The Appeal

Saturday, July 21, 1906

St. Paul, Minnesota

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THE APPEAL KEEPS IN FRONT BECAUSE: 1-It aims to publish all the news possible. 2-It does so impartially, wasting no words. 3-It its correspondents are able and energetic. VOL. 22. NO. 29. BISHOP POTTER AND WASHINGTON'S GRANDFA A Rediscovered Statue and Some Advice to A Travelers. BISHOP POTTER AND WASHINGTON'S GRANDFATHER Bishop Potter has reason to be proud of the deep interest he has awakened in England in his efforts to restore the historic Washington relics which were removed fifty years ago from the Garsond church, in Wiltshire, an hour's ride directly south from Stratford-on-Avon. The relics were on the point of being shipped to America at the time the old church was being renovated. An American persuaded an official to the monument and memorial tablet erected to Lawrence Washington in the chancel in the year 1645, Parts of the monument were taken out of the parish without a "faculty" from the proper authorities and were about to be shipped to America when they were detailed at Southampton and stored in an outbuilding near the church, where they have remained all these years. This and recent attempts to bring over the ancestral home of the Washington in Northamptonshire, at the time of Louis fair and coopstruct it as a show on the grounds have awakened Englishmen to the priceless value of all that pertains to George Washington and his ancestors. Garsond should not be confounded with Sulgrave Manor, another home of the English Washington, near the town of Banbury, in Northamptonshire, which the St. Louis fair syndicate wanted to buy when it was put up for sale with 204 acres of farming land. Garsond, quite another place, is only a hamlet, perhaps fifty miles further toward the southwest. Money was needed to restore the Garson monument, and a friend of Bishop Potter called his attention to the matter. He at once set about interesting himself in completing the work. He promised to bear the necessary expense, and during his recent trip abroad he visited Garson and had the pleasure of seeing the spot where the enterprise is to be carried out. He was warmly received, and his sermon there was greatly admired. Garson is a small village of perhaps a hundred inhabitants nesting in the center of rural Wiltshire, with its magnificent meadows, parks and forest land. The nearest town is Malmesbury two miles distant. The Garson church and plain and of considerable antiquity, andough renovation has given it a fresh and somewhat modern atmosphere. The interior is, in conformity with the outside, extremely simple in furniture and ornaments, with a record on the south wall of all the rectors since 1297. The old manor house once occupied by the Garson Washington has undergone many vicissitudes, and toward the end of last century was occupied as a farmhouse. It is now in ruins, but portions of the original structure remain. "The stones composing the church monument and the memorial," says the North Wilts Herald, "have been very carelessly preserved. Still there are enough for the purposes of reconstruction. "Originally the monument was of great beauty, and although much dilapidated, it is not difficult to see that when first placed in Gar森don church it consisted of a freestone very richly glided and painted, with marble columns of the Corinthian order. The inscription was placed on an oval slab of black marble enclosed in a bowl. The interior is now detached, while the slab has been submitted to much ruthless handling, to which a crack from side to side bears witness. "It is a consoling fact, however, that the remnants of such a historic relic are capable of renovation and re-cre GARSDON 3 GARSDON CHURCH One day a very nervous, timid looking woman, accompanied by a robust farmer, came on the platform at one of the country stations. For a short time she seemed to devote her attention to the time table, but not finding there the satisfaction she sought, she stepped up to the station agent as he came out of his office. "Will you please tell me if the three-fifteen has gone yet?" she asked in concern. "Yes, about twenty minutes ago," he replied. tion. The existence and whereabouts of the monument were communicated by the rector of the parish, the Rev. Robert Hop Potter, the well-known bishop of New York, who has made himself entirely responsible for its reconstruction. "It is only right, perhaps, that the premier Protestant ecclesiastic of America should thus interest himself in perpetuating the memory of one who was so closely connected by family relationship with the great George Washington, as the following genealogical particulars will show: Sir Lawrence Washington of Maldstone, and cousin to John Washington, who emigrated to America, and founded the Washington family there. There is nesting in this connection to relate that to the Washington cont of arms (that of Sir Lawrence), which is preserved at present in Garson church and will be attached to the reconstructed monument, contains three mullets and two bars, and it was from these that the idea of the Stars and BISHOP BISHOP POTTER. Stripes of the American flag was conceived. wis, the West Wind. But one West Wind, found the world. "To the memory of Sr. Laurence Washington Kt lately孝卿 Register of the Chancery of known Pyret of Charlity exeblarger A lovingly Husband A tender Father A bountiful Master A constant Relleuler of the Poore and to those of this Parish A perpetual Benefactour Whom it pleased God to take unto his Peace from the fury of the insuing Warrs Oxon. Mjal 1470 to the insuing Warrs Oxon. Mjal 1473, Etat Sine, 64. Where she died Juni 130, and was buried 16to Ano. Dnl. 1645. His Patricios cinereus curatui fillus Arena, Condere tulumu tumule jacet ite plus; The plions Son of his Parents here inter'd. Who hath his share in Urne for them prepar'd. "It may be stated that Sir Lawrence Washington's connection with Garsson dated from 1641, when he purchased the manor house there. At that time he made a mission, standing in a magnificent park, but only a magnificent portion of the house now remains. "At least five members of the family lie buried in the church, and the memorial slabs formed part of the original floor of the chancel, and on CHURCH. "And when will the four-thirty be along do you think?" "Why, not for some time yet." "Are there any expresses before then?" "Not one." "Nothing at all?" "Nothing whatever." "Any freight trains?" "No." "Are you quite sure?" "Certainly I am, or I wouldn't have said so." "Then," said the timid woman, turn- Travelers. BISHOP POTTER. THE APPEAL. the erection of the new chancel now constitute a portion of the paving of the aisle. The first of these slabs is to the memory of Sir Lawrence's only son, the second to his daughter, and the third to his daughter-in-law, after Pargiter. "This lady presented to Garodson church the year before he decease (1684) a solid silver communion service of massive weight, which is still in an admirable state of preservation. All the pieces (four in number) are engraved with the sacred monogram within a halo, and they are thus inscribed: "This was given by the Lady Pargiter to Garodson Church, she was formerly the wife to Laurence Wash-Esq, who both lye buryed here." HIAWATHA LEGEND Different Versions in Nearly Every Indian Tribe. Different versions of the Hiahawana legends are found among nearly all the Indian tribes. In his attributes, they only resembles the demigods of the Great War slew evil monsters to deliver their oppressed people. The principal legend relates that Nokomis, daughter of the Moon, was swinging in a rope of twisted grape vines, surrounded by her women, when one of them out of her grasp took hold of Nokomis to earth. Hehe she bore a daughter whom she warned against Mudkeen. wis, the West Wind. But one day the West Wind found the maiden lying among the lillies, and he wood her with such sweet words and soft caresses that she forgot the warnings of her mother. She bore him a son, Hiawatha, and then, because the West Wind forgot her, she died. Hiawatha, who is known among the different tribes as Michabou, Chilabo, Manobozo and Tarenyawagon, was reared by his grandmother, Nokomis. She taught him to understand the voices of the woods and waters, and told him the legends, which he, in turn, gave to all the Indians. These letters tell how the Aurora-Borealis is the death of the spirits; the brilliant lights being the symbols of the clubs of the warriors; that the Milky Way is the broad white road of the ghosts through the sky, and that the rainbow is composed of the flowers that have perished upon earth. Hiawatha passed much of his time alone in the woods, where he learned the language of birds and beasts and played so sweetly on his flute that they would follow him wherever he went—Craftsman. Satisfactory Bankruptcy They had a peculiar way of going into bankruptcy among the Marawarar in India, now unhappy giving way to the less picturesque method of the white man. When a man could not pay his bills he would summon his room in which they were ushered into a room in which he was ushered into a hold god was enshrined, but covered up with a cloth and with the face turned to the wall, in order that it might not witness the scene that was to follow. The insolvent would then, in garb of mourning, lie on the floor, presenting his back to his creditors, who, on a given signal, would fall on his shoulder and be beholden by a labor him till their wilt was ended. The beating finished, honor was declared to be satisfied all around. Four Big Brothers. Three brothers of John Seamonds of Tucson, Ariz., joined him in a family reunion last week. All are railroad conductors and big men, the aggregate weight of the quartet being 817 pounds. Their father was a railroad contractor, being one of the men who built the Chesapeake & Ohio. Albert is the heaviest of the brothers, weighing 252 pounds, the lightest being James, who is but 178. going to her husband, "I think we'll cross the tracks, William." Christian Scientist—How is your father, Johnnie? C. C.