The Appeal
Saturday, July 18, 1914
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
THE APPEAL KEEPS IN FRONT
RECAUSE:
1-It aims to publish all the news possible.
2-It does so impartially, wasting no words.
3- Its correspondents are able and energetic.
VOL. 30. NO. 29.
I. W. W. BOMB MAY END OUTRAGES
INTENDED FOR ROCKEFELLER
Detectives Sure That Dynamite Would Have Been "Planted" by Reckless Anarchists—Story of Propaganda Reads Like a Dime Novel—Many Girls Aid "the Cause."
New York.—Officials here believe that the premature explosion of a bomb in the hands of members of the Industrial Workers of the World killed four of the most dangerous agitators. Little trouble is now looked for. The tragedy is expected to end the outbursts, although members do not hesitate to assert that one or two deaths cannot put an end to "the cause."
The explosion foiled a plot, the police say, which may have caused great loss of life and damage to property. Efforts to prove that the bomb was being manufactured for use in blowing up some of the Rockefeller property have been fruitless, but detectives say there is little doubt that it was to be put to this use. Surviving agitators, however, assert that the bomb was sent to them by outside parties and are seeking to find the perpetrators of what they call a crime.
Damage might possibly have occurred had the bomb been "plante." is attested by the fact that the building in which the police say it was being manufactured was totally demolished. Three floors were blown apart
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Photo by American Press Association.
ALEXANDER BERKMAN.
and only the outside walls left standing. The death toll would have been enormous had it exploded in a crowd.
The story of the I. W. W. propaganda reads like a dime novel. These men and women, mostly followers of Alexander Berkman, one of the most noted anarchists in the country, one who has served a prison term for an attempt on the life of Henry C. Frick and withal a brilliant writer and scholar, say they will not rest until they receive recognition. First they began by invading churches of New York city, demanding something to eat and a place to sleep. These raids were stopped when about 100 men and boys were arrested, their leader given a long prison term and others serving from one to two months in jail.
Following this, members of the I. W. W. began what they called a protest against the murder of miners in the recent coal mine war in Colorado, in which many lives were lost. Led by Upton Sinclair, I. W. W. supporters marched up and down in front of the office of John D. Rockefeller, Jr., wearing crape bands on their arms. This continued for some time, and Mr. Rockefeller went to his home at Taryn Town, N. Y. He was followed by the agitators, and a riot occurred there when the town authorities refused to allow the visitors to make inflammatory threats against life and property.
About a dozen of the singleleaders were arrested in Tarrytown. Among these was Alexander Berkman, founder of a school of anarchy and admitted leader of the outbreaks. It is said that Berkman furnishes the brains for the agitators. His school is run regularly, and the attendance is said to be large. Students are taught to protest against present industrial conditions. One of the peculiar features is the number of girls and young women who become interested in the movement. These are considered by the police the most dangerous of the agitators.
Geological Survey Reports on State's Climate In Ancient Days.
Washington. - That the climate of South Carolina and Georgia was once almost tropical is one of the interesting conclusions announced by experts of the geological survey after an exhaustive study of the flora of those states. This vegetation grew during upper cretaceous and eocene time, or, as geologists say, at least, several million years ago.
A study of this flora, which has been preserved in fossil form in the rocks, indicates also that shallow seas extended inland over 100 miles from the present seaboard, that there was considerable elevation of the Piedmont area to the west, that the river graduates were high and the streams numerous and more or less terrestrial in character and that there were swamps along the lower courses of the streams.
The report states that the fossil plants indicate there was a mild though not strictly tropical climate without seasonal changes. There was no evidence that frost occurred and that the rainfall was abundant. Indications are, it is said, that in middle eocene time the climate of Georgia was much warmer than during the upper cretaceous epoch.
JUST WON'T BE A MOTORMAN
So Cassin, Engineer of Empire State
Express, Quits His Job at Seventy.
New York—Dennis J. Cassin, who, although seventy years old, still runs the Empire State express on the New York Central railroad from Croton to Albany and back two out of every three days, said that he would put in his application for retirement at once. Cassin got his first job with the Central in 1861, when the old wood burners were the highest type of engine. He has had the Empire State express for several years, and during that time has not had an accident. He has seen the coal driven locomotive developed, and it is because of the encroachment of the electric engine that he is getting out.
He said that he wouldn't give up his throttle to be a "motorman" for $1,000 a week. Several years ago in a contest conducted by a railroad magazine he won a diamond ring as the most popular engine driver in the country.
YEARS OF SILENCE ENDED BY CHANCE
YEARS OF SILENCE ENDED BY CHANCE
Under Vow Not to Speak to Each Other, Accident Opens Lips.
St. Joseph, Mo.-Robert and Joseph Miller, brothers, spoke to each other the other day for the first time in fifteen years. All of this time they have lived in the same house, eaten at the same table, slept in the same room and been partners in the produce farm which they own. They are well to do. Fifteen years ago, when their stock in trade consisted of a rundown little truck garden, they had a falling out over who did the most work, and Joseph vowed that he would never speak to his brother again until Robert spoke first. Pride prevented each from being the first to break over. When they had anything to say to each other they did it through the medium of a third person. "Ask Joe if he is going to town today or whether I shall go," Robert would say to a hired hand, even though Joseph were within a few feet of him. "Tell Bob I am going because there is some private business I want to see about," Joseph would reply through the same medium. During their resting hours and through the long winter evenings the two played cards together, but each sat stolidly smoking a pipe, and neither spoke to the other. With other people about they would talk freely and easily, but never to each other. The silence between them was broken when Robert was buried underneath a slide of cordwood which he was piling up. Joseph rushed up.
"Oh, Bob, are you badly hurt?" he asked. Afterward he said that he did not realize that he was breaking his vow.
"No, Joe," was the reply, "but this wood is holding me so that I can't get out without help."
Then the two men laughed, shook hands and began to converse about getting Robert out of his unpleasant captivity.
Minneapolis, Minn.-John Woods of Chicago recently left his home city for Minneapolis, and here is what has happened to him:
In Milwaukee he fell off a box car and fractured his right arm.
In Lacrosse he had pneumonia.
In Golish, Wis., he was "doped" and robbed of $140.
In Minneapolis he was sentenced to five days in the workhouse for vagrancy.
"Maybe this will be the end of it," said Woods. "I think some old jint has been on my trail."
Wooden Log Hides Money.
Sherman, Tex.-H. C. Wise, dead in Denver, Colo., with $8,000 in certificates of deposit hidden in one of his artificial legs, was a resident of Sherman. He came here in 1904 from Kansas City, where a brother and sister reside.
THE APPEAL.
ST. PAUL AND MINNE. LIS. MINN.. SATURDAY. JULY 18. 1914.
Strains From a Gramophone Picked
Up by a ship at Sea.
London—Strains from a gramophone playing "The Merry Widow Walz" and "God Save the King" were heard lately by wireless in the Nelson line steamship Highland Scot during a voyage to Buenos Aires, by the third officer. The boat was passing Vigo at the time, and afterward it was found that the ship from which the wireless came was a private yacht 200 miles away.
Mr. Marconi, commenting on this report, said: "They were probably experimenting with a gramophone and a wireless telephone transmitter aboard the private yacht. Tunes are transmitted and caught up in this way. I never heard of its being done over such a long distance, but it is quite possible. Gramophone tunes have been sent by wireless telephony from Marconi House to my house at Fawley, near Southampton."
WOMAN CANS GARDEN TRUCK
She Makes a Good Profit and the Results Are Sure.
Dodge City, Kan.—Two thousand quarts of beets and 600 quarts of picallii have been sold by Mrs. Will Robins to the Dodge City Wholesale Grocery company during the past few weeks—byproducts of the Robins truck farm, south of the river.
Mrs. Robins puts up these products in pint glass jars attractively labeled with words something as follows: "Fancy homemade picallii. No preservatives used. No factory made product. Put up by Mrs. Will Robins, Climarron, Kan."
Mrs. Robins also had a contract with railroad eating houses to furnish them with onions during the season just past. Her garden products are as valuable as the wheat crop on the average farm, and more certain.
WHALERS MAKE RICH HAUL
Off Coast of Lower California Get Fifteen Thousand Barrels of Oil.
San Diego, Cal.-The whaling fleet, comprising the tender Capella I. and whalers Juarez, Morelos and Hidalgo, has arrived here from Magdalena bay after an eight months' successful season off the lower California coast.
According to Captain Engebretzon of the Capella I, the Hidalgo captured 210 whales, the Morelos 219 and the Juarez 151. All of the mammals were taken within twelve miles of Magdalena bay and were principally of the humpback and blue species.
The Capella I. entered port with 15,000 barrels of oil, valued at $25,000. The tender will steam to Christiania, Norway, by way of the Panama canal, to discharge, leaving the whalers to continue the trade.
CHECKS ARE SIGNED WITH A MACHINE
Clerks In Pension Office Sign
820,000 Papers Each Year.
Washington.—J. S. Jones and William Adreon each year sign in the neighborhood of $20,200 checks, of an aggregate face value of $180,000,000. Jones and Adreon are clerks in the pension office, and the checks are drawn to the order of pensioners.
Technically this money is disbursed over the signature of Guy O. Taylor, the disbursing clerk of the bureau. In fact, however, it goes out over the signature of J. S. Jones and William Adreon.
A series of machines designed especially for it fills out the blank checks with the name of the pensioner, the amount due him or her and the name of Guy O. Taylor, printed. But the checks cannot be cashed until they are countersigned with an actual signature in ink. This is where Jones and Adreon come in. But even two men could not do this, and so machines are again utilized—signagraphs, as they are called.
Each man goes through the motion of signing his name, using a wooden pen-like arrangement on which there is really no point and no ink. This, however, causes to move ten real fountain pens, which actually inscribe the name on ten checks placed beneath. At each machine an assistant feeds in the blocks of checks, ten to a block.
Instead of actually signing 820,200 separate checks the two men together make only 82,020 signatures—41,010 each.
TREES CAUSE FRATRICIDE.
Forty Year Quarrel of Brothers Ends Fatally.
North Reading, Mass.—A forty year quarrel over timberland came to a climax here when Charles Samuel Harris, a farmer, was shot and instantly killed by his brother, James, who gave himself up to the police. He said his brother had attacked him with an ax during an argument about cutting the timber on their land and that he shot in self defense.
According to the statement of James Harris to the police, the brothers, though they had lived together forty years, always had been at odds over the disposition of the timber. Charles went to the lot and felled several small trees. When he returned to the house James met him in the kitchen, and the ancient quarrel was renewed.
Points Out Products For Which Large Sums Are Needlessly Expended Every Year—Holds That Extravagance is Principal Cause of Advance In Prices.
New York.—Have the American people become a nation of prodigals and spendthrifts?
It has been the custom of many Americans in bewailing the high cost of living to place the blame on the trusts, the tariff or some other agency. Of late, however, there has come into public notice a body known as the American Society For Thrift, which individually and collectively declares that the high cost of living is not so much chargeable to trusts or other agencies as to the prodigal and spendthrift spirit which has seized the people of this country, generally speaking. One of the leaders of the society is Governor Cruce of Oklahoma.
