The Appeal

Saturday, August 7, 1909

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. FIFTY B IN MIM IFTY BATTLECRAFT IN MIMIC WAR BY CAPT. ELLIS D. MORSON THE GUNS OF THE U.S. NAVY AT THE DEPARTURE OF THE U.S. NAVY AT THE DEPARTURE OF THE U.S. NAVY This shooting will occupy about two weeks beginning August 19. At its close the vessels will return to Hampton Roads and go to their home yards for repairs which may have been necessitated by the vigorous summer campaign. The winter maneuvers will take place in West Indian waters. Hampton Roads presented a great sight when the big war craft departed from there VOL. 25. NO. 32. ? YOU had been an eye witness of the great naval battle which was fought off the port of Provincescinctown, Mass., in the Atlantic city, you saw a sea creature, anitation that "Uncle Sam can lick the world." I It was a mimic encounter, the feature of this summer's maneuvers of the Atlantic battleship fleet, which were held off the rugged Massachusetts coast between July 7 and August 5, the exercises there having just come to an end. It was a great scrap, bloodless of course, but filled with enough mimic gore to make an American of the coldest temperament throw his hat into the air and yell for Old Glory, the stars and stripes, President Taft and all the rest. Drawn up in battle alignment were 50 war craft of every size and shape. They ranged all the way from Pearl Admiral Seaton Schroeder's 16,000 tally flagship, U. S. Navy, connecticut, to the tiny submarine torpedo boat Taran tula. Divided into two squadrons, opposing each other, these two divisions of "our friends, the enemy," broke the morning mist on opposite horizons and at the flagship's signals quickly fell into circular battle formation, opening fire at a distance of several miles. On paper it was a gory struggle. A dozen of the terrors of the sea were "disbled" by Rear Admiral Schroeder's edict and several submarines figuratively carried their crews to Davy Jones Jocker, never to return. The battle of Connecticut led the ships of one division. From the cover of each opponent's guns darted the torpedo boats and almost as often the courses were blocked and in some cases the torpedoes and torpedo boats "destroyed." By nightfall the battle being called a "draw," the searchlights of the two sets of enemies followed each other out of sight and that Saturday evening foes became friends upon reaching headquarters at Provincetown. Every known modern naval device was given its inning during the fight. Torpedoes were dispatched by wireless telegraph, this being an experiment tried in an actual engagement for the first time by the United States. The men adopted fire control mast, which has been called the inerted waste basket, proved a success, the officers said. The summer's maneuvers afforded the first opportunity for a crucial test of this invention. A dozen torpedo boats made attacks on the big battleships and officers and men were required to exert extreme vigilance to guard against the little submarine torpedo boats, four of which with the parent ship, the gunboat Castine, made things lively for the monster war vessels. Time and again the flagship Connecticut was compelled to dip her nets to ward off the destructive torpedoes which shot little swirls of foam to the surface of the ocean as they sped on their mission of mimic death. The grim reaper, burlesqued, stalked everywhere during the encounter and time and again ships were declared "sunk," "destroyed" or "secutled" to prevent capture by the enemy, while admirals, captains, petty officers and men were notified they had been "killed" by a well-directed shell. The battle of the fleets was the play of the maneuvers. To the able-bodied seamen the work consisted of fleet drills and exercises in tactical battle evolutions. With their work of Propulsion the fleet was scheduled to depart for the southern drill grounds, south of Virginia capes, for record and battle target practice, the results of which were ordered secretly abolated for the war department. for New England ports, where they spent July 4, preparatory to repairing to Provincetown for the maneuvers and sham naval struggle. In the northern ports the sailors and officers were granted shore leave in relays from July 2 to July 6. Four ships visited Boston Independence day, two were at Penobscot bay, two at Portland, Me., and one each at Marblehead, Mass., Portsmouth, N. H., Portseattle, Mass., Gloucester, Mass., and Booth Bay, Me. With the reassembling of the fleet at Brockport, Mass., three days after the fourth began the summer's work, which was more pictureque than that of any previous year, it was said. From Provincetown the fleet proceeded to seach each week, returning Saturday nights. On these trips of a week each occurred the fleet drills, the evolutions and other exercises. One feature of the maneuvers was the presence of the naval militias of several eastern states. The members of these militia bodies are citizen sailors. Each body of militia was taken out for a week's instruction on the big ships. Permission to take the reserves on the voyages was granted through the courtesy of the navy department. The Provincetown maneuvers presented the spectacle of battleships, at practice firing at sea under every weather condition for the first time in the history of American naval art. Night firing under the same conditions was one of the important parts of the program which was carried out the day. President Taft and Secretary of the Navy Meyer were witnesses of several of the maneuvers of the fleet at sea and both officials expressed themselves as delighted with the progress which the sailors have made at marksmanship since their world tour. Two old torpedo boats, Nicholson and O'Brien, were dismantled, filled with cork to keep them afloat and used as targets for the gigantic projectiles. Time and again they were riddled and finally, the cork having been so thoroughly perforated that they were longer than the cork afloat, they sank to the bottom of the ocean. They were towed at different speeds by the cruisers and thus the gunners of the men-of-war given an opportunity to gauge distance and motion at the same time, one of the most difficult feats at which the American tar is an adept. About cruisers Chester, Salem and Birmingham and the armored cruisers North Carolina, Montana and New York joined the fleet at Provincetown and took part in the elabo THE APPEAL. Defective Page would declare, and then Guelpa would talk to him somewhat after the following manner: "My friend, you feel weak—and why? Simply because at the present moment your body, in the process of starvation, is expelling from its various departments a bad superabundance of toxic matters and diseased or worthless tissue which you were overfeeding your system were unable to be thrown off owing to the calls you made upon your digestive and kindred organs. Not only do I starve you now, my poor friend, but tomorrow I will give you a purgative. You think I am cruel, do you? Not at all. All these noxious matters will be carried away from your system; but nevertheless I shall continue to stave you, caro amico. When your temperature has gone below the normal—that is to say, when in a couple of days the excess of toxic matter has been eliminated, then you shall have something to eat. No, not till then." rate program. The cruiser Montgomery, which had been fitted up as a torpedo experimental ship, was also with the fleet and took a prominent part in the struggle at sea, its experiments proving