The Appeal

Saturday, April 12, 1913

St. Paul, Minnesota

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THE APPEAL STEADILY GAINS 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 VOL.29.NO.15. MORGAN WAS A TITANIC FIGURE New Head of Famous Banking House a Small Edition of His Father—Has Enviable Record as a Financialer. Prominent as Yachtman and Public Philanthropist. MR. MORGAN'S RECORD OF ACHIEVEMENTS IN THE FINANCIAL WORLD. Born April 17, 1887, in Hartford, Conn. Entered Boston English high school in 1851 and was graduated in 1854. Spent two years in Goettingen, Germany. Became a bank clerk with Duncan, Sherman & Co. in New York, 1857. In 1890 was appointed American agent of the London banking house Dabney, Morgan & Co. and through his father's patronage made $1,000,000. Formed his famous alliance with the Drexels in 1871 and established the firm of Drexel, Morgan & Co. Wrested the Albany and Susquehanna bank from Jay Gould and James Flak. In 1877 went to the assistance of William H. Vanderbilt and carried out a survey out of the New York Central at a profit of $3,000,000. Dominated in 1884 every gathering of railroad executives who met to devise ways out of the disastrous rate wars. In 1885 rescued the Baltimore and Ohio from ruin and brought James J. Lewis into the management of that read. In 1888 reorganized the Cheesapeake and Ohio and the Reading railroad. In 1890 signed a man's agreement" against rate cutting, which is still in force. Went to the aid of the United government in the gold crisis of 1890. Organized the billion dollar United States Steel corporation in 1901. Took over in 1903 many of the business interests controlled by the Mutual, the Equitable and the New York Life Insurance Company. Testifying before the Fujio committee in 1913, he referred to profits of millions as "details" which he could not remember. He could not art collections are known. His philanthropy are noted. New York—With this list of business conquests as a guiding light J. P. Morgan, Jr., the new head of the great Morgan banking house, comes into his father's place in his forty-sixth year. In facial appearance, building, build M. ® by American Press Association. J. PIERPONT MORGAN, JR. and manner of walking he greatly resembles his father. He possesses the elder Morgan's grave demeanor, his prompt and forceful decision and his contempt of trivial details. He is the only son, there being three daughters—two married and one unmarried. He also inherits his father's love of yachting and is a zealous and discriminating art collector. Mr. Morgan, Jr., or Jack Morgan, as he is called by his friends in Wall street he was educated in New York city in 1867. He was educated in private schools and at Harvard, from which he was graduated in 1889. Immediately after his graduation he vatered the banking house of Morgan, Grenfell & Co. of London to learn the business of his father. Since that time he has been trained under the guidance of the elder Morgan for the place he is now called upon to fill. He has taken a prominent part in many of the great enterprises of the Morgan company. When this government made the payment of $4,000,000 to France for the Panama canal Mr. Morgan played an important part in the transfer and won the respect of foreign financiers for his skill and tact in that difficult transaction. Mr. Morgan, Jr., was sent by his father to Russia in 1905 to make negotiations for the great loan which that country was taking from the Morgan company at that time. During the panic of 1907, when the Morgan-Hill interests were at war with Harriman and the Standard Oil company over the Northern Pacific, he was a leading factor in the settlement of that crisis. It was he who raised from his former shoulders to that at time many of the burgess which the elder Morgan undertook in order to allay the panic and restore public confidence. At the coronation of King George, he was appointed first secretary of the special American embassy. In all these situations Mr. Morgan has proved himself a competent successor to his distinguished father. He is listed as a member of the firm of J. P. Morgan & Co. in this country and Morgan, Grenllen & Co. of London and is a director in a large number of various corporations. Although he is inclined to shun publicity and up to this time has escaped the limelight in the shadow of his father, he is recognized in the financial world as a man of strong convictions and real power. The new head of the Morgan house is an enthusiastic yachtsman, as was his father. As a member of the New York Yacht club he is owner of one of the most famous which are now being built by the yachtshops for members of that organization. For a number of years he sailed a thirty footer, the Ibis. Mr Morgan has extensive kennels on his Long Island estate, where he makes a specialty of breeding Pekingese, many of which have been prize winners. He is interested in various lines of public service and philanthropic work, being a governor of the Peabody donation fund in London and a trustee of the New York Trade-school. From his experience in foreign travel he has often made helpful suggestions for city improvement to the New York public officials. A system of street openings suggested by him in 1908 has resulted in greater convenience to the public and a considerable saving to the city. W. H. PAGE IS WELL KNOWN IN ENGLAND W. H. PAGE IS WELL KNOWN IN ENGLAND New York.—Walter H. Page, the new ambassador to the court of St. James, is a southerner. He was born in the village of Cary, N. C., in 1855 and was graduated from Randolph Macon college in the spring of 1876, after which he pursued postgraduate studies at Johns Hopkins university. He was one of the first fellows of the latter university when it opened in the fall of 1876, having won a Greek scholarship under Dr. Basil L. Gildersleeve. For a number of years he was president of the New York Alumni association of the university. Having chosen a literary career, he fell naturally into journalism and magazine work. For the Atlantic Monthly he wrote a society study of the life of Bessie Brough, which led to his obtaining an engagement to travel through the south as a correspondent of the Boston Post, the Springfield Republican and the New York World. The sociological problems of the south especially engaged his attention, and he later delivered a series of lectures on these topics at Harvard university. In 1890 Mr. Page became editor of the Forum, and it was due to his vigorous editorial policy that this magazine was made successful after having failed to pay anything on the investment for several years. In the course of his work as editor of the Forum Mr. Page became one of the best known litterateurs in the United States, and his writings attracted the attention of European men of letters. From 1895 to 1898 Mr. Page was the literary editor and adviser for the publishing firm of Houghton, Mifflin & Co. and for the next three years was the editor of the Atlantic Monthly, to which magazine he had been a contributor for years. Since 1900 he has been the editor in chief of the World's Work and has been a member of the publishing firm of Doubleday, Page & Co. The new ambassador has a wide acquaintance among men of letters and science in England and is an intimate friend of many contemporary English statesmen. His selection by President Wilson is considered a happy one and is on a par with those previously suggested—President Emeritus Elliot of Harvard university and Richard Oney of Massachusetts. Mr. Page is the author of "The Rebuilding of Old Commonwealth" and is a member of the University and National Arts clubs. His home is in Garden City. In 1880 he married Miss Alice Wilson, the daughter of Dr. William Wilson of Ann Arbor, Mich. They have several children. Mrs. Page has always been a woman of domestic tastes. Dons First Socks at Forty-nine. Leavenworth.-Andrew Allen, forty- nine years old, has had the experience of wearing his first pair of socks. It was not of Allen's own choosing that he domed the socks. An official of the Kansas state penitentiary stood over him while he took off a pair of rubber boots, the only kind of footwear he has been accustomed to use. THE APPEAL. BURLESON TELLS OF HIS PLANS Will Find Out if Postoffice Department Really Pays. PARCEL POST PROBLEMS. New Postmaster General Declares He Will Run Things as Much on Strictly Business Lines as Possible—Declines to Comment on Government Monopoly In Carrying Small Packages. Washington—Postmaster General Albert S. Burleson has outlined his plans for the work of the postoffice department. He is a big business institution, one of the biggest in the government, and it should be administered for the best interests of the people." said Mr. Burleson. "I want the department administered on business lines, but in such a way as will be of the greatest service to the people. "One of the first things I propose to do is to appoint a commission to consist of the first, second, third and fourth assistant postmasters general and the chief clerk of the department to make a thorough investigation of the postal service. "They will be directed to ascertain whether the greatest efficiency is being secured and where the service needs improvement. They will also seek to ascertain whether the department is actually self sustaining or without a plan of action." "With this information in hand we will proceed to administer the affairs of the department with the view to giving the people the best service," although I would also like to be able to say at the end of my term that the postal service is really self supporting. "The parcel post system presents many problems which must be met and solved. The postmaster general is given latitude to change rates and classification of the service, and I shall expect to make improvements as the need is made plain. "This service is of tremendous interest to the people everywhere, and I want to make it of the widest use in bringing the producers and consumers closer together and facilitate the handling of small parcels at low cost." Asked if he believed the government should carry out the carrying of small parcels and should insist upon its monopoly, Mr. Burleson declined to comment. "The work of the second assistant postmaster general's office is of great A. H. © 1913, by American Press Association. ALBERT B. BURLEY importance in this connection, as that office handles the questions of railway mail pay, the number and size of mail cars required for the transportation of mail matter and the problems connected with contracts for this service." "POP" TO MISSOURI APOLLO. Student Adjudged Perfect is Swamped With Proposals to Wed. Columbia, Mo. — Letters and telegrams making offers of marriage are coming to H. L. Shrader, a Kansas City student in Missouri university, who was recently adjudged the most perfect man physically among the 1,500 students there. Shrader has received offers of vaudeville, boxing and wrestling engagements, but most of the letters are from young women not only in Missouri and Kansas, but in widely scattered parts of the southwest. One girl says she is physically perfect herself and therefore offers herself as a fit wife in the interests of engenics. HORSE FOOLED BY MIRROR. Saw Hurdle Reflection and Tried to Jump Over it. Junction City, Kan.