So serious in the opinion of the members of this society has the situation become that a measure is about to be
Photo by American Press Association.
introduced in congress, to be known as the Clapp bill, directing President Wilson to invite foreign nations to participate in an international congress of thrift, to be held at San Francisco next year during the Panama-Pacific exposition, for the people of other countries than the United States have also developed a spirit of prodigality. Cicero in earlier days said, "Men know not how great a revenue is frugal." In later times Bismarck, the Iron Chancellor, declared that "saving goes before security, happiness and good citizenship." The members of the Society For Thrift believe that these sayings still hold good today.
"The plain fact of the matter," said one of the promoters of the movement, "is that extravagance has become almost more than a national habit among us. Self indulgence, the natural child of extravagance, has walked hand in hand with our readiness to spend money, a readiness which has become an obsession with many in their craze to outdo their neighbors. These people crave luxuries which they are well aware are far beyond their means, but which they persist in obtaining because of their personal vanity or a desire to impress others.
"And not only has this spirit grown tremendously in late years, but it is fast increasing. We are a money spending mad people. We accumulate money, and we throw it away. An expert says that we are now spending the tremendous sum of $25,000,000 yearly for chewing gum alone. When one considers the great number of persons who chew gum and notes the amount of advertising resorted to by gum manufacturers this estimate seems not improbable.
"For soda water and other nonnontoxicating drinks our bill in the United States has in a single year amounted to $325,000,000. As far back even as 1905 the craze for spending money was upon us, for in that year we spent in excess of $30,000,000 for automobiles, and this at a time when the automobile industry was still in its infancy. Since then this single item has reached into the hundreds of millions.
"In the twelve months of 1905, too, the people of the United States ate candy and confectionery that cost $75,000,000, money enough to build a string of inland waterways up and down the Atlantic seaboard. The value of diamonds, rings, watches, gold chains, necklaces, pendant and similar articles purchased has amounted to more than twice the cost of constructing the Panama canal.
"In 1908, before the wave of prohibition had advanced to its present point, the sum of $1,675,828,197 was expended in this country for intoxicating drinks, of which amount $638,170,864 was spent for whisky and other distilled spirits, imported and domestic, while the bill for beer and other malt liquors was $918,023,287. Three years before that date we spent $331,000,000 for cigars, cigarettes, chewing tobacco and snuff in twelve months."
Earl of Shrewsbury Proposes Second Monte Carlo at Canal. London. - The Casino Nacional de Panama company, limited, with the Earl of Shrewsbury and Talbot as chairman, which proposes to start a second Monte Carlo at Panama, gives an alluring description of the wonderful gambling and amusement resort it intends to launch.
The company is to acquire 250 acres of land and to operate under a charter "insuring absolute freedom from all interference for a period of twenty-five years," according to the promises of its prospectus, but no statement is made of what authority is to give the charter and to insure the freedom from interference. The casino is to include most of the attractions of Monte Carlo—a big hotel, an orchid garden, which will be one of the wonders of the world; a bathing pavilion, pigeon shooting, tennis grounds, golf courses and, principally, the gambling hall.
Panama is advertised as a splendid winter resort, while passengers will have twenty-four hours to spend on land while the steamers traverse the canal, thus insuring a constant patronage. Profits to the stockholders must be large, because the roulette tables will be run on a system giving the bank a much larger percentage of profits than the Monte Carlo company gets from the play there. Forty per cent dividends on the £4 shares are predicted by the prospectus.
MODEL CHILD LABOR LAW.
Industrial Board Would Put Little Workers Under State Bureau
Workers Under State Bureaus.
Philadelphia.-The members of the United States commission on industrial relations are discussing a plan for state bureaus to look after the welfare of working children of school age. The commission intends to present it at all the hearings it holds throughout the country with a view of recommending a model law for the states.
The proposed bureau would maintain a school census and enforce regularity of attendance, issue licenses to minors engaged in street trades, issue employment certificates and look after the child during the first two years in industry, establish vocational guidance work to fit industrial conditions of a community, help the child to get placed in its chosen industry, look after the delinquent, defective and dependent and take charge of the medical inspective service of the schools.
HE DIED IN PRISON, WITH PARDON ON WAY
Kansas City, Mo. - David Truax, eighty-two years old, a life termer in the Kansas penitentiary at Lansing, died while a pardon was on the way to him.
Truax served in the Ninety-first New York in the civil war. Having grubbed a competency from a little farm in Meade county, he left his family for a few months and went to the Kansas Old Soldiers' home at Dodge City. On his return from a visit to town one day Truax brought with him a pint of whisky. He put the bottle in his coat pocket, hung the coat in a tree and went into the barracks. While he was gone two of his cronies drank all the whisky and replaced the empty bottle. When he discovered the empty bottle he became mad with rage. He got an old army pistol and killed one and wounded the other. One of the men was killed instantly and the other crippled for life. Truax was tried for murder, convicted and sentenced to the Kansas penitentiary for a life term.
When Major W. L. Brown was appointed to the board of control he took a special interest in the convicts who have been soldiers and came to know his intersession a pardon was granted. The papers were mailed to the governor, and Truax was taken from the cellroom and given the freedom of the office.
He had been making big plans for his trip home. Out of his pension he had saved $150 to assure burial outside the prison cemetery and sent the rest to his family.
Major Brown called in the warden's office to see Truxan and found him sitting in an easy chair, apparently dozing. He was dead. In his lap was a book, "Homeward Bound."
Gas Brokes Deadly to Elise
Independence, Kan. - A gas leak alongside the curb in front of a Main street residence has inadvertently given the city a hint at fly swatting that may prove of immense value. Along this leak, which extends about forty feet, is a layer of bluebottle flies from two to three inches deep and three inches to a foot wide. It is estimated there are a half bushel of them. Something about the gas attracts the insects, and they are asphyxiated.
Snake Stories In Season.
Cottonwood Falls, Kan.-When Mrs. William Weaver, the wife of an Elmale liveryman, started to go into her cave the other day she encountered a bunch of snakes under the steps that had evidently come out from their winter quarters. She ran to the house and called her husband, who succeeded in killing fourteen reptiles of various sizes and species.
THE APPEAL STEADILY GAINS
BECAUSE:
4-It is the organ of ALL Afro-Americans.
5-It is not controlled by any ring or oligus.
6-It does no support but the people's.
AFTER RIVER PIRATES.
Posee Organized to Exterminate the Wholesale Freebooters.
Martinez, Cal.-River pirates, whose depredations in the Carquinez straits and the tide lands of the San Joaquin valley have caused farmers a loss of many thousands of dollars, are to be exterminated, it was learned here. With the co-operation of the federal authorities Sheriff R. R. Veale of Contra Costa county has organized a picked posee to wage war on the inland freebooters.
The chief source of revenue of the pirates is the merchandise produce plied along river levees awaiting shipment. The method of the gangs is to moor a scow at night in midchannel and row to the wharves, from which the produce is removed and brought to the bay cities and sold. The delta section has been a rich field for the gangs.
CASPIAN SEA SINKING.
Steamships In Many Places Unable to Reach Landing Stages.
St. Petersburg.-The scientific world in Russia has for some time been occupied with a curious natural phenomenon. The surface of the Caspian has since June, 1910, been continually sinking and is now beginning to be inconvenient for navigation, as steamers in many places cannot reach the landing stages.
Professor Shoralski, commissed by the government to study the subject, has ascertained that the amount of water contributed by the rivers flowing into the Caspian, especially by the Volga, has considerably diminished. It is therefore quite possible that the river water flowing into the sea is not sufficient to make good the loss caused by evaporation.
DOG FIGHTS FIVE MULES.
Result Is Four Dumb Patients For the Veterinary Hospital.
Clinton, Ind.—A bulldog attacked five mules in the barn lot near here. The dog took them one at a time, leaping at their throats. Repeatedly the mules shook off the dog, and twice they kicked him.
One mule picked the dog up by the skin of the back and shook him. When thrown to the ground the dog caught another mule and held to its throat until it went to its knees. The men who saw the combat say that another mule then pawed the dog so fiercely that it lay unconscious till carried from the lot.
The dog and three of the mules are now at a veterinary hospital.
TO ASK CITIZENSHIP FOR THE JAPANESE Will Settle California Problem, Says Mikado's Agent.
Baltimore.-Dr. Shosuke Sato, who has been studying the Japanese question in California at the direction of the emperor of Japan, said here that he would report to his sovereign that the only way the California land problem could be settled would be for the United States to grant citizenship to the Japanese now holding land in that state. He also said he would recommend that no more Japanese immigration be allowed.
"I have made a careful study of the California situation," said Dr. Sato, "and in my report to my government I will state that, in my opinion, there is but one way to settle the differences between the United States and Japan over the California question, and that is by granting citizenship to the Japanese now holding land in California. When this is done Japan will have no further trouble with the United States. There are at present about 100,000 Japanese in the United States, and over half that number are qualified to become citizens of this country.
"I will also recommend that no more immigrants come to this country. The matter can very easily be arranged by making an agreement or new treaty between the countries.
"Japan will show her friendship for the United States by not pressing the California matter until the Mexican question is settled. The Japanese government is of the opinion that the California question is a matter entirely within the jurisdiction of the federal government and should be settled in Washington.
"The Japanese in California are now in a very bad way, and the people of California do not care what becomes of them. By giving them citizenship and a vote the tension would be relieved. Japan has nothing to gain by going to war with the United States, and I personally do not think that a conflict between the nations will occur.
"As to Mexico, there are a number of Japanese who have gone to that country to engage in agricultural pursuits but in my opinion it would be better for them to go to Brazil or some other country in South America. There is one thing certain—Japan will not meddle in the Mexican muddle."
Hillsdale, Mich.-About the largest hide ever received at the local fannery has just been dressed. It was that of a white ox and was received from Lake View. Mich The hide measures eighteen feet from the nose to the tip of the tail and twelve feet across When green the hide welged 165 pounds and when dressed twenty-five.
$2.40 PER YEAR.
BLEASEISM ISSUE
IN S. C. ELECTION
Governor Seeking E. D. Smith's
Place In U. S. Senate.
BITTER CAMPAIGN GOING ON
Meetings Held In Each County, and Followers of Governor Try to "Howl Down" Other Candidates — Bless Promises to Cause All Negro Government Employees to Lose Jobs.
Spartanburg, S. C.—A political campaign such as can be furnished only by the state of South Carolina is now in progress. The issue is Blesseism. United States Senator Ellison D. Smith is opposed by Coleman Livingston Blease, the stormy governor who has kept his state in the public eye for the past three and a half years—who, his enemies say, has kept the state in disrepute since being chosen governor. The "biennial circus" has furnished many bitter and denunciatory speeches. For two months prior to an election in this state the candidates campaign in a body. Meetings are held in each of the forty-four counties. Candidates are allowed an hour to present their views. Disorder and chaos frequently attend these meetings, and supporters of Blease often attempt to prevent other candidates from delivering their speeches by riotous tactics. Personalities are common and bitter. Hence the state campaign has come to be known as the "biennial circus."
