The Appeal

Saturday, August 10, 1907

St. Paul, Minnesota

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THE APPEAL KEEPS IN FRONT BECAUSE: 1-It aims to publish all the news possible. 2-It does so impartially, wasting no words. 3-Its correspondents are able and energetic. GREAT CATHEDRAL FOR NATION'S CAPITAL PROPOSED CATHEDRAL OF ST. PETER AND ST. PAUL 63 Miles of Book Shelves in the New York Library NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY. SEEN FROM NORTHEAST CORNER 42D STREET AND 5TH AVENUE VOL. 23 NO. 32. GREAT CATHEDRAL PROPOSE Of which Bishop Satterlee is The movement for the erection in Washington of a Protestant Episcopal cathedral has been given added impetus and the aspect of a national church enterprise by the exhibition of the plans, private views of which have been permitted at the bishop's house. The drawings are shortly to be placed on view in the library of congress, where they may be seen by 63 Miles of Book NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY, In the "most beautiful public building in the United States," as New Yorkers characterize the new public library, now nearing completion at Fifth avenue and Fifty-second street, on the site of a once famous reservoir, there will be sixty-three miles of book shelves. It is estimated that these shelves will afford lodgement for about 3,500,000 volumes. Realizing the extreme value of the treasures which will be stored here, the architects and builders have taken especial care to make certain that this mammoth collection shall be safe from fire. The beautiful structure will be as nearly fireproof as human ingenuity can assure. One of the buildings are of massive stone, shining white. It fills the entire frontage of two city blocks from Fortleth to Forty-second streets, facing east. It is 394 feet long, 247 feet deep, and 130 feet above the ground at its highest point. Selected EQUAL TO EMERGENCY. Captain Showed Mate How to Sink The Manchor. Captain Sealby, of the Cretic, was talking about the nautical ignorance of the average tourist. "I once overheard a tourist," he said, "ask her husband where their daughter was. "In the blunt end of the ship," the husband answered. "Still worse, though," Captain Sealby continued, "was the nautical ignorance of a couple landsmen who went sailing. "These greenhorns had for anchor a lot of stones tied up in a burlap bag. "When lunch time came the skipper called to his mate: "Cast anchor! "The other heather the anchor overboard, but in the act the burlap split, and the stones sank to the bottom while the bag floated. "Skipper,' said the man, after watching the bag a little while, the anchor won't sink. What's to be done? "Here,' said the skipper, capably, 'take this pole and shove her down.'" the general public and the visiting thousands who are transient in Washington during the year. Were the first stones laid to-day for the proposed cathedral, five or six years would clap before the comission of the main building, if the plan were approved. If the fund were available. The estimated cost of the cathedral is $5,000,000 to $6,000,000. "Although not a stone toward the building of the Washington cathedral Book Shelves in the New BEEN FROM NORTHEAST CORNER stones from the walls of the old reservoir compose a large part of the foundations. The walls are six feet thick at the base. The marble facing is composed of solid blocks a foot or more thick. From the standpoint of library arrangement the stock room at the rear, overlooking Bryant Park, is the unique feature of the library. In the room, which is 297 feet long, 78 feet wide and 53 feet high, is a structure of steel beams covering almost the entire space. This is the bookcase. Four and a half million pounds of steel were put into it. The weight will fall upon 704 cast iron columns, bolted at their bases to solid mold. Floors of these columns will be of porus terna cotta, which manufactured under a heat equal to any possible confagration, is unburnable. The interior steel columns in the library, too, are protected against fire by the hollow blocks, for it has How a Resourceful Officer Captured a Prisoner. One of the most sensational captures of an escaped jailbreaker ever effected occurred last week along the D. L. & W. railroad, near Milton, Pa. Chief of Police Mincemeyer of Danville, leaning far out of a speeding locomotive, seized Charles Sutton by the collar and swung him on board, a prisoner. Sutton broke out of the Montour county fall several hours before and tried to escape along the railroad. Sheriff Williams and Chief Mincemeyer a locomotive crew together and started in pursuit. While running about twenty miles an hour they suddenly espied in the glare of the headlight Sutton, leaning back against a box car on the adjoining track to let the locomotive pass. He was unsuspicious of such speedy pursuit and did not realize it until Mincemeyer's strong arm shot out and seized him, and he was aboard the locomotive, which did not stop until after the capture was effected. THE APPEA has been laid, the work of the cathedral foundation has been fully inaugurated," Bishop Satterlee, sponsor for the movement, says. The cathedral of St. Peter and St. Paul is to be the official title of the mother church. While it will be the mother church of the diocese of St. Paul, the diocese garred more as a national institution by reason of its splendid proportions and scope and the fact of its location in the capital of the nation. New York Library 2D STREET AND 5TH AVENUE. been proved by tests that steel gives way when exposed to very great heat. The principal reading room is in the top of the building and its windows look in Fifth avenue and on Bryant Park. By day all light will be furnished by the sun, and the big room, on account of its lofty and open position, will be especially well lighted. It will be a show place of the city. Between the reading room and stack room beneath there will be direct vertical communication. When a reader wants a certain book he gives his order to an attendant near his seat, and in three or four minutes the desired volume is in his hands. The basement room, parcel rooms, a department for the exhibition of patents, a special library of children's books, a luncheon room, a book bindery, quarters and lockers for employees, and an office of the library circulating department. ... While it took a Western civilization to teach man the way to freedom and to strike the shackles from womanhood, the Orient anticipated the remainder of the world by centuries in appreciating the value of a life in the open for children. The youngster of China, Japan, India, Egypt, the Philippines never had to be freed. He has ever been so. A pessimist might say that the fathers and mothers of the Far East are too lazy to give that care to their offspring that is so typical of parents in the New World. This, they argue, is why the dark-hued youngster has been allowed to spend his young life in the open air, adding