—A valuable riding horse in the mounted service school at Fort Hiley was injured severely in a fall. The horse saw a reflection of a hurdle in one of the huge wall mirrors that line the hall and tried to jump it. He crushed through the glass and stained the restaurant Moore, the rider, escaped injury. Defective Page After proceeding seaward some distance the fleet of the enemy, composed of five battleships and two scouts, was discovered fifteen miles away. The aviation officers took observations of its location, course and speed without being detected. They returned to the ship and at dusk reported to Rear Admiral Badger, commander in chief of the Atlantic fleet, who ordered out the torpedo boat destroyer floatlas, which engaged the enemy within an hour. ONE WHO "CAME BACK." Bluteau Escaped From Prison, but Mother Made Him Return. Paris — Pierre Bluteau, who escaped from the Sante, returned to the prison voluntarily. He had some trouble getting back. When he rapped at the gate the turnkey gazed at him and asked: "Who are you?" "I am Bluteau," was the answer. "And who, pray, is Bluteau?" the turnkey inquired. "I am the young fellow that escaped, don't you know?" continued the knocker. With apparent reluctance the door swung open and Bluteau re-entered. Once within, he was joyfully welcomed as the "prodigal son returned." Supper was over, but the warden sent out for a special meal, and there was a reunion feast. According to Bluteau, his mother persuaded him to return to the prison. He escape was accomplished in overalls, in the disguise of a stoker. "Let me out; I'm in a hurry," he said. So they let him out as quickly as possible. TURTLE ONCE USED IN LEPROSY CURE Patients Bathed in Creature's Blood at Cape Verde. Paris.—A French historian in connection with the alleged cure for tuberculosis now being advanced by Dr. F. F. Friedmann in the United States calls attention to the little known fact that the medicinal use of the sea turtle is by no means of recent date. On July 8, 1483, King Louis XI. of France sent George the Greek, master mariner, to the Cape Verde islands to seek "various things touching nearly to the cell being and health of our perma- ture," the Cape Verde islanders had the reputation of having a cure for leprosy, a report of which was brought back to France by a traveler from the coast of Guinea at about the time King Louis was in declining health. According to the recital of this traveler, the big sea turtles were caught by the islanders when they came out on the beach at low tide to feed. They were at once killed and their blood caught in large tubs. Persons afflicted with leprosy bathed in the blood and afterward ate of the turtle's flesh. This treatment was kept up for two years, at the end of which time the patients were usually completely cured of the dreadful disease. This record would tend to show that Louis XI was a leper. That such was the case, been rumored by chronicles, but the expedition to the Cape Verde island lapped for the first time, throws much light on the psychology of Louis XI, his ill humor and his sedulous avoidance of mankind during the last days of his life. The wretched man evidently believed himself smitten with leprosy. He was, however, never fated to test the efficacy of the sea turtle remedy, for he died Aug. 30, 1483, before the return of the expedition. NOTES FROM THE NEWS. Milo Warrick of Clarkson, O., and his wife have just celebrated their eighteenth wedding anniversary, which was also his one hundredth birthday. He is the oldest undertaker in active work in the world. Hughey Golden, the thirty inch midget mascot of Princeton athletics, is in John Hopkins hospital, Baltimore, for an operation which is expected to make him grow. He was injured on the head as a baby, and, while mentally all right, has never "grown up." He is sixteen years old. It's worth $2.50 a foot to fall from a balloon if it's worth a cent, according to Edwin Clayton, an astronaut, of Fort Worth, Tx. He fell 4,000 feet when his parachute failed to work and is suing his employer at the above rate for $10,000. He broke his hip and both feet, dislocated his knees and injured his spine, but plans to go up again this summer. LANE WORKS TO PREVENT FLOODS WOULD RECLAIM VAST AREAS Secretary of the Interior Urges State and Federal Co-operation Similar to That Proposed in Oregon—Systematic Endeavor Essential to Success of the Plan, He Says. Washington—Franklin K. Lane, secretary of the interior, detailed a plan for preventing such floods as devastated Ohio and Indiana. The plan, which presents itself to the head of the department of the interior as an enormous reclamation project, hinges on the deepening and widening of the channels of all streams liable to flood conditions. Mr. Lane hopes to see the idea carried out through the co-operation of the federal government, with the aid of the states immediately endangered. The engineering in connection with channels is directly in the hands of the state government, and Mr. Lane takes no exception to that. But because of its reclamation features the plan he outlines falls within the jurisdiction of his department. Aside from the perpetual protection against flood which he believes his plan would give to settlers in low regions, there are widespread districts along the Mississippi and many other rivers that would be thrown open to settlement. "The reclamation service," said the secretary of the interior, "usually is regarded as relating to the arid lands of the west, which are reclaimed by bringing water from the mountains, but in another way reclamation is a great problem in the Mississippi valley and the east. Here, of course, the land is not arid, and there is no scarcity of water. But the water is to be removed from the land, and that is as fit sub- THE FLOOD © 1933, by American Press Association. BUILDING DIKE at LAKESIDE, IND., TO KEEP RIVER IN ITS COURSE. ject for reclamation work as that now being carried on in the desert lands out west. "The reclamation of these overwater lands, however, to be of real value must be preceded by systematic work on the channels of the streams draining the areas to be improved. The disaster at Dayton illustrates the point. The trouble was simply that the neck of the bottle was too small for the water to run out. The rain fell in torrents, and with no unobstructed channel to the sea the water simply backed up over the river banks. The rainstorm, I know, was phenomenal, with the systems have suggested would have doubled, in material damage and the loss of some lives. "It will not do for Ohio or Indiana or even the two states together to spend their money generously in clearing the beds of the streams within their boundaries. That would merely carry the food more swiftly to the state lines to the south, and the water would back more angrily than ever into what would quickly be great takes. The thing is too large for the states alone. A harmonious scientific system must be worked out by the federal authorities, and the states must then make their contributions in the way that will do the most good to the whole valley affected." How this co-operation between the federal and state governments might be effected Mr. Lane illustrated by plans now pending before his department for co-operation with the state of Oregon in reclaiming 30,000 acres of arid land. The land is under the government's ownership—as the rivers would be under the government's jurisdiction—and the government engineers of the reclamation service are asked to do the work. The state of Oregon supplies the water and contributes $450,000 to the water. A similar sum may be found by the state service, but on the understanding that the sale of reclaimed lands will liquidate the obligations assumed by the United States. 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. SWIMS IN ICY BAY AT 112 Has Celebrated Birth That Won Has Celebrated Birthday That Way For a Hundred Years Williams Bay, Wis. — Disregarding the advice of physicians and a cold wind that threw shivers into a crowd of curious spectators, Thomas Sullivan, keeper of a summer resort, celebrated his one hundred and twelfth birthday anniversary by donating a bathing suit and taking a plunge into the waters of the bay. "That's my one hundredth annual duck," shouted the old man as he emerged from the water and started on to the house. Since he was twelve years old the old fisherman he made it a point to observe his birth date by a swim in the bay regardless of weather conditions. In seasonable weather he takes his morning plunge immediately after rising. "If I didn't do that I would have been dead long ago," he said. "It's the only thing that keeps the blood moving in my veins." ROLLS IN BARREL FROM JAIL Prisoner Escapes With Aid of a Steep Hill at Pittfield. Troy, N. Y.-Waller Robinson, who has a remarkable record, was captured at Adams, Mass., after a hunt for him in this city, Pittfield, Mass., North Adams and elsewhere. He was wanted for jailbreaking in Pittfield and is also wanted by the New York state authorities as a convict who violated his prison parole. With but two weeks to serve in the Pittfield jail he made his escape. He was working on the grounds about the jail when, unnoticed by the guard, he got into a barrel, starting it rolling down the street, and the guard the jail stands to the fence about the grounds, climbed the fence and decamped before the guard realized what had taken place. ANTARCTIC REGION IS ENTIRELY DEAD No Need For Further Exploration, Says Lankester. London. Further exploration within 1,000 miles of the south pole will be of no scientific value, according to Sir Ray Lankester. "There is no living thing on the antarctic continent," he says, "excepting the seals and the penguins and a few other birds found on and near the coast line and a minute insect like the so called glacier flea, together with a few animalcules living in pools formed by the melting of ice in the brief summer and species of algae, mosses, lichens and fungi." Sir Ray, as director of the Natural History museum, had charge of the antarctic birds, etc., brought back from the south polar continent by Capetown's expedition on the Discovery, and he had official first hand information as to the results of all the explorations in that part of the globe. Flowers would grow at the south pole in summer if it were not for the mountains there, according to Professor Lankester. It is these mountains that make the south pole so cold. The south polar area is an elevated mountainsland land reaching 12,000 feet in parts, covered with perpetual ice in the north. But even over, the antarctic continent is surrounded by the sea and is lifeless. "There is a vast area of land around the north polar sea," said Dr. Ray, "which is green with vegetation and dotted with brilliantly colored flowers in summer and yet is only 500 miles distant from the north pole. In the arctic region are seals, white bears, walruses, foxes, wolves, musk oxen and many small mammals and birds which stray from the neighboring continental lands. There is abundant vegetation, including flowering plants, which find a growing place wherever land is exposed. So far as temperature is concerned, these flowers and plants would grow at the north pole itself were there any islands, in that part of the ocean, in contrast to the low lying land around the north pole the mountainous interior of Greenland is of high elevation and covered with perpetual ice and devoid of life. "The north pole is, in fact, a fair weather zone, while, on the other hand, the antarctic land is swept at all times of the year by blizzards of exceptional force and duration." From the very beginning of life on the earth, it is asserted, the south pole has been an uninhabited region. No animals ever lived there. The deepest digging will disclose no bones of extinct creatures. The antarctic continent is literally the only place on the whole earth where silence and mystery have existed from the first. It is regarded as very doubtful if there are any minerals near the south pole. Purse Retrieved by Dog. Hartford City, Ind.-William Lannon a Blackford county farmer, has a dog that retrieves lost pocketbooks. Mr. Bowers of this city was on the way to visit his uncle Tatman, four hundred northeast of city, when her pocketbook slipped from her lap in front of Lannon's house. The dog saw the purse fall, retrieved it and took it to its master. The next day Mrs. Bowers in searching for her pocketbook stopped at the Lannon farm to make inquiries and recognized her property. $2.40 PER YEAR. WILL ARREST MURDERERS. Minister Pezet Gives Assurance of Reforms on Same Day That President Taft Sends Message to Congress. Based on Report Made by Stuart J. Fuller, Special Investigator. Washington.