The Appeal
Saturday, September 27, 1913
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
HIS DOCTRINES ON CHURCH
Activities Have Not Been Confined to Church Work, but He Has Striven to Better Conditions In All Walks of Life—He is an Opponent of the Saloon—Was Chaplain During War.
St. Paul, Minn. — Archbishop John Ireland is seventy-five years old. He celebrated his birthday recently in a simple fashion. He has had a long career in the Catholic church in America, and his positive nature has got him into many national and international controversies, some entirely religious, others touched with politics. He has been called "the brainiest man in the church outside of Rome." For more than forty years he has been engaged in some intellectual struggle or another, now proclaiming the tenets of the Republican party and lashing its enemies, again defending the popes as popes or defending before the highest tribunals at Rome his ideas of church government in America and the relations of church and state. No field of intellectual, political or spiritual endeavor has escaped his pen or tongue. From the pulpit of his cathedral in St. Paul he has attacked alike the enemies of his church and his own enemies in the church.
He declared once: "There must always be among us an unequal distribution of the possessions of the earth, and the rights of property are sacred and cannot be violated. They who wrest to themselves the property of others are robbers and, together
ARCHBISHOP JOHN IRELAND.
with other violators of the divine law,
are excluded from the kingdom of
heaven."
John Ireland was born in Ireland. The name, uncommon in these days, is an old one in Irish history. Kilkenny is the place of his birth. He came to this country with his parents in 1840. Eventually the Ireland made the state of Minnesota their home. Very early in life he showed a desire to become a churchman. After an elementary education in the saffron where he studied the classes and the theology, to this country, he was raised to the priesthood in 1862 by the Right Rev. Thomas L. Grace, then bishop of St. Paul. At the beginning of the civil war he was sent as chaplain to the Fifth resentment of the Minnesota volunteers. Later he became, in turn, pastor of the cathedral at St. Paul, coadjutor bishop of that diocese and, on the death of Bishop Grace, the actual ruler. The church in the far west grew stronger at St. Paul, the registration, and eventually St. Paul was made the bishop of with Ireland as its archbishop. His fame as an orator and publicist was widely known at this time. A temperance advocate, the archbishop has given little or no quarter to the saloons or saloon keepers. The saloon became a leading question in the Catholic church in this country when Ireland was a young priest. In 1841 it was to the front again, following a fierce onslaught by Bishop Watterson of Columbus, O. One of his disciples, John Ireland, was the bishop Watterson withdrew his approval from every Catholic society that admitted saloon keepers to membership.
The archbishop was a member of the commission appointed in 1901 to settle labor disputes. He has lived to see his idens concerning the church and state in this country approved not only by the Catholic body in this country, but after a long struggle by the authorities at Rome. One of the most recent utterances on the subject of Americanism was pronounced in a speech at the last convention of the Federation of Catholic Societies. "In America," he said, "the government is the republic, the government of the people by the people and for the people."
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THE APPEAL STEADILY GAINS
BECAUSE:
4- it is the organ or ALL Afro-Americans.
5- it is not controlled by any ring or ollique.
6- it asks no support but the people's.
VOL. 29. NO. 39.
ARCHBISHOP JOHN IRELAND
COMBINE AUDITORS.
Secretary McAdoo Would Put Federal
Men In One Building.
Washington. -- Secretary McAdoo is urging upon congress a plan to combine in one building the auditing staff of the several executive departments. He would utilize the big structure about to be vacated by the bureau of engraving and printing. While the cost of remodeling would approximate $73,000, he declares the government would save about $35,000 a year in rent now paid for the use of quarters in business blocks. Auditors for the interior and navy departments now share one building, while those for the state and other departments occupy another. The clerical forces are divided, and a loss in efficiency is the result, according to Mr. McAdoo. Furthermore the secretary of the treasury is looking forward to a decided increase in the treasury auditing force on the passage of the new tariff law with its income tax provision.
6,000,000 IN COALITION PLAN.
Two Big Fraternal Associations May
Ampligrate it. It is Recorded
*Amalgamate, it is Reported.* Chicago - Steps toward the amalgamation of the National Fraternal Congress and the National Board of America were recently taken by 300 delegates representing the two organizations in conventions in Chicago. The membership of the societies represented is more than 6,000,000 and the combined insurance more than $800,000. Economy in management and greater efficiency are desired. The Modern Woodman, Woodman of the World and Royal Arcanum are among the orders in the organization.
GOOD BOYS WELL REWARDED.
Get Farms For Not Drinking and Smoking For Ten Years
Sloux City, Ia.—Ten years ago rays and Jay Garnett, brothers, of Sloux City, pledged their word to their uncle William E. Garnett, that they would not smoke, chew or drink intoxicating liquors until they reached their majority. The uncle promised a gift of importance in case they fulfilled their contract. The period named in their promise has ended, and to hold up his share of the bargain William E. Garnett deeded to the brothers a half section of valuable land in Cass county, MIll., share and share alike.
Baltimore—The blind telephone girl has come to stay. An exceptional girl two years ago passed the severe tests of the work and has since then been a conspicuous example of what the blind, when gifted in other ways may do, but now the Maryland School For the Blind has turned out five other well trained girls, and the managers believe that they will be able to open this field of work to many other girls. These six pioneers, who are leading the way for other blind girls of the future, are working with the regulation switchboards, but efforts are being made to evolve a new kind of board which will greatly simplify the girls and increase their efficiency.
The most difficult board now run by blind girls is that at the Central Young Men's Christian association. The Young Men's Christian association is a club, a hotel and a clearing house for many lines of religious, social and athletic activities. Just as a hotel it has about 200 rooms. The building has here and there eight pay stations, besides many house telephones.
A member of the association is apt to be in any one of a score or more parts of the building when he is asked for over the telephone. But wherever he is the blind girl will find him, if switching and asking and "searching" to locate him. What makes this position difficult is the fact there are not many annunciators by which a bell in a room may be rung summoning the roomer to the nearest telephone on his floor.
BOY DIES AMONG "HEALERS."
Lad Was Stawed in "Holy Ghost and Us" Colony.
Lewiston, Me.—Conditions at Shiloh, the colony of the "Holy Ghost and Us" society, are to be investigated again as a result of charges by Mrs. the thirteen-year-old Brunswick that her thirteen-year-old Brunswick, Haydon Jones, died of starvation at Shiloh.
Mrs. Whittum alleges that while her brother was ill no physician was called and that no special treatment was given him except that he was put on a diet of corn mush, while two women "healers" prayed over him. The ind died on July 22.
Hurt Once In Fifty-five Years.
Bloomington, Ind.—After working steadily in the carries of Monroe county fifty-five, the ind accident when a large slab was brushed off a fat car and crushed his right leg. Simms jumped in time to prevent the stone from killing him.
THE APPEAL.
MURDOCK LIKES RED HAIR.
Representative Says It Is Far Better
Than None at All.
Washington.—It is better to have red hair, with its sunset-like effect, than a bald pate suggestive of "September Morn" is the opinion of Representative Victor Murdock of Kansas, the Progressive leader of the house. The red hair of the representative, which has been the butt of many a joke in the house and elsewhere, was ably defended by him as he ran his hands through what remains of it. Red hair, he contended, is the sign that the possessor has great force of character and an indomitable will.
When Mr. Murdock appeared before the delegates to the eighth interna-
Photo by American Press Association
tional congress of students at a smoker in the University club, Claud M. Bennett, toastmaster, twisted him about his hair. Mr. Bennett introduced Mr. Murdock as "the red haired Progressive from the unattended state of Kansas." "I admit being in a state of red headness," answered Mr. Murdock, "but must submit an argument which I believe to be unanswerable—that red hair is inestimably better than no hair at all."
SAYS POOR SCALES CAUSE BIG LOSSES
Would Have Government Take Over Weighing.
Washington.-Declaring that freight shippers all over the country are suffering an enormous loss because of the fact that only 10 per cent of the track scales used by railroads are accurately tested and that only one-fourth of the scales are inspected in any way at all. Representative Willis of Ohio introduced a bill into the house to require a complete change in this respect. The bill, based on a long and exhaustive examination of the subject by the interstate commerce commission, requires that the American Railway association be authorized to designate the standard scale to be used, together with standards for pits, weights and devices pertaining to the track scales, railroads would then have until 1915 to meet the proper equipment. After that victory the act would result in heavy fines.
Representative Willis is a member of the interstate and foreign commerce committee of the house and has been in touch with the interstate commerce commission's inquiry into the question involved in his bill. The expert of the commission with whom Representative Willis has been consulting is Attorney Marchand of the commission.
A CRIMINAL .AT SIX.
Wisconsin Youngster a Burglar and Highway Robber.
Racine, Wis. — Richard Tucovlsky, six, was committed to the State Industrial School for Boys by Judge William Smelling in the Municipal court there to remain until he is released. Richard, despite his six years, has caused the police more trouble than any ten growups, his foolishness ranging from plain burglary to highway robbery, in which he used an unloaded revolver. Twenty times has Richard's name been entered on the police blotter for crimes that would have placed older boys behind prison bars. Threatening other children with a knife induced summary action. The commitment is of the youngest subject in the state's annuals of criminology.