The first primary will be held on Aug. 25. The result of the primary is equivalent to an election, as about 95 per cent of the voters of the state are Democrats. The primaries were
J. B. H.
inaugurated by Senator Tilman to eliminate the negro vote. No negro may vote unless he voted for Wade Hampton and the overthrow of the carpet bag rule and negro domination in 1876. Thus each negro voter must have been twenty-one years old in 1876 or fifty-nine years old today. Blease in this election is not opposed by Smith alone. Two of the most prominent and successful farmers in the state have entered the campaign, and the governor is forced to face the rapid fire arguments from three bitter opponents. L. D. Jennings, a planner and politician, mayor of Sumter, S. C., and arch enemy of Bleaseism is aiding Smith in making the fight to overthrow Blease. W. P. Pollock of Cheraw is also a candidate. In the various meetings that have been held Blease has continued his practice of appealing to the race prejudice of the ignorant and in a speech in this city promised if sent to the senate to have all negro government employees discharged and their places filled by "Bleasites." When his pardon record was attacked he answered that his friends demanded no explanation from him, and his enemies could not force him to explain. During the three years and six months that he has been governor Blease has pardoned and paroled over 1,200 convicts and prisons are now almost depleted.
When the governor announced his intention of seeking a senatorial toga many of his satellites and camp followers sought his place in the governor's mansion. As a result in this contest there has been a split in the ranks of the Blease supporters. No fewer than twelve men are running. Perhaps the most unique is John G. Clinckescales of this city, for many years a professor at Wofford college and one of the best known educators in the state and bitter enemy of Blease. Mr. Clinckescales has made his race on a platform that embodies compulsory education.
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SATURDAY, 18, 1914.
THE DEATH OF A MAN
There recently died in Chicago, an Afro-American who was every inch a man.
In these latter days when the Windy City has been overrun by jimcrowists, self-seekers at the expense of the race, self-segregationists, separate Christian association builders and others stepped in servility, a character like John G. Jones stands out in all its greatness and brilliance.
In the olden days he fought every exhibition of hostility to his people, to a finish. So great was his indignation when his people were wronged, and so vigorous was his fight against every form of jimcrowism that he earned for himself the sobriquet of "indignation Jones."
While in a lowly calling he earned and saved enough money to pay his tuition in a law school and after several years was admitted to the bar and built up a paying practice. He was prominent in Masonic circles and was received with great honors by members of the craft when he visited Europe some years ago.
Although somewhat dark in complexion he knew that he was not a Negro and resented being addressed as one and insisted on being called an American. He acted as an American citizen, demanded all the rights of American citizenship and he seldom failed to get his rights.
Jones was absolutely unafraid. Many years ago when he was a member of the Illinois legislature, he refused to vote for the late S. M. Culom for United States Senate, because he felt that Culom had not been square in his dealings with his Afro-American constituents. Every possible influence was brought to bear on Jones by the then powerful Republican machine to induce him to give his vote to Culom. He was caloed and threatened but he stood like adamant and even after Culom had been elected and a motion was made to make the election unanimous, Jones refused to change and registered his vote against the man he believed to
PROTEST AGAINST WRONG.
To submit in silence w
makes cowards out of m
The human race has of
Had no voice been ra
ignorance and lust; the
serve the law, and guill
disputes.
The few who dare, m
again to right the wrong
EL
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.
be inimical to the rights of the Afro-
American people. It is sad to say that there are few men with John G. Jones' strength of character left in Chicago. The ringing sycophants have come and prejudice has increased by leaps and bounds.
On July 3 the New York Evening Journal published a picture containing three figures, viz: Jack Johnson, an orang-outang and a leopard. It also published an editorial in substitution of the statement that "ABILITY TO WIN IN A PHYSICAL FIGHT IS PROOF OF INFERIORITY," and further says, "not deplorable, but encouraging, is the fact that no white man can be found to beat this tall Negro." Years ago, to be an adopt in "the manly art of self-defense" was considered one of the highest achievements for any man, yet nothing that has happened in a half century has so taken the conceit out of the Caucasian for "superiority" as the victories of Johnson in the "squared circle." In speaking of the heavy weight championship the white press has been looking to several "white hopes" to bring back the championship "where it rightfully belongs," but three times in succession, Johnson "carried home the bacon." Had Moran won the decision in France the other day, no such picture would have appeared in the New York Journal and no such editorial. It seems to us this is a case of "sour grapes," pure and simple. It makes all the difference in the world whose ox is gored.
The Afro-Americans in Atlantic City who are bending every energy to get a jimcrow principal for their jimcrow school ought to be in better business. They are making a great mistake. Instead of extending jimcrowism they ought to fight it and have the jimcrow school abolished as it is contrary to the laws of the state of New Jersey. Segregation NEVER plays. Perhaps the children of the men who are agitating this matter will curse them in the days to come and they will be justified in doing so. Any man who at any time justifies and fights for the segregation of his people from other American citizens is not only an enemy of his race but he is also an enemy of the Republic. Caste begets caste. If the Afro-American people are segregated why not the Jews next? Then perhaps some numerically weak class of citizens of foreign birth. Then perhaps the rich and the poor will be separated in the schools. Who knows?
The jimcrow agitators of Atlantic City are playing with fire.
The great wholesale drygood house of H. B. Clafn & Co. has failed, and the Jews did it.
Years ago A. T. Stewart the first great drygood merchant prince of America, angered the Jews by refusing to receive them as guests at the Grand Hotel at Saratoga, of which he was the owner. Jewish merchants all over the country combined and in a few years forced him to the wall.
The Chafin Company is really the reorganized Stewart business. For years Jewish merchants have been withdrawing their trade and when the pinch came Jewish bankers, remembering the insult to their people in the past, refused to furnish the money to enable the firm to tide over the trouble.
The Jews never forget an injury and who wrongs the race must pay the price.
Would that the Afro-American would lear to punish their enemies.
Segregation has come to Louisville because the Afro-Americans in that
RACE PR
I am convinced myself evil thing in this present justice; none at all. I the worst single thing and holds together most abomination than any o world. Through its book of coarse lust, suspicion and all the darker soul.
RACE PREJUDICE
I am convinced myself that there is no more evil thing in this present world than Race Prejudice; none at all. I write deliberately—it is the worst single thing in life now. It justifies and holds together more baseness, cruelty and abomination than any other sort of error in the world. Through its body runs the black blood of coarse lust, suspicion, jealousy and persecution and all the darkest poisons of the human soul.
—H. G. Wells in N. Y. Independent.
May he rest in peace.
PLAYING WITH FIRE
THE JEWS DID IT.
THE REASON WHY
Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
city have not been aggressive in their fight against injustice. Some years ago a proposal was made for a jincrow library and it was accepted without protest. Residential segregation came as a natural sequence. The idea of the Caucasian fiends of the South is that persons with an admixture of African blood must be kept in a separate social status subject to their whims and caprices. The Afro-Americans who accept public segregation in any form, WITHOUT PROTEST are doing themselves a great wrong and hanging a millstone about their children's necks. EVERY KIND OF JMICROWISM SHOULD BE FOUGHT TO A FINISH.
INTERMARRIAGE OF RACES ALL
RIGHT.
Intermarriage of whites with Japanese, Hindus and other orientals was defended by Professor Franz Boas of Columbia University, a noted anthropologist, in one of the series of lectures which he is delivering at the summer session of the University of California.
"All this feeling out here in California against the intermarriage of Americans and Japanese, as well as between whites and other oriental peoples, is simply foolish sentimentality, without the slightest biological foundation," Professor Boas said.
"Practically all the population of Europe is the product of the most widely divergent racial intermixes. Humanity, fundamentally, is very nearly identical the world over, no matter what may be the color or race."
ABILITY CAUSES RACE HATRED.
A novel explanation of the Russian dislike for the Jew has been given by Count Alexander Scherbatskoy, councilor of the Russian embassy in Washington.
The count said that Russians objected to Jews because they were more capable than the Russians and not because they were of a different race and faith.
"There is not much difference between the Jewish question in Russia and the Japanese question in California," he declared. "The Californians know the Japs are more clever than they are. The Russians know that they can not compete with the Jews. Their fear of the Jews is based on economic considerations."
COWARDLY COLORED CURS
The wires tell us that "thirty colored men watched the lynching of Rosa Carson at Orangeburg, S. C., but offered no resistance."
It is a great shame and disgrace to the race that thirty Afro-Americans stood by and failed to give their lives, if necessary, in attempting to prevent the lynching of one of their women.
They could not have died in a holier cause and the knowledge that they had fought to death in defense of the law would have made the next mob hesitate—all mobs are cowardly.
Any Afro-Americans who stand by and see the law outraged and one of their women lynched are worse than cowards.
Frank Park, of Spylester, Georgia, who was elected to fill the unexpired term of the famous jimcrowst, S. A. Roddenberry, who died last year, has signalized his entrance into the arena as a great statesman by introducing a bill in Congress which makes it unlawful for "negrets to be designated, elected or appointed as commissioned or non-commissioned officers in the army.
The New Age of Los Angeles calls attention of the Afro-American people of the country to the suit which S. W. Green, head of the Knights of Pythias, has instituted against the L. & N. R. R. of Florida, to recover damages for the assault perpetrated upon him while a passenger a year ago, and appeals to all aid to the Fythian order in pushing the matter.
ST. PAUL, MINN.
St. Phillips church has been treated to a coat of paint and looks quite fine.
Mrs. E. W. Lindsay and son left Wednesday for a two weeks' visit to Chicago.
Mrs. Robert Taylor and two children, of Chicago, are in the city, visiting relatives.
Mrs. L. J. Thompson and son left this week to visit relatives at Birmingham, Ala.
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Brown and Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Mekler have moved to 642 Rondo street.
There is a letter at this office from South Fort George, British Columbia, for Mrs. N. Covington.
Mrs. W. H. Parker, 654 Rondo street, who has been sick for several weeks, is again able to be about.
For Sale—the Little Diamond Cafe, 476 Rock Street. For terms apply to the proprietor, Mrs. M. J. Hicks.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonidas White of Omaha, Neb. are in the city, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Dillingham.
Mrs. Julius N. Avendorph of Chicago, who was the guest of Mrs. Mattie B. McGhee, left last Saturday for her home.
THE APPEAL man and his family havehalten a man one day of enjoying some splendid sunfish, which were evidences of the piscatorial skill of Mrs. E. E. Covington, on a recent fishing trip. Now, who will be the next?
Mrs. Birdella Driver has bought out the grocery of Young & Barksdale, 414 Bondo street, corner of Arundel, and some of the amenities, some of which have already begun. The store is now open for business.
FOR RENT BY W. T. FRANCIS, $8 and $9 Union Block: Modern 8 room house $30.00 per month. Or will sell for $3,900.00 on easy terms. Heat, gas, grate, parquet floors, 753 Ashlain Floor. Fine neighborhood.- Advertisement.
"SHINE 'EM UP!" When you wish your shoes shined or polished in the most artistic and satisfactory style, go to the PEOPLES' SHINING PARLOR, W. H. Porter, Propr., 349 Minnesota street, between 4th and 11th Advertisement.
NORTHWESTERN REALTY CO., I. S. ELAM, MNGR—RENTING, BUYING, SELLING, MONEY TO LOAN, INSURANCE, BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES. LIST YOUR PROPERTY WITH US, 415 RONDO STREET, PHONE, DALE 2282—ADVERTISEMENT.