—At the same time that President Taft's message on the Putumayo atrocities in Peru was being read in congress Federico Pezet, the Peruvian minister to the United States, presented to the state of state a communication from his government announcing the strict policy of Peru's new executive, President Billinghurst, to stamp out peonage in the rubber regions and bring the murderers of Indian slaves to justice. Two years ago the British government sent Sir Roger Casement to investigate the reported outrages on the Indians, with the result that the world was informed of a series of wholesale murders and a condition of barbarism unparalleled by any similar history of human greed. Last April the United States government ordered Stuart J. Fuller, consul at Gatobeg, Norway, to go to Iquitos, Peru, as consul, and to investigate the G. STUART J. FULLER operations of the Peruvian Amazon company in the Putumayo region. Mr. Fuller's report was the basis of the president's message sent to congress. The report confirms in the main the appalling accounts given by Sir Roger Casement, but states that the American investigator found that many of the white witnesses from Barbados had been sent out of the country, that the rubber company was apparently conducting its business in a more humane way and that wherever Mr. Fuller went he was dogged by agents of the company and prevented from securing evidence. The agents of the company were afraid to tell anything lest they should incriminate themselves or their comrades, and the Indians were sufficiently terrorized to keep them from telling anything comparable to the accounts secured by Sir Roger Casement. Mr. Fuller got evidence that one firm brought 200 men from Barbados to serve them in the upper waters of the Amazon, on the Carapana and Middle Igarapara rivers, in the Putumayo rubber region. These white men were armed with Winchester and were set at the task of enslaving Indians and compelling them to gather rubber. The Indians were an unresisting people and fell easy prey to the white men. They were forced to submit by flogging, imprisonment in stocks in the hot sun without food for days, by threats of shooting and by the sight of their tin being shot. The white men seized the wives of the Indians, and some of the overcrowded maintained large harbors of Indian women. Old men who were so weak they could not gather rubber were hung up by the thumbs. The statement presented by Minister Peset represents that President Billinghurst has followed the investigations of Great Britain and the United States and has decided to put a stop to the outrages. He has sent army officers to arrest the men guilty of murder, and where they have fed the country he intends to demand their extradition. President Billinghurst has decided to erect at liquots a biophilic and five mission stations at different points to look after the spiritual needs of the Indians and give them instruction. Army officers have been placed in charge of the administration of the government region, and it is confidently believed that the means employed will be effective to prevent any further outrages. The communication concludes by saying, "This indignation is not alone because these events have occurred in our territory, but on account of the harm which they have done to Peru by giving us an undeserved notoriety for deep rooted cruelty, which is not a trait of our national character." ie | Te — ; ivutYouRer “ye Ae NE « & i iat ‘i Pili ‘ig 5 \\ ae ! oe AN Bak ay in eo THE APPEAL ANational Afro-American Newspaper ontteReD WAEKLY 2x J. Q ADAMS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER 40 dah otrest 8, ad ian, ST. PAUL OF Ue No, 236 Union Block, 49 E. 4th St. J: @. ADAMS, Sianager. MINNEAPOLIS .FE-cr Metropolitan Bldg., Room 1020. Nevuu Glsea, secaser ‘TERMS STRICTLY IN ADVANCE. SINGLE Copy. ex Menta tee. SINGLE COPY, SIX MONTHS... t.0 tinste cory’ Thinee wonTis. “t Uther fumcrine aoe ot ns Seed Seat an ee A ee ne a are BREE Sn ceteh 60h Sok eas Ri Ria erste ngiangen gi deb Exprae "SR Bett Erle des ti ie Ea Sertie a reitd eats iy (orga prt af cha Sh Ceara ee ee, iver eau never be sent thon th au tte smo soy mens ne See ANS See pret oct sat a sige a eat notes 1 en oe aan na gris es se Loch aay lst ta a ot cerning rates, cn oe ag tn reach. Insertion’ There “are “fourteen Bei (erie ta anda aetna in Rei ak Serie Mant an eet hoc ats Aira Hut "cen aa eet Sait bn apn ge ic haar Bice Rete Mite a ne rhgarr gnats et hows. when Baer trameasea anna gah erat eetae pee ee See ER ew 1 een teper tone en Spe fae tare cer ot Se, eat et sar a" See hata Rie ae See he iti eet Soe, oe iar gee aire Se Naa aetna Ba ee ented a Tene ee ae wig 2 hl erent or cath Ut gor een ealng aunty ted, eerywhere ean, Sieh, eS tn grey ter ta pou aera ity adh ale Bow mallet Bt a ira datannis mabe Herein ete ata a te Bene ar be pamecat ge haat EE RAPS aioe ane SATURDAY, APRIL 12, 1913 ‘The “color question,” which, by the way, 1s attracting much more atten- tion than it should in this country, the land of the free (2) came up at the meeting of the Mississipp! Valley Sut trage conference at St. Louls, Mo, ‘Thursday, but was promptly and fatr- ly dealt with, It seems that at the meeting, which was held in one of the hotels, that Mrs. Victoria Haley, prest- dent of the St. Louis Afro-American ‘Women’s Club, was present at the morning session; in the afternoon she ‘again put in her appearance, When the attention of the hotel manage- ment was called to the fact that an ‘Afro-American was actually under the root of the hotel, a vigorous protest was made by. the hotel ‘management, but thanks to the stand taken by ‘Mrs. D. W. Knofler, state. campaign man- ager for the ‘suffragists in Missouri, and Mrs. Davis ‘Ni; O'Nolll, president of the St. Louis.-Equal Suffragist League, Mrs, Haley was allowed to remain, One of the causes of the opposition ‘lots of people have to the equal suffrage movement is the unde- fined status of tae “color question.” Surely whatever is good for white women is good for black ones, ‘The widows of New Jersey are to be nicely cared for it they have children, according to a law Just passed giving widows over 16 years of age $9.00 2 month for the first child, $5.00 for the second, and $4.00 for each additional. As the saying goes, this will help some, 1 anybody thinks the Republican party Is down and out, a perusal of the returns in the city election in St. Louls, Mo, last Tuesday will convince the skeptic that he has another think coming. Just think of it, the Repub- Ucans winning out in the mayoralty contest in St. Léuts! In a recent address at Washington, Representative Henry M. Golatoglo of ‘New York warned the Jews of Amer doa against being decelved into bellev- ing that prejudice against their race ‘had entirely died out in America. It ‘4a only lying dormant. “SIX* MONTHS’ COURTSHIP.” Judge's Sentence For Love at First Sight Pair. ‘Obicago.—Love at frat sight and all that sort of thing 1s romantic, but sometimes the vision ts clouded, ac- cording to Judge Newcomer of the mu- ietpal court. That is why be sentenced 8 young couple to siz months of court- abip. ‘The Judge looked benignly down from the bench. Before him were Loretta Brown of Kankakee and John Carr of Chicago, both under age. It had been 8 case of a glance, a emile and “Let's get married.” ‘The judge wanted to ‘know all about it. “Loretta,” he said, “would you like to marry Mr, Carr?” “Yes,” she murmured. “Hasty marriages,” he sald, “almost always result in hasty divorces, 1 don’t like them. So I sentence you to ‘six months’ courtship. The proposed new marriage laws advocate such a plan, and I think it a grand idea.” ‘The Judge then requested both to re- port to him once a week. Obdurate rel- ‘tives bad caused them to be brought to court APPENDIX ON WRONG SIDE. Also His Heart and Other Organs Outaide of That Philndelphin.—Surgeons at the Jeter son hospital have: dispeveted cman ‘whote vitae are alla the wroag piace, According to. statements “given” out Charles Henry, derelict. applies to to institution for treatment, and the phy- tlcians alscovered thet bis appendly ts on the left side of his body aud bis Neart and other organs onthe tight side. Dr tele says that the malforma: tions in the man's thorace cavity are due entirely to congenital abnormaities caused by the fact that he was the child of ‘blood relatives "Blenry did not know that be wen such a freak sir St the 2 raze were potce tim os he decided that he was a aaset to ny ruscum and started for New Tork for ayn Boston Teacher's Quest Ends In Observation Ward, New York.—Elderly, neatly attired and of quiet demeanor, Mise Emily Jane Clarke, a Boston schoolteacher. entered the reception room of the Rockefeller Institute For Medical Re search at Sixty-sixth street and the East river and asked to see the physl- clan in charge. Dr, Swift promptly pre- sented himself, whereupon Miss Clarke ‘aid: “I have heard and read so much of the wonderful work and of the remark- able operations that have beep achiev- ed at this institute that 1 have brought my own personal case bere.” “And what may your affliction be?” asked the physician. “Well, ip the first place. I want a new eharacter"— “A uew"— began the doctor. “And an entirely new brain,’ sup- Plemented Miss Clarke. “I hope you ‘will see your way to take up the work. I absolutely require a new character and a new brain.” Dr. Swift sent a summons to Belle- ‘Yue hospital and gave Miss Clarke in charge of Dr Roberts, who came in the ambulance. She was placed In the Psychopathic ward for observation. THE CHAMPION MOTHER. Woman Thirty-five Years Old Has Borne Twenty-seven Children. Cleveland.—The birth of tour boys makes Mrs. William G. Clark of Cleve- land the mother of twenty-seven ehil- dren. She ts only thirty-five years old. ‘The quadruplets died because of an injury to the mother. ‘This is the sec- ond set of quadruplets the woman has borne. She also ts the mother of three sets of triplets and dve sets of twins. Six of her twenty-seven children are alive, the oldest, Roland, belng nine- teen, and the youngest, Hubbard, ts two years old Mra Clark's mother had twenty-elght children. Her grandmother had twenty-nine children. quadruplets and triplets among them BLOOD CLOT’S ODD EFFECT. Untaught Farm Hard Suddenly Be- comes a Fiddler. Redwood Falls, Minn. While husk- ing corn on a farm near this city Frantz Schultz, who recently came from Gerany, sustained Injuries trom a runaway team, which cavsed a blood clot on the brain, which is affecting bis mind in a manner that énds.to baffle medical men, ashy, When brought bere for treatment he asked: to be permitted to play on a violin. an Instrument which he says he never tried to play before, He does not play by. note or written music, because he eaondt nead-tt: but proglycea good muale notwithstanding. ‘Gicesd Map cade Bi, ‘Mauch Chunk.- Pa.—After suffering. from a peculiar iliness for many years Bernard McNalty has dislodged a six inch lizard, wh{ch bas been in bis stom- ach since the days of the Porto Rican campaign tn 1808 when be was a pri- vate in the army England's Largest House, ‘Fhe proud distinction of being the largest house in England ts generally accorded to Lord Fitzwilliam’s York- shire seat, Wentworth Woodhouse. Of thls houxe it fs aald that the three prin- cipal entrances ure so far distant from each other that visitors are advised to bring three hats’ with them, one to be Kept at each point of egress. A: house which is 00 feet long, has = ball ‘in’ which two average suburban villas could be comfortably placed and boasts & room for every two days of the year is certainly large enough to eatiaty any reasonable ambition—Rxchanse. POLES ONCE ON EQUATOR: Flammarion Discusses a Discovery by the Scott Expedition, Paria.