The Appeal

Saturday, November 6, 1909

St. Paul, Minnesota

4 pages

Page 1
Page 1
Page 2
Page 2
Page 3
Page 3
Page 4
Page 4
Page text (machine-generated)
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. VOL. 25. NO. 45. LIFUTE SK ANY gray-haired retired American soldier in Washington for an army story and instantly he will start to tell you of the tale of Lleut. Michael Fitz- Gerald's dinner party. He's a favorite army yarn. Does it find its wee outside of the circle of the blue. A Lieut. Michael FitzGerald became Major Michael FitzGerald in course of time and because of wounds received in the very forefront of a battle for his adopted country he was placed upon the retired list of the marm. He died within a few months at his little home town in Pennsylvania. The dinner of Lieut. FitzGerald was an international episode. Some of the elders will remember that it was not until shortly after the close of the civil war that the last echo was heard of the dispute between Great Britain and the United States over territory in the northwest. The question of the ownership of the islands between Vancouver and Washington territory was still unsettled. The two governments in order not to lose prestige, it must be necessary to maintain garrisons on the displacement grounds. The United States were represented by one company of the old Ninth infantry, commanded by Second Lieut. Michael FitzGerald. FitzGerald was the only American commissioned officer in the field. Not far away from his headquarters were two companies of British regulars with a full complement of officers. Before FitzGerald and his command were sent to the island, occupied in part by the British. Gen. McDowell, who commanded the division of the Pacific, sent for the second lieutenant for the purpose of impressing upon him the delicate nature of his mission. All of these, Mr. FitzGerald," said the general, "observe the rules of international courtesy." "Till it do it, general," answered the second lieutenant promptly, "and no war will grow out of my treatment of the red-coats." The British and American garrisons were only a few miles apart. When Lieut. FitzGerald finally became comfortably fixed in his quarters and was feeling the full weight of being not only company commander but commanding officer of a United States garrison as well he was called upon in turn by each of the half dozen red-coated officers stationed beyond the hill. FitzGerald returned the calls promptly and shortly thereafter he was invited to dine with the six Englishmen as his hosts. At that dinner the American lieutenant was entertained royally. There was nothing in the British garrison that was too good for him, and, as the veterans say to day, "FitzGerald afterward told his comrades in the states, 'It was a wet night.'" When FitzGerald returned to his quarters and three weeks had passed away he made up his mind that it was time to prepare to return in some way the hospitality of the Englishmen. He took an account of the provender at hand and found that the supply at his disposal were the ordinary army rations and a jug of whisky. There was nothing fit for a banquet such as FitzGerald was to give, nearer than San Francisco. The second lieutenant was a man of expeditents. The next bout to San Francisco carried some communications to certain supply houses, and not long afterward the sup- plies arrived at FitzGerald's quarters. The American officer was no mere dinner giver. The invitations which he sent to the six British officers were en graved, bore the arms of the United States in colors and announced the banquet. It took Lieut. FitzGerald a fall week to unpack the boxes which had come from San Francisco. He told about 10 of his enlisted men that it would not do for an American officer to be out done in hospitality by the British. Forth with he instructed them carefully in duties an waiters by one command-Fitz. He picked out of the command five men who had some music in their souls and provided them with instruments. When the British officers arrived and preliminary courtesies had been exchanged they were shown in a banquet hall with a table in its center glittering with silver and with cut glass. The red-coats ate of delicacies and of substantials that none of them thought could be found nearer than New York, and they drank wine of the kind that no bursars were. There were two waiters for every guest, and five enlisted men fiddled away and blew at their instruments throughout the 20 courses of the dinner. There were toasts and toasts and, it was not all over until about an hour after the host had excused himself temporarily to attend revellie roll call. Then came the cold gray light of the week after. The joy of remembrance of the banquet had kept Lift. FitzGerald's heart up for the week that had passed. Then the bills came in from San Francisco. In amount they had cost $200. FitzGerald's banquet had cost $200. If the lieutenant should pay the bills the banquet would mean bankruptcy. The commander of the island post passed a night in thought. In the morning there was a look of relief upon his face. In an hour's time there was ready for transmission to Gen. McDowell in San Francisco a large official envelope marked in large letters in red ink "International Courteses." Included were the bills for patte de folle gras, rare old Burgundy and other things the new