—How is your father to-day, Johnnie? Defective Page BEAUTY FOOD FOR MIDSUMMER Diets Recommended to Those Who Want to Have a Fresh, Clear, Summer Skin. Mary THE GIRL WHO LIVES ON A PARTLY FRUIT DIET Is sure to have a plump, face and a nice clear skin. "I am on a complexion diet," said the prettiest girl of the bunch gathered upon a corner of the summer plaza. "I am eating things that are good for my skin—and nothing else, writes Madame D'Arcy. "I go upon the principle that beauty is skin deep. But I also believe that it takes a great deal to keep the skin nice. I eat entirely to please my skin. I food injure my skin I them must. I never eat anything that makes my nose red or my lips pale. And I give up all foods that make my arm rough and my cheeks mottled. "That may seem extreme to some people who do not know all about it. But really it is quite in keeping with the true nature of foods, for foods affect your skin. Last spring I ate too many acids. I mixed my acids up, putting salad, strawberries and fruit punches all together in one meal. "The result was that my nose broke out a bright red, and it was weeks getting toned down again. "I am eating now for my general skin. It was rough and full of open pores. But I learned how to subdue these things, and little by little my skin is becoming smooth and clear and free from these awful pores. "For my breakfast I take one acid, I eat one kind of berries, but I do not eat before breakfast. I take them before breakfast, is so stupid to eat fruit before one's breakfast, so the French will tell you. I glasses of clear water before eating, and then I eat almost anything I want. Then I finish my meal with fruit. That is the French complexion diet." "It makes a very satisfactory arrangement for me. I find that it agrees with me. I drink all the coffee I desire, but I take care not to have it too hot. Very much evil is done by scalding the lining of the stomach. I never treat my stomach badly. I eat my foods hot, but not too hot by means. If food is too hot to be held in, it is surely too hot to be put into the stomach. The Vienna Complexion Class. "I have a friend who was the color of paste. She went in the shoulders and felt badly. I found that she was drinking hot water mornings before breakfast, and, womanlike, she was overdoing the matter. She drank the water scalding hot, and the result was a burned stomach. I put her on the Vienna complexion diet and she got well. "The Vienna complexion diet is a wonderful thing. It is worth a trip across the water to obtain it. You are here, but it lacks local color. I went over and tried it, and I shall never cease to be glad that I did so. "I joined a little complexion class. We were under the care of one of those queer specialists, and we were put upon a certain diet. For breakfast we had cool water and were told THE GIRL WHO LIVES O le sure to have a plump A Useful Hen. A New York boy learned many things during a visit to the country. Everything on the farm was new to the little fellow, and he especially delighted in the livestock. When he found out that the hens made eggs he was anxious to see one of them at work. Being a patient waiter, his desire was finally gratified. Proudly seizing the product of the cackling fowl he marched into the house with his prize. "Let me have it," said his aunt, "and M. THE BERLIN DIETARY TAKES OFF THE FAT And makes the profile sharp and clear. to drink plenty of it before sitting down to eat. Then we had coffee so poor that we wanted only one cup, and some of the finest toasted bread in the world. It was a case of twice cooked food throughout the day. Women who are troubled with a poor complexion can try twice cooked food. It is particularly good in the summer helps not only a woman but a man. **Russian Complexion Diet.** "The Russian complexion diet is THE BERLIN DIETARY And makes the profit good in its way, but it is more for winter. There is so much meat and fish in it. We took it in while we were at *E*. Petersburg. It makes you as lean as a rail. You have browled fish, broiled meat in small quantities, and you have had even a suspicion of sugar in it. You thrive and get thin and muscular on this diet, and you bloom like a rose. "At a summer resort it is a good N A PARTLY FRUIT DIET face and a nice clear skin. we will cook it for dinner." "Oh, 'tain't necessary," replied the boy. "The hen cooked it. It's still warm." In the Blue Grass Country, "I see here that a German professor claims that the time is coming soon when there will not be enough water on earth to support human life." "Which only goes to show," replied Col. Kornfed, "that science, suh, backs up the judgment which true Kentuckians have always held." MINNESOTA HISTORICAL GAINSITE. THE APPEAL STEADILY BECAUSE: 4-It is the organ of ALL Afro-Americans. 5-It is not controlled by any ring or clique. 6-It asks no support but the people's. thing to take the Irish complexion diet I am going to take it up for a month and note my improvement. The idea is to eat cereals without too much cream upon them and with no sugar at all. The pure sweet cereal is the best. Then you eat vegetables by the quantity, mostly cooked. You do not eat a great deal of corn, but you go in for spinach, which is the great beauty food. You also eat a great deal of fresh cheese, which is also the diet of Southern Italy. The peasants live on it work hard, thrive and have lovely skins. "You must not mix your complexion diets. If you are taking the Irish diet you must not mix pastry with it. Rich pies and outedale do not go well together, and the dinner that is two-thirds porridge must not wind up with a smoking dough pudding. "Here is a complexion diet for the girl with a red nose and an inflamed TAKES OFF THE FAT e sharp and clear. pair of cheeks. For breakfast, cooked fruits, consisting of stewed berries, eaten either hot or ice, without too much sugar; some kind of well-cooked hot bread; coffee if the patient likes it, and a little meat if she wants it. "At noon the red-nosed victim can eat all the vegetables she wants, providing they are thoroughly well cooked, made with meat, and in good gestible beans, peas and corn. All must be cooked until soft, as they cook vegetables in the South. She can wind up with crackers and stewed fruits. What to Eat for the Skin. "Raw fruits are not bad for the girl with the red nose, providing she does not eat too much of them. "For her principal meal, the red-nosed girl may eat a salad, with plenty of oil in it and a very little lemon or fish; may eat a white meat of fowl or fish; may eat potatoes cooked and then cooked again in cheese or cream or any other way she may like them. A Man's Complexion Diet. There is a complexion diet for the pale man and the pale woman. Both are in need of something that makes blood, and for them there is the corn starch diet. One must live upon corn starch. Cream with eggs beaten into it, mayonnaise dressing, nearly all eggs and oil, and upon the nicest of sweet fruits. In a little while the color will come back. Then it is quite easy to exercise off the fat. "Taking off fat is always a matter of diet. When I was in Berlin I bought the Berlin dietary. I am giving it to all of my fat friends. It gives them an abundance of food to eat, yet the food is by no means fattening. I gave it to a woman who was struggling along the weight of 200 pounds, and in a little while she was as neat as a pin and down to normal. She had followed my little Berlin dietary." $6,000,000 for Philanthropy Probably one of the largest benevolent bequests rescribed in any country during modern times has fallen to the lot of Hungary by the will of the late Count A. Karolyi. The count was seventy-five years of age, and he left no direct descendants. He had also been one of the most enterprising supporters of modern methods of scientific agriculture in Hungary. By his will he bequeathed a sum of $6,000,000 for philanthropic objects. A Good Joke. "I thought you told me there was an extensive plant in the neighborhood of the lot you sold me." "So there is!" "Why, man alive, there's nothing near the place except a cemetery?" "That's it." A Confusion of Persona. She—Won't you take me for a ride in your automobile? He—I'm sorry, but it's broke. "Oh, are you?" $2.40 PER YEAR. SUMMER DIVERSIONS SOME ENTERTAINMENTS ONLY POSSIBLE IN WARM WEATHER. A Most Aesthetic Daisy Luncheon—Decorations and Refreshments for a Lawn Party—A Morning Wedding. A Daisy Luncheon. Now is the season for a daisy luncheon. These most satisfactory of nowers are blooming in quantities in the country and outskirts of town, and may be had for the plucking. Their lasting quality makes them especially adaptable for decorative purposes. Back the masks, fireplaces and of the room with them; brown earthenware crocks and jars are fine receptacles for this purpose. Facial dimisales may be made from cardboard and water colors for place cards, or two or three natural ones may be thrust through a plain white card; the lettering done in gold is effective. A charming centerpiece is made by filling a low glass dish or yellow jar with sand and then planting the daisies and make garlands of them to drop to the corners of the table from which they should be white, candles of yellow, with shades of yellow trimmed with artificial marguerites. This makes the prettiest table imaginable. The menu can be kept nearly all white and yellow; if grape fruit is not procurable, oranges may be served in the same way, or white cherries dipped in powdered sugar; cream of celery soup with the yolk of hard boiled egg grated over the top; sweet breads with new potatoes, green peas in yellow ramakins or pastry shells with tiny carrot straws, hot biscuit, a fruit salad in banana skin boats, and orange ice with individual sunshine cake. Provide a knot of daisies for each guest, and in this day of the popular "all white" gown, it is most likely that the guests will complete the color scheme by appearing in white costumes. A correspondent asks for a description of a lawn party, how to decorate, what to serve, etc. There is nothing that will make a lawn party so pretty as quantities of Chinese lanterns, and there cannot be too many used. Then if without much expense the grounds could be wired in a large, open space, while a veritable fair land glimmering in the trees. The colored bulbs are very effective. Have plenty of rugs scattered about, with seats, a fern decorated table with a fragrant or fruit lemonade, a text or canvas awning for the serving of light refreshments, a platform for dancing, with a stringed orchestra or three or five pieces, will afford the requisites for a most delightful party. A bride-elect wishes to know what to serve at a 12 o'clock wedding luncheon; if paper or linen napkins should be used and what the duties of a ring bearer are. In the first place, if this bride wishes to be strictly up-to-date she should call the repast serveed at noon a "breakfast," and not a "uncheon;" the hour for the latter is from one until two. An acceptable menu for this season of the year would be a cold mixture all the fruits obtainable, with a sugar drink and served in tall tigers; then breasts of chicken or sweet-breads, potatoes, creamed sweet-asparagus tips on toast; a salad of cherries, the plits replaced by hazel nuts served on white hearts of head lettuce; an ice or cream, wedding cake and