—Camille Flammarion, the cet: ebrated astronomer, discussing the statement that the Scott expeditior found evidence that the south poe bud twice been a temperate zone, auld: “The evidence evidently relates te the @iscovery of fossils of fauna and flora such as bave already been found fn the arctic regions, These are taken by one school of theorists as proving that the poles once occupied the post ton of the equator and enjoyed a warm elimate, while the two opposite points now on the equator, were frozen poles “The theory is that the obliquity of the earth, which, as every one knows, travels around the sun at an angle of 28 degrees, i llable to great variation. ‘Thus from time to time during the millions of years the earth has existed the poles have changed from place to lace on the earth's surface," “But this {s only a theory and one which the exact sclence of astronomy oes not so far support.” GOATS TO CHEAPEN LIVING. Gattlemen Declare Meat Is as Good as Beet and Lose Covtly. BB Pato, Tex.—E! Paso people and all other people in these United. States ‘who complain of the high price of beet im the retall markets ehou!d eat more goat meat. “Tt lo cheaper abd st t Food when properly prepared and pro erly cooked,” ts & remark, which 1 Beard in ti circle at dines and om which i» becoming more frequent “Cattle prices are. golng, fo come down with'a erash prety seon if thew continued sky high ures are oot checked. because the people, will quit buying beet" la another remark beard at ines.” Goate—eat goat meat” says the ert wan Ov tne Stee OS sane Ket a few days ago a bunch of 306 New Merico yearlog sheep, which av eraged seventy-nine pounds, ‘sold for $635 a hundred, ‘Ou the sume Gay ta the same warket a shipment of 12 outs, which averaged” serenty-tot Pounds, old for $3.00 hundred, Harvard Professor Takes Rest In Twilight State, Boston.—A Harvard professor who ‘has uot slept for twenty years. but bas taken bis ‘st in the “twilight state” is the subject of investigations by the pyschological laboratory of the university and the State Psychopathic hospital, ‘The “twilight state.” in which the subject retains consciousness of all that goes on about bim, ts declared to be a sclentific relaxation more satis- fying than sleep and restoring the bodily vigor in about half the time re- quired by sleep. While the identity of the Harvard professor 1s kept se- cret, Professor Hugo Munsterberg, di- Tector of the psychological laboratory at Harvard, who is a personal friend of the sleepless educator, has made a close study of his case. Profescor ‘Munsterberg said his experience show ed that it is sclentifcally possible to sleep: without complete loss of con- sclousness. To assist in experiments at the State Paychopathic hospital on the “twilight state” a special easy chair has been constructed. It is described as.a device to ald subjects to relax “as completely as a gallon of molasses on a slab of cold marble.” MUMMY HAD AN AFFINITY. Letter Tells of “Unrighteous Love” in Egypt 222 B.C. San Francisco.—Through the nding of a love letter on the withered breast of a mummy In the Golden Gate park museum {t was established that affin- {ties reigned and scandals flourished in the days of the Ptolemys in Egypt. ‘The missive fell out of the mommy's case as it was being placed in a new coffin, ‘Translated it reads: ‘On, my Golden Poppy, long are the days When T'see theo notl My heart ts sick with love for thes.” Carefully guard Our Unrighteous tove. ‘The woman died in 222 B. O. with the letter clutehed to her heart. 1,176 MEN BITE ON LOVE BAIT Dead Lotter Office Full of Answers to Mysterious Illinois Girl. Washington.—There ave 1,176 letters tn the dend letter division of the post- office department for “Miss Z. X. Rad- eliffe, Elgin, 11." ‘The mysterious “Miss Radcliffe” ‘wrote to the mayor of San Francisco seme time ago and asked help to get @ husband who would appreciate a ‘good girl and $90,000. Her letter was Pabliished in San Francisco papers. Answers rained into Elgin, bat no- body called. Uncle Sam Is looking after the lot that accumulated. Most of the epistles contain photographs. ‘Oldest City. In the World. Jeontom, or Konte, .as.it le better, known today, in Asia Minor, 300 miles east of Smyrna, held by some archaeol- oftsts to be the oldest city in the world. derived its name from the elkones. of images of mud, which, according to the ancient legend of the place, were made by Proitetheus and Athena at the com- mand of Jupiter, who after the great flood caused the winds to blow upon the elkones and they became. living men and women. ‘Thus, according to this tradition, Iconfum was the first place settled after the flood. Argonaut. Cupid Too Strong, Westerly, R. 1—Annle Sisson, who went to Fresno, Cal., to marry. 2 capk talist and found bim'a dishwasher and Was sent home by a charitable society, vanished again. and friends have re: celved word that she has married the capitalist dishwasher after all. 5TH ANNUAL CONCERT Pythian Military Ball ‘To be Given by he Minne Pp lig KNIGHTS <> PYTHIAS NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY MONDAY EVENING, APRIL 14 A Grand Vaudeville Entertainment under the direction of Mr. C, H. Miller. seine ta solering ae Mendes Addie ter, at SAS eae tuna meacees ee MUSIC BY MSCULLOUGH ORCHESTRA ADMISSION - - 50 CENTS excsT? {eich the Armory, transfer to any car going west on Hennepin, SAINT PAUL salichnate Witte en Miki Cade clo Mt costs Uttle to place your papers. sash securities and valuables in abso ‘ute aafety. Boxes In our vaults can * had for $4 per year. Store your oxes, trunks, te, with as. North xestary. ‘rene! ty” 188 Rndicott. Ar cade—Advertisement, Why not patronize the business houses that Inviso you to. trade with them through ‘thelr advertisements in THE APPEAL? They are helping to support your paper, show them that you believe in helping those who help You, or your enterprises. Trade with the people who advertise in THN AP. euaL. ‘ ALBION W. HOLDEN—Fine house painting, hand ofl finishing, varnishing, staining, Wall tinting, ete, done on short notice. First class, durable work guaranteed, General repairing and Jobbing of ali 'Kkinds. Send or leave orders at 527 |St. Anthony Ave., or telephone Dale = Estimates. furnished—Advertise ment. , ‘THE BUSY BER CAFE, 317 Wabs sha street (up stairs) W. F. T. Chand: ler, proprietor. Everything new but the name. First-class meals will be servel a la carte at all hours, A ‘splendid regular dinner will be served from 11:80 a.m. to 8:00 p. my at 25 cents, Open day and night. Tel. N W. Cedar 4525-Advertisement, WHEN YOU ARB HUNGRY, and want a quick meal, just go to the LITTLE ST. PAUL ‘CAKE, 120 3. Bighth street, betwoen Robert and [Jackson. James H. Thomas, proprie- ‘tor. ‘There you may get first-class mesls to order at all hours, day and night; Regular dinner” daily” trom 11:30 to 2:80 for 25 cents, Tel. Ce- dar 9201, | THE VALET TAILORING CO., No. 154-166 B. Sxith street. The most up-to-date establishment of tts | nd in mhe clty. Clothing made to. order, swonged. pressed, renovated “and. ret vated. “Goods called for and deliv. ‘ed. ‘Four suits pressed for $1. They are prepared to give best. service at lowest rates. ‘Tel, N. W. Cedar 4362 ©, Howell, manager—Advertisement. ‘The members of St. James A. MB. chureh have aad a splendid proposition offered to them. ‘Mr. Sperry, the well known real estate man, has offered to move. the Plymouth "Congregational ehureh, now situated on the corner of Summit and Wabasha, out to Jay and Fuller streets, put it on a suitable basement, movo the parsonage around on Fuller street and have everything ready to begin worship, for $10,000, and give them 20 years to pay. A snap. Grab it THIS MEANS YOU. If there is a one cent postage stamp on your pa- er, that meane that you have not patd your subscription for more than 4 year, and the Government compells us to bay ono cont each to send the bapers to delinquent subscribers. Now It you are honorable and square, you will come and pay what you owe. It certainly does not reflect any credit on you to have us pay one cent on each paper we sond to you and for which you have not paid. Is this fair and square? “The One More Effort Clud held its weekly meeting and social at the resi dence of Mrs. J. Q. Adams, 627 St. An: thony ave,, last Tuesday evening. ‘The feature of the evening Was the chicken ‘supper, which was. enjoyed by the large number present. Very little was donated for the supper, yet the ladies cleared $10 by their efforts. The next meeting will be held at the residence of Mrs. Belle Tyler, 588 Rondo street, when ‘a "Turkey “Supper” will be Served beginning at 6:00 o'clock. ‘The public is cordially invited, | The Beach,” the new oriental cate, 122 8. Third’street, is meeting with marked success. ‘There aro. large crowds there nightly attracted by the excellent cuisine ‘as well as by the first class vaudeville entertainment fur- nishod by Mme. Rollan and Mme. Tay lor from Chieago, trom 8 p.m. to a, m, This Is a fino place for after the theater parties to spend a pleasant time. Byerything strictly frst class and of a character that will not of- fend the most fastidious. When, you wish a real good meal, go to “The Beach,” N. C. Campbell, Mgr.; Tel. ‘Cedar’ 9019, ‘A few months ago Mr, and Mrs. Eé- ‘ward Sparks, accompanied by their ‘two sons and a daughter arrived in St. Paul from Alabama for the purpose of residing here, Mr. Sparks is a half brother of Rev. Joseph S. Strong and they were domitiod with him. ‘They were Drosperous farmers in Alabama Dut thought they would breathe the froer air of Minnesota, The father jand the sous secured positions on the railroad and the itl was placed in McKinley school wiiere she proved to be very bright and was highly com- pmended by Miss Margaret Lennon, the principal, who said she would make her mark. ‘They brought several hun- ‘dred dollars of cash with them and re- eelved. considerable from the rent of ee ee see going on nicely, lof @ sudden Mrs, Sparks got. dissatis- fied and she persuaded all to return to [their old home and they left Thursday, very much to the.regret of the male Portion of the family and of Rev. [Strong and is family. won ake: Nice elght-room house in first class condition, walking distance, corner lot, sewer, water, tollet. A ‘bargain at $1,850. Small cash payment down the balance lke paying rent. Apply to G. W. Patterson, Tel. Dale 2055. 527 St. Anthony ay. REAL ESTATE BARGAINS. Now Is the Time To Buy. Eightroom house, modern, Carrol! street. Basy terms, Sixroom house, modern, near Her shel ave, the swell new ‘addition to Merriam Park. "This is one of the best Dargains the real estate market offers. ‘A fine building lot on Igtehait ave, between Milton and Victoria streets. Other houses and building lots for sale on easy terms. Seo me before buying it you are looking for bargains in real estate. C. L, SMITH, Phone Dale 5418, 476 W. Central ave. A BIT OF KINDNESS, “The greatest thing.” says some cone, “a man can do ig bis Hear enly Father is to be Rad to some of his other children.” I wonder hhow itis that we are not all kinder than we are. How much the world needs itl - How easily itis done! How instantaneously itactsl How infalibly it is remembered! How superabundantly it pays itself back, for there is fo debtor in the world 10 honorable, so superbly honorable, as love —Henry Drum- mond. ‘An Apron Effect. ‘The Mb apron of pale blue moire ailk. gives. this chantilly. Inco. dinner gown a housemald effect. but the Ilttie apron over the founced gown is really a 2 a | ie | | ' ie a rss aw va eae be Fe | bd fa Se ‘AOE DINNER GOWN. very graceful. Crystal buttons go down the front of the apron, and it is weighted with crystal fringe. Crystal buttons on the black satin shoes are a Yery new note, Left Over Sweets, Use bits of Jelly to enrich puddings. Small quantities of berries serve the same purpose. A cupful of ripe cur- rants, or any sort of berries can be masbed into a cupful of sugar and add- ed with a beaten egg to make a ple. Hven a half cupfol of berries or jam adds a delicious flayor to a quart of fee cream. Save the leftovers or sirup from cans of frult for gelatin desserts, sherbet, creams, puddings, sauces, char- lottes, frait cottage puddings, with stale bread or cake or to pour over Brench pancakes. +. Culinary.» ‘Mrs. Newedd—Jack, dear, I want you to get your life insured. Newedd—Why? Are you going to #0 your own cooking?