of great future value. The great Atlantic torpedo fleet also deserves mention in connection with the summer's play at war. The flotilla of 12 boats with the cruiser Dixie as parent ship and four brand new submarine boats with the gunboat Castine as their parent ship played spectacular parts alongside of the monster battleships of fifteen and sixteen thousand tons. Only 12 of the 16 battleships which went around the world were with the fleet of the Atlantic ocean off Provincetown, the other four in Rear Admiral Schroeder's command being new vessels, receiving their first experience at fire in this practice. that position. Now, the eliminating, first one of, of these diseased areas is the first duty of man, woman and child to themselves. Say Dr. Guelpa to his recalcitrant patient: "When you are attacked by an illness, do you not find, my dear friend, that nature removes from you most of your ordinary desire to eat and drink? You, however, think that you know better than nature. You say that yourself that you must prepare for your sickness by putting in a stock of food—and haps drink. Foolish man! Does it not occur to you that nature is trying to teach you how to act and you won't learn. Far from wailing till you are stricken with illness, try an occasional day's starvation and illness may now come. You will, by doing this, rid your aunt of its effete tissues and its noxious toxin matters or poisons. When you feel that occu- STOP EATING AND GET WELL "In the course of my long experience I have noted," says Dr. Guelpa, one of Italy's best-known consulting physicians, according to the New York World, "that the beginning of a cure of a sick person always declares itself when the bodily weight shows a decrease. Whenever, on the contrary, the weight remained stationary I never failed on any occasion to find that the temperature had increased and that the particular illness of the menstrual cycle had occurred. And so it was that Guelpa, much to the chagrin and temporary discomfort of his many patients, and he had one of the largest clientes in Italy—was wont to ruthlessly prescribe a "diet of starvation." The patient would naturally protest. He felt weak he However, the doctor carried his investigations somewhat further. It occurred to him that even in the healthy state, or in the normal body which is supposed to be enjoying good health, this used-up or damaged body was not in a casional expulsion from the body. It is obvious that when the regulation amount of food is consumed the body's digestive and kindred organs have their allotted tasks to perform. Consequently, the refuse or worthless matter remains in the system, thus forming an object of attack in the case of disease, a source of debility and a happy hunting ground for those noxious animals that prey upon the healthy body, first intrenching themselves in a center of the body which is predisposed to unhealthiness and attacking from MISJIN 6 that position. Now, the eliminating, first of all, of these disease areas is the first duty of man, woman and child to themselves. Says Dr. Guelpa to his recalcitrant patient: "When you are attacked by an illness, you do not find, my dear friend, that nature removes from you most of your ordinary desire to eat and drink? You, however, think that you know better than nature. You say to yourself that you must prepare for your sickness by putting in a stock of food—and perish it to you that nature is trying to teach you how to act and you won't learn. Far from waiting till you are stricken with illness, try an occasional day's starvation and illness may never come. You will, by doing this, rid your system of its efetive tissues and its noxious toxic matters or poisons. When you feel that occasional headache; when you feel that "all-overishness" that sometimes attacks you; when you are depressed—you call it billious—well, try a bout of starvation and then watch for recall. How long should we starve, then, according to our Guelpa? He says himself that there are few persons who cannot do three days without food, and that, too, with constant pugatives. At first a general gastric and muscular weakness is felt. That is simply the beginning of the process of elimination. Soon a sense of comfort begins to be enjoyed. Of course the body in this period is more prone to catch cold, a matter that must be provided for by an increase of clothing and a hot drink now and then. The Chamber of Commerce of Port au Prince offers to place at the disposal of chambers of commerce, produces manufacturers of the United States and its colonies space in its rooms for the exhibition of their products. --- --- THE APPEAL STEADILY GAINS BECAUSE: 4-It is the organ of ALL Afro-Americans. 5-It is not controlled by any thing or clique. 6-It asks no support but the people a. WHICH IS HOTTEST PLACE? Yuma, Ariz., and Needles, Cal., Where Thermometer Daily Reaches 120 Mark, Gliven Honor. New York.—With the advent of hot weather the old controversy between Yuma and Needles, the first in Arizona, and the other in California, as to which is the hottest place in the United States has been revived. Neither is clamoring for the distinction—oh, no, each is striving to thrust it upon the other! As a matter of fact, the difference is so slight that it isn't worth quarreling about. From now on until late in September the mercury will climb up in the Hotel at Needles, Cal. tube until it reaches the 120 mark nearly every day in both places; and there are weeks at a stretch when it never falls below 100 even at night. One can cook eggs hard by simply burying them in the hot sand. The Mojave Indians of the lower valley of the Colorado river always go barefoot, and the hot sands and stones have caloured their feet until they are as hard and as insensible to pain as the hoofs of a horse; they can walk on the sand, for example red-hot coats without flinching. The extreme heat is due to the low altitude, combined with the proximity of the Colorado and Mojave deserts. For 1,000 miles on the east, and 500 on the north and west, stretches a waste of sand and cacti. With every mile traversed by the winds they gather heat, so that a cooling breeze from any direction is an impossibility. The man that traverses the deserts doesn't wonder that Yuma and Needles are hot. He only wonders that they are not white hot. He can stand the excessive heat find Needles and Yuma health resort admiably adapted to the cure of consumption, bronchitis and rheumatism. However, most people would consider the disease more tolerable than the cure. A year ago a pretentious hotel was built at Needles-for the purpose of exploiting the place as a winter resort. It is all right in winter time, but in the summer months New York's tenement districts are cool and delightful in comparison. Electric fans are installed in the hotel in every room and corridor, and wide balconies protect every apartment from ever receiving the direct rays of the sun. At nights guests pull their beds out on the corridors; but neither science nor ingenuity has devised a way of making life tolerable in Needles in summer time. NEW POST FOR LIEUT. GRANT. Grandson of Famous War General is Superintendent of State, War and Navy Buildings at Capital. Washington.