boat. With the enclosures went this, written in Lift. Michael's own hand: "Excerpt from Maj-Gen. McDowell's instruction: 'Above all things, Mr. FitzGerald, observe the rules of international courteses.'" Gen. McDowell fumed, and tradition has it that he swore, but he ordered that the bills be paid out of the contingent fund, and the memory of that banquet in the wilds of one of the islands which now form part of San Juan, which state of War is to this day in the minds of several veterans. THE APPEAL. plies arrived at FitzGerald's quarters. The American officer was no mere dinner giver. The invitations which he sent to the shack of officers were bore, bore the arms of the United States in colors and announced a banquet. It took Lieut. FitzGerald a full week to unpack the boxes which had come from the Pacific. He told about 10 of his enlisted men that it would not do for an American officer to be outdone in hospitality by the British. Forth-ward in his instruction he carefully in dues as waiters. INTERNATIONAL EPISODE ON NORTHWEST BORDER of the English service, and has a place in the story telling groups of the American army as "an international episode." In Arlington cemetery, he crosses the Pocock from Washington lies the body of John G. Bourke, who in life was an officer of the fighting Third cavalry. Major Bourke's last tour of active duty was in Chicago during the railroad strike of 1894. The cavalryman found time aside from his soldier duties to study the folklore of the North American Indians with whom he fought and was friendly alternately as the government would have it, for years on years of life in the west. Major Bourke was an active member at one time of the American association which makes folklore study a specialty. He was interested not only in the inherited tribal tales of the Sioux and the Apache, but he took within his study scope the folklore of all primitive peoples. With the side of the great stone monument erected to the memory of Gen. Crook and which stands near Major Bourke's grave in Arlington cemetery is set a bronze panel showing the scene of the surrender of the Apaches under Geronimo to Crook in the Sierra Madres 23 years ago. The faces of the Indians and of the army officers shown are portraits. One of the officers in the group is John G. Bourke, and there is a story in connection with the folklore major and the Geronimo campaign which other besides folklore people possibly may appreciate. There had been a fight at long range with the Apaches in the mountains and Bourke's troop, dismounted, had been engaged. When the fight was over and the Apaches who escaped killing had made for farther mountain fastnesses, as was their custom, the troopers moved forward and found one Indian who had been shot between the eyes, the bullet coming on at the back of his head. It is unlikely to say terribly that the Apache was dead. Gen. Croc came up and found Major, then Captain, Bourke saying a few warm things to one of the duty sergeants of his troop. Bourke left the sergeant, and Crook, turning to the cavalry captain, said: "Bourke, what on earth has Sergeant Casey been doing this time?" "Doing, general!" exclaimed Bourke wrathfully. "Doing enough; I tried for five years to make a sharpshooter out of Casey, and at the end of the time he couldn't hit the barracks he was inside with the doors and windows shut. "And yet, general, that fellow Casey here to-day at a clean 900 yards plugged and killed the only Apache in this whole southwestern country who could have given me the folklore story I've been after for years. "I tell you, general, that Casey has escaped court-martial only by swearing the shot was a scratch." It takes only a casual reader of the army orders which are published daily in Washington to make it known that more than one deserter who has been caught succeeds in escaping the punishment due him by sheer force of the pleas, pathetic and otherwise, which friends make for him. Occasionally there are extinguishing circumstances even in the cases of deserters; but desertion is desertion, no matter how it is viewed, and clemency is not looked upon with favor by either regimental company commanders, and in truth the deserter must be killed, so they do escape, through the soft-heartedness of civilian secretaries of war. It is said that occasionally deserters write to the wife of the president of the United States asking that she intercede for them with her husband. This plan worked once, but if the facts in the case are known to the present mistress of the White House it is probable that the letters of deserters caught and awaiting trial will receive scant attention. The story of a deserter who appealed to a president's wife, and he did not appeal in 1830, just as the Sheridan fellow in the year 1839, just as the Sheridan fellow in the fall, a young fellow went from Chicago to Fort Sheridan and there gave himself up as a deserter. It is probable that the cold weath- er and lack of money had much to do with the former soldier's surrender to the authorities. The records were looked up and it was found that the man was what he declared himself to be—a deserter, and nothing less. He was locked in the guardhouse to await trial, he was long, for a court-martial was convened and the officers' deliberations was a sentence of four years in Fort Leavenworth for the prisoner. Then