The Appeal
Saturday, September 13, 1913
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
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.
FINDS METHOD OF PROLONGING LIFE
Cells Are Made to Reproduce After Death.
RESULT OF LONG SEARCH.
Dr. Alexis Carrel Announces Discovery of Remarkable Advancement in Science—Possible That Old Age May Be Postponed by Use of Method—Shown That Cell Survives After Death.
New York.—The earlier experiments upon the preservation of life in animal tissues after removal from the gross organism have set Dr. Alexis Carrel at the Rockefeller institute at the threshold of a more important discovery.
These experiments established the facts that not only could connect tissues be preserved permanently in a condition of active life, but that, under certain easily controlled conditions, growth could be controlled.
In Dr. Carrel's laboratory cells have been proliferating rapidly for more than sixteen months after their re
moval from the organism of which they had formed a part. Hitherto all tissue when removed from the animal organism has been meat. These researches established the fact that such tissue may continue to grow indefinitely.
As this discovery became more familiar to the investigator it was discovered that a constant relation existed between the rate of growth of the cell and the composition of the medium in which it is preserved.
This fact, Dr. Carrel now announces, indicated that certain cell phenomena of the higher animals, such as multiplication, growth and senility, might now be investigated profitably. At first blocked by lack of proper method, this investigation has now become possible through the discovery of a tech-netic tool that allows connective tissue to multiply indoors in the test tubes, like mycosearaxicus
In the report now issued it may be taken that the mention of senility is intended to foreshadow an ultimate object of this line of profound study. That would seem to mean that this research is advancing toward the discovery of some means of postponing the approach of old age.
But Dr. Carrel says nothing of the sort. He confines himself to a rigidly detailed statement of experiments.
The results of this series of researches have the interest that they prove conclusively that Dr. Carrel has taken yet one more step toward the goal of his inquiry. His earlier reports established the sufficiently startling fact that the death of the gross organism by no means entailed the simultaneous death of the component cells.
The first conclusion reached was the proof of life after death—the survival of the cell. The later investigation has established a knowledge of the characteristics of the growth of connective tissue.
This has led to a new result—the indefinite proliferation of a strain of connective tissue cells outside of the organism. The strain of connective tissue originated from a fragment of chicken embryo heart, had been pulsating in the test tube for 104 days, was still actively alive after sixteen months of independent life and more than 190 passages. The rate of proliferation of the connective tissue sixteen months old equaled and even exceeded that of fresh connective tissue taken from an eight day old embryo.
"It appears, therefore," Dr. Carrel reports, "that time has no effect on the tissues isolated from the organism and preserved by means of the technique described. During the sixteenth month of life in vitro the cells increased rapidly in number and were able in a short time to produce a large quantity of new tissues."
Name For New Battleship.
Washington.—In honor of his native state Secretary Daniel probably will name battleship No. 39, building at the New York navy yard, the North Carolina. The name of the cruiser North Carolina will be changed to the Asheville, Charlotte or Winston-Salem.
NEW DEFENSE FOR GIBSON.
Attorney Announces He Is to Be Tried Again In Szabo Case.
Again in Szabo Case.
Goshen, N. Y.-Burton W. Gibson, county has been tried twice by Orange county jurists on the charge of having civilians on the charge of Mrs. Rosa Menschik shenclik on Greenwich Lake on July 16, 1912. will be tried again after Robert H. Elder, his attorney, said that District Attorney J. D. Wilson, Jr. of Newburg, intended placing Gibson on trial for a third time at the term of the supreme court to convene in Goshen in the latter part of October. He said he would be Gibson's attorney again and that Henry Kohl of Newburg and Jacob J. Singer of Jersey City would be associated with him.
A conference will be held by Gibson's lawyers, when the case will be discussed in detail.
Mr. Elder said an entire new defense will be opened at the third trial, which, his opinion, would be more favorable to Gibson than the defense in either of the two trials in which the jurors disagreed.
Gibson is in good health. He exercises daily with dumbbells.
AVIATOR LOOPS THE LOOP.
French Aeroplanist Turns Somersault In the Air With Safety.
Juvian, France. - A French aviator named Pegoud "looped the loop" while flying at a height of 1,500 feet in his aeroplane. He afterward descended without injury.
Pegoud, who recently caused a sensation by dropping safely from an aeroplane with a parachute, had announced that he intended to turn a sonar-suit in the air with his aeroplane, and his movements after his ascent were followed closely by a large body of observers.
When Pegoud had reached a height of about 3,000 feet he turned the nose of his machine straight toward the earth and darted downward with his motor working at full power. After reaching 1,200 feet with frightful velocity Pegoud changed the position of his rudder and caused the aeroplane to turn a complete vertical circle. The machine then glided down in a huge spiral volplane and alighted gently on the ground.
FIRST WIFE'S SPIRIT IN PLOT, HE ASSERTS
Advised Him to Transfer Property to No. 2, Veteran Says.
St. Louis—Stephen F. Garlock's determination to expose an alleged conspiracy between his wife of the flesh, Mary, and the materialized spirit of his first wife, was revealed when he started an action for a divorce. He is sixty-nine years old and a civil war veteran.
His principal charge is that his wife invigiled him into a spiritualistic seance and there called up the spirit of his dead wife, who advised him to hire his real estate to the living wife.
The petition does not set out in detail all that transpired at the seance. It recites that when he refused to sign away his property as directed by the spirit of his first wife the second wife, in the presence of all the real and materialized spirits, called him "an uneducated, unrefined and ignorant fool," causing him great humiliation.
It was through the influence of a daughter by his first marriage that he was prevented from signing the deed. according to Mr. Garlock. The petition was made to give him his property in this way, Mrs. Garlock persuaded him to give a note to her for $500, secured by deed of trust on real estate, and that a week later she had the locks on the doors of his room changed and bolted him out.
BASEBALL BY WIRELESS
Service Given to Sailors In Navy is a Great Success.
Washington.—The United States aerial "news service," whereby officers and men on United States warships far out at sea are kept informed each night of the baseball scores and other items of interest, has proved a great success.
Reports to the navy department from the battleship Illinois, which has just returned to water waters with a big ship in the middle of a battleship, reports were picked up readily by the vessel when it was 2,175 nautical miles out at sea from the navy's powerful station at Arlington, Va. and 2,610 miles distant from the station at Key West. The battleship also reported intercepting wireless messages from European stations.
Was a Merchant Ship Purchased For Use in Spanish War.
Washington.-The collar Alexander, one of the many merchant ships purchased for the Spanish-American war, has been stricken from the naval list and is for sale. The vessel was built in England in 1804, is a steel schooner of 1,181 tons displacement, 343 feet long and forty-two foot beam and is fitted out with 1,000 horsepower vertical triple engines.
For some years past the Alexander has served as a fuel ship for the Asiatic fleet. At present she is lying off Olongao, Philippines.
THE APPEAL. Minnesota Historical Society
WANTS U.S. PLANT FOR ARMOR PLATE
Plan to. Force Manufacturers to Keep Prices Down—Government as a Competition. Would Not Produce. All of Its Own Plate—Increase In Prices Has Been Felt.
Washington. Seven million dollars to provide for a government armor plate plant is asked for in a bill introduced by Representative Britten of Illinois. The bill was introduced coincident with the announcement by the navy department that bids for $3,000,000 worth of armor for battleship No. 39 had been rejected because they are identical. Although Representative Britten is a Republican, his bill follows generally the ideas of Secretary Daniels, who has reported that a "trust" evidently exists in the armor plate business and that the government should have a plant of its own, not to make all its armor, but to provide enough to make competition with the private mills.
In addition, Representative Britten is about to take up with several senators the advisability of changing the Underwood tariff bill so as to admit armor plate free of duty.
Representative Britten's bill provides for the acquisition of a site, the erection of necessary buildings and the procuring of necessary machinery and supplies for the establishment and maintenance of the plan. Active operations on the plant are to be begun within six months after the passage of the bill.
In discussing his bill Representative Britten said that he had in mind for some months the introducing of a "plan that would break up if possible the trust now controlling the armor plate situation in this country.
"The opening of the bids of the navy department for $3,000,000 worth of armor for battleship No. 39, appropriated for last year, in which the bids of the three armor producing companies in the United States corresponded exactly and giving the same amount per ton as last year," said Mr. Britten, "shows concisely the collusion existing in the bidding regardless of the fact that each bider attests in an affidavit submitted with his respective bids that the company is not engaged in any competition that would be unfairly that competition for this enormous amount of government business is a farce.
"The only way to procure armor plate at anything like a reasonable price is for the government to enter into direct competition in its manufacture with the companies already engaged in this work. I am not in favor of entering into the field to such an extent as to put the other armor producing companies out of business, but to manufacture a sufficient amount of this commodity so as to force them into competition and compel them to offer us their armor at least at a fairly reasonable cost.
"Investigations recently made in this direction have shown that in a government plant capable of turning out 10,000吨 a year, which is about half of the armor needed on a two-battle program, the cost of the armor will not exceed $314 a ton. The difference between this and the amount bld Tuesday, which was exactly the same per ton as the bids submitted last year was $454 on 10,000吨, at a rate of $454 per ton. Now, now paid, the government would save $1,400,000 per annum. Deducting the interest on the money used in building the plant, the government will still save considerably over $1,000,000 a year, which amount in a very short time will completely cover the cost of the plant, and at the same time we will be independent of this branch of the steel trust. As a business proposition the plant would not the government more than 17 per cent on the entire investment after allowing 3 per cent on the total expenditure or $1,200,000. In 1906 the price of armor plate was $346 a ton, in 1907 the trust jumped it to $420 a ton, and last year it was raised to $454 a ton. The price goes up and remains and remains up, and the evidence is not lacking that the price at the present time is based more upon what the companies think they can get for the costs.
"Some years ago we were confronted with the same problem in the purchase of the powder for the use of the army and the navy. We built a powder plant, entered into direct competition with the powder companies and today are saving $268.80 on each ton of powder."
"We manufacture our own powder in part, we manufacture our own guns, and there is no reason in the world why we should not manufacture a part of our own armor plate. The cost of the plant is not prohibitive, and the cost of operation will not be a severe obstacle.
"I am convinced that the government should erect a plant large enough to manufacture a good portion of the armor plate required and give that set of the work to such firms as are willing to bring their prices down to what will be shown by the government plant to be a reasonable figure. This is the 'entent of my bill."
JUDGE WANTS HEARING.
Emory Speer of Savannah, Ga., answers His Acuswers.
Washington—Following the bringing of charges in congress against Judge Emory Speer of Savannah, Ga., the justice at once forwarded to Henry Clayton, chairman of the judiciary committee of the house, an informal answer to the question. In his answer the judge states that his only source of information was through the newspapers, and he asked for a copy of the original charges.
JUDGE EMORY SPEER
He denied each of the allegations and wants a hearing just as soon as he recovers from an attack of hay fever. Among the charges was one that Judge Speer aided his son-in-law by giving him appointments in court. This was emphatically denied. Answering the charge that he was permanently unfit for a judicial station, Judge Speer says that he only insists on order and deform in his courtroom. He asserted that the men who "attempted to defame me in their statements were counsel for defendants in cases of great embezzlement or representatives of predatory interests."
PRIORITY OF DEATH TO FIX GREAT ESTATE Relatives of Aged Couple Fight For $1,000,000 Fortune.
Springfield, Mass.-Disposition of a $1,000,000 estate hinges on whether Sherman D. Porter or his wife died first in a grade crossing accident at South Deerfield. According to the medical examiners, both were killed instantly.
Relatives on both sides are aligned for a legal fight. The case may be further complicated if Mr. Porter's will makes a substantial bequest to his chauffeur, who was for many years in his service and whom the railroad company blames for the accident.