Mr. Hugo Williams of New York, a brother of Dr. H. I. Williams, is in the city to make his future home. He is a practical plumber and steamfitter phone in the near future. Mr. Williams will doubtless prove to be quite an acquisition to St. Paul.
The place to have your shoe repairing done in the best possible way at the lowest possible price is at JARVIS, 104:100 East Fifth street. Men's shoes, women's shoes and boys shoes of the best grades for the money to be found in the city—Advertisement.
For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whoever believeth in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. John 3:18. There is a way which seemeth to be the way to be saved are the ways of death—Proverbs 14:12—Selected by E. W. Gilles.
Mr. Chester W. Patterson is now acting as agent for the John Brown Cigar Co., and is making good. The special brands of the company are: "John Brown," "Thin Dime" and "Blue Head." When you wish a cigar just for the sake of these. Mr. Patterson is still writing insurance also, don't forget that.
THE BUSY BEE CAFE, 317 Wabash street (upstairs), W. F. T. Chandler proprietor. Unexcelled cuisine. First class home cooked meals u la carte at all hours. A splendid regina room. A spacious room to 3:00 p. m. at 25 cents. Open day and night. Tel. N. W. Cedar 4525—Advertisement.
HON. DANIEL W. LAWLER
Makes a Fourth of July Speech of
which a few Excusee Follow.
Which a new Excerpts Follow.
Crookston, Maine. Condemning "Dermacken, Marmelos, with a case of whisky in their stomachs and a case of wine in their stomach and a case of wine in the cellar who would take away the poor man's beer." D. W. Lawler, recent candidate for Democratic nomination for Governor, assailed councillor in his address at the Fourth of July exercise.
Mr. Lawler said that a very large and influential portion of the people are laboring under the delusion today that the great ills of humanity can be cured by the message he gave to them. He said that "many well meaning people, even in Minnesota, be lieve that the evils of intemperance can be wiped out by passing a law giving the majority in a county the right to vote in the county jurisdiction. It is good, but the reasoning bad. Human nature can be refined and reformed by education, but never by coercion. The evils of intemperance are today greater in the State of state which has been a probabilistic state for years, than in the state of Minnesota."
The speaker paid a warm tribute to the women of America. "The women of this country," he said, "are better than its men, nobler in their ideals and more respectful to women. Referring to woman suffrage he said that the people of the United States have at least one thing to be thankful for, and that is that the women of America have not imitated the grotesque and extravagant antics of the Suffragette England. Deprecating the women brought about by coercion, Mr. Lawlen said that the same motive which looks upon county option as the cure-all of social conditions favors also woman suffrage. "A natural that the idealist and dreamer should believe that society will be elevated and reformed if these women are given the right to vote, but," he continued, "the experience of other commonwealths has shown that the tendency of woman suffrage is not abate men, in but some degree, at the average man, to the standard of the average man.
"In Minnesota most of the agitation for county authority and woman suffrage has been carried on to divert attention from the state's past five years the so-called brewery interests have been the 'great, much more important' to the utility corporations. The legislative
crook and the honest reformer have sometimes formed peculiar alliances. I was a member of a state convention not long ago and observed with humor and appreciation the polling of my own county delegation on a test ballot. Out of eighty-six delegates, four voted for the winner, and four bet that three out of the four had had a slug of whiskey that morning before breakfast.
"In the same campaign a county option leader of the same political faith expended a large part of his time sitting patiently and receptively in the room of the Paul waiting for an interview. If the hypocrite and the boodler could be cut out there would be little difficulty in setting such questions. I honor the honest and consistent prohibitionist like your fellow citizen, E. B. Lobek. He has not words strong enough to express my contempt for the Democratic leader with a pint of whiskey in his stomach and a case of wine in his cellar who would take away the poor man's beer. The trouble with some of the Democratic leaders is to quarrelate as social reformers, is that they are more anxious to get a check from a brewer than to give a check to intemperance. I am advised that there is one great Democratic editor and county optionist in Minnesota, who is looting of a brewery so long as the footers stayed away from the coffers of the United States Steel corporation. We read that the march of the British Army in India can be traced by the empty tins in its wake. You know that the county optionist in Minnesota where county option presides where the highminded and ausere county optionist on his return from town today to the comforts of home will indicate his journey by an imposing deposit of discarded bottles in the room now as empty and as eloquent as many of our political reformers."
IN CHRISTIAN SOUTH.
Lynching of Afro-American Woman Society Function in South Africa
Orangeburg, S. C.:—Rose Carson, a colored woman, was taken from the jail at Elloree near here and lynched by a mob. Eye witness state that many of the most prominent citizens took part in the festivities. The womens' group, led by the mayor of a 12 year old child, was taken to the scene of her alleged crime and hanged. Afterward the body was riddled with bullets.
Subject for a Carnegie Medal
Atlanta City, July 2—During a fight in a houseboat at Missouri avenue and the Thoroughfare tonight, May Whitaker, 32 years old, sustained a serious stab wound in the arm and was drowned when Louisa Brown, an African American girl, plunged into the Thoroughfare and carried her ashore. The Whitaker woman was rushed to the City Hospital in a serious condition. Police are searching for Charles McChell, alleged to have been her assailant.
AFTER McADOO
Congressman on Trail of the Great Segregationist.
Washington, D. C.-Sec. of the Treasury McAdoo, son-in-law of Pres. Wilson, is likely to have his "private yacht" son is that the private yacht happens to be a public yacht, and, according to Representative Good of Iowa, cannot be used for sailing parties. Good son is that the绽弯机 Oneronda has been used for weekend trips by Secretary McAdoo in direct violation of the law.
"If the public had the power," he declares, "it would remove from office a secretary of the treasury who not violates the law, but violates it himself."
Secretary McAdoo is also famous as the man who thinks that Afro-Americans are not fit to use the same water as whites. The regime Afro-American clerks and employees have been segregated and compulsed to use separate toilet rooms.
we do not have to bargain with them. We do not have to bargain with Joel E Spingarn, on his second invasion of the South, in recent months, too, in the interest of our people. The N. A. A. C. is entitled to increased confidence and support on the part of our people, for the very practical fight on segregation it is making. —Cleveland Gazette
IS CASTE BREAKING UP?
Sir George Macalpine says that caste in India is breaking up and that Christianity is doing the work. He gives caste ten years to die and says that when it is dead there will be a great infux from India into the Christian church. The Hindu who gives up his religion and even his caste to get into the Christian church is a fool—he's jumping out of the frying pan into the fire. The Christian church is really the greatest promoter of caste in the world and if great numbers of Hindus break away from the caste, promptly be organized into segregated churches in violation of the alleged basic principle of Christianity.
"RETURNING" TO AFRICA.
The Richmond, (Va.) Reformer speaks of the colored people "returning to Africa." "Returning" is not the proper word; it should be "gong." The people who are going to Africa are possibly descendants of Africans who were brought here against their wills a hundred years ago or more. He will be the best for Africa are poor deluded creatures who have been imposed upon by soundrelays of the Chief Sam ilk. They will sup sorrow by the ladle full. Africa is not the place to go in order to better one's condition unless the immigrant is a white man. An Afro-American with a little capital who wishes to really improve his condition should go to Brazil. He will be the best line and his advancement will be limited only by his own capabilities.
Silence is Infamous.
Possibly the worst thing permitted to go on and work injury to Negroes, has been the silence of Negro speakers. Bent, Tillman, Vardaman, Blease and others have been telling the North and West about Negroes raping, white women. By all means they should prove proven claims, but as it is, both sections believe it. Shame on the intelligent men and women of our race who allow these base calumniators to plone Ploner Press, Martin'sburg, W. Va.
What Segregation Means
Rev. Quincy Ewing, a Southern Caucasian, Born and Reared in Mississippi, Shows the Policy of the South is to Keep the Afro-American in Inferior Status.
Evidences of Christianity
HOWARD UNIVERSITY
Stephen M. Newman, A. M., D. D., President
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES
A. B. and B. S. Courses
TEACHERS COLLEGE
SCHOOL OF MANUAL ARTS AND APPLIED SCIENCES
Courses In Engineering
Domestic Science
Domestic Arts
Manual Arts
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC
ACADEMY
Three Preparatory Courses
(Classic, Scientific, Normal)
COMMERCIAL COLLEGE
Stenography
Typewriting
Economics, Etc.
LIBRARY SCHOOL
PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS
SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
College of Medicine
College of Dentistry
College of Pharmacy
SCHOOL OF LAW
All Courses Begin September 30th, 1914
For Catalogues, Address, Howard University
Washington, D. C.
BY REV, QUINCY EWING
But we are very far from needing to rely upon any general consideration in support of the proposition advanced above. It is supported by evidences on every hand, waiting only the eye of the beholder, and not something is said or done with this end in view, to emphasize, lest they forget, the conviction for both white man and Negro that the latter is and not the former; let me instance a few such evidences.
Consider, first, the "Jim Crow" legislation in the manner of its enforcement. Such legislation is supposed to have for its object the separation of the races in trains, street cars, etc., to allow people from occasional contact with African Americans to engage Negroes, and to prevent personal encounters between the whites and blacks. Members of the different races occupy the same cars, separated only by absurd inadequate little open-mesh wire screens, so tiny and thin, can move them from one seat to another, and strengthen of his little finger. Needless to add, these screens would serve to obscure neither sound, sight, nor smell of drunken rowdies who sat behind them. In summer cars, black and white passengers may be separated not even by passenger, who they are simply required, respectively to occupy certain seats in the front or the back end of the cars.
In Birmingham, Alabama, the front seats are assigned to Negroes in all closed cars, and the back seats in all open ones. Why the front seats in the one case, and the back seats in the other, it is not easy to understand in the letter and alleged spirit of the Jim Crow law derying purpose of the law is clearly not the separation of the races in space; for public sentiment does not insist upon its fulfillment to that end. The underlying purpose of it would seem to be the separation of the races in status; the doctrine of inequality attacks the status of passengers rude in public conveyances on equal terms; therefore the Negro who rides in a public conveyance must do so, not as of undoubted right, but as with the white man's regulation. "This place you may occupy, that other you may not, because I am I and you are you, lest you or to me or you are you, that I am I and you are you." Such is the real spirit of the Jim Crow laws.
IN HOLY RUSSIA.
Jewish Girl Outraged and Crucified By Russians.
Berlin—One of the most revolting crimes in the dark history of Russia was the Peterburg tribute of three Russian youths having outraged and then crucified the daughter of a poor Jewish fisherman in Stavaprol, on the Volga.
After outraging the young girl, the dispatch declares, the three youths dragged her to a cemetery, where they nailed her to a cross above one of her knees. They were driven through her hands and feet and even through her eyes. The three murders were arrested, but their friends in the town released them and escaped, it is asserted.
THE ONLY SOLUTION.
Recently at the Church of England Congress at Southampton, Sir Sidney Olivier, who was governor of Jamaica from 1907 to the end of 1912, put forward the claim that no solution of the American color question was possible except by a resolute disclaimer of the color line and the race differention theory.
