The Appeal

Saturday, May 10, 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 olique. 6-It asks no support but the people's. STEFANSSON NOW READY FOR START Explorer Will Leave In June For Long Arctic Stay. WILL REMAIN FOUR YEARS. Farty Will Study Blond Eskimos and Gather Scientific and Geographical Data About Arctic Sea and Vast Unbreaking Regions Between Bering Strait and the North Pole. New York.—Villajalmur Stefauasson, who discovered the oblond Eskimos, in announcing his plans for his coming four year expedition in the north, said that it would be the party's object to gather geographical and scientific data about the vast unexplored territory between Bering Strait and the north pole and between the western border of the arctic archipelago and the known open sea north of Siberia. "We shall start from the navy yard at Esquimalt, Victoria for ForBering strait, in the winter of week 2, June in the steam whirl Kirsten of 24 hours, proceeding east along the north coast of Alaska," he said. "The expedition, planned as a private American expedition, has been taken over by the Canadian government, which has enabled us to double its size. "I have engaged as oceographers James Murray of Glasgow, who was P. the biologist with Shackleton in the British antarctic expedition, and Dr. A. Poeffner of Edinburgh, who was Shackleton's navigator. Two biologists engaged are Henri Beauchat, a Frenchman, a specialist in American archaeology and anthropology, and Dr. Edward Janess, who is now on his way from New Zealand. Dr. Fritz Johansen, a Dane, will go as zoologist. The second in command will be Dr. R. M. Anderson of the American Museum of Natural History. The skipper of the Karluk will be Captain C. T. Pedersen, a whaler of twenty years' experience, who will pick a crew of fourteen or fifteen hands. His experience shows that animals had best live off the country. As far north as land has been discovered there is plenty of bear, caribou, musk ox, seal and walrus. The provisions taken will be grains, like rice and oats, and only dried fruit. "One of the big things will be the study of the blond Eskimos, and we are going to ascertain the depth of the arctic sea, character of its bottom, direction and speed of its currents, temperature of the water, its salinity and its vegetable and animal life." Mr. Stefoumand expects to be gone four years, but may in summer send the ship back to Esquimalt. Whether he can be the boat of ice, open sea, a continent or a series of lands is one of the few remaining mysteries of the world today, according to the explorer. the thirteen ton schooner Teddy Bear may be used as an auxiliary for establishing a base on Victoria Island in the arctic, for discovering metals and studying tribes. If the Karikul should come across land the party may establish a base upon it. Mr. Stefam萧, the child of teelandic parents, was born at Wimulpel in 1878, was graduated from the University of Iowa with Dr. Anderson in 1883 and afterward became a professor of anthropology at Harvard. In 1908 he went with Dr. Anderson to the arctic spent four years there and discovered the blood Eskimos, who, he says, cannot be descendants of whalers or survivors of the Franklin expedition. History on a Vase. Berkeley, Cal.-Lost for a half century. a Greek vase dating back to the sixth century before Christ has been discovered in the anthropological museum of the University of California, and through the discovery Professor Oliver M. Washburn of the department of classical archaeology is enabled to amplify records of history and mythology. From this black figured Attic vase, which was given to the university by Mrs. Phoebe A. Hearst, the story of the killing of the son of Priam has been deciphered. WRONG TO WATCH BASEBALL. Harvard Expert Says, Spotcotters Get Too Wrought Up. Cambridge, Mass. Beware. O ye baseball fans, for you are the product of a radically wrong attitude toward athletics. Witnessing professional baseball contests tends to harmful excesses and immorality. Thus spoke Harvard's world famous strength expert Dr. Dudley A. Sargent, recently He said in part: "The excitement attending ball games as they are played at present is harmful. Our baseball fans nowadays are devotees of a game in exactly the same sense as are those fascinated by the roulette game or other games of chance." "Attendance at these games, means that thousands of men and boys and even women become unduly excited over the athletic prowess of professional players. They leave the ball grounds with nerves tingling and spirits exalted if the game goes well, and the question is. What outer do those men and women find for their emotions thus aroused? I am tempted to leave the subject with an interrogation point. "There is nothing wrong with a ball game as such any more than there is with a theatrical performance as such but such games arouse emotion without but a motor outlet. This would not be the case. If the game were actually played instead of watched. We are overdoing one phase of the so called love of sport. "There is nothing in this houseform of athleticism, and the less we have of it the better." BISHOP PREPARES TO DIE. Chooses Grave, Orders Cross and Calms Monument Maker. Trenton, N.J. - Bishop McFaul of the Catholic diocese of Trenton, in good health, is preparing for death. He has just chosen his last resting place and ordered his monument, going about the business as though it were an every day incident. For his grave Bishop McFaul has chosen a plot of ground in front of Morris hall, a home for aged women at Lawrenceville, erected by the bishop several years ago. Dennis Dooley, a marble cutter, was somewhat shocked when Bishop McFaul ordered him to make a Celtic cross to be placed over his grave until the bishop assured him that he had no intention of dying soon. IS DONE WITH PULPIT BECAUSE OF CRITICS Fort Smith, Ark.—Members of the congregation of the Hemphill Presbyterian church have been balloting on whether they will accept the resignation of their pastor, the Rev. J. P. Hicks, just now a floorwalker in a hosiery department of a big department store. The preacher is hoping they accept his resignation, for a taste of floorwalking has spilled him for the pulpit. Hicks' advanced ideas of theology invited criticism among his flock, and without upolizing he resigned. Many of his church members, however, sympathized with him, and the ballot was taken as the means of determining his relative popularity. The preacher and W. G. Burton department store head, are close friends. Burton not long ago commented on the lack of help during the Christmas rush of last year. "Hire me," Hicks said. "If they accept my resignation I'll need the money to meet old obligations." "You're on." the merchant said. And Hicks went to work. The floorwalker went home tired the first night of his new work, which was a Saturday night, and the next morning he preached a sermon on "Why I Designed, or Cogs In the Wheels of Pressure." Hicks is a deep student and until he took his new job never anything familiar but theology. Some of the more staid members of his congregation regard his latest venture as the most during and unconventional thing he ever attempted, but it is not his first departure from convention. $5,000 WHEN HE EARNS $1,000 Uncle Leaves Legacy Under This Condition to Nephew. Minneapolis, Minn.-After he earns $1,000 "by his own efforts" S. E. Davis of Los Angeles will receive $5,000 under the will of his uncle, the late S. Cal. E. Davis of Minneapolis, just fled "S. E. Davis is not a bad young man, but good and too freehearted," commented the uncle in the will. Mr. Davis died April 4 on a train returning from Pasadena, Cal. His estate is estimated at $110,000. He was the founder of the Monitor Drill works at St. Louis Park. The widow will receive the home and other real estate. Women Hold Five City Jobs. Kansas City, Kan.-With the appointment of a woman as city clerk in the city, the government of this municipality are now held by women. Miss Laura A. Jost was appointed city treasurer, Mrs. Merle Addison Cutler and Miss Esther Bower, deputy treasurers, and Miss Beulah Ritz, city clerk. THE APPEAL. ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS. MINN.. SATURDAY. MAY 10. 1913. May Not Work as Well Here as in European Climate — Theoretically Patient Takes Air Saturated With Rays, Which Travel to All Parts of the Body by Way of the Blood Vessels. Baltimore—The John Hopkins hospital has purchased a quantity of radium in Europe and within a few weeks will establish a new department for the treatment of diseases by means of the inhalation of radium enamations. So far as known, this will be the first use of radium in this way in the United States. Since the discovery of the mineral about fifteen years ago by Professor MME CURIE. and Mme Curie of France it has been used in many surgical cases in Europe, and until a few years ago its use was confined to such cases and to giving what are called radium baths. Especially noteworthy were its effects in the treatment of cancer, giving hope that a new and permanent means of fighting the Disease had been found. The use of radium in purely medical cases is something comparatively new. It was discovered that the emanations from radium were enormously beneficial in the treatment of chronic rheumatism, facial paralysis, neurologia and diseases of the joints. Persons who had suffered from these alimentes for years found their one relief to come from radium. It is also known that gradually a method of treatment has developed from that discovery. By this method the emanations from radium are collected and held in solution in the air. A compartment called an "emanatorium" is the cabinet in which patients of the radium treatment must be placed to breathe in the confined laden with radium emanations. An hour or more at a time must be spent in the emanatorium, and the treatment continues for three weeks. The theory is that the radium rays, which do not perish like light rays, but are held in solution in the air, are breathed into the lungs. There they get into the blood and thus are carried to every organ of the body. This is why radium is used in the treatment of diseases are an actual material substance which can saturate the atmosphere, as seems to be the case. At all events this treatment has been practiced in Europe for two or three years and has to its credit, it is said, a number of cures. The substance (radium) is yet too much of a mystery for scientists to bank on what it will do or whether it can repeat here what it has apparently been doing in Europe. The John Hopkins warms people not to put too great confidence in the new method until it has had a thorough trial here. Climatic conditions differing from those of Europe may affect the manifestations of radium here. One highly important feature in connection with the John Hopkins undertaking is that radium treatment will not be high priced. Hi and poor alike will have entrance to the new department. This seems paradoxical when it is remembered that a very small amount of radium is worth a fortune. One American physician has sent abroad for a small supply of it and is said to be paying $25,000 for what is contained in a very small phial. But this high price is somewhat offset by the fact that radium is almost imperishable. Giving off emanations reduces its quantity by such an infinitesimal amount that it is claimed the quantity which John Hopkins brings over will be doing service for 2,000 years. Another matter which may shortly be investigated in connection with radium is the theory that its presence in certain mineral waters is the cause of their curative qualities. It is said that the emanation experts to make an investigation of the springs at Hot Springs. Ark. to ascertain how much, if any, radium is in the water. CAT IS GOOD ALARM CLOCK. When Si> oClock Whistle Blows Anti- When Six o'Clock Whistle Blows Animal Awakens Master Pial Awakens Master. Sharon, Ja'-Mack Moeller, a steel worker of near Farrell, would not trade his pet Matisse cat for the best alarm clock ever invented. He vouches for the story that within the last year he has not once arrived late at his work, while before Tom came into the family circle he was frequently tardy. Moeller's cat, wakens him every morning at 6 o'clock, and if he turns over for just a few more winks the feline begins clawing at the covers until Moeller arises. Moeller used to have an alarm clock. Sometimes he would forget to wind it. He would oversleep and arrive late at work. There is a whistle at a factory close, and this always blows at the clock. And the whistle blows it is time for Moeller to arise, and it jumps on the bed and stairs there until the sleeper is broused. The cat has been more reliable than the clock and has not missed awakening Moeller except Sundays for several months. TEETH IDENTIFY SKELETON. Dental Work Shows That Bones Be-long to Lost Girl Albuquerque, N. M. - The finding of a woman's skeleton in lonely Louie Huerras canyon, thirty miles from this city, explains the disappearance on Nov. 14, 1911, of Margaret Greb, twenty-two daughter of John Greb, a carpenter, who afterward went insane over the loss of his daughter, while a brother contracted tuberculosis from exposure in the search and died. The skeleton started out for a walk in the sand hills, lost her way when night fell, and, although the mountains and mesas were searched for attrace of her, none was found. The skeleton, which was found stripped clean of flesh and clothing, was identified by a gold filling in the teeth. OMAHA DENIES TALE OF RED CROSS HELP Cyclone City Objects to "Fake" Stories About Relief Given. Omaha—Reliant to the value of $1,200,000 has been received for the benefit of the sufferers from Omaha's big Easter cyclone. This sum includes cost, supplies, labor, automobile and hospital service, tornado insurance and everything that was done for the victims to help them. The biggest single item on the list is the $500,000 in tornado insurance carried by the losers. Insurance companies have been very liberal in their adjustments of losses and many homes omaha are now being rebuilt which otherwise would have remained in ruins. The second largest item is that of cash contributed from all sources. This amounts to $470,000 and will undoubtedly reach the half million mark before the fund is closed. This $470,000 was raised almost entirely in Omaha itself. Many donations were sent in from Nebraska towns and the state of Nebraska contributed $40,000. New York city's donations amounted to $8,000. San Francisco, to which city Omaha was the first in the Union to send succor after the earthquake and first sent Omaha last $5. The final individual subscription from the editor of a labor paper. On the afternoon following the earthquake Omaha started a special train of supplies and provisions and a large amount of cash to San Francisco. The great american Red Cross society has not aided Omaha to the extent of a single dollar, although Omaha hears frequently of subscriptions being handed to that institution for the benefit of the tornado sufferers. Omaha is not kicking against the Red Cross onomasistance, but does object to the need of speed in country telling of the quickness and speed with which the Red Cross leaped into Omaha and did wonderful deeds of relief. BEES KILL 200 PULLETS. Honey Gatherer Also Give Auto Party a Hot Time. Porterville, Cal.