WATCH STOPS AS HE DIES.
Timepiece Marks the Minute of Its
Owner's Death.
Milwaukee. Wis.—When Gustav Mayer, thirty, a machinist employed by the Columbia Construction company, dropped dead from heart failure on a Muskegon avenue car on Eleventh avenue, his watch, which he had carried for seven years and which he boasted never lost a second, suddenly stopped.
Maresch, according to reports made by the street car crew and the police, fell from his seat in the car at 6:34 a.m. The large silver watch taken from the body at the morgue showed that it had stopped at that moment.
ish public as at the recent grees, have and Scotland gated by Prey and deceive their Professor S. maize origin confirmed. A Medical Journals disease has a isles, wha sumed.
BEEF FROM SOUTH AMERICA
Bacon Shows Remarkable Advance of 128.5 Per Cent in Past Decade—Other Articles of Food, Meat Especially, Go Bounding Up—Statistics Submitted by Bureau of Labor.
Washington—Bacon had advanced 128.5 per cent, pork chops 111 per cent and round steak 102.5 per cent on June 15 of this year, compared with the average prices for the ten year period ending with 1000, according to startling tables made public by the bureau of labor statistics.
The figures show that retail prices of food in general were 59.2 per cent higher on the date mentioned than for the ten year period in question, while they are 3.3 per cent above the price of June 15, 1912, and 14.4 above the average of June 15, 1911.
Sugar is a shining light, with a decline in price of 8 per cent from the ten year average, but this ray of sunshine is allowed under when consumers are told that smoker ham shows an increase in price of 8 per cent, hens 76.8 per cent, sirloin 75.2 per cent, rb roast 75.0 per cent, 66.5 per cent, cornelain 57.3 per cent, potatoes 44.4 per cent, butter 41.3 per cent, eggs 40.8 per cent, milk 38.4 per cent and flour 28.6 per cent.
When the price of each of the fifteen articles included in the bulletin is considered according to the average consumption in workingmen's families, retail prices are shown to have been at a higher level on June 15 of this year than at any other time during the last twenty-three and a half years, with the single exception of Nov. 15, 1912 when the level was slightly higher.
Actual prices were obtained in forty cities, including New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco, Buffalo, Newark and New Orleans, betting the country both ways. While the average increase in the cost of living at retail grocery stores in 1913, as compared with June 15, 1912, is placed at only 3.3 per cent, the increase in many articles was much bigger. Baskin is in first place in this comparison, in this comparison, in being 16.2 per cent, higher than in 1912.
Smoked ham is second, showing an increase of 14.1 per cent for the year, while pork chops occupy third place with an increase of 13.4 per cent.
Hens advanced 11.8 per cent; eggs, 11.7 per cent; round steak, 10.1 per cent; sirloin steak, 9.8 per cent; lard, 7.2 per cent; rib roast, 6.8 per cent; butter, 5.8 per cent, and milk, 4.1 per cent.
South America is sending greatly increased shipments of beef to the United States, and the importation of this product now has become a factor in the import trade. Between 2,000,000 and 3,000,000 pounds of fresh beef, part from Argentina, have entered the three souths. A large portion of the beef is coming from Australia.
Officials of the commerce predicted that the imports of fresh beef from these countries in the present fiscal year will exceed 8,000,000 pounds.
TO GRIND WILD RICE
Flour of It Will Be Tried as an Experiment.
Grand Rapids, Mich.—F. L. Vance, "the wild rice king" of the Poplep river country, has commenced the manufacture of rice flour from the products of the shallow lakes of northern Minnesota.
For years Mr. Vance has made a business of harvesting wild rice and has built up a market. He be manufactured at the Anderson grist mill at La Prairie, especial machinery for the purpose being installed.
Before being ground the rice must go through a roasting or drying process, and this is done near where the grain is harvested. A machine devised and built for this purpose by Mr. Vance is capable of roasting 1,200 pounds in six minutes. As far as known, this is the first time an artifact of wild rice made to manufacture flour from wild rice. The raw material is plentiful, and prepared only cost will be the gathering and grinding, no seeding or soil preparation being necessary.
PELLAGRA IN ENGLAND
Fifty Cases Studied Confirm Theory It is Not Due to Maize.
London — Fifty cases of pellagran whose existence only became known to any considerable section of the British public as a result of the disclosures at the recent international medical congress have been found in England and personally investigated by Professor Sambon, who has gone to the United States to study the disease there.
Professor Sambon's doubts as to the maize origin of pellagran appear to be confirmed, according to the British Medical Journal, by the fact that the disease has declared itself in the British isles, where maize is sparingly consumed.
Cummins Bill Would Jail Men Guilty
\ of Lamar's Trick.
Washington.—With a view to stopping the practice of impersonating members of congress and other public officials, which practice was brought to the attention of the senate lobby investigating committee by the confession of David Lamar, Senator Cummins of Iowa, member of the committee, has introduced in the senate a bill whose object is to deal with persons guilty of misrepresentation.
The Cummins bill would make practically impossible the impersonation of members of congress, such as that in which Lamar engaged, using the names
© 1913, by American Press Association.
or representatives trainer and guardian for the purpose of driving Judge Robert L. Lovett and other financiers into employing Edward Lauterbach as their counsel. Despite the confessed deceptive and fraudulent nature of the plot engineered by Lamar, there is no law to reach it. Under the Cummins bill impersonation over the phone or otherwise by any person of a member of congress or other public official will be made a felony, punishable by imprisonment of from three to five years a maximum fine of $10,000, or both fine and imprisonment. Similarly, impersonation over the phone or any one conversing from one state to another will be made a felony.
BONDS TO MAKE THIS A HAPPY MARRIAGE
Canton, O.—An ironclad agreement, backed by bonds pledging a $700 farm and $700 in cash put up by their respective fathers, promised to insure the wedded bliss of Miss Elizabeth Boldi, seventeen years, and Casian Bartl, Jr. twenty, of Youngstown.
The young people themselves have no doubt in their minds that they will get along together. They have sworn eternal love to each other and declare that the agreement and the bonds are entirely superfluous. But the parents, noting the increase of divorce and the fact that there are many pitfalls for the feet of unwary married young people, decided to do all they could in a legal way to make the marriage knot so tight that it can never be united.
By the terms of the agreement Bribery father promises that his son will never gamble, drink, play or dance with any young woman other than his wife. The agreement pledges $700 farm. The bride's father has deposited a cash bond of $700 with a bank that his daughter will make a model wife, will not gossip, run around with other men and will cook to the husband's satisfaction.
BEER MAKES MAN BARK.
Victim of His Own Imagination, Fearing Attack of Rabies.
Ann Arbor, Mich.-George McGowan, formerly of Dansville, N. Y., who suffered with rabies last March, but, according to a newspaper clipping found in a pocket, was cured at Albany, drank a glass of beer and later awoke the neighborhood in the vicinity of his room by barking and yelping.
Investigating, the citizens found McGowan on all fours, alternately biting at the table leg and snapping at any one who came his way.
A physician and three policemen overpowered the man and took him to a hospital. Specialists in rabies declare the man was not one of hydrophobia, but his victim of his own imagination. They ascribed the attack to the effect of the beer.
McGowan is now comfortable and will recover.
Never Blow in a Mule's Ear.
Stoneham, Colo.-Barney Benson had heard that the way to cure a nule of balking was to blow in its ear. He tried the remedy and is now at a hospital in Sterling with both jaws broken and several teeth missing. The mule did not take kindly to the "gentle zephyr" playing in its ear and as a rebuked landed both heels on Benson's jaw.
He Shoots a Bear Cub Caught in a Trap.
Sacramento, Cal.-J. F. Misplay, a deputy in Superintendent George Radcliff's office in the Capitol building, returned from his vacation with a tale of how he slaughtered a magnificent big brown bear. Misplay was getting along fine with his story until one of his party told a friend how the superintendent's deputy had come across a ninety pound cub a farmer had tamed to pull logs in the woods and shot him while the bear was tied to a tree.
Misplay declares that he trapped the bear and that he had a perfect right to be the cub's brains out while the animal was trapped in the trap.
As proof of his prowess in the wilds Misplay had some cub meat shipped to his friends. The "kill" was made about fifteen miles north of Cisko.
CLAIMS CHICAGO ESTATE.
Baltimore Man Believes He Is Son of Publisher Lee.
Baltimore—Believing that he is a son of the late William H. Lee, a Chicago publisher, who died last summer, leaving a $200,000 estate. Clarence O. Lee of this city has placed his claims to a share of the property in the hands of lawyers.
Lee said his father left Baltimore about twenty-five years ago, and nothing was ever learned of his whereabouts. Two other sons are said to live in Baltimore.
Romantic incidents in the early life of William H. Lee, which were published after his death, coincide with the Baltimore claimant's recollections of his father and led to his belief in the relationship.
HE SAYS HE'S NOT DEAD.
Civil War Veteran Denies He Was Killed at Fair Oaks.
