro-American news stand, 3104 State
street
‘The engagement of Miss Aurelia
Marshall to Mr. John Young is an-
nounced. ~
Next Tuesday. October 17th, is the
only registration day for the Novem
ber election.
Iee cream, soda water and soft
drinks at Mrs. Lettie Easton’s, 2619
State stret.
‘The Men’s Sunday Forum of the
Institutional church opened for the
season Sunday. -
‘The best suit in tho elty for the
price at Six Little Tailors, 124 Dear-
born street. .
You need ‘THE APPEAL every week.
Send your order to the office, 323-325
Dearborn street.
Mr. H. U. Holmes, a well known
Chicago man, left the city this week
on an extended trip around the world.
‘The many friends of Mr. J. H.
Holmes of 3229 Wabash Ave. will be
pleased to know that he is well and
up again.
Cole's Carbolisalve cures catarrh.
Insert a small quantity in the nostrils
At night on retiring. 25 and 50 cents.
All druggists.
THE APPEAL ts without question
the best advertising medium through
which to reach the Afro-Americans of
Chicago.
“Ozonized ox marrow” ts the best
preparation for the hair. Sold by all
druggists. Depot, 76 Wabash avenue,
Chicazo.
Mr. and Mrs. Riley White have re.
cently moved to 170 B, 82nd St. where
they will be at home in the future to
their many friends.
__ You ought to have THE APPEAL
every week. Send a postal card order
to'the office, 829-325 Dearborn street,
and it will come.
| You must register next Tuesday,
October 17th, unless you have already
registered, or you cannot vote at the
November election,
subscribers for THE APPEAL, who
wish to discontinue the paper ‘must
send written notice to the office, prop-
erly dated and signed.
James H. Moody, Chicago agent of
THE APPBAL, may be found at the
office, 825 Dearborn street, every bust
ness day from 12 to 1p. m.
If you wisn a loan on household fur-
niture, horse, wagon, diamonds, jew:
City er rent estate, and are holding a
salaried position, call on John Q
Grant & Co., room 311, No, 36, South
Clark street.
The Six Little Tailors are now oc-
cupying their new and spacious west
ern headquarters at 124 Dearborn
street, and would be pleased to have
their ‘many friends and patrons call
and see them.
Persons having money to Invest oa
chattels, diamonds, ete, call on Jobn
Q. Grant & Co., suite ‘11, 86 South
Clark street. ‘They will give two per
cent per month on all moneys left with
them to be loaned on above securities.
‘The I. B. W. Club will hold its meet
ings in the future every Thursday
from 2 to 5 o'clock P. M. at Douglas's
Center, 3032 Wabash Ave. Mrs, C.
Svest ts President‘and Mra. a. White
See’y.
Mr, William C. Norris, well known
in Chicago, is now habitating in the
logging camps of Oregon with gener.
al headquarters at the beautiful city
of Portland. He will return to his
Chicago friends in the near future
very much recuperated by his Western
trip.
‘The Knights Templar of Chicago
will celebrate their 18th Anniversar3
of Corinthian Commandery No. 1 at
the Coliseum Annex on the evening
of Nov. 22d. All grand and subordin
Gite bodtes of the craft have beon in
vited, The celebration will wind uy
with a grand ball.
‘The opening ‘of the Lincoln club:
the new headquarters of the west
side ‘republicans, was celebrated a
the clubhouse at 1215 Washingtor
boulevard Saturday ‘night. The clut
rooms were well filled with members
Jand their friends and an informal pro:
gramme of short addresses occupied
most of the evening,
\
‘Under the management of J. L. Foye
and W, M. Simmons, the Keystone Ho
tel for men only is still the leading
Inotel in Chicago, Frye and Simmons
We successors of the original proprie
tors, have successfully managed the
place for almost two years, and the}
‘are gaining in popularity every day
| They ‘are both energetic young busi
hose men, and aro meeting with a de
served encouragement from the peo
ple.
| ‘The readers of The Appeal are ask
ing why is it we don't publish an}
more births and only publish deaths’
[mney say that it reminds them of th
nie a eet cies nak Gud sahil
ery ee ean pie ee ego RR oy
here 4s an _unrepealed law in Scot-
land to the effect that “no man*shall
play football hereafter under a pen-
alty of 50s.” It dates from the time of
James I. Richard Il. once passed a
law against “Tennise, football, and
‘other such importune games,” and at
‘the seme time in Scotland an eract-
ment wus made that “the footballe
and golfe be utterly erved down’ anc
not be used.”