it was that the deserter began to think he had been a fool to give himself up and he began to think of something else as well. It was just a week before Christmas when the prisoner sat down in has cell and a letter to Mrs. Benjamin Harrison, White House. C. Afterward a fellow prisoner of the deserter sat down and been allowed to read the letter before it was to Washington and that it was such an appealing epistle that it made him weep. Mrs. Harrison was told how hard it was to be in prison during the glad Christastide, when the world was bright from the reflection of happy faces, and when, if ever, pardon should come to the errie. The president's wife received the letter and was so touched that she made it a point at once to interest her husband in the case. The result was that President Harrison donned the prisoner. The young fellow was released and by permission he stayed around the barracks at Fort Sheridan a few hours before leaving for Chicago. When he left he carried away all the money which a sergeant of F company had been given a year to use on furlough. The pardoned one also got gold watch belonging to the first sergeant of F. That deserter never was caught, and as far as it is known he never again gave himself up to the authorities. There was more than a rumor at the time, however, that two enlisted men in the United States army saw to it that the tale of the deserter's deeds was sent to the White House in order that the president's wife might learn that even a woman and a president's wife may sometimes mistake human nature. CONDENSED COURTESY. Wise Club Member Wheatataked German Bar on Instead of Winning and Dining Him. A German baron—he said—blew into New York and got acquainted with some clubmen. He was put up at a club by one of them for the customary two weeks and paid his bills promptly. There was great surprise when the man who him up refused to make an application for a renewal of the courtship to the club for the baron. Club members were indignant about it and one of them had a new card issued. The baron appreciated the compliment and entertained lavishly. He left without paying his bills and the member who volunteered the second time had to settle. "I was asking" he asked the man who had stood sponsor first time. "No," he said. "I didn't wine and dine him, like you. I took him out one day and wheat caked him."—Saturday Evening Post. A BOOKMARK CHURCH. In Japan, under the guidance of Rev. David S. Spencer as presiding elder, many of the native churches have been engaged in a strong effort toward self-support. The Toyohashi church was built of the proceeds of the sale of silk bookmarks made by the members of the congregation. These silk alps with tassels and friedries in other lands. Some of the workers made encumbered silk handkerchiefs, which are also used among the people of the home land. The Japanese are showing themselves in labors and patience true types of the Christian. WIndy Willa. As a contrast to the short will of E. H. Harriman, one might mention the will of the late Lord Grimthorpe, in the framing of which no fewer than 11,070 words were used; and that of Mr. Edward Bush, a retired Gloucester engineer, who died last autumn worth £114,813, and disposed of it in a will containing 26,000 words—Strand. THE APPEAL STEADILY GAINS BECAUSE: 4-It is the organ of ALL Afro-Americans. 5-It is not controlled by any tying or clique. 6-It asks no support but the people's. MINNESOTA HISTORICAL $2.40 PER YEAR COUNTESS SENT TO PRISON Lady Constance Lytton Placed in Jail for Taking Part in Suffragette Demonstration. Newcastle, England.—Lady Constance Lytton and Mrs. H. N. Bralisford, arrested following a suffragette demonstration against David Lloyd-George, chancellor of the exchequer, were sentenced to a month's imprisonment. Mrs. Bralisford is the wife of a former leading writer on the London Daily News, who resigned his editorial position a week ago as a protest Countess of Lytton against the government's treatment of suffragette prisoners. The demonstration took the form of a rush on the chancellor as he was making his way to his motor car from the Palace theater, in which he had addressed an audience on the subject of the budget. RESTORES HARVARD HOUSE Edward Morris of Chicago Provider Free Resort for Americans Visiting Shakespeare's Birthplace. London.—Harvard house, which was opened at Stratford-on-Avon by Ambassador Whitelaw Reid in the presence of a large and distinguished audience, is a historic building which has been restored by Edward Morris of Chicago, the world being directed by Marie Corelli, the novelist. In this house, which was built in 1596, Robert Harvard, the father of John Harvard, for whom Harvard college was named, married Katherine Rogers in 1605. Robert Harvard and his wife removed to London, where John Harvard was born in 1607. The house will be the property of Harvard university and a free resort for Americans visiting Shakespeare's birthplace. In restoring it some exceptionally fine carved woodwork was discovered, and the structure is considered a fine Harvard House. example of late sixteenth century construction. London it has been used as a burdens place of a firm of auctioneers and is said to have cost Mr. Morrin $6,750, with as much more expended for restoration. Sailors Seaslck on Mississippi. The report has reached Memphis of three of the