Lansing, Mich.—One of the interesting figures in the ranks of the G. A. R. is John Broad of Lansing. According to the records, Mr. Broad did not participate in the war, but he at all. The war records say he dead. He has been trying for fifty years to convince the officials at Washington that he is alive and he has not succeeded yet. John Broad, killed at the battle of Fair Oaks, Va.," say the records, and, so far as the department is aware, there is to it. "I'm dead yet, official records." "but the boys don't mind associating with a ghost, so I guess it's all right."
OPERATION CURES
CRAZED MURDERER
Trenton, N. J.-Through a successful operation in the New Jersey State prison here James Sikelya, a convicted murderer, who was declared insane, has been restored to full possession of his senses.
Sikelya killed a countryman during a fight with other Hungarians in a barroom at Belvidere. N. J., on Oct. 11, 1911. He received an injury to his skull and soon after became deranged. He was thought to be dying about the prison authorities and was about to receive the last rites of the Catholic Church when the physicians decided to operate. They removed a section of bone from the base of Sikelya's skull, which had been pressing upon his brain, and he is reported to be in full control of his senses.
Dr. Samuel Sica, one of the physicians who assisted at the operation, said:
"Sikelya is now calm and peaceable. All his old violence has left him. The relief brought about by the removal of the piece of bone that was pressing on his brain has given the man a new outlook on life. He is now anxious and eager for employment in the prison shops and for the crime he committs. A normal man's abhorrence. The injury, as I understand, came about in the fight which he committed to prison for murder, but it would seem to me that the operation has changed the man entirely, making him a better man than he was before he received the injury."
CAUSE OF FOREST FIRES.
Lightning to Blame—Educational Campaign Has Changed Conditions.
Washington.—Lightning has caused most of the fires this year in national forests, according to reports to the forest service. In former years spark showering locomotives, campers and brush burners were the chief causes of fires. The change is attributed to the educational campaign conducted among users of the forests, as well as to the improvement of the fire patrol system.
Dew and windy conditions in southern Arizona and New Mexico make fire risk there imminent.
Deaf and Dumb Congress.
Glent. Belgium.—The first international congress of the deaf and dumb recently opened here. All proceedings are conducted in the sign language. The principal object of the congress is the organization of an international union to promote the welfare and improve the condition of indigent deaf and dumb persons.
$2.40 PER YEAR.
HOW HER VISIT IS REGARDED
Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, American Suffragist, Does Not Think That English Leader Should Be Entertained, as Few Courtesies Were Shown Americans While Abroad.
New York. - Will Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst be allowed by the immigration authorities to land in this country?
Most of the suffragette leaders say they honor Mrs. Pankhurst as a woman, but that they don't approve of her methods. Her visit is going to put them in an awkward position. If they don't pay any attention to her they will be accused of a slight to a woman who has spent her life working "the cause." If they do show her attention their action may be interpreted as militant methods.
This is the choice. Is it which Mrs. Pankhurst's visit has forced upon the American women, and a good many of them are resenting it. The Woman's Political union has taken the bull by the horns and cabled to the prospective visitor an invitation to a public dinner. The invitation has been accepted. But never was hospitality preceded and accompanied by so much hostility.
A solution is to follow Mrs. Pankhurst and leave her alone. Neither she nor organization ever gave a dinner to a American suffragrist in England. She has had plenty of opportunities too.
MRS. EMMELINE PANKHURST.
But the Pankhurst society, alone among the English organizations, has never extended a single courtesy to an American leader, not even to Mrs. Catt, the international president.
"Why all this talk of what we shall or shall not do for Mrs. Pankhurst?" said Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, president of the National society. "Why not do just as Mrs. Pankhurst does when we visit England? I have been there repeatedly, Mrs. Catt has been there, other presidents of our organizations have been there. But I have yet to know of a luncheon or a dinner or a reception being given by Mrs. Pankhurst or her society for any of us. "What Mrs. Pankhurst first visited this country, we have entertained her to the best of our ability. National society gave a reception for her, and there were dinners and luncheons flowers and carriages for her wherever she went. Since then we, for our part, have been in her country, but the Women's Social and Political union has never extended any of these courses to us. Wouldn't the natural inference be that Mrs. Pankhurst had signified her own desires and that we should be doing the simple and sensible thing if we did not extend to her the courtesies she forbore to extend to us?
"It is true that, as I was reminded by some one the other day, I have spoken and lectured many times in England. But I never received one pen for it. Not that, but I never had a carriage furnished me to the hall. I hired my own. If I marched in one of their parades I bought my own sash. And what was true of me in these circumstances was true of other American women.
"I honor Mrs. Pankhurst as a woman, while I disapprove of her methods. I regret for two reasons that she is coming to this country now—first, because at this time we need to focus all our own attention and all the public attention on our own work. Her coming will distract the attention from our issues and our methods.
"In the second place, she is coming here to raise money for her work in England. Thousands of people will pay to see and hear her, and that money will go abroad with her. I am sorry, because this is a critical time with us, and we need money."
J. B.
DR. W. E. EURGHARDT DU EOIS.
DR. W. E. EURGHARDT DU EOIS.
Author of "A Litany of Atlanta," Published Originally in the New York Independent and Reprinted in The Appeal by Permission.
ANNIVERSARY OF ATLANTA'S
SHAME.
Seven years have passed since the bloody massacre of innocent Afro-Americans at Atlanta, Georgia, and we reprint Du Bois' famous "A Litation of Atlanta" that the race may not forget the awful days when Colored men, women and children were shot down like dogs because of their race. Not a single person who was killed had been guilty of any crime whatever. The massacre was caused by the incendiary editorials of the Atlanta News and Journal, owned by Hoke Smith, since Governor of Georgia and now United States senator from that state.
In his gubernatorial canvass Smith also made incendiary speeches inciting the Caucasians against Afro-Americans and demanding that the race be disfranchised. This has since been done by legislative enactment.
Senator Hoke Smith is said to be the author of the jim crow policy of the present administration and he has the active support of Vardaman, Hefflin, Roddenbery and nearly every Southerner in Congress. Every Afro-American parent ought to bring "A Litany of Atlanta" to the attention of his children. Let them commit it to memory—it is a gem of perfect English. Let it burn into the souls of your children so that they may know that in its efforts to degrade the Colored race and resuce it to a condition not far removed from slavery, the South does not hesitate to murder innocent men, women and children.
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.
---
Silent God, Thou whose voice afar in mist and mystery hath left our ears an-hungered in these fearful days—
Hear us, good Lord!
Listen to us, Thy children: our faces dark with doubt, are made a mockery in Thy sanctuary. With uplifted hands we front Thy heaven. O God, crying:
We are not better than our fellows, Lord, we are but weak and human men. When our devils do deviltry, curse Thou the doer and the deed: curse them as we curse them, do to them all and more than ever they have done to innocence and weakness, to womanhood and home.
And yet whose is the deeper guilt? Who made these devils? Who nursed them in crime and fed them on injustice? Who ravished and debauched their mothers and their grandmothers? Who bought and sold their crime, and waxed fat and rich on public injustice?
Is this Thy justice, O Father, that guile be easier than innocence, and the innocent crucified for the guilt of the untouched guilty?
Wherefore do we pray? Is not the God of the fathers dead? Have not seers seen in Heaven's halls Thine hearsed and lifeless form stark amidst the black and rolling smoke of sin, where all along bow bitter forms of endless dead?
Thou art not dead, but flown afar, up hills of endless light, thru blazing corridors of suns, where worlds do swing of good and gentle men, of women strong and free—far from the cozenage, black hypocrisy and chaste prostitution of this shameful speck of dust!
HAVE YOU READ
THE APPEAL?
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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1913
A Litany of Atlanta
We beseech Thee to hear us, good Lord!
Have mercy upon us, miserable sinners!
Thou knowest, good God!
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 lunch 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.
The information has reached THE APPEAL to the effect that the Indian, Gabe Parker, who has been named as Register of the Treasury at Washington, D. C., has proved to be incompetent and in view of the fact that the Hon. James C. Napier is still on the job it seems that there may be some truth in the statement.
de
my
end
and
more
good
Is?
sed
right
ce,
A city la-
twin Murder r
and cry of dea-
stars when chu-
sate the greed
Bend
In the pa-
our ears and h
heads and leer
was mockery,
Turn
Behold th
black man wh
paid him. Th
sin? Nay, but
whom he had
man lieth m
children, to po
d?
arm
ow
ht,
and
back
Doth not
long shall the
pound in our
crazed brutes
and burn it in
Forgi
Bewilde
a mobbed and
of Thy Throat
by the bones
the very bloot
the Plain of
now debased a hight hatred, and wonder fourth its way out on such savagery communities of in the South for Colored persons with a tendency to limit advantages to elementary and industrial lines, even unequal of federal school appropriations to Southern states. Fourth—Race and Color Segregation By Or Within the Federal Government a policy which never approached the official stage until the institution now existing as to the public lavatories and working in the department buildings at Washington under the Secret Treasury and the Postmaster General, constituting the intro-caste into the national government, a humiliation of one-tie people, a violation of the principles of Civil Service Reform.