Since the fatality the Porter home has been visited by relatives who were never entertained there in the lifetime of Mr. and Mrs. Porter. He was eighty and his wife much younger. If it can be established that his death occurred an instant before hers, her relatives would become heirs to the estate. His relatives intimate that the will bears a codicil which alters the provisions of the instrument if her death should occur before his.
Under old court rulings, when husband and wife persisted together, the wife was presumed to have died first, being the weaker of the two, but later rulings have been based on close inquiry into all the circumstances. The relative ages of the two, it is said, may become determining factors in the Porter case.
Mr. Porter made a fortune in the candy business and at the time of his death was president of the Kibbe Bros.' Manufacturing company, wholesale confectioners and importers.
TO JAIL TO SAVE FATHER.
Rough Rider Sacrifices His Liberty,
Mother Caught Gun Man.
Craig, Colo.-Eugene H. Decker and
Clarence E. Decker, father and son,
who were tried at this term of the dis-
trict court on the charge of horse
stealing, were found guilty and inoc-
ent respectively. The son is one of
the most widely known cow men and
rough riders in this country. The
horse was the property of Ira H. Oim-
stead.
Young Decker pleaded guilty in
order to free his aged father of compi-
city in the crime. His mother single
handed captured William Morgan, the
notorious Hole-in-the-Wall gun man,
last fall after Morgan had for three
weeks eluded sheriff parties in three
counties.
Boy of Three Lost Two Days in Wilds
Muskogee, Okla.-After¬¬trumping
two days over the mountains without
food, Oran Trammell, a three-year-old
boy who had wandered away from a
construction camp at Woodsan, was
found by James Payne, an old hunter.
Payne declined the reward of $400
offered by J. T. Trammell, the child's
father. The country through which
the child wandered was infested with
wolves and wildcats.
Defective Page
MAN OF MYSTERY MAY TELL PAST
Stranger Found Six Years Ago Has Never Been Able to Remember His Past—Operation Expected to Prove Successful—Identity Still Unknown.
Minapolis, Minn.—For more than six years "J. C. R," the Minnesota "man of mystery," has been in the State Hospital For the Insane at Rochester, Minn., unable to talk, unable to remember his past, and in all that time not one person has appeared to claim him.
Yet there is hope that the mystery will be solved. Recently physicians made an X ray examination. While this revealed that there was no fracture of the skull, it was thought there might be a good plot on the brain, so an operation was performed.
The operation was considered successful, but the surgeons found such a degenerate condition of the brain cells that they give only slight hope that "J. C. R." will ever regain his normal faculties. However, there is just a chance.
"We expect no sudden change or sensational return of memory," said a doctor. What the outcome will be is problematical. A part of the memory cells of the brain has been destroyed by degeneration; but there is a possibility that there are sufficient cells remaining to restore the memory in part, at least. If possible the hospital authorities will teach the man to talk. With the large cyst removed there is assurance that the degeneration of the brain area will not increase and the brain tissue is unimpaired. He can therefore speak as a child is taught, it is believed. With the power of articulation, it is thought that he may be able to tell some of the facts of his life, which now he can communicate only by motions, and those very vaguely. "J. C. R." is not insane and has never been insane. He was picked up on the depot platform at Wasawe, Minn., one night in June, 1907. How he got there no one knows. His right side from his temple to his foot was paralyzed. He could not say a word. He could not make persons understand him by gestures, nor could he understand anything that was said to him.
He was a public charge, and as such he was cared for by the county. Arrangements were made for him to live with a German family. He was attended by Dr. W. A. Chamberlain but his case baffled the physician. Dr. Chamberlain gave up hope of his recovery, on April 24, 1908, he was taken to the Rochester asylum. At the hospital he has always had his liberty. He is what is known as an observation patient who can be trusted.
To see "J. C. R." once is to remember him. Although he cannot talk, he asks questions, as it were, with his large, intelligent brown eyes, which haunt one with their puffit entreaty. He is about medium height. His black hair, which is brushed well off his forehead, is tinged with gray. He is apparently about forty-five years of age. Without his cane he has difficulty in walking.
Still "J. C. R." is now able to make himself partially understood. By continual pointings to a map he gave the hospital surgeons the impression that he was the son of an admiral and an officer himself. He also indicated a spoon in Baltimore as his home. Repeated a spoon in the naval department and Baltimore authorities brought many replies of lost persons, but none which would fit the case of "J. C. R."
The United States navy has no record of a missing man who tallies with his description, yet "J. C. R." has been able to make the surgeons believe positively that he has served in the United States navy.
The only thing he can write are the initials "J. C. R." Yet he does not seem to think at times that those are his initials, although they were found on his clothing. When asked about it he rubbed the injured side of his head and looked puzzled.
This strange man has been a favorite of the hospital. He has fully realized his hospital needs, for one moment does he permit himself become morbid. He has a winning smile which illuminates his whole countenance, but his face in repose is pathetic.
The surgeons were able to make it known to him what they intended to do, and by gestures "J. C. R." inform them that he welcomed the operation.
SHE'S A FAN ALL RIGHT.
Foul Split Miss Bauer's Nose, but She Stayed Through Game.
Zanville省, O-White, witnessing a double header Miss Cora Bauer, aged thirty, of this city, was struck in the face by a foul ball, which split open her nose. She fainted.
But after a physician had revived her and taken three stitches in her nose she decided to stay out the game. She lost three teeth and may be disfigured for life, but she didn't seem to care.
MINNESOTA
HISTORICAL
SOCIETY.
THE APPEAL KEEPS IN FRONT
BECAUSE:
1-It aims to publish all the news possible.
2-It does so impartially, wasting no words.
3- Its correspondents are able and energetic.
NUN DESERTS CONVENT.
Sister Leocadia Believed to Be Teaching Music in New York
**Ing Music in New York.**
Naglaa Falls, Ont.—Sister Leocadia, teacher of music in Mount Loretta Convent, at Falls View, a mile south of this place, has left the convent, where she had spent more than twenty-five years of her life. It has just become known that Sister Leocadia, apparently wearying of the life within the cloister, made her departure from the convent several months age. It is believed that she made her way to New York and is trying to earn a livelihood by teaching music.
At the age of eight Margaret Coulter of Philadelphia entered the Mount Loretta convent. She was an orphan who had one brother. Her next nearest relative was an uncle. She became a novitate at the age of sixteen and took her final vows at the age of twenty-one, when she became known as Sister Leocadia. Soon after she took the vell she became teacher of music in the convent.
Girls from all sections of the United States and Canada have studied music under Sister Leocadia. It is said that she was very popular among her pupils as among the sisters of the convent and among the students of appearance and charming in manner. Her beauty had often been remarked by persons who were in the habit of visiting or passing the convent.
Mount Loretta Convent is the parent institution of the Loretta Sisterhood in Canada. When inquiries were made recently at the convent for Sister Lorecia it was learned that she had not returned. Mother Joseph, assistant to the mother superior, said that Sister Lorecia had gone away, and she added that she did not know her whereabouts. Mother Joseph, however, said she believed that Sister Lorecia was somewhere in the United States.
London—Queen Mary by reason of her unconventional aversion to gambling in any form by women has prevented the establishment of a woman's club in London which, from a social point of view, by far would have outranked any existing woman's club in the city and which, in fact, would have been a kind of women's Marlborough club.
The incident at the same time shows him in spite of the queen's strong and consistent objection, the society women of England are equally determined not to be deprived of their big or little gambling.
A plan was formulated a short time ago to start a woman's club the membership of which was to be restricted to past and present ladies of the various royal households in England. At first everything pointed to its immediate great success. Nearly every royal lady residing in England promised to join, and a strong body of ladies of the royal households immediately came in.
Of course it was absolutely essential that such a club should have the support of the queen, as she is the head of the select body from which the members were to be selected.
Lady Agneta Montague, the organizing secretary of the club, immediately told Mary as soon as the successful establishment of the club was assured. A couple of weeks ago the queen wrote to Lady Agneta that she would join the club, but only on the conditions that there should be no card room in it and that no male visitors should be received.
These conditions were made known, and two weeks sufficed to show that they rendered the formation of the club impossible, for of the 180 ladies who formed the original nucleus of the organization 140 have now withdrawn their names. As a result the scheme has been abandoned.
LAST OF CROW INDIANS
Lake Metimop Dies on Reservation Near Saginaw, Mich.
Saginaw, Mich.-Lake Metimop, said to be the last of the Crow Indians, died on a reservation near Saginaw.
For many decades he was closely associated with the Crow reservation, and for some time had been its only living founder. He had been blind for the last three years.
While some people doubted that the Indian was as old as he claimed to be, 107 years, it was believed that he was Michigan's oldest inhabitant. Metimop, better known as Met Wop, settled in the Saginaw valley before white men commenced to colonize that section. Although quite a leader, he was considered more of a farmer than a fighter.
BECOMES RICH IN A DAY.
Widow, Support of Four Children, is
Heir of Brother-in-law.
Los Angeles, Cat.-Mrs. S. A. T.
Jones, a widow supporting four
children by working as a copyist in
county offices here, is a millionaire.
William Jones, a brother of the
woman's husband, died in Australia.
He left to his brother's widow an estate
which is estimated to reach the million
mark. Jones, a Welshman, and his
wife came here many years ago.
$2.40 PER YEAR.
PACIFIC HALFWAY ACROSS THE CANAL
Dredges. Expected to Complete Work of Establishing Channel at Western End In Short Time—The Cut is 5,000 Feet Long, 500 Feet Wide and 41 Feet Deep.
Panama.—The last remaining barrier at the Pacific end of the Panama canal has been blown up by dynamite. It was an intensely interesting spectacle. An electric switch was turned on, and a moment later the 1,500 spectators and the officers of the British New Zealand saw a wonderful light. He thought the stones were thrown high in the air. There they seemed to hung, then fall back as the roar of the explosion echoed in the nearby hills.
About twenty long tons, equivalent.
Photo by American Press Association.
BLAST AT PANAMA CANAL.
to 44,800 pounds, of 45 per cent dynamite constituted the blast, which was one of the largest ever set off in the canal. The charge, which was planted in 541 holes at an average depth of thirty feet, tore a big gap in the barrier, but not to a sufficient depth to permit the water to flow through, as the sea level channel was at low tide. Equally as interesting as the explosion was the actual breaking of the barrier, the tide creeping steadily up until it was level with the top of the gap. A workman seized a shovel and made a small trench, through which a rill of water trickled. Gradually it widened until an hour afterward a torrent, with a thirty-five foot fall, poured through an opening 400 feet wide into that part of the canal between Gambo dike and Miraflores locks which had been excavated by steam shovels. This cut, which is, 5,000 feet long, 500 feet wide and 41 feet deep below mean sea level, was immediately filled when the waters of the Pacific touched for the first time the solid masonry of the Miraflores locks. Dredges passed through the opening, and in a few days the last vestiges of the barrier will be removed, establishing a practically complete channel at the Pacific end. The dredges have begun to remove the last barrier of the Atlantic channel. When that work is accomplished ships may navigate to the locks at both ends.
On May 18 the engineers of the Panama canal exploded 32,750 pounds of dynamite that had been loaded into 236 holes to dispose of the first dike holding back the Pacific ocean. This dike had dammed the waters of Ancon harbor, in the gulf of Panama, until the engineers practically finished excavating a long stretch of the canal near Miraflores. The mighty blast was successful, and the waters of the Pacific flowed into the canal up to the point where it was checked until the last blast removed another barrier.
DOG BARKS FOUR DAYS.
Spaniell Finally Attracts Notice to its Dead Master.