sunburn to his already copper or black cuticle and never knowing anything but the health-giving joy of the fresh air and the open. Perhaps this is true, but travelers will tell you that the Oriental father and mother are not lacking in affection, particularly when the offspring is a boy. Among the wealthy, where every wish of the young is quickly responded to, the same open life is permitted the children, nay, is thought to be essential to their healthy future. There is none of the coddling of anne of the wrapping in cotton that seems to be the United States. The wise Chinese or Japanese father and mother reason that above all things their offspring should be kept close to nature. This idea even affects the nobility, and where a man born to the purple fears to let his child run wild with other youngsters, for fear kidnappers might steal him for ransom, he makes the same outdoor life possible with safety by building a large garden. Here the boy roams his younger days, unbothered by books or tutors, free till such time as the father decides that he is old enough to have a brain ready for knowledge and constitution to bear him through the strain of hard application. This latter case has related particularly to the Japs, who more than any other Oriental nation appreciate the value of education, and count no extreme of money wasted that goes to prepare a boy or girl for the future. The Japs play as one would expect the children of someone that turn people to play. They enjoy themselves hugely, but except for wide grins, which disclose fine teeth, there is little evidence of the good time they are getting from striving to keep out of the way of the chaser whose eyes are veiled. Motherhood is a strong instinct with the Japanese girl, just as the warlike spirit seems to dominate the boy. The real little mother in her highest estate can be found in Tokio, Chefu, Nagassaki and a hundred other places. It is no uncommon sight for a girl of ten to have in charge half a dozen brothers and sisters, arranged in steps and going all the way down to one and two years. Patience and gentleness to an astonishing degree mark the care these little mothers lavish on their young charges. Playtime to a Japanese girl often means little more than years spent in taking care of the future heads of famine. Chinese children with their yellow faces and fat bodies make you think irresistibly of rolls of butter bound about with bright hued wrappers. The Chinese baby is much more Insulted Dignity. Foreman—What is all that arguing down the road? Laborer (indignantly)—Why, the man running the steam roller wants us to call him a chauffeur. Commercial Regret. Little Samuel—Papa, that gun you sold to Scannell last week burst the first time he used it, and he was killed. Father—God of Abraham! That is terrible! I sold him that gun on the installment plan. THE FILM "THE STAIRS" BY JOHN HARRISON UNCLE SAM'S LITTLE WARDS. Diminutive maidens of the tropics, Philippine islands. demonstrative than his Jap brother or sister. He laughs loudly, plays boisterously and is full of charm and roguery. While the adult Chinaman stands in great awe of his all-powerful God, of whom the greatest of prophets is the all-knowing Confucius, the children of the nation are not at an early age compelled to master all the lore of religion. This instruction is left till a time when it is felt the growing mind can grasp the great truths. Prior to that time the child's chance of future happiness depends largely on the conduct of the parents, the father and mother being expected to so live that the gods cannot take of. UNCLE SAM'S Diminutive maidens of th fense against them or their offspring. Confucius taught charity and kindness to children as prime tenets of his doctrine, therefore none except of children that deep reverence which only comes with understanding of vital truths. It is no uncommon sight to see a group of almond-eyed youngsters playing church, imitating the Celestial teachers of the faith, the priestess of the idol that their elders would not approach except in humble awe. In all Uele San's domain there is no place where children have their own way more thoroughly than in the Philippines. It has been thought that Young America in the cities of the United States enjoys a good deal of license, but its condition shrinks almost into bondage as compared with YOUTHFUL MOTHERS. JAPAN. Plague of Caterpillars. Travelers in the Wodonga and Barnarwatha districts of Australia find it difficult, writes a Melbourne correspondent to set their horses to face the caterpillars that swarm the country roads. They are dending vegetation, and it is feared the vineyards will be devastated. An excursion train, when seven miles from Pensthist, was brought to a standstill through dense masses of the insects blocking the rails. The wheels crushing them to death "skidded" from the rails. the freedom allowed the brown youngsters who came to United States control after the Spanish-American war. The Filipino child runs as wild as a native vine. No one says him nay. He can go and come at will, and only at nightfall does the mother or father round up the brood to put them to sleep. Children of the Citadelite district in Cairo, Egypt, present another interesting example of the juvenile outdoor life of the East. They dress little or not at all, but they are a happy and robust bunch, who seem to thrive on dirt, exposure, and a none too plentiful supply of nourishment. The man who has studied physical culture, and who knows all the arguments in favor of an outdoor life, will naturally wonder why these children, who never know anything else, do not grow into more robust men and women. In Japan they do develop fine healthy physiques. They are diminutive, but they have limitless endurance and can live on only a fraction of what would be required to keep LITTLE WARDS. tropics, Philippine islands. life in an American, German or Englishman. In China they would perhaps grow to equally able mental and physical maturity but for the curse of opium which saps the nation. The stock of the Philippines has not yet been long enough under test to permit a fair estimate, but the probabilities are that the children raised in the open will eventually make good, healthy Americans, with a fair sprinkling of brains. Not Popular. Miss Skreecher—What sort of songs do you like best, Mr. Supher? Mr. Suphrre—The songs of the sev eentheenth century. Miss Skreecher—How odd! Why do you prefer them? Mr. Suphrer—Because nobody ever sings 'em nowadays. Potent. Invalid—Is this a good place for the nerves? Proprietor of Health Resort—Is it why, when I opened up here I only charged $2 a day—now I've got the nerve to charge $10. Putting His Foot in it. "Why, Jack, how can you call Geri tie plain? I'd like to be only half as good looking as she is!" "You are Mabel, and you know it!" "Jack!" (Then he realized his blunder.) WASHINGTON THE CITY OF MAGNIFICENT DISTANCES. A Collection of Events Occurring Among