French coffee. Use linen napkins; paper ones are only permissable at picnics, on the porch and at public affairs of an informal nature. The ring bearer immediately precedes the bride, carrying the ring upon a tray or a small lace-covered pillow; recent wedding circles were carried in a long golden stamen of a large calce by a tiny white-dressed page, and the idea was a lovely one. MADAME MERL DISORDERED DIGESTION. Simple Diet and Active Exercise Best Means of Keeping Vital Organs in Proper Condition. Much of the sensitivity of the body to changes in outside temperature comes from disordered digestion. Inward congestion, due to clogged, torped bowels, produces a sense of chilliness. Some case condition causes one more readily to succumb to the heat of summer. Simple diet and active exercise, keeping all the vital organs free to perform their functions, will enable one to enjoy the cold of winter, and to be fresh and hearty in midsummer's fiercest heat. Whoever reflects, will be able to see the truthfulness of these words of Thoreau: "It is the vice of the last season which compels us to arm ourselves for the next. If man always conformed to Nature, he would not have to defend himself against her, but he for a long constant nurse and friend, as do plants and quadrupeds." He himself was a proof of this statement. Invitations for Dinner. Except for a formal dinner, invitations written in the third person are out of date. Personal notes are sent ten days or so in advance and mention is made if cards or any other amusement will take place after dinner. For a formal dinner, the engraved card is generally used and mention is made if cards or any other amusement is to take place. HAVE YOUR RIGHT THE APPEAL THE APPEAL, A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY ADAMS BROS. EDITORS AND PUBLISHERS 49 E. 4th St., St. Paul, Minn. ST. PAUL OFFICE, No. 110 Union Blk. 4th & Cedar, J. O. ADAMS, Manager. MINNEAPOLIS OFFICE, Guarantee Loan Bldg. Room 1020 HAKVEY B. BURK, Manager. CHICAGO OFFICE, 323-5 Dearborn St., Suite 310, C. F. ADAMS, Manager. TERMS. STRICTLY IN ADVANCE SINGLE COPY, ONE YEAR ..... $2.00 SINGLE COPY, BIX MONTHS ..... 1.10 SINGLE COPY, THREE MONTHS ..... 80 Whenever possible, use a double-spaced font. 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The date on the address label shows when subscriptions are made two weeks prior to expiration, so no paper may be missed, as the paper stops It occasionally happens that papers sent to us do not receive any number when due, inform us by postal card at the expiration of five days from the date of receipt, or by duplicate of the missing number. Communications to receive attention must be neat, upon important subjects, plainly written, and not too messy. We must reach us Tuesdays if possible, anyway not later than Wednesdays, and the bearer signs the envelope, turns, unless stamps are sent for postage. We do not hold ourselves responsible for the views of our correspondents. Write for terms. Sample copies free. In every letter that you write us never fail to give your full name and address, plainly written, post office, country and state. Best ness letters of all kinds must be written on separate sheets from letters containing news or matter for publication. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT. Treat each man according to his worth as a man. Distrust all who would have any one class placed before any other. Other republics have fallen because the unscrupulous have submitted loyalty to class for loyalty to the people as a whole. —President Roosevelt's speech at Little Rock, Ark. SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1906. THE 59TH CONGRESS Here is a partial summary of the doings of the Fifty-ninth Congress: The pure food law, the meat inspection act, the statehood act, the isthmian canal act settling the question of type and settling it reasonably, the natura-act, the employer's liability act, the permanent law of "free" denatured alcohol act, and two or three other measures of importance figure prominently on the congressional account. But there is another side of the account. Congress virtually acquiesced in the publicization of the Constitution and States. It refused to interfere with the states' representation, by which one man in the South is equal in political power to a half dozen in the North. It passed a resolution of sympathy with the Jews in Russia, but had no sympathy with the Aro-Americans in the South. It required a strenuous effort to prevent a nationalizing of the Southern Jimmy crew and Fifty-ninth Congress will be as noted in history for what it left undone as for what it did. "A MODERN JEREMIAH." The Chicago Tribune calls Bishop Turner a "modern Jeremiah" and a prophet of ill for his race. It says that "the Afro-American needs every possible encouragement and uplift. M. BISHOP HENRY M. TURNER. One of the Most Fearless Leaders of the Afro-Americans—A Man who "Talks Right out in the Meeting." The tendency to retrogression is strong. Socialists. According to Mr. Howell enough without any discouraging suggestions. Inspector on Honeysuckle island, man simply takes a girl and lays with her. NOW THE APPEAL ALDS not proprose to refute the Tribune's opinions nor to substantiate those of Bishop Turner, but it does assert that there is no Afro-American leader in the United States who has labored more zealously and more evidence of unselfish devotion to its mission in the church Bishop Turner. During a long life he has bored in establishing churches and schools all over the country and has trotted all over the globe in the same behalf. He feels his manhood and does not condescend to toady and flunkey around that "thrift may follow fawning." He is not built that way, hence he is not a millionaire and never will IF A MAN IS SINCERE People generally respect a man who convinces them that he is sincere in his notions, even if they consider the notions themselves, very cranky. But a man can not select a better way of rendering himself an object of concern to assume a virtue when he has it no use. Such has been Bent Tillman's experience in the Morris incident. Tillman, smarting under a rebuff from the President which he had experienced and well deserved selzed upon the incident to gratify his desire for revenge and to make political sense. He then horn as the great champion of American womanhood. But the people saw through him and it; and the Senator, like the king of France: "Marched up a little hill, And then marched down again." Exit Tillman, unwept, unhonored and unsung. "Educated in America, where he has long lived, in his service in the Chinese long office, Sir Chentung Liang-Chong, is to be influential in promoting friendly relations with the United States." The above expression of opinion from a prominent journal, seems to THE APPEAL to be almost idiotic. JJ how an intimate knowledge of the immeasurable evidence which exists in the United States and influence "in promoting friendly relations" THE APPEAL cannot see. And moreover the Chinese ambassador has given out his opinion that the only hope of promoting friendly relations lies in a great change in American treatment of Chinese. The Japanese seem to have the white brother in a panic over the white. In a recent speech, Congressman Mikhail of California said "The Japanese are in imitation of the American brands and are selling them as the genuine article, they are putting counterfeit American bicycles on the market, and are even reproducing American labels and revenue stamps on boxes of cigars." Congressman did not seem to admire these evidences of Japanese enterprise and ingenuity, and "went for the heathen" Japanese without mercy. it is no good for the newspapers to The Esquimaux have already reached condemn lynching so long as they are the high plane in reference to mar- so bitterly opposed to the punishment rage so ardently desired by advanced of the lynchers. KILMA SPEAKER CANNON. When the Republican convention of the Eighteenth Congressional district meets at Wattsa August 16 it will be nominate "Uncle Joe" Cannon for Congress and launch his boom for Preside n of the United States. Lieutenant the Speaker have been nursing his Presidential candidacy for nearly ten years and have concluded that the proper time to tell the Republican party that they are the conclusion to succeed President Roosevelt will be next fall, when the veteran Congressman will be nominated for his seventeenth term as member of the Lower House of Congress. It is thought probable that other illinois Congressional districts will endorse "Uncle Joe" for the Presiden cy, although the only definite plans related to the Speaker's home district. Speaker Cannon has thus far pooh-pooh- becoming a President al candidate, but Republican leaders in his district say he will make a to rumitable a, and that the honor of a home indorsement is due him because of his long service and distinguish ed record as a Congressman. Socialists. According to Mr. Howell, Inspector on Herschell island, a man simply takes a girl and lives with her so long as both are satisfied. So if the Society are not satisfied with things he goes to Herschell island and be happy, and leave the rest of us to worry along the best we can. John Sharpe Williams is continually straining his little brain to do or say something brilliant or at least sensational; and therefore he made a kick against making an appropriation President's from a traveling expenses. John comes from a little mudhole town in Mississippi and represents 1300 of the most ignorant hill-billions upon the face of the earth. John has a great deal more gab than brains. At French Lick Springs, Ind., of which Tou Tagart, chairman of the Democratic national committee is owner, the sign: Gambing of All Kinds is Prohibited. meets one at every turn. But sad to say, a raid recently made on the place brought to light gambling apparatus by the car load. The sign in question was merely a Democratic platform. If the newspapers would cease exploiting the cranky notions of men who were wise in their own conceit and great food and coffee of common sense, it would be a move in the right direction. Why should space be wasted to notify the world that Dr. Isaac Friedman favors applying Oster's theory to the pest afflicted? What if he does? Bishop Potter has been among the Nubians on the Upper Nile and he says that their "mental progress stops at a certain point." The Bishop went there seeking to find some grounds to affirm his American race-prejudice; he found it. He formed that opinion a half century ago, before he had ever heard of the Nubians. The residents of the Ghetto of Chicago are very tired of the sociologists who make a practice of poking their noses into