-Two hundred pulets belonging to W. F. Weems, a poultry raiser in the Plano district, were stung to death when a swarm of bees attacked them. The bees, which belong to the Kern County Land company, are brought to this district every year during the orange blossom season. Besides the chickens which were killed of other bees so badly stung that they will also die. After the bees, had attacked the chickens they continued down the road and attacked an automobile party. The bees were so thick that after the car had emerged from the swarm the tonneau was covered with them. Ball of Live Snakes. Peru, Ind.-Joseph Spangler and Robert Stanley, Chesapeake and Ohio railroad employees, found a ball of snakes near a pond in West Peru and killed twelve of the reptiles. The men were led to the snakes by a small one that had crawled to the track and they struck at the snake it made a dash for the ball, which was at least a foot in diameter. Some of the snakes were five feet long. Defective Page Author of Income Tax Measure Declares That Public is Compelled to Pay $1,500,000,000 Annually Into Pockets of "Selected Individual." Properties Assessed Too Low. Washington.—"The richer a person grows the less he pays in relation to his property or income. Experience has shown that under the present tax system personal property practically escapes taxation for either local or state purposes." These statements were made in the house by Representative Hull of Tennessee in defending the income tax, which is carried in the Underwood tariff bill and is estimated to yield the government $70,000,000 a year in revenues. Andrew Carnegie is singled out as a shaking example of the rich who escape taxation. He holds $400,000,000 of United States Steel corporation securities. Until recently he has paid state taxes on $5,000,000 of personal wealth. New York city authorities have increased this assessment recently to $10,000,000. "The rich investor," said Mr. Hull, "the money lender, the wealth bush- by American Press Association. REPRESENTATIVE CORDELL HULL. ness and professional men, cover up most of their taxable property. The intangible personal stock, bonds and other securities escape taxation almost entirely." According to Mr. Hull, manufacturers have been in a tariff partnership with the government and have waxed fat. For more than half a century there has been a constant struggle by the wealthy to shift the burden of taxation to the shoulders and backs of those weaker, poorer and less influential citizens. Statistics of property valuations were given by Mr. Hull to show that wealth is not being taxed and is not bearing its fair burden. The census investigation, 1904, in New York reported that the city had about $5,500,000,000 of personality, and the returns for taxation were about $1,500,000,000. The Kentucky taxy commission reported in January, 1912, that the total amount of bank deposits from which the assessors were to make up their taxation lists against the depositors and taxpayers was about $12,000,000. The bank statement to the controller placed these deposits at $133,000,000. The mayor of Philadelphia recently told the council there that property in that city had been underdvalued more than $300,000,000. The census reports in 1904 valued all real property at $107,000,000,000. The ad valorem assessment was $29,000,000,000. The value of personality was placed at $44,000,000,000. It was assessed for taxation purposes at $9,000,000,000. Hull charged that under the former scheme of taxation the government, in forcing the people to turn over for government funds, gave a bonus of about $1,500,000,000 a year to selected individuals who were given special favors by the high protective tariff tax. Denial was made of the charge that the income tax was sectional in character. Hall argued that wealth had made itself sectional. Five-year-old Girl Prodigy. St. Louis - Wannetta Haverstick of 4250 Maryland avenue, just five years old. The first six months into a biology of learning and wisdom under the teaching of her father. Dr. G. Waverstick, formerly a lecturer on children's diseases at the Physicians and Surgeons' hospital. She has mastered the first grade reader, knows more geography than the average twelve-year-old pupil, is well up in physics, has taken a keen interest in politics and is so well versed in the Bible that she is excluded from the Surgeons' class containing children of her. [SHIFTING RIVER MAKES CLAIM. Sacramento's Freaks Give Man a Fins 160 Acre Homestead. Hamilton City, Cal.-Taking advantage of the freaks of the Sacramento river in making land along its course, John P. Ryan, a well known young civil engineer of Hamilton City, will in a few years become possessor of 100 acres of the finest land in California, as he has filed a homestead on 100 acres on Packer Island, in the river a short distance south of Butte City. The Mexican government made the west bank of the Sacramento river the eastern boundary of the Larkins grant. At that time there was a channel around Packer island which filled up on the west side as the years went by and the island became a part of the Larkins grant. The land on the opposite side of the river was surveyed and the island was not included. The land on the Larkins grant claimed the island, and their right was not disputed. As Ryan has notified the other owners on the island, there are no more lucky acres to be obtained by home-steading. FLIES OVER PANAMA CANAL Fowler Makes Trip From Pacific to Atlantic in Fifty-five Minutes. Panama.—Robert G. Fowler, the aviator, successfully flew from the Pacific over the canal in a hydroaeroplanet with a passenger, landing at the Atlantic side in fifty-five minutes. A picture was taken of the operator and machine in motion. The flight has frequently been termed impossible on account of the air currents over Culebra. Fowler flew directly over the cut and was able to carry out various evolutions despite wind obstacles. Leaving Panama Beach at 9:45 a.m. he circled over Panama City and the high entrance for awhile, then rose high toward Culebra, where he encountered a twenty-five mile breeze. In continuing to Cristobal the motor suddenly stopped, after missing fire, through the gasoline giving out. Fowler succeeded in landing with ease on a reef. The pontoon was torn, but otherwise the machine was undamaged. Denver.—There is probably no person in Denver who is able to start at the Union depot, traverse every street between there and Broadway, with Nineteenth street as the western limit and Nineteenth street as the eastern, and stop without a mistake or a change of mind at every mail box in that area, but a horse, aged fifteen, leptest Bess, knows the hundreds of mail boxes and can find them on the darkest of the streets, blizzard, a rainstorm or a ninety mile wind occupying all available space. Bess is the property of Frank Monroe, a mail collector. She has grown aged in the service of Uncle Sams's mail department. In the twelve years of her service as assistant mail collector for the aforementioned route she has missed only seven days, none of these in the last year. It is the boast of her master that a sunlit mail collector can be placed on the roof for the mail to turn with the mail without the aid of any guide other than the sagacious Bess. As her master climbs into the wagon after gathering the mail from one box Bess heads directly for the next one, be it around the corner, across the street or down the block, and she never misses a box. Moreover, until the mail is in the rear of the wagon and she hears her master's voice, she will not leave the spot. Bess, says her master, intends to remain a government employee for many years. She will spend most of the day sleeping in her stall until time to go on duty at 4 o'clock in the afternoon, she exhibits no signs of advanced age. REPAYS FRIEND HE ROBBED. But Not Until Twenty-six Years Have Passed. Louisville—The stricken conscience of an aged man in Germany was responsible for the return of German bank notes amounting to nearly $1,000 American money to Nicholas Wermelster of this city, who was robbed of that amount at his old home in Metz, Germany, twenty-six years ago. The letter inclosing the notes was dated March 10, 1913, the anniversary of the theft, and was unguarded. All though the writer referred himself as a "trusted friend who betrayed the confidence of your household." Mr. Wermelster declared he was unable to identify him. Rooster Sits in For Hen. Columbus, Ind.—Fred Ortel, caretaker at the City hospital, has a hat which seemed to want to sit, but she persisted in leaving her nest. Becoming disgusted with her unmotherly conduct, the rooster took the nest and proceeded to sit on it. Noting the rooster's steady habits, Ortel placed a setting of eggs under it a few days before, far it has proved faithful to its trust, nesting the nest only for food and drink. $2.40 PER YEAR. WARM RECEPTION FOR AMBASSADOR Sir Cecil Arthur Spring-Rice Was Best Man at Colonel Roosevelt's Wedding in 1886—Very Popular on Board Ship, Where He Made Many Friends Among Passengers and Crew. New York — Sir Cecil Arthur Spring-Rice, the new ambassador from Great Britain to the United States, on his arrival here on the Carmania, accompanied by his secretary, D. G Osborne, announced that his family would come over later, when he had prepared for them in Washington. The ambassador was met at the Cunard pier by George Wilson, vice president of the Pilgrims Society of Amer- @ 1913, by American Press Association. SIR CECIL ARTHUR SPRING-RICE. ica; Courtenay Walter Bennett. British consul general in New York, and his staff; L. David Campbell and Clark Kerr. attaches of the embassy, who came on from Washington. On the voyage Sir Cecil Spring-Rice sat at the captain's table and made himself popular with the Americans on board, which included 130 Clark tourists from the Egyptian cruise of the Laconia. In making the customary speech on behalf of the seamen's charities as chairman the ambassador said he occupied the same place as a bridegroom at a wedding—inconspicuous, but necessary. When asked if he had anything to communicate regarding European events Sir Cecil said, with a smile, that diplomats abroad in the service of their respective governments were not permitted to express their opinions. "I know very little of American affairs said he, "as I have been out of town for so long. It will probably be some time before I am familiar with all the details of my new job." The new ambassador to the United States is of medium height and medium build, with a good head and forehead, deep set eyes and a grizzled, gray Vandykue beard, giving a business air to a keen intellectual face. He is not of the physical type of the big, imposing, ruddy faced diplomat, picturing magnificent audacity, but his looks betoken rather methods of great affability, powers of analysis and the ability to use the lancet instead of the big stick. Sir Cecil is most approachable and democratic. He was a popular passenger. He was so good at the Carmanthi His manner is so good and he is responsive that his questioners forgive him when he talks and yet says nothing. The ambassador is Irish by descent. He is the grandson of Lord Montague of the second creation. His father was the Hon. Charles Spring-Rice, and in 1904 Sir Cecil married Florence, the daughter of Sir Frank Lascelles, who was his chief in the embassy at Berlin, when in February, 1905, Sir Frank sent him hurriedly to London to confer with Lord Landowne and King Edward. After the conference he made a hurried trip to this country, cried with Sir Mortimer landed, the ambassador at Washington, and danced Roosevelt at midnight and day set on foot the procession between Russia and Japan. In eight days Sir Cecil was back in London. Ambassador Spring-Rice was born in 1859 and educated at Eton and Balliol, Oxford. He was clerk in the war office and the foreign office, assistant secretary to Earl Granville precepts writer to Earl Roseby, secretary of legation at Brussels, Washington. Tokyo, Berlin and Constantinople, charge d'affaires at Teheran, minister to Persia and on Sept. 1, 1908, he assumed the duties of British minister at Stockholm. In addition to English the new ambassador speaks French, German and Italian finely and has a good knowl. of Russian and Swedish when Theodore of Montana and Theodore of Smith Edith Kermit Cark in London on Dec. 2, 1886, the new ambassador was best man. THE APPEAL STEADILY GAINS BECAUSE: 4-It is the organ of ALL Afro-Americans. 5-It is not controlled by any ring or olique. 6-It asks no support but the people's Intentional Duplicate Exposure VOL. 29. NO. 19. STEFANSSON NOW READY FOR START Explorer Will Leave In June For Long Arctic Stay. WILL REMAIN FOUR YEARS. Party Will Study Blond Eskimos and Gather Scientific and Geographical Data About Arctic Sea and Vast Unexplored 'Regions' Between Bering Strait and the North Pole. New York - Villajalm Stefannass, who discovered the blond Eskimos, in announcing his plans for his coming four year expedition in the north, said that it would be the party's object to gather geographical and scientific data about the vast unexplored territory between Bering Strait and the north pole and between the western border of the arctic archipelago and the known open sea north of Siberia. "We shall start from the navy yard at Esquimalt, Victoria, for Bering strait, in the first week of June, in the stern tank, of 247 tons, proceeding east along the Arctic Coast of Alaska" he said. "The expedition, planned as a private American expedition, has been taken over by the Canadian government, which has enabled us to double its size. "I have engaged as oceographers James Murray of Glasgow, who was PETER © by American Press Association. D. VIRILHAEL MURTEL STEFENLSON. the biologist with Shackleton in the British antarctic expedition, and Dr. A. Forbes Mackay of Edinburgh, who was Shackleton's surgeon. Two anthropologists engaged are Henri Beuchat, a Frenchman, a specialist in American archaeology and anthropology, and Dr. Edward Janess, who is now on his way from New Zealand. Dr. Fritz Johansen, a dane, will go as zoobologist. The second in command will be Dr. R. M. Anderson of the American Museum of Natural History. The skipper of the Karluk will be Captain C. T. Pedersen, a whaler of twenty years' experience, who will pick a crew of fourteen or fifteen. "My experience shows that explorers had best live off the country. As far north as land has been discovered there is plenty of caribou, musk ox, seal and walrus. The provisions taken will be grains, like rice and oats, and only dried fruit. "One of the big things will be the study of the blond Eskimos, and we are going to ascertain the depth of the arctic sea, character of its bottom, direction and speed of its currents, temperature of the water, its salinity and its vegetable and animal life." We are going to soon expect to be gone four years, but may in summer send the ship back to Esquimalt. Whether the territory to be explored is all ice, open sea, a continent or a series of islands is one of the few remaining mysteries of the world today, according to the explorer. The thirteenth ton schooner Teddy Bear may be used as an auxiliary for establishing a base on Victoria Island in the arctic, for discovering metals and minerals, if the Kariku should come across land the Mariku should establish a base upon it. Mr. Steffanson, the child of lecandible parents, was born at Winnipesau in 1878, was graduated from the University of Iowa with Dr. Anderson in 1893 and afterward became a professor of anthropology at Harvard. In 1908 he went with Dr. Anderson to the arctic, spent four years there and discovered the blood Eskimos, who, he says, cannot be descendants of whalers or survivors of the Franklin expedition. History on a Vase. Berkeley, Cal.