—Boston ‘Tran- pertot. i COLLEGES AND SCHOOLS ee OEE Eee ! Ew en = Ree Ie eR: ene SE core NS re Rs Te re dee Br Se Age eke pla en ik HA ee ie aig hg ee en Ls ee eee a eee ee ee SERS ee pegs Bee oe eRe i ee Knowle Bullding, Boyt Hall Stone Hall Gir’ al. odal Nome, ATLANTA UNIVERSITY. Atlanta, Ga- Is beautifully located in the City of Atlanta, Ga. The courses of study include High School, Normal School and College, with manual ‘raining and domestic science. Among the teachers are graduates of Yale, Harvard, Dartsmouth, Smith and Wesley. Forty-one years of successful ork have been completed, Student come from all parte of the Sorte, Graduates ace almost universally successful, For further ioformecey, address President, EDWARD T. WARE, Atianta, Ga. PEARL DONS OE karen renee Mies Ue WILBUR. P. THIRKIELD, President, Washington, D. ©. ‘The Collegeot Arts and Science—Ki 1A Me, Dea. ‘The Peacherw College—Enwis B. Moone, A SEs'Ph. Di, Det ‘The Academy—Guotox J. Cuumines, Ar My Dean. ‘The Commercial Callege—Guonce W. Coos, A'M., Dean. Scliol of Manual Arte'and Applica Sclence—- PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS ‘The School of Theology—IsaAc Crane, D. D., Dean. ‘The School of Medicine: Medical; Dextai ana Phariaacentical GollegeaEowaxo 0. Batsocu, M.D. Deas, ‘The School of Cay —Banjsson i Lacutox, UL D, Dean, For Catalogue and Special Information Address Dean of ‘Department. A i fT yes SRG gh Sui dasamsa vd Brera Te tae eee eR Beautiful Situation, Healthful Location. The Best Moral and Spiritual Environment—A Splendid Intellectual Atmosphere— Noted for Honest and Thorongh work. Offers full courses in the following departments: College, Normal, High Sckecttgcectenee da,the following, dep Good water, steam ‘heat, ciectis igts, good drainage. Expenses very rentoustie, ‘Oprortieaty eb Agee ‘Fall Term Peres. eet 221 19m. For Information Address PRESIDENT W. MeGRANAHAN, Knoxville. Tenn. eg Ee eee ae, ee TUSKEGEE GAMMON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY Normal and Industrial Institute) *7saN74, ceonaia. ‘TUSKEGEE, ALABAMA. The aim of this school Is to do prac- Uncorporated.) rganaed July te iat by the Sta AgTea 2Y, cog al AY te, Si Eg gy BOOKER 7, WASHINGTON, Principa WARREN LOGAN, ‘Treasurer LOCATION. nthe Bick Beit of Abama. where th cme Sota nba eee i ENROLLMENT AND FACULTY. A QEGE LS wadenta more than 0 tn ‘COURSE OF STUDY. Ragan education, combined ‘eth. i Pet core ry VALUE OF PROPERTY. Byoonty eeaiatiog ot 060 cares aR” arm 2 tres SHES aude taboo ites a esd oes NEEDS. 50 aunuaiy tor the education of sash ecitec™URRS tothe sino, ooh Sours ahO0 HUA" pean eo stip acidemia sates arate sal Sh at ig Peony aha a for eirent Sipenat aka but ‘Benes the wort dope by qaieg a ie aie Setead Mieten e Home tame S TTunuagee Je 10 miles cust of ‘Mont ray Hh actin a Bon Eeeeyett aes Bekah ‘Tuskegee 8a quiet boa ol otras Saale armnttul, Sosa te eas We Se ene aA wiieat aero Lincoln Institute JERPERSON CY, MesbURL Sento ta Un Clee trea ecw bese, rot New Fngland CoNSERVATORY OF MUSIC are Ex Sashes See Momeni cse mee ee : @ Straighten S ‘up. Why do you wash in the hardest pos- Shi, Ter oo a ae Rem et e Y () bending over the tub, no back kinks, no. G work to speak of, no wear and tear from SA Sarit maak ohne caret War SL See ae ee 1 — fabric, it is absolutely harmless. 636 \ Pearline is right WANTED, A SAMARITAN. Prone in the road he lay. Wounded and sore bestead: Priests, Levites past that way, And turned aside the head. ‘They were not hardened men In human service slack: His need was great: but then His face, you see, was black. ‘From the New York Independent. Defective Page GAMMON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY ATLANTA. GikomaIA AIMS AND METHODS. utah mi ate $0 oor: ual eh, tape jee ee aah iaeica i an oe Se Rarer fe nate oF sound oF steoy, Reisen ames OE asia aie Setn ste that eae ice deen, ec EPA ee cre bees SiseNES as th iia and a ce et dite od oa cuts ten me Sra ear wa tee Se Stat eas ee shia ee area eae Seige oe ieeuer tenis i eer ere, ote E Shp aces Br aR THE PARSIOENT, out Pachoge semiary, ait eae Washington Conservatory of Music and School of Expression. do T STREET, WASHINGTON, Dec Lance ano COMPEteTeacuLrY DEPARTMENTS fn Vs nda PT They Ay Soe ee eeeeeeea, Seelam ilen a Rie ti eter nec, Tuan amet, ese" Sea ri Sa LEWig @. GREGORY, Financial Secretary. SERIE GRRRORE iste Shaw Univers section neck mts epicenter tent esas eae ig ee edie tte ad site Si aes Peron pe Tier ies arama te cre mart oat Se dN easel este or See tae ior ema 5 Erie eee ore ire eee ar “Ae iaenie year, Males Oe he Thursday sey ae ee ee HSENE Shoes Cathe toi lina, Adivon "THE PRESIDENT sste Grey, Raa Bc ev eh AVERY COLLEGE TRAINING SCHOOL NORTH siDe, pirrsouRal, en, A Practical Cheerary and “tkdastriat srigace “Sten TER, an cae, Hey Ss ste, Ameren, Bore we Scare Eee, de Box! 184 Norske eee Peete a A WEEK'S RECORD IN MINNESOTA'S CAPITAL The "Saintly City" and Saintly City Folk—Neway Items of Social, Religious, Political and General Matters Among the People. SATURDAY, APRIL 12, 1913 Grand Cabaret entertainment at the Marquette Club every night. The next free concert at the Auditorium is to be held April 12. Mrs. M. J. Leavitt and grand-daughter left this week for the coast. Mrs. J. H. Dillingham still continues to get on nicely since her operation. Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Covington have moved to 556 W. Central avenue. W. T. FRANCIS WHO FOR A NUMBER OF YEARS WAS IN THE EMPLOY OF THE LEGAL DEPART- MENT OF THE NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY, HAS OPENED OFFICES FOR THE GENERAL PRACTICE OF THE LAW AT 88 AND 89 UNION BLOCK, ST. PAUL, Advertisement. Mrs. Samuel Hatcher has about re- covered from her late attack of ton- sillitis. And sin when it is finished bringeth forth death—James 1:15—Selected by E. W. Gilles. Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Thompson and that precious baby have moved to 318 Grotto street. It is understood that there are several weddings soon to be announced. Look out for them. The office of the "Small Loan Co." has been moved to rooms 25 and 26 fifth floor Union Block. Mrs. C. L. Sharp has returned from Detroit, where she went to attend the funeral of her father. The "common people" are very much aroused, and very rightly, too, over the ice question. Twenty years ago, on April 10th, the Afro-American Masons of St. Paul organized a Consistory. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence L. Smith have moved into their residence, No. 788 St. Anthony avenue. Mr. Fred Green is the manager of the Park Garage Wash Rack, cor Selby and Wheeler avenues. Gopher Club Foot Ball Team gives a Grand April Ball at Bowley Hall on Thursday evening, April 17th. Res. 678 St. Anth., Tel. Dale 2947. T. H. LYLES Directors and Embalmers. 322 Wabana St. Answered Day or Night in Twin Cities. Pall Bearers Furnished if Desired. Assistant When Necessary. Phones 508. St. Paul, Minn. If you have some news you would like to see in THE APPEAL, write it on a postal card and send to this office. Mr. Vernon Barksdale and Miss Lorena Garry were quietly married at the parsonage by Rev. E. H. McDonald last Monday. FOR RENT—Two rooms furnished for gentlemen or man and wife for light housekeeping, 311 Rice street.—Advertisement. FOR RENT—Gentlemen wishing nice rooms are requested to call at Mrs. Henry Hart's, 425 University ave. Terms reasonable. Mrs. E. Few was operated upon for an ovarian tumor at St. Joseph hospital by Dr. Valdo Turner last Monday and is getting along nicely. You should go to the Little St. Paul, 130 East Eighth street, and try some genuine Mexican Chill made by its excellent chef, Jerry Beasley. It's fine! A BARGAIN—There is a splendid lady's blue chevotil suit for sale at Clifford A. Smith's, the tailor, 109 E. 8th street. Size No. 40. Will sell cheap. If the readers and well-wishers of THE APEAL will send items of social news to this office it will be appreciated and the news will be published. Ever notice how a woman will shove along to make room for a man in a crowded car—and how they won't do anything of the kind for another woman? Mr. W. J. Utley, proprietor of the torsional parlor and pool room at No. 90 East Fifth street, has enlarged his place so as to put in two more pool tables. FOR SALE—A full dress coat and vest for medium size man, will sell very cheap. Apply in afternoon at Room 161, Union Block, corner 4th and Cedar. A REMINDER THE STATE BANK OF NEW YORK Invites the saving accounts of frugal wage-earners, it is well fitted to take care of them. Interest rate 3½% per annum. DEPOSITS OVER $4,350.00 Charles P. Noyes, President. Louis Betz, Treasurer. WAIT!WAIT! Thursday Evening, April 17 Mr. W. J. Utley has moved his barber shop to No. 90 E. 5th street and is being fitted up in great shape. He has put in five pocket billiard tables in the rear. When you have any baggage to be taken to the train or other hauling you wish done, call Mr. Louis Liverpool, N. W. Cedar 245; he will take care of you promptly. When you buy ice cream, why not buy the best? 496 Partridge street. It's for sale, too, at all places handling first class ice cream. Mr. Earl Hart and Miss Laura Moody were united in matrimony by Rev. E. H. McDonald, at the parsonage, Tuesday evening, in the presence of only a few friends. SPIRELLA CORSET, Cora E. Anderson corsetetter. Any lady wishing to be properly corseted call or address 365 Aurora Ave. Tel. N. W. Dale 1345—Advertisement. The So-Lit Club has issued invitations for a dancing party to be given in honor of Mr. James Homer Goins and Miss Eunice Easher Glass at Dittsch Hall Friday evening, April 18. "The Favorite Shining Parlor," Messrs. Beard & Alexander, proprietors, has been moved to 105 E. 5th street, where first class work is done on short notice at all times.—Advertisement. Mr. R. M. Johnson has been commissioned a notary public in and for Ramsey County by Gov. O. A. Eberhart and he is now fully equipped to do business for any person needing his services. Mr. Thomas E. Carroll left Tuesday for his 160 acre farm near Plaza, N. D., where he intends to put in 100 acres of flax this season. His wife, formerly Miss Mamie Hinson, will follow him in a few weeks. If your wife is alling buy her a GOSARD CORSET and she will be in better SHAPE than ever before. For sale by Mrs. J. E. Cloak, 292 St. Albans street. N. W. Phone, Dale 2076.—Advertisement. When you wish a nice shave or any thing else in the tonsorial line call on Irvin Young, 40 E. Third street, in the front part of Banks & Wankt's place. Satisfaction to all comers. Give him a call.—Advertisement. WOOD AND PIANO LESSONS given by Mrs. Addie Crawford Minor at her residence, 392 Carroll street only, for instruction arranged at restaurants. Tel Dale 2192. terms reasonable.—Advertisement. SHINE 'EM UP! If you wish a good first class shine or polish, go to the People's Shining Parlors, 127 E.5th street, between Robert and Jackson, W. H. Porter proprietor. Special chairs for ladies.—Advertisement. Barrett & Mueller, Funeral Directors and Embalmers, 490 St. Peter street, for $75, will furnish for a funeral: A cloth covered casket, embalming and service, two carriages, hearse and grave.—Advertisement. If you wish any typewriting done call on Miss Alice Vassar, public stenographer and Notary Public, Room 25 Union Block, corner of Fourth and Cedar, Tel. Cedar 5552. Residence 334 Rondo. Phone Dale 1345.—Advertisement. Zion Presbyterian church, Western avenue near Aurora. Sunday services, morning 11:00 a. m.; Christian Endeavor, 7:00 p. m.; Evening worship, 8:00 p. m.; Sunday School 12:00 m. Public cordially invited. Rev. G. W. Camp, pastor. The Globe Method.—To sell Furniture that will Satisfy, at prices that will Gratify. We give Furniture and Stoves you do want, for Furniture and Stoves you don't want.—Globe Furniture Co., 473-475 St. Peter street.