Alpena, Mich.—For four days a small water spaniel lay whimpering in front of his master's shanty. Dozens of persons noticed the dog's peculiar actions and passed on. Several offered to feed the animal, but it refused to eat. Finally it ceased to whine and began to yelp and succeeded in inducing neighbors to enter the dilapidated building. There they found the body of Frank Cleveland, whose sole companion for years had been his dog.
Hen Lays Egg in an Egg.
Milton, Ind.—J. M. McMahan has a hen egg $7\frac{1}{2}$ inches in circumference one way and nine inches the other and weighs $5\frac{1}{2}$ ounces. A few days ago the egg was blown, and the yolk and white of the egg filled a teacup one third full.
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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1913
BLOOD LUST OF THE MOB.
Just recently a Negro was lynched by a mob at Greenville, Georgia. The very next day it was announced that the Negro's innocence had been completely proved, the real culprit having been apprehended and confessed.
The mob that destroyed an innocent man will go its way undisturbed, yet it committed hot-blooded murder without justification.
It is a fine commentary upon the law and upon the ability of men to govern themselves.
It is especially an illuminating commentary on the whole race-hatred movement. It indicates that the real desire is to lynch a Negro and not particularly to punish the man guilty of crime. It shows how debased a man can become through hatred, and makes one pause and wonder whether civilization may work its way out on this continent when such savagery can dominate whole communities of men.
Mob murder is worse than individual murder, and yet it is seldom punished.
In this case an innocent citizen, supposed to have the protection of the law, was ruthlessly slaughtered to make a holiday for a frenzied, shouting mass of half-crazed men, drunk with lust for blood through a fostering of race hatred. Nothing can undo that crime, nothing give back that life. Yet the law complacently beholds these maniacs proceeding about their business and makes no effort to apprehend them for their awful crime.
It seems inevitable that some day the government itself will have to devise a way to prevent this disregard of law and justice and decency if communities are unwilling or helpless.—St. Paul Dispatch.
The foregoing editorial, which we republish in its entirety, strikes right at the root of the mob murder and is one of the very best that we have seen. We hope it will bear good fruit.
We publish in this issue the form of a petition to President Wilson against Jim Crowling and color segregating by the federal government. CUT IT OUT, SIGN IT YOURSELF, GET YOUR ACQUAINTANCES TO SIGN IT AND THEN FORWARD TO THIS OFFICE TO BE FORWARDED TO THE PRESIDENT AT WASHINGTON. Copies of the petition have been placed in the hands of a number of men in the Twin Cities and elsewhere in the state and every Afro-American, and every actual believer in the brotherhood of man, black or white to whose notice it comes is requested to sign it. This is but one of the ways in which we can show our dissatisfaction with the outrageous discriminations which are constantly perpetrated upon us. SIGN THE PETITION.
We understand that President Wilson claims that the Afro-Americans are in favor of and desire the segregation of employees of the government. The President is sadly misinformed or has jumped to the wrong conclusion. Let every liberty-loving, self-respecting, manly Afro-American in the United States write him a letter denying in the strongest terms that such is a fact. DO IT NOW.
It was with considerable satisfaction that we noted the strike of the white longshoremen's union of Mobile, Ala., to help the local Afro-American union some 2,000 strong to enforce their demands for an increase in pay. True unionism among laborers should have no color line.
SAINT PAUL
Mr. W. J. Uttley has moved his barber shop and pool parlor to No. 30 E. 4th Street.
And when sin it is finished bringeth forth death...James 1:15—Selected by E. W. Gilles.
The office of the "Small Loan Co." has been moved to rooms 25 and 26 fth floor Union Block.
If you wish to invest your money safely to draw four per cent interest buy St. Paul certificates.
The heart of a coquette is like a rose, of which her lovers pluck the leaves, leaving only the thorns for her husband.
The B. Y. P. U. of Pilgrim Baptist Church each Sunday at 6:45 P.M.
The meetings are very interesting. All are cordially invited.
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.
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.
Barrett & Mueller, Funeral Directors and Embalmers, 430 St. Peter street, for $75, will furnish for a funeral: A cloth covered casket, embalming and service, two carriages, hearse and grave—Advertisement.
SHINE 'EM UP! If you wish a good "dish of soup," polish go to the People's Shining Brigade, 18 St. street, between Robert and Jackson, W. H. Porter proprietor. Special chairs for ladies—Advertisement.
The Globe Method.—To sell Furniture that will Satisfy, at prices that will Graft. We give Furniture and Furniture Stoves you don't want.—Globe Furniture Co. 473-475 St. Peter street.—Advertisement.
PROF. C. S. PATTY'S HERB MEDICINES can be had only at the corner of University avenue and Mackin street. If you are not feeling well it will certainly be worth your while to learn about these remedies. Tri-State Phone 5732—Advertisement.
For nice home cooking, try the LITTLE DIAMOND CAFE, 476 Robert street, Mrs. M. M. Hicks,榨. Daily dinner, 3:00 c. o'clock; breakfast day dinner, 10:00 c. o'clock; 30 cents; breakfast at 6:30; supper 5 to 8. A carte meals at all hours—Advertisement.
Why not patronize the business houses that invite you to trade with them through their advertisements in THE APPEAL? They are helping to support your paper, show them that you believe in helping those who help you with 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 the necessary equipment for doing dental pathology. Patients pleased to have old patients call or any one who appreciates honest work at honest prices—Advertisement.
THE BUSY BEE CAFE, 217 Wahama street (up cafe) W. F. T. Chandler, proprietor. Everything new but the name. First-class meals will be served a la carte at all hours. A splendid dinner will be served from 11:30 to 13:00 in 25 cents. Open day and night. Tel. N. W. Cedar 4525—Advertisement.
HOT TIME FOR DELINQUENTS.
We clip the following from one of our exchanges to warn our delinquent subscribers what a hot time they will have if they fail to pay their newspaper bills. The same fate awaits our slow-paying advertisers: the 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 words, "Delinquent subscribers." Come, said the angel, "we must be careful not to wilt." said the editor, "I'm not going. This is heaven enough for me."
CutThisOut ATTENTION!!! Colored Citizens
National Petition Against Jim Crow and Color Segregation by Feberal Government
Read, Citizens, Sign, Get Others to Sign, then Mail to THE APPEAL 49 E. 4th street St. Paul, Minn.
This is to certify that we, the undersigned, are surprised and indignant that under your administration there should be any rules made by members of your Cabinet to segregate employees of the national government by race or color. We protest against this as a plain insult, public degradation, an insufferable injury to Colored Americans, the establishment of caste in this free Republic. We petition you to reverse, prevent and forbid any such movement by your bureau chiefs, in accord with your promise of fair, friendly, just and Christian treatment of your Colored fellow-citizens.
NAMES. ADDRESSES.
SCREENING OFF NEGROES
New York Evening Post.
So far as the Colored people are concerned, they are already deeply stirred by the action of several of Mr. Wilson's Cabinet officers in segregating the Negro employees within their departments—in some cases they are forced off in corners as if even their aspect were contaminating. As usual in such cases, the Negro officers' welfare that it is being done. That they are thereby rendered more in the possession of their offices, and are less likely to be discriminated against, is the sincere belief of some who have had part in this innovation. What they do not see is that this for the first time officially establishes a caste among the citizens and employees of the federal government; that the "nigger departments" and the Negro sections will be pointed to as the "nigger departments" and made the basis for such men as Vardaman and Hoke Smith and their less conspicuous imitations; that the "nigger sections" will become as despised and neglected as the "Jim Crow" car.
So far from helping the Negro to retain office, it will soon make it impossible for fine and able Negroes of self-respect to enter a service which is not of their senior or, as people who must be set off less mere contact with them result in, being in the far South every fresh act of discrimination, every additional effort to degrade and to humiliate, will allow its justification by this action of the federal government. Needless to say, those Cabinet officers who have begun this shocking segregation process took great care not to ascertain whether the wishes and feelings of those to be "Jim Crowed" might be. It was the point of view of those who had the power to act which prevailed.
That all of this will go without challenge is not to be expected. The progressive senators are already alive to their opportunity. The Colored people themselves are beginning to be heard from, and their political influence is not to be despised. But we do not believe that this phase of it will concern Mr. Wilson. We think that when the matter is put before him in its true light he will withhold his sanction from it, just as we do not permit any southern reactionaries, however influential, to deter him from giving in the matter of offices fair play to a heavily disadvantaged race.
PROTEST AGAINST WRONG.
To submit in silence when we should protest makes cowards out of men.
The human race has climbed on protest.
Had no voice been raised against injustice, ignorance and lust; the inquisition yet would serve the law, and guillotines decide our last disputes.
The few who dare, must speak and speak again to right the wrongs of many.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
ALBION W. HOLDEN—Fine house painting, hand oil painting, varnishing, staining, wall finishing, etc., done on short notice. First general repair work guaranteed. General repair work job handled. Send or leave orders at 527 St. Anthony Ave., or telephone Dale 205. Estimates furnished.—Advertisement.
WHEN YOU ARE HUNGRY, and want a quick and easy meal to the LITTLE ST. PAUL CAKE 300 Eighth street, between Robert and Jackson. James H. Thomas, propetor. There you may get first-class meals to order at all hours, day and night. Regular dinner daily from 11:30 to 2:30 for 25 cents. Tel. Cedar 3021.—Advertisement.
THE VALET TAILORING CO. 151-156 E. Skill street. The most up-to-date establishment of its land in the city. Clothing made to order, ungued, pressed, renovated and repaired. Goods called for and delivered. Four suits pressed for $1. They are in excellent condition, lowest rates. Tel. N. W. Cedar 4322. O. Howard, manl.—Advertisement.
F. H. Harm & Bro, the popular jewelers and opticians, formerly of 237 Robert street, have moved to larger and better quarters at No. 14 Pitt Street, street, between Wabasha and Cedar, where they will be pleased to see old and new patrons—Advertisement.
FRIENDS AND FELLOW CITIZENS:
Owing to the fact that the Dixie Jubilee Singers have been engaged for the evening of Monday, September 22, at St. James A. M. E. church and that no change can be made in their booking, the celebration of the anniversary of the Emancipation to be held on Thursday THE APPEAL will not occur on that date but will take place later in the month, perhaps the 30th. This will give more time for the preparations that are now under way to make the event the biggest and best ever. Everybody get ready for the time of their lives.
N. B—If you haven't sent in your card as a patron do so NOW.
TWO OF THE FLOUR CITY'S YOUNG SOCIETY PEOPLE WED.
The Groom is One of the Thrifty Young Men Who Has Done Well and the Bride is a Pretty, Petite, Piquaint Helpmeet.
The leading social event of last week was the wedding and reception of Mr. Frank Walter Terry and Miss Beatrice Lee Mason, which took place at the elegant residence of the bride's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. S. D. Tucker, 3836 Eleventh avenue south, on a dayday evening.
The couple attracted by the appropriate and beautiful decorations of blooming plants, cut flowers, smilax, evergreens and white ribbons, including a large white wedding bell which hung over the dining table.
The wedding ceremony which took place at 7:30 p. m., was somewhat private, the witnessed by only fifteen of the relatives and particular friends of the high contracting parties.
The ceremony was conducted by Rev. T. J. Carter of Bethesda Baptist church and was read from a beautiful manual bound in white morocco, the book contained a certificate of ownership properly filled out and signed by the minister and bore the autograph signatures of all the witnesses present, and after the nuptial knot was securely tied, this precious souvenir bride. The wedding march played by Miss Mildred Shull, who afterward sang, "Oh, Promise Me," to an accompaniment by Miss Albreta Bell of St. Paul. There were no attendants, the bride and groom at the appointed door, and from different doors and met the front of the bride who tightly tied the nuptial knot. Congratulations followed and those who had been hidden to the wedding reception began to pour in and during the evening there were upward of fifty of representative families of the Twin Cities and other cities present.