their business and homes. The best plan is to kick them out or return their visits. A Kentucky German wants a divorce from his wife upon the ground that she is a "Negress." the attorneys claim that she is an octonion; and of course, neither a mulatto nor a "Negress." The news man of Russia, when it comes to writing about the Jews, are a close second to our own associated press liars when they write about Afro-Americans. Bishop Potter says that the British only pretend to like the Americans, and he might have added that the Americans only pretend to like the British. JOHN H. HARRIS SENATOR SHELBY M. CULLOM. Who Has Secured the Passage of a La w Making an Appropriation for Secur- ing. Plans and Location for Lincoln Monument at Washington. SENATOR CULLOM SECURED THE PASSAGE OF THE PRESENT LAW. And for Twenty Years he was chairman of the Committee Having That Subject in Charge and Worked Faithfully on it. Senator Cullom's early senatorial career was brought most prominently before the public through his introduction and championship of the interstate commerce bill. The relation between the people and the common carriers was a subject in which Senator Cullom had long before his election to the Senate taken an active interest. He came to the bar at a time when the corporation, as an institution, was its infancy. No man at that time dreamed of the wondrous growth which the year of the future would give it. Important to the corporation to pect to vast aggregations of capital were unsettled. Corporation law, as such, was waiting for the construction to be given it by the judges like Supreme Court of the United and the Supreme Court of the United. The relation between the common carrier and the people was equally an unsettled question; and the Senator early began the study of this importance of the law. In the case called "granger legislation", and the construction State laws for the control of railroad transportation, began the discussion which is still before the national Congress as one of the live issues of the time. Senator Cullon has stood in the front rank in this important work. As Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives, he appointed a committee of the Lower House of the Illinois Legislature which drafted the first Illinois law to strengthen the first Illinois law to subject; and the law as amended by this Legislature, stands as the Illinois law today, and probably goes as far as a state can constitutionally go to regulate the regulation of common carriers. As Governor he appointed the Illinois Railroad and Warehouse Commission, which tested the new law and put it into practical operation. Senator Cullom secured the passage of the present interstate commerce law and the safety years he was chairman of the subject in charge. SENATOR SHEL Who Has Secured the Passage of a L ing. Plans and Location for L For the past few years Senator Culom has had in mind the accomplishment of an achievement which will stir the pride of every citizen of Illinois, the building of a monument in the City of Washington which will commemorate the remotest generation of Abraham Lincoln. Senator Culom is one of the few men living who knew Mr. Lincoln before he became a national character. He sat at the feet of Lincoln and drank inspiration from that noble soul. He was his associate at the bar of Illinois, upon the political platform and in the details of political and so CULLOM AS GOVERNOR GAVE A CLEAN CUT BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION. Used Strict Economy in All Branches of the Public Service—The Public Debt, of the State Paid—Greatest Good, to the Greatest Number His Motto. In the administration of the State government Governor Culom developed the highest qualities of statesman, and combined with the greatest degree of business administration, and, by the excrese of the strictest economy in all branches of the public service during his administration the public debt of the State was paid. to this administration, too, that the additional penitentiary at Chester and the additional hospital for the insane at Kankakee were constructed. He was a faithful friend of the State institutions and not a breath of scandal at the construction or operation of any of them while he was in the executive mansion. Men of the highest character and standing were selected for important departments of service, with a special view to deform executive ability and fitness to perform the duties of their respective positions. There was no executive interference with the several boards of trustees, commissioners and heads of departments in the organization and in the appointment and removal of subordinates. The various boards were held accountable for results and were given the fullest powers by the executive. Wherever the interests of the State fell within the purview of the executive department, the most patient and thoughtful attention was bestowed upon them. SENATOR HOPKINS Gives His Views on Diffranchisement in the South Speaking of diffranchisement Senator Hopkins said in an interview: "Under the federal state constitutions in this country today, a comparatively few persons at the South are intrusted with power equal to that enjoyed by a great number of persons at the North. In that state of South Carolina for example, where there are 500,000 white persons and 700,000 Afro-Americans. In that state Afro-Americans are not allowed to vote, and the result is that the 500,000 whites there exercise, Federal Government, as much power as do 1,200,000 persons in Illinois. "Now, it is a more commonplace to state that such a condition is a travesty on representative government. If that order of things continues, the order will not be long before the liberties of the people will be disregarded. Such government may be administered intelligently for a time, but it can never, in any sense, be said to be free. The spirit of unjust discrimination runs through the 'warp and woof of it,' the unjust abatement that is oligarchic and despotic, and the verses of republican principles and republican institutions. Safety Appliance Act The thousands of employees of the railroads all over the United States will hold Senator Cullom in grateful remembrance for his work in drafting the law providing for the equipment of all interstate commerce lines with safety appliances for the coupling and uncoupling of cars. This act has been referred to in an opioid abuse construction and application of the act by a United States judge as—“So highly meritorious, so generous in its purposes, so in harmony with the best sentiment of humane people and a progressive sentiment, that appeals strongly to the courts for its prompt and vigorous enforcement.” Economic subjects are proverbially dry and uninteresting but the student of history will look in vain for more vast and compelling dealing with the more vast and complex subjects, more startling aggregations of capital, more just and equitable reforms, mingled with more generous consideration for human life, than is included in the enactments of Conduct and the subject of interstate commerce under the leadership of Shelby M. Cullom. ILBY M. CULLOM. La w Making an Appropriation for Secur- lincoln Monument at Washington. social life. His love for the great emancipator strengthened with the years, and much of his character, exemplified in his long service, is the result of his service to the nation. Lincoln in the work of the legal profession in Springfield. The frultion of his great design seems now to be fairly in sight. Senators have been made a part of a law making an appropriation for the purpose of securing plans and a location for the proposed Lincoln monument at the capital. The desires and prayers of the people of Illinois will be a senior Senator in this labor of love. To preside over a great commonwealth like that of Illinois, surpassing in wealth, importance and resources many of the minor States of Europe, and states in population than the United States, he was elected President, in such a way that every department and bureau shall work in concert in the development of the moral and material progress of a mighty people, requires not only the guiding hand of practical experience, but the selection of men and measures best adapted to secure the desired result. His was recognized as the very best of administrations, and so satisfactory to the people of the State was this thoroughly patriotic and business-like man, who was elected and re-elected in 1880, and he was the first and only man ever so honored in the history of the State. Cannon Coming. Speaker Cannon of the House of Representatives is a popular idol in Illinois, because of his long and honorable career and his sterling character. Mr. Cannon resembles Abraham Lincoln, who respects. Speaker Cannon will come to Chicago to deliver a speech at the Auditorium in favor of the renomination and reelection of Shelby M. Cullom to the United States senate. The Smithsonian Institute. For more than twenty years, Senator Cullom has been, by appointment, Senate its representative on the board of the Smithsonian Association's Smithsonian Institution, a great national institution located in Washington for the diffusion of knowledge among men. The board of regents has practical experience as chairman is the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. Senator Cullom gives largely of his time and the benefit of his experience in the extension of the work of this institution. COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS. An unsectarian Christian Institution, devoted especially to advanced education. College, New College, Preparatory and English H gh school courses, with Industrial Training. Supervise boys and boys. Physical culture for girls. Home and training. Aided given to needy and descriptive students. Term begins the first Wednesday in October. For catalogue L2 information, address HOWARD UNIVERSITY Thirty-ninth Annual Session will begin October 1, 1906, and continue eight months. STUDENTS MATRICULATED FOR DAY INSTRUCTION ONLY. Four years' graded course in Medicine. Three years' graded course in DentalSurgery. Three years' graded course in Pharmacy. Instruction is given by the didacticules, quizzes, clinics and practical laboratory demonstrations. Wellequipped laboratories in all departments. Unexcelled hospital facilities. Knoxville College. Classical, Scientific, Agricultural, Mechanical, Normal and Common School Courses, together with Theological, and Medical Schools. Fifty-five Dollars a Year will cover all expenses of the school, light and furnished room. Separate home and mafia for little girls and another for little boys. Presented on Monday in September. Send for catalogue 4) President of Knoxville College, 54272 N. Monroe Street BALTIMORE & OHIO R. R. ALL TRAINS VIA WASHINGTON TEN DAY STOPOVER ALLOWED AT WASHINGTON BALTIMORE PHILADELPHIA DEPOSIT TICKETS IMPRIDATELY ON ARRIVAL AT EITHER CITY Knoxville College. Classical, Scientific, Agriculture School. Coaches, together with Theological, and Medical will cover all expenses of board within the light a and matron, for little girls and another for juniors, boys Monday in September. Send for catalogue #) Presidie Yen TUSKEGEE Normal and Industrial Institute Organized July 4, 1881, by the State Legislature of Mississippi State Normal School. Exempt from taxation. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON, Priacipal. WARREN LOGAN, Treasurer. LOCATION In the Black Belt of Alabama where the blacks outnumber the whites three to one. ENROLLMENT AND FACULTY Enrollment last year 1,235; males 883; females 1,152. Average attendance, 1,932; instructors, 88. COURSE OF STUDY Education combined with industrial training; 284 hours of operation. VALUE OF PROPERTY VALUE OF PROPERTY Property costs $10,000 per student, land $5,000 building costs $1,000 per student labor, is valued at $30,000, and no mortgage. NEEDS $50 annually for each of six students; ($200 enables one to finish the course; $200 creates permanent scholarship. Students need $1,000 per semester. Money in any amount for current expenses. Besides work done by graduate as class room and industrial leaders, thousands are reached through the Tuskegee Negro Conference. Tuskegee is 40 miles east of Montgomery and Alabama on the Western Railroad. Alabama Tuskegee is a quiet, beautiful old Southern masterpiece with a mild mind and uniform, thus the Tuskegee is a place of quiet reflection. TILLOTSON COLLEGE The Oldest and Best School in Texas for Graduated Students. Faculty mostly graduated from the University of North牙. Reputation unsurpassed. Manual course. Music a special feature of the course. Special advantages for earnest students. Special course for themselves. Send for catalogue and circular to REV. MARSHALL R. GAINES, A. M. AUSTIN, President. TEXAS. A Practical, Literary and Industrial Trade School for Afro-American Boys and Girls, located in New York, and a separate building. Address. Joseph D. Mahone. Niles, CA. Allegheny City. Alphapia. New England CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC All the advantages of the finest and most completely conservatory building in the world, the alt- mometer of recognized credit of Art and Fashion and association with the masters in the Profession are offered students as the New England Conservatory of Art and Fashion. A wide variety of music Courses can be arranged in Excursion and Oratory. All parties in and your book will be at our application BALTIMORE £ 0 CHICAGO OAK CHEVROLET ST. LOUIS LOUVREVILLE ALL TRAINS VIA F. J. Shadd. M. D., Secretary. The regular course of study occupies the years, and covers the lines of work in theology, and the instruction usually pursued in the leading theological seminaries of the country. EXPENSES AND AID. Tulliver Hall. The apartments for students are plainly furnished. Good board can be had for students per month. Buildings heated by steam. Aid from loans interest, and gifts students who do their utmost in the training of young man with grace, gifts, and energy. For the advantages now opened to him Seminary. For further particular address. L. G. ADKINSON, D. D. BRAINERD INSTITUTE CHESTER, S.C A normal and industrial school with a English education, and lay a solid foundation for success and usefulness in every area of study. A graded course of study, designal to give a thorough, symmetrical and complete MorristownNormalCollege Fourteen teachers, Elegant and com- pulsive, indulging in elegant unsurpassed. Departments, English, Muscle, Shorthand, Type- writing and Industrial Training. FIFTH DOLLARS IN ADVANCE will pay for board room light, fuel ti- tulum and incidences for the entire year. Eard $6.00 per month; tuition $2.00 per per month. Through work done in each de- partment. Rev. Judson S. Hill, D. D. Morrentown, Tenn. SCOTIA SEMINARY CONCORD, N. C. This well known school, established for the higher education of girls will open for the first time. The school will be made to provide for the comfort, health and thorough instruction of stu- dents, washing, $45, for term of eight months. Address Rev. D. J. Batterfield, D. D. Concord, N. C. UNIVERSITY Experienced Faculty Progressive in all departments, best Methods of Instruction, Health of Students carefully looked after. Students taught to do manu- labors as well as think. For catalogue and other information, write to the President. R. S. LOVINGGOOD, AUSTIN, TEXAC- E OHIO R. R. PITTSBURG BATTLEFIELD PITTSBURG BATTLEFIELD CALIFORNIA WASHINGTON rn | | fr WEEK'S. RECORD. IN. MINNESO. [ORAS CAPITAL. The “Gaintly City” and Saintly City Felks—Newey Items of Social, Re- gious and Gineral Matters Among ake People. REPUBLICAN TICKET * Governor... ALL COLE «Chief Justice CHARLES M. START State Treasurer CLARENCE DINEHART Secretary of State JULIUS “H, SCHMAHI Attorney General E. T. YOUNG State Auditor -8. G. IVERSON Clerk Supreme Court ©. A. PIDGEON Railroad Commission C.F. STAPLES ns Se atin a erica BRE eR Cuca ie” aeaee Its office corner Ninth and St. Peter streets. ROOMS TO RENT to gentlemen at ‘96 Summit:Avenue. Call and examine and learn terms. Miss Alda J. Fogg, of West Superior. 1s visiting Mr. Milton Fogg and family ot 427 Rondo St. Mrs. George K. Grissom left Thurs day for Chicago to visit her sister Mes. 8. W. Brooks for several weeks. Mrs. Geo, Duchett has retuned to the elty from a most delightful visit to her parents in Northwestern Canada, FOR RENT.—One or two furnished rooms for rent, gentlemen preferred. Apply to Mrs. “A. A. Hodge, 214 ‘Thomas street. Actor Cribs, a one legged man, was arrested for vagraney on last Wednes. day and on Thuraday was sent to the workhouse for 80 days, NOTICE!—Mra.Ella Smithhas mov- ed her boarding house trom 852 Cedar street to 566-Codar street. Old and new customers are tnvited to call. ‘The Union Sunday School plenic_ at Minnetonka Thursday attracted an enormous crowd and was a most de- Tightful attatr. Everybody was happy. ‘The Appeal has purchased tho press and outht of the Richardson Printing Company and added the same to the plant. Bring in your Job printing. Best work at lowest prices. Rev. J. R_ White, W. M. of North Star Lodge, No. 138, U.'B. P. left yes terday for Chicago, thence to Lexing ton, Ky., to attend the triennial meet: ing’ of the National Grand Lodge. Shoes mended walle you walt, at Jarvis’, 83 Bast Fourth street. Halt soles, 80 and 75 cents, Prices reason- fable for all kinds of repairing. He can do It on short notice. Jarvis 354 Minnesota ‘street. FOR RENT—Pine 10.ro0m flat, sec ‘ond floor of No. 319 Wabasha, all in good order, water and closets, newly painted anid papered. References re- quired, “Apply to R. M. Newport, Pio heer Press Building. Mr. and Mrs, Wesley Dorsey for: merly of 1265, Fairfield Ave. have moved to thelr new home 848 Kent St They” havea ‘nice new seven-room house are “living at home and board: Ing at the same place.” ‘THE PEOPLES SHINING PAR 1.018, Walter Porter, Prop.. No. $57 E, 4th and 127 B. Sth streets. When you wish @ good shine give him a call Shines 5 cents. First. elass work. Speclal chatrs. for ladies. “The frends of Mr. and Mrs. Quitman Hicks will be pleased. to tearn that Uisy have gone (o Omaha, Neb., to per manently “reside, Mis.” Hicks has grown much better in health, They tire located at 1111 So, 9th St. Mrs. J. C. Corbin and daughter, Miss Louisa, of Pine Bluff, Ark,. wite and: daughter’ of Prof, J."C. Corbin, are expected tn the clty the latter part Of the month as guests of Prof, Cor bin's nephew, Mr. J. Q. Adams. ‘The State Savings Cank, corner Fourth and Minnesota streets, 's open Monday evenings from 6 to 8. "Ac- counts ean be started with $1.” A litle amount saved every week may some day stand between You and want. ELK EXPRESS CO., G. J. Charles. ‘tow, ‘manager, coruer ’ St. Peter and Ninth streets. Packing, shipping and storing of furniture and. household goods. Piano moving a speciatty. House renting, real estate handled. Bessie Johnston was convicted tn police court last Friday afternoon of larceny and sent to the workhouse tor 45 days. Within a year the woman has been arrested 14 times for various theres, but was never convleted ntl this time JARVIS, the saver and healer of soles, has moved from his old stand on 4th street Just around. the corner on Minnesota street No. 854 between 4th and Sth, When You need a pair of new shoes or need @y mending’ done alt on him, OARDING HOUSE. Mrs. Bla Smith, prop., 866 Cedar stroet. Break fast 1:00 1011300 A. M. Regular dit: ner, 12:00,m, (0 2:80 p.m. Meals at Se Scam To charles P. Noyes, Wm. B. Dean, John D. Ludden, Ferdinand Wiltus, Kenneth Clark, Gustav Willlus, Jona D, O'Brien; Thomas Fitzpatrick, Willlam Constans, Harris Richardson, ‘Abie | Mo Hannaford) Chas. G: Lawrence,. THE THIRTEENTH ANNUAL PICNIC Eggs : | ‘St. Philips Mission at Spring Park, Lake Minnetonka j THURSDAY, AUGUST 9,1906 ‘Again St. Philip's Mission’ invites. you and your “rlends to attend tis ANNUAL BIGNIG. Brenthing posse wil ve done tor insuts the weuat Bleasent outing. “Good Music and program of Atnfetc Sporto will be fur ished. Refteshments in charge of the Ladies of the Mision so opfale:saros as raha eRe toa Bee, ates Mtaags Cia, Depa aonligPRe Uhr SONAL meals sete pod gen fo 8, Pat bavirhe Committee reserves the right to cancel any ticket hela by an objectionable ie TICKETS: Adults, 65 cts; Children, 35 cts. other hours to order. Regular dinner 25 cents, In the game of baseball at the union Sunday School plenle ‘Thursday. be- tween the boys clubs known as the B. C. C. of St. Paul and the St. Thomas Mission Club of Minneapolis the St Paul boys carried off the honors by a score of 7 to 3. FIRST CLASS MEALS, ike. méth: eF used to cook may be had at Mrs. Ella Smith's, No. 96 Cedar street Breakfast from 7:00 to 11:00 a. m., dinner from 12:00 to 2:30 p, m. Meals to order when desired. Regular meals 25 cents, “Sunday dinners a speciality. Jarvis, the neeler and saver of soles, 354 Minnesota street, says in one of his street car signs: “I can mend shoes better than T 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 ‘ight, __,If you wish @ good shave, hair cut. ‘shampoo, or anything in the tonsorial line, cali 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. THE ST, LOUIS KITCHEN, Mos, Julla Hinson, ‘proprietor,No. 317 Wa- dasha, up stairs. Meals 25cts. Break. fast from 7:00 to 11:00 a, m., Dinner from 12:00 m. to 3:00 p. m.: Supper from 5:00 to 8:00 p. m. Ail regular meals 25 cts, All home cooking. Tel, N. W. Main 2315—L. 7. M. LYLES W. B. ELLIOTT Res, 42 Rondo Tel. Dale 419-2. ei" Date et-d 2nes. 411 Univrey. LYLES @ ELLIOTT. Funeral Directors and Embalmers, S22" Wabasha St Calle Answered Day or Night In ‘Twin ‘Cities: Active Pall Bearers Furnaned Desired. Lady Assistant When Necessary. Both Phones 608, St Paul, Minn. ER SAU EM EN, Mr, George B. Lowe our enterprising picture frame man of 475 Wabasha Street, has added a photograph gal- ery to his place of business and. is prepared to do anything in the line Of photography. All the up-to-date novelties. Call ‘and have the latest style photograph taken. Hamm's New Beer. ‘This beer is so Aecidedly” superior to any draught veer ever before. brewed, that within the few days it has bedn on sale tt 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. Robert Porter was fined $18 in the police court last Saturday for snooting At his sweetheart Nellie Riley, a white woman. She accused her lover of un- faithfulness *and during the qua:rel that followed he fired a shot at her but by the time they were taken into custody they had kissed and made up. SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE VAULTS.