-Lost for a half century, a Greek vase dating back to the sixth century before Christ has been discovered in the anthropological museum of the University of California, and through the discovery Professor Oliver M. W. Wheeler of the department of ancient archaeology is enabled to collect records of history and mythology. From this black figured Attic vase, which was given to the university by Mrs. Phoebe A. Hearst the story of the killing of the son of Priam has been dechiphered. WRONG TO WATCH BASEBALL. Harvard Expert Says Spectators Get Too Wrought Up. Cambridge, Mass. Beware. O ye baseball fans, for you are the product of a radically wrong attitude toward athletics. Witnessing professional baseball contests tends to harmful excesses and immorality. Thus spouse Harvard's world famous strength expert, Dr. Dudley A. Sargent, recently He said in part: "The excitement attending ball games as they are played at present is harmful. Our baseball fans nowadays are devotees of q game in exactly the same sense as are those fascinated by watching a roulette game or other games of chance. "Attendance at these games means that thousands of men and boys and even women become unduly excited over the athletic prowess of professional players. They leave the ball grounds with nerves tingling and spirits exalted if the game goes well, and the question is. What outer do those men and women find for their emotions thus aroused? I am tempted to leave the subject with an interrogation point. "There is nothing wrong with a ball game as such any more than there is with a theatrical performance as such, but such games arouse emotion without furnishing a motor outlet. This would not be the case if the game were actually played instead of watched. We are overdoing one phase of the so called love of sport. "There is nothing in this house form of athleticism, and the less we have of it the better." BISHOP PREPARES TO DIE. Chooses Grave, Orders Cross and Calms Monument Maker. Trenton, N.J. - Bishop McFaul of the Catholic diocese of Trenton, in good health, is preparing for death. He has just chosen his last resting place and ordered his monument, going about the business as though it were an every day incident. For his grave Bishop McFaul has chosen a plot of ground in front of Morris hall, a home for aged women at Lawrenceville, erected by the bishop several years ago. Dennis Dooley, a marble cutter, was somewhat shocked when Bishop McFaul ordered him to make a Celtic cross to be placed over his grave until the bishop assured him that he had no intention of dying soon. IS DONE WITH PULPIT BECAUSE OF CRITICS Pastor Resigns and Gets Job In Local Store. Fort Smith. Ark.—Members of the congregation of the Smith Hill Presbyterian church have been balloting on whether they will accept the resignation of their pastor, the Rev. J. P. Hicks, just now a floorwalker in a hosiery department of a big department store. The preacher is hoping they accept his resignation, for a taste of floorwalking has spilled him for the purpose. Hicks' advanced ideas of theology invited criticism among his flock, and without apologizing he resigned. Many of his church members, however, sympathized with him, and the ballot was taken as the best means of determining his relative popularity. The preacher and W. G. Burton, department store head, are close friends. Burton not long ago commented on the lack of help during the Christmas rush of last year. "Hire me," Hicks said. "If they accept me, I will need the money to meet old obligations." "You're on," the merchant said. And Hicks went to work. The doorwalker went home tired the first night of his new work, which was a Saturday night, and the next morning he preached a sermon on "Why I Resigned, or Cogs In the Wheels of Progress." Hicks is a deep student and until he took his new job never knew anything familiarly but theology. Some of the more staid members of his congregation regard his latest venture as the most during and unconventional thing he ever attempted, but it is not his first departure from convention. $5,000 WHEN HE EARNS $1,000 Uncle Leaves Legacy Under This Condition to Nephew. Minneapolis, Minn.-After he earns $1,000 "by his own efforts" S. E. Davis of Los Angeles will receive $5,000 under the will of his uncle, the late Spee E. Davis of Minneapolis, just fled. "S E. Davis is not a bad young man, but good and too freehearted," commented the uncle in the will. Mr Davis died April 7 on a train returning from Pasadena, Cal. His estate is estimated at $110,000. He was the founder of the Monitor Drill works at St. Louis Park. The widow will receive the home and other real estate. Women Hold Five City Jobs. Kansas City, Kan. - With the appointment of a woman as city clerk in this city five important positions under the government of this municipality are now held by women Miss Lana A. Jeetwani city clerk, Mrs. Merle Addle Cutter and Miss Esther Bower, deputy treasurers, and Miss Beulah Rett city clerk. THE APPEAL. May Not Work as Well Here as in European Climate — Theoretically Patient Takes Air Saturated With Rays, Which Travel to All Parts of the Body by Way of the Blood Vessels. Baltimore.—The John Hopkins hospital has purchased a quantity of radium in Europe and within a few weeks will establish a new department for the treatment of diseases by means of the inhalation of radium emanations. So far as known, this will be the first use of radium in this way in the United States. Since the discovery of the mineral about fifteen years ago by Professor Mary Ann and Mine. Curle of France it has been used in many surgical cases in Europe, and until a few years ago its use was confined to such cases and to giving what are called radium baths. Especially noteworthy were its effects in the treatment of cancer, giving hope that a new and permanent means of fighting the disease had been found. The use of radium in purely medical cases is something comparatively new. It was discovered that the enanations from radium were enormously beneficial in the treatment of chronic rheumatic diseases, neuralgia and diseases of the joints. Persons who suffered from these alliments for years found their one relief to come from the strange element, and gradually a method of treatment has developed from that discovery. By this method the emanations from radium are collected and held in solution in the air. A compartment called an "emanatorium" is the cabinet in which patients of the radium treatment must be placed to breathe in the confined air laden with radium emanations. An hour or more at a time must be spent in the emanatorium, and the treatment continues for three weeks. The theory is that the radium rays, which do not perish like light rays, are held in solution in the air, are breathed into the lungs. There they get into the blood and thus are carried to every organ of the body. This is what would happen if radium emanations are an actual material substance which can saturate the atmosphere, as seems to be the case. At all events this treatment has been practiced in Europe for two or three years and has to its credit, it is said, a number of cures. The substance (radium) is yet too much of a mystery for scientists to bank on what it will do or what it will do, what it apparently been doing in Europe. The John Hopkins warms people not to put too great confidence in the new method until it has had a thorough trial here. Climatic conditions differing from those of Europe may affect the manifestations of radium here. One highly important feature in connection with the John Hopkins undertaking is that the radium treatment is the high priced. Rich and poor alike will have entrance to the new department. This seems paradoxical when it is remembered that a very small amount of radium is worth a fortune. One American physician has sent abroad for a small supply of it and is said to be paying $2,500 for what is contained in a very small phial. But this high price is somewhat offset by the fact that radium is almost imperishable. Giving off emanations reduces its quantity by such an infiltrational amount that it is not detectable by the naked eye. Kohls brings over will be doing service for 2,000 years. Another matter which may shortly be investigated in connection with radium is the theory that its presence in certain mineral waters is the cause of their curative qualities. It is said that the government authorities will appoint experts to make an investigation of the springs at Hot Springs. Ark. to ascertain how much, if any, radium is in the CAT IS GOOD ALARM CLOCK. When Six o'clock Whistle Blows Animal Awakens Master. Sharon, Pa.-Mark Moeller, a steel worker of near Farrell, would not trade his pet Mattete for the best alarm clock ever invented. He vouches for the story that within the last year he has not once arrived late at his work, while before Tom came into the family circle he was frequently tardy. Moeller's cat wakes him every morning at 6 o'clock, and it he turns over for just a few more winks the feline begins clawing at the covers until Moeller arises. Moeller used to have an alarm clock. Something he would forget to wind it. Moeller also always drives at work. There is a whistle at a factory close by, and this always blows at o'clock. The cat knows when the whistle blows it is time for Moeller to arise, and it jumps on the bed and stays there until the sleeper is awoken. The cat has been more reliable than the clock and has not missed awakening Moeller except Sundays for several months. TEETH IDENTIFY SKELETON. Dental Work Shows That Bones Be- long to Lost Girl. Albuquerque, N. M. - The finding of a woman's skeleton in lonely Los Hu- ceras canyon, thirty miles from this city, explains the disappearance on Nov. 14, 1911, of Margaret Greb, twenty-two, daughter of John Greb, a carpenter, who afterward went insane over the loss of his daughter, while a brother contracted tuberculosis from exposure in the search and died. The skeleton out of a walk in the sand hills, lost her way, when night fell, and, although the mountains and mesas were searched for attrace of her, none was found. The skeleton, which was found stripped clean of flesh and clothing, was identified by a gold filling in the teeth. OMAHA DENIES TALE OF RED CROSS HELP Cyclone City Objects to "Fake" Stories About Relief Given. Omana—Relief to the value of $1,200,000 has been received for the benefit of the sufferers from Omana's big Easter cyclone. This sum includes cost, supplies, labor, automobile and hospital service, tornado insurance and everything that was done for the victims to help them. The biggest single item on the list is the $500,000 in tornado insurance carried by the losers. Insurance companies have been very liberal in their adjustments of losses and many homes in Omana are now being rebuilt which otherwise would have remained in ruins. The second largest item is that of cash contributed from all sources. This amounts to $470,000 and will undoubtedly reach the half million mark before the fund is closed. This $470,000 was raised almost entirely in Omaha itself. Many donations were sent in from Nebraska towns and the state of Nebraska contributed $40,000. New York city's donations amounted to $8,000. San Francisco, to which city Omaha was the first in the Union to send succor after the earthquake and fire, sent Omaha just $5. This was an individual subscription from the editor of a labor paper. On the afternoon following the earthquake Omaha started a special train of supplies and provisions and a large amount of cash to San Francisco. The great american Red Cross society has not aided Omaha to the extent of a single dollar, although Omaha hears frequently of subscriptions being handed to that institution for the benefit of the tornado sufferers. Omaha is not kicking against the Red Cross because, but does object to the stories given in country telling of the quickness and speed with which the Red Cross leaped into Omaha and did wonderful deeds of relief. BEES KILL 200 PULLETS. Honey Gatherers Also Give Auto Party a Hot Time. Porterville, Cal.-Two hundred pulets belonging to W. F. Weems, a poultry raiser in the Plano district, were stung to death when a swarm of bees attacked them. The bees, which belong to the Kern County Land company, are brought to this district every year during the orange blossom season. Besides the chickens which were killed so the chickens were so badly hurt that they will also die. After the bees, had attacked the chickens they continued down the road and attacked an automobile party. The bees were so thick that after the car had emerged from the swarm the tonneau was covered with them. Ball of Live Snakes. Peru, Ind.-Joseph Spangler and Robert Stanley, Chesapeake and Ohio railroad employees, found a ball of snakes near a pond in West Peru and killed twelve of the reptiles. The men were led to the snakes, a man who that had crawled to the track, and they struck at the snake it made a dash for the ball, which was at least a foot in diameter. Some of the snakes were five feet long. Defective Page Author of Income Tax Measure Declares That Public is Compelled to Pay $1,500,000,000 Annually Into Pockets of "Selected Individuals." Properties Assessed Too Low. Washington.