—Advertisement. Rev. E. H. McDonald has been granted ed a ten days' leave of absence by Pilgrim Baptist Church to give him a chance to rest up after this strenuous labors in the protracted meeting which was held at the church and which was so successful. The Mothers' Meeting will be held at the West End Branch Y. W. C. A. next Monday afternoon at 2:00 o'clock. Mrs. Perry, of the Juvenile court will be the principal speaker. Mrs. B. C. Archer will sing a solo. The public cordially invited. For nice home cooking, try the LITTLE DIAMOND CAFE, 476 Robert street, Mrs. M. J. Hicks, prop. Dally H. Cotton T. Petticord 35 CENTS dinner, 11 to 3 o'clock, 25 cents; Sunday dinner, 11 to 6 o'clock, 30 cents; breakfast at 6:30; supper to 8. A la carte meals at all hours. A telegram from Milwaukee says an Afro-American in that city, after reading of the verdict in the Olson murder case, went and looked up his wife's affinity and killed him. Imitation is the sincerest flattery, hence Prof. Olson should feel quite proud—perhaps. PROF. C. S. PATTY'S HERB MEDICINES can be had only at the corner of University avenue and Mackubin street. If you are not feeling well it will certainly be worth your while to learn about these remedies. Tri-State Phone 5732—Advertisement. Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins. 1 John 4:10. Be not deceived, God is not mocked, for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. Galatians, 6:7—Selected by E. W. Gilles. At the last it bitch like a serpent and stingeth like an adder. Proverbs 23:32. For if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of His Son, much more being reconciled we shall be saved by His life. Romans 5:10—Selected by E. W. Gilles. F. H. Harm & Bro., the popular jewelers and opticians, formerly of 237 Robert street, have moved to larger and better quarters at No. 14 East Sixth street, between Wabasha and Cedar, where they will be pleased to see old and new patrons.—Advertisement. Mr. and Mrs. James Edward Glass have issued invitations for the wedding of their daughter, Miss Eunice Esther to Mr. James Homer Goin's Monday evening, April 21, at 8 o'clock at St. Philips Episcopal church. Reception from 8:30 to 10:30 at 855 Albemarle street. The place to have your shoe repairing done in the best possible way at the lowest possible price is at JARVIS', 104-106 East Fifth street. He has a complete stock of men, women's and boys' shoes of the best grades for the money to be found in the city.—Advertisement. THE ST LOUISE KITCHEN, Mrs. Julia Hinson, proprietor, No. 138 E. 3d St., up stairs. Meals 25 cts. Breakfast from 7:00 to 11:00 a.m. Dinner from 12:00 m to 8:00 p. m.; Supper from 5:00 to 8:00 p. m. All regular meals 25 cts. All home cooking Tel. T. S. 2718.—Advertisement. For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whoever believeth in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. John 3:16. There is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death—Proverbs 14:12.—Selected by E. W. Gilles. Mr. S. P. Clark has moved his barber shop from one door west to one door east of the Little St. Paul restaurant on Eighth street. He has as his assistant Mr. A. W. Thurman and they are prepared to take care of all comers in first class style. Give them a call, 132 E. Eighth street, Tel. Cedar 1832. Mr. Valdo Turner returned home Sunday evening from her Southern trip extending several weeks. She had a splendid time in every and while not altogether pleased with some of the conditions she found, saw much that was encouraging. She purposes to tell the public of her trip in the near future. The Social and Literary Society will meet Monday evening, April 14, at the residence of Mrs. Wm. B. Tandy, 535 Rondo street. Dinner will be served at 6:00 o'clock. A good program will be rendered. The club will resume the reading of Booker T. Washington's "Up from Slavery." Everyone is cordially invited. RELIABLE DENTISTRY at reasonable prices. Dr. H. I. Williams has opened offices in suite 202 Kendrick Building, 27 E. Seventh street, and has all the necessary equipment for doing dental work painlessly. He will be pleased to have old patients call or any one who appreciates honest work at honest prices. In the goodness of their hearts Messrs. H. G. Johnson and Sid Cuthbert raised among their associates the sum of $8 which was invested in first class of $8 enameled Kitchen utensils and presented the same to Crispus Attucks Home this week, for which the officers of the Home tender their grateful thanks. Mrs. W. T. Brown died at her late residence 268 St. Anthony ave, last Sunday, aged 30 years. Her funeral was held at the family residence Wednesday afternoon at two o'clock. Rev. E. H. McDonald officiating. She leaves a husband and son to mourn their loss. Lyles, funeral director. Interment at Forest cemetery. "A Joy Ride on the Water Wagon" is the topic of an address by Clinton N. Howard of New York at Central Park M. E. church, 12th and Minnesota streets, next Sunday evening at 7:45 o'clock. Mr. Howard is a popular chauqua lecturer and also is said to be the most entertaining speaker on the "dry" platform in the nation. The So-Lit Club held a social and literary meeting at the residence of Miss Lucille James last Thursday evening with a full attendance. The late John M. Langston was the subject for discussion, in which Miss Adina Adams and Messrs. C. W. Patterson and A. V. Hall took part. The chance to rest up after his strenuous next meeting will be held at the residence of the parents of Miss Ida Loomis on Thursday evening, April 24. The grand opening of the Palm Garden of the Porters and Watters' club, 317½ Wabasha, Tuesday evening, was a decided success. The room was filled to overflowing and all had a splendid time. A nice lunch was served to all present-numbering something over 300. The entertainers were: Messrs. T. H. Crump, soloist; Bart Howard, piano; Joe Collins, cello; Earl Ilier, trap drum. A cabaret entertainment will be given every night. BRIDES OF ALL NATIONS. Something New Under the Sun at Pilgrim Baptist Church. The Ladies' Aid Society of Pilgrim Baptist Church will have a new and novel entertainment at the church on Thursday, evening, April 17, entitled "Brides of All Nations," in which a number of bonnie lassies and buxom matrons of the church and congregation will take part, also a few of the male persuasion, of course. There will be several interesting special features that will add to enjoyment of the occasion. Don't miss this, as it will be great. Tickets 15 cents. The public cordially invited. The Attraction at the Grand Next Week. THE WORLD'S FIRST WOMEN'S HISTORY MUSEUM MADGE HUGHES With the Daffydille at the Grand Next Week. Presenting two musical burlettas, the first entitled, the Daffydills on Broadway and the second "Mazuma" or "The Hand of Gilt," the "Daffydills" come to the Grand week commencing Sunday matinee. April 13. Both of these pieces are composed of sheer nonsense and of equally thick, texture, the author, Sam Rice, having made it the effort to shadow any portion of the comedy by the introduction of a plot of any consequence. They are designed solely as a panacea for the blues and to send the audience home in a pleasant frame of mind. There are plenty of song hits which need not be mentioned in detail, but in the achieving of which a young and pretty chorus plays an important part. The scenic equipment carried by this show is probably the most elaborate of that with any burlesque organization, and is spoken of as a tribute to the art of the scene builders' studio. Sartorily, the show in its entirety is a dazzling affair, the costuming equalling any of the high priced musical comedies in richness. Mr. Rice sustains the principal comedy roles in both the pieces presented and Miss Billie Hill and Madge Hughes capably handle the principal feminine parts, the several lesser roles being satisfactorily performed by an efficient cast. As a whole, the show is clean and up to date, there being no semblance of vulgarity in the entire production, the marketing especially to ladies and children. Country Store is still a popular feature every Wednesday night. CARD OF THANKS We desire to thus publicly tender our thanks to our friends and the public generally whose generosity enabled us to make our first Annual Matinee Bazaar on March 6th a success, both socially and financially. The sum of $43.26 clear of expenses was realized. City Federation, Ione E. Gibba Club, M. T. C. Art Club, Sojourner Truth Union, Mother's Effort Club. For Stoves, Ranges and Furnaces Splint coal in full loads at this price Holmes & Hallowell Co. CALICO HOP TO BE GIVEN BY THE CATHOLIC LADIES' CLUB AT BOWLBY HALL CORNER SIXTH AND ROBERT STREETS FRIDAY EVENING, APRIL 25 M'CULLOUCH ORCHESTRA Our stores ought to be the headquarters for everyone in the Twin Cities who really wants best quality in shoes and cares anything for the way he gets it and the cost of getting it. There's no extra charge for courtesy, here; nor for the advantage of a large variety of shapes, leathers and styles from which you may select; nor for the certainty that everything you get will be good. TICKETS Medames Kelly and Benson, the official supervisors of dancing schools called at Prof. Arthur Winstead's Colonnade Dancing School one evening this week and witnessed the manner of dancing and method of instruction and complimented the Professor quite highly in view of the fact that none of the objectionable dances, such as the turkey trot, bunny hug, grizzly bear, etc., were taught or tolerated. Prof. Winstead has been teaching dancing in St. Paul for over ten years and the supervisors gave him great praise for the success he was having in every way. SPRING MILLINERY Mme. Hart our milliner, 425 University avenue still has a grand showing of the latest creations in spring hats, flowers and trimming. Also full line of hair goods on hand, or matched or made to order on short notice. TAKE NOTICE! Dr. T. A. Dutton's "Vegetable Discovery" will change your blood without changing your habits. I have a fresh lot on hand. Don't forget my self-experienced remedies for external use. Those who knock my profession are too stingy to buy. Nothing beats a trial but a failure. You must cure yourself without using medicine until used up, then you can tell what the results are. Call Cedar 7833 and leave your number.—Advertisement. FLOWER LOVERS Send for Green's Imperial Poppy Seed Mixture. A rare treat and a delightful surprise to lovers of flowers. Ten cents per package, by mail, prepaid. Fred Green, Poppy Specialist, 962 St. Anthony Ave., St. Paul, Minn. GILT-EDGED INVESTMENTS Mr. Williams, the real estate man, still has many lots for sale at low prices in Brandon, Moose Jaw, Letho $10 to one-third cash per lot. Monthly bridge and Basana, Canada. Lots from $60 to $225, each in the industrial sections of these cities. These are good investments. Terms from payments plan. Room 26 Union Block. Reference: International Security Co., Winnipeg, Can.—Advertisement. Everyone who receives THE APPEAL and has not paid for it is expected to pay for it. No one is entitled to receive it free. This means you! HOT TIME FOR DELINQUENTS. We clip the following from one of our exchanges to warn our delinquent subscribers what a hot time they will have if they fail to pay their newspaper bills. The same fate awaits our slow-paying advertisers: "An editor who died of starvation was being escorted to Heaven by an angel sent for that purpose. "May I just glance in at the other place before we ascend to eternal happiness?" So they went below and skirmish around, taking in the sights. It so happened that the angel lost track of hunting him. He went around Hades hunting him. He went around writing by an enormous furnace, fanning himself and gazing with rapture upon a crowd of lost souls in the fire. Over the furnace was a sign bearing the words, "Delinquent subscribers." editor, "Im not going. This is heaven Come," said the angel, "we must be Our stores ought to be the heart of Twin Cities who really wants be anything for the way he gets it as There's no extra charge for advantage of a large variety of from which you may select; nor thing you get will be good. Selz Shoes, $3.00 to $6.00. WATKINS ROYAL BLUE Seventh and Cedar Streets, St. Paul. Defective Page going now.' 