—First Lieut. Ulysses S. Grant, III., corps of engineers, United Lorem U.S. Grant States army, grandson of President Grant, the famous war general, has been appointed superintendent of the state, war and navy building at Washington. Capt. John H. Poole, corps of engineers, held the office of superintendent for about four years. He succeeded Rear Admiral George W. Baird of the navy. Capt. Poole made many reforms and improvements in what is known as "the biggest office building in the world," and reduced expenses considerably. He is relieved from this duty to enable him to take a two-year course of instruction at the School of the Line at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. Officers of the army corps of engineers are eligible to detail to the superintendency since the naval corps of engineers was merged into the line of the navy several years ago. Lieut. Grant, the new superintendent, since his graduation near the head of his class at West point, in June, 1908, has served a tour of duty at the engineer school at Washington barracks, and also as one of the officers of the naval corps. For several months past he was stationed at Boston on duty in connection with the river and harbor works and fortifications in that vicinity. Last year he married Miss Edith Boot, daughter of Senator Root, of New York. MINISTER TO CHINA Charles R. Crane Educated Without Aid of College. Has Visited Nearly Every Country on the Globe and is Master of Several Languages—Well Acquainted with Orient. Chicago.—Charles R. Crane, newly appointed minister from the United States to China, is a rare type of citizen in that he was born to wealth and yet may be classed in the roll of self-made men. He was reared with the idea that a college education is not essential to the life success of a man who has a brain of his own and uses it. His schooling ended when he had done with the public school. What he has gathered of learning since then has been from books and from the world and its people as they have peared to him in extensive travel. Richard T. Crane, Sr., father of Charles R. Crane, is vigorously opposed to modern methods of education as carried on in the great universities and many of the public schools. He does not believe these institutions fit a man properly for the battle of life, and they are too theoretical and not sufficient to be what he went so far as to declare it would be a good thing for one of the states if its state university buildings were blown up. Whether Charles R. Crane shared the educational views of his father, it is a fact that, instead of spending four years in college and winning a degree, he jumped at once from his boyhood schooling into the workshop and started the business career which has made him a man of practical mind and alert powers of observation. When the opportunity came he inaugurated a program of travel which sent him to many of the out of the way places of the world and gave him an intimate knowledge of affairs possessed by few men even in these days of globe trotting. Mr. Crane' has set foot in nearly every country on the globe, has penetrated to out-of-the-way nooks and corners, has occasionally fitted out caravans of his own to explore unfrequent lands, and is as much at home in Russia or China as he is on his home street in Chicago. He is a linguist of considerable attainments, and has occasioned rare books and, what is more, a reader of the same. He is prominent as a civic enthusiast and for years has been a powerful factor in movements for the advancement of Chicago commercially, physically and morally. During his travels Mr. Crane spent much time in China, his business interests taking him into every province. He came into close contact with all classes of Mongolians. In his work he observed in particular of curios of his many visits to China. In all his knocking about the globe, Mr. Crane was absorbing languages. In his library in his Michigan avenue home are books written in a dozen different languages. They are not sorted according to catalogues as a less scholarly owner would sort them, but instead are grouped under subject heads. Friends of Mr. Crane say that when he wants to look up a reference on a topic he goes to his shelves and takes down books in several languages without them the aid of a lexicon. He is said to read 12 languages and to speak with ease and fluency six or eight. Five years ago Mr. Crane added $10,000 of his personal fortune to "The Young Empress Fund" for Russian soldiers and sailors. This gift was made through Count Rostoffstoff, chancellor of the empire, and for it the donor was the recipient of grateful thanks from the empress. Long and close contact with official and civilian leaders, he knew him a feeling toward that nation, but at the same time he has a warm spot in his heart for China and the Chinese. The feeling is said to be reciprocated. The Chinese have been drawn to other members of the family. Professor Williams, uncle of Mr. Crane, wan professor of Chinese at Yale and he is the author of a book on China. Mrs. Crane was Miss Cornelia W. Smith, whose girlhood home was Paterson, N. J., where she became the bride of Mr. Crane 28 years ago. Like her husband, her interests are in the arts. Her name does not appear in the member-ship lists of any Chicago club. The family has a beautiful summer home at Lake Geneva, Wis., and another at Woods Hole. Mass. HAVE YOU READ THE APPEAL? MINNEAPOLIS OFFICE Guaranty Loan Bldg., Room 1020. H. B. BURK. Manager. CHICAGO OFFICE 223-5 Dearborn Street. Suite 660. C. F. ADAMS. Manager TERMS. 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We do not hold ourselves responsible for the soliciting agents wanted everywhere. Write for terms. Sample copies free. In every letter that you write we never fail to give your full name and address, plainly written county and state. Business letters of a kind separate sheets from letters containing news or matter for publication. Entered as at station; June 9, 1888 at the post offices at St. Paul, New York, under act of Congress, March 3, 1879. M. The Republican platform, adopted at Chicago, explicitly demands justice for all men with disabilities just as explicitly declares for the enforcement, and without reservation, in letter and spirit of the Constitution, that the fifteen amendments to the Constitution. t is needless to state that stand with my party securely in the platform, and believe that equal justice to all men and the fair and impartial enforcement of those rights with the real American spirit of fair play.-Hon. W. H. Taff's speech accepting Republi cannionation for Presidency. SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1909. The daily press is responsible for the following story, which, if true, ought to doom the perpetrators to the tortures of hell, if there is any such place, either than that portion of this God-forsaken country, south of Mason and Dixon's line: Rev. Frank R. English, white, formerly pastor of the Finley M. E. church of Cincinnati, Ohio, who was recently appointed to the presidency of Rush University in Mississippi, an Afro-American institution, went to Ethel Miss., to look over some property there. The quarterly conference of the Afro-American M. E. church was in session and the presiding elder invited the Rev. Mr. English to grace the occasion with his presence, as both belonged to a church of the same faith and order. Rev. English, as a good Christian should have done M. H. HON. SHELBY M. CULLOM Illinois' Senior United States Senator, and Grand Old Man. under the circumstance, accepted the from the Florida Times-Union in ref- invitation. erence to a resolution to disfranchis M. Illinois' Junior Senator to Whom Hon. Frank O. Lowden Has Given His Proxy as a Member of the Republican National Committee. After the meeting was over and he was about to depart, he, naturally