Sir Sidney Olivier certainly knows what he is talking about. In the Island of Jamaica, where he was governor for five years, there are about 800,000 colored people and only 20,000 whites and yet there is absolutely no friction between the races. Jamaica is a British colony and the government is just. Colored men enjoy every civil and political right which white men have and there is no color line
Mining other things: Sir James Hare,
"My study and comparison of conditions in the United States and the West Indies," he said, "has brought me to that conclusion. American and colonial politicians and public men are not Exeter Hall abolitionists nor evangelical Christian missionaries. I do not expect them to adopt the methods of missionaries, nor do I sympathize with all their programmes. But it cannot be ignored that it happened that the faiths of the men who laid the foundations for the peaceful development of the mixed community in
Why is it that in every Southern city no Negro is allowed to witness a dramatic performance, or a baseball game, in every city, or every large city, there are hundreds of Negroes who would gladly pay for first-class seats at the theatre and the baseball game, were they permitted to. It can hardly be that permission is given to Negroes in every city, ball games are so well attended by half the population that first-class seats could not be furnished for the other half. As a matter of fact, theatre-auditoriums and baseball grandstands are seldom crowded; the rule is that Negroes in every city must but many vacant Surely as simple as moving from seat to seat a makeshift screen in a street-car, would it be to set apart a certain number of seats in the dress-circle of every theatre. Negroes in every city must be the ball park for Negro patrons. The reason why this is not done, is perfectly obvious; it would be intolerable to the average Southern man or woman to perform in the theatre or baseball terms of equal accommodation with Negroes would look out of place, out of status, in the dress circle or the grandstand; their place, signifying the peanut-gallery, or the bleachers.
---
Consider further that, while no Negro, no matter what his occupation, or personal refinement, or intellectual culture, or moral character, is allowed to trave in a pullman car between state lines, or to enter as a guest a hot tel patronized by white people, the man is given food and shelter in all first class hotels, and occasion neither disgust nor surprise in the Fullman car. Here again the heart of the race problem is laid bare. The black nurse with a white baby in her arms, the black valet looking after the comfort of a woman, the black servant inferiority conspicuously upon them; they understand themselves, and everybody understand them, to be servants, enjoying certain privileges for the sake of the person served. Almost anything the Negro may do in the South, and anywhere he may go, provides the manner of his doing and his service, and the premium put upon his inferiority; such his inducement to maintain it.
IN CHRISTIAN U. E.
Afro-American Woman Lynched by
Americans.
Muskogee, Okla.-Lemuel Peace, a
Caucasian, went into the colored
section of the city Sunday night and
mistreated Marie Scott, an Afro-American
woman. To defend herself, she killed
him. She was arrested and put into
the Wagoner county jail for safe keep-
ing. Tuesday she was taken out of
the jail by a masked mob and hanged
at a telephone pole. The mob pulled
the screaming woman from her cell,
tied a rope about her neck and
dragged her some distance through the
streets before reaching the telephone
pole.
Jamaica were democratic and human-
itarian and, above all, uncompromis-
ingly Christian.
"Were race differentiation held to it must increase civil discord. The balance of numbers is as it is in the South in America it must tend to foster obscure preparations for civil war and rebellion. If statesmen and citizens face in the contrary direction I do not say that they will attain immediately civil peace, but I am confident that they will be traveling the only road toward it.
"I do not suggest that race does not greatly affect facilities for combination between humans in healthy national life, but race difference is only one of many schismatic agencies. The solution of the difficulty involves discipline for the white man as the black."
Editor H. C. Smith of the Cleveland, Ohio Gazette, announces himself as a candidate for the Legislature. He was formerly a member of the Ohio Legislature and did good service for humanity in securing the passage of a civil rights bill and an anti-lynching law. Mr. Smith has been a fearless advocate for the rights of his people, through his newspaper and THE AP-EAL trusts that he will secure the nomination and be elected by a large majority.
SAINT PAUL
A WEEK'S RECORD IN MINNESEO TA'S CAPITAL
The "Saintly City" and Iaintly City Folks—Neway Items of Social, Religious, Political and General Matters Among the People.
SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1914.
Mrs J. H. Charleston is again coniined to her bed.
Mr. Maurice DeBaptiste, of Winnipeg, Can., is in the city.
W. T. FRANCIS
WHO FOR A NUMBER OF YEARS WAS IN THE EMPLOY OF THE LEGAL DEPARTMENT OF THE NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY
HAS OPENED OFFICES FOR THE GENERAL PRACTICE OF THE LAW AT 88 AND UNION BLOCK, ST. PAUL,
You should get in on the ground floor by buying some shares in the Citizens Ice and Fuel Company now.
Get in line for the big boat excursion by the Villa Club, the latter part of July. See further announcements.
FOR RENT—Two 4-room flats, apply to J. P. Anderson, 272 St. Anthony Ave. Phone, Dale 2024—Advertisement 7-4.
Dr. J. R. French, the dentist, has moved his offices from the third to the fourth floor of the Kendrick block, suite 404.
Be on the qui vive for the musical recital at St. James A. M. E. church, Thursday, July 30, featuring Mr. Robt. A. Blackwell, baritone.
The Union Sunday School picnic on next Tuesday, July 21, at Minneapolis Don't forget. Everybody goes to this picnic, great and small.
The State Savings Bank has fallen in line with other banks and has raised the rate of interest paid on deposits to FOUR PER CENT.
If you have anything good to say of THE APEAL tell it to your friends. If you have anything bad, tell it to "Hustling" Morgan, the agent.
T. H. LYLES
Funeral Directors and Embalmer
150. W. Fourth St.
Active Pall Bearers Furnished If Desired.
Lady Assistant When Necessary.
Both Phones 508. St. Paul, Minn.
FOR RENT—A newly remodeled and decorated, modern 5-room flat, first floor, $20. No. 318 W. Central. Tri-State 2557—Advertisement 7-11.
Mrs. J. B. French, who has been visiting her son, Dr. J. R. French, the dentist, left Monday for her home in Chicago. She had a very pleasant visit here.
If the readers and well-wishers of THE APPEAL will send items of social news to this office it will be appreciated and the news will be published.
SPIRELLA CORSET, Cora E. Anderson corsetier. Any lady wishing to be properly corseted call or address 365 Aurora Ave. Tel. N. W. Dale 1345—Advertisement.
Mr. Clifford A. Smith, the tailor, took a run down to Chicago to visit relatives and spend the glorious 4th. He had a good time for several days and returned home last week.
Mrs. Laura Livens, of Brooklyn, N. Y., who has been spending several weeks with her sister, Mrs. J. H. Dillingham, leaves Monday for her home, after a very pleasant visit.
Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Snelson of Columbus, Ohio, are in the city to make their future home here. They are at present the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Hardy, 518 St Anthony avenue.
Mr. M. Gastotern was discharged from his job at The St. Paul, so he took his room mate's suit case and pawned it and now he will have 30 days at Como to repent of his unfriendly act.
Dr. John Ford, who has been visiting his sister, Mrs. B. F. Edwards, left Monday evening for his home in Jacksonville, Fla. He was accompanied to Chicago by Rev. E. H. McDonald, who returned Thursday.
Dr. John Ford of Jacksonville, Fla., filled the pulpit at Memorial Baptist church last Sunday morning and the pulpit of Pilgrim Baptist church in the evening. On each occasion he had large and delighted audiences.
Gopher Lodge, Elks, has given up
MONEY
Is a necessity of modern life. Sometimes it's a serious question just how to get it, but we know one thing that helps—and that is the SAVING HABIT!
STATE SAVINGS BANK
93 East Fourth Street.
THENEXTBIGTHING
Wewishtoannounce that the Outing Par excellence will be the first Moonlight Excursion
[Image of a man in a military uniform with a cap and a mustache.]
ON THE ELEGANT STEAMER Red Wing and Monday, July 20, 1914 at 9: MUSIC BY IMPERIAL ORCH COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS Chester W. Patterson, Chairman
Red Wing and Barge Monday, July 20, 1914 at 9:00 P.M.
MUSIC BY IMPERIAL ORCHESTRA
COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS:
its hall at 126 E. Third street and now meets at Wagner Hall, corner Charles and Western Ave., on the 2nd Wednesday in each month.
The St. Louis Kitchen complying with a general demand is again serving regular dinners from 11:30 to 2:00 o'clock at 25 cents. All home cooking.—Advertisement.
FREE—IF YOU WANT A JOB CALL AT THE FREE EMPLOYMENT BUREAU OF THE ST. PAUL AFROAMERICAN LABOR LEAGUE, 468 ROBERT STREET, G. T. WILLIAMS, MNGR.
If your wife is alling buy her a GOSSARD CORSET and she will be in better SHAPE than ever before. For sale by Mrs. J. E. Cloak, 292 St. Albans street. N. W. Phone, Dale 2076.—Advertisement.
VOCAL AND PIANO LESSONS given by Mrs. Adlae Crawford-Minor at her residence 251 Rondo street, only. Hours for instruction arranged to suit patrons. Terms reasonable. Tel. 1597.—Advertisement.
HAIR CULTURE—Scalp Treatment and Hair Culture. Any one wishing the PORO treatment and PORO Hair Grower, should apply to Mrs. G. W. Bell, 1776 W. Minnehaha street, St. Paul, Minn.—Advertisement, 5-2.
At the next supper of the Business Men's Association the following subject will be presented by a special speaker: "What we need, why we need it, how to get it." A general discussion of the subject will follow.
Mrs. Julia Hinson, proprietor of the St. Louis Kitchen, 128 E. Third street, has had her dining room newly papered and it looks as pretty as a picture. Go and see it and at the same time get a good home cooked meal.
F. H. Harm & Bro, opticians and jewelers, are now located at 492 Wabasha street in the Shubert Building, where they will welcome old and new customers. If you want honest work and goods at fair prices call on them.
A MUSICAL The Choi of St Church w
The Choir of St. James A.M.E. Church will present in Recital Mr. Robert A. Blackwell
Baritone Soloist From the Boston Conservatory of Music
ASSISTED BY
Miss Albreta C. Bell, Pianist
Miss Eva Walker, Reader
St. Paul Ladies Quartet
Miss Bertha Lewis, Pianist
Mr. Otis Murray, Violinist
Mr. Robert S. Strong, Organist
Mrs. B. C. Archer, Accompanist
NOTICE-The person bringing in the largest amount from the sale of tickets, over Six Dollars, will be presented a beautiful twenty-nine inch Colored doll
Kenneth Hamilton
A. V, Hall
TICKETS
Saint Paul, Minn.
and Barge
1914 at 9:00 P.M.
IAL ORCHESTRA
ARRANGEMENTS:
person, Chairman
The Globe Method.—To sell Furniture that will Satisfy at prices that will Gratify. We give Furniture and Stoves you do want, for Furniture and Stoves you don't want.—GLOBE FURNITURE CO., 473-475 St. Peter Street.—Advertisement.
FOR SALE—$2,400.00. Six-room stucco dwelling, No. 969 Rondo street near Chatsworth, Hardwood finish, electric lights, gas for cooking. Easy payments. Apply to W. T. Francis. 88-89 Union Block, Fourth and Cedar.—Advertisement.
At St. James A. M. E. church tomorrow, fourth quarterly meeting, sermon by Presiding Elder, Rev. T. W. Lewis at 10:30 a. m., Sacramental sermon by Rev. E. R. Edwards at 3:00 p. m., sermon by Rev. T. W. Lewis at 8:00 p. m. Everybody welcome.