—"The richer a person grows the less he pays in relation to his property or income. Experience has shown that under the present tax system personal property practically escapes taxation for either local or state purposes." These statements were made in the house by Representative Hull of Tennessee in defending the income tax, which is carried in the Underwood tariff bill and is estimated to yield the government $70,000,000 a year in revenues. New Carnegie is singled out as a shining example of the rich who escape taxation. He holds $400,000,000 of United States Steel corporation securities. Until recently the state taxes on $5,000,000 of personal wealth. New York city authorities have increased this assessment recentl- to $10,000,000. "The rich investor," said Mr. Huil "the money lender, the wealthy busk M. ® by American Press Association. REPRESENTATIVE CORDILL HULL ness and professional men, cover up most of their taxable stock. The intangible personal stock, bonds and other securities escape taxation almost entirely." According to Mr. Hull, manufacturers have been in a tariff partnership with the government and have waxed fat. For more than a constant a 'century there has been a constant struggle by the wealthy to shift the burden of taxation to the shoulders and backs of those weaker, poorer and less influential citizens. Statistics of property valuations were given by Mr. Hull to show that wealth is not being taxed and is not 'hearing its fair burden. A recent investigation, 1904, in New York reported that the city had about $5,500,000 of personality, and the returns for taxation were about $1,500,000,000. The Kentucky tax commission reported in January, 1912, that the total amount of bank deposits from which the assessors were to make up their taxation lists against the depositors and taxpayers was about $12,000,000. The bank statement to the comptroller for the same month placed these deposits at $133,000,000. The mayor of Philadelphia recently told the council that property in the town undervalued more than $300,000,000. The census reports in 1904 valued all real estate at $107,000,000; the ad valorem assessment was $39,000,000,000. The value of personality was placed at $44,000,000,000. It was assessed for taxation purposes at $9,000,000,000. Denial was made of the charge that the income tax was sectional in character. Hall argued that wealth had made itself sectional. Five-year-old Girl Prodigy. St. Louis - Wannetta Haverstick of 4250 Marlins Avenue, just five years old, has been admitted in the last eight months into a prodigy of learning, wit and wisdom under the teacher of her father, Dr. G. Waverstick, formerly a lecturer on children's diseases at the Physicians and Surgeons' hospital. She has mastered the first grade reader, knows more geography than the average twelve-year-old pupil. Is well up in physics, has taken a keen interest in the Bible that she is excluded from the Sunday school class containing children of her age. SHIFTING RIVER MAKES CLAIM. Sacramento's Freaks Give Man a Fine 160 Acre Homestead. Hamilton City, Cal.-Taking advantage of the freaks of the Sacramento river in making land along 14th course, John P. Ryan, a well known young civil engineer of Hamilton City, will in a few years become possessor of 100 acres of the finest land in California, as he has filed a homestead on 100 acres on Packer island, in the river a short distance south of Butte City. The Mexican government made the west bank of the Sacramento river the eastern boundary of the Larkins grant. At that time there was a channel around Packer island which filled up on the west side as the years went by and the island became a part of the Larkins grant. The land on the opposite side of the river was surveyed and the island was not included. The owners of the Larkins grant claimed the island, and their right was not dispatched. As Ryan has notified the other owners on the island, there are no more lucky acres to be obtained by home-steading. FLIES OVER PANAMA CANAL. Fowler Makes Trip From Pacific to Atlantic In Fifty-Five Minutes. Panama--Robert G. Fowler, the aviator, successfully flew from the Pacific over the canal in a hydroacropile with a passenger, landing at the Atlantic side in fifty-five minutes. A picture was taken of the operator and machine in motion. The flight has frequently been termed impossible on account of the air currents over Culebra. Fowler flew directly over the cut and was able to carry out various evolutions despite wind obstacles. Leaving Panama Beach at 9:45 a.m. he circled over Panama City and the canal's entrance for awhile, then rose high and steered toward Colon, where he encountered a twenty-five mile breeze. In continuing to Culebra the motor suddenly stopped, after missing fire, through the gasoline giving out. Fowler succeeded in landing with ease on a reef. The pontoon was torn, but otherwise the machine was undamaged. AGED MARE KNOWS DENVER MAIL ROUTE Needs No One to Guide Her on Trip About City. Denver.—There is probably no person in Denver who is able to start at the Union depot, traverse every street between there and Broadway, with Nineteenth street as the western limit and Nineteenth street as the eastern, and stop without a mistake or a change of address. You fill in that area, but a horse, aged seven years, knows the hundreds of mail boxes and knows them so well that she can find them on the darkest of nights, with a blizzard, a rainstorm or a ninety mile wind occupying all available space. Bess is the property of Frank Monroe, a mail collector. She has grown aged in the service of Uncle Sam's mail department. In the twelve years of her life, she collected for the aforementioned tour, missed only seven days, none of the last year. It is the boast of her master that a substitute mail collector can be placed on the route for the first time and return with the mail without the aid of any guide other than the sagacious Bess. As her master climbs into the wagon after gathering the mail from one box Bess heads directly for the next one, be it around the corner, across the street or down the block. She will be in the rear of the mail until the mail is in the rear of the wagon and she bears her master's voice, she will not leave the spot. Bess, says her master, intends to remain a government employee for many years yet. Except for the fact that she spends most of the day sleeping in her stall until time to go on duty at 4 o'clock in the afternoon, she exhibits no signs of advanced age. REPAYS FRIEND HE ROBBED. But Not Until Twenty-six Years Have Passed By. Louisville—The stricken conscience of an aged man in Germany was responsible for the return of German bank notes amounting to nearly $1,000 American money to Nicholas, Wermelster of this city, who was robbed of that amount at his old home in Metz, Germany, twenty-six years ago. The letter enclosing the notes was dated March 10, 1913, the anniversary of the theft, and was unsigned. Although the writer referred to himself as a "trusted friend who betrayed the confidence of your household." Mr. Wermelster declared he was unable to identify him. Rooftie Sits In For Hen. Columbus, Ind - Fred Ortel, caretaker at the City hospital, has a hen which seemed to want to sit, but she persisted in leaving her nest. Becoming disgusted with her unmotherly conduct, the rooster took the nest and procreated. Notice the rooster's steady habits. Ortel's setting of eggs under it a few days ago, and so far it has proved faithful to its trust, leaving the nest only for food and drink. $2.40 PER YEAR IS A VETERAN DIPLOMAT. Sir Cecil Arthur Spring-Rice Was Best Man at Colonel Roosevelt's Wedding In 1886—Very Popular on Board Ship, Where He Made Many Friends Among Passengers and Crew. New York.—Sir Cecil Arthur Spring-Rice, the new ambassador from Great Britain to the United States, on his arrival here on the Caramania, accompanied by his secretary, D. G. Osborne, announced that his family would come over later, when he had prepared for them in Washington. The ambassador was met at the Caunder plier by George Wilson, vice president of the Pilgrims Society of Amer- A. H. ica; Courtenay Walter Bennett, British consul general in New York, and his staff, L. David Campbell and Clark Kerr, attaches of the embassy, who came on from Washington. On the voyage Sir Cecil Spring-Rice sat at the captain's table and made himself popular with the Americans on board, which included 130 Clark tourists from the Egyptian cruise of the Laconia. In making the customary speech on behalf of the seamen's charities as chairman the ambassador said he occupied the same place as a bridegroom at a wedding—Inconspicuous, but necessary. When asked if he had anything to communicate regarding European events Sir Cecil said, with a smile, that diplomats abroad in the service of their respective governments were not permitted to express their opinions. "I know very little of American affairs," said he, "as I have been out of touch for so long. It will probably be some time before I am familiar with all the details of my new post." The new ambassador to the United States is of medium height and medium build, with a good head and forehead, deep set blue eyes and a grizzled, gray Vandyke beard, giving a business air to a keen intellectual face. He is of the physical type of the big, imposing, ruddy faced diplomat, picturing magnificent audacity, but his looks betoken rather methods of great affability, powers of analysis and the ability to use the lanec instead of the big stick. Sir Cecil is most approachable and democratic. He was a popular passenger and a good mixer on the Carannia. His manner is so easy and he is so responsive that his questions forgive him when he talks and yet says nothing. The ambassador is Irish by descent. He is the grandson of Lord Monteagle of the second creation. His father was the Hon. Charles Spring-Rice, and in 1904 Sir Cecil married Florence, the daughter of Sir Frank Lascelles, who was his chief in the embassy at Berlin, when in February, 1905, Sir Frank sent him hurriedly to London to confer with Lord Landsworth and King Edward. After the conference he made a hurried trip to this country, called with Sir Mortimer durer, the British ambassador at Washington, upon President Roosevelt at midnight of a Sunday and set on foot the process of mediating between Russia and Japan. In eight days Sir Cecil was back in London. Amassibador Spring-Rice was born in 1859 and educated at Eton and Ballol, Oxford. He was clerk in the war office and the foreign office, assistant secretary to Earl Granville precia writer to Earl Roseberry, secretary of the Renaissance Museum, Washington, Tokyo, Berlin and Compton, charge d'affaires at Teheran, minister to Persia and on Sept. 1, 1908, he assumed the duties of British minister at Stockholm. In addition to English the new ambassador speaks French, German and Italian finely and has a good knowledge of Russian and Swedish. When Theodore Roosevelt was married to Kermit Carow in London on Dec. 2, 1868, the new ambassador was best man. 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. Mr. E. W. Gilles, the missionary teacher, has moved to 1027 27th avenue southeast. Prof. C. C. Minor has again reorganized his brass band, preparatory to the summer season. Attorney Turner W. Bell of Leavenworth, Kan., was in the city this week on legal business. He was the guest of B. S. Smith, Esq. Attorney W. C. Hueston, of Kansas City, Mo., was in the city this week on legal business. He was the guest of Mr. Ed. Dennis, 1911 Lincoln St. N. Mr. James A. Peterson has a gubernatorial bee in his bonnet and says he will run for governor next year regardless of what the Progressives do. 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 and Druggist Sundries 121 Sixth Street So. MINNEAPOLIS The Young Men's Progressive Club of Minneapolis will give a "Shirt Waist Stair" Monday evening, June 2nd, at Kennedy's Hall, 322 Nicollet ave. more later. Attorney C. H. Calloway, formerly a resident of the "Flour City," but now residing in Kansas City, Mo., was in the city this week on legal business. He was the guest of W. R. Morris, Esq. 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 theatrical people. Kidd F. Mitchell, Prop—Advertisement. Should you need anything in drugs or medicines, or druggists' sundries, toilet articles, cigars, soda, etc., etc., call at Geo. W. Nelson's drug store, 121 Sixth street south. Prescriptions carefully compounded. Cut rates. There was a meeting of the Board of the Women's State Federation held at the residence of Mrs. Bingham, last Friday and the resignation of Mrs. Nellie Francis, as president was reluctantly accepted. 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. --- MRS. McCULLOUGH ANNOUNCES THE CLOSING SOIREE AND MAY QUEEN CONTEST AT THE AUDIORIUM ANNEX ON-MONDAY EVENING, MAY 12. THE LADY PRESENT WHO IS VOTED THE MOST POPULAR WILL BE CROWNED QUEEN. ```markdown ``` GILT-EDGED INVESTMENTS. Mr. Williams, the real estate man still has many lots for sale at low prices in Brandon, Moose Jaw, Letho $101 to one third cash per unit. 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., Winnipesau, Can—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 mall, prepaid. Fred Green, Poppy Specialist, 962 St. Anthony Ave. St. Paul, Minn. 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 at the post office, the branch post offices, or the numbered stations designated by the postmaster, or presented to rural or other carriers duly 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 sald 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 $50. Respectfully, O. H. Neegaard, Supt. of Malls. STATE OF MINNESOTA COUNTY OF Ramsey, District Court, Second Judicial District. AGNES TEAL. named defendant: You are hereby summoned and required to appear in the court in the above entitled action, which has been filed with the court, and you are hereby required to copy your answer to this complaint on the subscriber at his office. Nos. 88 and 89 and Willem County, Minnesota, within thirty days after the service of this summons upon your request, you are hereby required toice, and if you fail to answer said complaint within the time aforesaid, the Court will apply to the Court for the relief demanded said complaint. W. T. FRANCIS Attorney for Plaintiff. Residence, 606 St. Anthony Avenue; Office, 88 and 89 Union Block, corner Cedar Street, St. Paul, Minnesota. STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP MANAGEMENT, CIRCULATION, of the Appeal, published weekly at St Augustine, required by the Act of August 24, 1912. Note—This statement is to be made in duplicate, both copies to be delivered by the postmaster, and the other will send one copy to the Third Assistant Postmaster General (Division of Classification), Washington, D. C., and the other in the files of the post office. Editor-J. J. Adams, 49 E. 4th St: St. Paul, Minn. Editor-J. J. Adams, 49 E. 4th St, St. Paul, Minn. Business Manager-J. J. Adams, 49 E. St. Paul, Minn. Publisher-J. J. Adams, 49 E. 4th St, St. Paul, Minn. Owners (if a corporation, give names and addresses of stockholders holding 1 or more of total amount of stock). J. Q. Adams, 49 E. 4th St. Paul, Minn. Known bondholders, mortgages, and percent or more of total loans holding percent or more of total mortgages, or other securities—None. Average number of copies of each issue submitted, through the mails or otherwise, to paid subscribers during the six months (This information is required from daily newspapers only.) Sworn to and subscribed before me this 1st day of April, 1818. JOHN W. BOERNER. Notary Public, Ramssey Co. Minn. (Seal.) (My commission expires Jan'y 1, 1914). ORDER FOR CREDITORS TO PRESENT CLAIMS WITHIN THREE MONTHS. State of Minnesota County of Ramssey —ss. Probate Court. In the Matter of the Estate of Margaret issued. Letters of administration on the Estate of Margaret E. Adams, deceased, late of the city of St. Paul, in the County of Ramsey and State of Minnesota being appointed by it. It appearing on proper proof by affidavit, . . . made and filed herein, as provided in law, that there are no disputes against the estate of said deceased: It Is Ordered. That three months be amended and filed from and after the date of this order which all persons having claims or demands against the said deceased, if the same in Probate Court of said County, for examination and allowance, or be barred. It Is Ordered. That the first Monday in July, 1913, at 10 o'clock a.m. at a General Term of said Probate Court, be held at the Court House and be the same hereby is appointed as the time and the place when and the said Probate Court will examine and adjust said claims and demands. And It Is Further Ordered. That once and in hearing be given to all creditors and payable to the Estate, by forthwith publishing this Order once in each week for three successive months in the APPEAL, a legal newspaper printed and published in said County. Dated at St. Paul this 20th day of March. 