'You go on,' said the enough for me," HEALTH HINT FOR TODAY. Typhoid Inoculation Typhoid Inoculation. These are the advantages of typhoid inoculation, as declared by the secretary of the Massachusetts board of health; "By the administration of typhoid vaccine a person is rendered incapable of unlearging the tortures of the disease and also of being a distributing agent of the germs. Dead germs of typhus are suspended in a saline solution and injected in the human system by vaccination. The only ill effects following the treatment are (occasionally) a dull headache, a lame back and soreness about the wound made by the vaccination process. Within a few days all traces of inconvenience are ended. The subject is immune to typhoid. It is a truly wonderful discovery. It is really not new, for the United States troops on the Mexican border during the late unpleasantness in Mexico were all treated—12,000 of them—and not one had typhoid, except a teamster, who was not inoculated with the vaccine." Lacking In Humor Little Robbie was entertaining Mr. Geezeley while Miss Tripperson was upstairs adjusting her back hair and giving her face a few final dabs with the powder puff. "Jist after you was here the last time. She said she seen you lookin' at yourself in the mirror several times and you never laughed wunst."—Cleveland Leader. Antiquity of Tennis. Among all the popular games of today none perhaps is of greater antiquity than tennis, for it is said to have originated in the ball games of the ancient Greeks and Romans. In the first place the ball was struck by the hand, later on heavy gloves were worn or cords strapped around the palm, and the racket was contrived during the fifteenth century. MONEY TO LOAN—The J. & M. Loan Co. will loan you money on anything of value, or on your plain note, at rates you can afford to pay. All transactions strictly confidential. Office 569 Rondo street, Tel. Dale 872. J. H. Dillingham, Manager.—Advertisement. Phone Cedar 5521 Hours:9 am to 12 & 1 to 5 pm DR. W. T. MITCHELL DENTIST DENTIST 403 COURT BLK. 24 E. 4TH ST. ST. PAUL GUN METAL BLUCHER HIGH HEEL AND ARCH $4.00 headquarters for everyone in the best quality in shoes and cares and the cost of getting it. Your Credit is good at the GLOBE FURNITURE CO. 473-475 St. Peter St. The leading New and Second Hand Furniture store of the city Tel. Ceder 3817 A. B. CHERNISS, Mgr LITTLE DIAMOND CAFE MRS. M. J. HICKS, Prop. First Class Home Cooked Meals to order at all hours Daily Dinner 11 to 3 at 25c. Sunday Dinner 11 to 6 at 30c. 3breakfast 6:30 Supper 5 to 8 476 Robert, ST. PAUL VANDER BIE'S ICE CREAM IS THE BEST For Sale Everywhere J. C. VANDER BIE 496 Fortridge ST. PAUL, MN MRS. W. B. ELLIOTT & CO. Staple and Fancy Groceries, Ice Cream, Cigars, Confectionery and Notions 411 University Ave. ST. PAUL Phone Cedar 6132 Dr.H.I.WILLIAMS DENTIST Formerly of the New York Dental Co., now located at 27 EAST SEVENTH STREET Room 202 Kendrick Bldg. Hours—Daily 9 A. M. to 8 P. M. Sunday 10 A. M. to 2 P. M. ST. PAUL, MINN. After the Theatre Visit "THE BEACH" M. C. CAMPBELL, MGR. The Swellest Oriental Cafe in the Twin Cities LATEST AMERICAN AND CHINESE DISHES A High Class Vaudeville Entertainment From 8 pm to 2 am 122 E. Third St. ST. PAUL Tel. Cedar 9104 Opp. Union Depot CONTINENTAL TAILORING CO. Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing, and Repairing Four Suits Sponged and Pressed $1.50 CONTINENTAL HOTEL Entrance on Sibley Cor. Third and Sibley-st., ST. PAUL F. M. PARKER & CO. Best place in the city for Pure Drugs and Proprietary Medicines. A complete stock of Druggists' Sundries, Soaps, Perfumes, Toliet Articles, Pure Candy, Fine Stationery, Kodaks and Supplies, Best Brands of Cigars, etc., etc. F. M. Parker & Co. Prescriptions Delivered. Open all night The REXALL Store. Both Phones 315 PHONE DALE 8601 Staple and Fancy Groceries, Candies, Con- fectionery, Cigars, School Supplies, Etc. Ice Cream Parlor and Cafe, Lunch at all Hours. REAL ESTATE AND RENTALS HANDLED. Cor. Western and Bondo ST. PAUL Office Cedar 1673 Dr. Valdo Turner PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Kendrick Block, 27 E. 7th OFFICE HOURS 9 to 11 a. m., 12 to 1 p. m., 3 to 5 p. m. Sundays 10 to 11 a. m. Res. 386 St. Albans Tel. Dale 918. ALBION W. HOLDEN Painter and Decorator 527 St. Anthony Avenue ST. PAUL, MINN 4 SUITS PRESSED VALET TAILORING CO 106 E. SIXTH ST $1 DOINGS IN AND ABOUT THE GREAT "FLOUR CITY." Matters Social, Religious and General Which Have Happened and are to Happen Among the People of the City. Miss Adina Adams of St. Paul, was in the city yesterday visiting friends. Mr. and Mrs. Glover Shull have moved into their new seven-room resi- dence No. 3512 Clinton avenue. Prepare to come over to the Gopher Club entertainment at Bowley Hall, St. Paul, April 17th. Don't forget it. Mr. E. W. Gilles conducts a Bible and Missionary Training School every Friday at 8:00 p. m. at the residence of Mr. Joseph Johnson, 526 Seventh avenue No. Phones, N. W. Nicollet 9556 T. S. Center 3638 Geo. W. Nelson Druggist 121 Sixth Street So. MINNEAPOLIS Keystone Hotel and Buffet, 1313 Washington Avenue South. Rooms and Meals by Day, Week or Month. Rooms $1.50 per month and up. Special rates for the theatrical people. Kidd F. Mitchell, Prop.—Advertisement. Should you need anything in drugs or medicines, or drugists' sundries, toilet articles, cigars, soda, etc., etc., call at Geo. W. Nelson's drug store, 121 Sixth street south. Prescriptions carefully compounded. Cut rates. The Minneapolis Knights of Pythias are making great preparations for their grand Concert and Ball at National Grand Armory, Kenwood Parkway, Monday evening, April 14th. Watch and wait for this big event. Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitation for our sins. 1 John 4:10. Be not deceived, God is not mocked, for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. Galatians 6:7—Selected by E. W. Gilles. WHEN IN ST. PAUL go to the St. Louis Kitchen, No 138 E Third St. 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.; supper from 5:00 to 8:00 Mrs. Julia Hinson, Prop. Tel. T. S. 2718—Advertisement. The Hard Times Party which was given by the Young Men's Progressive Club at Kennedy's hall Monday night was a novel and highly enjoyed affair. There was quite a large crowd present and a lot of costumes worn by both ladies and gentlemen certainly looked like hard times has struck them. The crowd was very jolly, however, and the whole affair was a grand success in every way. Rev. John Carter Stewart, father of Mr. J. E. Stewart, died at his son's residence 2915 Columbus ave., on last Wednesday, aged 83 years. The deceased was for many years a minister of the gospel. He was a veteran of the Civil war and a member of Morgan Post G. A. R. His funeral was held at Bethesda Baptist church yesterday afternoon at 2:00 o'clock, Rev. T. J. Carter officially. Interment at Lakewood cemetery. Make preparations to attend the fifth annual conert and Pythian military ball to be given by the Minneapolis Knights of Pythias, at National Army Minneapolis, Monday evening at 14th hour. The following artists will appear in the program. C. H. Miller, Mrs. Addie Crawford, C. C. D. Jakson, Mrs. Math. Blair, Miss Grace Vassar, Mrs. Cora Grisom, Bunnie Haster, Foster Brown, Mrs. Emma Archer, Miss Alice Vassar. Tickets, 50 cents. ```markdown ``` DON'T WORRY, JUST WAIT FOR THE GRAND PRIZE WALTZ FOR $5 IN GOLD TO BE GIVEN BY MRS, McCULLOUGH AT HER GRAND SOIREE AT THE AUDITORIUM ANNEX, MINNEAPOLIS. ON MONDAY EVENING, APRIL 28. ALL REGULAR PATRONS INVITED. ```markdown ``` At the last it biteth like a serpent and stingeth like an adder. Proverbs 23:32. For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that who believeth in Him should not perish but be saved from death 3:16. There is a way with seeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death—Proverbs 14:12—Selected by E. W. Gilles. GOOD MAN WANTED. Wanted, an experienced advertising man; one who can talk politics and is up on the newspaper business. Liberal commission paid to the right man, or will take him as a partner. For a position in theocate Publishing Company E.D. Cannon, Mgr., 703 Rostchild Building, Portland, Ore. CHILDREN TEETHING Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup has been used for over fifty years by millions of mothers for their children while teething, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for diarrhea. Sold by drugists in every part of the world. Be sure and ask for "Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and take no other kind. Twenty-five cents a bottle—Advertisement. PARCELS POST INFORMATION. St. Paul, Minn., Jan. 4, 1913. Publisher, THE APPEAL. Sir: Although the newspapers from time to time have published information with reference to the parcel post system, in operation since January 1, 1913, it is evident that many people do not fully understand the essential points with reference thereto, and therefore I respectfully request that you publish for the information of your readers, that: 1. Distinctive parcel post stamps must be used on all fourth-class matter, that such matter bearing ordinary stamps will be treated as "held for postage," for postage. 2. That parcels will be mailable only on the post office, the branch post offices, or the numbered stations designated by the postmaster, or presented to rural or other carriers only authorized to receive such matter; that 3. All parcels must bear the return card of the sender, otherwise they will not be accepted for mailing. 4. It will also be understood that parcel post stamps are not valid for payment of postage on matter of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd class, nor can any of said classes be accepted at the parcel post rate of postage. 5. Registration of parcels has been discontinued, but instead parcels are insured against loss in an amount equivalent to its actual value, up to Respectfully, O. H. Neegaard, Supt. of Mails. ANNOUNCEMENT. New Firm, Banks & Watkins. - The saloon, No. 40 East Third street, formerly owned by the late Philip E. Reid, has been purchased by Messrs. Gus, Banks and Geo. Watkins and will be conducted, as before, in the first class style for which it was famous. The public is cordially invited to call when desiring the best brands in our line. —Advertisement. Dr. H. I. Williams, the well known dentist, has again opened dental parls in suite 202 Kendrick Building, 27 E. Seventh, where he will be pleased to meet old and new patrons. Phone Cedar 6132—Advertisement. For God so loved the world that He gave Hjs only begotten Son that whoever believeth in Him should not perish but have everlasting life—John 3:16. There is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death—Proverbs 14:12. Selected by E. W. Gilles. There is a Prof. Knox traveling around the country, who claims to have invented Mental Science. He says it will bring long life and prosperity. He say he will live 10,000 years. We don't know that we'd care to live so long; but we'd like to have the prosperity he claims may be had under mental science. ORDER FOR CREDITORS TO PRESENT CLAIMS WITHIN THREE State of Minnesota, County of Ramsey —ss. Probate Court. In the Matter of the Estate of Margaret E. Adams, deceased, Letters of administration on the Estate of Margaret E. Adams, deceased, County of Ramsey and State of Minnesota being granted to J. Q. Adams. Appearing on proper proof by affidavit, on the date of this Order, provided by law, that there are no debts against the estate of said deceased. Is Ordered, That three months be and the same is hereby allowed from and after the date of this Order, in demands against the said deceased, if any there be, are required to file the Court of said County, for examination and allowance, or forever barred. Is It Further Ordered, That the first Margaret E. Adams, deceased, in said County, a.m. at a General Term of said Probate Court, to