—We invite your inspection. It costs little to place your vapers, cash securities and valuables in abso: lute safety. Boxes in our vaults can be had for $4 per year. Store your boxes, trunks, etc, with us. North- wostern Trust Co., 138 Endicott Ar cade.” ‘The Valet Tailoring Co., Owen How- ell, manager, has taken the place of Howell & Davis, tallors, at 156 Bast Sixth street. ‘They have a new deliv- ery wagon and have inaugurated a monthly scheme in which. they agree to keep your clothes sponged and pressed and in good order for $1.00 Fer month, Go.see them about. it. On Thursday morning, at St. Jo- seph’s Hospital, tittle Robert Duweise Crane, aged 10 years, son of Mr. J. R. Crane, died of hung trouble. ‘The tw- neral will take place at the residence 406 Edmund Street at 2:00. o'clock this afternoon and at 2:30 from the Pil grim Baptist Church. Interment at Oakland Cometery. Fall polities fs beginning to he quite Interesting and several candidates for the various offices have filed for re- nomination. Among them ate Michael W. Fitzgerald the ‘present. very. ef cient Register of Deeds who Is now serving his third term, Hehasproven himself to be the right man for the place and it is probable that he ‘will have very little opposition. ‘The Valet Tailoring Co., Mr. Owen Howell manager, has made quite a lot of Improvements, having putin another pressing table, making three with patent gas ovens.” The floor has been covered with Inoleum and new furniture has bean put in, making the place the most up-to-date in the clty. Give them a call when you wish any- (hing In their Tine. Persone who desire to accommostate visitors during the coming G. A. R. ‘encampment, which ‘will be held be: tween Aug. 13th and 20th, either with ‘tooms oF rooms and board, will con: fer a favor by seeing Mrs. J. R. White, Phoenix Building, over McQuaids grocery, or Mrs. Benjamin Sears at the Tea Rooms, 581 Wabasha, with whom arrangements may be made. ‘Mr. Clifford Smith, our progressive tallor, has found it ‘necessary to en- large his quarters on account of his constantly increasing business. He is now located in a suite of three rooms in the Bradiey Bullding, entrance at room 411. He has added a lot of fur- niture and fixtures as well as a fine stock of goods. Call to see him in his new quarters No. 411 Bradley Bullé- Ing. i | Mrs. 0. D. Charleston, W. Central pera Gave acluiOhene Woduaatay.ks Mrs. William H. Tonipkins, of Kansas City, Mo. ‘The guests were Mesdames A. M. Holliday, M. L. Wintersmit and W. E. MeDonald. They. after- wards enjoyed a delightful ride over the Selby-Lake Line to Minneapolis, where they visited awhile and then re: turned to St, Paul over the Como-Har- rlet Line. ‘The clerk of courts on Thursday Is- sued. the marriage license for Mr. Owen Howell and Miss Lottie Chairs. Miss Chairs was the nurse of the late Mrs. S.A. Robinson, mother of Mr. Howell, and by her devotion and as- siduous attention won his and his mother’s heart so that it was her dying request that they unite in marriage as soon as possible, and in compliance with her wishes ‘the wedding will be solemnized in a few days. On last Sunday morning Mrs. S. A. Robinson, mother of Mr. Owen How: ell, after an illness of about two months duration, died of a complt- cation of diseases at the residence of her son, 998 Iglehart Street. ‘The fu- neral services were conducted at. the house Monday afternoon by Rev. Hor- ace S. Graves assisted by Rev. W. D. Carter. ‘The house was filled with friends and the service was very im- pressive. It had been only about two ‘months ‘since the deceased had lost her husband at Milwaukee and at her Tequest her remains were taken to Milwaukee Monday evening and on Tuesday laid beside his. Rev. W. D. Carter accompanied Mr. Howell and the remains and preached the funeral at the Methodist church of which the deceased was a member. Both in St. Paul and Milwaukee numerous floral tributes were bestowed. Mr. Howell returned to St, Paul Thursday. ec Ae REC i. the sone: eas a BE Eo ay Bie <a Sea Bee HN Nae be : M. W. FITZGERALD, eS Sa iS ) " A] 4 se N K » S| ae 6 ‘% y % 4 aq K ey Ki . \ Y Ni 4 ies i Ah yarasarcaecucerer VEXSSSOSS rv. JAMES Alm, & CHURCH ALM § | The services last Sunday were lively in the extreme and one person joined tho ‘churen, Mrs. Maggie Jenkins ‘The attendance in the evening. con tinyes to grow. Rev. Graves preached f Very practical sermon in the morn ing and gave us some new picturss cf Jotin the Baptist. Rev. Graves preached the Sacra ‘menjai sermon at St. James in Minn eapolls last Sunday afternoon and the people were highly pleased with the effort The One More Biort Club met at Airs. Bessle Lucas reatdence last Puce day evening and had a splendid time. They have the Hamilton recital Tues day evening—summer prices will pre vall15 cents anywhere in the house Subscribers to the envelope system will please take notice that no money pala in through the envelopes In July Appeared in the June Announcer: it will come out in the July Annouacer ‘The Union Picnic of the Twin Cities was the biggest thing that has hap- pened in the history of Sunday School lentes. : About 2,000 people flocked to Spring Park Lake cnlinacoakeranatene Defective Page time they did have; . ait-did their best to enjoy themselves. There were about. 45 useful prises Sistema. ‘There -were- two. ball games - eapolis winning in the afternoon and the famous B. C..C. ot St. Paul in the eee ae ee sata Be ie SPS ejoraens thee tr Soe scat et aay cre teat al east _ Rev. and Mrs. H. 8. Graves enter- Peminaria tern athe etna masa oe, Ms Scenes tae ae Wines and te ty Pie ppoLiTaN (98 ey, MutY 0 ae = gu AL Z Danger Bivo. CAT eee CLAIMS PAD. OUR BEST AD. 0. D. CHARLESTON ........ $10.00 387 W. Central, WM. CANNON wesc... 25:00 Vancouver, 8. 6. ED. R. SMITH cesses, 14.00 ‘62 Cedar, eee BS. MILLS, coset eseees 9000 ads Farrington: ‘Our Latest Claims Paid, OWEN DAVIG vesssssresses + $100.00 RB. BEARD vecscscsscsss 400 ‘Owen Davis had paid in but $7.00. COSMOPOLITAN MUTUAL CASUAL. ty CO. MILLS’ LUNCH AND SANDWICH J. S. Mills, proprietor, 444 Robert street, between Seventh and Eighth streets, Open trom 6:00 a. m, to 2:30 a. m, Tel. orders delivered free. Tele- phone, N. W. Main 9082 L. This 1s the place to get your favorite sand- wich or a good lunch. The best grade of coffee is used and the cook knows how to prepare It, therefore, you are sure of excellent ‘coffee. An epicure will find all of the delicacies of the Season here. Soup and stews are al- ways Kept on hand and such sand- wiches as the New York, Pork Ten- derloin, Chicken: St. Paul, Hamburger. Egg, Denver, Cheese, Sardine, ete, can be served at any time. It you try this place once you will be satts- fied with the quality, service and price and you will be sure to call again, MANDOLIN RECITAL. The Grand Musical Event of the ‘Season. On next Tuesday evening one of the grandest musical events will be held at St. James church under the auspices of the “One More Effort Club,” ~Prot.. Kenneth-J.-Hamfiton, the phe- nomenal mandolin artist of Des A so XN og XN . y Call, Second Annual Convention. The State Federation of Afro-Amer! can Women ‘of Minnesota will hold thelr second annual session at Duluth, Minn., Wednesday and Thursday, July 25th and 26th. All clubs Taborias for the common’ good of ‘mankind and contributing to the material progress ot the race through the heart, lead and hand, are urged to be represented if you ‘cannot. represeat. in person we hope to heat from you by letter other informafon ean be obtained by ‘writing to the President or State Or /ganization, We hope to hear {rom ‘the clubs in Minnesota at once. “lone E. Gibbs, President, 1613 B. 24th Street, Minneapolis. Mary L. Joyce, Secretary, | “"3216 23rd Ave. So., Minneapolis Laura D. Hickman, State Organizer 405 Western Avenue, St. Paul. Mr. Owen Howell, the manager of the ‘Valet. Tailoring’ Co, No. 156. & Sixth street, has branched out again. He has secured the room next door to his shop and has ‘Stted up one of the nicest sort of smoking parlors (3. be found in the city. ‘There is a. hand: somely furulshed front room and mors handsomely. furnished. back parlor. oF den for lovers of the weod. ‘The tailor shop and the clear parlors are connected. by a large archway. Both places are beautifully painted, paper. ed and decorated. In short it Is just the swellest place in town. He invites the public generally to give him a call He will Keep a full stock of cigars, to baccos and. smokers articles xecond to none in the elty. You must see the place to appreciate It. Fersons desfring to rent Wagner hall, corner Charles and Western ave- nues for lodge meetings, parties. dances. meetings or for any occasion may obtain the same ‘at reasonable rates upon appllcafion to J.T. Charleston; 632 University. avenue. THE DATE OF THE BIG PICNIC! === py THE == fib ag AT CARVER, MINNIS Wednesday, July 25 TRAINS ON MINNEAPOLIS & 8T. Louis RAILROAD Leave St. Paul, at 9:00 a. m. and 1:30 P. m. Minneapolis, 9:30 a. m. and 1:50 p, m, Returning Train at Night, Goes. Through to St. Paul coher aeiae Seno FARE 75 CENTS CHILDREN 3@ CENTS ge Ee POTTGIESER FILES. . = ieee ae ees ror hie pene Foston ov couny| MINNEAPOLIS the present board of county commis- GREAT “FLOUR CITY.” the republican ticket. He will un- | Matters Social, Religious and Gene doubtedly be nominated and re-lect-| Which Have Happened and Are Deen entrly tllefciory, adhe ta] apPes Among the People of thoroughly honest and conscientious, Drink Golden Grain Belt Beer, Ba liao eMart eh Ne eee Oi Mamas te va ee - E bat 3 eis N ths: - ae aa ea oS y ue 2 v