The bride, who is pretty, petite plump and popular, was gowned in white crepe meter over white liberty satin, trimmed in rose, point lace entrain. She wore a dainty wedding dress and a dainty minims of Spanish lace and orange blossoms, and carried a shower bouquet of brides' roses.
The hostess was assisted in receiving the guests by Mesdames H. Simpson, G. W. Barnett, O. Cannon, Wm. Hyde, W. M. Moden and Ella Wheater.
Misses Edna Shuil, Gladys Modes, Oddlette Johnson and Marianne Jeffrey served frappe.
Messrs. Willis Colter, Arthur Rhodes, W. M. Moden, J. R. White, J. r. Austin, Raymond Cannon and J. B. Burk served refreshments.
Mrs. M. Scott received the presents.
The reception lasted until about 11:00 o'clock when the bride who had disappeared, appeared in her going-down grey roundcushion with a waist of grey fabric and with Irish point lace, wearing a white felt hat trimmed with white satin.
After cutting the bride's cake she went out on the front porch and threw over her head her bouquet to a trunette beautie which she was caught above Abbey Kansas City. Good byes were then said and the bride and groom entered their motor car and started on their bridal tour to Huntsville, Mo., Macon City, Moberly and Columbia and Buxton and Des Moines, Iowa. She be gone about the 23rd of both and will be at home to their friends at the lovely home which the groom has prepared for his bride, No. 3812 Marquette avenue, after October 1.
The young couple were the recipients of a number of handsome presents as帕amak tawels to Mrs. Lady Walker and daughter, Miss Eva.
Damask tablecloth, Harold Combs, Raymond Cannon, Miles Cannon, Samuel Bassfield, Harry Harper, Will Hilder, Lunch cloth, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hammond
Cut glass salt and peper crues, Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Smith, St. Paul.
Cut glass salad dish, Mrs. C. Campbell.
Large framed painting, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Robinson and the Misses Anderson, St. Paul.
Large cluny lace center piece, the young ladies at Madam Boyd's.
Marsillets bed spread, pair sheets, pair pillow slips, pair towels, Mr. Dave Terry, brother of groom, Buxton.
Handsome bath rug, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Wright.
Two pair Irish embroidery pillow slips, two bath towels, Mrs. Ella Wheaton.
Pair towels, Mrs. A. E. Combs.
Hand painted plate, Mr. and Mrs. M. Cannon.
Silver cold meat fork, Mr. R. M. Toombs.
Set silver initial tea spoons, Mr. W. M. Mason, father of bride, Cincinnati.
Cut glass pickle dish and sugar and creamer, Mr. and Mrs. Austin.
Cut painted fruit plates, Mrs. N. Kellum.
Decorated sugar and creamer, Mr. and Mrs. Walter A. Houston.
Large cut glass nappy, Misses Mildred and Edna Shull.
Large cut glass berry bowl, Mr. and Mrs. Glover Shull.
Decorated Haviland china cream and sugar, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Oliver, St. Paul.
Embroidered towel, Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Butner.
Seal silver lemonade spoons, Mr. and Mrs. R. C. McCuilough, Mrs. Alex Grimes.
Silver cut loaf sugar trays, Misses Clar and Gertrude Howard, Charlotte Gillard, St. Paul.
Gold brooch, Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Gunn, Tahassahue, Fla.
Serving tray, Mrs. Minnie Plummer and daughter Mildred, Mrs. Z. A. Pope and son Veasus. Mrs. Z. A. Pope and fork, Mr. and Mrs. John Washington. Cut glass olive dish, Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Bonner and Miss Jessie Adams, St. Paul. Cut glass sugar and creamer, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hyde. Cut glass sugar and creamer, Mrs. A. C. Winter. Hand painted salt and pepper, Miss Mildred. Cut glass and silver violet holder, Mrs. A. C. Swift. Handsome set of initial tea spoons in cloth case, Mr. and Mrs. Z. J. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Judy, Mr.
Knowles Building. Boys' Hall. Stone Hall. Giris' Hall. Model Home. ATLANTA UNIVERSITY, Atlanta, Ga.
Is beautifully located in the City of Atlanta, Ga. The courses of study include High School, Normal School and College, with manual training and domestic science. Among the teachers are graduates of Yale, Amherst, Portsmouth, Smith and Wesley. Forty-one years of successful work have been completed in the South. Graduates are almost universally successful. For further information, address President, EDWARD T. WARE, Atlanta, Ga.
HOWARD UNIVERSITY
The Collegeof Arts and Science—KELLY MILLER, A. M., Dean.
The Teachers' College—LEWIS B. MOORER, A. M., Ph.D. D. Dean.
The Curriculum Center—GUSCH, D. Dean.
The Commercial College—GEORGE W. COOK, A. M., Dean.
School of Manual Arts and Applied Science—
PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS
The School of Theology—ISAAC C.
The School of Medicine: Medical
Colleges—EDWARD O. BAR
The School of Law—BENJAMIN F.
For Catalogue and Special Informe
Beautiful Situation, Healthful Locati
Environment—A Splendid
Noted for Honest
Offers full courses in the follow-
High School, Grammar school and In-
Good water, steam heat, electric
very reasonable. Opportunity for Se-
fall Term Opens Sept. 27, 1911.
PRESIDENT R. W. McGRANAH
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. Goods
Good water, airheat, electric lights, good drainage. Expenses very reasonable. Opportunity for Self-help.
Fall Term Office Sept. 27, 1911. For Information Address
PRESIDENT R. W. MGRANAHAN. Knoxville, Tenn.
TUSKEGEE Normal and Industrial Institu tusKEGEE, ALABAMA;
Organized July 4, 1881, by the State
Judiciary and Tuskegee State Normal
School. Exempt from School Exemption.
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 1,100 students, more than 100 instructors.
COURSE OF STUDY.
English education combined with industrial training; 28 industries in constant operation.
VALUE OF PROPERTY.
Property constating of 2,356 acres of land. 101 buildings almost wholly 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. 101 students pay their own board in cash and labor). Money in any amount, paid by the students, through the Tuskegee Negro Conference.
Besides the work done by graduates as class room and industrial leaders, 101 students pay their own board through the Tuskegee Negro Conference.
Tuskegee is 40 miles east of Montgomery and 138 miles west of Atlanta, on the Mississippi River. Tuskegee is a quiet, beautiful old Southern town, and is an ideal place for a summer vacation at all times mild excellent winter resort.
Lincoln Institute
WESTROOM CITY, MISSOURI
Founded by the Soldiers of the 624 and 656
Regiments of the U. S. Colored Infantry.
Supported by the State of Missouri. Has
Normal, College, Agricultural, Mechanical
and Industrial Courses Buildings and equipment
unsurpassed Thirty teachers representing the
best schools of the country Students from all
sections of the county. For catalogue and further
information address
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN ALLEN
President.
New England CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC
SOAP
up. Why do
sible way?
bending ov
work to open
rubbing.
matter how
or howe
fabric, it
Pearl
WANTED,
SOAP
Straighten 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
Pearline is right
Prone in the road he lay.
Wounded and sore bestead:
Priests, Levites past that way,
And turned aside the head.
They were not hardened men
In human service slack:
His need was great: but then
His face, you see, was black.
e New York Independent.
---
LOCATION.
NEEDS.
LARK, D. D., Dean.
Dental and Pharmaceutical
LOCH, M. D., Dean.
LEIGHTON, LL. D., Dean.
Station Address Dean of Department.
Con. The Best Moral and Spiritual
Intellectual Atmosphere—
and Thorong work.
ing departments: College, Normal,
instruction,
lights, good drainage. Expense
help.
For Information Address
AN,
Knoxville. Tenn.
GAMMON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY
The aim of this school is to do practical work in helping men towards success in the ministry. Its course of study is based on the curriculum, its work is thorough; its methods are fresh, systematic, clear and simple.
COURSE OF STUDY.
The regular course of study occupies three years in the regular course in the several departments of the theological instruction, usually pursued in the leading theological schools of the country.
EXPENSES AND AUDIT.
Tution and room rent are free. The apartments for students are plainly furnished. Good board can be had for ever per month. Buildings heated by steam.
A from lora without interest, and gifts of friends, are granted to deserving students who show interest in self-help. No young man with gifts, gift and energy, need be deprived of this advantages now opened to him in the Seminary. For further particular address.
THE PRESIDENT,
Gunnom Theological Seminary,
Atlanta, Georgia.
Washington Conservatory of Music and School of Expression
802 T STREET, WASHINGTON, D. C.
Piano, Voice and Viola, Viola Tuning, Theory Analysis, Harmony, Counterpoint, Fugue, Vocal Expression, Wind Instrument, History of Music, Methods.
Scholarships Awarded *Awarded* *Recitals*
HARRIER GIBBS-MARSHALL, President,
GEORGE WILLIAM COOK, Treasurer,
ABBY WILLIAMS, Secretary,
ANNIE E. GRINAGE,
Financial Secretary,
Sham University
This-institution of learning, established in 1865, offers a variety of courses for both young women, as well as college, normal and preparatory departments. There are also Schools of Nursing and Health Sciences. The facilities have recently been increased. The courses offered will be completed within the next two years. Applications should be made several months or so prior to the start of the last few years to receive all who apply. The academic year begins on the Thursday of the second consecutive week. The charges are moderate. Catalogues furnished upon application.
AVERY COLLEGE
TRAINING SCHOOL
NORTH SIDE, PITTSBURGH, PA.
A Practical Hibernian and Industrial Trade School for Afro-American Boys and Girls Unusual advantages for Girls and a separate building. Address Joseph D. Mahoney, Principal, Box 154. North Side, Pittsburgh, Pa.
raighten
to you wash in the hardest pos-
Use PEARLINE. there's no other way to do it. No back knickles, no skid of, no wear and tear from Millions use PEARLINE. No or when you use PEARLINE, you delicate your hands or the is absolutely harmless. 636
line is right
A SAMARITAN.
---
ac
SAINT PAUL,
‘A WEEK'S RECORD IN MINNESo-
TA'S CAPITAL
The “Saintly City” and faintly City
Folke—Newsy Items of Social, Re-
Uigious, Political and General Mat.
ters Among 'the People.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER, 12, 191%,
SWAT THAT FLY! DO IT NOW!
It is unwise to trust the man who
trusts no one,
Mrs, T. H. Lyles left last week for
a visit to Chicago.
‘Mrs, E. H. MeDonald is expected
home today from her trip east.
Don't think other folks are fools be-
Yause you think you are not.
Mrs, Addie C. Minor, after an ex-
tended trip out west is again in the
elty.
Mr. and Mrs, BW. Lindsay have
moved from 126 Arch street to 506
‘Thomas street.
Your Credit is good at the
GLOBE FURNITURE CO.
ATSATS St, Peter St,
‘Tae leading New and Second Hand
_ Furniture store of the city
‘Tel. Coder 3217
A.B, Cumamnse, Mgr
dbase REDDER EARS
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Roberts have
moved from 418 Bdmand street to 978
St. Anthony avenue.
Mrs, Belle Tyler and sister, Miss
Irene Salters have returned from Chi
cago. '
Mrs. George Evans of Benton Har-
bor, afich, Is in the city the guest
of irs. FB. Simpson of St. Anth-
ony avenue.
Mrs. H. B. Rogers and her parents,
Mr. and Mrs, B. F. Day, have moved
to 615 St. Anthony’ avenue
Mrs, 8. E, Hall returned last week
from an extended and very pleasant
trip to Chicago, Fond du Lae and
‘other points,
Rev. E. H. McDonald will leave
Monday to aitend the meeting of the
National Baptist Convention at Nash:
ville, Tenn.