sailors getting seasick or more properly speaking "river slick," during the storm which raged on the Mississippi river a few nights ago. Along with the old salts, it is said, Capt. H. C. Partee, one of the sailors who steered the torpedo flotilla to Memphis, who is said to have suffered greatly from seasickness when the craft was rocking in the turbulent waters of "Old Miss." Sailors who have been accustomed for years to life on the high seas were among those who succumbed to the churning which the storm gave to the river's bosom. For nearly two days those old timers, who have been wont to scout at the idea of seasickness, were unable to appear on deck to perform their duties, while Capt Partee is just recovering from his experience. "I take my hat off to the Mississippi river," said Ileut. Mitchell. "When an inland stream can make any of those boys sick it can command my utmost respect."—Memphis News-Reporter. Has Chicago Man Solved the Great Mystery? Figures Six and Nine Keep Glass Wheel Turning—Inventor Explains the Theory of His Simple Device. Chicago—The discovery of perpetual motion, of a sort, is the claim of a Chicago man, W. L. Saunders; and a picture of his invention is reproduced herewith. As will be seen, the entirely of glass with 12 hollow glass balls, on each of which is painted the figure "6," or the figure "9," according to its position on the wheel. "Right there is the principle of the discovery," says the inventor. "It is simplicity itself, so simple that it is a wonder nobody has discovered it until now. "The figures are sixes going up and nines coming down. A nine is more than a six. The nines going down on the left are going up on the right and in manner the wheel is started and kept turning without any other power. In short, a nine is more than a six. "So delicate is the adjustment of the wheel's balance that the painted numbers are enough to start it going. It is the first device of the kind that the government has seen fit to grant a patent on." One of the machines is said to have run without breaks within stopping. The one on exhibition in Chicago has been running continuously for two months. The device is used as a window at. Perpetual Motion Machine. traction, no claim being made that the principle is available for furnishing power, etc. Crossing the Channel on a Plank. A day or two after Bleriot's successful flight across the English channel a man named Westkite announced his intention of crossing on a plank two feet wide 18 feet long and two inches thick, fitted with a mast and sail and two empty oil drums to give it buoyancy. Westkite, however, was picked up more dead than alive off and still hoped to still hopes to accomplish the feat. A few days later Thomas Wakerell set out to row across the channel in a boat of his own construction, consisting of two planks, with sides a few inches high. He was ultimately picked up in the North Sea and landed at Rotterdam. Some two or three years ago old Etonians attempted to row from Dover to Calais in a four-car scuiling boat, but before they got half way across the channel the boat was swamped by the crew nearly needed. That it is not impossible, to cross the channel in a small boat was proved some time ago by a young French man named Felix Chauchois, who, alone and unaided, crossed from Dover to Calais in a canoe in 27 hours and seemed little the worse for his adventurous voyage. Japanese Abandoning Farm Life. The hard conditions of living under the new civilization, with its heavy and increasing tax burdens, its higher standards, its intensifying competition, and its cutting off of all responsibility of overlords, drove the youth of the farming families into the cities for factory or shop employment, thus shifting population from the rural to the urban regions, precisely as we find population shifting in the United States. This is the main cause. So that out of the misery of the farming poor, land speculation in Tokyo, Yokohama, Osaka, Kobe, Nagoya and other cities profited enormously. In all those place population made amazingly rapid increase. While there is considerable scattered sentiment in favor of a small land-value tax, the political power of the landowners was comparatively few, and the landed class can, for the present at least, hold things as they are—Henry George, Jr., in Collier's Weekly. Vegetarians in Dispute. English vegetarians are awfully scared on the Japs for proving traitors to their old vegetarian mode of living, and are predicting endless calamity, even ruin, saying: "When rice-eating people take up meat the result is always disastrous to their health." Japs are not afraid to listen to any British advice intended to weaken them as warriors.