the People of the Capital of This Great and Glorious Nation and Condensed for our Readers. Special Correspondence THE APPEAL Washington, August 7- The government mandates each year approximately $800 million in supplies and labor furnished under contract. That the contracts under which this enormous sum is annually expended should be free of legal defects is admitted by every official of the government whose duties are connected with the summer vacation, is freely admitted that many of these contracts are loosely drawn and that the government is muted of large sums every year. A special committee, appointed by the President just before he left Washington, on the summer vacation, is now at work on this critical study of all the contract forms with a view to the adoption of a standard system that shall be operative in all the departments, instead of the present method of entering into contracts which is not alike in any two of the executive departments. Maj. John R. Lynch, paymaster, United States Army, former auditor of the treasury for the Navy Department, has been assigned to duty as chief paymaster of the Department of the Navy, with station at Hilo, as the relief of Maj. Francis L. Payson, paymaster, granted leave of absence. Fruit dealers of California have a petition prepared which they will present to President Rosevelt and Commissioner Sargent of the immigration bureau asking that the law be amended with reference to the exclusion of O. H. Kercheval. D. H. Kercheval, a fruit grower of Sacramento, now in this city, declares that the Chinese laborer is a necessity for the development of the fruit interests of California. He will be among those who will petition for a repeal of the law. He will also hope to obtain the assistance of the administration in attempting to get such legislation enacted. Mr. Kercheval is a member of the International Equity League. The petition, which will be presented later with numerous signatures, favors the unrestricted admissibility of immigrants, although Mr. Kercheval does not regard the Jannesse as of equal importance to the Chinese as laborers for California. F. J. Shad, Washington's famous physician and secretary of the Medical Department of Howard University, will address the National Medical Association at Baltimore, August 27 on "Rational Therapeutics." The fifth-fifth annual session of the National Grand Tahoe Council of the Grand United Order of Gallileo Fishermen was called to order at 10 o'clock Tuesday morning in Gallileo Temple, 229 F street southwest. The large hall was well filled with delegates from Washington, Maryland, Virginia, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Richmond and Baltimore, Dr. James T. Walker was chairman. The overexercises were opened with a hymn, "Bless the Tie." Rev. W. Howard Gerard praver, John C. Danyard praver, Dee Dee Dee of the District of Columbia, delivered the address of welcome to which Rev. H. H. Mitchell of Columbus, Ohio, responded. Miss Maggie Jefferson sang a solo. In behalf of the city justice of the Galilean Robert H. Terrell delivered an address. Dr. W. E. Atkins, secretary of the endowment department and cashier of the Galilean Fisherman Bank, responded. Prof. J. B. Newman sang a solo. Mr. B. Newman sang a solo. Secretary, made an address in behalf of the District Grand Tahenacle, to which Mr. C. F. McLaurin of Hampton, Va., responded. The entire audience then sang "My Country 'Tis of Thee," and the audience then sang "Grayson pronounced the benediction." A reception to the delegates was held Wednesday evening. Hon. W. F. Vernon, Register of the Hon. W. F. Vernon, Register of the West. He will speak at the League Meeting in Topela and spend some time at Excelsior Springs. The demand for positions in the consular service from any of the States is not quite what was anticipated by State Department officials when the service was made attractive and more modern and up-to-date by the Root. There has been a considerable increase in the number of offices the last years, and, although two examinations have been held under the new system—the first last March and the second early last month—there are new applicants for vacancies. The filled. The posts vacancies and new applicants will be sent, pay from $2,000 to $3,000 the year, with opportunities for rapid promotion to offices in higher grades, commanding up to $6,000, $8,000, and a few at $12,000. It is the number of applicants for the jobs that determines the department has decided upon a third examination to be held next fall. The date—November 20, 21 and 22—has been set far enough distant to enable all candidates to make sufficient preparation. Few candidates are academic, or commercial education have been called on the two previous examinations. "To take the examination, a candidate must be designated by a Senator from his State, if that State shows a vacancy. While several States are representing some of the others—nobly the Northeast of the Mississippi, have many candidates than vacancies. Unless there are more applications for vacancies, the effort of the State HAVE YOUR READ THE MORALS THE APPEAL, A NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY ADAMS BROS. EDITORS AND PUBLISHERS 49 E. 4th St., St. Paul, Minn. ST. PAUL OFFICE No. 236 Union Block, 4th & Cedar J. Q. ADAMS, Manager MINNEAPOLIS OFFICE Guaranty Loan Bldg., Room 1020. H. B. BURK, Manager. CHICAGO OFFICE 323-5 Dearborn Street, Suite 660. C. F. ADAMS, Manager TERMS, STRICTLY IN ADVANCE: SINGLE COPY, ONE YEAR.....$2.00 SINGLE COPY, SIX MONTHS.....1.10 SINGLE COPY, THREE MONTHS.....60 When subscriptions are by any means allowed to run without prepayments, and 5 forms for each old week, or at the rate of $2.40 per year. Resumes should be made by Express Money Order, Post Office Money Order, Registered Letter or Bank Draft. Postage stamps will be received the same as cash for each week, or at the rate of $1.00 per cent and two cent stamps taken. Only one cent and two cent stamps taken. Silver should never be sent through the main. It is almost sure to wear a hole through the envelope and not, or else it may be stolen so do at their own risk. Marriage and death notices 10 lines or less $1. Each additional line 10 cents. Payment notices 10 cents. Announced at all must come in season to be news. Active diving rates 15 cents per agate line, each insurer is fourteen cents each, each insurer is two cents each, each insurer is two cents each. No single advertisements less than three months contract. Cash must accompany all orders from parties unknown to us. Further partitions on application. Reading notices 25 cents per line, each insertion. Natter is set in brevier type--about six words to the line. All head lines count correctly. The date on the address label shows when subscription expires. Renewals should be made two weeks prior to expiration, so that no paper may be missed, as the paper stops flowing. It occasionally happens that papers sent to subcribers are lost or stolen. In case you do not receive a paper by postal card at the expiration of five days from that date, and we will cheerfully forward a duplicate of the missing number. Communications to receive attention must be written only upon one side of the paper; must reach us Tuesdays if possible, anyway not later than Wednesday, and bear the signature, unless stamps are sent for postage. We do not hold ourselves responsible for the views of our correspondents. Soliciting agents wanted everywhere. Write for terms. Sample copies free. Inquiries must never fail to give your full name and address, plainly written, post office, county and state. Business letters of all kinds must be written on envelope or postcard containing news or matter for publication. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT. Treat each man according to his worth as a man. Distrust all who would have any one class placed before any other. Other republics have fallen because the unscrupulous have substituted loyalty to class for loyalty to the people as a whole. —President Roosevelt's speech at Little Rock, Ark. ```markdown ``` SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1907. THE WEST INDIAN In a recent number of the North American Review, Mr. W. P. Livingstone has an article headed: "The West Indian and the American Negro—a Contrast." Mr. Livingstone evidently wishes to be regarded as an original observer, one who has had opportunities for personal observation of the conditions he is discussing. But his article does not entitle him to any such regard; for there is nothing in it which almost any well read person could sit down and write, and, moreover, the article contains one or two statements so widely at variance with the facts as to show that Mr. Livingstone is indebted to the newspapers for most of his so-called facts. Still, there are some grains of truth in the article, and some little correct reasoning, and we give a synopsis. Mr. L. notes the fact that in the West Indies there is a distinct line of demarkation between the "colored" man and the pure black which weakens, "the power of combination among the members of the darker races," while in the United States the word 'Negro' is made to include thousands who "are practically white in thought and temperament." Un- J. B. President of the National Afro-American Business League, Which Meets at Topeka, Kan., Aug. 14-16. T. THOMAS FORTUNE Chairman Executive Committee, National Afro-American Business League. doubtedly this policy tends to the consolidation of the darker races in the United States. Mr. Livingstone notes the absence of "visible antagonism" in the West Indies, and indirectly states the reasons therefor. All classes use the same cars, schools and churches, colored men occupy most of the subordinate and some of the higher positions in the public service, voting is absolutely unfettered and there is no intimidation. Absolute justice is administered by the courts and punishment automatically follows the offence, be the delinquent black or white. The absolute contrast between these conditions and such as prevail in the United States is readily seen. We now come to some of what we regard as Mr. Livingstone's errors. He claims that the experience of the "Negroes of the United States has taught them the value of a beneficent despotism." He asserts: "When they plumped for President Roosevelt, it was the man, not the Repub-lean party, for whom they voted. That certainly does not explain why they "plumped for Grant, Garfield and McKinley, long before the President was made a candidate." But Mr. Livingstone falls in the most grotesque errors when he attempts to describe conditions in the south, evidently basing his opinions upon the campaign slush of Vardaman, Hoke Smith and Tom Dixon. Hear ye him. "The whole South is darkened by the shadow of mutual suspicion and outrage. No white woman cares to walk abroad without escort; every house has its stock of weapons and most persons carry a revolver for self-protection. Mob law, with its accompaniments of strange barbarity, is of common occurrence. Social freedom is paralyzed, and in some districts the situation amounts to a reign of terror." The fact that the above quotation is a hideous caricature of the existing facts is shown by the fact, of which Mr. L. is seemingly unconscious, that Southern newspapers of the extremest type are bitterly resenting the publication of such monumental lies and claiming that they are published with malicious intent to repeal immigration from the south. These newspapers claim that such statements are published in pamphlet form and in various languages for the express purpose of frightening immigrants from the South. Is it possible that neither Mr. Livingstone nor the North American Review is aware of these facts? THE APPEAL recently reproduced from a Mississippi journal an intensely bitter article reflecting upon Gov. Vardaman for giving currency to such outrageous lies, and, in the article claims that women, even in the rural districts of that state, are more secure then in New York or Chicago, that in such districts they very often leave the doors wide open all night, without any fear of molestation. The Memphis Commercial-Appeal copied the article and vouched for its truth in every particular. It now devolves upon Mr. Livingstone to show that these southern journals are misrepresenting the facts of the case and the conditions which prevail at the south. Either they are, or he is. Again, Mr. Livingstone seems to be entirely unaware of the fact that at their last sessions, several southern legislatures passed stringent laws against "pistol-toting" and the Governor of Arkansas, only a few weeks ago, published a statement that under no circumstances would he pardon a "pistol-toter." Would, or could, he have done that if Mr. L.'s imaginary reign of terror prevailed in any section of the state? OKLAHOMA CONSTITUTION When the enthusiastic Democrat of Oklahoma counted noses at the constitutional convention and discovered that they had an overwhelming majority, according to their invariable practice in such a contingency, they proceeded to write themselves down as asses. Unmindful of the two important facts that they had a republican and a Republican Congress to deal with, they blocked out legislative districts in such a way as to make it impossible for the Republicans ever to elect a United States Senator. They adopted drastic provisions relative to corporations, so drastic in fact that they were modified later upon the-receipt of notice that the President would never approve the constitution if it came to him in the form in which it was first drafted. A community guilty of sending such a gang of hoodlums to make laws for it deserves. no consideration whatever, but should be made to remain in outer darkness weeping and wailing and gnashing its teeth until it can send men to represent it who are at least partially civilized. It ought to be a source of exquisite pleasure to every decent man in the country, to hear of such a gang of bounc-steeers being knocked out. KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS. Atlanta, Ga.