Because of race or color—r horrible savage practice almost universally prevalent in the Southern states in violate spirit and letter of the federal law, taking away a citizen's or in a Republic, not, as claimed, by a voting test, but the app severe tests: one the insuperable test for Colored citizens and ancestry and no test for white citizens.
Sixth—The Denial of Right by Jury and Substitution of law.
fruit—dread results of all before mentioned color discrimin denial of the suffrage.
Such conditions demand the protest and the practical oppositic patriotic citizen of this Republic, of Colored citizens for the press their rights, their liberties, their families, and very lives; of other for the preservation of our Republic form of government.
We call upon all Colored citizens to resist color oppression by voting and every lawful means within their power.
Rev. Byron Gunner, N. Y.; Dr. J. L. Johnson, Ohio; W. Monroe Mass.; Mrs. A. Truitt, Penn.; Joseph Dunn, R. I.; N. N. Murray R. C. Ransom, N. Y.
that some day will have to de- this disregard and decency if illing or help
the fact that the
is still on the
e may be some
---
ROM lust of power and lust of gold,
Great God deliver us!
From the leagued lying of despot and of brute,
Great God deliver us!
A city lay in travail, God our Lord, and from her loins sprang twin Murder and Black Hate. Red was the midnight; clang, crack and cry of death and fury filled the air and trembled underneath the stars when church spires pointed silently to Thee. And all this was to sate the greed of greedy men who hide behind the veil of vengeance!
Bend us Thine ear, O Lord!
In the pale, still morning we looked upon the deed. We stopped our ears and held our leaping hands, but they—did they not wag their heads and leer and cry with bloody jaws: Cease from Crime! The word was mockery, for thus they train a hundred crimes while we do cure one.
Turn again our captivity, O Lord!
Behold this maimed and broken thing; dear God it was an humble black man who toiled and sweat to save a bit from the pittance paid him. They told him: Work and Rise. He worked. Did this man sin? Nay, but some one told how some one said another did—one whom he had never seen nor known. Yet for that man's crime this man lieth, maimed and murdered, his wife naked to shame, his children, to poverty and evil.
A city lay in travail, God our Lord, and from her loins sprang twin Murder and Black Hate. Red was the midnight; clang, crack and cry of death and fury filled the air and trembled underneath the stars when church spires pointed silently to Thee. And all this was to sate the greed of greedy men who hide behind the veil of vengeance!
In the pale, still morning we looked upon the deed. We stopped our ears and held our leaping hands, but they—did they not wag their heads and leer and cry with bloody jaws: Cease from Crime! The word was mockery, for thus they train a hundred crimes while we do cure one.
Turn again our captivity, O Lord!
Behold this maimed and broken thing; dear God it was an humble black man who toiled and sweat to save a bit from the pittance paid him. They told him: Work and Rise. He worked. Did this man sin? Nay, but some one told how some one said another did—one whom he had never seen nor known. Yet for that man's crime this man lieth maimed and murdered, his wife naked to shame, his children, to poverty and evil.
Hear us, O heavenly Father!
Doth not this justice of hell stink in Thy nostrils, O God? How long shall the mounting flood of innocent blood roar in Thine ears and pound in our hearts for vengeance? Pile the pale frenzy of blood-crazed brutes who do such deeds high on Thine altar, Jehovah Jireh, and burn it in hell forever and forever!
Forgive us, good Lord; we know not what we say!
Bewildered we are, and passion-toot, mad with the madness of a mobbed and mocked and murdered people; straining at the armposts of Thy Throne, we raise our shackled hands and charge Thee, God, by the bones of our stolen fathers, by the tears of our dead mothers, by the very blood of Thy crucified Christ: What meaneth this? Tell us the Plan; give us the Sign!
Doth not this justice of hell stink in Thy nostils, O God? How long shall the mounting flood of innocent blood roar in Thine ears and pound in our hearts for vengeance? Pile the pale frenzy of blood-crazed brutes who do such deeds high on Thine altar, Jehovah Jireh, and burn it in hell forever and forever!
Forgive us, good Lord; we know not what we say!
Bewildered we are, and passion-tost, mad with the madness of a mobbed and mocked and murdered people; straining at the armposts of Thy Throne, we raise our shackled hands and charge Thee, God, by the bones of our stolen fathers, by the tears of our dead mothers, by the very blood of Thy crucified Christ: What meaneth this? Tell us the Plan; give us the Sign!
---
THE ADDRESS TO THE COUNTRY
After a national campaign in which independent Colored voters broke away from traditional party solidarity against the national Democratic party under the lead of this League for the expressed purpose of trying the experiment of bringing about a better racial feeling between the Colored American and the Democratic South, the National Independent League in the 6th Annual Meeting assembled, has no apologies to offer for the course advised, despite disappointment at the course so far pursued under cabinet officers and in one respect by the President, a Democrat whose election the Colored voters dissolved so numerously, more so than ever for a Democrat before. The officers of this League and other leaders were not only given assurances of no color discrimination, but a National Democratic Committee, which supported four headquarters to send out librarians to the Colored voters asking their vote on the assurance of justice and equal rights but Gov. Wilson, the candidate, by word and open letter, declared unequivocally for a course based upon the letter and spirit of the federal constitution, on Christianity, and "justice executed with liberality."
Cutting down almost to zero the holding of federal office by Colored citizens under presidential appointment is not consistent with these promises.
The present policy of color segregation in toilers and working positions in the Treasury and the Postoffice Department buildings at Washington is such an insult, humiliation, public degradation, denial of justice, of freedom and the right to rise by merit, that its continuance would be not only a menace to our Republic, but an act of perfidy by the National Democratic party whose acting committee head was none other than the present Secretary of the Treasury; and of personal dishonor by the present President of the United States.
We cannot believe that this course will be persisted in by the cabinet officers or long permitted by this Christian President.
We appeal to the National Democratic party to be true to the name "democracy," to be a national not a sectional party, one of equal rights, not one dominated by sectional or racial prejudice. We appeal to President Wilson to be the president of all the people, not of a part of the people.
The Democratic party is now on trial, as to whether its leaders in the North are to make good on their past claims that the national party was not a mere Southern race-prejudice party, whether its best-Southern leaders can make good on their prophecies that support by Colored voters in the North would lead to more friendly racial relations. The question whether Colored men can ever safely vote the National Democratic ticket is now in the hands of a Democratic administration, which has complete control of the federal government. On the answer depends the future of the party as one destined to retain power.
We call to the attention of the people of the United States and protest against.
First—Complete denial of Civil Rights
for American citizens because of race and color in the Southern states, and a partial and growing denial, in Northern states.
Second—Segregation of Citizens for Race and Color in all public facilities and places of accommodation and resort in these Southern states, including even libraries, street cars, and residences, degrading system of Jim-Crowism.
Third—Unequal and Inadequate School Provisions
in the South for Colored persons with a tendency to limit educational advantages to elementary and industrial fines, even unequal application of federal school appropriations to Southern states.
Fourth—Race and Color Segregation By Or Within the Federal Government, a policy which never approached the official stage until this administration now existing as to the public lavatories and working positions in the department buildings at Washington under the Secretary of the Treasury and the Postmaster General, constituting the introduction of caste into the national government, a humiliation of one-tenth of the people, a violation of the principles of Civil Service Reform.
Fifth—Disfranchisement for Race or Color,
Because of race or color—r horrible savage practice, the full almost universally prevalent in the Southern states in violation of the spirit and letter of the federal law, taking away a citizen's only defense in a Republic, not, as claimed, by a voting test, but the application of severe tests; one the insuperable test for Colored citizens and based on ancestry and no test for white citizens.
Sixth—The Denial of the Right of Trial by Jury and Substitution of Lynching law,
fruit—dread results of all before mentioned color discrimination and denial of the suffrage.
Such conditions demand the protest and the practical opposition of every patriotic citizen of this Republic, of Colored citizens for the preservation of their rights, their liberties, their families, and very lives; of other citizens for the preservation of our Republic form of government.
We call upon all Colored citizens to resist color oppression by agitation, voting and every lawful means within their power.
Rev. Byron Gunner, N. Y.; Dr. J. L. Johnson, Ohio; W. Monroe Trotter, Mass.; Mrs. A. Truitt, Penn.; Joseph Dunn, R. I.; N. N. Murray, Ill.; Rev. R. C. Ransom, N. Y.
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.
Keep not thou silence, O God!
[Picture of a man in a suit with a mustache].
REV. A. J. CAREY, A. M., D. D., PH. D.
The Eloquent Pastor of the Institutional A. M. E. Church, Ch
Represented the Afro-American Race at the Perry Centennn
Who Had the Manhood to Protest against the Wrongn
of the Race and Demand a Square Deal.
A. M. E. Church, Chicago W
t the Perry Centennial and
Against the Wrongs
a Square Deal.
The Eloquent Pastor of the Institutional A. M. E. Church, Chicago Who Represented the Afro-American Race at the Perry Centennial and Who Had the Manhood to Protest Against the Wrongs of the Race and Demand a Square Deal.