THE APPEAL: A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERIOAN NEWSPATER.
Cron A
CA |modern
Be 4 z
a isthe
Pane, BIG
Pere)
B . QA i ‘S wae
> <6 BREWERY
CPi. Roey here
L < BF” ng and do make
Wert the Best Beer
Ga Seay on the market.
CET xe 35,
CALL FOR IT
THE KNAPP SHADE ADJUSTERS
W. J. WORK, SALES AGENT
P. 0, Box 192 WHITE BEAR LAKE, MINN.
Have your old shades rehung by the new meth
od, and by which you obtain better’ ventil-
Iation, control the amount “of light and
secure privacy when desired.
ORDERS LEFT AT THIS OFEICE WILL “RECEIVE
PROMPT ATTENTION
eas i
a
rN a Paar}
eG © 3 eg 5
kt ONC RW EO eed
a ie cot
| ha alia ae il,
ah ene 7, a)
eo | Seer ft]
nr it)
“We, ,a_jury*composed of! men+ who knows
Sige Betti Cigale ibd a tocante
ee Conts, fromseveryasinoker™ es
A Trieyae ere
5¢ Cigar
TA Weer C00 tb OL REL ae
Fae
oe
¥ Moores V
: |
_ Stoves
- Always
oe aS
. SY a
y N Nat Es A a
1 IN Saag
THE SANITARY WAY
—NO SMOKE, NO SMELL
A slight pull on the chaln tts the
top, forming a hood which, draws all
‘smoke, or odors, from broiling, back
into tht range, thus preventing thelr
escape into the room.
This Is Moore's patent and Is to
be found on Moore’s Ranges
Oral and ope the Hinged Top,
the Oven ‘Thermometer, which
makes baking a sure thing: the
| | Controtler Damper, and other dy
|] devices to be found only on Moore's
| Ranges.
fy Johnson Furniture
and Carpet Co. p
419-421 Jackson Street
, a
ay . |
$ bd pe
2 D
JS. MILLS’ LUNCH ;27 SANDWICH ROOM.
2S. MILLS? LUNCH s3x6>> SANDWICH FOO".
No. 444 Robert Street, ‘Telephone N. W. Main 3082-L
SANDWICH BILL.
dere iy B| Bimmer ee
Russian’ Sandwich ........0.2..... 18 | Roast Beef Sandwich... 10
Riarfequin Sandwich = == 2148 | Alam Sandwich’ | aeced! SB
CE si ECLA
(= Vs 1) 1 ae.
x ; a ‘6 -
CC is 3 hee
. 2 CN j
Qa oo N@QiP/
2 ._:-—««. NG
EYE DEFECTS AND SYMPTOMS.
Eye defects are few—symptoms many.
‘There can be but two defects in the human eye.
Theeye may be too long in whole. Then-we have the
Myopic eye.
Or too short in whole—the Hyperopic eye.
Combine the two in one eye and we have Astigmatism.
Properly adjusted glasses will correct these defects.
Medicines or waiting, never.
Symptoms that spring from these two simple eye mal-
ormations are manifold; such as eye and headaches, Indi-
gestion, Dyspepsia, Nervous Debility, Chorea, Epilepsy and
other ailments having their origin in lack of nerve force.
Mie comet ail Deicctset tea Buaad aye tual gusts
will remedy. Charges reasonable. Satisfaction guaranteed,
HARMS OGULO CURES SORE EYES 250 PER BOTTLE,
RH. HARM & BRO.