-The state supreme court in a decision handed down late today held that the Afro-American Knights of Pythias should not be allowed to secure a charter from the state. The above is simply another evidence that the courts will decide legal questions any way that public sentiment demands. For this they have ample precedent in the noted case of Barabas. The rabble demanded that the Savior should be condemned and Barabas released—and it was done. E. H. LEE Chief of Division, Office of Auditor for the Pst Office Department, Washington, D. C. WASHINGTON Continued From First Page. Department to equalize the representation may ultimately prove unsuccessful. Praise for the work by Mrs. Fernandez at the Afro-American social settlement, 116 and 118 M street southwest, is expressed in a letter from James Lewis, president of the Louisiana Child Saving and Reform Society, Mr. Lewis, who recently visited the institution, writes to Ralph Tyler, auditor of the Navy Department, that "we are compelled to ask ourselves 'What will the harvest be?' This work calls for the best in our race. If we would reach the unreached and save the young from the slums. A serious problem confronts us; if we must at one work upon the unfortunate and young youth. It is, therefore, the plain duty of every patriotic lover of his race to do something toward enlightening and bringing them in touch with higher ideals of life. My experience in this work is that you will not find as much enthusiasm as you would in a picnic or an excursion, but you will have before you the example of the MAJ. JOHN R. LYNCH Chief Paymaster, Department of the Visayas, Philippine Islands. Good Shepherd, who left his flock of ninety and nine to save the one little one." In speaking of the work of Mrs. Fernandez recently Auditor Tyler commended it highly. "The little barefooted urchins of our race isolated in the alleys and housed in hovels through which the inspiring rays of Mrs. Fernandez have appealed to our men and women whose station in life is terraced, slightly E. H. LEE M. M. H. Chief of Division, Office of Auditor for ington above the ordinary far more than the glamour of social affairs and frivolous amusements. It is a mighty hard work we have before us, this work of reclamation. We are nearing a crisis, and with us alone it lies whether or not that crisis can be safely passed. This work of uplifting the children of our' race, pointing out and leading them up to high ideals is a practical work. I often wonder that we do not too frequently spend too much time on the impractical and not sufficient on the practical." REGIMENTAL MEETING Patriarchs of Grand United Order of Odd Fellows Meet. Springfield, Ill., Special, Aug. 7—The first regimental meeting of the patriarchs of the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows, military organization of the order, was held in the supreme court rocms at the state house to-day. The organization consists of the patriarchs at St. Paul, Chicago Springfield, Galesburg, Peoria, Keokuk and Buxton, Iowa. The following officers were elected: Colonel, R. F. Rattcliff, Chicago; lieutenant colonel, R. S. Donaldson, Springfield; majors, H. T. Wells, Chicago, J. Burnell, Peoria; vice president, F. Walls, Galesburg; financial secretary, W. H. Johnson, Chicago; corresponding secretary, G. Smith, Chicago; treasurer, George B. Lowe, St. Paul; captain, George Gustus, Chirsted yesterday on a charge of entic- BUSINESS LEAGUE TO MEET. Business Association To Hold National Convention. Arrangements have been completed for the eighth annual session of the National Business League, to be held in the hall of the house of representatives at Topeka, Kan., August 14 to 16. inclusive. It is stated practically all arrangements have been completed for the entertainment of the delegates. The first session will be called to order Wednesday morning, August 4 at 10:30 o'clock. Addresses are to be made by the following: Gov. E. W. Hoch, William Green, mayor of Topeka; C. K. Holliday, president Topeka Commercial Club, and James H. Guy of the Topeka Business League. There will also be brief, addresses by D. F. Tipton, Emporia, Kan.; M. W. Turner, Indianapolis, Ind.; E. E. McDaniel, South McAleran, I.; T; John Spencer, Grinnell, Iowa; J. B. Bell, Houston, Tex., and R. C. Owens, Los Angeles, Cal. The session Thursday morning will be invited in the Auditorium, at which President Booker T. Washington will deliver an annual address. This session will be practically for business, during which reports from the various offices, and committees will be heard. Brief addresses will also be delivered. A session will be held Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. The closing exercises will be held Friday. Banquet To Be Given The banquet which is to be tendered the members of the league will be held in the Auditorium, Friday evening, August 16, at 8:30 o'clock. Arrangements have been made by the Topeka league for several outings for the amusement of the delegates. The officers of the league are: Booker T. Washington, president, Tuskegee Institute, Ala.; Ira O. Guy, first vice president, Topeka, Kan.; S. G. Elbert, second vice president, Wilmington, Del.; Charles Bangs, third vice president, Mound Bayou, Miss.; Fred D. Patterson fourth vice president, Greenfield, Ohio; Emmett J. Scatt corresponding secretary, Tuskegee Institute, Ala.; Fred R. Moore, national organizer, Brooklin, N. Y.; Gilbert C. Harris treasurer, Boston, Mass. Frank H. Gilbert, acting registrar, Brooklyn, N. Y.; Cyrus Field Adams, transportation agent, Washington D. C.; S. Laing Williams compiler, Chicago, Ill.; William H. Davis, official stenographer, Washington, D. C. Executive Committee—T. Thomas Fortune chairman, Red Bank, N. J. Samuel E. Courtney Boston Mass. Thedcree W. Jones, Chicago, Ill.; S. A. Furiss, Indianapolis, Ind.; J. C. Napier, Nashville, Tenn.; W. L. Taylor, Richmond, Va.; M. M. Lewen, Pensacola, Fla.; J. C. Jackson, Lexington, Ky.; Philip A. Payton, Jr., New York City; W. O. Emory, Macon, Ga.; N. T. Veler, Brinton Pa.; J. E. Bush; Little Rock, Ark. BUSINESS LEAGUE NOTES A unique feature of the coming meeting will be the presence, from the Business Course Department of Western University, Prof. Albert Ross, DiRECTOR, of a number of young men and women stenographers and typewriters trained in this school, who are to be located in the convention hall, ready to take dictation for such business men who would want to correspond with their families or friends in this way during their stay in Topeka. The Committee on Home and Location have arranged for all visitors and IOLLAND the Pcst Office Department, Wash- , D. C. League members to be taken care of at an average rate of $1.00 per day for board. There will be no attempt to hold up the delegates on this item. The officers of the