Chicago, Ill., September 18.
The Centennial of the Battle of Lake Erie was celebrated September 10, about thirty miles from Sandusky, Ohio, on the spot where one hundred years ago, Commodore Perry won his famous victory. Ex-President Taft was the principal speaker.
The Centennial of the Battle of Lake Erie was celebrated Sept. about thirty miles from Sandusky, Ohio, on the spot where our years ago, Commodore Perry won his famous victory. Ex-President was the principal speaker.
Rev. A. J. Carey, A. M., D. D., Ph. D., pastor of the Institution of this city had the honor of representing the Afro-American men's celebration.
It is possible that it may not be generally known that 109 seamen who fought with Perry were colored men. In his speech, brought out this fact and also called attention to the bravery of the race in all the wars for the protection and preservation of life and said the colored man had won the right to square deal. Strong appeal to the American people to turn the most effective American life upon injustice and unrighteousness and truly said enemies of our country must be conquered or they will conquer Dr. Carey's speech is a message to the American people from body of intelligent Afro-American citizens who are not satisfied with conditions and believes in protesting against wrong. Pleading chance, he said: "We ask nothing more than a fair chance and satisfied with nothing less."
Caucasians who were present say that Dr. Carey's speech was most effective delivered at the celebration. He was enthusiastically and was frequently interrupted by deafening applause. That even an appreciate true manhood when exhibited by an Afro-American in the Governor McCreary of Kentucky met Dr. Carey in the court of the "The Breakers" the next day after the exercises, he hand and said, "While I do not agree with everything you I admire the manhood displayed in your utterances."
GEMS FROM DR. CAREY'S SPEECH AT THE PERRY CENE
American history actually teems with deeds of heroism and dauntless courage and unwavering loyalty on the part of the "Little in the Nation.
Today we speak of Peace, of Universal Peace. How can there be Peace without Universal Justice?
Today the American people are in mortal conflict with enemies potent, far more dreadful than British fleet or armed cruisers, enemies themselves be conquered or they will conquer us. Is the "Brit really big enough for the task, for the responsibility, for the event that is his?
As a true American, one who loves his country and believes in its greatness and goodness, the "Little Brother" stands here, plead for a fair chance. We ask nothing more—we will be safe nothing less.
We have done and are still woing our part. We have ever to the flag—no black anarchist has ever torn the starry bar. But we feel that we have not had a square deal. In many states disfranchised because of our race and jim crow laws disgrave books of every southern state.
Efficient and trustworthy Afro-American government employeesington have recently been set apart from their fellows, with whom worked for many years, as if they were lepers. The "Little Brother" that such segregation is unnecessary, unfair, unjust, unAmerican Christian.
And, now, Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen of the Commission, in behalf of the One Hundred and Nine dauntless who fought Perry, in behalf of the 10,000,000 Afro-Americans who love and flag, for this opportunity of speaking for them today, I plead with as celebrate, we shall also determine that the most effective for American life shall be turned upon injustice and unrighteousness, in every form of discrimination, disfranchisement, segregation violence and jim crowism, to the end that the day will no longer white men and colored men native and foreign born, Southern North, shall look upon the shattered fleet of all those enemies of the Republic and may with truth exclaim, "We have met the enemy are ours."
IT no longer blind, Lord God, deaf to our prayer and durdour suffering. Surely Thou too art not white, O Lord pale, bloodless, heartless thing?
Ah! Christ of all the Pitites!
Forgive the thought! Forgive these wild, blasphemous wives. Thou art still the God of our black fathers, and in Thy soul's so some soft darkenings of the evening, some shadowings of the night.
But whisper—speak—call, great God, for Thy silence is terror to our hearts! The way, O God, show us the way and point the path.
Whither? North is greed and South is blood; within coward, and without, the liar. Whither? To death?
Amen! Welcome dark sleep!
Whither? To life? But not this life, dear God, not this. the cup pass from us, tempt us not beyond our strength, for that clamoring and clawing within, to whose voice we would not yet sudder lest we must, and it is red, Ah! God! It is a red awful shape.
Selah!
He was celebrated September 11th on the spot where one hundred thousand victory. Ex-President Taft, of the Institutional Church of the Afro-American race at the University known that 109 of the 434 men. In his speech, Dr. Carey motion to the bravery and heroism of the men and truly said that they for they will conquer us. American people from the great cities are not satisfied with present mist wrong. Pleading for a fair and a fair chance and will be carey's speech was easily the He was enthusiastically received as a applause: That even Southern men Afro-American was shown Dr. Carey in the crowded lobbies after the exercises, he grasped with everything you have saidferences."
THE PERRY CENTENNIAL SPEEDs of heroism and valor, or the part of the "Little Brother" face. How can there be University conflict with enemies far more than armed cruisers, enemies which conquer us. Is the "Big Brother" responsibility, for the opportunity country and believes in this country Brother" stands here today more—we will be satisfied with art. We have ever been loved torn the starry banner down ideal. In many states we are crow laws disgrace the status of government employees in Washington, our fellows, with whom they have. The "Little Brother" feeble, unjust, unAmerican and unfulfilled the Commission,感谢 you kindness who thanked you Americans who love and honor them today. I plead with you the most effective forces of our and unrighteousness as exhancement, segregation, more the day will no the far distance all foreign born, South as well all those enemies of this have met the enemy and the to our prayer and dumb to art not white, O Lord, a wild, blasphemous words. and in Thy soul's soul sit shadowings of the velvet for Thy silence is white now the way and point us death is blood; within, the To death?
e, dear God, not this. Let your strength, for there is voice we would not listen, ah! God! It is a red and
Rev. A. J. Carey, A. M., D. D., Ph. D., pastor of the Institutional Church of this city had the honor of representing the Afro-American race at the celebration.
It is possible that it may not be generally known that 109 of the 430 seamen who fought with Perry were colored men. In his speech, Dr. Carey brought out this fact and also called attention to the bravery and heroism of the race in all the wars for the protection and preservation of our country and said the colored man had won the right to a square deal. He made a strong appeal to the American people to turn the most effective forces of American life upon injustice and unrighteousness and truly said that these enemies of our country must be conquered or they will conquer us.
Dr. Carey's speech is a message to the American people from the great body of intelligent Afro-American citizens who are not satisfied with present conditions and believes in protesting against wrong. Pleading for a fair chance, he said: "We ask nothing more than a fair chance and will be satisfied with nothing less."
Caucasians who were present say that Dr. Carey's speech was easily the most effective delivered at the celebration. He was enthusiastically received and was frequently interrupted by deafening applause: That even Southerners appreciate true manhood when exhibited by an Afro-American was shown in the Breedery of Kentucky met Dr. Carey in the crowded lobby of the hotel, "The Breedery" the next day after the exercises, he grasped his hand and said, "While I do not agree with everything you have said, I admire the manhood displayed in your utterances."
GEMS FROM DR. CAREY'S SPEECH AT THE PERRY CENTENNIAL.
American history actually teems with deeds of heroism and valor, of dauntless courage and unwavering loyalty on the part of the "Little Brother" in the Nation.
Today we speak of Peace, of Universal Peace. How can there be Universal Peace without Universal Justice?
Today the American people are in mortal conflict with enemies far more potent, far more dreadful than British fleet or armed cruisers, enemies which must themselves be conquered or they will conquer us. Is the "Big Brother" really big enough for the task, for the responsibility, for the opportunity that is his?
As a true American, one who loves his country and believes in this country's greatness and goodness, the "Little Brother" stands here today to plead for a fair chance. We ask nothing more—we will be satisfied with nothing less.
We have done and are still wooing our part. We have ever been loyal to the flag—no black anarchist has ever torn the starry banner down. But we feel that we have not had a square deal. In many states we are disfranchised because of our race and jim crow laws disgrace the statute books of every southern state.
Efficient and trustworthy Afro-American government employees in Washington have recently been set apart from their fellows, with whom they have worked for many years, as if they were lepers. The "Little Brother" feels that such segregation is unnecessary, unfair, unjust, unAmerican and unChristian.
And, now, Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen of the Commission, thanking you in behalf of the One Hundred and Nine dauntless heroes who fought with Perry, in behalf of the 10,000,000 Afro-Americans who love and honor the flag, for this opportunity of speaking for them today, I plead with you that as celebrate, we shall also determine that the most effective forces of our American life shall be turned upon injustice and unrighteousness as exhibited in every form of discrimination, disfranchisement, segregation, mob violence and jim crowism, to the end that the day will no the far distant when white men and colored men, native and foreign born, South as well as North, shall look upon the shattered fleet of all those enemies of this great Republic and may with truth exclaim, 'We have met the enemy and they are ours.'
---
IT no longer blind, Lord God, deaf to our prayer and dumb to our dumb suffering. Surely Thou too art not white, O Lord, a pale, bloodless, heartless thing?
Ah! Christ of all the Pitites!
Forgive the thought! Forgive these wild, blasphemous words. Thou art still the God of our black fathers, and in Thy soul's soul sit some soft darkenings of the evening, some shadowings of the velvet night.