S. LOUIS 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. 40 cents. Tel. Phone Cedar 6090—Advertisement.
When you are hungry any time, day or night, call at the "Cosmo Grill," 40 E. Third street, and you will find what you wish. Regular dinner from 11:30 to 3:30 for 25 cents. That famous Chile Con Carne always on hand. Phone Cedar 9128. Charles Jackson, (Big Boy), Prop.—Advertisement.
Next Monday evening is the evening on which the Men's Business Association had scheduled for its monthly supper, but owing to the fact that almost everybody is going with the Villa Club on its excursion the supper has been postponed so that the members may go on the excursion.
SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE VAULTS—We invite your inspection. It costs little to place your valuable papers, cash, securities and other valuables in absolute safety. Boxes in our vaults can be had for $4 per year. Store your boxes, trunks, etc., with L RECITAL James A M E.
James Combs
R. S. Stokes
50 CENTS
us. Northwestern Trust Co. 138 Endicott Arcade—Advertisement.
Miss Elenora Rodney, of Duluth, Minn., and Miss Hazel Mosley, of Galesburg, Ill., and the guests of Miss Infantry Martyrs, 588 Rondo street, and on last Monday she gave a little dancing party in their honor. About forty of the young people were present and had a very delightful time, with music, refreshments and terpischorian diversitions.
THE VALET TAILORING CO. No. 154-156 E. Smith street. The most apt-to-use establishment of its kind in the city. Clothing made to order, sunged, pressed, renovated and made. Goods called for and delivered. Four suits pressed for $1. They are prepared to give best service at lowest rates. Tel. N. W Gedar 4362 O. Howell, manager—Advertisement.
They say that the most lucidous and satisfying meals may be obtained every Friday and Saturday, at Memorial Baptist church, corner of Rice and Fuller streets. The dinners begin at 12 o'clock sharp and run to 8 p. m. and one gets all the seasonable things for only 25 cents. The ladies are making a special feature of these dinners and the public is cordially invited to call and try them. The test of a dinner is in eating it.
"Camp Hope" has had a number of visitors during the last few days including, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Mills, of North Yakima, Wash.; Dr. John Ford and sister, of Jacksonville, Fla.; Dr. Mrs. W. Hunter, of Chicago; Dr. and Mrs. T. C. Chapman, of Kansas City; Dr. and Mrs. Valdo Turner, Miss Bogar, Messrs. E. J. Murphy and B. C. Archer. The campers have now been out four weeks and they have not caught all the fish in the lake yet.
Julius Stewart, employed on the Morning Star, was discharged last Tuesday and as he was leaving the boat at 6:00 p. m. the boys on the boat taunted him and poked fun at him. This so enraged Stewart he went up town, procured a revolver, and went back to the boat about 8 o'clock to open fire on the crew of Charles Vogel's helicopter in the abdomen and was taken to the hospital. Stewart fed but was captured and was tried in the police court for assault with a dangerous weapon and his case was continued to July 22
Dr. H. I. Williams, the dentist, 27 E. Seventh street, who has been unable for some time to comfortably accommodate his patients, is now prepared to do so. He has secured the adjoining room, removed the partitions and now has two large operating rooms and a much larger reception room. He has also changed the main entrance of his suite to No. 203, just in front of the elevator. He is now better than ever, able to take care of his daily increasing clientele. For tooth troubles see Dr. H. I. Williams, second floor Kendrick Block, 27 E. Seventh street—Advertisement.
Mrs. J. H. Charleston, matron of Crispus Attacks Home, developed a case of diphtheria last week and was taken to the detention hospital and the Home was placed under quarantine. Several other cases of the dread disease have since developed and the victims have been taken to the hospital. The inmates are not allowed to leave the premises and persons outside are not allowed to enter. Arrangements have been made with the tradesmen for the delivery of food and other necessities and everything is moving along as smoothly as could be expected under the circumstances. Communications may be had by 'phone with the Home.
A HALL IN SIGHT.
After Years of Waiting and Wrangling and Working.
For many years the people of St. Paul have been talking about building a hall and numerous projects have been started, all of which came to naught.
But, now, it seems that a hall is in sight. For the past four months a committee of sixteen, composed of eight members of Mars Lodge, Odd Fellows and Perfect Ashlar Lodge, Masons, has been meeting weekly and working faithfully on the project and have got their plans so far perfected that they have incorporated themselves into the Union Hall Association for the purpose of erecting a $1,000 building between Machine and Kent streets. The final meeting for signing the building contracts will be held Monday night and the project will be fully launched. The officers of the Association are: S. E. Hall president; E. J. Murphy, vice president; C. H. Miller, secretary; R. M. Johnson, treasurer.
The board of directors consists of S. E. Hall, chairman; E. J. Murphy, C. H. Miller, R. M. Johnson, W. T. Francis, Geo. L. Hoage, J. B. Johnson, C. H. Brown, J. H. Dillingham. The erection of a hall is now as cured.
MR8. 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 avenue, St. Paul, manufacturers all kinds of hair goods, transformations, switches, puffs, etc. all through the 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. m. to 9:00 p. m. Phone Dale 4926.
Hair dressing for weddings and parties a specialty.
On reading and filing the petition of the representative of said estate, praying, examining, adjusting and allowing his Final Account, and for the assignment of his residual estate to the persons these entitled: It Is Ordered. That said petition be examined, and that said matter be cited and required to appear before this Court, on Monday, the 14th of October, or as soon thereafter as said matter can be heard, at the Probate Court, at St. Paul, in said County, and show cause, if any they have, why said petitions should not be greater than those in St. Paul, in said County, and publication therein in The Appeal according to law, and by mailing a copy of the day of the petition at least each of the heirs, devices and legatures of said decedent whose names and addresses appear from the files of this
DONT YOU FORGET
The Catholic Men's Club
WILL GIVE ITS BIG
MOONLIGHT EXCURSION
On the Elegant Steamer
PURCHASE & BARGE
TUESDAY EVENING, AUGUST II
McCULLOUGH ORCHESTRA
TICKETS FIFTY CENTS
```markdown
```
I positively guarantee to extract
ABSOLUTELY H
Get prices here before
A Written Guarantee for 20 Y
Dr. Williams, 2
TEL. C. 6132 KENDRICK BLDG
BIGGEST B
OF THE YEAR
YOUNG MEN'S P
Of St.
Monday Event
Music by McCull
TICKETS
I positively guarantee 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
BIGGEST EXCURSION OF THE YEAR BY THE YOUNG MEN'S PLEASURE CLUB Of St. Paul
Boat Leaves Foot of Jackson Street at 8:30 O'clock
CAPITOL STEAM LAUNDRY.
"The House of Quality and Service."
Besides doing first class laundry work at low rates, also does DRY CLEANING, and for a short time offers these special rates:
Ladies' Suits ..... $1.50
Ladies' Long Coats, full lining ..... 1.50
Ladies' Long Coats, half lining ..... 1.25
Ladies' Long Coats, no lining ..... 1.00
Ladies' Long Gloves ..... .10
Ladies' Short Gloves ..... 0.05
Men's Suits ..... 1.00
Mrs. Spring Over Coats ..... 1.00
Terv us and you will be convinced.
Our wagons go everywhere.
Phone N. W. Cedar 939, Tri-State 1643
743 Wabasha St. 938, St Paul, Minn.
Yes. Damphools.
Over at Atlanta City the Negroes having secured a James Crow school, are raring and snorting because the Board of Education exhibits some discrimination to give them a James Crow principal. What fools we mortals be.
—Charleston, (W. V.) Advocate.
Any proper persons, male or female, who wish to act as agents for the great book "FACT OF RECON- INFECTION," by Major John R. Lynch, should write for territory and terms to Major John R. Lynch, 4321 Forestville Ave., Chicago. The book is just from the press and sells at sight. Do it now—Advertisement.
Protest Against Injustice.
Colored men of America, now that you have begun, let there be protests against all forms of injustice and petitions for all legitimate rights and privileges. Let no law-making body assemble without having in its budget your protest against all wrongs, and your petitions for all that is right.
Afro-American Right
We prefer the use of the words "Afro-American" or "Colored" when references are made to the race. Correspondents are at liberty to use the world "Negro" with or without the capital "N." But if they have no conscientious cruppies we prefer the other two cautions. News Louisville, KS.
HONORING AN ARCH TRAITOR.
Fifty years ago when we were going to school one of the things that greatly impressed us was the universal contempt that was held for the traitor Benedict Arnold. But things have changed now according to press dispatches in the daily papers, one of which is as follows. Go to "June 3—Memorial exercises in many cities of the South marked the observance of the birthday of Jefferson Davis today. In several states the occasion was designated as a legal holiday."
Just think of honoring the day that arch traitor was born! One of the causes of the conditions in this country today is because treason was not made so odious that no one who wished to be tolerated in any community would admit he was one of the traitors of 1860-3.
THR. DAILY 1484 PROMPT DELIVERY
MRS. W. B. ELLIOTT & CO.
Staple and Fancy Groceries, Ice Cream, Cigars, Confectionery and Notions
411 University Ave. ST. PAUL
Dr.H.I.WILLIAMS Announces his NEW method of PAINLESS DENTISTRY
extract teeth and remove nerves
BY PAINLESSLY
before going elsewhere
10 Years Given With All Work,
27 E. 7th St
BLDG. 2ND FLOOR ST. PAUL
EXCURSION
DEAR BY THE
PLEASURE CLUB
St. Paul
ening, Aug. 3d
Bullough Orchestra
50 CENTS
CHIROPODY
Hair Weaving, Hair Goods Made
to Order. Combings Bought.
MRS. LILLIE HAMILTON
WITH
MAD. NOTAW WILSON
PARLORS
563 CHARLES St
LITTLE DIAMOND CAFE
MRS. M. J. HICKS, Prop.
First Class Home Cooked Meals
to order at all hours
Daily Dinner 11 to 3 at 25c.
Sunday Dinner 11 to 6 at 30c.
Breakfast 6:30 Supper 5 to 8
476 Robert, ST. PAUL
Phone Dale 5029 Prompt Delivery
The Imperial
BIRDELLA DRIVER, PROP.
Confectionery, Ice Cream, Soda and Sundae, Cigars
Fresh Fruits and Vegetables
441 Rondo ST. PAUL
N. W. DALE 3454 T. S. 5730
Brotchner's Pharmacy
Rondo & Dale Sts. ST. PAUL
T. S. 1296 N. W. Cedar 5599
Established 1887
ST. PAUL RUG AND HAG CARPET FACTORY
LUDWIG STOPPEL, Prop.
We make Rugs from Ingrain and
Brussels Carpets, Silk Curtain
and Rag Carpet Weaving.
Cleaning and Refitting.
Orders called for and delivered.
285 W. 7th ST. - ST. PAUL, MINN.
Let us show you how to SAVE
MONEY and SPACE in your home
by using the
NORTHWESTERN
REVERSIBLE CONCEALED
WALL BED
For full information call, write or Phone
NORTHWESTERN BEDDING CO.
Bradford and Wycliff Sts., St. Paul.