and very properly, shook hands with his brother in Christ, the presiding elder. When he came out of the church a crowd of whites chased Rev. English to the depot and ordered him away from the town on the next train. To what a pass the hellish color prejudice has carried the Southerners! To think that two members of the SAME CHURCH in which the shaking of hands is one of the ritualistic ordinances cannot obey the ordinance if, by the will of God, one happens to be black and the other white, without danger of his life, is something almost too terrible to be true. If the Bible is true, and hell is the certain portion of those whose hearts are not Christ-like, the walls of his majesty's domains must be bulging now, and when the many millions of the devil's own who now encumber the earth shuffle off the mortal coil, where the devil will the devil put them? MISCEGENATION IN THE SOUTH. The New Orleans Times-Democrat has had a discussion with one of its correspondents on miscegenation in the south. The journal intimated that the white people of the south are opposed to that practice, from which opinion the correspondent disents and he seems to have the better of the argument. He shows that the laws of Louisiana furnish no adequate remedy for the evil. Louisiana and 'other southern states have laws prohibiting racial intermarriage and in some there are anti-concubination laws, but it is a well-known fact that those laws do not do much in the way of preventing the existence of illicit relations between the races. The reason is that southern legislation affords no protection to the Afro-American woman nor her half-breed offspring. In no southern state can the black woman resort to law to compel the white father to support the half-breed offspring. Should she attempt to do so she would be laughed out of court. Yet it would seem that such a law would strike at the very root of the evil. When Louisiana adopts such a law, the T. D. can have a good basis for its argument—not before. A SENSIBLE SOUTHERN VIEW. So many of the utterances of our Southern brethren seem to be mere abulations of a passion which is supposed to be very heroic, that it is really refreshing to come across an article from a Southern newspaper that takes a reasonable and sensible view of things. We quote such an article in part from the Florida Times-Union in reference to a resolution to disfranchise the Afro-American, recently adopted by the Florida Senate: Do the gentlemen who are discussing this question not know that the South gained fifteen Representatives in Congress and fifteen electoral votes by the enfranchisement of the Negroes, and that we would lose more than that number now if they were disfranchised? Before the Negroes became voters the South had only three-fifths representation on the Negro population—that is to say, the representation of the 9,000,000 Negroes would now be cut to 5,000,000, we would lose the representation of 3,000,000 people—that is to say, nineteen Representatives in Congress and nineteen votes in the Electoral College. No force bill would be necessary to accomplish this. It would be accomplished by a return to conditions that prevailed before the Negro was enfranchised. Unfortunately, the South is ruled by two-by-four demagogues who are sent to the legislatures and who are impervious to any such thing as common sense. It is quite gratifying to find that, at least, New York is willing that the Afro-American soldiers should be stationed there in view of the senseless hullabaloo that is raised every time it is ordered that a black regiment is to be stationed near some city. The "Fighting Tenth" came back from Manila a few days ago and landed in New York, and after being cheered by the crowds that lined the curb on Broadway on their way to the city hall park, where they were viewed by Mayor McClelland and other city officials. At the Armory they were served refreshments and there was speech making by Maj. Gen. Leonard Wood and others. President McGowan, of the board of aldermen, said: "You have done more to kill race prejudice than all others. If the people of Vermont don't treat you right, come back here. The State of New York and the United States demand for you the respect of the community and State in which you are stationed." Senator Bacon makes two statements which to THE APPEAL seem contradictory. First he says that the Afro-Americans of Georgia have accumulated $27,000,000 of taxable property; and next he states that the expense of the schools for their children is borne almost exclusively by the whites. Does he mean to assert that that $27,000,000 of taxable property pays no tax? THE APPEAL conjectures that it pays pretty much as the other property of the state (Copyright, by W. G. Chapman). Professor Draper, intent upon the bubbling mixture within the retort before him, nodded slightly as the mall entered and deposited a packet of mall upon his desk. For weeks he had been pondering the mystery contained within the mass, and he congratulated himself that at last there were telltale signs visible to his practiced eye which promised an early and satisfying solution. Presently he slipped the spirit lamp from its position and leaned back to watch the cooling of the compound. By accident his eye fell upon the letters at his elbow, and after an idle glance of curiosity at the topmost he suddenly started forward and seized it excitedly. "Tom!" he ejaculated in surprise. "Who dares to address me in that manner?" With a hasty motion he tore open the envelope and withdrew a second, unscaled. "Ah!" was his puzzled exclamation. "Some one married, eh?" The professor-glanced quickly at the retort and then settled back with a sigh to peruse the missive. "Well, well! Nell's atlaced at last! And to old George, too! Well, my congratulations, old man—Nell was the prettiest girl in the class, anyway!" He leaned forward and studied a vacant spot on the table. Then he reached over and drew out a drawer in a desk near by, abstracting there- EMERY The Professor Glanced Quickly at the Retort. from a bundle of letters tied together by a pink ribbon. He fumbled them over thoughtfully. "Yes," said he at length. "It is as I thought. The whole class has married—that is, excepting Tom." He arose and stepped before a mirror, stroking his dark beard musingly. "Tom, you lonely old canine dissector, will you ever marry?" he asked the face in the glass. The professor started. "I forgot Mollie Kenton entirely! But of course she is married. Why, it's been ten years, and Mollie—well, I was just a shade sweet on her myself at one time!" With a gesture of impatience at his momentary weakness the professor pushed the letters aside and bent over the slowly cooling mass in the retort. It was too late now, he told himself, to harbor such distracting thoughts as this letter called up. Ten minutes later, however, he caught himself whispering to a row of test tubes in a rack along the wall: "I wonder Mollie married!" Recollecting himself, he attacked test anew, and an hour thereafter was diligently engaged with his calculations. A week later the professor was trying to believe that he had entirely forgotten the incident. He was working long hours at his multiplying duties in an effort to fully occupy his mind. But another letter reached him—an invitation to the graduating program at his old school. He glanced down the finely wrought page with suspicion. "Eh! Mollie Kenton down for an oration? Mollie's daughter, of course. What? Alumni representative? It's our Mollie!" Professor