1913. CITATION FOR EXAMINATION OF FINAL ACCOUNT. STATE OF MISSOURI COUNTY of Ramsey--ss. In Probate Court. In the matter of the estate of Frank Grablich, also known as Frank Grablich, and as Adam Decedent, the State of Minnesota to all whom it may concern: On reading and filing the petition of the estate of Frank Grablich, the Court fix a time and place for examining, adjusting and allowing his Final Decedent, and or the assignment of the residue of the estate to the persons thereto entitled: It is ordered, that said petition be heard before this Court, on Monday, the 19th day, matter be cited and required to appear before this Court, on Monday, the 19th day, as soon thereafter as said matter can be heard, at the Probate Court Rooms in the said county, and show cause, if any they have, why said petition should not be heard in this Court, by publication thereof in the Appeal, according to law, and by mailing a copy of the said day of hearing, to each of the heirs, devises and legates of said decedent matter, to those persons appeasers appear from the files of this Court. Witness the Judge of said Court this 18th day of April, E. W. BAZLLE, E. W. BAZLLE, Judge of Probate. (Seal of Probate Court) Attest: F. W. Gosewish, Clerk of Probate. 'O Mahlay & Boerner, Attys. April 28, 2014, enforcement MEET ME AT— "The Budweiser" Nic. HERGES, PROP. CHOICEST WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS Tri-State Phone 5004 Cor. Dale and University, - ST. PAUL. Main 9592 T. S. 3073 PORTERS' AND WAITERS' HOTEL FOR MEN ONLY GLOVER SHULL, Manager Rates 50 cents per day 309 Hennepin MINNEAPOLIS Steam and Hot Water Heating Electric Wiring A Special! M. J. O'NEIL ELECTRIC GAS AND COMBINATION FIXTURES PLUMBING 56-00 EAST SIXTH STREET Both Phones 32 ST. J AUL. MINN 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. "CURLEY'S BAR" 122 East Third Street Finest Brands of Imported and Domestic Wines, Liquors and Cigars S. E. Cor. Third and Robert, ST. PAUL, MINN. Painting, Paper Hanging, Calcimining. Whitewashing Done on Short Notice 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. DEAL MACHINE Dimes are little you ly when locked up to savings account and pr tition. "Planted" dollar ings. THE STATE 93 East Northwestern MANUFA Rubber and Metal ST OF EVERY 110 EAST THIRD ST. LOG JARNS BYNUP W. Cedar 939 Capitol Ste MINNESOTA Tri-State Phone 3184 Estimates Furnished Free Ed. Hinderer & Son INSTALLERS OF THE FAMOUS Ideal Furnaces Sheet Metal Workers Steel Collings. Roofing Guttering and Spouting All Kinds of Sheet Metal, Stove and Furnace Repairing 1313 Minnesota St. Paul, Minn. Young dollars. They grow on- together. Treat yourself to a grove it to your own satisfac- dollars will add to your earn- SAVINGS BANK t Fourth Street On Stamp Works. FACTURERS OF AMPS Y 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 1643 ```markdown ``` HARMS BREWERY "Leads T Quality and Servi throughout our esta It takes a real " the efficiency of our appreciated. TEST IT TO HAMMS BREWERY TELEPHONE 93 Ham "Leads Them All Quality and Service are the way throughout our establishment. It takes a real "hurry call" the efficiency of our delivery or appreciated. TEST IT TODAY HAMM'S BREWERY TELEPHONE 935 FOR Hamm's BEER "Leads Them All" 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. PHONE CEDAR 5552 R. O. LEE ATTORNEY AT LAW PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS 25 UNION BLOCK 4TH AND CEDAR PHONE CEDAR 5552 R. O. LEE ATTORNEY AT LAW PRACTICE IN ALL COURTS 25 UNION BLOCK 4TH AND CEDAR READING ROOM LAUNDRY OFFICE FOR FIRST CLASS TONSORIAL WORK GO TO Shaving, Hair-Cutting, Shampooing, Electric Head and Face Massage, Maniseuring, Sanitary Baths, Shoes Polished KINK-NO-MORE FOR SALE $1.00 PER BOX HAIR STRAIGHTENING A SPECIALTY LEADING AFO-AMERICAN PAPERS FOR SALE Tel. Cedar 9282 ST. PAUL, MINN. GOOD SHOES The Horsheim SHOE For the man who cares STANLEY SHOE CO. 421 Robert Street. St. Paul Tel. N. W. Cedar 940 T.-S. 709 St. Paul Steam Laundry "The Sanitary Laundry" Works: 289-291 Rice Street Offices: { 480 Wabasha St. { 443 Broadway St. V. B. Webster, Prop. St. Paul Art Street, St. Paul Cedar 940 T.-S. 709 St. Paul bster, Prop. St. Paul ONE. LEE Y AT LAW N ALL COURTS ST. PAUL For Good Health Digesto MALT AND HOP TONIC Digesto is a necessity Sold by all druggists THEO. HAMM BREWING COMPANY ST. PAUL MINN. IF EVERYONE KNEW THE GOODNESS OF GORDON CAPS NO ONE WOULD BE WITHOUT ONE. Geneva Blue R U. S. Governm Family 457-459 S BIDDLE CIRCLE, LADIES OF G. A. R. meets first and third Tuesdays of each month at court room, old calf building, Mrs. M. H. building, Mrs. J. R. White, Secy. PARKHILL MR. J. R. White, Secy. PARKHILL FIDELITY COURT OF CALANTHI NO. 345, N. A., S. A., E. A. and A. R. meets first and third Tuesdays in each month at k. of P. Hall Ave. Minneapolis, Mrs. Minerva E. Barnett, W. C.; Miss Marianne M. Scott R. of D., 25 W, 29th St. PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH, Chelsea and Pond. Sunday services: Preaching 11 a.m. and worship 12:30 o'clock. Wednesday area general prayer meeting. Friday greeting general prayer meeting. Friday greeting and weddings promptly attended. Rav. E. H. McDonald, Pastor, 651 W. Central GOPHER LODGE NO. 105, L. B. P. O. of the World, meets second and third Tuesdays in each month at Elk Hall No. 126 East Third Hall, Paul, L. B., Greer, E. R., Richard M. Johnson, Secy., 572 Kent ST. ST. JAMES A. M. E. CHURCH, Chelsea and Jay streets. Sunday services: Sunday morning, p. m. Wednesday prayer meeting, 8:00 a.m. Monday and Tuesdays; at home Wednesday and Thursday. Weddings, June I MOST WORSHIPFUL GRAND LODGE -OF- PIONEER LODGE NO. 1. L. F. AND A. M. Meets first and third Mondays at Wagner Hall, cor. Western Ave. and Charles street at 8:00 Noble Pryor, W. M.; J. H. Charleston Secy. 636 W. University. PERFECT ASHL I R LODGE NO. 4. F. and A. M. meets second and fourth F. and A. M. meets second and fourth Wagner Hall, cor. Western Ave. and Charles street at 8:00 F. B. Simpson, W. M.; J. M. 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. Chandler, H. G.aude Goodman, Secy. 556 Sibley street. PILGRIM COMMANDRY NO. 22 Knights Templar, meets fourth Thursday in each month at Wagner Hall, cor. Western Ave. and Charles street W. T. Joyce, E. C.; John Sayles, Secy. 479 Rondo street. MARS LODGE NO. 262 G. U. O. of O. F. meets second Friday nights at Odd Fellows Hall, cor. University, corner Farrington avenue. W. F. Farrington, J. H. Dillingham, N. G.; J. Wesley Kelly, P. G. 560 St. Anthony Park. HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH, No. 553 G. O. F. meet first and third Monday N. W. Co. meet first and third Fellows Hall, N. W. Co. meet Francis, Farrington. Mrs. Nelle Francis, M. N. Marie E. Lindsay, W. R. 126 Arch street. PAST GRAND MASTER'S COUNCIL No. 123, G. U. O. of F. meet second and fourth Friday in each month and end of fourth Hall, 221 W. University corner Farrington, Wm. R. Morrils, W. G. M. corner Hickman, G. S. No. 422 St. Anthony and St. PAUL PATRIARCHY No. 114 meets second Hall month as Odd Fellows Hall, 221 W. University corner Farrington. Entrance on Farrington twice. R. Hickman (acting) R. V. P. W. M. V. P Geo. B. Lowe, W. P. R. 1784 Wabasha Minneapolis. HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH NO. 776 Houses a meets second and fourth Tuesday in the morning and fourth Tuesday Hall. Cor. Fourth street and Eighth Ave. South. Mrs. S. Darager. M. N. G. Miss Cora Napier. W. R. UNITED BROTHERS OF FRIENDSHIP NORTH STAR LODGE NO. 138. U. N. Thursday in each month at Wagner Hall. Western Ave., and Charles street. Brothers in good standing always welcome. O. Howell. M. J. Adams. W. S., 49 E. 4th St. RAMSEY LODGE NO. 3. U. B. Meets second Friday in each month at Wagner Hall. Western Ave., and Charles street. Brothers in good standing always welcome. M. A. Davis, M. W. A. D. Adams. W. S., 411 Charles Street. JOHN H. HAYES LODGE NO. 6 K. O.F. Meets first and third Tuesday in the morning. Castle Hall 221 W. U. University cor. Farrington. Knights of Kyrie. Standing always standing always welcome. James Thomas. C. C.; Jas. A. H. Anderson. C. 148 E. 9th St. Jas. James. K. R and M. 231 S. Albans street. KING OF CUSTOMS # COPYRIGHTS P.C. Aware of potential liability, please inform us of any changes in client information to provide patentable. Communications from a Handbook on Patents on a free, lowest cost website to Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive a special notice. Without charge, in the event of a breach of copyright, we will notify you. Scientific American. A handsome illustrated journal. Largest distribution of any scientific journal. Four-time winner. $1. Sold by all newstellers. MUNN & Co. 381 Brologen, New York Brass Office, C $ F. St. Washington, D. C. SAINT PAUL * WEEK'S RECORD IN MINNESOTA'S CAPITAL The "Saintly City" and Saintly City Folks—Neway Items of Social, Religious, Political and General Matters Among the People. SWAT THAT FLY! DO IT NOW! Grand Cabaret entertainment at the Marquette Club every night. Mrs. Eva Lowery, now at Anoka, is still in a very precarious condition. FOR RENT: A nice large furnished room for at 330% Rondo street. Mrs. J. H. Dillingham still continues to get on nicely since her operation. 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 Mr. J. Bagby of Calgary, Can., is in the city circulating, among his friends. And sin when it is finished bringeth forth death—James 1:15.—Selected by E. W. Gilles. Mrs. Mattle B. McGhee left Thursday for her farm in Wisconsin to spend a few days. Mrs. A. Woodworth, a sister of the late Mrs. Epps, was in the city to attend the funeral. The office of the "Small Loan Co." has been moved to rooms 25 and 26 fifth floor Union Block. W. F. FRANCIS WHO FOR A NUMBER OF YEARS WAS IN THE EMPLOY OF THE LEAGUE 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. The Men's Episcopal Club will meet at St. Phillips Church on Tuesday evening, May 14th at 8:30 o'clock. Mrs. S. K. Johnston, agent for Dr. Dutton's Vegetable Discovery has moved to 915 Woodbridge street. A coquette is a woman who places her honor in a lottery; ninety-nine chances to one that she will lose it. If you have some news you would like to see in THE APPEAL, write it on a postal card and send to this office. The heart of a coquette is like a rose, of which her lovers pluck the leaves, leaving only the thorns for her husband. Mrs. R. B. Chapman after spending several months in the south has returned home much improved in health. FOR RENT—Two rooms furnished for gentlemen or man and wife for light housekeeping, 311 Rice street.—Advertisement. Res. 678 St. Anth., Tel. Dale 2947. T. H. LYLES Funeral Directors and Embalmers. 322 Wabasha St. Cath. Answered Day or Night in Twin Cities. Active Pall Bearers Furnished If Desired. Cath. Assistant When Necessary. Both Phones 508. St. Paul, Minn. FOR RENT—Gentlemen wishing nice rooms are requested to call at Mrs. Henry Hart's, 425 University ave. Terms reasonable. The B. Y. P. U. of Pilgrim Baptist Church meets each Sunday at 6:45 P. M. The meetings are very interesting. All are cordially invited. The public baths on Harriet Island are to be opened to the public on May 25th. The Island is now open for picnics and other gatherings. The protracted meeting at St. James church has been well attended and has been quite successful in bringing sinners to repentance. Mr. George Watkins, of the firm of Banks & Watkins, 40 E. Third street who has been spending some time in Canada is expected home today. Watch and wait for the first boat excursion of the season to be given by the GOPHER CLUB BOYS, the date of which will be stated later. You should go to the Little St. Paul. THE STATE SAVINGS BANK THE STATE SAVINGS BANK. 93 East Fourth Street. Invites the saving accounts of frugal wage-earners, it is well fitted to take care of them. per annum. DEPOSITS OVER $4,380.00 Charles P. Noyes, President. Louis Betz, Treasurer. THANKSGIVING SERVICES MARS LODGE NO. 2202 HOUSEHOLD RUTH 553 P. G. M. COUNCIL 123 EVERYONE Grand United Or PILGRIM BAP SUNDAY, MAY II. St. Pa PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH SUNDAY, MAY II, 1913 AT 2:00 P. M. St. Paul, Minn. Order of Exercises MASTER OF CEREMONIE MASTER OF RECEPTION, ORGAN VOLUNTARY. CORONATION. PRAYER..... SCRIPTURE READING. ODD FELLOWS' OPENING ODE. RESPONSIVE READING. LORD'S PRAYER. SOLO, SELECTED. ADDRESS—'PETER OGDEN. ANTHEM. PAPER....H. QF R. MEMORIAL SOLO, SELECTED. BLEST BE THE TIE THAT BIN THANKSGIVING SERMON. AN APPEAL FOR T Rev. A. H. Lealtad, A. J. Robe THANKSGIVING HYMN CLOSING ODE. BENEDICTION. MASTER OF CEREMONIES, F. D. PARKER, D. G. M. MASTER OF RECEPTION, J. H. DILLINGHAM, P. G. M. REV. A. H. Lealtad, A. J. Roberts, N. G., S. E. Hall, W. G. M. THANKSGIVING OFFERING HYMN CLOSEING ODE. BENEDICTION. 130 East Eighth street, and try some genuine Mexican Chili made by its excellent chef, Jerry Beasley. It's fine! A BARGAIN—There is a splendid lager blue chviot suit for sale at Clifton A. Smith, 190 E 8th street. Size No. 40. Will sell cheap. If the readers and well-wishers of THE APPEAL will send items of social news to this office it will be appreciated and the news will be published. Mr. W. J. Utley, proprietor of the tonsorial parlor and pool room at No. 90 East Fifth street, has enlarged his place so as to put in two more pool tables. Attorney L. Louis Erwin left last Tuesday for Duluth to finish up some legal business, on his return he will go to housekeeping at 1187 Sherburne avenue. street, between Robert and Jackson W. H. Porter proprietor. Speech chairs for ladies—Advertisement. The husband of Rosa Robertso who is in jail charged with her murders, consented to allow her sister mainly to Kansas City for internment and she left with the body Wednesday. The "Young Men's Progress Club of Minneapolis will give a "Shirt Party" on Monday evening June 2nd, at Kennedy's Hall, 322 Nil ollet avenue. If you are looking for a good time go over and join in with the boys. If you wish any typewriting call on Miss Alice Vassar, publish stenographer and Notary Public, Room 25 Union Block, corner of Fourth and Cedar Street. Phone Dale 1345. Adve tissement. 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? 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. When you have any baggage to be taken to the train or other hauling you wish done, call Mr. Louis Liverpool, W. N. Cedar 24; he will take care of you promptly. When you buy ice cream, why not buy the best? It made by J. C. Wylie. Partridge street, it for sale, too, at Alles handling first class ice cream. Dr. J. R. White has been commissioned by Gov. Eberhart as a delegate to the National Negro Farmers Convention which convenes at Birmingham, Ala. July 4, 5. 