Topeka League have just issued a special invitation to all members of the National League and their friends, urging them to attend the meeting and assuring them a profitable and interesting stay in Kansas. Detailed information along any line and especially as to accommodations can be furnished by Mr. Ira C. Guy, Vice President of the National Business League, 311 West 14th Street, Topeka, Kansas. EMMETT J. SCOTT Corresponding Secretary of National Business League. The social features, aside from the very strong program which has been arranged, includes an outing at Garfield Park on Thursday, a banquet at the Auditorium on Friday evening, and a final picnic at "Vinewood," the aristocratic pleasure resort, six miles from the city on Saturday, August 17th. Detailed information as to accommodations at Topeka can be secured from Mr. Ira O. Guy, Chairman, Ways and Means Committee, 311 West 14th Street, Topeka, Kansas. The National Business League will meet Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, August 14, 15, and 16, in the Hall of the House of Represtatives, State Capitol Building, Topeka, Kansas.—Governor E. W. Hoch will welcome the delegates. Bernheim An unseatarian Christian Institution, devoted especially to advanced education, international education, and high school teaching. Industrial Training. Superior advantages. Music and Printing. Athletic for boys. Physical culture for girls. Home life and training. Aid given to needy and ill children. Begins the first year of school. Information and information, address HOWARD UNIVERSITY The Fourth Annual Session will begin October 1, 1907, and continue eight months. FOUR YEARS' GRADED COURSE IN MEDICINE. THREE YEARS' GRADED COURSE IN DENTAL SURGERY. THREE YEARS' GRADED COURSE IN PHARMACY. AN OPTIONAL FIVE-YEAR COURSE IN MEDICINE IS OFFERED. Full corps of forty-five instructors. Well-equipped laboratories. The New Freedmen's Hospital has completed a cost of $500,000 offers unexcelled clinical facilities. The Second Session of the Post-Graduate School and Polyclinic will begin May 14 and continue six weeks for Medical Course and four weeks for Dental Course. Dear Ms. Koch, This School is connected with a Great University of Seven Departments; one of which is the University of Applied Professors. For further information or catalogue, please visit: www.sevendepartments.edu. Knoxville College. Classical, Scientific, Agricultural, Mechanical, Normal and Community School Courses, together with Theological, and Medical Schools. Fifty-five Dollars a Year will cover all expenses of board, tuition, fuel, light and furnished room. Separate home education for little girls and another for little boys from 6 to 16 years. Term begins last Monday in September. Send :or catalogue $ President of Knoxville College, Knoxville Tenn HORLICK'S MALTED MILK Don't argue with dirt Pearline THE HOTEL HOWARD UNI- SCHOOL OF MEDICAL 1867 REV: WILBUR P. THINKFIELD, D. D. President The Fourteenth Annual Session will begin Octo- months. FOUR YEARS' GRADED COURSE IN THREE YEARS' GRADED COURSE IN THREE YEARS' GRADED COURSE IN AN OPTIONAL FIVE-YEAR COURSE IN Full corps of forty-five instructors. Well-e- Freedmen's Hospital just completed at a cost of facilities. The Second Session of the Post-Graduate May 18, 1908, and continue six weeks for Mo- Dental Care. This School is connected with a Great U. one thousand students, and over one hundred p. For further information or catalogue, write J. F. SHADD, M. D. 901 R. St., N. W., Knoxville College. Classical, Scientific, Agricultural School Course, together with theological, and Medi- will cover all expenses of board, tuition, fuel, light and matron for little girls and another for little boys Monday in September. Send for catalogue.) President TUSKEGEE Normal and Industrial Institute TUSKEGEE ALABAMA. (INCORPORATED) Organized July 4, 1881, by the State Legislature. State Normal School Except from taxation. BOOKER W. WASHINGTON, Principal. WARREN LOGAN, Treasurer. ENROLLMENT AND FACULTY Enrollment last year 1,253; males. 882; females. Average attendance, 1,105; instructors. 88. COURSE OF STUDY English education combined with industrial training; 28 industries in constant operation. VALUE OF PROPERTY Property Property is valued almost wholly built with student labor, is valued at $350,000, and no mortgage. NEEDS $50 annually for the education of each student; $1,000 for the education of each student; $1,000 creates permanent scholarship. Students pay their own board in cash and labor. There is always an amount for current expenses and building. Besides the work done by graduates as class room and industrial leaders, thousands are passing through the Tuskegee Negro Conference. Tuskegee is 40 miles east of Montgomery and 10 miles west of Atlanta on the Western Railroad of Alabama. Tuskegee is a quiet, beautiful old Southern town, and is an ideal place for study. The climate is warm and sunny, making the place an excellent winter resort. TILLOTSON COLLEGE The Oldest and Best School in Texas The oldest and best school in Texas is graduates of well known colleges in the north. Reputation unassured. Manua- tionally unassured. Music a special feature of the school. Special advantages for earnest students are: a large library. Send for catalogue and circular to: REV. MARSHALL R. GAINES, A. M. President. AUSTIN. TEXAS A Practical, Literary and Industrial Trades School for Afro-American Boys and Girls. Unusual advantages for Girls and a separate building. Address New England CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC All the advantages of the finest and most completely equipped Conservatory building in the word, the assemblage of a recognized center of art and Music and association with the magisters in the Profession are offered students at the New Royal Conservatory of Music. Through work in all departments of music Courts can be arranged in Excitation, and Oratory. GEORGE W. CMADWICK, Musical Director. All participles and peer book will be sent on application. School Children S HORLI Department--Normal and College: Special attention to Vocal and Instrumental Music. Theoretical Agriculture, Sewing and Cooking. Healthy Location; heated by steam, illuminated by electricity; room, boarded light and heat 800. For catalog and particulars write to President Virginia Normal, Co. leagiate Institute, Petersburg, Va. NIVERSITY MEDICINE. 