Nicholas Pottgieser. printing and stationery supplies, ties Saved mich money to the. county *Niek" has been eareful to the. point of conservatism, and. such a member is always valuable on a board. None has given more time and attention to county affairs, and his vote has. al ways been resistered on the right side. 5 SEEKS RE-ELECTION. R. H. Seng Candidate for the County Board. | Robert H. Seng has filed with the puny uation a notice’ of ls cand ‘acy for re-election to the board of ERY See SE well kn@wn tg the voters and people of St. Paul, having served as county assestor and is at present a Republi can member of the board of county commissioners. He has made an en. fvable record on the board as a pro gressive and alert advoeate of meas. ‘ures advanced for the best Interesis of ‘the county. "Mr. Seng was one of the original champions ‘of the good roads move: ment in Ramsey county. He stood for better trade and transportation facia ‘tes during the early stages of the art ‘tation when opposition was the strong: est and has been largely responsible for the inauguration of rational and business methods ‘In caring for the county's highways. The present pro gram’ of permanent - improvement which ts being carried out with so ‘much. general satisfaction has been fone of hfs pet measures, To Club Women. ‘Those who are going to Duluth July 24 should be sure to get tickets over the Great Northern Railway and have their local agent sign thelr certificates s0 as to insure their getting the round trip for one and one-third regular fare, Tickets will be limited to elght days only on the Great Northern. Be sure to get a certificate signed, Mattie R. Wade, > Com, on Transportation. It's » good deal easter to pray for the preacher than to pay for the Spent Hine” MINNEAPOLIS DOINGS IN AND ABOUT THE GREAT “FLOUR City.” Mattera Social, Religious and General Which Have Happened and Are to Happen Among the People of the City, Drink Golden Grain Belt Beer. ‘The Ladies of the Twin City Charity Club will give a Grand. Ball about August 45th at Dania Hall, cor, Cedar ave.'and Sth st Anyone who can furnish accommo. dation to G. A. TR. visitors please no lity Mr, Wai, R. Morris, 1020 Guaranty Loan Bullding. Don't forget the big K. P. piente at Carver, Minn., on Minneapolis and St Louls Railroad Wednesday. July 25th. Fare, adults 75 ets. children $0 cts Tinie Gstdig Giridn' Wolk, Maes. Mrs, Ione Gibbs and the other déle- gates Who attended the meeting of the National Federation of Afro-American Women Clubs at Detroit last week has returned. Mrs. Gibbs says that the meeting was the most successful ever held by the Federation, Misses Elrette Smith of Knoxville. Ui, and Mallahen Shumpert of Colum: bus, Miss., both teachers in the Merid. Jan Academy at Meridian, Miss., visit ed Mrs. Geo. H, Wade the past’ week. They Were very much impressed with the Twin Cities, WHEN IN ST. PAUL, go to the St. Louls Kitchen, 317 Wabasha, upstairs, for your meals. All home. cooking. All regular meals 25 cents, ‘Breakfast from 7:00 to 11:00 a. m.; Dinner from 12:00 m. to 3:00 p. m.i Supper from 5:00 to 8:00 p.m.’ Tel. N. W. Main 2815—L. “Mrs, Julia Hinson, Prop. Drink Golden Grain Belt Beer, When in St. Paul and you wish to set FIRST CLASS MEALS, like you used to get at home call on Mis. Ella ‘Smith No. 566 Cedar street. Break fast from 7:00 to 11:00 a. m., dinner from 12:00 to 2:80 p. m, Meals to order when desired. “Sunday dinners @ specialty. Regular meals 25 cents. el aero me atiuaiey cxcnac clon se. Winston, Harper, Fisher Co. fame meat NOTICE—If you can accommodate any of the visitors to the G. A. R. en: campment please send your fuil name and adiiress, the number you can ac commodate, ‘and whether you can fur nish rooms and board, board without Yooms or rooms without board. Ad: dress C, W. Dwyer, Chairman, Public Affairs ‘Committeo,’ Hotel Dwyer, 224 Washington ave. So. On the occasion of the Masonfc Grand Lodge Meeting at Duluth Aug. 2ist, the committee has arranged for a one fare round trip ticket ($4.30). Tickets good from August 20th to Aug. 25th o¥er the Great Northern No one should miss this opportunity to vialt the Zenith City of the North: West, Be sure to get your certificate when you buy your ticket. The Union Sunday. School plenic held at Spring Park; Lake Minuetonka, ‘Thureday, was one of the best ever held by the schools. A large crowd of children and their parents were in at tendanee and everybody had a good time. ‘The two baseball games and the prizes were hotly contested, >in- neapolls and St. Paul dividing the hon- ors. THE APPEAL Manager getting away with handsome pair of shoes. The Grand Masonic Lodge of this state will hold. its aunuial convention In Duluth about Aug. 23d. ‘The com- mitice (on arrangements pave an nounieed that they have arranged with the RR Co. for a special train, at an extremely low rate, and will ofté: an inducement for anyone desiring to see the Zenith City, Tickets will be good for two days. There will be boat ex- cursion. on Lake Superior and a Grand entertainment given-for the visitors {n the. evening. Dr, Valdo Turner seu a nae ina seen Kegs bo Kaos (O4E, SEVENTH ‘ST. PAUL, MINN. Suits ‘and Overcoats to Order $25. to $50. Pants and Vests $5to$15 PARKER'S DRUG STORE F.M. PARKER, DRUGGIST VIRGINIA RESTAURANT i SUNGK BOOK: Ss aN C.A.MILLEP as ae expert f && }\ REPAIRER OF Ne Aepamel Watches, Cocks ¥ ¢7 and Jewelry eee 903 GLOBE BLD Sy St. Paul SEND A POSTAL CARD AND Hm Wit CALL FOR AND DE- fiver ‘coos Prices Reasonable and all Work Canrastend. __ cma toes TOWLE’S Log Cabin. Maple Syrup ; Woe = FS SSS Was awarded the GOLD MEDAL st the World’s Fair, St. Louis, 1904, for absolute pur- ity and richness of flavor. we ele Coanteate wens, of World's Greatest Exposition. pee ee ee ; FORD'S. HAIR POMADE rey Esa “ozomizeD OX MARROW” e ERI ea toe reir ci Aaaty termes Bae rg rc ai born, barah, Kinky "or curly bait sort, Beaziee cheated from ‘Guo ireattoentr feet bre ania Hae Bees danas Pad Bue ia me hee be ce Erte Heike POPE AS Senora SS eae pool rie ee ie Se i rae SRE pec eee Se apenas canes Soe aie ee cee ee ine oF (dealer ean ‘pot eapsiy you be cob feed sh Oates ipod 5 iotin tipper Wine Sr sts Sed } Tho Ozonized Ox Marrow Co. Nie snr srcn | Carles Berd ak } 16 Wabash Avs., Chioage, Mm, arenes 100 THE EAGLE The tall tower in the picture is not the city hall in old Amsterdam, the capital of Holland. It is a representation of a unique clock entirely of slate, and the man who made it did not pretend to be an artist or a linear descendant of Michael Angelo. Mr. Humphrey O. Pritchard, a gifted quarryman of the little town of Delta, in Pennsylvania, is the author of the remarkable clock. It is certainly an advertisement for Pennsylvania slate. If a man can make a wonderful piece of mechanism out of slate, why couldn't he make watches, bicycles, automobiles, overalls, neckties and even shirt, collars out of the slate? This clock was made of a judicious selection of the same material. It is said that Mr. Pritchard used 164 pieces of slate, held together by 23 dozen Press Agent Among the curiosities recently exhumed in the scientific explorations among the rules of Egypt none is more striking than the reclining statue of a nEgyptian king's press agent. They called him Rameses, Jr. You see him reclining+taking a siesta during one of those hot Egyptian afternoons on a hardwood mattress. His head is protected by a cap skillfully manufactured from native palm leaf. You'll observe that the man has eight ribs on a side, with a smile identical with the one worn by the more modern emperor of China in the second century. A couple of pegs near the foot of the couch serve to steady himself by should any chance earthquake happen along during his nap. It will be observed that the knees The only business hurt by the enforcement of the law against the open Sunday saloon is that of the brewers. The business of the farmer is not hurt. The seller of clothing, the dealer in groceries, the handler of any kind of merchandise—these are not hurt by Sunday closing. At every store the business of the six days is not decreased, but, instead, increased by the enforcement of the statute against opening the saloons on the Sabbath. The loss of business is only to the brewers. For every dollar lost to the brewer on Sunday because his city saloon is closed there is a dollar Woman Kills Big Grizzly. On the Durling ranch in Stonewall, says the Trinidad correspondent of the Dencer Republican, a large grizzly bear was shot and killed by Mrs. Dulling, wife of the county commissioner, a few days ago. Mrs. Dulling, was alone on the ranch and was riding about looking after stock when she saw a bear eating a heifer it had killed. Mrs. Dulling had a Winchester and promptly killed the grizzly. She is known as a remarkably nervy woman, and during her many years small screws, in completing his wonderful bit of timekeeping architecture. The clock is four feet high and a perfect timekeeper. Railroads should have it. With such a clock big trains ought to climb the Altoona grade and reach the top always exactly on time. Dollar watches are said to kill more people than automobiles, causing business men to miss connections at home. When they were to be at dinner at 7 o'clock, they often do no arrive until three and four in the morning, and even then were not certain that they were in the right house. This clock has a set of cathedral chimes. So beautiful are their tones that one can imagine himself in old Strassburg, Cologne or the Notre Dame in Paris. It took Mr. Pritchard eight months to complete the wonderful timepiece. to the King. of the press agent have been worn smooth by long periods of worship in the temple praying to the gods for good business and increased salary. The big bird with outstretched wings at the top of the picture represents immortality. It was guaranteed to all Egyptian press agents who did their work well and made no fun of the priests. At the ends of the couch are a couple of half-grown boys posed like statuary. They are the chaps supposed to work the typewriter for the press agent, go on errands, tell the public when he is not in, when he is at the barber, or when he is busy with the manager or helping the leading lady of the throne prepare an authentic account of her life and triumphs at court and elsewhere. gained by other business during the week. The closing of the saloon on Sunday is in the interest of honest trade in the week time. It is more. It is in the interest of the boys of the state. It means that on the idle day there is no saloon door inviting to drunkenness and debauchery. Of course, the brewers will fight the Sunday law. They have subscribed $100,000, according to Father Coffey, to bring about the election of a