6. SPIRILLA CORSET, Cora E. Anderson corsetter. Any lady wishing to be properly corsetted call or address 385 Aurora Ave. Tel. N. W. Dale 1345—Advertisement. Mrs. Q. Hicks of 463 Thomas street was hostess for the M. T. C. Art Club of Minneapolis Thursday afternoon. The club is busy preparing for the annual meeting in Duluth in June. Tomorrow is Mothers Day, but the observance of it will be had on Monday at 10 a.m. at the M. T. C. Art Club. p. m. Mrs. S. E. Hall and Mrs. Gora Grissom will fill numbers on the program. "The Favorite Shining Parlor," Messrs. Beard & Alexander, proprietors, has been moved to 105 E. 5th street, where first class work is done notice at all times—Advertisement. The meeting place of the National Educational Congress, which met here last summer has been chosen at Norfolk, Va., to Kansas City, Mo., on account of the death of Prof. John J. Smallwood. 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. 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. Clock, 232 St. Albans street. N. W. Phone, Dale 2075. —Advertisement. The "Calico Hop" which was given by the Catholic Lads' Club at Bowl by Hall last Monday night attracted quite a large crowd of young folks and some old ones too, and proved to be a very pleasant affair. The Marquette Club, 49½ W. Third street has the star vauduillians, Norma Thomas and Buster McDonald (who have been at the Mandarin) as its entertainers this week. They are great, you ought to hear them. VOCAL AND PIANO LESSONS given by Mrs. Addle Crawford Minor at her residence, 392 Carroll street only. Hours for instruction arranged rue to split nations. Toll. Date 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 FRED DOUGLAS NO. 9005 HOUSEHOLD RUTH 4671 ST. PAUL PATIARCHY 114 der of Odd Fellows AT PIST CHURCH 1913 AT 2:00 P. M. Jul, Minn. ES, F. D. PARKER, D. G. M. J. H. DILLINGHAM, P. G. M. REV. HENRY P. JONES REV. GEO. W. CAMP J. H. HICKMAN, JR. W. T. FRANCIS, M. V. P. PILGRIM BAPTIST CHOIR MRS. IDA BROYLES, P. M. N. G. EXERCISES MRS. HARRIET LOOMIS-OLIVER NDS. ORDER REV. E. H. McDONALD THE BUILDING FUND erts, N. G., S. E. Hall, W. G. M. ING OFFERING CHOIR street, between Robert and Jackson, W. H. Porter proprietor. Special chairs for ladies—Advertisement. The husband of Rosa Robertson, who is in jail charged with her murder finally consented to allow her sister Mrs. Ida Lethbridge to take the remains to Kansas City for interment and she left with the body Wednesday. The "Young Men's Progressive Club" of Minneapolis will give a "Shirt Waist Party" on Monday evening, June 2nd, at Kennedy's Hall, 322 Niceville Road. If you are looking for a good time go over and join in with the boys. 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. 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 do want.—Glove Furniture Co. 473-475 St. Peter Street—Advertisement. Zion Presbyterian church, Western avenue near Aurora. Sunday services, morning 11:00 a. m.; Christian Endeavor; 7:00 p. m.; Worship, worship, Sunday School 12:00 m. Public cordially invited. Rev. G. W. Camp, pastor. Mrs. J. T. Quarles who was sole manager of the recent benefit given for Tschidas' Hall desires to thank the public for $35.50 as the net proceeds of the entertainment. The amount was sent to the flood sufferers of Cairo and Omaha. For nice home cooking, try the LITTLE DIAMOND CAFE, 476 Robert dinner, 11 to 3 o'clock, dinner, 11 to 3 o'clock, 30 cents; day dinner, 11 to 6 o'clock, 30 cents; breakfast at 6:30; supper 8 to 8. A la carte meals at all hours. Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitation for our sins. I John 4:10. Not be deceived, is it! For whatsoever a man sown, that she should be 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 Son, much more being reconciled we were 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. The place to have your shoe repairing done in the best possible way loves lowest possible price is at JARVIS 10140. He has a complete stock of men's women's and boys' shoes of the best grades for the money to be found in the city. Advertisement. WAITRESS WANTED—Owing to the fact that Mrs. Mayne Carroll, Mrs. Julia Hinson's daughter will leave Monday for Plaza, N. D. to join her husband, some good woman is wanted as waitress at the St. Louis Kitchen, 138 E. Third street. Good wages, steady job, good place for the right person. Attorney R. O. Lee, after spending over seven months in Canada looking after and closing up some land business very successfully, returned to St. Paul Sunday to remain permanently in the practice of law. He has opened an office in room 25 Union Block, corner of Fourth and Cedar streets where he may be found by anyone desiring his services. The So-Lit Club met at the residence of Mrs. J. Q. Adam Thursday evening in social seas" with Mr. C. W. Patterson as host. The principal topic for discussion was the present municipal form of government, the present form won out. A splendid lunch was served and a very pleasant time generally was had. --- 1913 Mr. W. J. Utley has moved his barber shop to No. 90 E. 51th street and is being fitted up in great shape. He has put in five pocket billboard tables in the rear. THE ST. LOUIS KITCHEN Mrs. J. Utley was previously prostrated. No. 3d St. up stairs. Meals 45 cts. Break fast from 7:10 to 1:00 p.m. m. Dinner from 12:00 m. to 3:00 p.m. 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 who should not perish but have everlasting life. 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 first job to prepare meals and are prepared to take care of all comers in first class style. Give them a call. 132 E. Eighth street, Tel. Cedar 132. To Whom This May Concern. An invitation is hereby extended to St. Paul Chapter No. 23, and Queen of Sheba Chapter No. 70 of the Eastern Star to attend the annual Queen Esther sermon which will be held at Wagner Hall, corner of Charles street and Western avenue on Sunday afternoon, June 1st at 3:00 oclock. Mary, H. J. McDonald will preach the sermon. Malinda Bush, W. M. W. F. T. Chandler, W. P. F. L. D. Parker, Senior in Agricultural College Elected to a Chair. TAKE NOTICE On the occasion of the annual Thanksgiving Day service of the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows, Sunday, May 11th, which will be held at Pilgrim Baptist Church at 2:00 o'clock p.m., an appeal will be made to the public for a generous donation as a certain portion of the collection will be devoted to the building fund of the new Odd Fellows' and Citizens' building. Patriotic and progressive Odd Fellows, members of other fraternal organizations and citizens generally are especially invited to be present and give liberally. THE PROHIBITION LECTURE COURSE. The lectures by W. G. Calderwood of Minneapolis, now running in this city, are proving very popular. For the week beginning, Sunday, May 11, faces and subjects will be as follows: Sunday, May 11, at the Presbyterian Church, South St. Paul, Subject, "The Kingdom of the King," Monday, 12, the Asbury M. E. church, Ross and Frank streets. Subject, "The Philosophy of Prohibition." Tuesday, 13, at the Hamline M. E. church, corner of Capitol and Asbury avenues. Subject, government by the People's Presbyterian church, corner of Summit and Minneapolis avenues. Subject, "Two Masters." Thursday, at the Hamline Presbyterian church, corner of Asbury and W. Minneapolis street. Subject, "The Method." Friday, 16, at the University Congregational church, corner of Sherburn and Victoria streets. Subject, "Social Demands." Missouri honors Moses Dickson as the founder of the "Knights of Tabor." Kentucky honors Marshall W. Taylor the founder of the "United Brothers of the Church," the "Sisters of the Mysterious Ten." He not do less for the founder of the Order of the "Knights of Alpha and the Ladies of Omega of the World." founded upon inspiration received by St. John the isle of Palms, and exemplified through modern methods, clearly demonstrated in up-to-date re Edwards' Auto Express, Baggage and Storage. B. F. EDWARDS, Prop. We Move You so Quickly it is a Pleasure. Polite, Prompt and Composite Personality is the way we treat you. Try us and be Convinced WATCH FOR "LITTLE BENNIE" AND HIS RED CHASE CAR, BUZZING APOUND GU BLU HEEL 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. SAINT PAUL PROF. C. S. PATTYS HERB MEDICINES can be had only at the corner of University avenue and Mackinub street. If you are not feeling well, you may be worth your while to learn about remedies. Tril State Phone 5732—Advertisement. MONEY TO LOAN—The J. & M. Loan Co. will loan you money on any thing of value, you can pay at rates you can afford to pay. All transactions strictly confidential. Office 569 Rondo street, Tel. Dale 872. J. H. Dillingham, Manager—Advertisement. SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE VAULTS—We invite you to inspection it costs little to place your papers, cash securities and vouchers in abso- cute safety. Boxes in your vaults can be $4 per year. Store your boxes, trunks, drawers in North western Trust 50, 138 Endroit Arcade—Advertisement. Why not patronize the business houses that invite you to trade with them through their advertisements in newspapers. They are helping to support your paper. You can believe in helping those who help you, or your enterprises. Trade with the people who advertise in THE APPEAL. 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 able to help old patients call or any one who appreciates honest work at honest prices. THE BUSY BEE CAFE 317 Wabash street (up stairs) W. F. T. Chaler, proprietor. Everything new but the name. First-class meals will be served a la carte at all hours. A splendid regular dinner will be served at 10 a.m. at 25 cents. Open day and night. T. E. I. W. N. Cedar 4528—Advertisement ALBION W. HOLDEN — Fine in house painting, hand oil finishing, varnishing, staining, wall tinting, etc., done on short notice. First class, durable work guaranteed. Second class, durable and jobbing of all kinds. Send or leave order to St. Anthony Ave., or telephone Dale 2055. Estimates furnished — Advertisement. WHEN YOU ARE HUNGRY, and want a quick meal, go to the LITTLE ST. PAUL CAFE, Eighth street, between Robert and Jackson. James H. Thomas, proprietor. There you may get first-class meals to order at all hours, day and night. Regular dinner daily from 12:30 to 2:30 for 25 cents. Tel. Cedar 9201. THE VALET TAILORING GO. 145-156 E. Sxth street. The most up-to-date establishment of its kind in the city. Clothing made to order, sunscreen, pressed, renovated and reconditioned. Four suits pressed for M. and delivered. Four suits pressed for G. are prepared to give best service at lowest rates. Tel. N. W. Cedar 4382 O. Howell, manager — Advertisement. Queen of Sheba Chapter No. 70 O. E. S., is preparing a veritable treat for the people of the Twin Cities, that many will doubtless show they apper- ence of pressing pressure they have arra- gesed to BRYON BYROURS, composed of seven of the fa- est musicians in the country, known on two continents. The concert will be given at St. James A. M. E. church on evening. May 20. Tickets 25, 35, 50 children under 12 years 25 cents. For further particulars see bills. At the last meeting of the Self Culture Club the following officers were elected: Pres, Mrs. Mattie R. Hicks; vice president, Mrs. Emma Hood; secretary, Mrs. Nora Covington; asst. secretary, Mrs. Lottie McManus; vice president, Mrs. Johnson; chaplain, Mrs. Mary Durant; Mrs. R Hall. The club meets Wednesday May 14 with Mrs. Hood, 700 Sherburne avenue. Mrs. Anna Epps, 288 Rondo street, a member of the deacons board of St. James A. M. E. church died last Tuesday, aged 47. Her funeral was held at the church Thursday afternoon. Rev. H. P. H. Jones officially. There was a large number of friends who pay the last tributes of respect. Lynda the director, interment at Forest cemetery, the deceased leaves her mother, two slaters, two sons and a daughter to mourn her departure. Mr. T. O. Rogers, a former resident of St. Paul, but now residing on his 160-acre farm near Plaza, N. D., was in the city for a few days this week, on business, and the guest of Mrs. C. H. Jackson, 651 Wheaton. Mr. Rogers resided in St. Paul for six years and is the owner of a house and lot on Aurora and Kent streets. Two months ago he moved his family on his farm where they will reside in the future. He will put in a crop of fifty acres of flax this season. He left Wednesday for his home. Last Monday, at the "Busy Bee" Cafe, there was quite an influx of legal talent at one time. Attorney R. O. Lee was uneer with the "APEALE man as his guest. Attorney W. T. Franks came it with Attorneys Turner C. Baworth, v. Caworth, K. C. H. Calloway and v. Caworth, Kan. C. Kansas City, Mo., as his guest. The dinner was over Attorney J. Louis Erwin came in and joined Lawyer Francis' party. The legal lights from out of the city are attending the session of the U. S. Court of Appeals where Atty. Bell is defending Chas A. Shipman in robbing the mails of $8,000 in 1998. Atty. Hueston and Calloway are defending Dr. W. J. Thompson of Kansas City in a civil rights suit. 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 on slow-paying advertisers: "For our 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 skimming around, taking in the sights. It so happened that the angel lost track of him, and he hunted him. He found him sitting 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 editor, "Delinquent subscribers," editor, "imagineing is heaven Come," said the angel, "we must going now." 'You go op,' said the enoughe for me." GUN METAL BLUCHER HIGH HEEL AND ARCH $4.00 Phone Cedar 5521 Hours: 9 am to 12 & 1 to 5 pm DR. W. T. MITCHELL DENTIST 403 COURT BLK. 14 N. 4TH ST. ST. PAUL 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. breakfast 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 Partridge ST PAUL, MINN 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, MOR. 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, Dying, 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, Perfume, Follet 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 3601 "THE BUSY CORNER" A. J. M.CMURRAY & CO. Staple and Fancy Groceries, Candies, Confectionery, Cigars, School Supplies, Etc. Ice Cream Parlor and Cafe, Lunch at all Hours. REAL ESTATE AND RENTALS HANDLED. Corp. (Western and Rondo) ST. PAUL 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. 286 St. Albans Tel. Dale 912. ALBION W. HOLDEN Paintar and Décorator 527 St. Anthony Avenue ST. PAUL, - MINN SUITS PRESSED VALET TAILORING CO 156 E. SIXTH ST $1 SAVE YOUR RIGHT THE APEAL A National Afro-American Newspaper PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY J. Q. ADAMS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER 49 E. 4th Street, St. Paul, Minn. ST. PAUL OFFICE No. 236 Union Block, 49 E. 4th St. J. Q. ADAMS, Manager. MINNEAPOLIS OFFICE Metropolitan Bldg. Room 1020. JACKER GIRLS, Manager. TERMS STRICTLY IN ADVANCE SINGLE COPY, ONE YEAR.....