IF YOU WANT A PICTURE OF
YOUR SELF OR YOUR HOUSE IN
THE SOUVENIR EDITION, PHONE
DALE 2065,
If you wish to know how the Fit
lieth Anniversary of Emancipation is
getting along, ask the dressmakers.
SHEE OHEHESEE EOD
W. 7. FRANCIS
WHO FOR A NUMBER OF
YEARS WAS IN THE EMPLOY
OF THE LEGAL DEPART.
MENT OF THE NORTHERN
PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY,
HAS OPENED OFFICES FOR
THE GENERAL PRACTICE OF
THE LAW AT 88 AND 89
UNION” BLOCK, ST. PAUL,
Advertisement.
PEHSEH SOHO ODES
It you have some news you would
like to see In THE APPEAL, write {t
on a postal card and send to this of
fice.
The friends of Mr. B. 0. Coble will
Goubtiess be pained to learn. that he
Js quite sick in Seattle and would itke
to hear from them.
Messrs. Abe Lyles and Walker Wil
liams have opened a barbershop on
Rondo street near Western avenue,
‘Tomorrow is the Sunday that has
been set aside as a day of prayer
for equal rights in the Afro-American
churches" throughout the United
States.
Res. 678 St, Anthony, Tel. Dale 2047
T. H, LYLES.
Funeral Directors and Embalmers
150 W. Fourth st.
Calls Answered Day or Night ir
“Twin Cities.
Active Pall Bearers Furnished it
Desired,
Lady Awsistant When Necessary,
Both Phones 608. St. Paul, Minn.
Teveeereeraanenanneennvarenanann
According to Health Commissioner
Lankester it will be the. prevailing
style for all dogs to wear thelr muz-
zies until November 1,
FOR RENT—Furnished front room,
modern conveniences, hot water heat,
walking distance. 261 Rondo street.
‘Tel. Dale 6147—Advertisement.
Mr. Charles H. Allen a cousin of
Mr. W. H. Johnson, is in tae city
with the {dea of locating. He is stop-
ping with his uncle, Mr. W. 8. John.
son, 281 Rondo street.
A REMINDER.
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Cry) ey) na ia
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as as ca
<< ZFS |
THE STATE SAVINGS BANK.
98 East Fourth Street,
Invites the saving accounts of fra
gal wageearnors, It is well ftted to
take eare of them,
Interest rate )
84%
per annum,
DEPOSITS OVER $8,000,000.00.
Sherles P. Noyes, Loule Betz,
President. ‘Treaaurer
‘BESCIALOD ANG LAG: NSwR (Wi -be “DUD
shed.”
‘. R, (Hustling) Morgan—Real Es
tate, Loans, Insurance Collections—
Notary Public—Representative of THE
APPHAL, No, 418 Charles , street
Phone Date 2974.
When you buy ico’ cream, why no
buy the best? It's made by J.C
Vander Bie, 496 Partridge streeet, 1t'
for sale, too, at all places handling
first class ‘co cream.
THE APPEAL is very much pleas
ed with the cordial reception which
is being given its new representative
Mr. T. R. Morgan, who promises. tc
give the public improved service. Mr.
Morgan needs no introduction to this
‘community.
SPIRELLA CORSET, Cora E,+An
derson corsetter. Any lady wishing
to bo properly corsetted call or ad
dress 365 Aurora Ave. Tel. N. W
Dale 1845 —Advertisement.
PLEASE SEND IN THE RE
CEIPT CARD FOR YOUR TICKETS
WHY NOT LET US KNOW THEY
HAVE BEEN RECEIVED? THAT'S
ALL WE WISH TO KNOW...
It your wife ts ailing buy her a GOS
SARD CORSET and she will be in
better SHAPE than over before. Foi
sale by Mrs. J. B. Cloak, 292 St, Al
bans street. N. W. Phone, Dale 2076
—Advertisement.
NEXT MONDAY night go over (
Minneapolis: to the Harvest Festiva
of the Young Men's Progressive Clu
fat Masonic Hall, comer Sth avenue
and 4th street So., if you are looking
for a real good time.
FOR SALE—AN elght-room moder
residence on West Central avenue
between Dale and St. Albans, a
low rate on easy terms, Apply at this
office or at 619 Temperance street
Must be taken quick,
‘The case of Turner Starks, Jr.,. wha
was arrested for wrecking the car of
Mr. Joseph Blsinger, when out on a
Joy ride, was brought up in police
court yesterday and he was bound
over to the grand jury.
IF YOU VALUE YOUR LIBERTY
AND CITIZENSHIP IN THIS YOUR
NATIVE LAND, CUT OUT AND SIGN
THE PETITION ON SECOND PAGE;
THEN GET IT FULL OF SiG.
NATURES AND MAIL AS DIRECTED.
ALSO WRITE A PERSONAL LET:
TER TO PRESIDENT WILSON. IF
YOU NEVER DID SUCH A THING
BEFORE IN YOUR LIFE, DO IT
Now. GUARD YOUR LIBERTY.
Mrs, B.A. Hardrick and Mrs. M. J.
McAllister of Springfleld, Mo., Sirs
F. Harrison and Mrs. Mary Brown of
St. Joe, Mo, and Miss Gertrude
Hughley of Caicago are guests at the
West End Branch ¥. W. C. A.
FOR SALE—SIX ROOM HOUSE,
ALL MODERN EXCEPT HEAT—
Carroll avenue near Farrington, large
beautiful lawn and garden, A fine
comfortable home for only $2,500.
Shown by appointment. C. P. Abbott,
803 Pioneer building. —Advertisement.
Mr. ‘Thomas Lloyd Hickman will
preach at Pilgrim Baptist church to-
morrow evening and will leave next
week to resume his studies in Dennt-
son University, . Granville, Ohio,
where he is taking a course in the:
ology.
‘The place to have your shoe re
pairing done jn: the’ best possible way
at the lowest possible price ts at
SARVIS;, 108-106 Bast Fifth street
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.
‘The Third Anniversary of Madam
Hart, our miliiner, at 425 University
jast ‘Thursday afternoon and evening
was a decided success, the ladies of
the Twin Cities by scores attending.
‘The display of millinery and acces:
sories was splendid and much admir
‘ed. Refreshments were sorved and
‘the ladies had a regular matinee,
EVERYBODY knows who knows
anything about it that the Southern
chefs cannot be surpassed in tooth
some cuisine, Well, James Palmer
‘the famous chet trom the “Crescent
City” is now the proprietor of the
‘Acme Cafe, 107. Third street and
invites those who are fond of good
“eats” to call. Regular dinner from
iL a.m to 3p. m, for 25 cents, A
Ja carte meals at ail hours, ‘Try ‘em
Invitations have been issued for a
meeting to be held at the residence
of Dr. Valdo Turner on Friday even
ing, Sépt. 19, for the purpose of or
ganizing a local branch of the Na
{ional Association for the Uplitt of
Colored People. ‘This day will be the
first anniversary of the death of the
late Frederick L. MeGhee and it is
considéred that. the organization of
a local branch on this day will be a
fitting memorial to his memory. as his
heart longed for such an organization
‘and the needs of the times demand its
‘consummation.
‘Mr. W. Hopkins Johnson, delegate
from Gopher Lodge, Elks, to the Na
Honal Grand Lodge at Atlantic City,
, J., has returned home highly elat
ed with his trip. There were present
450 delegates from 225 lodges, repre
senting 18,700 members. It was the
‘biggest and most harmonious meeting
in the order's history. ‘The parade
‘was one of the grandest ever witness
ed In Atlantic City, and the grand bal
‘on Youn’s Million Dollar Pier al
which 5,000 were present was nove
surpassed. The dally newspaper
treated the mecting, the parade anc
the ball very nicely. Mr. Johnsor
was reeletced Grand Inner Guard.
‘The Testimonial Concert which
| FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY,
‘Of Emancipation Under Ausplece ‘of
‘The Appeal, Booming.
‘he Twin Cities’ celebration of. the
Fittieth Anniversary of. Emancipation
‘which 16 to be held under the auspices
ot THE APPEAL 1s assuming grand
Proportions which spell success. BY.
ery thing 1s moving along. nicely and
as the time draws near the interest
rows more intense. A, glimpse a
the lst of patrons in andther ‘column
‘will satisfy the most skeptical that it
will be a,swoll-grand affalr.
The celebration will be held in the
beautiful Arcanum Hall in the Lowry
Dullding, corner Fourth and St, Peter
‘streets, St. Paul, on Tuesday evening,
‘September 30th,
‘This hall will be remembered as the
‘one in which the “Minnesota Gradu-
‘ates’ Reception” was held on July 6,
1908, under the management of THE
APPEAL man. It is a handsome hall,
elegantly furnished, has dining rooms,
recoption rooms, smoking room, etc.
and is the best hall that could be ob
tained in the olty.
‘There are entrances to the hall n
Fourth street near St. Peter and on
St. Peter between Fourth and Fifth
stieets, the main entrance of the build:
ing.
‘The program for the occasion is be
ing formulated and will be appropri
ate and attractive.
Following the exercises will come
the dancing and supper.
Further announcement next week.
| EMANCIPATION CELEBRATION
Fittieth Anniversary to be Given Un-
der the Ausplces of THE APPEAL
Tuewtey, September 60,
Ciroular lettre in raterence to the
Proposed Fiftieth Anniversary Cele-
Sration ‘of winanelpation to, held
under the auspices of THE APPEAL,
‘Tueadiy, September 30. were matted
tome. tine "goto. persone. desited
te patrons, "Bome "ot the carte
were "sent in’ "without ‘comment,
Sn, Another one ofthe name Kind was
Others give a few words of approval
fmhich Go publi boow. it you rer
telved one of the lottery sou fa Sour
Sard me baces
ore are some of tue ‘sentiment:
Cont on me a8 one to asst in
every respect to" make the ‘affair
rand success
amust Brawn,
It should be done,
George L. Hoage.
1am heartily in tavor of this ex
vertainment. fhe. records: of "your
ast. enteriaamanty speak, oll for
the coming function. .
Clarence L. Smith.
‘The prospect for your grand enter-
tainmont Tooke good to fae taal
do all I can to help you on to success,
Ralph Watson.
‘am delighted with the idea and wi
nelp to cary it out :
F. D. Greene,
| Am always ready and willing to
help along a good thing
JA, Sayles,
1 endorse and will boost
Es stewart
Xt wil be & success 1 iknow a0 It
haw the right iat at te Head of it
WW. 5, Johneen.
Go rent ahead, T am with you.
Joueph Adame,
I know that your coming entertain-
sent wil bo & pleasuratie sce,
Tuo celebration of the Tifteth Anat
ersary of Binancipation mark an era
that should spur the race onward and
Upward to higher detinis and greater
nenievments™
Dr. J. M. Bode.
Tho Pitueth Anniversary of man-
cipation ought to be celebrated Un
der your atlefent management 1 will
Be an saeured success:
Slanper cibbe, 66.
Pelng an old soldier and cherishing
tne ‘iemory” ot that Gran ‘Old Mate
whose hand guided by our Loving
Father with one stroke ot hle-pon aut
Phot. slaves fae Why, Soe Eat
ton, fall felt au I do You would not
ine ‘sting “room,
‘Sergt. J. W. Harper.
Mave been with) you. in. many
trutles eat wou't formke you
ith.
Dr..d. R. White
We have been pining for a frat
ciate, entertalnaent for a'tong) dane
hd all youre with Joy.
FA, witame
‘The Twin-City Star is always with
THB APBAL Yor net succes,
hares: Sumner mith,
I was with you before. I'll be with
}you some more.
George Barnett
Just what we've all been waiting
tor.
ee
On the receipt of your clrcitar tet
vor’ ‘Bogan to thie up sometniag
Now and’ novel to protent at" sour
Satertaisment and 1 think Te got
|P"shall respond with the bent © eat
reduce,
lg Chas, H. Miller.