Draper sat down suddenly and relapsed in a rapt silence. Presently he chuckled. "To think of it! She must be—h'm—27 would be generosity, I should say. I'm 38 myself!" He smiled and tugged fiercely at his beard. "I think I will do it!" he said finally. "I'll know her, anyway! She'll never recognize me in these, however," and he passed his hand over his face. The hall was duly thronged. Rugs and roses made the stage a fairyland from which deboutants floated at intervals to deliver their message to the waiting world and silently melt away again. Professor Thomas Draper sat through the long program, impatiently waiting the appearance of the speaker he hoped to recognize. The preceding number had ceased and the thunders of applause that greet young graduates on such occasions as this were dying slowly away. In the lull that followed a form stepped quickly out from the mystifying background and glided down to the center of the stage. Professor Draper sat up straight and surveyed the figure with unconcealed intensity. After a moment he sank back with a weary air—that was certainly not his Mollie Kenton! His memory of her was of a far slimmer, more auburn-haired creature; this perfectly proportioned woman—no, it could not be Mollie Kenton. Idly he listened to the stirring words of the speaker, his eyes occasionally pausing in their wandering to rest on her fair throat, her queenly head or a rounded shoulder. He felt a strange lack of interest now, and his disappointment was bringing him to a realization of the folly of making the unwarranted journey. In the midst of his thoughts the speaker ended and drifted lightly away to the plaudits of the assemblage. "Mollie grows younger every day!" remarked some one near by. The professor opened his eyes quickly and glanced about. He tapped his neighbor lightly on the arm. "Who was that last speaker?" he inquired. "That's Mollie Kenton! Don't you know her?" His informant spoke in a tone of surprise and Professor Draper leaned limply back in his seat. Was that really Mollie? There was something of the miraculous in this thing, and in an endeavor to account for it on scientific grounds he became calmer. He folded his arms and fixed his eyes straight ahead. He was aroused presently by his neighbor's rising and edging out into the aisle. Unthinkingly he, too, arose and forced a way down to the rear of the hall. He glanced at his watch—it was eleven o'clock. The program must be well-nigh ended. With a feeling of loneliness he left the hall and stood bareheaded in the calm June night. From the stage entrance a light shone, and as the professor caught sight of it his boson swelled with recollections of other times when he had watched that same stage door with palpitating heart and heaving breast. And then, as he looked, a shadow thrust forward, followed almost instantly by a form. He knew her now—that telltale sweep of the hands as they gathered the straying locks and patted them defily to place. Before he realized it he was stepping up toward the light. In a moment he stood at a point so near that another step would reveal his presence. Breathlessly he stood and studied the girl—it was the same Mollie Kenton! He stepped forward into the path of light. The girl turned a startled face toward him as he came up the walk. "Why, it's Tom! Tommy Draper!" The girl reached out quickly and grasped his hand. "Oh, it is Tom!" she repeated, while the professor flushed to his hair and struggled to speak. "Yes, it's Tom," he said. "And you don't mean to say that you are the same old Mollie Kenton?" "The same—only—a trifle older." She pushed him out at arm's length and surveyed him critically. "My! But are you really such a tremendous professor as those looks would indicate? You are so—so studious looking, Tom!" "I—ah—I am a trifle studious, I presume," he admitted. "I can remember when you—Isn't it a lovely night? Is that an owl hooting, Tom?" "Some one blowing a horn, I judge," said the professor. She glanced at him with a faint smile. "And it IS a fine evening!" he added, apologetically. "I'll get my things, Tom, and you can take me home. I was going with Stella Tilton, but she has Ned Edgely to fall back on and won't be disappointed." She whisked out of sight, leaving the professor dazed at the suddenness of it all. It was just like the old times. The same moon, the same restful quiet, the same sprightly care-free Mollie—all was as it should be except himself. He seemed so much more advanced—older and more orderly. In a moment the girl came out and seized his arm with an air of proprietorship that made him wince, but switched him wholly back to those other days. The walk home was strangely long. At times the moon opportunely lurked in the protecting lee of intervening clouds. At the end the man who had lingered ten years over his researches forgot his science in the possession of his one perfect affinity—the woman who had lingered ten years, sustained by her buoyant spirit, melted into weakness as she realized the presence of the primal factor in her life. “And, dear,” remarked Tom Draper facetiously, just before they separated, “I was wondering just recently whom you had married, never dreaming but that you were married!” “Yes, Tommy!” said the girl, as she pushed away from him. “But I never wondered whom I was going to marry. I knew that—you’d come back some time!” “Ah—that is to say—as——” “That is to say that I knew the consequences would be—would be——” “Fatal?” “Fatal, Tommy!” said she, laughingly. Some moments later there was a smothered "Tom!" from somewhere, after which Professor Thomas Draper strode hastily down the moonlit walk. What Time Do Birds Get Up? One of the small compensations for sleepless old age is to lie awake all night while the whole household is asleep and listen to what is going on. I will give you one of my night's experiences. I say nothing of the earlier hours except that I think the blackbird is the last to go to bed. At half past two the robin's song I hear. At a quarter to three a thrush flies up from somewhere on to the bare branch of an ash tree, and there, after stretching out one wing after the other and then his legs, and giving himself a regular wash and brush up—I can see him plainly, for the tree is in front of my open window and bed—he begins his song; his notes at first are rough, as if he had a cold in his throat, but in a short time he pours forth his liquid music clear and sweet as a nightingale. By four o'clock all the trees are alive with a variety of songs of many birds, each one singing his own song regardless of harmony, the whole contributing to one general harmony. By half-past five the music is silent, breakfast time has arrived, and the lawn is alive with starlings, thrushes, blackbirds, robins and sparrows.