—New York Press. HAVE YOU READ THE APPEAL? THE APPEAL, NATIONAL AFRO-AMERICAN NEWSPAPER PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY AMS 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 Bld., Room 1020. H. B. BURK, Manager. CHICAGO OFFICE 223-5 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 prepayment, the terms are 60 cents for each 15 weeks and 5 cents for certain weeks, or at the rate of $2.40 per year. Stampinances should be made by Express Money Order or Bank Deposit Order. Letter or Bank Deposit Order. Postage stamps will be received the same as cash for the fractional parts of a dollar. Only 10 and two cent stamped taken. Hertz and two cent stamped taken. It is almost sure to wear a hole through the envelope and be host; or also it may be stolen. Persons who send silver to in letters torture and death notice 10 lines or less. Each additional line 10 cents. Payment all must come in seperate to be accepted. Living-rising rates, 6 cents per agree line, each living-rising. There are fourteen agree lines in each pad, and about seven words in an agree line. No discount allowed on less than $1. No discount allowed on less than three months contract. Cash must accompany all orders from parties unknown to us. No discount allowed on time or space. Reading notices 25 cents per line, each insertion. No discounts for time or space. Reading matter is set in 'brevier type' about six weeks to the line. All head-lines count double. Copyright 1909, by Harris & Ewing. PRESIDENT WILLIAM H. TAFT The Republican platform, adopted at dhLCeng, explicitly demands justice for all men without regard to race or color, and without enforcement, and without reservation, in letter and spirit of the thirteenth, fourteenth and fifteenth situations. it is needless to state that I stand with my party squarely on that plank in the fight, and I am justice to all men and the fair and impartial enforcement of these amendments are in keeping with the fair play,—Hon. Wm. H. Taft's speech accepting Republican nomination for Presidency. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6. 1909. "FAITHFULNESS AND DEVOTION." The Charleston News and Courier says: "The Negro women of the present day are entirely too frivolous to do anything well. They do not care. Old house servants are few and far between. The modern servant does not stay in one place for a long period. She gets tired and quits, or she wishes a month or two to rest, or something happens. She has no stability, and she is daily proving that the old characteristics of the race—faithfulness and devotion—are passing away. No people in the world save the Southern people would endure the worthlessness of these Negro women." THE APPEAL would remark that the "Negro women of the present day" are working for money and not upon the "faithfulness and devotion" [Picture of a man with a mustache and a suit. The background is black.] theory. They wish to be paid enough for their labor to live comfortably, but they are almost invariably forced to labor for a mere pittance, scarcely enough to keep breath in their bodies. Again, the best Afro-Americans refuse to allow their daughters to go out to domestic service, as it exposes them to the advances of dissipated young and old white men and often results in their degradation. The "Negro woman of the present day" very often has a good home of her own to which she can return rather than work for nothing, and she does not stay at one place if she is mistreated. town of Holly Springs, an attendance of 5,000. So the result of t to injure the Afro- tion of the state was have an excellent pl themselves, entirely and enjoying a great perity. The foregoing state but for some unac the great victory of cans over the old tracted but little att AN IMPORTANT And, even among her own race, the "white folks" kitchen girl" usually belongs to the lowest stratum of society. "THE GRAND OLD COMMON WEALTH." The governor of Virginia is boasting largely of the fact that his state last year expended nearly a quarter of a million for good roads; a fact which is simply an evidence that the old Dominion is woefully behind the times. For instance, Maryland, for the same period expended, or provided for expending the respectable sum of $5,000,000, or more than twenty times as much, and her roads were incomparably better than those of Virginia. Any sensible man can readily see that the miserable condition of Virginia roads would prevent intelligent farmers from having any desire to locate in such a section of the country. The South is, however, so wrapped up in its old traditions and so unprogressive that Gabriel's trumpet would scarcely avail to arouse the sleepy citizens from their solonnel condition. If Virginia ever learns to devote as much attention to constructing good roads as she does to framing jim-crow laws, she will make a wonderful advance in civilization. A GREAT VICTORY The Afro-Americans of Mississippi administered a handsome rebuke to Vardaman, the mongrel who was once governor of the state, and whose first official act was to veto the bill for the normal school for colored youth at Holly Springs, thereby closing the institution. Led by Bishop Cottrell, they went to work and established the best equipped institution for colored youth in the entire South in that very same 1920 M. B. HON. FRANK H. HITCHCOCK, Postmaster General of the United States. town of Holly Springs and shortly had an attendance of 5,000 students. So the result of the old reprobate to injure the Afro-American population of the state was that they now have an excellent plant, managed by themselves, entirely free from debt and enjoying a great degree of prosperity. The foregoing statements are facts but for some unaccountable reason the great victory of the Afro-Americans over the old governor has attracted but little attention. AN IMPORTANT CONCLUSION. The American Association of Dining Car Superintendents was recently in session in Chicago, and among its conclusions was one of great interest to the