: I fully approve of your proposed
calepraton and ‘doom it "worihy, ot
Se" hlgnest‘conaleration
; B's Rellesen.
| Pot tae on, the lst of Promotors,
Poshors and Patrons, 111 be with Jo.
1. W. Barnett
Your entertainments have been
{uch delightful airs that would
not miss one. “Gout me th,
( Tg. Franklin,
[> Nothing ts top good for Thum Av.
Peale Wey with tntted etort should
make this celebration “Excelsior.”
DF Eawarde
| shat be pleased to do what 1 can
for the auecote of te proposed tate
1 Won he Morte
;_ The Emancipation Celebration with
you at ite heed eannot be anything
fata saves :
LA. Mather,
Xt you work on the celebration as
{you do at your residence it will be
Wr teat
| a ‘Thos, Neal.
‘You may count om my best efforts
in your behalf 4s fully as I gave them
‘ia "Your lormer ettertainments:
{ ‘Wm. M. Smith.
| Am sure this entertainment is
quite appropriate, and should have
ie encomagemet ct an. Wo wi
| all in our power to assist fn making
‘fea huge auceess
ms Sl Henry High.
The. prompesta* fir Your smertaty-
sn in Bd 38 Yen
all 1 can 10 make ft & success,
Alta: Ato.
A splepaia idea 4a Which 1 heartily
oat “Chas, W. Serutenin,
W. Serutenin,
dime Sri TO
‘With pleasure 1 WM Go sh 1 Yan.
‘3. Hi. Binnnater,
¥ think it is all right and will do
all Y ean to help make it a success,
NY "eters Covington.
‘Am always with a /g00d. thing.
Geo. W. Duckett.
1 am always willing to push a good
thing along. =
Wm. W. Wimberly.
I believe in the brotherhood of man
and will help You all Tan.
_ R.¥. Solomon.
‘What man has done, man can do
again. ‘The entertainments you have
given’ were par excellent; the coming
one should gurpass them all.
W. T. Francie.
‘There fe no buch word as tail with
you. :
OrFington . Han,
‘They tell me you are something of
@ manager of big affairs and Til be
there to 808.
J. Louis Ervin,
You helped me to pull of kome
‘good things and you can count on me
to help you. ‘ 5
3. He Diningham.
1 don't seo why your eiitertainment
shouldn't be one of the grandest. I
‘will-give you all the assistance T can
to make it such. I wish to see you
do the “turkey trot” that evening.
H.C. Petticord.
You can always be depended on
tor big things, just go ahead, Il hold
‘your coat,
. LB. Greer.
Tbe with you with some new
stunts for the grand march.
‘Owen’ Howell.
“Bvery little bit, added to what
you've fot, makes just a ttle” bit
more.” “Ada me.
R. E. Cousby.
I seldom’ get to go to entertain-
ments but Til be ‘with you in yours
it possible.
Lo M, Terrill,
1 am in for all undertakings that
are for the honor and glory of the
race.
Luther Singleton.
I know that your coming entertain-
ment will be a grand success and we
are with you.
z W. W. Mille.
Do IT Now!
Nothing succeeds like success and
that’s what we are after. That the
celebration of the Fittieth Anniver-
sary of Emancipation will be a suc-
‘cess cannot be doubted when it has
the following named up-to-date, pro-
gressive people as its patrons:
sshiggigsendlychennk
gern Agama BH, Zobnson
waragaae Baas
wea, Pais
kimi | 2E
EERE ots,
Eigen fee
beeen bea”
eee Cee ae
Soe gees
ie eae
Bi, Bradshaw 3 8, Mase
icy ee ee ie
Sue fee,
Eri fe
ioe” Ps
Kees, FS
Raia. Ete,
25 Billion fe Belthe
Eee, OF oe
We aamee 4 LES
agian Seer
Bigiaes | Ee tn
yeas iat cea
Sheu Sua
tea ee
FERS. GSP.
CER” SEE
fii fess
bates LE eee
Pees anne,
fae See
3 W. Marper LM. ereilt
iat ek Rak
Skorgue’ | CE
eke Gene
Eee Bhtalitn
eeeae er,
sires BA is
Pie Seth,
Gi hae ee ee
44 Ge Bae
viiee Ete
t MESSRS.
‘Wilts concer ae
yeas. Pea
Be Sooper BW. Stepp
oct
pe A ee ey eo
EG. Lee Bagmiel Seote
Robert Marshall = J.'L. Titus
eatin Ghee
Eee ati,
ce ee Ae
‘If you tiave not sent in your card
aaa patron Goto OKgE ble
‘the list closes. DO IT NOW.
Tam sure that the coming entertain
ment will be a grand one from th
fact that your previous experience and
success in handling affairs of this
Kind is a guarantee that this one will
be the grandest of them all,
Lieut. T.W. Stepp,
Duluth, a,
‘Will be with you 4f life lasts.
J.C. Black.
‘Will lend whatever aid possible.
Or Hicks.
T highly endorse the affair.
Chas. Sauniters.
‘Wishing you success.
Wi A. Johnson.
1 think it tsa very worthy under
taking on your part: 1 will do. all
in my power to make it a success.
: D. E, Beasley.
T think it ts @:good thing,
WG. Hood.
I only hope for perfect success and
will back you with my time an¢
money.
1 LV. Douglass.
Count me with you in your spten:
aid fairs every time.
; a de We Bales
‘Tho entertainments you have mish
aged is recommendation enough. We
are with you heartily.
James A. Vass,
Count, on me to assist in thts nob
enterprise.
‘ Tolbert Bush.
Betng & builder myself, ¥ am al
ways ready to help others build. 1'l
help you. -
= \- Frank Peoples.
ej. ©. WILLIAMS
f Se Pay faonees he NEW metodo
WW ie ty
NUT GSIIOF™ PAINLESS. DENTISTRY
4 positively gaite stet to extract teeth and remove nerves
ABSOLUTELY PAINLESSLY
Get prices here before going elsewhere
“ A.Written Guarantee for 20 Years Given With All\Work
Dr. Williams, 27 E. 7th St
TEL. C. 6132 KENDRICK BLDG. 2ND FLOOR ST. PAUL
Ce ee ee
| TEL. NIC. 2188 PLANS FREE
: F. PEOPLES.
:
Contractor ®& Builder
* REPAIRING A SPECIALTY X
Painting, Plumbing, Paper-Hanging, Flaster-
ing, Brick and Concrete Work
You don’t need Money; if you own your lot. 1 build homes on
‘Monthly Payments, it’s just like paying rent
236 BOSTON BLOCK MINNEAPOLIS
Accept best wishes for success.
J.-A. Roberts.
T indorse the movement most heart
fly, as I think we as a race, should
not lose sight of the day four millton
of our people were emancipated.
1G. W. Moker.
We accept your invitation and heart
ly tender our assistance.
JN. Sellers.
Nothing gives me greater pleasure
than to help boost a project that well
merits the same.”
J. E, Johnson.
TAKE NOTICE,
In connection with the celebration
of’ the Fiftieth Anniversary of Eman-
elpation it is the intention of the pro-
prietor of THE APPEAL to issue a
SOUVENIR EDITION, similar to those
issued in 1910 and 1911 containing
full account of the celebration, cuts
of prominent persons in the state and
thelr homes and places of business,
thus making it quite valuable to the
‘race and all persons interested or
represented therein, Any one wishing
a cut, sketch, or to be represented in
any way should communicate with or
call at THE APPEAL office at once.
‘The time is short and you must hurry.
Phone Dale 2055. Persons in Minne-
apolis may communicate with Wm. M.
Smith, 501 B, 27th street, Phone South
8347. ' Don't procrastinate, DO IT
Now.
MRS. MILLIE ALEXANDER.
The Hair Manufacturer and Hair
Dresser in St. Paul.
Mrs. Millie Alexander the famous
hair artist, well known in many states
Is now located at 499 Western ave
nue, St, Paul, manufacturers all kinds
ot.’ hair goods, transformations,
switches, puffs, etc,
‘Will give four scalp treatments per
month for $1.50 and one jar of her
wonderful Halr Grower free. Off
hours from 8:00 a, m, to 9:00 p. m
Phone Dale 4926.
Hair dressing for weddings and par
ties a specialty.
IF YOU VALUE YOUR LIBERTY
AND CITIZENSHIP IN THIS YOUR
NATIVE LAND, CUT OUT AND SIGN
THE PETITION ON SECOND PAGE;
THEN GET IT FULL OF SIG.
NATURES AND MAIL AS DIRECTED.
ALSO WRITE A PERSONAL LET.
TER TO PRESIDENT WILSON. IF
YOU NEVER DID SUCH A THING
BEFORE IN YOUR LIFE, DO IT
NOW. GUARD YOUR LIBERTY.
MAN WITH TWO HEADS ON HIS
‘SHOULDERS.
Barly this week a man was dis
covered in At. Paul who: had two
heads on his shoulders, one was his
‘own and the other was his sweet-
heart, She was expressing her de
light because he had just invited her
to accompany him to the Fiftieth An.
niversary of Emancipation September
20, Another of the same Kind was
also discovered in Minneapolis.
CARD OF THANKS.
‘We vish to thank the many friends
for their kindness during the illness
of our mother, Mrs. Susan Goodrich
and for the sympathy shown in the
hour of our bereavement, special)
do we desire to thank the Union Be
Revolent. Association and Biddle’ Cir
cle, Ladies of the G. AR. We wiss
also to thank Piigrim Baptist. chol
for the lovely music rendered an¢
thank other friénds for the floral de
stgns.
‘Respectfully,
Mr. and’ Mre. James MeCiain,
Mr. James Thomas, the enterpris
ing proprietor of the “Little. St. Paul
Gate,” 130 3. Bighth street, has reno
vated, repapered and refuratshed hi
place’ of business very neatly and at
fractively. ‘Tho chef 1s. Mr. Charles
Jackson, tier pow as “Big Boy,
and he’ ts turing out some very
toothsome, meals. Call and see.
_
BIG SNAPS
w
Six-Room Dwelling, All Modern,
Sleeping Porch, Builtin Side-
board, Oak Finish—$3,600; $200
Down, $25 per month.
Five-Room Dwelling, Water, Gas,
Good Chicken House—$1,800;
$200 Down, $20 per month.
ThreeRoom Dwelling, Water
and ‘Gas—$1,000; $200 Down
$12 per month.
All on St. Clair Street, three
blocks from car line.
Two Lots near St. Clair Street
70x120 feet—$350, $50 Down
$10 per month.
‘Street improvements all in. ~
‘Tel. N. W. Midway 1883,
0. &. JONES.
| Macore Jnxxree Rowxat Horas
Pea Macca
| JENKINS & HOPKINS, PROPS.
Ice Cream Parlor, Confectionery,
Soft Drinks, Cigars Etc...
Phone Date 6898,
845 AURORA. ‘BT. PAUL.
a a9?
‘Why Have Kinky Hair?’
SJRAT-N-IT_¢
ee «ey
oy a
BEFORE. AFTER,
Stralghtens the most obstinate
coarse kinky hair. Basily applied,
Harmless, Ocorless, Clean and Last
me,
‘Apply once Presto and your Hat
wit become straight instantly Temata
ing ao for monihe without another sp
Tcation
resto’ eradlicates Dandruff and
other biseagos of the Hatr and Scelp
Nothing like ‘Presto tn the wor
A patlge ot Frosto Wit direction
sont postpaid sousrely baaled on re
Seine bt One Dollar
Satisfaction guaranteed or mone}
fete
LAFAYETTE MANUFACTURING
COMPANY.