$2.00 SINGLE COPY, SIX MONTHS.....1.10 SINGLE COPY, THREE MONTHS.....60 When substitutions are by any means allowed to run without prepayment, the mails should be sent to the office and 5 cents for each odd week, or at the rate of $2.40 per week. For orders from the Office, Post Office Money Order, Registered Letter or Bank Draft. Postage Stamps will be received the same as the original. Only one cent and two cent stamps taken. You should never be sent through the mail. It is almost sure to wear a hole through the envelope and be lost; or else it may be stolen. Persons who own us in letters, do so at their own risk. Marriage and death notices 10 lines or less. 41. Each additional line 10 cents. Payments can be sent on all must come in season to the news. Advertising rates, 15 cents per agate line. There are fourteen agate lines in an inch, and about seven words in an agate line. No single advertisement less than 10. No three agate lines in the contract. Cash must accompany all orders from purse uncleavens to us. Further Reading notices 25 cents per line, each insertion. No discounts for letters in Inverness. In order to receive letter-type about six words to the line. All head lines count double. Letters that show when subscription expires. 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Entered as second class matter June 6, 1835 at the postoffice at St. Paul 1879. under act of Congress, March 3 SATURDAY, MAY 10, 1913. For years THE APPEAL has contended that persons who are arrested as suspected criminals but who are innocent of the crime charged should have some redress, which is not now the case. It seems however that the New York Legislature has turned to our way of thinking as a bill was passed in the lower house this week to pay $1.00 per day for each day's imprisonment to persons who are pardoned by the governor and who are in his opinion innocent. The bill will also allow such persons to apply to the board of claims for additional damages. For the first time in the history of the Anatagamated Association of Iron, Tin and Steel Workers, an Afro-American is occupying a seat as a delegate at the national convention in session this week at Fort Wayne, Ind. His name is Edward Harris and he heals from Covington, Ky. Taking this as a straw, which shows the way the wind blows, the millennium must be at hand. There is one thing certain, Harris must be a powerfully good It is not often that a woman's beauty causes her to lose a job, but it seems that this is the cause in the case of a young woman in Bethany College, W. Va. The young woman in question was physical instructor and was discharged because, as the faculty said, "she was too beautiful to remain in the same room with susceptible young men." Five of the young men were expelled at the same time on account of her fatal beauty. Mr. Carnegie, at the peace congress in St. Louis, said: "If a man wishes to select the safest life possible, the one freest from all danger from violent death, let him enter our army or navy." That sounds good, but the last word from Japan has not been said, yet. To escape a prison sentence, C. H. Holt, a white man of Kansas City, claims to be an Afro-American. Then he went to Memphis and held up an Afro-American for $200, and was caught and identified. How to Live a Hundred Years By LILLIAN RUSSELL, Actress and Noted Beauty WE SHOULD ALL LIVE THE ONLY AVOID FRICTION LOSS OF VITALITY, OF LESS SCRAPING OF B ENVIRONMENTS. AND TO A LAW OF SLEEP, IS DUE THE MOST OF FRICTION AND THEREFORE OF C Every person should sleep call hours out of the twenty-four. If one-third of life consciousness is LIVING IN THE SENSE OF HUMAN when we are given a perfectly simple all told, the years of such a man when he celebrates his hundredth DAY OLDER THAN SIX YEARS. That is the actual term idlers that decrepititude. You must not only sleep eight FROM SLEEP WITH A LAU-Feel youthful and happy, but if you day you are sure to get ahead of an I believe that a BEAUTIFUL ABSOLUTELY ESSENTIAL HEALTHY BODY. A really in good physical condition and will be OF HIS BODY. Power of Is Now BUILD ALL LIVE TO BE A HUNDRED DAY AVOID FRICTION. JUST AS WITH OF VITALITY, OF FORCE, IS DUE TO SCRAPING OF BODY AND MIND AND TO A LACK OF SLEEP, THEN DUE THE MOST OF OUR MENTAL THEREFORE OF OUR PREMATURES should sleep calmly, dreamlessly, twenty-four. If he does this it may consciousness is suspended—in she THE SENSE OF EXPENDING VISION a perfectly simple little mathematical series of such a man's life number onates his hundredth birthday he is MORE THAN SIXTY-SIX AND MAY be the actual term of his active life, attitude. Not only sleep eight hours, but you WITH A LAUGH. That not mind happy, but if you laugh at yourself to get ahead of anybody else. Be a BEAUTIFUL AND YOUTH ESSENTIAL TO A BEAUTY ESSENTIAL TO A BEAUTY. A really intelligent person condition and will be sensible enough to Y. WE SHOULD ALL LIVE TO BE A HUNDRED IF WE WOULD ONLY AVOID FRICTION. JUST AS WITH MACHINES, OUR LOSS OF VITALITY, OF FORCE, IS DUE TO THE SENSELESS SCRAPING OF BODY AND MIND AGAINST THEIR ENVIRONMENTS. AND TO A LACK OF SLEEP, THE RIGHT KIND OF SLEEP, IS DUE THE MOST OF OUR MENTAL AND PHYSICAL FRICTION AND THEREFORE OF OUR PREMATURE AGING. Every person should sleep calmly, dreamlessly, for a full eight hours out of the twenty-four. If he does this it means that during one-third of life consciousness is suspended—in short, he is NOT LIVING IN THE SENSE OF EXPENDING VITALITY. And then we are given a perfectly simple little mathematical problem. If, all told, the years of such a man's life number one hundred, then when he celebrates his hundredth birthday he is NOT REALLY DAY OLDER THAN SIXTY-SIX AND TWO-THIRDS YEARS. That is the actual term of his active life, and no one considers that decrepitude. You must not only sleep eight hours, but you must WAKE FROM SLEEP WITH A LAUGH. That not merely makes you feel youthful and happy, but if you laugh at yourself so early in the day you are sure to get ahead of anybody else. I believe that a BEAUTIFUL AND YOUTHFUL MIND IS ABSOLUTELY ESSENTIAL TO A BEAUTIFUL AND HEALTHY BODY. A really intelligent person will want to be in good physical condition and will be sensible enough to TAKE CARE OF HIS BODY. Power of Individual Is Now Supreme By Rabbi HARRY LEVI of Boston IN ANCIENT TIMES THE IN LITTLE CONSEQUENCE. SUBORDINATED TO THE WHICH HE WAS BUT A VIDUAL REIGNS SUPREME, GO EVEN BY THE GOVERNMENT IN SO LONG AS HE DOES NOT TRIERS. SOMETHING MAY BE SAID. There are times when a man in law of self preservation; also he is the most of his own powers in his own way to truth, and he must. Yet he dare not do anything harm and law. LAW IS THE DOM. To be free we must respression is necessary to SELF I of the moral law as of the law or of conventions, for, after all, in the wisdom of the ages, and we must. Such self repression is the pro-but of SELF CONTROL. He character becomes a social blessing; sentiment, but not sens. He knows even how to repress grief to others. Between self expression and s- bility. Except we find our finis- TION we do not achieve ripe effe- we cannot realize our best. To Be Unhappy Life U BY HENRY M. TO BE UNHAPPY IS TO WHO UNDERSTAND THE IS OF THEIR OWN M TO BE FOUND HERE O It should be the duty of DESTROY THE ANGUISH tures toward nature, life and dea- BE HAPPY IN LOVE. ment is not always caused by the CLEARSIGHTEDNESS. We must have the courage far from despising disappointme- useful in educating us. IT TIMES THE INDIVIDUAL WAS OFFERED CONSEQUENCE. ALL HIS INTERESTS INDATED TO THOSE OF THE LARDER WAS BUT A SMALL PART. BUS SUPREME, GOING HIS OWN WAY GOVERNMENT IN THE PURSUIT OF THE DOES NOT TRESPASS ON THE LARDER MAY BE SAID IN FAVOR OF BOYS when a man is justified in having salvation; also he must achieve self mastery in his own powers and opportunities. Truth, and he must speak his heart, not do anything he pleases. Wherefore LAW IS THE GUARANTY we must respect the rights of the secretary to SELF EXPRESSION, and as of the law on the statute book. For, after all, in many respects convince the ages, and we may well view them as expression is the product not of pressure CONTROL. He who disciplines him uses a social blessing. He finds emotion, but not sentimentalism; reason how to repress grief and so does not express and self repression there we find our finest, freest, fullest St. not achieve ripe efficiency. Yet exceptize our best. Unhappy Is to Life Unjustly By HENRY MARX, French Poet Unhappy IS TO BLAME LIFE UNDERSTAND THIS AND REALIZE THEIR OWN MAKING KNOW THE FOUND HERE ON EARTH. See the duty of the governments of the ANGUISH AND TERROR FICTION, life and death. BY IN LOVE. We must recognize ways caused by the other person, but BEADEDNESS. Save the courage to be mistaken two using disappointment, must understand us. IN ANCIENT TIMES THE INDIVIDUAL WAS COUNTED AS OF LITTLE CONSEQUENCE. ALL HIS INTERESTS HAD TO BE SUBORDINATED TO THOSE OF THE LARGER ORDER, OF WHICH HE WAS BUT A SMALL PART. NOW THE INDIVIDUAL REIGNS SUPREME, GOING HIS OWN WAY, PROTECTED EVEN BY THE GOVERNMENT IN THE PURSUIT OF HIS OWN ENDS SO LONG AS HE DOES NOT TRESSPASS ON THE RIGHTS OF OTHERS. SOMETHING MAY BE SAID IN FAVOR OF BOTH CONDITIONS. There are times when a man is justified in having recourse to the law of self preservation; also he must achieve self development, making the most of his own powers and opportunities. He must think his own way to truth, and he must speak his heart. Yet he dare not do anything he pleases. Wherefore we have government and law. LAW IS THE GUARANTEE OF FREE-DOM. To be free we must respect the rights of others. Self repression is necessary to SELF EXPRESSION, and this is as true of the moral law as of the law on the statute book. Even it may be of conventions, for, after all, in many respects conventions represent the wisdom of the ages, and we may well view them as danger signals. Such self repression is the product not of pressure from without, but of SELF CONTROL. He who disciplines himself into exalted character becomes a social blessing. He finds emotion, but not emotionalism; sentiment, but not sentimentalism; reason, not hysteries. He knows even how to repress grief and so does not become a burden to others. Between self expression and self repression there is no incompatibility. Except we find our finest, freest, fullest SELF REALIZATION we do not achieve ripe efficiency. Yet except we serve others we cannot realize our best. To Be Unhappy Is to Blame Life Unjustly By HENRY MARX, French Poet TO BE UNHAPPY IS TO BLAME LIFE UNJUSTLY. THOSE WHO UNDERSTAND THIS AND REALIZE THAT HAPPINESS IS OF THEIR OWN MAKING KNOW THAT PARADISE IS TO BE FOUND HERE ON EARTH. It should be the duty of the governments of the world to DESTROY THE ANGUISH AND TERROR felt by living creatures toward nature, life and death. BE HAPPY IN LOVE. We must recognize that disillusionment is not always caused by the other person, but from LACK OF CLEARSIGHTEDNESS. We must have the courage to be mistaken twenty times and, so far from despising disappointment, must understand that it can be useful in educating us. GUARD YOUR TONGUE. To keep a guard upon one's tongue at all times is a good rule to follow. Nothing is more foolish and tactless than the pleasure some people take in "speaking their minds." A man of this kind will say a rude thing for the mere pleasure of saying it when different behavior might have preserved his friends or made his fortune. --- THE QUEEN OF WALES TO BE A HUNDRED IF WE WOULD JUST AS WITH MACHINES, OUR FORCE, IS DUE TO THE SENSE-BODY AND MIND AGAINST THEIR BACK OF SLEEP, THE RIGHT KIND OF OUR MENTAL AND PHYSICAL YOUR PREMATURE AGING. family, dreamlessly, for a full eight he does this it means that during suspended—in short, he is NOT EXPENDING VITALITY. And little mathematical problem. If, his life number one hundred, then a birthday he is NOT REALLY EIGHTY-SIX AND TWO-THIRDS of his active life, and no one can right hours, but you must WAKE EIGHT. That not merely makes you laugh at yourself so early in the anybody else. AND YOUTHFUL MIND IS TO A BEAUTIFUL AND intelligent person will want to be in sensible enough to TAKE CARE Individual Supreme INDIVIDUAL WAS COUNTED AS OF ALL HIS INTERESTS HAD TO BE USE OF THE LARGER ORDER, OF A SMALL PART. NOW THE INDIING HIS OWN WAY, PROTECTED BY THE PURSUIT OF HIS OWN ENDS ESSPASS ON THE RIGHTS OF OTHERS IN FAVOR OF BOTH CONDITIONS. It is justified in having recourse to the must achieve self development, make and opportunities. He must think not speak his heart. We please. Wherefore we have GOVTHE GUARANTEE OF FREE-REPECT the rights of others. Self-re-EXPRESSION, and this is as true in the statute book. Even it may be many respects conventions represent may well view them as danger signals. Product not of pressure from without, who disciplines himself into exalted ang. He finds emotion, but not emo-timentalism; reason, not hysteresis. Self and so does not become a burden. Self repression there is no incompati- frest, fullest SELF REALIZA- ticiency. Yet except we serve others. Ppy Is to Blame Unjustly MARX. French Poet BLAME LIFE UNJUSTLY. THOSE HIS AND REALIZE THAT HAPPINESS MAKING KNOW THAT PARADISE IS ON EARTH. The governments of the world to AND TERROR felt by living crea- th. We must recognize that disillusion- other person, but from LACK OF to be mistaken twenty times and, so en-t, must understand that it can be Ernest Thompson Seton said, "I asked a little boy in one of my camps to tell me something wonderful about birds. "Why,' said the little boy, 'how they come out of the eggs, that's wonderful. "Now,' I went on, 'tell me something about them more wonderful still. "Why,' he answered, 'it's more wonderful how they ever got into the eggsa."