—Letter London Spectator. Germany is the envy of Ireland as the leading potato country, with an annual range between 1,330,000,000 and 1,800,000,000 bushels. Next comes Russia, with about 1,000,000,000. France scores from 375,000,000 to 525,000,000; Great Britain and Ireland from 200,000,000 to 270,000,000; Belgium from 60,000,000 to 90,000,000; Canada from 50,000,000 to 70,000,000. ```markdown ``` An unaccented Christian Institution, devoted especially to advanced education, offers English and English High School courses with industrial Training. Superior advantage, boys' Physical culture for girls. Home life and training. Aid given to needy and ill children. Begins the first year of education and information, address. President MORGAN HUMMER, PhD. HOWARD UNIVERSITY The Forty-first Annual Session will begin October 1, 1908, and continue eight months. OUR YEARS' CAREER COURSE IN MEDICAL Knoxville College. Classical, Scientific, Agricultural, Mechanical, Normal and Common school Courses, together with Theological and Medical Schools. Fifty-five Dollars a Year will cover all expenses of board, tuition and room. Separate home and matron for little girls and another for little boys from 6 to 10 Years. Forming the Monday in September. Send for catalogue 4) President of Knoxville College, Knoxville Park. HORLICK'S MALTED MILK Don't argue with dirt Pearline HOWARD UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MED REV. W. P. THIRKIELD, 1867 Robert Reyburn, M. D., Dean The Forty-first Annual Session will begin Oct. 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 instructors. Well equipped labora- tory. The New Freedmen's Hospital, which adjoins at a cost of $600,000, offers unexcelled clinical facili- ties. The Third Session of the First-Grade School 1909, and continue six weeks for Medical Course and For further information or catalogue, write W. C. MNEILL, M. D., Sec. 539 Florida Avenue, Knoxville College. Classical, Scientific, Agriculture School Courses, together with Theology and Music, will cover all expenses of board, tuition, fuel, light a and matron for little girls and another for little boys Monday in September. Send for enclosure $1. Presid- ency Tanz. TUSKEGEE Normal and Industrial Institute (INCORPORATED) Organized July 4, 1881, by the State Logic Mature as The Tuskegee State Normal School Except from taxation. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON, Principal. WARREN LOGAN; Treasurer. LOCATION backs outnumber the whites three to one. ENROLLMENT AND FACULTY Enrollment last year 1,253; males, 882; females, 371. Average attendance, 1,105; instructors, 88. COURSE OF STUDY Engineering combined with industrial training; 28 instructional co-op operation. VALUE OF SCHOOL VALUE OF PROPERTY Property consisting of 2,269 acres of land, buildings and landscaped yard with student labor, is valued at $350,000, and no mortgage NEEDS $50 annually for the education of each student; $200 enables one to finish the course; $100 creates permanent scholarship. Students pay $100 per semester; money in any amount for current expenses building. Work done by graduates as class room and industrial leaders, thousands ached through the Tuskegee Negro Conference. Jelegee is 4 miles cast of Montgomery and 5 miles west of Atlanta, on the Western Alabama. Steeges is a quiet, beautiful old man, and is an ideal place for stunts or for the place an exhibition. TILLOTSON COLLEGE AUSTIN, TEXAS. The Oldest and Best School in Texas for Colored Students. Faculty mostly graduate from the University. In the north. Reputation, unsurpassed. Manua. training a part of the regular course. Special advantages for earnest students. A Practical, Literary and Industrial Trades School for Afro-American Boys and Girls. Unusual advantages for Girls and a separate building. Joseph D. Mahoney, Principal. Allegheny, Pa. New England CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC BOSTON, Mass. All the advantages of the finest and most completely equipped Conservatory in the world, the art of conservatory music, and association with the masters in the Profession are offered. The Conservatory is the national conservatory of Music. Through work in all departments of music. Courses can be arranged in Recitation and Oratory. GEORGE W. CHAMWELL, Musical Director. All performers and producers will be sent an application. School Children Departments—Normal and Collegiate; Special attention to Vocal Instruments, Music, Theoretical Agriculture, Sewing and Cooking Healthy Location; beated by skilled labor by electricity; room, board, tuition, light and last 500. For catalog and particulars write to President Virginia Normal, Collegiate Institute, Petersburg, Va. UNIVERSITY MEDICINE, ELD, L.L. D., 1908 W. C. McNeill, M. D. Secretary begin October 1, 1908, and continue eight ELE IN MEDICINE. ELE IN DENTAL SURGERY. ELE IN PHARMACY. ELE IN MEDICINE IS OFFERED. Instruments. In the Medical College, just completed facilities. School and Polyclinic will begin May 9, and four weeks for Dental Course. D. Secretary Agricultural, Mechanical, Normal and Common School. School. Fifty-one Dollars a light and furnished room. Separate house his boys from 6 to 16 years. Term begins last President of Knoxville College, Knoxville GAMMON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY ATLANTA, GEORGIA AIMS AND METHODS. The aim of this school is to do practice work in helping men towards success in the teaching of the arts; it is broad and practical; its ideas are high; its work is thorough; its methods are fresh, systematic, clear and simple. OVERVIEW. The regular course of three occupies three years, and covers the lines of work in the several departments of the theological school in the leading theological seminaries in the country. EXPENSES AND AID. Tutton and room rent are free. The apartments for students are plainly furnished; card can be had for seven dollars per month and dinged heated by steam. from loans without interest, and gifts of friends, are given to students who do their utmost in the study of energy, need be deprived of the advantage of this school in this Seminary. For further particulars address: REV, J. W. E. BOWEN, D. D. Pres. Gammon, Theological Seminary. BRAINERD INSTITUTE A normal and industrial school with a great emphasis on designed to give a thorough, symmetrical design. English education, and lay a solid foundation of practical usefulness in every vocation of life. Board of Trustees. MorristownNormalCollege FOUNDED IN 1881. Fourteen teachers. Elegant and commendable. Unsurpassed. Departments: College paraparatory Normal, English, Music. Typewriting and Industrial Training. FIFTY DOLLARS IN ADVANCE. write a letter of recommendation tuition and incidentals for the entire Board. $6.00 per tuition $2.00 per incidental in each department. Send for circular to the president. Rev. Judson S. Hill, D. D., Morristown, Tenn. This well known school, established for higher education of girls will open for boys. Every effort will be made to provide instruction of student with and thorough instruction of student in board, light fuel, washing, $45, for term of eight months. address. **Riverhead School** [Riverhead School] Able and Experienced Faculty. Progressive in all departments, best Methods of Instruction, Health of Students carefully booked, offer. Students taught to do manual labor as well as think. For catalogue and other in- formation, write to the president. R. S. LOWINGGOOD, Austin, Texas. In Should Drink GAVEL MADE OF MANY WOODS Gift to Medical Institute is of Historical Interest—Contains Seveny-Seven Pieces. Kansas City, Mo.