Drexel Building. Phladelphia, Pa
‘Dept. D.
TRslable ‘Agents wanted averywhere
Radios cr gentaman, “preeis"is'
heer cae
Your Looks Can
Ladies jy ivgin
pete,
i ,
Madam Notah Wilson’s
fr ge PRS htc Pin Dan, Ha
ning Maaring Mengt..AeHa
te Cad cme Se
ee Charles St. ‘ST. PAUL
w Ge ColarSs82 "PHONES Res. Date 29
i DEALER IN.
Real Estate mInsurance
Handles Farm Lands and city Prop
Sry Builds, Buyer Selle or Rents
finan
Ingures your Life, your House, your
owtnid Gonae
Insures against aamage by Fire.
Lighining or tettade!
See, STRONG before closing a dea
neers
Office 25-26 Union Block
Corner of Feteth ond’ Cater
‘ST. PAUL 4 MINN.
‘Walker Williams: A.C. Lyles
Red Moon Barber Shops
Fiest Class Tonsorial Work all Branches
Expert Workmen
124, THIRD St. 310 RONDO sr.
Se
MADAME L. A. PORTER.
ames, ae Dra Malice
tee ett, eee ee
ete aa eae eee
cee
494 W. Central Ave., ‘ST, PAUL.
UNDERTAKER LYLES wovED. ¢
Our undertiker Thos. H. Lyles who
has been at 322 Wabasna street for
years, with Listoe & wold has moved
‘with them to thelr new and up-to-date
building, 150 West Fourth street, cor-
Bercoirmatar Wien ‘Selsey oy
found at any time by those needing
his services. All the latest designs,
Eneitcrmtcr merece
mee (oaehaad Gemeente
|Wlegant ¢ch_pel for holding funeral
services. ,Catls answered by day 01
night on a momeat's notice.’ Bott
phones 508. Cee BES L
| Phone Cedar S52 Heers:9 amty 12 2 1 5p
DR. W. T. MITCHELL
Ls DenTisr
“come = ST. PAUL
LITTLE DIAMOND CAFE
Mrs, M. J. Hicks, Prop.
| First Class Home Cooked Feals
to order at all hours
Daily Dinaer 11 t03 at 5c.
Sunday Dinner 11 to 6 at 30.
Breakfast 6:30 Supper 5 to8
476 Robert, ST. PAUL
iw
Bret AULA
aa be
pee ei
— Eee
BOUTELL BROS.
‘URGEST HOUSE FURNISHERS IN THE NORTHWEST
FIRST AVE, SOUTH AND FIFTH BY,
MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA
ee
a ia i se
MRS. W. B. ELLIOTT & CO.
Staple and Fancy Groceries, Ice
‘Cream, Cigars, Confectionery
| and Notions
411 University Ave. ‘ST. PAUL
| VaNveR BIE'S
| #1ICE CREAM#
IS THE BEST
For Sale Everywhere
J. CG. VANDER BIE
TALN.W. Cedar 911 Tel ‘tr-Stato 1998
MONTANA
MEAT MARKET
G. H. Riworn, Proprietor
Fresh and Salt Meats
“nisi, Heat boar
566 ROBERT ST. ST. PAUL
‘Tel. Cedar 9104 - Opp. Union Depot
GONTINENTHL TAILORING 60,
‘M. GUEST, Mgr.
Cleaning, Pressing, Dyelag, 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,
Cor. 6th and Wabasha.
Best place in the city for Pure Drugs
and Proprietary Medicines.
A complete stock of Druggists’ Sun-
‘Aries, Soaps, Perfumes, Tollet Arti-
cles, Pure Candy, Fine Stationery,
Kodaks and Supplies, Best Brands
of Clears, ete, ete.
F. M. Parker & Co.
Prescriptions Dellverd. Open all night
‘The REXALL Store. Both Phones 318
ALBION W. HOLDEN
Painter and Decorator
527 St. Anthony Avenue
SP. PAUL, - MINN
bt wy
“THE BUSY CORNER
A. J. MeMURRAY & CO.
Staple and Fancy Groceries, Candies, Con
fectionery, Cigars, School Supplies, Etc,
lee Cream Parlor and Cafe, Lunch at
~ all Hours.
REAL ESTATE AND RENTALS HANDLED,
Conc WoprhaadResde Ot. Fath
‘Office Cedar 1678
Dr, Valdo Turner
|" PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
| endrick Block, 27 B, 7th
OFFICH HOURS
9to lla. m, 12 tol p. m, 8 toby, m
Sundays 10 t0 11 m.
Roe 386 St Albans “Tol. Dale 918,
ee
ovescesenocscossessecooors
SUITS PRESSED
VALET TAILORING CO”
156 E.. SIXTH 8T
ieee Bae ia Ne i ee
THE 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.
Rev. M. W. Witthers has moved to 1029 Fourth street N.
Mr. Henry Mosley has returned from New York and is now connected with the new Twin City Stag Club, where he will be pleased to meet all his old friends.
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
Best Service Good Music
"LA FRANCE"
CHOP SUEY CAFE
Mrs. J. M. Mask, Prop. & Mgr.
AMERICAN AND CHINESE
DISHES
Regular Dinner from 11 a. m. to 2 p. m.
OPEN FROM 7 A. M. TO 2 A. M.
255 First Av S.
Minneapolis
255 First Av S. Minneapolis
Keystone Hotel and Buffet, 1313 Washington Avenue South. Rooms and Meat & Day. Week or Month. Rooms $1.50 per week and up. Special rates for theatrical people. Kidd F. Mitchell, Prop—Advertisement.
Minneapolis will be well represented at the celebration of the Fiftht Anniversary of the Emancipation under auspices of THE APPEAL at Aarcum Hall, corner of Fourth and St. Peter streets, St. Paul, Tuesday evening, September 30th.
Mr. Ralph Watson returned last week from his two weeks' vacation. He was the guest of Dr. and Mrs. T. H. Phillips at Keokuk, Iowa, and was at the opening of Uncle Sam's big dam with its 200,000 horse power plant. He had a very delightful trip.
Phones, N. W. Nicollet 9556
T. S. Center 3638
Geo. W. Nelson
Drudgist
and Druggist Sundries
121 Sixth Street So. MINNEAPOLIS
WHEN IN ST. PAUL, go to the St. Louis Kitchen, No. 138 E. Third street, upstairs, for your meals. Meals to order from 7:00 a.m. m. to 8:00 p.m. Regular Sunday dinner from 1 to 3 p. m. 35 cts. home cooking. Mrs. Julia Hinson, Prop. Tel. Cedar 6090. —Advertisement.
The Young Men's Progressive Club will give a harvest festival and dance at Masonic Hall, corner 5th ave. and 24th street So. Monday evening, September 15th. Just as usual the Y. M. P. C. punch will be in evidence. Of course the McCullough orchestra will furnish the music. The "Boys" of the Y. M. P. C. intend to give their friends and patrons a very pleasant evening and cordially invite them to be present.
IF YOU VALUE YOUR LIBERTY AND CITIZENSHIP IN THIS YOUR NATIVE LAND, CUT OUT AND SIGN THE PETITION ON SECOND PAGE; THEN GET IT FULL OF SIGNATURES AND MAIL AS DIRECTED. LETTER TO PRESIDENT WILSON. IF YOU NEVER DID SUCH A THING BEFORE IN YOUR LIFE, DO IT NOW. GUARD YOUR LIBERTY.
TERRY-MASON
Continued from second page.
Continued from second page.
and Mrs. Herman Simpson, Mr. and
Mrs. John W. Scott, Mr. and Mrs.
John B. Wishon, Mrs. G. D. Smith,
Miss L. O. Mishaw, Silver gold bowl punch ladle, Mr.
and Mrs. W. C. Jeffrey.
Brass and art glass library reading lamp and large decorated vase, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Moden, Mr. and Mrs. O. G. Price, Mr. and Mrs. G. Barnett, Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Boulden, Mr. and Mrs. R. Van Hook, Dr. and Mrs. J. H. Redd, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Minor, Mr. and Mrs. A. Price, Mr. and Mrs. D. Moulden, Mr. and Mrs. F. Wiles, Mr. and Mrs. James Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. A. White, Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Calimese, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence McCullough, Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Madison Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Ford, Rev. and Mrs. J. T. Carter, Mr. and Mrs. Osa Lawrence, Mr. and Mrs. Jose H. Shwarwood, Mrs. M. Grey, Mrs. Frances Hardy, Mrs. Mattle Neal, Mrs. Elfe McCracken, Miss Lolo Calimese, Miss Alice Marshall, Miss Ada Lewis, Mrs. Sara Marshall, Mr. Walter Smith, Mr. Lewis Marshall, Miss Ella Scott.
Body-Brussels rug, Mr. A. H. Kenvon.
Large framed landscape, Mr. and Mrs. J. Eddings, Dr. and Mrs. R. S. Brown, Mrs. John Newcomb, Mrs. Boyer, Miss Lettie B. Hayes.
If you have anything good to say of THE APPEAL tell it to your friends. If you have anything bad, tell it to "Hustling" Morgan, the agent.
Let Madam Notah Wilson dress your hair for the celebration of the Fiftieth Anniversary of Emancipation at Arcanum Hall, Tuesday, September 30, and you will look all right.
Gopher Lodge, Elks, has given up its hall at 126 E. Third street and now meets at Wagner Hall, corner Charles and Western Ave., on the second Wednesday in each month.
"The Favorite Shining Parlor," Messrs. Beard & Alexander, proprietors, has been moved to 105 E. 5th street, where first class work is done on short notice at all times—Advertisement.
Mr. James A. Hyde is now operating the Cosmopolitan Cafe at 40 E. Third street. He puts on a swell regular dinner from 11 a. m. to 5 p. m. for 25 cents. A la carte meals at all hours.
---
If you wish a good meal in a big hurry call on him.
Mr. T. H. Lyles, our undertaker, who has had his office with Listeo and Wold has moved with this firm to its new and up-to-date building, 150 W. Fourth street corner of Franklin, where he may be found as usual. Both Phones 508.
ST. LQUIS KITCHEN, 138 E. Third street, up stairs, Mrs. Julia Hinson, Prop. a la carte meals at all hours from 7:00 a. m. to 8:00 p. m. All home cooking. Regular Sunday dinner from 1 to 3 p. m., 35 cents. Tel. 6090—Advertisement.
Mr. and Mrs. Jose H. Sherwood have issued invitations for the celebration of their "crystal wedding," or fifteenth anniversary of their marriage, at their residence, 971 St. Anthony avenue, Monday evening, September 22, from 8:30 to 11:00 o'clock.
PATRONS of the St. Louis Kitchen, 138 E. Third street, Mrs. Julia Hinson, proprietor, are hereby notified that on and after this date regular dinners will not be served during the week; only a la carte service will be given. All old and new patrons cordially invited to try the new service. It will be noticed that the list of patrons for the celebration of the Fiftieth Anniversary of Emancipation under auspices of THE APPEAL has passed the 100 mark. Heretofore they have been confined to married men and their wives but this time the men without wives are taking a hand. There is some class to entertainments given under the auspices of THE APPEAL man, best crowds, best dresses, best dressed, best program, best summer event, everything. You pay ONE DOLLAR to get in, but you have nothing more to pay for after you get in. Everything of the BEST, FREE!
SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE VAULTS—We invite your inspection.
It costs little to place your valuable papers, cash, securities and other values in absolute safety. Boxes in our vaults can be had for $4 per year. Store your boxes, trunks, etc., with us. Northwestern Trust Co., 138 Endicott Arcade—Advertisement.