OPTICIANS,
109 East Seventh Street. ‘ST. PAUL, MINN.
CLIFFORD A. SMITH
Pa [TAILOR]
i cs TAS JUST RECEIVED HIS
| Py - FALL AND WINTER
iis WOOLENS
| Suits and Overcoats
NR PM sie, Fi ad Ousliy Couaned
Ct Pressing and Repairing.
| VA 412 Bradley Building,
(ne _ ec
Ld SHAROOD’S
ee ee,
—-———_ The Ideal Comfort Shoe
2 MADE ONLY BY .
TheSharood ShoeCorporation
The Largest Exclusive Manufacturers
of High-Grade Footwear in the West ‘
| Sharood Shoes Are Made for the Whole Family
FOURTH AND BROADWAY, ST. PAUL, MINN.
Defective Page
Pork Chop Sandwich. ......++--... «10
Plain Steak Sandwich...c.cccsc0. 10
Rabie Sandwich vasecesveesveess 1
Roast Beet Sandwich..... 10
Roast Veal Sandwich........0.... 10
Tongue Sandwich on. i. sss 10
Ham and Egg Sandwich... 10
Sardine Sandwich eve .ccc ccs 3
Ham Sanawich > BEOEE "5
Egg Sandwich 20...
Wienerwurst Sandwich <..c000i. (8
Cheese Sandwich 252720000000 1
Pigs" Foot Sandwich......sccscs.s 3
ee, Sc. Tea, Sc. Cocoa, Sc.
SUEIRTY DIRELTORY.
coer iii S
st. PAUL.
MASONIC \
AFA Y
nA Oe .
Teena
MS er
a
Lt ae
A ci: ey ABM ———
most WORSHIPFUL GRAND LODGE
MINNRGOTA, RUF. AND A.M.
ee OWN, GRAND MASTIRR
1B SnGne ie miseavoll Min
1 DURA, GRANT, SECHETARY,
PIONEER LODGE No.1, AT: ad &
ae ee eee ThiNt Mongiot of each
Megha Mat a AM eg Chaves sipet
ey aerate Ae 00 te Eds
Pease en eee
PERFECT ASHLAR LOGI NO, 4 3.
RLS One and fab
ica dhigmelt game ane a
Ee eee eee i
Ene A eee ©
MARS LODGE, NO. 2208, MEETS
ston and fourth "pueda ine month
Re eRe
Farrington. “Daniel Roy. N.G.: ‘Thos. R-
igen, P. S., 422. 8t. Anthony ‘ayée’
PASE OAND NASMEIES cOUNCIt,
xPARE SIND BASTING COUN:
Oda “Feliows’ “Hail, “221° W. University,
Sarin Farrington“ dintrenes_on Peenik:
PH a CR
HRlimal a seg Rhino soe
Si, PACY, pATMARCHY Xo. 11
Bea ciiows AMES WCAG
rington avenue. ‘Thos, R. Hickman
eT PE eS ati ee
BEER. Yond, W. ME ists Hae
“a HUSRBOW OH ER. i AG
Monday in cach month at cae Fellows
NESE AB, oe Oia a eta
Shad BSE! SP GET M aN
Sahoo WEE Bo ad Sarton
ivan! SROTHaNE OR FRIEND:
BIDDLE CIRCLE, LADIES OF G. A.
BG TAM MB HITCH, COR
ils a iy Neos Ran
near ha A, beets
sick attended on noilee, Rev. R. Seymour
‘Pastor. Parsonage, Cor, Jay and Fuller.
Rubobt a is ae tele ‘waitnaay weve
fg Rr at cl Ed Mae
HS eA,
“st, PHILIP'S EPISCOPAL MIsSi07
Sooke Aaa Waa a Say
Wgenita ottas,gc bi
OSWALD WEIS,
GROCER
SPECIALTIES: Teas, Coffees,
Fruits and Vegetables.
Full line of Canned Goods and
wae ction
440 University Ave.
ST. PAUL = MINN.
50 vexne
EXPERIENCE
‘Trape MARKS
Desicns
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