1907 ROBERT REYBURN, M. D. Dean. begin October 1, 1907, and continue eight RSE IN MEDICINE. URSE IN DENTAL SURGERY. RSE IN PHARMACY. RSE IN MEDICINE IS OFFERED. Well-equipped laboratories. The New cost of $600,000 offers unexcelled clinical educate School and Polyclinic will begin for Medical Course and four weeks for eat University of Seven Departments; dred professors. e write M. D. Secretary. Washington, D. C. Agricultural, Mechanical, Normal and Common and Medical Schools. Three five baths, Ten light and furnished room. Separate home with boys from 6 to 24 years. Term begins last 1) President of Knoxville College, 6 noxville GAMMON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY AIMS AND METHODS. The aim of this school is to do practical work in helping men towards success in helping them to study its broad and practical; its importance is high, its work is thorough; its methods are fresh, systematic, clear and simple. COURSE OF STUDY. The regular course of study occupies three years in the several departments of theological instruction usually pursued in the leading theological seminaries of the country. EXPENSES AND AID. Tuition fee is free. The apartments for students are plainly furnished. Good board can be had for seven days per month. Buildings heated by steam. Aid from loans without interest, and gifts of friends, are granted to deserving students who do their utmost in the living grace, gifts, and energy, need be deprived of the advantages now opened to him in this Seminary. For further particulars address REV. J. W. E. BOWEN, D. D. Pres. Gammon Theological Seminary. BRAINERD INSTITUTE CHESTER, S. C. A normal and industrial school with a graded course of study, designed to give B. thorough symmetrical and complete education for success and usefulness in every vocation of life. Board and boarding hall. Morristown Normal College FOUNDER, 1981. Fourteen teachers, Legend and commemorative departments. College Preparatory, Normal, English, Music, Shorthand. Typewriting and Industrial Training. FIFTY DOLLARS IN ADVANCE will pay tuition and incidentals for the entire year. Board $6.00 per month; tuition $2.00 per term. Through work done in each department. Send for consultation to the president. Rev. Judson S. Hill D. B. SCOTIA SEMINARY CONCORD, N. C. This well known school, established for the higher education of girls will open for the next year. Every effort will be made to provide for the comfort, health and thorough instruction of students. Expense for light furniture, 15 for term of eight months. Address. Rev. D. D. J. SATTERFIELD, D. D. Concord, N. C. Able and Experienced Faculty. Progressive in all departments, best Methods of Instruction, Health of Students, and Training of Teachers taught to do manual labor as well as think. For catalogue and other information, write to the president. R. S. LOVINGGOOD. Austin, Texas. n Should Drink ICK'S THE WORLD'S FIRST BLACK MAN THE TAILOR, HAS REMOVED HIS PLACE OF BUSINESS FROM THE BRADLEY BUILDING TO EIGHTH STREET NEAR ROBERT OPPOSITE THE GOLDEN RULE. HE INVITES OLD AND NEW CUSTOMERS TO CALL AND INSPECT HIS ELEGANT STOCK OF NEW SPRING AND SUMMER SUITINGS. PRESSING AND REPAIRING DONE ON SHORT NOTICE. NORTHWESTERN TELEPHONE, HOTEL DWYER. 224 Washington Av. S. Minneapolis, Minn. JOHN H. HARRIS CHAS. W. DWYER, PROP. Hotel Dwyer has been refitted and refinished and is in first class order throughout. Rooms with heat, electric light and bath, by the day, week or month. Hotel always open for business. Terms reasonable. ALLEN'S ULCERINE SALVE Is a sure cure for Chronic Ulcers, Bone Ulcers, Scrofulous Ulcers, Varicose Ulcers, Mercurial Ulcers, Fever Sores, Gangrene, Blood Poisoning, White Swelling, Poisoned Wounds, Hemorrhoids, Hemorrhoidal Cuts, also Cuts, Burns, Fetors, Carbuncles, Abscesses. For balls by druggists. Mail 262 and 500, J. P. ALLEN MEDICINE CO. *ST. PAUL, MN*, J. P. CLEMEN *7th and Jackson Sts.* Both Phones. A BIG BOOST. For the Cosmopolitan Mutual Casualty Co. Mr. Editor: It is with great pleasure that I take this method of publicly testifying to the prompt business methods of the Cosmopolitan Mutual Casualty Co., in which I hold a policy covering sickness. I was sick sixteen days, was entitled to the free services of the Company's physician and when the report of my illness was handed to the secretary and properly verified and attested I received the snug sum of $21.33 as my sick dues. I take great pleasure in recommending the Company. Oscar D. Claiborne, 451 Charles street FOR SALE. Bargains in 'Cheap Homes, if Taken at Once, by Williams & Co., 475 Wabasha. 8—Room House Western and Au- rora ..... $3,100 7—Room House Edmund St. ..... 1,750 6—Room House Rondo near Kent ..... 1,900 6—Room House Central Ave. ..... 1,000 8—Room House Fuller St. ..... 2,000 4 Lots Rondo bet Mackubin and Kent ..... 600 7 Lots University Ave. ..... $750 to 1,700 2 Lots on Charles, south facing ..... 600 2 Lots on Edmund, south facing ..... 500 1 Lot on St. Anthony, south facing ..... 650 For Rent. 7—Room House Western Ave. ..... $25 4—Room suite ..... 16 4—Room suite ..... 12 Making Good Use of Lent. "You think that Lent exercises a great influence?" "Certainly," answered Miss Cayenne; "it not only has a beneficial effect on the moral nature but it gives one a chance to economize." Bootless "You can't expect that those Nicaraguan heroes will die with their boots on." Making Use of His Time. "Did you accomplish anything during the session of congress?" "Yes, indeed," answered the statesman. "I got some very good ideas for my summer lecture tour." The Mistake He Made. Robinson—What spolit Archie's chance with Miss Milluns? Jenkins—She told him she disliked compliments. Robinson—And he persisted in paying them? Jenkins—No; he was stupid enough to believe her, and stopped. No Need to Waste Time. An assumed critic on etiquette says an invitation to dine should be accepted the same day. Any chump knows that much. We'd have an answer in the postoffice within ten minutes. --- HELLO BILL! GOPHER LODGE No. 105 I. B. P. O. E. of the WORLD PURC MONDAY MUSIC BY NOTHING BE Tickets Boat leaves T. H. Lyles, W. B. Cole, Jos. Thomas, A. K. C GOLD GRAIN BEE N. W. 'Phones Main 2179-L Main 559-J2 ON STRE PURCHASE MONDAY EVE MUSIC BY DUNCAN'S A NOTHING BUT FUN, DAY Tickets - Boat leaves foot of Jackson Boat leaves foot of Jackson street at 8:30 p. m. sharp. D. C. Cotton T. H. Lyles, O. C. Hall, W. B. Cole, N. H. Casey, Jos. Thomas, B. M. Brooks, A. K. Clark, GOLDEN RAIN BEL BEERS In 2179-L D. C. Cotton, Chairman. T. H. Lyles, O. C. Hall, J. Q. Adams, S. G. Thompson, W. B. Cole, N. H. Casey, R. Farr, J. Welborne, Jos. Thomas, B. M. Brooks, D. Driver, T. Williams, A. K. Clark, John Payne, Sec'y. GOLDEN GRAIN BELT BEERS Tel. N. W. J. B. M. 396 D. FANCY G We are here to Agent for Dr. Laure Malt Tonic, Malt on SAMUEL G. THOMPSON PRACTICES IN ALL THE COURTS OF THE STATE OF MINNESOTA. Wills, Deeds, Contracts Etc., skillfully drawn. Complicated Property Matters and Accident Cases a Specialty. No. 28 E. 4th St. ST. PAUL, MINN. JOHN THOORSELL V. E. THOORSELL Thoorsell & Son Funeral Directors and Embalmers 457 BROADWAY - PORTLAND BLK. Tel. T. C. 2233. N. W. Main 501. Res.