But whisper—speak—call, great God, for Thy silence is white terror to our hearts! The way, O God, show us the way and point us the path.
Whither? North is greed and South is blood; within, the coward, and without, the liar. Whither? To death?
Amen! Welcome dark sleep!
Whither? To life? But not this life, dear God, not this. Let the cup pass from us, tempt us not beyond our strength, for there is that clamoring and clawing within, to whose voice we would not listen, yet shudder lest we must, and it is red, Ah! God! It is a red and awful shape.
In yonder East trembles a star.
Vengeance is mink ; I will repay, saith the Lord I
Lord, we have done these pleading, wavering words,
We besech Thee to hear us, good Lord!
to the sobbing of women
W. E. BURGHARDT DU
We bow our heads and hearken soft to the sobbing of women and little children.
Atlanta, in the Day of Death, 1906. W. E. BURGH
Special Correspondence THE APPEAL
* * . *
* * *
* * *
* * *
Thy will, O Lord, be done!
Kyrie Eileson!
Our voices sink in silence and in night. Hear us, good Lord!
In silence, O Silent God,
Sahab
| — —
aaa
seria
SAINT PAUL
‘A WEEK'S RECORD IN MINNESO.
TA'S CAPITAL
The “Saintly City” and 1 rintly city
Folks—Neway Items of Social, Re-
Nigious, Political and General Mat-
ters Among the People.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1913.
NEAT
TUESDAY
SEPTEMBER 30
50TH ANNIVERSARY
CELEBRATION OF EMANCIPATION
AT ARCANUM HALL, ST. PAUL,
CORNER FOURTH AND ST. PETER
Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Hubbard left
‘Thursday for Montana.
Mr. and Mrs. Noble Pryor have
moved to 582 Rondo street.
Mr. and “Mrs, Arthur C. Lowe have
moved to 246 Cathedral Place.
Mrs. ‘Thomas Neal left Wednesday
for a visit with her husband at Dalton,
Minn,
‘The school board wants $1,119,082
for its estimated expenses for next
year.
Dr. F. B. Cooper, the dentist, left
‘Thursday for Portland, Ore., for the
Expose of locating.
PESTO HEE O EEE EOS
W. T. FRANCIS
WHO FOR A NUMBER OF
YEARS WAS IN THE EMPLOY
OF THE LEGAL DEPART-
MENT OF THE NORTHERN
PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY,
HAS OPENED OFFICES FOR
THE GENERAL PRACTICE OF
THE LAW AT 8 AND 89
UNION BLOCK, ST. PAUL,
Advertisement.
PREOTS SOE ETO
Dr. Valdo Turner left yesterday for
a little hunting trip near Hinckley,
Minn. He will return Monday.
It you wish to know how the Fit
tieth Anniversary of Emancipation is
getting along, ask the dressmakers.
Mrs, Ella E. Covington has moved
her Ladies’ Bath Rooms from Fourth
and Wabasha to 42 W. 4th street, near
St. Peter. '
IF YOU WANT A PICTURE OF
YOUR SELF OR YOUR HOUSE IN
THE SOUVENIR EDITION, PHONE
DALE 2065.
FOR SALE—A nice Favorite heat-
ing stove. A snap if taken at once.
Inquire at 788 St. Anthony ave—Ad-
vertisement. |
Dr. Leroy French, dentist, of Chi-
cago, Is in the city for the purpose of
locating. He is stopping with Mr. and
Mrs. C. L. Smith,
Little Miss Lea May Minor who was
in Chicago came home all by her
lonely last Wednesday evening. Quite
a trip for one of her age.
SPIRELLA CORSET, Cora B. An-
detson corsetier. Any lady wishing
to be properly corsetted call or ad-
dress 365 Aurora Ave. Tel. N. W.
Dale 1345,—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.
Res, 678 St. Anthony, Tel. Dale 2947
T. H. LYLES,
Funeral Directors and Embalmers
180" W. Fourth ‘St
Calle Answered Bay or Night ir
‘Fein elles
Active Pall Bearers Furnahed |
Devitt,
Lady Assistant When Necessary, :
Both Phones 808. 6b. Paul, Minn |
Mrs. Louise Jackson Wright and two
children who have been in Chicago
and White Water, Wis., for the past
two months, have returned to the city
after having a very pleasant trip.
Mr. Orrington C. Hall will again
take a position as clerk in the office
of County Auditor George 9. 1e18 pn
Wednesday, Oct. 1. Congratulations
for both the auditor and Hall are in
order.
It your wife is alling buy her a GOS-
SARD CORSHT and she will be in
better SHAPH than ever before. For
sale by Mrs. J. B, Cloak, 292 St. Al-
dans street. N. W. Phone, Dale 2076.
Advertisement,
Rev. W. D. Carter of Seattle was
the guest of THE APPEAL at dinner
at the Busy Bee Cafe last ‘Thursday.
Rey. Carter has fully recovered from
his recent illness and now looks the
picture of health,
FOR RENT—Six room modern flat,
fully furnished, with the privilege of
retaining one Toomer already there.
Must be taken by October 1. Apply
to Madam Hart, the milliner, 426 Uni-
versity avenue—Advertisement.
VOCAL AND PIANO LESSONS
given by Mrs. Addie Crawford-Minor
at her residence 251 Rondo street,
A REMINDER.
ime ml
Paha oh ea ree eee it
i Mein i
| a
at
ie aS ‘aa |
am ma
ri eer or
222 EP
THE STATE SAVINGS BANK.
93 East Fourth Street.
Invites the saving accounts of fru-
gal wage-earners, it is well fitted to
take care of them.
Interest rate
4%
re akc
DEPOSITS OVER $5,000,000.00,
Shorlen P, Noyes, Louls Betz,
President, ‘Treasurer.
man
. _ eA.
45 ee POE heh Se See ee
only. Hours for instruction arranged
to suit patrons. ‘Terms reasonable.
Tel. Dale 1597—Advertisement.
The only fear in the minds of the
management of the Fiftieth Anniver:
sary of Bmanclpation at Areanum
Hall, next Tuesday evening is. that
the crowd will exceed the capacity of
the hall. Everybody who is somebody
It seems ts going.
‘The omly fear in the minds of the
management of the Fiftieth Anniver.
sary of Einaneipation at Arcanum
Hail, next ‘Tuesday evening Is. that
the crowd will exceed the capacity of
the hall. Everybody who fs some-
body it seems is going.
Mr. J. W. Strong loft Jast Tuesday
for Chicago to attend the wedding of
Mr. Jackson Sparks of this ety and
Mrs. Bettie Barnett of Chicago. The
trio arrived in the clty Wednesday.
‘The newly weds are stopping with Mr.
Chas. Jackson on Rondo street.
Watch and wait for the BIG BALL
to be given by Queen of Sheba Chap-
ter No. 70 Order of the Eastern Star
at Tschida ‘Hall’ cor. Lafond and
Arundel streets ‘Thursday evening
October 16th. Music by McCullough
orchester. Admission 25 cts—Adver-
Usement.
TOPO OHO SESEEHES
THE PEOPLE WHO WISH TO
TRIP THE LIGHT FANTASTIC, ARE
THE VERY ONES WHO SHOULD
GET TO THE EMANCIPATION
CELEBRATION AT ARCANUM
HALL EARLY NEXT TUESDAY, SO
THAT THERE WILL BE A SUFFI-
CIENT NUMBER PRESENT TO
BEGIN THE EXERCISES EARLY.
EVERY MOMENT OF DELAY
TAKES OFF FROM THE TIME ron
DANCING. REMEMBER THAT.
COME EARLY AND THE DANCING
WILL BEGIN EARLIER.
PESOS OSE E EES
The place to have your shoe re-
pairing done in the best possible way
at the lowest possible ‘price is” at
JARVIS', 104106 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 elty.-Advertisement.
Rev. and Mrs. W. D. Carter of Seat-
tle, Wash,, are in the city tne guests
of ‘Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Beasley of
Marion street. ‘They will leave for
hiome next Wednesday. ‘They were in
attendance at the annual meeting of
the National Baptist Convention at
Nashville, ‘Tenn,, last week. ,
Rey. H. P. Jones has returned trom
the meeting of the Iowa Conference at
Evanston. He reports the meeting as
one of the best ever held. In the mat
ter of “dollar money” St. James
Church of the city stood third on the
st, with $270, which was only" aoe
passed by Quinn Chapel and Bethel of
Chicago.
Mr. C. H. Jackson has opened a
dining room to be known as Jackson's
Place at 590 Wabasha street. Regu.
lar dinner will be served trom 11:30
to 8:00'for 25 cents. Special Sunday
dinner from 12:30 to 4:30 for 35 cents.
Hspecial attention will be paid to fam:
ilies “and. parties.” Open’ until mid-
night. Tel. Cedar 7863,—Advertise-
ment.
The meeting held at the residence
of Dr. Valdo Turner last Friday even-
ing for the purpose of organizing a
branch of the N. A. A. C. P. was very
well attended. "Another meeting is
called for Monday evening, uct. 6 at
St. Philip's church at 8 o'clock, at
which time @ permanent organization
will be formed and officers elected.