T. S. Park 6275—N. W. Midway 137
SUITS PRESSED
VALET TAILORING CO
150 E. SIXTH ST
---
804 KENDRIK BLOCK
807 E. SEVENTH ST. ST. PAUL
Office Cedar 1673
Dr. Valdo Turner
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Kendrick Block, 27 E. 7th
OFFICE HOURS
9 to 11 a. m., 12 to 1 p. m., 3 to 5 p. m.
Sundays 10 to 11 a. m.
Reg. 386 St. Albans Tel. Dale 912.
Geo.W. Nelson
DRUGGIST
Full Stock of Pure Drugs, Proprietary
Medicines, Druggists' Sundries,
Toilet Articles, Candies,
Soda, Cigars, Etc.
High Brown and High Brown De Luxe
Powder a Specialty.
ORDERS DELIVERED
Cor. Wabasha and Summit, St. PAUL
Mrs. A. Wilson
FASHIONABLE DRESSMAKING
AND
LADIES' TAILORING
491 University Ave. ST. PAUL
"THE BUSY CORNER"
A. J. MCMURRAY & CO.
Staple and Fancy Groceries, Candies, Confectionery, Cigars, School Supplies, Etc.
Ice Cream Parlor and Cafe, Lunch at all Hours.
REAL ESTATE AND RENTALS HANDLED.
Cor( Western and Rondo ST. PAUL
VANDER BIE'S
ICE CREAM
IS THE BEST
For Sale Everywhere
J. C. VANDER BIE
406 Partridge
ST. PAUL, MINN
Tel. Dale 7817 City References
MADAME L. A. PORTER.
Shampooing, Hair Dressing, Manicuring,
Facial Massage, Scalp Treatment.
Switches Made to Order. Sore Corns,
Ingrowing Nails, Bunlons Removed.
TRY PORTER'S WONDERFUL HAIR
GROWER.
Grace Ferguson. Mayme Lobbins.
Phone Dale 7417.
HOME BAKERY
—and
DELICATESSEN
FERGUSON & LOBBINS, Props.
Our Bread, Pies, Cakes, Etc., Are Made
from the Best Materials. They "Can't
be Beat."
Dainties for Receptions, Luncheons, Teas
and Old-Fashioned Cakes (40
cents per pound) Our Specialties.
Orders Delivered.
TEL. CEDAR 441 THRI-STATE 1033
U. S. TRANSFER CO.
LET
U.S.
HAU
IT
ST
SAINT PAUL
MIDWAY
MINNEAPOLIS
MAIN OFFICE
Cor. Ninth & Jackson
ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA
CENTRAL DRUG CO.
Expert Pharmacists
Corner State and Washington Sts.
EVERYBDOYINVITED
Will Give Their Third
ANNUAL PICNIC
AT
ANTLER'S PARK
ON THE
"DAN PATCH"
ELECTRIC
LINE
Thursday, Aug. 6, 1914
There will be good FISHING, BOATING and plenty of Amusements for
Men, Women and Children.
A SPLENDID ORCHESTRA IN ATTENDANCE.
DANCING FROM 3:00 TO 8:30 P. M.
The DAN PATCH TRAINS will
Nicollet ave. station at 8:30 and 11:00
return at 9:00 p. m.
Take 54th and Columbia Heights
Lake and Nicollet ave. to Dan Patch
Round Trip Jickets 7
The DAN PATCH TRAINS will leave Minneapolis from the 54th and Nicollet ave. station at 8:30 and 11:00 a. m. and 2:00 and 5:00 p. m. Trains return at 9:00 p. m.
Take 54th and Columbia Heights street car on Marquette ave. and at Lake and Nicollet ave. to Dan Patch station.
Round Trip Tickets 75 cts. Children 35 cts.
COMMITTEE IN CHARGE
Dr. R. S. Bro
Wm. Dotson Frank
Irvin Smith Alton
Thomas Henderson
Dr. R. S. Brown, Chairman Wm. Dotson Frank Terry Walter Smith Irvin Smith Alton Boone Calvin Lewis Thomas Henderson Ephraim Bludsoe
MINNEAPOLIS
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.
SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1914.
Mrs. E. B. James, 3700 Snelling avenue, is quite sick.
Mr. J. N. Sellers has been suffering for several days from a carbuncle but has at last got some relief.
Don't forget the Union Sunday School picnic at Minneaha Falls next Tuesday, July 21. You are invited.
Little Edith Stone, 2712 Grand avenue, will leave Monday for Alexandra, Minn., to be the guest of Mrs. Hobson.
The funeral of Mr. Hall, who died July 11th, was held at O. A. Lawrence's undertaking rooms last Monday at 2:30 o'clock.
The Crispus Attucks Home association is preparing to give a boat excursion in the near future. Watch for further announcements.
The funeral of Mrs. Gailbreth, daughter of Mrs. H. Tyler, who died last Saturday, was held at the family residence, 91 South 13th street, Monday at 10:30 A. M.
Quarterly meeting at St. Peter A. M. E. church Sunday, July 26. When you see Rev. E. G. Jackson just slip your dollar in to his hand and note the expression on his face.
Mr. Wm Neal, 1823 Fifth Ave. S., had a very bad accident a few days ago by having his hand caught in the machinery in the auto factory where he is employed, whereby he lost one of his fingers.
The biggest rally that has ever been known in the Twin Cities is now in progress for the benefit of Crispus Attucks Home. Everybody is invited to take a part in it by giving a dollar or more.
The Cason Bro's Orchestra, T. E. Cason, manager, Earl C. Cason, assistant manager, is prepared to furnish music for all occasions at reasonable rates. Phone Hyland 3770. Residence 1210 Sixth ave. N.
Of course, everybody will bear in mind that the 18th annual picnic of Pride of Minnesota Lodge, No. 5, K.P., will be given on Tuesday, August 4th, at Carver, Minn. Further announcements later.
Mr. John N. Sellers is now the authorized representative of THE APPEAL in Minneapolis and entitled to receive subscriptions, contract, and collect for advertisements, etc. Address communications to 2420 Riverside avenue.
Mrs. J. B. Elliott, 3410 Grand avenue, gave a surprise party in honor of Mrs. Lewis of Detroit, Mich., on Saturday evening last. The evening was spent in various games and enjoying refreshments. Mrs. Lewis left for her home on Monday accompanied by Mrs. Elliott.
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. to 8:00 p. m. Regular Sunday dinner from 1 to 3 p. m. 40 cts. All home cooking. Mrs. Julia Hinson, Prop. Tel. Cedar 6090. —Advertisement.
Have you heard the sweet voiced entertainer at the France Chop Suey Cafe, 255 First ave. So.? Well, you ought to hear him, he is some singer. You can get all sorts of American and Chinese dishes there, too. Regular dinner from 11 a. m. to 2 p. m. Open from 7 a. m. to 2 a. m. Mrs. J. M. Mask, proprietor.
There is to be an open air reception or reunion of Minneapolis people who have lived here for twenty-five years or more on Sunday afternoon, July 19, between 3 and 5 o'clock, at Minnehaha Park. St. Paul people who have been in Minnesota for a quarter of a century are specially invited to be present, also the public cordially invited. Appropriate exercises will be conducted by the committee in charge of the occasion and a notable gathering is confidentially expected.
leave Minneapolis from the 54th and a. m. and 2:00 and 5:00 p. m. Trains street car on Marquette ave. and at station. 5 cts. Children 35 cts.
own, Chairman
Terry Walter Smith
Boone Calvin Lewis
Ephraim Bludsoe
PICNIC!
Twenty-third Annual
OF
St. Anthony Lodge 2877
G. U. O. O. O. F.
AT
PARKER'S LAKE
On the Electric Short Line
Tuesday, July 28th
BOATING, BATHING, FISHING.
FINE NEW PAVILION AND
GOOD MUSIC FOR DANCING.
ATHLETIC CONTESTS BETWEEN
ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS.
REFRESHMENTS IN ABUNDANCE.
ST. PAUL FRIENDS ESPECIALLY INVITED
Trains leave the Terminal station ax
7th St. and 2nd Ave. North, Minneapolis,
at 6:15, 8:15, 10:15 A. M., and 1:15,
4:15, 5:20, 6:20 and 7:45 P. M.
Returning, leaves Parkers Lake at 8:05
and 9:55 A. M. and 1:06, 4:06, 5:40,
7:03 9:23 and 10:53 P. M.
COMMITTEE: Wm. R. Mortis,
Clay Winnings, Wm. Love, T. Perkins,
J. Whitley, M. Brown, C. Sexton, J. W.
Winnings, C. C. Perkins, D. W.
Raynor, White, W. Simmons, J.
Withers, J. Banham, N. Stone, O. A.
Lawrence, Ch'h.
CITATION FOR EXAMINATION OF FINAL ACCOUNT.
On reading and filling the *petition* of the Court fix a time and place for examining, adjusting and allowing his attention that the Court fix a time and place for examining, adjusting and allowing his attention that the assignment of the residue of said case to the persons thereto entitled: Ordered that said petition be heard and all persons required and said matter be cited and required to appear before this Court, on Monday, the 16th of June, 2014. A. M., or as soon thereafter as said matter can be heard, at the Probate Court of St. Paul, in said County, and show cause, if any they have, why said petition be heard and all persons required that this citation be served by published The Appeal according to law, and by mailing a copy of this citation at least once each of the heirs, devisees and legates of said decedent whose names and addresses appear from the files of this Court.
Witness the Judge of said Court this
26th day of June. A. O. 1914
E. W. BAZILLE.
(SEAL)
(SEAL)
Attest:
F. W. GOSEWISCH.
Clerk of Probate.
J. Louis Ervin. atty. for Adm.
303 Court Blk.
St. Paul, Minn.
7-11-14
MINOR'S BAND
Chas. C. Minor, Director and Manager.
MUSIC FURNISHED FOR ALL OC...
CASIONS AT REASONABLE
RATES.
Full Satisfaction Guaranteed.
1221 Sixth Ave. No. MINNEAPOLIS.
"For Forty-nine years The Best of Beers"
Hamm's BEER
N.W. BOMONT 1400
TRI-STATE 935
MOST MODERN BOTTling PLANT
THEO. HAMM BREWING CO
ST. PAUL.
TWIN CITY STAG CLUB
246-50 FOURTH AVE S.
J.E. STEWART, Manager
FINEST ESTABLISHMENT OF ITS KIND IN THE UNITED STATES.
Twenty Elegant, Steam Heated, Electric Lighted Rooms for Gentlemen Only. Free Bath. Rates Reasonable.
Lobby, Reading and Lounging Room, Buffet and Grill Room, Billiard Room, Dining Room, Barber Shop and Bath, Private Dining and Reception Room for Ladies.
A LA CARTE MEALS AT ALL HOURS. BEST SERVICE.
REGULAR DINNER
Daily, From 1 to 6 P. M. 25 to 35 Cts.
Sunday, 35 to 50 Cents.
Special Terms for Private Parties,
Banquets, Etc.
MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA.
Phone Nic. 9769.
Main 9592 T. S. 3073
PORTERS' AND WAITERS'
HOTEL
FOR MEN ONLY
GLOVER SHULL, Manager
Rates 50 cents per day
309 Hennepin MINNEAPOLIS
GOOD
SHOES
The
Horsheim
SHOE
STANLEY SHOE CO.