Afro-American. Among the prominent members was Superintendent of the Illinois Central, Mr. Dow, who declared: "The question of substituting women waiters for Afro-Americans had been taken up at former meetings of the association, but it was decided that women would be unable to do the work satisfactorily. The Lake Shore road and others employed white men instead of Afro-Americans, for a while, but all returned to the original system." This may seem a very unimportant incident, but it is one of great significance, since it refers to the matter of gaining a living. It is the testimony of the railroads of the country to the established fact that in certain lines of industry, the Afro-American has no rival. In the results of the elections held last Tuesday THE APPEAL has much to regret and also much to be happy over, but the greatest amount of satisfaction is derived from the fact that the people of Maryland turned down the proposed amendment to the constitution of the state that would have disfranchised the Afro-American citizens of the state. We agree with a daily contemporary that: "The result of that contest was of more importance and significance than the victory or defeat of any candidate or any party in any state." Our Southern brethren do not seem to realize the fact that every move they make to down the Afro-American results in one of two things: either to incite the sufferer to do more for himself or to raise him up friends in the North and even in the South. THE BROADWAY ```markdown ``` Good Jokes JUST TEMPORARILY. There were ominous signs of a brewing storm in 'tae midnight sleeper. "Look here!" thundered the man in the lower berth. "I want you to stop that snoring up there; do you hear?" "What's that?" mumbled the humorous fat man in the upper bert. "What am I doing?" "Why, you are creating a disturbance by snoring like an elephant. If you can't be a gentleman everywhere, you must be one while you are up there, understand?" The fat man chuckled softly "Oh, I see the point now." "What point?" "Why, you want me to be a gentleman by birth." And the next moment he dodged an umbrella, two suitcases and six shoes. Romance Under Difficulties. The modern Romeo was furious. "What's the trouble, old man" asked the friend. "Why, confound those aeroplanes," he growled, almost slipping from the rope ladder. "I mistook the headlight of one of them for the moon and swore by it. Now Juliet has given me the laugh." And the discouraged suitor went around to the aerodrome to register a complaint. Easily Obtained. Prominent Politician (with massive dignity)—Sir, I am creditably informed that you have an article in type making certain charges against me. Can you furnish proofs of your assertions? Editor (easily)—Sure, Mike! I'll send the boy upstairs and get as many proofs as you would like to have. MUSICAL COMEDY. P The Author (to the leading lady)— Excuse me, but last night you played the third act first. I don't think any- one noticed it, but it shows a lack of system, eh, what? Limited Supply. If explorers keep searching up there, I'll be bound. There are no surfaces the surface North poles to go. 'round. The Natural Result "Our dressmaker is an unusually good woman. She is a perfect example." "That's on account of her business." "On account of her business! What are you talking about?" "A dressmaker has to lead a pattern life." Discouraging. Nell (sentimentally)—I wonder if there is anything in a presentiment—why the chance of marrying a rich and handsome young man should haunt me so? Bell (cynically)—Perhaps because it is the ghost of a chance. Assimilated. "That man couldn't interpret a single passage of the constitution." "Yet you naturalized him, judge." "Well, he was away up on batting averages. I guess he'll make a good American." A Congenial Occupation. "It is a wonder that Sparks' widow didn't take up his business when he died. It's a sort that comes natural to a woman." "What was it?" "He was a matchmaker." Poor Man! Kind Lady—And your partner of the ties drank piano polish in mistake for cough syrup? How did it all end? Sandy Pikes (wiping his eyes)—He had a fine finish, mum, a fine finish. All in the Family. "You know the artist we met last summer, who boasted so of his family connections? Were any of his pictures hung?" "No, but his grandfather was." Had to Do It. "That clerk of yours watches the clock a good deal." "Perfectly excusable in his case. He's a commuter." The Real Flight: "Well, did the man you backed to build a new airship, make you fly?" "No, but my money did." No Results. "How was that automobile race?" "Flat failure. Not a man in the entry was killed." I don't see how a policeman can fall off on the trail of anything or anybody. One Way. "But what can you do with a man who is always telling you his opinion of himself?" "Well, if he bothered me I would tell him my opinion of him, and I guess that would hold him for awhile." KEPT HIS WORD. She will not let Him go to night! And sit in a game! Is it right? The last time he went to play He promised as he went away He'd come in early. And the bird That gets the worm Of which you've hear Saw him come in; It was bad. But she is mad Because he did. CAUTIOUS. "Adelalde Emmeline, will you be some my wife?" "Are you in a position, Clarence, to keep a wife with four dolls and a doll's carriage?" Alas, Alack! Oh, woman, lovely woman, ourQUALS