Interested persons are invited to be
present.
EVERYBODY, knows who knows
anything about ‘it that the Souther
chefs cannot be surpassed in. tooth-
some culsine. ‘Well, James Palmer,
the famous chef from’ the “Crescent
City” 1s now the proprietor of the
Acme Cafe, 107 B. Third street and
invites those who are fond of good
“eats” to call.” Regular dinner from
11 a. m to 3 p. m. for 25 cents. A
ja carte meals at all hours, ‘Try “em.
FOR SALE—SIX ROOM HOUSE,
ALL MODERN EXCEPT HEAT—
Carroll avenue near, Farrington, large
peautiful lawn and garden, A fine
somfortable home for only $3,500,
Shown by appointment. C. P. Abbott,
303 Pioneer building.—Advertisement,
ise 8,
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—_—
Le Pais
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MME. ADDIE GRAWFORD-MINOR,
Who Will Sing at Emancipation Cele-
ration at Arcanum Hall,
Sept. 30.
THE EMANCIPATION
CELEBRATION.
Arrangements for the grand celebra-
tion of the FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY
OF EMANCIPATION under the au-
spices of THE APPEAL at Arcanum
‘Hall, cor, Fourth and St. Peter streets,
St, Paul, Tuesday, September 30, are
about completed. i
The program which is now all com:
pleted, includes the reading of Lin-
coln’s Emancipation Proclamation;
addresses by Mayor Herbert P. Keller,
Attorneys W. R. Morris, W. T. Francis
and J. Louis Ervin; the principal ad-
dress will be made by the Attorney
General of Minnesota Hon. Lyndon A.
Smith. Mf. Arthur V. Hail will read
an original poem, There will be a
Plano solo with violin obligato "by
‘Abraham and Harry Eurist. An eight
hand piano number by Misses Ada
Lewis, Mildred Shull, Atbreta Bell and
Adina’ Adams. Minnesota's great
Vocalist Mme. Addie Crawford Minor
will render a soprana solo. The pre-
mier comedian Charles H. Miller and
‘Company will give an original sketch.
Rev. G. W. Camp will offer the invo-
cation ‘and Rey. ‘W. M. Withers will
pronounce the benediction. Music will
be furnished by the McCullough or-
chestra, Sergt. John W. Harper will
preside. The addresses are to be
short and the exercises are to begin
promptly at 9:30 o'clock, if there is a
corporal’s guard in the house and ev-
ery one is earnestly requested to be
in his or her seat so that the program
may be concluded promptly at 10:30
o'clock, when the grand march will
take place and the supper will be
served and the devotees of terpsichore
de allowed to enjoy themselves.
Miss Frances Willard McCray, the
leading elocutionist of Grand Forks,
N. D,, will give a number.
It is hoped the people generally will
obtain their tickets from the patrons,
a full st of whom may be found be-
low, so that there will be no delay
about entering the hall. ‘The manage-
ment reserves the right to refuse to
admit any and all persons whose pres-
ence will be undesirable, ant it is
hoped that no such persons will pre-
sent themselves at the hall and they
will thus be spared the humiliation
of being refused admission. A hint to
the wise is sufficient.
‘The price of the tickets is one dollar
each and no one will be admitted
without a ticket. A ticket entitles
the purchaser—if not an undesirable
person—to admission to the hall,
checking of wraps, supper, punch and
the privilege of the floor for the grand
promenade, without further expense
whatever.
‘The crowd will be large and the
hall is in the heart of the city and in
a building in which are many tenants
nd the people are requested to refrain
from any undue exhibitions of exhub-
erance of spirits and enter and leave
the building with as little noise and
confusion as possible. ‘This affair,
which promises to be quite large and
select is under the management of
the committees named below:
Ea ee
Pane
REV. G. A. CAMP.
Who Will Deliver the Invocation at
the Emancipation Celebration at
Arcanum Hall, Sept. 30.
MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE.
Joseph Adams = =Wm. R. Morris.
TBP Anderson Geo. W. Nelson
Joseph Bayium Bs Peoples
1S? Backe G: 1 Hobinson
B,"e' Beasley Chas. W. Serutchin
W. FT. Chandler Jose H, Sherwood
GoW. Duckett G"S,"Smith
5 wYervin Wm. ai 'smitn
HB, Bawards Clarence L- Smith
W. Branca, = Wage Utley
Jasper Gibbs, Sr, J, N. Sellers
one al K 0. Lee
5, W, Harper LM Ferein
Geovt, Henge. Valdo Turner
6°. Howard Goat Tibbs
3.8. Johnson © B Yancey
We Jonson = L.A. Smith
TH Lyles Geo. we Willa
PROGRAM COMMITTEE.
Chas. H. Miller |S, J. Mason
Geo,” Barnett ‘Thos. Neat
°°, Bellesen’ > F.C: Nelaon
Samuel Brown J. W. Peyton
Geo. Benton Noble Pryor
Rolla Beard WH, Reynolds
G2. Charleston J. A. Roberts
So Ditingham = M. Balters
Wig wus Liisher Singieton
BW, Granam = Stewart
Sn. ant N. ‘Walter Goins
Henry Hart © Pe Tier
Wim. Liggins SR. White
Geo. B. Lowe ‘Arthur White
BW. Lindsay =F. A, Willams
© Me Mask Bhi. Yohnson
GW. Moker Vernon ‘Barksdale,
| FLOOR COMMITTEE.
© L. McCullough L. P, Moore
“M. , Barkedate — Balph Watson
i G! Bass SE. Ransom
AF Soviiton Avthigr Rhodes
L, V"Bougtass SW. Stepp.
Gwen ‘Howell Richard Stokes
Quitman Wicks Wa It. Willams,
CE Sones DL. pitus
W'S. Johnson ‘Samuel Scott
2» ¢ vowe 5. 'W. strong
HG Bettleora | Wm.’ Hyde
& ©. Bleet W. W. Wimberly
Siover “shun Eifeton White
‘Wills Cotter Wa. Weir
Tasper Gibbs, Jr. B De Green
Rovere Marshall” Gibson Owens,
AD Wright
REFRESHMENT COMMITTEE.
RB. Chapman Wm. W. Mills
‘Wm, Alston Alex. Payne
Ef Anderson A’ Sayles
B.C. Archer W.'S, Butler
S/W Bannister J. La Coste
EW, Bamett! Bf Scr
ii. W. Bradmnaw —W. “é, Mitenen
RB, Gousby Chas, ‘Saunders
JH Charieston A. Stanley
& W.Gowaras Jaa "A, Vase
TE prankin eT, Waters
LB. Greer & W. Patterson
Henty High Veassus Pope
Somucl Hatcher Tolbert Bush
Wigenkins <5. We titton
3 Adohnson " — ¥, J. Solomon
ERuawrence 3. W. Baie
Mr. Orri C. Hall will have charge
of the box office.
Mr. R. M. Johnson will be door
keeper,
Misses Edna Shull, of Minneapolis,
Ruth Hunter, Martha Goins and Hdy-
thella Adams of St. Paul, will serve
punch, ad Ifbitum.
‘The splendid celebration has ‘been
arranged for by the Committee of
‘Management—white
SERGT.'J. W. HARPER.
Who Will Preside at the Emancipa-
tion Celebration at Arcanum Hall,
‘Sept. 30.
‘The splendid program is the result
of the labors of the Program Com-
mittee—biue badge.
‘The supper and the serving of the
same {s in charge of the Refreshment
Committee—red badge.
‘The Floor: Gommittee...will.act.as
ushers and have charge of the hall
during the terpsichorean _divertise-
ments to the sweet strains of the Mc-
Cullough orchestra—yellow badge.
The Reception Committee is com-
posed of the entire list’ of patrons and
patronesses and the wives and sweet-
hearts of the gentlemen on this com-
mittee will be entitled to lavender
badges.
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MISS FRANCES WILLARD MsCRAY,
Who Will Read at Emancipation Cele.
bration at Arcanum Hall,
Sept. 30.
Badges for patrons, patronesses and
members of the several committees
may be obtained in the large recep.
tion room where reports for tickets
must be made and be receipted for
betoce: Gaterine te “hall
a a THe BILL
eg
as
a
we
4 |
J. LEWIS ERVIN.
Will Deliver an Address at Emanvipa
tion Celebration Arcanum Hall.
PATRONS AND PATRONESSES.
RECEPTION COMMITTEE.
MR. AND MRS.
Joseph Adams = W. H. Johnson
Wan kusten =” Wink Johng
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; WM. R. MORRIS, ESQ.
Will Deliver an Address at Emancl
pation Celebration at Arcanum
Hall.
Tolbert Bush «GW, Moker
Geo. Benton 81 Mason
MCL. Barksdale CL. MeCailough
J, C. Black ‘Thos. “Neal
Eee Reker
Bolt Beaty aise. Giese arene
joseph Baylum. J. Wi Peyton
BBs He Pelle
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YEP EESe 6 iN
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| GW. Duckett J. A. Sayles *
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‘TAKE NOTICE.