-T. C. 4620. St. Paul, Minn. and Embalmers PORTLAND BLK. St. Paul, Minn. First-Club SATISFACTION ST. PAUL, Frank C. Friedmann PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST solicits your patronage Full Line of Drugs, Sundries, Perfumes and Toilet Articles. Seventh and St. Peter Streets, St. Paul, Minn. N. W. 1707-J PHONES T. C. 2165 Have you Prescriptions filled at Streets, St. Paul, Minn. E. Eisen HONES T. C. 2165 THE BU The Mississippi Pharmacy FRANK H. POETZ, Prop. 548 Mississippi St. Cor Nash. St. Paul, Minn. POETZ, Prop. St. Paul, Minn. We give & H. security TELEPHONE C 554 St. An FIRST GRAND RIGHT EXCU ON STEAMER CHASE & BA DAY EVENING, AU DUNCAN'S AUDITORIUM O BUT FUN, DANCING, REFRE ts - 50 ves foot of Jackson street at 8:30 p. m. COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS. D. C. Cotton, Chairman. O. C. Hall, J. Q. Adams, S. N. H. Casey, R. Farr, J. B. M. Brooks, D. Driver, T. Clark, John Payne, JOS.TROST GROCER Cor, Rondo & Dale St Both Phones ST. PAUL N. W. Main 939-J PHONES Twin City 1643 Capitol Steam Laundry 743 Wabasha St. First-Class Work SATISFACTION GUARANTEED ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA CARL NELSON DEALER IN Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars Family Trade a Specialty 560 St. Anthony Avenue, Cor. of Kent T. C. Phone 4493 ST. PAUL, MINN. E. Eisenmenger THE BUTCHER WHEN YOU WISH A GOOD, JUICY PIECE OF CORN-FED MEAT, FANCY POULTRY OR FRESH FISH CALL ON ED. FOUR DELIVERIES DAILY. We give "S. & H. Green stamps and "security" stamps. TELEPHONE CONNECTIONS. 554 St. Anthony Ave. GOPHER 105 I.B.P.O.E. OF THE WORLD CERVUS ALCES AMER & BARGE WING, AUG. 19 EDITORIUM ORCHESTRA PENCING, REFRESHMENTS 50 Cents street at 8:30 p. m. sharp. Chairman. Q. Adams, S. G. Thompson, Farr, J. Welborne, Driver, T. Williams, John Payne, Sec'y. Tel. N. W. Dale 1140-J J. B. Michels 396 DALE ST. ST. PAUL, MINN. 'Phone T. C. 1354 Peter Therkildsen FANCY BAKERY WEDDING CAKES A SPECIALTY. 285 E. 7th St. ST. PAUL, MINN. --- EXCURSION FANCY GROCERIES Agent for Dr. Lauretzen's Health Table Malt Tonic. The only pnre Malt on the Market. LOUIS ARBOGAST CHOICE GAME & MEATS Poultry 201 W. SEVENTH ST. ST. PAUL, MINN. MOOSE BEER Duluth Brewing and Malting Co. DULUTH, MINN. DR. HURD 91 E. SEVENTH ST. Specialty — Painless extracting, Crown and Bridge Work. HARM CLASSES EYE DEFECTS AND SYMPTOMS. Or too short in whole—the Hyperopic eye. Combine the two in one eye and we have Astigmatism. Properly adjusted glasses will correct these defects. Medicines or waiting, never. Symptoms that spring from these two simple eye malformations are manifold; such as eye and headaches, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Nervous Debility, Chorea, Epilepsy and other ailments having their origin in lack of nerve force. We correct all Defects of the human eye that glasses will remedy. Charges reasonable. Satisfaction guaranteed. A Complete Assortment of Woolens for Men Fine Dress Suits a Specialty MILK, CREAM, BUTTER, EGGS, DRY GROCERIES COFFEE, CHEESE AND BAKERY GOODS 913 MINNEHAHA AVE. Minneapolis Minnesota L. R. CLAUSEN SOUTH SIDE MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS 917 Minnehaha Avenuc Minneapolis - - Minneapolis Our Brands Are: WIENER STYLE EXPORT PRIVATE STOCK E. N. Y MERCH A Complete A Fine I 250 Nicollet Avenue, MOST WORBHIPPILF GRAND LODGE OF- MINNESOTA, A. F. AND A M. R. S. BROWN, GRAND MASTER, 405 Century Bldg., Minneapolis, Minn. JOSH D. SHERWOOD, GRAND SECY. 130 W. Arch St., St. Paul, Minn. PIONEER LODGE NO. 1, A. F. and A M., meets first and third Mondays of each week at Wagner Hall, cor. Charles street and Dillingham, cor. 800 p. m. J. H. Dillingham, W. M.; D. E. Beasley, Secy. 905 Marlon street. Hamm BREWERY PERFECT ASHLAR LODGE NO. 4. A. F. and A. M. meets second and fourth A. F. and A. M. meets Wagner Hall, B. O. Charles street and Western street, A. D. W. D. Carter, W. M. 1000 Iglehart street, Jose H. Sherwood, Secy. 150 W. Arch St. MARS LODGE, NO. 102. MEETS at Old Fellows Hall, 221 W. University corner Farrington avenue. Entrance on Farrington, S. E. Hall, N. G.: Thos. R. Hickman, P. S. 422 St. Anthony avenue. HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH, NO. 553 G. U. meets first and third Monday in each month at Lows Hall, N. W. Cor. University andington. Mrs. Sadle Johnson, M. N. G. M. M. M. Johnson, W. R. No. 916 Marlon St. PAST GRAST MASTER'S COUNCH. No. 123, G. U. O. of F. meets the second and fourth Friday in each month at Fellows Hall, 221 W. University, corner Farrington, Wm. R. Morris, W. G. Thos. Hickman, G. S., No. 422 St. Anthony avenue. ST. PAUL PATRIARCHY NO. 114. second Monday in each month at Odd Fellows Hall, corner Farrington, Entrance on Farrington avenue. Thos. R. Hickman (acting) J. W. R. Morris, P. M. V. P. Geo. B. Lowe, W. P. R. 1783 Wabasha. FOR IT UNITED I NORTH F. meet month at Brothers come. J. W. See'y. UNITED BROTHERS OF FRIENDSHIP NORTH STAR LODGE No. 138. U. B. Ferguson in each month at hall No. 116 West Saxon. Brothers in good standing always welcome. J. R. White, W. M., J. Q. Adams, W. Sec. y, 4 E. Fourth street. John H. Hayes Lodge No. 6, K| of Pa meets first and third Tuesdays in each month at hall, Circle of Avenue Six, Fayston University and Fairington at 890 o'clock P. M. Knights of Pythias in good standing always welcome. J. R. Hayes, C. C., R. W. Gully, K. R. and S. 389 Rondo. BIDDLE CIRCLE, LADIER OF A. G. meets first and third Tuesdays of each month in Supreme Court room, old capital building. Mrs. M. J. Leavitt, Pres. Mr. J. R. White, Secy. BPIXD. FIDELITY COURT OF CALANTHE NO. 345, N. A., S. A., E. A., A. A., and A. meets first and third Monday in each month at K. of P. Hall, 211 Henpinne W. C., Mrs. Mattie R. Wade, R. of D., 115 Eighth Ave. So. GOPHER LODGE NO. 105. I. B. P. O. E. of the World, meets second and fourth Thursday in each month at Cen- tral Park, in 116 W. 6th St. St. Paul, N. H. Lyles, E. R., D. C. Cotton, 430 Rondo street. FILGIMB BAPTIST CHURCH. C 12th and Cedar. Sunday services: Preach at 11 a. m. and 7:45 p. m. Sunday school at 12:30 o'clock. Wednesday wea- sage at 11 a. m. and 7:45 p. m. Sunday study Sunday school lesson. Funerals and weddings promptly attended. Rev. W. D. Carter, Pastor. 1000 Iglehart. ST. JAMES' A. M. E. CHURCH. COR. Fuller and A. Y. streets. Sunday services, 11:00 a. m., 7:30 p. m. Wednesday prayer and Sunday services. Monday and Tuesdays; at home Wednes- day and Thursday. Weddings, funerals and the sick attended on notice. ST. PHILIP'S EPISCOPAL MISSION corner Aurora avenue and Mackublin street Sunday services: Early celebration of Holy Holy Eucharist first and third Sundays, 1:40 a.m. m. Matins, second and fourth Sundays, m. Sacrament, 2:00 a.m. Brotherhood of St. Andrews, 6:30 a.m. Vespers, 7:30 p.m. Week services: Weednesdays, confirmation class, 8:00 p.m. Wednesdays, confirmation class, 8:00 p.m. Holy Eucharist, 9:00 a.m. m. Rev. A. H. Leahtad, Rep. 112 Carroll street modern brewery in every respect is the BIG We have every facility for making and do make the Best Beer on the market. Case or draught. EIGHTH Hayes Lodge No. 6, K] of F meets first and third Tues coror of University and Far- rington, Avenues, at 8:00 Pythias in good standing al- ways. John H. Hayes, C. C. R. John H. Hayes, C. C., R. W. Gully, K. of R. and S., Rev. H. S. Graves, Pastor Parsonage, Cor. Jay and Fuller.