legislature pledged to its repeal. They could make more than that amount in a single Sunday. As between Missouri brewers and Missouri boys, we vote for the Sunday law and the boys. Columbia Herald. residence in the Stonewall has killed several bears, at one time saving her husband from what seemed to be sure death, when he was attacked by a female grizzly he had wounded. Mrs. Duling killed the bear when it was within a few feet of her husband. "It is perfectly natural that we should hate the man who wants to do all the talking," reflected Uncle Allen Sparks. "He prevents us from doing it all." "We, a jury composed of men who know cigar values, find that the plaintiff, the Judge Harlan Cigar, is entitled to recover 10 cents from every smoker." Judge Harlan 5¢ Cigar HART & MURPHY, MAKERS, ST. PAUL, MINN. JAS. NANKIVELL, Jr., Proprietor. L. L. L. Is the 64 East Sixth Electro=The A POINT Rheumatism, LaCripp Apendicitis, Neur the current suitably controlled switchboard is applied at the the entire surface of the body opener, producing a mild or inner or first blanket to fecally comfortable while under off, the patient is removed for bed with a compartment the pro- is concluded by the external portions of the body. 536-538 Wabasha Street, ST. PAUL, MINN. Is the Place to Get Your . . . FLOWERS... Electro=Therapeutic Blanket A POSITIVE CURE FOR Rheumatism, LaGrippe, Paralysis, Cout, Pneumonia, Apendicitis, Neuralgia and all Chronic Spinal and Stomach Troubles. METHOD OF TREATMENT. The action of these Blankets is to superinduce a process of sweating by means of a newly patented arrangement of the blankets. The patient is first enveloped in a heavy woolen blanket and then encased in the shoulders downward in the electrical blanket and reclines upon the table, while the current is controlled by the proper equation of the switched board is applied at the feet. Thus an even current is distributed over the entire surface of the body and increased or decreased at the will of the operator, producing mild or energetic process of sweating. The action of the inner or first blanket is to alleviate the sweat and make the patient perfectly comfortable while undergoing treatment. When the current is turned off, the patient is removed from the blankets, given a bath and briskly rubbed with a course wool, producing a vigorous circulation and the treatment is concluded by the external application of certain medicines over the affected portions of the body. PROF. J. R. WHITE A modern brewery in every respect is the BIG Hamm BREWERY We have every facility for mak- ing and do make the Best Beer on the market. Case or draught. CALL FOR IT T BOTH TELEPHONES. St. Paul. Epic Blanket FOR Cout, Pneumonia, Chronic Spinal Injuries. Once a process of sweating by wires which carry the cur- surface of the blankets. The and then sweated from the lines upon the table, while action of the switches of the current is distributed over increased at the will of the of sweating. The action of and render the patient per- when the current is turned in the wound and briefly culation and the treatment in medicines over the affected 205 Phoenix Block J.S. MILLS' LUNCH SANDWICH ROOM. No. 444 Robert Street, Between Seventh and Eighth. Telephone N. W. Main 3082-L Open from 6:00 a.m. to 2:30 a.m. A BIG BREAKFAST FOR 10 CENTS. A BIG BOILED OR ROAST DINNER FOR 10 CENTS. A BIG SUPPER FOR 10 CENTS. BREAD AND BUTTER, POTATOES, COFFEE, TEA OR MILK SERVED FREE WITH THE FOLLOWING ORDERS: Ham and 2 Eggs 15 Bacon and 2 Eggs 15 Small Steak 10 Vegetable Chops 10 Hamburger Steak 10 Mutton Chops 10 2 Rolls and Coffee 5 Ple and Coffee 5 Meal Ticket, Good for 11 Ten Cent Meals, $1. Hamburger Sandwich Pork Sandwich Plain Sandwich Plain Steak Sandwich Roast Veal Sandwich Roast Beef Sandwich Jalap Sandwich Roast Chicken Pork Chop Sandwich Sorghum Sandwich Tongue Sandwich Cheese Sandwich Am sandwich Eng sandwich Wienwerm Sandwich flee, 5c. Tea; 5c. Milk, 5c. Cocoa, 5c. TEEN CENTS. ARM BURSES AND SYMPTOMS. MARS B. second and at Odd Fellow corner Farrington, Farrington, Hickman, nue. PAST G. No. 123, G. and for Odd Fellow corner Farrington, Wm. Hickman, G. nue. ST. PAY meets second Odd Fellow corner Farrington and (acting) R. P. Geo. B ash. HOUSES U. O. of C Monday in Hall, N. W.ton Aves. Maggie B Johnson, W. MEALS FIFTEEN CENTS. HARM GLASSES EYE DEFECTS AND SYMPTOMS HARM GLASSES Eye defects are few—symptoms many. There can be but two defects in the human o Theeye may be too long in whole. Then w Myopic eye. Or too short in whole—the Hyperopic eye. Combine the two in one eye and we have As Properly adjusted glasses will correct these Medicines or waiting, never. Symptoms that spring from these two simple ormations are manifold; such as eye and heada gestion, Dyspepsia, Nervous Debility, Chorea, E other ailments having their origin in lack of nen We correct all Defects of the human eye t will remedy. Charges reasonable. Satisfaction HARMS OCULO CURES SORE EYES 25c PER BOT F. H. HARM & B OPTICIANS, effects in the human eye. in whole. Then we have the the Hyperopic eye. eye and we have Astigmatism. is will correct these defects. ever. from these two simple eye mal- has eye and headaches, Indi- Debility, Chorea, Epilepsy and origin in lack of nerve force. of the human eye that glasses table. Satisfaction guaranteed. ORE EYES 25c PER BOTTLE. RM & BRO. CIANS, There can be but two defects in the human eye. Theeye may be too long in whole. Then we have the Myopic eye. Symptoms that spring from these two simple eye malformations are manifold; such as eye and headaches, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Nervous Debility, Chorea, Epilepsy and other ailments having their origin in lack of nerve force. We correct all Defects of the human eye that glasses will remedy. Charges reasonable. Satisfaction guaranteed. HARMS OCULO CURES SORE EYES 25c PER BOTTLE. • REMEMBER IF YOU WISH CLOTHES TO LOOK NEAT, UP- TO-DATE IN EVERY RESPECT, HAVE CLIFFORD A. SMITH TAILOR MAKE YOUR Spring Suit or Top Coat They Will be Exclusive From All Others in Style, Fit and Quality PRESSING AND REPAIRING M. W. Tel. 3488-L NO. 411 BRADLEY BUILDING 5th st., between Wabasha and Cedar sts. ST. PAUL, MINN. SHAROOL Pneumatic S The Ideal Comf MADE ONLY BY Good Shoe Corp. Largest Exclusive Manufacturer Grade Footwear in the W oes Are Made for the W AND BROADWAY, ST. PAUL, REZ Pneumatic Soles. The Ideal Comfort Shoe MADE OF TheSharoodSho The Largest Exclus of High-Grade Foot Sharood Shoes Are M FOURTH AND BROADV TheSharoodShoeCorporation 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 Eplcreun Sandwøh ..... 25 Club Sandwøh ..... 25 Mote Sandwøh ..... 25 Criterion Sandwøh ..... 15 Russian Sandwøh ..... 15 Excelsler Sandwøh ..... 15 Welsh Rarebelt Sandwøh ..... 15 Snow Sandwøh ..... 15 Chicken Sandwøh ..... 15 Harlequil Sandwøh ..... 10 Ham and Egg Sandwøh ..... 10 Oyster Sandwøh ..... 10 Navy Sandwøh ..... 10 Rabbit Sandwøh ..... 10 Ple, 5c, Rolls, 5c, Doughnuts, 5c, Co 109 East Seventh Street. THE BOSTON EDITOR M. B. MINNESOTA, A. F. AND A. M. R. S. BROWN, GRADE MASTER. 40. Century Blvd., Minneapolis, Minn. B. R. Century GRANT, "DOCERTARY, 831 Payne Ave. St. Paul, Minn. PIONEER LODGE NO. 1, A. F. and A. M. meets first and third Mondays of each month at Wagner Hall, cor. Charles street W. M. M. avenue at $ 80 p. m. f. M. L. Phelps, W. M. M. De Lyons, Sec. 500 Temperature street. PERFECT ASHLAR LODGE NO. 4, A. F. and A. M. meets second and fourth Tuesdays at Wagner Hall, Cor. Charles street and Western ave. at $ 8 p. m. Wm. T. Chandler, W. M. M. 13th St. N. B. Marshall, Sec. 514 Aurora ave. MARS LODGE, NO. 202, MEETS second and fourth Tuesday in each month at Odd Fellows Hall, 221 West University, Minneapolis. MEETS second and fourth Farrington, Daniel Roy, N. G.; Thos. R. Hickman, P. S., 422 St. Anthony avenue. PAST GRAND MASTER'S COUNCIL NORTH D. F. OF G. F. meets the second and fourth Farrington, Odd Fellows Hall, 221 W. University corner Farrington. Entrance on Farrington, Wm. R. Morris, W. G. M.; Thos. R. Hickman, G. S. No. 422 St. Anthony avenue. ST. PAUL, PATRIARCHY NO. 114, meets second Monday in each month at Oakland University, corner Farrington. Entrance rington avenue. Thos. R. Hickman loving). R. V. P.; W. R. Morris. P. M. V. J. Boo. B. Lowe. W. P., 175% Wabasha. HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH. No. 553 G. I. O. of O. F. meets second and fourth Monday at Farrington. Fellows Hall. N. W. Cor. University and Farrington Aves. Entrance on Farrington, Mrs. Maggie Beard, M. N. G.; Mrs. Ida M. Johnson, W. R., No. 916 Marion St. UNITED BROTHERS OF FRIEND- SHIP. NORTH ST LODGE NO. 138. U. B. F. Cor. University and Farrington mouth at Hall No. 116 West Sixth street. Brothers in good standing always welcome. J. R. White M., W. J. Q. Adams, W. Secy. 49 E. Fourth street. John H. Hayes Lodge No. 6, K. K. of P. days in each month at hats cor. of University and Farrington Avenues, at 8:00 p.m. Nightights of Pythas in good standing always welcome. John H. Hayes, C. C. BIDDLE CIRCLE, LADIES OF G. A. A. R. meets first and third Tuesdays of each week. Supreme Court room, old cap- tain building. Build in 1910. Mr. J. R. White, Secy, Phoenix Bldg. ST. JAMES' A. M. E. CHURCH COR- Fuller and AJ. street. Sunday service 1100 a. m.; 7:30 p. m. Wednesday prayer meeting. 8:00 p. m. Pastor visits on Mon- teau. 8:00 p. m. Home Wednesday and Thursday Weddings. Minerals and the sick attended on notice. ST. PHILIP'S EPISCOPAL MISSION corner Aurora avenue and Mackubn street Sunday services: Early celebration of Holy Eucharist, 1:30 a.m. Holy celebration of Holy Eucharist first and third Sundays, 11:00 a.m. m. Matins, second and fourth Sundays, 1:00 a.m. Sund, f. school, 12:30 p. m. Brotherhood of St. Matthew, 6:50 p. m. Vespers, 7:30 p. m. Week services: - m. wednesdays, confirmation class, 8:00 p. m. - p. m. Sunday prayer, 8:00 p. m. Saturdays, Holy Eucharist 9 A. M. Rev. A. H. Lealtad, 112 Carroll PEOPLES TEA AND COFFEE COMPANY, J. J. HARTY, Proprietor. STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES 517 University Ave. ST. PAUL, - MINNESOTA. Telephone Dale 439 J. OOD'S ST. PAUL. MINN. S UNITED BROTHERS OF FRIENDSHIP John H. Hayes Lodge No. 6, K. of P. meets first and third Tuesd. cor. of University and Farr- ington Avenues, at 8:00 morning lights of Pythias in good standing always welcome. John H. Hayes, C. C. R. W. Gully, K. of R. S. 389 Rondo REV. H. S. Graves, Pastor. Personage, Cor. Jay and Fuller. PLIGRAM BAITIST CHURCH Cor. 12th and 13th edn. school at 11 a. m. School at 11 a. m. School at 12:30 o'clock. Wednesday evening study Sunday school lesson. Friday evening study Sunday school lesson. Wednesday and weddings promptly attended. Rev. W. D. Carter, Pastor, 1000lglehart.