In connection with the celebration
of the Fittieth Anniversary of Eman
etpation it is the intention of the pro-
prictor of THE APPHAL to issue a
SOUVENIR EDITION, similar to those
issued in 1910 and 1911 containing a
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 APPHAL 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
3347." Don't procrastinate. DO IT
NOW.
FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY.
Of Emancipation Under Auspices ‘of
The Appeal, Booming,
The Twin Cities’ celebration of the
Fiftieth Anniversary of Emancipation
which is to be held under the auspices
of THE APPEAL is assuming grand
proportions which spell success. Ey-
ery thing is moving along nicely and
as the time draws near the interest
grows, more intense. A glimpse at
the list of patrons in another column
will satisfy the most skeptical that it
will be a swell-grand affair.
‘The celebration will be held in the
beautiful Arcanum Hall in the Lowry
Feta ears
EU ae
oo
a ee
——
ee ee
Loge ae
aera NG riers
| as Vd z
ees - Aa
W. T. FRANCIS, ESQ
Who Will Deliver an Address at the
Emancipation Gelebration at Ar
en caleprn
building, 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 {s a handsome hall,
elegantly furnished, has dining rooms,
reception rooms, smoking room, etc.,
and is the best’ hall that could be ob-
tained in the city.
‘There are entrances to the hall on
Fourth street near St. Peter and on
St. Peter between Fourth and Fifth
atrests, 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.
FRIENDS AND FELLOW CITIZENS:
Owing to the fact that the Dixte
Jubilee Singers have been engaged
|for the evening of Monday, September
22, at St. James A. M.' BE. church
and that no change can be made in
|their booking, the celebration of the
Fittieth Anniversary of the Emancipa-
tion to be given under auspices of
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. Ev-
jerybody get ready for the time of
ther lives.
_N, B—It you haven't sent in your
card as a patron do so NOW.
Respectfully,
J. Q. Adams,
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
of hair goods, transformations,
switches, puffs, etc.
‘Will give four scalp treatments per
month for $1.50 and one jar of her
wonderful Hair Grower free. Office
hours from 8:00 a. m. to 9:00 p. m.
Phote Dale 4926.
‘Hair dressing for weddings and par-
ties a specialty.
If you have some news you would
lke to see in THE APPEAL, write it
2.8 postal card and peng to thisiof-
be ee ees
ad
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iz mm
ft 2.
as
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sees
MAYOR HERBERT P, KELLER,
Who Will Deliver an Address at Eman
Clpation Celebration at Ar:
canum Hall; Sept 30,
SEE AC RUIN A TBAT
UNDERTAKER LYLES moVED.
Our undertaker Thos. H. Lyles who
has been at 322 Wabasna street for
years, with Listoe & .. old has -moved
with them to their new and up-to-date
building, 150.West Fourth street, cor.
ner of Franklin, where he may be
found at any time by those needing
his services... All the latest designs,
makes and styles of funeral goods
are on hand at reasonable prices.
Elegant ch pel for holding funeral
services. Calls answered by day or
night on a momeat’s notice. Both
phones 508,
It is unwise to trust the man who
trusts no one,
Mr. W. J. Uttley has moved his bar
ber shop and pool parlor to No, 30 B.
4th Street.
‘When you buy ice cream, why not
buy the best? It's made ‘by J. C.
Vander Ble, 496 Partridge strecet. It’s
for sale, too, at all places handling
first clags ice 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 to
give the public improved éervice. Mr.
Morgan needs no introduction to this
community,
F. H. Harm & Bro.) the popular
Jewelers and opticians, formerly of
287 Robert street, have moved to
larger and better quarters at No, 14
East Sixt’. street, between Wabasha
and Cedar, where they will be pleased
to see old and new patrons.—Adver-
tisement.
ALBION W, HOLDEN—Fine
house painting, hand oil finishing,
varnishing, staining, wall tinting,
ete, done on short notice, First
class, durable work guaranteed,
General repairing and jobbing of ali
kinds, Send or leave orders at 527
St. Anthony Ave,, or telephone Dale
2056. Wstimates furnished —Advertise
ment.
WHEN YOU ARE HUNGRY, and
want a quick meal, just go to the
LITTLE ST. PAUL CAKE, 130 1
Highth street, between Robert an¢
Jackson. Jaines H. Thomas, proprie
tor. There you may get frst-clas
meals to order at all hours, day an
night. Regular dinner daily from
11:20 to 2:30 for 25 cents. Tel. Ce
dar 9021.—Advertisement.
THE VALET TAILORING CO., No
154-156 E. Sxith street. The mos
up-toxdate establishment of its | tnd it
the city. Clothing made to ordey
svonged. pressed. renovated and re
pairea. Goods called for and deliv
ered. Four suits pressed for $1. The:
are prepared to give best service a
lowest rates. ‘Tel. N. W. Cedar. 432
(0. Howell, manager—Advertisement.
MAN WITH TWO HEADS ON HIS
SHOULDERS.
Early this week a man was dis
covered in St. 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
30, Another of the same kind was
also discovered in Minneapolis.
af Cedar 2886, Clty References.
MADAME L, A. PORTER,
Shampooing, alr, Dressing, Manicuring
Eaclal Massage, Scalp’ “Treatment.
Switches Made to Order. Sore Corns,
Ingrowing Nalls, Bunions Removed,
TRY PORTER'S WONDERFUL HAIR
GROWER.
194 W. Central Ave., ST. PAUL.
ae ete Seder
Macor Jzzxrre — Romexr Horie
JENKINS & HOPKINS, PROPS.
Ice Cream Parlor, Confectionery,
Soft Drinks, Cigars Etc.
Phone Dale 6893.
545 AURORA. 8T. PAUL.
ae
an eg
a a
Pie
aN |
|
rien cade
| eee /
i Ptee atc }
MR. CHAS. H. MILLER,
Who Will Entertain at Emancipation
Celebration, Arcanum Hall,
Sept. 30.
Phone Cedar 5521 Hoard am tol? Atte 5ym
OR. W. T. MITCHELL
} benrist
save s ST. PAUL
———
LITTLE DIAMOND CAFE
Mrs. M. J. Hicks, Prop.
First Class Home Cooked reals
to order at all hours
Daily Dinner 11 to3 at 25c,
Sunday Dinner 11 to 6 at 30.
Breakfast 6:30 Supper 5 to8
476 Robert, ST. PAUL,
VANDER BIE'S
#wICE CREAMs#s
IS THE BEST
For Sale Everywhere
J. ©. VANDER BIE
496 Partridge ST, PAUL, MINK
er
“THE BUSY CORNER”
‘A. Js MeMURRAY & CO.
Staple and Pancy Groceries, Candies, Cons
fectionery, Cigars, School Supplies, Ete.
Ice Cream Parlor and Cafe, Lunch at
all Hours.
REAL ESTATE AND RENTALS HANDLED.
Cor Western and Ronde = BT, PAUL
Office Cedar 1678
Dr. Vaido Turner
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Kendrick Block, 27 B. 7th
OFFICE HOURS
9tolla.m,12tolp.m,3to5 p.m.
Sundays 10 to 11 a m,
‘Res. 386 St. Albans Tel. Dale 918
————
“Why Have Kinky Hair?”
STRAT-N-IT
Mee > eA
BEFORE. AFTER.
PRESTO
Straightens the most obstinate,
coarse kinky hair. Easily applied,
Harmless, Odorless, Clean and Last.
ing.
Apply once Presto and your Hair
will become straight instantly, remain-
ing 0 for months without another ap-
plication,
Presto eradicates Dandruff and
other Diseases of the Hair and Scalp.
Nothing like Presto in the world!
A package of Presto with directions
sent postpaid securely sealed on re-
ceipt of One Dollar.
Satisfaction guaranteed or money
refunded.
LAFAYETTE MANUFACTURING
COMPANY.
Drexel Building, Philadelphia, Pa.
Dept. D.
Reliable Agents wanted everywhere.
Ladies or gentlemen. Presto is a
money maker.
i Your Looks Can
Ladies Be Improved by
vsInre
1 y,
Madam Notah Wilson’s
{7M Gre FIGS inion ah ae Drening ae
Seating Mantrng Magog, Ate Pe
cloner aren
563 Charles St. ST. PAUL
Of ce Cedar 5552 PHONES Res. Date 2419
J. S. STRONG
DEALER IN
Real Estate 2oInsurance
Handies Farm Lands and City Prop-
erty; Builds, Buys, Sells or Rents
Houses.
Insures your Life, your House, your
Household Geode
Insures against aamage by Fire,
Lieetits oetttnede:
See STRONG before closing a deal
Elsewhere.
Office 25-26 Union Block
ICornéy af’ Fodrti and (6d
ST. PAUL MINN.
Walker Williams, AG. tyke
Red Moon Barber Shops
Fiest Class Tonsorial ea all pias
Expert Workmen
124 EB. THIRD ST. 370 RONDO ST
ee ali aie
Sa ee
Geseesversveceestentesee>
SUITS PRESSED
4 VALET TAILORING |
T wen, sixth ot
| .
00-0-90-90-200-64-00-96066660808060