—During the annual session of the American Institute of Homeopathy, held in this city a year ago, Dr. William Davis Foster of Kansas City was elected president of the institute for the following year. To show his appreciation of his election Dr. Foster had made a gavel which he presented to the institute. A year was required for Dr. Foster to get together the material of which it is made. The gavel is made of 77 pieces of wood, a piece from every state ```markdown ``` Gavel Which Contains 77 Pieces of Wood. and territory in the United States and from Germany and France. There are pieces from the houses or the possessions of all of the pioneers of homeopathy. Each piece in the gavel is numbered. In a bound volume, called the "Gavel Book," is contained all the correspondence bearing upon the gathering of the material of which the gavel is made. The varieties of wood used include mahogany, white pine, ebony, black walnut, rosewood, sequoia gigantea, vegetable ivory, surrender oak, Arizona ironwood, redwood, a bit from an Indian medicine man's tomahawk from Alaska, orange wood, diamond willow, fir, petrified wood, yellow cedar, cherry and yellow pine. Each piece is numbered with a small gilt number. In the "Gavel Book" under a corresponding number is a short biographical sketch of the person of whom the piece is a souvenir. The ends of the gavel are gold. One end is engraved with "Similia Similibut Currentur." Upon the others is engraved "Presented to the American Institute of Homeopathy by William Dawson Foster, M. D., President 1900." The handle is ebony tipped with ivory. MENTIONED FOR THE CABINET Washington Rumor Says Congressman Scott of Kansas May Succeed Secretary Wilson. Washington.—There is a revival in Washington of the gossip that Secretary Wilson will retire from the da Congressman C. F. Scott. partment of agriculture in December and that Representative Scott of Kansas will succeed hihm. Several prominent papers have printed stories to that effect. It was said at the White House that the matter had not been considered there, and Representative Scott said that the president had never mentioned the subject to him. Secretary Wilson has held the place under three presidents—McKinley, Roosevelt and Taft—and holds the record for cabinet service. Charles F. Scott represents the Second Kansas district, is chairman of the committee on agriculture, and is serving his fifth term in congress. Two of his terms were as congressman-at-large. He was born in Kansas, lives in Iola and is editor and owner of the Iola Register. "Boo-hoo!" sobbed little Jimmy. "it don't pay to be patriotic these times." "What's the trouble, my little man?" asked the kind-hearted old gentleman in the park. "Why, the teacher said after she read a Bunker hill poem, 'Let the eagle scream' and when I stuck sticks at the eagle up in the zoo to make him scream the cops chased me two blocks. Boo-hoo!" Disposing of It Cheaply. Client—This copy of my will is all right, but I want the original written on a slate. Lawyer—Beg pardon, but what is your object? Client—So my heirs won't have any difficulty in breaking it. ```markdown ``` Broke His Spirit. REGARDING HER She Appreciates Attention Flowers Books Drives All Good But he wins her choicest approval in his invitation to a tete-a-tete luncheon Her opinion of his taste is verified at his selection of Hamm's BEER Her Favorite "LEADS THEM ALL" THEO. HAMM BREWING CO. St. Paul, Minn. Places our Ad. in the Public Eye any place we put it. PEOPLE LOOK FOR BARGAINS FROM THIS STORE AND GET THEM. Never idle, always busy, drop in. TEL. N. W. DALE 3473 The Western Inn F. F. ROELLER, PROP. IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC WINES, LIQUORS & CIGARS 379 Carroll Cor. Western ST. PAUL, MINN. GOOD SHOES The Florsheim SHOE For the man who cares STANLEY SHOE CO. 421 Robert Street, St. Paul HOTEL DWYER. 224 Washington Av. S. Minneapolis, Minn. A. H. CHAS. W. DWYER, PROP. Hotel Dwyer has been refitted and is in first class order reformished 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. GOLDEN GRAIN BELT BEERS N. W. 940 Telephones T. S. 789 ST. PAUL STEAM LAUNDRY! "The Sanitary Laundry" W. B. Webster, Prop. First Class Work at Right Prices Called for and Delivered 289-291 Rice Street ST. PAUL JOS. TROST The Grocer Is now located at 616 Rondo street with a splendid, New Stock of Staple and Fancy Groceries MINN. ORIGINAL CHOP HOUSE FOR GOOD THINGS TO EAT R. S. HARRIS, PROP. HABERDASHER Men's Furnishings, Hats, Caps, Umbrellas, Canes, Etc. Goods that Please the Eye Prices that Fit the Pocket. 33 East Sixth Street, St Paul THE BOSTON EDITOR THE MAGIC IS TWO TIMES LARGER THAN PICTURE-IT STEEL HEATING BAR SHAPE 1000 ODOR MFR. 10 WIDTH 1000 MM PLUINUM CONB TWO TIMES LARGER THAN PICTURE-IT IS 9 IN LONG THE MAG AND HAIR-ST SHOP 100 OR 8 MAR 10 MAILED ANYWHERE POSTAGE SEND MONEY IN POST OFF ies you need this. THE MAGIC IS TWO TIMES LARGER THAN PICTURE IT IS 9 IN LONG STEEL HEATING BAR SHAMPOO ONLY 9 MFG. 10 ALUMINUM COND THE MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER AND HAIR-STRAIGHTENER MAILED ANYWHERE IN U.S. $100 POSTAGE PAID. EVERY lady can have a beautiful and fruity milkshake. This is toilet necessities. After a shampoo or a shaving cream, after the dandruff, and it will straighten the dandruff, giving it a natural fruity appearance. Remember that the Magic never burns in heat, because the comb is never heated direct. The steel heating bar alone is put into the flame of the heater, as shown below. MAGIC PATENT APPLICAT Agents wanted in every town, but do not wait, send for it today Eastern Agents. New York MAGIC SHAMPOO "You use Everyone strictly DUR PARK CIGA HART & B MNFRS. S Telephone "CURLEY 122 East Finest Brands of Im Wines, Liqu N. E. Cor. 3rd and Robert St Dimes are little young ly when locked up together savings account and provi tion. "Planted" dollars ings. THE STATE S 93 East F EYE DEFECTS A Eye defects are few—symptoms can be but two deficits. The eye may be too long in myopic eye. Or too short in whole—the combine the two in one eye. Properly adjusted glasses, medicines or waiting, new symptoms that spring from formations are manifold; such gestion, Dyspepsia, Nervous other ailments having their cause. We correct all Defects of will remedy. Charges reason. HARMS OCULO CURES SO F. H. HAR OPTIC You too? Everyone smokes the strictly High Grade DUKE OF PARMA CIGARS HART & MURPHY MNFRS. ST. PAUL, MINN. Telephone Cedar 2622 BURLEY'S BAY 122 East Third Street West Brands of Imported and Done Wines, Liquors and Cigars Mr. 3rd and Robert St. Times are little young dollars. They get them locked up together. Treat your cigars account and prove it to your own self. "Planted" dollars will add to your E STATE SAVINGS BAY 93 East Fourth Street EYE DEFECTS AND SYMPTOMS These defects are few—symptoms many. There can be but two defects in the human eye: eye may be too long in whole. Then we see too short in whole—the Hyperopic eye. Combine the two in one eye and we have Astigmaty adjusted glasses will correct these diseases or waiting, never. Symptoms that spring from these two simple ones are manifold; such as eye and headache, Dyspepsia, Nervous Debility, Chorea, Epilepsies having their origin in lack of nerves, correct all Defects of the human eye the remedy. Charges reasonable. Satisfaction given. HARM & BREATHS OCULO CURES SORE EYES 25c PER BOTTLE H. H. HARM & BREATHS OPTICIANS. MAGIC PATENT APPLICED FOR TOP Agents wanted in every town, but do not wait, send for it today Magic Shampoo Drier, $1.00 Magic Alcohol Heater . 50c Eastern Agents. New York Hair Co., 738 Broadway, N. Y. MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER CO., MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA. "You too?" Everyone smokes the strictly High Grade DUKE OF PARMA CIGARS HART & MURPHY, MNFRS. ST. PAUL, MINN. Finest Brands of Imported and Domestic Wines, Liquors and Cigars Dimes are little young dollars. They grow only when locked up together. Treat yourself to a savings account and prove it to your own satisfaction. "Planted" dollars will add to your earnings. HARM CLASSES EYE DEFECTS AND SYMPTOMS. Mye defects are few—symptoms many. There can be but two defects in the human eye. Theeye may be too long in whole. Then we have the Myopic eye. 