IF YOU VALUE YOUR LIBERTY AND CITIZENIZATION IN THIS YOUR NATIVE LAND, CUT OUT AND SIGN THE PETITION ON SECOND PAGE; THEN GET IT FULL OF SIGNATURES AND MAIL AS DIRECTED. ALSO WRITE A PERSONAL LETTER TO PRESIDENT WILSON. IF YOU NEVER DID SUCH A THING BEFORE IN YOUR LIFE, DO IT NOW. GUARD YOUR LIBERTY.
For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whooever believeth in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. John 3:16. There is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death—Proverbs 14:12.—Selected by E. W. Gilles.
HE WHO WOULD BE FREE MUST HIMSELF STRIKE THE FIRST BLOW!
HAVE YOU DONE YOUR DUTY BY SIGNING THE PETITION AGAINST SEGREGATION WHICH APPEARS ON SECOND PAGE?
IF YOU ARE A MAN WORTHY OF THE NAME SEE THAT A PETITION WITH YOUR NAME ON IT IS SENT TO THE APPEAL OFFICE AT ONCE.
EVERYONE KNEW THE GOODNESS OF
GORDON CAPS
NO ONE
WOULD BE
WITHOUT
ONE.
MAKE NO MISTAKE, JUST SMOKE
Sight Draft
THE VERIBEST FIVE CENT CIGAR
MEET ME AT—
"The Budweiser"
NIC. HERGES, PROP.
CHOICEST WINES, LIQUORS
AND CIGARS
Tri-State Phone 5004
Cor. Dale and University, - ST. PAUL
TWO
FIFTY
TWO
252
TWO
FIFTY
TWO
Mild, Rich, Satisfying!
5c
Try It Once and You'll Become a 252
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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.
Cosmopolitan Grill
James A. Hyde, Prop.
First Class Regular Dinner From 11 a. m. t.
25 CENTS
A La Carte Meals at All Hours
Class Regular Dinner From 11 a.m. t
25 CENTS
A La Carte Meals at All Hours
First Class Regular Dinner From 11 a. m. to 5 p. m.
25 CENTS
A La Carte Meals at All Hours
40 E. Third St. ST. PAUL
DAR 0140
LAW OFFICES OF
J. LOUIS ERVIN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
SUITE 303 COURT BLOCK
MUL MI
TEL. CEDAR 9804 HOURS: 8 A. M. TO 1 & SUNDAYS BY APPOINTMENT
DR, F. B. COOPER
DENTIST
Dimes are little young
ly when locked up together
savings account and prove
tion. "Planted" dollars
ings.
THE STATE SA
93 East Four
Northwestern
MANUFACT
Rubber and
Metal STA
OF EVERY DE
110 EAST THIRD ST.
are little young dollars. They are locked up together. Treat your account and prove it to your own planted" dollars will add to your STATE SAVINGS BANK
93 East Fourth Street
Nwestern Stamp Works
MANUFACTURERS OF
and STAMPS
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION
THIRD ST. ST. P.
Dimes are little young dollars. They grow only when locked up together. Treat yourself to a savings account and prove it to your own satisfaction. "Planted" dollars will add to your earnings. THE STATE SAVINGS BANK 93 East Fourth Street
Northwestern Stamp Works. MANUFACTURERS OF
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION
110 EAST THIRD ST. ST. PAUL, MINN.
TOWLE'S LOG CABIN SYRUU
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.
FROM MY CAMP TO YOUR TABLE
JACK TOWLE
St. Paul Minn. St. Johnsbury, V
N. W. Cedar 939
Capitol Stee
743 W
First Class Work Sa
939 PHONES
Capitol Steam Laun
743 Wabasha St.,
ass Work Satisfaction
Capitol Steam Laundry
743 Wabasha St.,
First Class Work Satisfaction Guaranteed
ST. PAUL.
PHONE CEDAR 9140
SAINT PAUL
ner From 11 o. m. to 5 p. m
ENTS
Meals at All Hours
ST. PAUL
HOURS: 9 A. M. TO 1 2 TO 6 P. M.
SUNDAYS BY APPOINTMENT
dollars. They grow on-
her. Treat yourself to a
e it to your own satisfac-
will add to your earn-
SAVINGS BANK
Fourth Street
Stamp Works.
ATTURERS OF
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 Candles, 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
team Laundry
MINNESOTA
ST. PAUL
P
After the day's work
Hamm's
BEER
makes the
evening meal
a pleasure.
Theo.Hamm
Brewing
Company
ST. PAUL MINN
THE NEW YORK TIMES
After the day
Ham
BE
makes the
evening m
a pleasu
PHONE GDAR 5339
R. O.
ATTORNEY
PRACTICE IN
25 UNION BLOCK
4TH AND CEDAR
PETER H.
FOR FIRST CLASS TONSORIAL WORK
GO TO
UTLEY'S
30 EAST FOURTH STREET
Shaving, Hair-Cutting, Shampooing, Electric Head and Face Massage, Manieuring, Sanitary Baths, Shoes Polished
Tel. Cedar 9282
GOOD
SHOES
The
Florsheim
SHOE
For the man who cares
STANLEY
SHOE CO.
421 Robert Street. St. Paul
422 Nicollet, Minneapolis
Main 9592 T. S. 3073
PORTERS' AND WAITERS'
HOTEL
FOR MEN ONLY
GLOVER SHULL, Manager
Rates 50 cents per day
309 Hennepin MINNEAPOLIS
MOST WORSHIPFUL GRAND LODGE
OF
MINNESCO, A. F. AND A. M.
C. H. ROBINSON, GRAND MASTER
1830 SCHOOL SEAPOLIS.
M. A. BOLLING, GRAND SECRETARY
892 W. Central Avenue.
PIONER LODGE NO. 1. F. AND A.
M. Meets first and third MONTH
of each month at Wagner Hall, cor. West-
F. and Charles street. at 8:00 p. m.
M. F. and M. J. H. Dillingham,
Secy. 569 Rondo.
PERFECT ASHL R LODGE NO. 4.
F. and A. M. meets second and fourth
Tuesdays at Wagner Hall, cor. Western
B. Sims street at $ p. m.
F. B. Sims street at E. 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. Arthur D.
Adams, H. P. W. L. Green. Secy.
PILGRIM COMMANDER NO. 22.
Knights Templar, meets fourth Tue-
day in each month at Wagner Hall,
cor. West F. and Charles street.
W. T. Joyce, E. C.; John Sayles, Secy.
479 Rondo street.
MARS LODGE NO. 2202 G. U. O. of O. U. meets second and fourth Wednesday of each month. Hall 221 West University, corona Hall. 222 West University, corona Avenue. Entrance on Farrington. J. H.ingham, N. G., J. Wesley Kelly, P. G. 950 Amy Ave.
HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH, NO. 553 G. U. of O. U. meets third Monday in each month at Odd Fellows Hall, N. W. Cor. University and Lows Hall, N. W. Cor. University and Lows Hall, N. W. M. G.; Carrie E. Lindsay, W. R. 506 Thomas street.
ST. PAUL PATROIROCHA NO. 114 Meets third Monday in each month at Odd Fellows Hall, corner of W. University and Fellows Hall, corner of W. University on Farrington and Fellows Hall, R. V. P., T. E. Franklin, P. M. V. P.; Augustus Jones, W. P. R.
ST. PAUL PATRIARCHOCHA NO. 114 Meets second Monday in each month at Odd Fellows Hall, corner of W. University on Farrington. Entrance on tonne avenue. R. Hickman (acting) R. V. P.; W. R. Morris, P. M. V. P. Geo. B. Lowe, W. P. R. 1782 Wabasha. GOEHOLD OF F. U. O. of O. U. meets second and fourth Tuesday each month at Labor Temple Hall, Cor. Hall, Cor. Hall and Eighth South, Mrs. S. Danger, M. N. G.: Miss Cora Naper, W. R.
UNITED BROTHERS OF FRIENDSHIP
NORTH STAR LODGE NO. 138. U. B. F. Meet thursday in each month a. Wagner Hall, cor. Western Ave. and Charles street. Brothers in good standing always welcome. O. Howell, W. M. J. M., W. S. 4, 4th St.
RAMSEY LODGE NO. 3. U. B. F. Meet second Friday in each month at Wagner Hall, cor. Western Ave. and Charles Street. Brothers in good standing always welcome. M. A. Davis, W. M. A. D. Adams, W. S. 411 Charles Street.
JOHN H. HAYES LODGE NO. 6 K.OF.P. Meet first and third Tuesday at month at Castle Hall 223. W. Unl. university cor. Farrington. Yankees in good standing always welcome. James Thomas, C. C. Jas. Henderson, V. C.; 148 E 9th St. K of R. and S. 321 St Albans street.
BIDDLE CIRCLE. LADIES OF G. A. Rousse and third Tuesdays of each month at building. Mrs. M. J. Leavitt, Freemr. J. R. White. Secy., Phoenix Bldg.
FIDELITY COURT OF CALANTHEN
NO. 345. N. A. N. S. A. E. A. A. and A.
A. A. and third Monday in each
month at K. A. N. S. A. A. Ave.
Ave. Minneapolis. Mrs. Minneva
E. Barnett. W. C.; Miss Arlene M. Scott.
R. of D. 25. W. 29th St.
PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH. Cg.
12th and Cedar. Sunday services: Preach
in the church. 4:00. 4:55. Sunday
school at 12:00 o'clock. Wednesday.
general prayer meeting. Friday wre-
ning study. Sunday school lesson. Funerals
and holidays deputy attended. Rev. E.
H. E. McHill, Pastor, 851 W. Central.
GOPHER LODGE NO. 105. L. I. B. P. O.
E. of the World, meets second and
fourth Thursday in each month at Elks
P. P. of 26. East Third street St.
Paul, L. B. P. E. R., Richard M.
Johnson, Secy., 572 Kent.
ST. JAMES' E. M. CHURCH. COR
Pulver and Jay streets. Sunday services.
11:00 a.m. p.m. Wednesday prayer
meeting. 8:00 a.m. Monday, Wednesday at
Monday and Tuesdays: at home Wednesday
and Thursday. Weddings, funerals
ST. JAMES A. M. E. CHURCH, CORPER and Jay streets. Sunday services, 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. Wednesdays prayer meeting, 8:00 p.m. m. Pastor visits on Monday and Tuesday, at home Wednesdays, 8:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. Worships, funerals and the sick attended outside Parsonage 435 Jay street. Rev. Henry P. Jones, Pastor.
S. PHILIPS EPISCOPAL MISSION center, Holy Avenue and Mackubin street. Sunday services, celebration of Holy Eucharist, 7:30 a.m. m. High celebration of Holy Eucharist first and fourth Sundays, 11:00 a.m. m. Sunday school, 12:30 a.m. m. Brotherhood of St. school, 12:30 a.m. m. Brotherhood of St. Week services, Wednesdays, confirmation chas, 8:00 p.m. Fridays, evening prayer chas, 8:00 p.m. Fridays, Holy Eucharist, 9:00 a.m. m. Rev. A. H. Lealid, Rector, 395 Thomas St.
SMOKE THE OLD RELIABLE Sight Draft CIGAR
General Meat Dealers
Blue Ribbon Hams and Bacon
U. S. Government inspection of all Cattle, Hogs
and Sheep
Family, Hotel and Restaurant
Trade a Specialty
THEO. HAMM
BREWING
COMPANY
ST. PAUL. MINN
right Draft Box
The King of Nickel Cigars
W. S. CONRAD CO.
ST. PAUL
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AYES LODGE No. 6 K. O.F. Meets first and third Tues-
day at Castle Hall 221, W. Uni-
versity, cor. Farrington, Farrington,
in good standing always
James Thomas, C. C.; Jas. A.
Henderson, V. C.; 148 E 9th
K. O.F. K. O.F. K. of R
St Albany street
50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE
TREAT MARKS
DESIGNS
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