be held at the Court House be and the same hereby in said County, as the time and the place when and where the said Probate Court will adjust said claims and demands. And It Is Further Ordered, That man may thus hear hearing he given to all creditors in the estate, by forthwith publishing this Order once in each week for three successive prints in the APPEAL, a legal newspaper printed and published in said County. Dated 11 St. Paul this 20th day of March, 1913. By the Court: E. W. BAZILLE. Judge of Probate. (Seal of Probate Court.) CITATION FOR HEARING ON PETITION FOR ADMINISTRATION. STATE OF MINNESOTA, VOL. OF Ramsey, ss. In. Probate Court. In the Matter of the Estate of William M. Riffe, Decedent. The State of Minnesota to All Whom It The petition of Cynthia Morgan, having been filed in this court, representing that William M. Rifle, then a resident of the city of New York, sota, died intestate on the 3rd day of March, 1913; and praying that letters of administration of his estate be granted to it. It Is ordered, that said petition be heard and that all persons interested in the petition be required to appear before this Court on Monday the 28th day of April, 1913, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon or as soon thereafter as possible. The Probate Court Room. In the Court House in the City of St. Paul. In the Court House in the City of St. Paul. Have, have, why said petition should not be granted, and that this citation be served by the publication thereof in the Appeal Court. In the Court House in the City of St. Paul. Of this citation at least 14 days before said day of hearing, to each of the heirs of said decedent whose names and addresses are known, and appear from the files of this court. Witness the Judge of said Court, this 4th day of April, A. B. W. BAZILLE, B. W. BAZILLE. TWO FIFTY TWO 252 TWO FIFTY TWO Mild, Rich, Satisfying! 5c Try It Once and You'll Become a 252 "Fan"! Sold by the Good Dealers Ask any Cigar Dealer for 'the King of Nickel Smokes' MADE ONLY BY HART & MURPHY SMOKE MAKERS SINCE 1857. SAINT PAUL, U.S.A. Finest Brands of Imported and Domestic Wines, Liquors and Cigars S. E. Cor. Third and Robert, ST. PAUL, MINN. J. H. Bannister & Co. No. 258 W. Seventh Street Painting, Paper Hanging, Calcimining. White- washing Done on Short Notice COLD WATER PAINTING AND WHITEWASHING BY MACHINE Estimates Given ST. PAUL, MINN. E. N. YOUNG & CO. A Complete Assortment of Woolens for Men Fine Dress Suits a Specialty Dimes are little young dollars. They grow only when locked up together. Treat yourself to a savings account and prove it to your own satisfaction. "Planted" dollars will add to your earnings. THE STATE SAVINGS BANK 93 East Fourth Street Northwestern Stamp Works. MANUFACTURERS OF Rubber and Metal STAMPS 110 EAST THIRD ST. ST. PAUL, MINN. Capitol Steam Laundry ```markdown ``` Dimes are little you ly when locked up toge savings account and pro tion. "Planted" dollar ings. THE STATE S 93 East P Northwestern MANUFACT Rubber and Metal STA OF EVERY I 110 EAST THIRD ST. FROM MY CAMP TO YOUR TABLE JACK TOWLE N. W. Gedar 939 P Capitol Ste 743 Wa Minneapolis, Mian. Tri-State Phone 3184 Estimates Furnished Free Ed. Hinderer & Son INSTALLERS OF THE FAMOUS Ideal Furnaces AND Sheet Metal Workers Steel Ceilings, Roofing Guttering and Spouting All Kinds of Sheet Metal, Stove and Furnace Repairing 313 Minnesota St. Paul, Minn. young dollars. They grow on- together. Treat yourself to a prove it to your own satisfac- dollars will add to your earn- E SAVINGS BANK First Fourth Street Born Stamp Works. MANUFACTURERS OF TAMPS ERY DESCRIPTION ST. PAUL, MINN. TOWLE'S LOG CABIN SYRUP Aside from being unsurpassed on Griddle Cakes, Hot Muffins, Waffles and Gems, it adds a new flavor to Candies, Sherberts, Desserts and all cooking. Get our book "Camp to Table" its free. The Towle Maple Products Co. St. Paul Minn. St. Johnsbury, Vt. PHONES Tri-State 1843 Steam Laundry HAMMS BREWERY TELEPHONE 935 Hamms B "Leads Them All" Quality and Service are the watch throughout our establishment. It takes a real "hurry call" to the efficiency of our delivery depa appreciated. HAMM'S BREWERY TELEPHONE 935 FOR Hamm's BEER Quality and Service are the watchwords throughout our establishment. It takes a real "hurry call" to make the efficiency of our delivery department appreciated. Theo. Hamm Brewing Co. St. Paul, Minn. N. W. 940 Telephones T. S. 789 ST. PAUL STEAM LAU iPhonees T. S. 789 RAM LAUNDRY! ST. PAUL STEAM LAUNDRY! "The Sanitary Laundry" W. B. Webster, Prop. First Class Work at Right Prices Called for and Delivered 289-291 Rice Street ST. PAUL The tired mother who knows the body-building power of has no fear of housework. "It banishes fatigue and brings refreshing sleep to the tired body and mind." Made. By Theo. Hamm Brewing Co. ST. PAUL, MINN. N. W. DALB 3454 T. S. 5730 Brotchner's Pharmacy Rondo & Dale Sts. ST. PAUL GOOD SHOES The Florsheim SHOE For the man who cares STANLEY SHOE CO. 421 Robert Street. St. Paul A handsome culation of year, four MUNN Branch HA Gen Blue U. S. Gov Fam 457-459 --- 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. TEST IT TODAY READING ROOM LAUNDRY OFFICE FOR FIRST CLASS TONSORIAL WORK GO TO Shaving, Hair-Cutting, Shampooing, Electric Head and Face Massage, Manieuring, Sanitary Baths, Shoes Polished KINK-NO-MORE FOR BALE $1.00 PER BOX HAIR STRAIGHTENING A SPECIALTY LEADING AFRICA-AMERICAN PAPERS FOR BALE CITATION FOR EXAMINATION OF FINAL ACCOUNT STATE OF MICHIGAN COUNTY OF Ramsay-ss. In Probate Court. In the Matter of the Estate of Wood D. Sougluck. Decedent. The Matter of Minnesota to All Whom it May Concern. On reading and filing the petition of the representative of said estate, praying that the Court fix a time and place for adjusting and allowing his Final Accord to the assignment of the residue of said estate to the persons thereto entitled: It is Ordered. That said petition be it that persons interested in the said matter be cited, and the pear before this Court, on Monday, the 5th day of May, 1913, at 10 o'clock A. M. 5th day of May, 1913, at 10 o'clock A. M. be heard, at the Probate Court Rooms in the Court House in the City of St. Paul. They have, why said petition should not be granted and that this citation be served by publication thereof in the Court House in the City of St. Paul. A copy of this citation at least 14 days before said day of hearing, to each of the persons named in the decedent whose names and addresses appear from the said day of this Court. In Court this 10th day of April, A. D. 1913. "THE BIG THREE" P. H. Southall, Edward Pipkin and Robert Glenn, are the managers of the dancing academy at Arcade Hall, 1311 Washington avenue S. A delightful soiree every Thursday evening. Admission 28 cents. You are invited—Advertise ment. PAST GRAND MASTER'S COUNCIL NO. 123, G. U. O. of O. F. meets the second Friday in each month at Odd Fellows Hall, University, corner Farrington. Entrance on ton. Wm. R. Morris, W. G. M.; Thos. R. Kramman, G. S. No. 422 St. Anthony avenue. ST. PAUL PATRIARCHY NO. 114, meets second Monday in each month Odd Fellows Hall, 221 W. University, corner Farrington. Entrance on Farrington avenue. Thos. R. Hickman (acting) M. V. P.; Geo. B. Lowe, W. P. R.; 1783 Wabasha. MINCAPOLIS. HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH NO. 776 U. Q. O. of O. F. meets second and fourth Tuesday in each month in elephants pall Hall. Cor. Fourth street and Eighth Ave. South, Mrs. S. Darger, M. N. G.; Miss Cora Napaler, W. R. UNITED BROTHERS OF FRIENDSHIP, NORTH ST LAROGE NO. 138, U. B. F. meets 3d Thursday in each month at Ward Hall, cor. Western Ave. and Charles Hall, cor. Good standing always welcome. O. Howe, M. J. Q. Adams, W. S. 49 E. 4th St. RAMSEY LODGE NO. 3, U. B. P. Meets second Friday in each month at Wagner Hall, cor. Western Ave. and Charles Street. Brothers in good stand- ing always welcome. M. A. Davis, W. M. A. D. Adams, W. S. 411 Charles Street. JOHN H. HAYES LODGE NO. 6 K.OF P. Meets first and third Tuesday in Castle Hall 221 W. Uni- versity cor. Farrington. A Miniature standing always in good standing always. James Thomas, C. C.; Jas. A. Renderson, V. C.; 148 E. S. James, K of R. and S. 321 St Albans street. BIDDLE CIRCLE, IN LADIES OF G. A. R meets first and third Monday in supreme Court room, old capita- tion building. Mrs. M. J. Leavitt, Pres. Mr. J. R. White, Secy. Phylloxera Bldg. FIDELITY COURT OF CALANTE NO. 345, N. A. S. E. A. A. Meets first and third Monday in each month at K. of P. Hall, 211 Hennepin Minerva, Minerva Barnett, W. C.; Miss Arlene M. Scott. R. of D. 25 W. 29th St. PLGRIMB BAPTIST CHURCH, Cordillage and Cedar. Sunday services: Preaching school at 12:30 o'clock. Sunday school at 12:30 o'clock. Wednesday general prayer meeting. Friday evening general prayer meeting. General and weddings promptly announced. E. H. McDonald, Pastor, 651 W. Central. GOPHER LODGE NO. 105, I. B. P. O. Cordillage and Cedar. fourth Thursday in each month at Elks Hall, No. 126 Eight Third street. St. Gretner, E. R. Richard M. Johnson, Secy., 572 Kent. ST. JAMES' A. M. E. CHURCH, COR Fuller and Jay streets. Sunday services, 11:40 a.m.; 7:30 p. m. Wednesday meeting, 8:00 p. m. Pastor 'vis.' on Monday and Tuesdays: at home Wednesday and Thursday. Weddings, *uneat* ST. JAMES' A. M. E. CHURCH, COR Fuller and Jay streets. Sunday services, 11:40 p. m. Wednesday prayer meeting, 8:00 p. m. Wednesday on Monday and Tuesday, at home Wednesday on Monday and Tuesday, at home Weddings, funerals and Thursday. Weddings, funerals and Thursday. Weddings, on notice. Parasenage 435 Jay street. Rev. Henry P. Jones, Pastor. S. PHILIPS EFISCOPAL MISSION corner Aurora avenue and Mackubin courtyard, celebration of Holy Eucharist, 7:30 a.m. celebration of Holy Eucharist first and second Sunday, 6:30 a.m. Matts, second and fourth Sundays, 1:10 a.m. school, 12:30 p.m. 1:10 a.m. Brotherhood of St. Bishop, 7:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. Weeks Work, Wednesday, evening prayer class, 8:00 p.m. Fridays, evening prayer class, 8:00 p.m. Saturdays Holy Eucharist, 8:00 p.m. A. H. Lealadt, Rector, 395 Thomas St. I ST. PAUL SUN 3800 Clinton Ave., Minneapolis. M. A. BOYD, GRAND SECRETARY. 892 W. Central Avenue. PIONEER LODGE NO. 1. F. AND A. M. A. B. BOYD, GRAND SECRETARY. dof each month at Wagner Hall, cor. arve. And Charles street, at 8:00 p. m. noble Pryor, W. M.; J. H. Charleston Secy. 636 W. University. PERFECT ASHLIR LODGE NO. 4. F. AND A. M. meets second and fourth Tuesday at Wagner Hall, cor. Western arve. And Charles street, at 8:00 p. m. F. B. Simpson, W. M.; J. E. Murphy Secy. 1354 Thomas street. BETHEL CHAPTER NO. 28 R. A. M. Meets second Thursday in each month at Wagner Hall, cor. Western Ave. and Charles street, at 8:00 p. M. W. F. T. T. Hinder, H. P., Claude Goodman, Secy. 558 Sibley street. PILGRIM COMMANDERY NO. 22. King Templar meets fourth Thursday month at Wagner Hall, corner Western, and Charles street. W. T. Joyce, E. C.; John Sayles, Sec. 479 Rong street. MARS LODGE NO. 2202 G. O. of O. W. second and fourth W. Wednesday nights nights in college and fourth W. West University, corner Farrington West University, corner Farrington, J. H. Dillingham, N. G. G. Wesley Kelly, P. G. 950 St. Anthony Ave. HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH, NO. 653 G. O. meets and third Monday in each room. University and lows Hall, N. W. Cor. University and lows Hall, N. W. Cor. University and lows Hall, Mrs. Nelle Francis, M. G.; Mrs. Carrie L. Lindsay, W. R. 128 Arch street. AYES LODGE No. 6 K. O.F. Meets first and third Tues- dale, Castle Hall 221 W. University, cor. Farrington. Farrington is in good standing always James Thomas, C. C.; Jas. A. Henderson, V. C.; 148 E $th K. O. F. K. O. F. St R albens street 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE PATENTS TRADE MARKS DESIGNS Copyright &c. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is truly patentable. Patents strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Munich & co. receive special notice, without charge, in the