421 Robert Street, St. Paul
422 Nicollet Ave., Minneapolis.
SMOKE
THE OLD RELIABLE
Sight Draft
CIGAR
The King of Nickel Cigars
W. S. CONRAD CO.
ST. PAUL
F. M. PARKER & CO.
Best place in the city for Pure Drugs and Proprietary Medicines.
A complete stock of Druggists' Sundries, Soaps, Perfumes, Toilet Articles, Pure Candy, Fine Stationery, Kodaks and Supplies, Best Brands of Cigars, etc., etc.
F. M. Parker & Co.
Prescriptions Delivered Open all night
The REXALL Store. Both Phones 315
Visit Wildwood Park
ON BEAUTIFUL WHITE BEAR LAKE
First-Class Restaurant, popular prices. Special Dinner on Sundays from 11:30 A.M. to 3 P.M. for 75 Cents.
Splendid New Pavilion with Dance Hall, Promenade and Refreshment Counters.
Dancing on Weekdays only from 2:30 to 5 P.M. and from 8 to 10:30 P.M. Sunday Orchestral Concerts at 3 and 8 P.M. Music by Minnesota State Orchestra. Prof. W. H. Baker of St. Paul in charge of Dance Floor.
Other "Good Time" features—Bathing, Boating, Bowling, Ball Throwing Games, Carousel, Fishing, Fun Factory, Picnic Grove with fine new Shelter Pavilion, Postal Photo Gallery, Penny Arcade, Playgrounds, Roller Coaster, Swings, Shooting Gallery, Water Chute.
HOW TO GO TO WILDWOOD PARK FROM ST. PAUL
Take an Electric Train at Seven Corners Terminal for Wildwood Park. Fare—each way, 15 cents, or 10 cents with transfer from any St. Paul Local Line.
UTLEY'S
30 EAST FOURTH STREET
Shaving, Hair-Cutting, Shampooing, Electric Head and Face Massage, Manieuring, Sanitary Baths, Shoes Polished
KINK-NO-MORE FOR SALE $1.00 PER BOX
HAIR STRAIGHTENING A SPECIALTY
LEADING AROMA-AMERICAN PAPERS FOR SALE
Tel. Cedar 9282 ST. PAUL, MINN.
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
Your Credit is good at the
GLOBE FURNITURE CO.
473-475 St. Peter St.
The leading New and Second Hand
Furniture store of the city
Tel. Ceder 3817
A. B. CHERNISS, Mgr
Office Cedar 5552 PHONES Res. Dale 2419
J. S. STRONG
DEALER IN
Real Estate AND Insurance
Handles Farm Lands and City Property;
Bulldo, Buys, Sells or Rents
Houses.
Insures your Life, your House, your
Household Goode
Insures against damage by Fire,
Lightning or Tornade.
See STRONG before closing a deal
Elsewhere.
Office 25-26 Union Block
Corner of Fourth and Cedar.
ST. PAUL
MINN.
Best Hops and Malt Brewed without fault
Hamm's
BEER
HOST
MODERN
BOTTLEING
PLANT
THEO. HAMM BREVING CO.
ST. PAUL
---
Northwestern Stamp Works
MANUFACTURERS OF
and
il STAMPS
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION
THIRD ST. ST. PAU
PHONE CEDAR 4877
John Brown Cigar Co.
MAKERS OF
FINE HIGH GRADE CIGARS
SPECIAL BRANDS
JOHN BROWN THIN DIME BLUE HEAD
115 E. THIRD STREET
THIRD FLOOR
ST. PAUL
R 9140
LAW OFFICES OF
J. LOUIS ERVIN
PAUL MIN
TY 252 THE FI T
Mild, Rich, Satisfying!
5c
It Once and You'll Become a 252
"Fan"!
Sold by the Good Dealers
By Cigar Dealer for 'the King of Nickel Smokes'
MADE ONLY BY
ART & MURPHY
MAKERS SINCE 1857. SAINT PAUL, U.S.A.
939 PHONES
The House of Quality and Service
Capitol Steam Laundry
and Dry Cleaning
TWO
FIFTY
TWO
252
TWO
FIFTY
TWO
Mild, Rich, Satisfying!
5c
Try It Once and You'll Become a 252
"Fan"
Sold by the Good Dealers
Ask any Cigar Dealer for "the King of Nickel Smokes"
MADE ONLY BY
HART & MURPHY
SMOKE MAKERS SINCE 1857. SAINT PAUL, U.S.A.
First Class work. Satisfaction Guaranteed
Try us and you will be convinced
Our Wagons go Everywhere
Ashp. Street. ST. PA
PHONE CEDAR 9140
JOHN H. HARRIS
Stamp Works.
URERS OF
MPS
DESCRIPTION
ST. PAUL, MINN.
ST. PAUL
Meets thir
Odd Fellow
ity and F
on Farring
P., August
HOUSE
U. O. O.
Tuesday i
ple Hall,
Ave. South
Miss Cora
UNITED
NORTH
F. Meets
Wagner H.
Charles alway
ing always
J. Q. Ada
JOHN H.
SERVIN
AT LAW
URT BLOCK
NO. 345, I
meets first
month at
Ave. Mine
Barnett, I
R. of D., I
PILGRIM
12th hall of
ing at 11
school at
ing general
ing study
and wedding
MEMOR
corner Ri
services:
m. Sunda
meeting T
lie cordial
Donald, p
ATTORNEY AT LAW
SUITE 303 COURT BLOCK
52 TWO FIFTY TWO
satisfying!
become a 252
ing of Nickel Smokes'
MURPHY
SAINT PAUL, U.S.A.
NES Tri-State 1643
Quality and Service
Im Laundry
Cleaning
GOPHEL
P. of the day
nnesday
Hall, corne
St., St.
Richard M.
ST. JAMES
Fuller and
Ices: 11:00
prayer on Monday
nnesday and
nermals and
Parsonage
Jones, Pa.
S. PHIL
corner A
street Sect
tion of Hoe
celebration
thin Sunday
and fourth
school, 12
Andrew, G.
Week servi
class, 8:00
8:00 p. m.
9:00 a. m.
355 Thomas
ZION PH
Farrington
day service
8:00 P. M.
Young Pea
week, mec
Rev. G.
Farrington
Anyone
quickly as
invention
tissue str
sent free.
Patents
special note
Scien
A handson
citation of
year A. KUNN
Everywhere
ST. PAUL, MINN.
MOST WORSHIPFUL GRAND LODQI
—OF—
PIONER LODGE NO. I. F. AND A
M Meets first and third Mondays
of each month at Wagler Hall. West
ern Ave. and Charles street, at 8:00 p. m.
D. Gamble, W. M.; J. H. Dillingham,
Secy. 569 Rondo.
PERFECT ASHI, R LODGE NO. 4
and A. M. meets second and fourth
Tuesdays at Wagler Hall. Western
Ave. and Charles street at 8:00 p.
m. W. B. Ellott, W. M. W. F. Chandler,
Secy. 517 Wabash.
BETHEL CHAPTER NO. 28 R. A. M
Meets second Thursday in each month
at Wagler 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
month at Wagler Hall. cor.
Western Ave. and Charles street
W. T. Joyce, E. C.; J. John Sayles, Secy'.
MARS COMMANDER NO. 22 G. H. H. H.
daily nights at Odd Fellows' Hall. 22
West University, corner Farrington.
J. H. Dillingham, N. H. Wesley Kelly, P.
950 St. Anthony Ave.
HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH, NO. 553
G. O. of F. meets first and third
M. O. of F. meets first and third
Fellows Hall, N. W. Cor. Hall, Odd Fellows
Farrington ave., Mrs. T. E. Franklin,
N. M. G.; Mrs. Carrie E. Lindsay, W. R.
506 Thomas street.
FREDERICK DOUGLASS LODGE NO. 1005
G. U. O. of F. meets first and
third Friday nights in each month at
Farrington Hall, corner of Farrington
and University Hall, corner of All
Fellows in good standing welcome
A. 2. Roberts, N. G.; James R. Lynn, P.
S., 276 Carroll avenue.
ST. PAUL PATRIARY NO. 1103
meets third Monday in each month at
Odd Fellows Hall, corner of W. University
and Farrington, Entrance on
Farrington. George B. Love, R. V.
P., Augustus Jones, W. P. R.
Minneapolis.
HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH, NO. 756
G. O. of F. meets second and fourth
M. O. of F. meets second and fourth
Fellows Hall, street and Eighth
Ave., South, Mrs. S. Singer, M. N. G.; Miss Cora Napler, W. P. R.
UNITED BROTHERS OF FRIENDSHIP
NORTH STAR LODGE NO. 138 ' R F
Meets 3d Thursday in each month a
Wages. gat. cor. Western Ave. and
Charles streets. Standing
always welcome. O. Howell, W.
M. J. Q. Adams, W. S., 49. E. 4th St.
THE FEDERAL
MILITARY
AIR FORCE
BIDDLE CIRCLE, LADIES OF G. A. R meets first and third Tuesdays of each month in Supreme Court room, old cap bible in White Secy., Phoenix Ridge.
FIDELITY COURT OF CALANTHE NO. 345. N. A. S. E. A. E. A. A. and A. A. meet first and third Tuesday in each month at K. of P. Hall, Hale Ave., Minneapolis. Mrs. Minneva E. Barnett. W. C.; Miss Arlene M. Scott R. of D. 25. W. 29th St.
PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH. Cor 12th and Cedar. Sunday services: Preach m. and 7:45 p. Sunday school at m. and 7:45 p. Sunday gueletual meeting. Friday evening study Sunday school lesson. Funerals and weddings promptly attended.
MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH, corner Rice and Fuller streets. Sunday services: Preach, 11 a. m. and 8 p. m.; Sunday School, 12:45; Deaconess meeting 7. B. Y. P. U. 7:30 p. M. public cordially invited. Rev. E. H. McDonald, pastor, 651 W. Central avenue
ZION PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, Cor.
Farrington and St. Anthony avenues. Sun-
sation services, preaching, 11:00 A. M. and
P. M.; Sunday School 12:00 P. M.
8:00 P. M.; Sunday Peoples meeting, 7:00 P. M.; Mid-
week meeting, Wednesday, 8:00 P. M.
Rev. G. W. Camp, pastor. Manse 377
Parrington ave.
OVER 65 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
PATENTS
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
COMMUNICATIONS
---
HAMMER
MINNESOTA
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Minneapolis.
AYES LODGE No. 6 K. OF P
day in and third Tuesday
day in Castle Hall 221 W. U.
university cor. Farrington.
Farrington is in good
standing always James
James Thomas, C. C; Jas.
A. Henderson, V. C; 148 E $th
K of R St Albans street
Anyone sending a sketch and description may be charged. The invention is probably patentable. Community inventors are not required to receive free. Oldest patent for securing patients. Receive special notice, without charge, in the
Scientific American.
handsonly illustrated weekly. Largest cit-
rity. Four months. Four months. Sold by all new dealers.
MUNN & Co 3618 Broadway. New York
Branch Office, 65 F St., Washington, D.C.
TORY & CLARK Pianos
TORY & CLARK Piano Players
TORY & CLARK Organs
855 and 257 Wabash Ave.