—New York Tribune. BOWSER'S HEART. MRS. BOWSER DOESN'T JOIN. He Offers Sympathy to Several Who Spurn It and Comes to the Conclusion That Humanity Deserves All That is Coming to it. By M. QUAD. [Copyright, 1912, by Associated Literary Press.] The BOWSers had finished their dinner and settled down for the evening and all was going well when Mr. Bowser suddenly noticed that the wind was banging the rear blinds with lonesome Mrs. Sounds, with collective Mr. Bowser looked up from her book and noticed the sad look on his face and inquired if he was not feeling well. "I was thinking of how many sorrowing hearts there are in the world tonight," he answered. "Hark to that long drawn sigh of the wind. You might almost believe it a wall of grief from a stricken people." "Yes; every one has his sorrows," she answered, but at the same time wondering if this was the beginning of one of his turtles. "Thousands of hearts are aching for kind words," he went on, "and yet we sit here in utmost selfishness and have no thought of care. It is indeed a selfish cruel world, and I for one am assured of myself." "But one person can do so very little." "But do we ever do a little? Has either one of us during this long week spoken one single word of cheer to sor "I KNOW JUST HOW YOU FEEL." rowing humanity? I have gone around selfishly intent on money making, and you have sat there and bossed the cook around as if she were a slave, and the recording angel has found nothing to our credit. I tell you, Mrs. Bowser, it is not right. Our conduct is simply shamful." Mrs. B. is Unrepentant. "I don't feel any stings of conscience," she said as she remembered that the cook had been out two afternoons and three evenings during the week and had come home almost tips on two occasions. "And why don't you? Because you have a frozen turpil in your breast. You really seem delighted at the sorrows of others. You'd go out of your way to say mean things to a man whose heart was breaking. I have known you to read of an earthquake at one fell swoop and smile over it." The family cat had settled herself down for a quiet evening, but Mr. Bowser's tones warned her that a circus was on hand, and she got ready to take a frour seat at the performance. "If you wish me to turn the house into a sorrowful asylum it can be done," said Mrs. Bowser. "We might advertise in the papers that words of cheer will be spoken here free of cost." "By thunder," exclaimed Mr. Bowser as he rose up, with his right arm sawing the air, "but it's no wonder that pedestrians sheer off from our gate can walk across our back yard. Intuition must warn them against your cold heartedness. Only yesterday I stood at our gate and sought to conex a homeless dog inside, but he looked up at your windows and howled dismayly and fled. Woman, I wouldn't have your heart for all the money ever coloned!" Mrs. Bowser wanted to give him back as good as he sent, but prudence closed her lips and quiet reigned for a couple of minutes. It might have reigned longer but for another day he had been walking about, stopped and shivered as he heard it and then made a sudden resolve. Answering the Call of Duty. Answering the Call or Duty. "I shall do my duty whether you do or not," he said as he passed down the front hall. "Are you going out?" "I am. If a few kind words of mine, spoken to men who wander about in these wailing winds with no hope in their hearts, will lift them up for the moment those words shall be spoken. You needn't sit up for me, if that blamed old cut it for you, looking cross eyed and be in return I will jump out of the window." "Mr. Bowser let him go without another word, and he had not yet turned the first corner when he came upon a man backed up against the fence. He appeared to be just such a man as was acting for kind words, and Mr. Bowser had a gentle hand on his shoulder and said: "My dear sir, I know just how you feel, and I don't blame you for it. You have sought for one sympathetic soul in this cold world, but you have failed to find it, and your heart" "Look here, old cock." interrupted the man as he fung off the hand. "I'm waiting here for my girl to come out and go to the show with me, and don't you get too funny?" "Aren't you a man with a burden of sorrow?" asked Mr. Bower as he stepped back. No Sympathy Wanted. "Not by a jurguit, old funny, and you can pass right on. I'm a journeyman plumber, I am, and the burden of sorrow is on the man who pays for the solder. If I were you I wouldn't drink any more tonight." Mr. Bowser passed on. There was a tickling in his right ear, but nevertheless when he had gone a block farther and encountered an old woman lugging a big basket he stopped her to say: "Madam, the world has used you cruelly, and you are making your way homeward tonight with the feeling in you heath that no one cares whether you go or do." "And who be you?" asked the woman as she backed off and looked around for a policeman. "I am one who desires to speak kindly to you and bid you believe that sympathetic hearts still beat." "Oh, you are! Well, now, let me tell you that I am carrying home my laundry work, and if you make a grab at this basket I'llell out and bring people who'll have you in jail in five minutes." "My dear woman, you can't believe any such thing of me. I left my own fireside not two minutes since to—" "Then go back to it! You are either an old mouser or you want to snatch me basket. Off you go, or I yell out!" Repulsed Again. Mr. Bowser tried once more. He tackled a sad face, bump shouldered young man whom the cold world had refused to sympathize with, but had scarcely uttered ten words when he was interrupted with: "And is it asking me to go some where and take a drink with you?" "No. slr. What I wish to let you know is that I sympathize with you in the way this heartless world has used you." "And there's no drink?" "No, slr!" Five minutes later, Mrs. Bowser heard a great clatter on the sidewalk, and as she ran to the front window she saw Mr. Bowser gallop through the gate, pursued by four or five men with burden, but he got in the steps and into the house ahead of them. "Well?" she asked as she confronted him in the hall, while the pursuers baned at the door. "I see how it is!" he gasped as he began to climb the stairs. "It's another of your put up jobs to have me assassinated, but it has failed, and tomorrow we will have a talk and settle about the alimony. Not a word, mad, am, not a word! If any one calls for me that I cannot be seen!" With that he came down and entered the library and locked the door behind him, and it wasn't ten minutes before a stranger called and asked for him. "He cannot be seen," replied Mrs. Bowser. "Is he dangerously ill?" "Oh, no." "Busy with some invention?" "Something of the kind." "If I could just speak to him for a moment." "His orders were very strict." "Just a word or two." "It is useless." A Chance Missed. "It was." "What did he want?" "He didn't say, but I judged it to be important. He did not give his name. Was any one coming here this evening to pay you money?" "There, there, and you've let him go." Mr. Bowser was out of the house ten minutes later and on the run to the corner. There stood a stranger, and he at once asked: "Your name is Bowser, isn't it?" "It is." "He was just at your house." "To hand me $40?" "No. I want to borrow $1 to get a couple of meals and a bed." Mr. Bowser booted him and withdrew his sympathies from all mankind. FISK UNIVERSITY FACES CRISIS. Noted institution in Daring of Losing Vast Sum—A Battle for Higher Education of Afro-American People called to Help. Fisk University, the most noted Afro-American institution for higher education, is facing a serious crisis in its attempt to raise an endowment fund. The institution was offered $60,000 more than two years ago by the General Education Board, on condition that it raise $240,000 in addition, for liquidation of accumulated indebtedness of about $50,000 for repaying and re-fitting buildings, for the installation of a heating and lighting plant, and for endowment. An amount of $300,000 was to be raised, two-thirds of which was to go for endowment. The institution has run all these years, almost entirely through the support, from the year, of white friends in the North. About two hundred of these white friends have contributed toward the present endowment effort, but the total amount given leaves $104,000 yet to be raised. The time limit of the initial offer of $104,000 is University June 1st and the University authorities' have no assurance that this time limit will be extended. The alumni are carrying on a loyal rally; to raise $25,000 as their share in the fund, but there will still remain a large portion of the fund from other friends. The white friends utenured generously to this fund and now of the Afro-Americans have contribute asking what the Afro-Americans propose to do. The authorities of the land, key to the appeal to the Afro-Americans to rally to the rescue of this institution which for forty-seven years has offered all that is highest and best in education and culture to the Afro-Americans of the land, key to the appeal to the Afro-Americans to rally to now and June 1st. Checks and money orders should be made payable to Fisk University and may be sent to the editorial office of this paper or directly to Fisk University and that at least $1 between now and June 1st. Checks and money orders should be made payable to THE APPEAL will be acknowledged in its columns. Shall we rally to the call of an institution which from its foundation has aimed to set the feet of young Afro-Americans in the path to all the learning and cult of the best institutions of the land afford? Knowles Building. Boys' Hall. Stone Hall. Girls' Hall. Model Home. ATLANTA UNIVERSITY. Atlanta, Ga. In beautifully located in the City of Atlanta, Ga. The courses of study include High School, Normal School and College, with manual training and domestic science. Among the teachers are graduates of Yale, Harvard, Dartsmouth, Smith and Wesley. Forty-one years of successful work have been completed. Students come from all parts of the South. Graduates are almost universally successful. For further information, address President, EDWARD T. WARE, Atlanta, Ga. HOWARD UNIVERSITY WILBUR P. THIRKIELD, President, Washington, D. C. The Collegeof Arts and Science—R The Teachers' College—LEWIS B. The Academy—GEORGE J. CUMMIN The Commercial College—GEORGE School of Manual Arts and Applied PROFESSIONAL The School of Theology—ISAAC CL The School of Medicine—Medical, Colleges—EDWARD O. BALL The School of Law—BENJAMIN F. For Catalogue and Special Information Beautiful Situation, Healthful Location Environment—A Splendid a Noted for Honest a Offers full courses in the follow High School, Grammar School and Inc Good water, steam heat, electric very reasonable. Opportunity for Sel Term Openings Sept. 27, 1911. PRESIDENT R. W. McGRANAH The College of Arts and Science—KILLY MILLER, A. M., Dean. The Teachers' College—LEWIS B. MOORE, A. M., Ph.D., Dean. The Teachers' College—CURMINGS, A. M. Dean. The Commercial College—MILLER, A. M., Dean. School of Manual Arts and Applied Science— 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 School, Grammar School and Industrial. TUSKEGEE Normal and Industrial Institu TUSKEGEE, ALABAMA (Incorporated) Organized July 4, 1881, by the State Legislature as The Tuskegee State Normal School. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON, Principal WARREN LOGAN, Treasurer. In the Black Belt of Alabama where the blacks outnumber the whites three to one. **ENROLLMENT AND FACULTY.** Over 1,500 students, more than 100 instructors. **COURSE OF STUDY.** English education combined with industrial training; 28 industries in constant operation. **VALUE OF PROPERTY.** Property consisting of 2,250 acres of land. 108 buildings almost wholly built with student labor, is valued at $1,250,000, and no mortgage. **NEEDS.** $50 annually for the education of each student; ($200 enables one to finish the course. Students pay their own board in cash and labor). Money in any amount, can be paid to the student. Students pay their own board in class room and industrial leaders, and are brought through the Tuskegee Negro Conference. Tuskegee is 40 miles east of Montgomery, Alabama, on the Western Railroad of Alabama. Tuskegee is a quiet, beautiful old gothic town, and is an ideal place for study. Students are at all times mild excellent winter resort. Lincoln Institute JEFFERSON CITY, MISSOURI Founded by the Soldiers of the 62nd and 65th Regiments of the U. S. Colored Infantry. Supported by the State of Missouri. Has Normal, Collegeate, Agricultural, Mechanical and Industrial Courses Buildings and equipment unassurped Thirty teachers representing the best schools of the country Students from all sections of the country. For catalogue and further information address BENJAMIN FRANKLIN ALLEN, President. New England CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC All the advantages of the final and most completely equipped Conservatory building in the world, the art of conservatory design, and the skills with which the academy associates with the new in the Profession are offered students in the New England Conservatory of Music. The courses can be arranged in Electroacoustics and Oratory. GOORGE W. CADRACH, Musical Director, Conservatory of Music. SOAP up. Why sible way, bending o work to sp rubbing. matter ho or howe fabric, Pea WANTED, up. Why do you wash in the hardest possible way? Use PEARLINE, there's no bending over the tub, no back kinks, no work to speak of, no wear and tear from rubbing. Millions use PEARLINE. No matter how or when you use PEARLINE, or however delicate your hands or the fabric, it is absolutely harmless. 636 Prone in the road he lay. Wounded and sore bestead: Priests, Levites past that way, And turned aside the head. They were n In human His need wa His face, y From the New York L LOCATION. NEEDS. KELLY MILLER, A. M., Dean. MOORE, A. M., Ph.D., Dean. GGS, A. M., Dean. W. COOK, A. M., Dean. Science— SCHOOLS ARK, D. D., Dean. Dental and Pharmaceutical OCH, M. D., Dean. DAGHERTON, LY. D., Dean. Onion Address Dean of Department. Ton. The Best Moral and Spiritual Intellectual Atmosphere— And Thorongh work. ing departments: College, Normal, industrial. lights, good drainage. Expenses -help. For Information Address AN. Knoville, Tenn. GAMMON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY ATLANTA, GEORGIA. AIMS AND METHODS. The of this school is to do practical work in the ministry. Its course of study in the ministry. Its course of study in the ministry. Its course of study in the ministry. Its methods are fresh, systematic, clear and simple. COURSE OF STUDY. The room occupies three years, and covers the lines of work in the several departments of theological instruction in the leading theological seminaries of the country. EXPENSES AND AID. Tuition and room rent are free. The apartments for students are plainly furnished, and the buildings in the dollars per month. Buildings heated by steam. From loans without interest, and gifts of friends are not intended. Students who do their utmost in the line of work, young men with grace, gifts, and energy, are inspired of the advantages now opened to him in this Seminary. For further particular address. THE PRESIDENT, common Theological Seminary, Atlanta, Georgia. Washington Conservatory of Music and School of Expression 902 T STREET, WASHINGTON, D. C. DEPARTMENTS Piano, Voice and Viola, Piano Tuition, Theory Analysis, Harmony, Counterpoint, Fugue, Vocal Expression, Wand Instruments, History of Music, Methods. Scholarships Awarded Artists' Recitals HARRIET GIBBS-NARHALI, President. GRIEWILLiam COOK, Treasurer. ABBY WILLIAMS, Secretary. ANNIE R. GRANMAN. FINANCIAL Secretary. Shaw University This-Institution of learning, established in 1865, has industrial departments for both young men and women, and has separate preparatory departments. There are also Schools of Law, Medicine, Pharmacy and Theology. The academic year begins on the Thursday of August 15, 2015. The classes are thirty-two consecutive weeks. The charges are moderate. Please contact the ADDRESS: "THE PRESIDENT" Bauw University, Raleigh, N. C. AVERY COLLEGE TRAINING SCHOOL NORTH SIDE, PITTSBURGH, PA. Industrial Trades School for Afro-American and Girls. Unusual advantages for Girls and Girls. Unusual advantages for Girls. Joseph D. Mahoney, Principal. straighten do you wash in the hardest pos- Use PEARLINE, there's no over the tub, no back knies, no break of, no wrest and tear from Millions use PEARLINE. No now or when you use PEARLINE, over delicate your hands or the it is absolutely harmless. 636 line is right A SAMARITAN. not hardened men service slack: s great: but then you see, was black. independent.