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. 337 ROBERT STREET, ST. PAUL, MINN. --- The Most Proper Line of FALL WOOLENS TO BE HAD FOR A NICE SUIT OR OVERCOAT IS SHOWN BY Clifford A. Smith PRESSING AND REPAIRING DONE 109 Eighth St. Opposite Golden Rule Telephone Main 3488-L St. Paul, - - Minn. THE MAGIC SHAMPOO DRIER AND HAIR-STRAIGHTENER MAILED ANYWHERE IN U.S. $10 SEE MONEY BY POST OFFICE NORTH BORDER. And this. You can get along without it, of course, but greatly to the disadvantage of your appearance. Do not mistake this elegant toilet necessity for some of the cheaply made imitations it is, different, as you will see by the pictures. The aluminum comb is easily detached from the seat after the bar is as shown below) the county back in place, the handle is turned and the magic is ready for use. The Magic Heater, also suitable for heating the curling iron, has cover and can be carried in hand bag. Magic Shampoo Drier, $1.00 Magic Alcohol Heater, 50c Air Co., 738 Broadway, N.Y. DRIER CO., MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA. OO?" Smokes the High Grade MAKE OF MRA MARS MURPHY, ST. PAUL, MINN. Cedar 2622 Y'S BAR" Third Street Imported and Domestic Cars and Cigars ST. PAUL dollars. They grow on mer. Treat yourself to a cigarette to your own satisfac- will add to your earn- SAVINGS BANK Fourth Street Hyperopic eye. Have and we have Astigmatism. Will correct these defects. On these two simple eye malas eye and headaches, Indi- Debility, Chorea, Epilepsy and migrin in lack of nerve force. The human eye that glasses able. Satisfaction guaranteed. E YEES 25c PER BOTTLE. M & BRO. GIANS. Meets Month at Walker W. Secy., 301 PERFECT By Tuesday and Thursday Bolling, Secy., 138 MARS O. F. meet daily in West Uni- venue. H. S. 449 W. meet daily in North Uni- venue. H. O. of Monday Parringer, M. G. Mrs. Marlon St. meet daily in North Uni- venue. PAST G. NO. 123, G. and Odd Corner Parringer, W. Hickman, A. Uni- venue. ST. PAUL meets second Gold Parringer, corner Parringer, A. Uni- venue. R. V. P.: Geo. B. L. HOUSE OF U. O. O. Tuesday and Thursday Parking, South Ave., Mrs. G. UNITED NORTH P. meets daily in North Uni- venue. ST. JAMES Fuller and 11:00 a.m. m. meet, s-suppe set daily in North Uni- venue. ST. PHILIP covert Avery Sunday service Eucurist. Holy Eucharist on Sundays. The Brown Wesper Wednesday Fridays, every days Holy A. H. Lea- Stu You DEAR Sister, your pomegranate for it makes easy to combine Mrs. B. (Formerly 50 years. The use of H. Born, M. Born soft and gloss in any style of Removes and the soap, breaking off. Absolutely guides even on Delicately halves of refining Poorly Ed but anything you want. Pomade—it it. If your draught gurnine three bottles. One bottle, two way bottles. Money Order, receipt of price. THE BEST KING FORD'S MAS Cage by the shop. DR. 91 E. SEVEN. Specialty less ex- --- MARS LODGE NO. 2202 G. U. of O. F. meets second and fourth U. Wednes- day. University corr. Fringes Hall, 221 West University corr. Fringes Hall, b. avenue. Entrance on Fringington. B. avenue. Entrance on Fringington. P. S., 449 West G.; J. Wesley Kelly, P. S., 449 West G.; U. University Avenue. HOUSEHOLD OR RUTH. NO. 553 G. U. of O. F. corr. Fringes Hall, Menday in each month at Odd Fringes Hall, N. W. Cor. University and N. W. Cor. University, M. G., Mrs. Ida M. Johnson, W. R. No. 914 Marlon St. PAST GRAND MASTER'S COUNCIL No. 123, G. U. of O. F. meets the second and fourth Friday in each month at corner Fringington Hall, 221 W. University. corner Fringington Hall, 221 W. University. Wm. R. Morris, W. G. M.; Thos. Hickman, G. S., 422 St. Anthony avenue. PAUL PATRIARCHY NO. 114 meets second Friday in each month at Cold Fellows Hall, 221 W. University. corner Fringington. Entrance on Fringington on avenue. Thos. R. Hickman (acting) R. V. B. Lowe, P. M. V. P. Geo B. Lowe, W. P. R.; 1781 Wabasha. Minneapolis. HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH NO. 776 G. U. F. meets second and fourth Tuesday in school. Cor. Fourth street and Eight ave. South, Mrs. Emily Newton, M. N. G.; Mrs. Margaret Williams, W. R. UNITED BROTHERS OF FRIENDSHIP. H. H. Hayes Lodge No. 138. U. B. F. meets first and third Tuesday month at Tschida Hall, Cor. Arundel and Lafond. Brothers in good standing and welcome. O. Howell, W. M. J. Q. Adams, W. Secy, 49 E. Fourth street. John H. Hayes Lodge No. 6 K. of Pi meets first and third Tuesdays in each month at Hall, F. of University and F.ington University at 500 c'clock P. M. Knights of Thina in good standing always. John H. Hayes, C. C., R. W. Gully, K. of R. and s. 389 Rondo. BIDDLE CIRCLE, LADIES OF G. A. R. meets first and third Tuesdays of each month. Superintendent room, old cap building, building 1, Mrs. J. R. White, Secy., Phoenix Bldg. Parsonage, Cor. Jay and Fulner. ST. PHILIP'S EPSICOPAL MISSION corner Aurora avenue and Mackinab street Sunday services: Early celebration of Holy Eucharist, 7:30 a.m. High celebration, 8:30 a.m. first and third Sundays, 11:00 a.m. Sunday, 11:00 a.m. Sunday school, 12:30 a.m. Brotherhood of St. Andrew, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Week services, 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, 8:30 p.m. Friday, evening, 8:30 p.m. days Holy Eucharist, 9:00 A. M. Rev. A. H. Lealtad, Reporter, 5:41 Fuller St. Straighten Your Hair DEAR SIES: I have used only one bottle of your pomade and now I would not be without it. So it makes and an straight and easy to comb and also starts a new growth. MRS. W.F. WALKEB, Sta. I- Harriman, Tenn. Ford's Hair Pomade (Formely known as Ozonized Ox Marrow) The use of Ozonized Ox has proved its merits. The use of Ford's Hair Pomade has born, harah, kinky or curly-hair straight, dappled glossy and easy to comb, and arrange in a tight, tight, tight manner. Removes and prevents dandruff, invigorates the scalp, stops the hair from falling out or browning, and wigs. Absolutely harmless—used with resultless even on the youngest children. Removes, its use is a pleasure, as ladies of refinement use, as ladies of refinement. Ford's Hair Pomade has imitators. Don't be anything else alleged to be "just good." Ford's Hair Pomade will be used. Pomade it will pay you. On this page. on every package. If your drug bill requires you to supply you with the gummie, we will send you Three bottles size for - - - - - $ . 55 Three bottles size for - - - - - $ . 1.40 One bottle, small - - - - - $ . 2.50 We pay postage and express charges to all points Money Order, All orders shipped, promptly on receipt of price. Address FedEx Ded Ox Marrow Co., East 13 Eastin Kirk, MI FORD'S HAIR POAME is made only in Ohio by Ford Motor Company. Agents Wanted Everywhere. DR. HURD 91 E. SEVENTH ST. Specialty — Pain- less extracting, Crown and Bridge Work. ST. PAUL MOST WORSHIPFUL GRAND LODGE OF MINNESOTA, A. F. AND A. M. W. D. CARTER, GRAND MASTER. 155 S. WILLOW Ave. St. Paul. JOSE H. SHERWOO, 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 month at 126 East Third Street at 8:00 p. m. Walker Williams, W. M.; William England, Secy., 391 Farrington Ave. PERFECT ASHLAR LODGE NO. 4, A. F. and A. M. meets first and third Tuesday at schida Hall, cor. Lafond and Thomas sts. 8:00 p. m. M. A. Bolling, W. M. Jose H. Sherwoo, Secy., 130 W. Arch St. Hayes Lodge No. 6. Kl of Pmeets first and third Tueses corr. of University and Farrington Avenues, at 8:00 F. Knight F. Knight Pythias in good standing al- ways welcome. John H. Hayes, C. C, R. W. Gully, K. of R. and s.. Charles Ford Print