not in town. When you come to town, Or run your neighbors, do it! The Modern Way "Will your daughter and her hus band live with you when they return from their wedding journey?" "I'm not quite sure about it. From the way Sadie talked, it seems likely that she and her husband will at once take possession of our home and let us live with them as long as they can find it convenient." No Hints. "Mrs. Comeup hates the least suggestion of the time when she had to do her own work. She got very angry with a society reporter the other day, and what do you suppose it was for?" "What was it?" "He spoke of the ease with which she swept into the room." Playinc Safe His Wife—Shall we invite Dr. Oldham to our daughter's wedding? Her Husband—I should say not! You know how absent-minded he is. His Wife—Yes; but what of that? Her Husband—Why, it would be just like him to charge it on his bill. Horrible. Horrible. "I think he is trying to make me angry so that I will break our engagement." "What has caused you to think that?" "He tells everybody that I am the inspiration of the poems he writes." He (gravely)—I have a question to ask you, Miss Hawkins. She—Oh, Harry! This is so sudden. But if dear papa has no objections and you don't mind a rather long engagement— (And Harry was about to ask her if she believed in votes for women!)—Illustrated Bits. **Proof Positive.** She wonders if I love her! I dine, without regrets. On grats lunch, to buy a bunch of pessy violets. **Putting His Foot in It.** "People shouldn't worry about foolish things." "They shouldn't!" "Oh—er—I wasn't thinking about your wife when I spoke." **Not So Easy.** Blinks—Some one told me that Coyner was well to do. Jinks—Well, isn't he? Blinks—I should say not. I couldn't do him. Great Success. Gunner—I've invented an outo horn. Let me get you interested in it. Guyer—What kind of a horn is it? Gunner—Oh, one that people will jump at. Adverse Fate. "Just my hard luck!" moaned the tramp. For he had been offered nothing to quench his thirst but soft drinks. "I don't like to call by previous engagement." "Don't care for the formal call, eh?" "No; it's more fun to drop in on a friend and find him quarreling with his wife." "Bill and Tom said they were going to have a rousing time in the country." "Oh, they've got a rousing time all right. Have to get up at six o'clock every morning." A An unsectarian Christian Institution, devoted especially to advanced education, College, Norma, College Preparatory and English High School courses, with industrial Training, Superior advantage in Music and Art painting, Athletic for boys, Physical culture for girls. Home life and training. Admission only, lesserving students. Term begins the first Wednesday in October. For catalogs and information, address President HORACE BUMSTEAD, D. G. Virginia Normal Collegiate Institute. PETERSBURG, VA. Department: Normal and Collegiate; Special attention to Vocal and Instrumental Music, Theoretical Architecture, Sewing and Cooking, Healthy, Local Appliance by steam, lighted by electricity; room, board, tuition, light and heat. $66. For catalog and particular written to President Virginia Normal, Collegiate Institute, Petersburg, Va. HOWARD UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE, REV. W. P. THIRKIELD, L.L. D. 1867 Robert Reyburn, M. D. W. C. Dean S The Forty-first Annual Session will begin October 1, months. FOUR YEARS' GRADED COURSE IN MEDICINE THREE YEARS' GRADED COURSE IN DENTAL THREE YEARS' GRADED COURSE IN PHARMACY AN OPTIONAL FIVE YEAR COURSE IN MEDICINE Full套装 instructors. Well equipped laboratories. The New Freedman Hospital which adjoins the Medic at a cost of $500,000, offers unexcelled clinical facilities. The Third Session of the Post-Graduate School and Po 1909, and continue fine Course and four week For further information or catalogue, write W. C. McNEILL, M. D., Secretary The Forty-first Annual Session will begin October 1, 1908, and continue eight months. YEARLY SPARED COURSE the New Freedom's Hospital, which adjoins the Medical College, just completed at a cost of $600,000, offers unsecured clinical facilities, of $60,000, offer unsecured The Third Session of the Post-Graduate School and Polyclinic will begin May 3, 1909, and continue six weeks for Medical Course and four weeks for Derval Course. For further information or catalogue, write W. C. McNEILL, M D., Secretary 539 Florida Avenue, Washington, D. C. Knoxville College, Classical, Scientific, Agricultural, Mechanical, Normal and Common School Course together with Theological, and Medical Schools. Fifty-five Dollars a Year will cover all expenses of board, supplies, equipment, tuition, and matron for little girls and another for little boys from 6 to 14 years. Term begins last Monday in September. Send for catalogue 4) President of Knoxville College, Knoxville Tenn. Knoxville College. Classical, Scientific, Agricultural, Mechanical, Normal and Common School Courses, together with Theological, and Medical Schools. Fifty-five Dollars a Year with cover all expenses of life, tuition and light and furnished room. Separate home and matron for little girls and another for little girls. Monday in September. Send for en-catalogue (4) President of Knoxville College, Knoxville TUSKEGEE Normal and Industrial Institute (INCORPORATED) Organized July 4, 1881, by the State Legislature as The Tuskegee State Normal School Except from taxation. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON, Principal. WARREN LOGAN: Treasurer LOCATION In the Black Belt of Alabama where the 20s outnumber the whites three to one. Women enroll last year 1,253; males, 884; females, 371. Average attendance, 1,105; instructors, 88. COURSE OF STUDY Engineering combined with industrial shipping; 28 industries in constant operation. VALUE OF PROPERTY VALUE OF PROPERTY Property consisting of 2,267 acres of land, 8 bushels of hay, built with student sibs, is valued at $350,000, and no mortgage. NEEDS $20 annually for the education of each student; ($20 enables one to finish the course; $2,000 creates permanent scholarship. Students can earn $1,000 in cash and labor; money in any amount for current expenses and building. Besides the work done by graduates as class members, the Tuskegee thousands are acquired through the Tuskegee Negro Confederate Tuskegee is 40 miles east of Montgomery and Alabama. *alleges in a quiet, beautiful old E.* *at all times mild and sad and* *at all times quiet and still.* TILLOTSON COLLEGE The Oldest and Best School in Texas for Colored Students. Faculty mostly graduates of well known colleges in the country unsupported. Manua training a part of the school. Music a special feature of the school. Special advantages for earnest students A Practical, Literary and Industrial Trades School for Afro-American Boys and Girls, Cribs and a separate building. Address. Joseph D. Mahoney, Principal. New England CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC All the advantages of the finest and most completely equipped Conservatory building in the world, the attendant faculty, the faculty of association with the masters in the Profession are offered students at the New England Conservatory of Music. The courses can be arranged in Election and Oratory. GEORGE W. CHADWICK, Musical Director, Conservatory of Music. School Children S HORLIC MALTED Don't argue Pearl HORLICK'S MALTED MILK use Dont argue with dirt Pearline Defective Page Florida Avenue, Department--Normal and College; Special attention to Vocal and Instrumental Music, Theoretical Agriculture, Sewing and Cooking. Graduate in Engineering by steam, lighted by electricity; room, board, tuition, light and heat. &amp; 680 write to President Nigel Nunn, Institute, Petersburg, Va. 1908 W. C. McNeill, M. D. Secretary begin October 1, 1908, and continue eight GE IN MEDICINE. GE IN DENTAL SURGERY. GE IN PHARMACY. GE IN MEDICINE IS OFFERED. laboratories. joins the Medical College, just completed facilities. School and Polyclinic will begin May 3, use and four weeks for Dental Course. D. Secretary cultural, Mechanical, Normal and Common Medical Schools. Fifty-five Dollars a week light and furnished room. Separate home boys from 6 to 12 years. Term begins last President of Knoxville College, Knoxville GAMMON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY ATLANTA, GEORGIA ALPS, NEVADA BRAINERD INSTITUTE CHESTER, S. C. A normal and industrial school with a graded course of study, designed to give thorough, symmetrical and complete English and use a solid foundation for success and use in every vocation of life. Board and headquarter. Morristown Normal College SCHURCH, IN, IN Fourteen teachers. Elegant and comm committed. Climate unsup- passed. Departments: College paratory Normal, English, Music, Typewriting and Industrial Training. FIFTY DOLLARS IN ADVANCE, with tuition and incidentals for the entire year. Board $6.00 per month; tuition and incidentals through work done in each department. Sends circular to the president. Rev. Judson S. Hill, D. D. Morrison SCOTIA SEMINARY CONCORD, N. C. This well known school, established for the higher education of girls will open every month. Every effort will be made to provide for the comfort, health and thorough expense for board, light fuel, washing for term of eight months. Address. SAMUEL HUSTON COLLEGE A CHRISTIAN SCHOOL Able and Experienced Faculty. Progressive in all departments, best Med Tech, with students carefully looked after. Students taught to do manual labor as well as think. For catalogue and other information, write R. R. S. 10VIN600D. n Should Drink ICK'S D MILK gue with dirt line Washington, D. C. A WEEK'S RECORD IN MINNESOTA'S CAPITAL. The "Saintly City" and Saintsly City Folks—Newly Items of Social, Religious, Political and General Matters Among the People. The Busy Corner Cool Weather Menu Hot Chocolate and Whipped Cream Hot Tomato Bouillon Hot Beef Tea Hot Clam Bouillon COAL AND WOOD—B. B. Fifield, 205 Scandinavian-American Bank Building, Cor. Jackson and Sixth streets, sells the best grades of Coal and Wood at the lowest prices. Fire and accident policies also written up. If you can't tell the truth don't tell anything. Mrs. T. H. Lyles is on the sick list this week. Mrs. Jeannette Cook leaves next week for Greenville, Miss. PRINTING of all kinds done at THE APPEAL office. Satisfaction guaranteed. Try the Special Sunday Dinner at Gopher Cafe, 65% W. Third street, 35 cents. Habit, the best 5 cent Cigar. "COAL THAT BURNS, NO CLICKKERS." THAT'S WHAT WE HAVE. HOLMES & HALLOWELL, SEVEN CORNERS. We are now having the beautiful weather which made Minnesota fa- mous. Where do you eat? Why not at THE GRILL, 138 E. Third street. Regu- lar Dinner 20 cents. Elegant Sunday dinner at GOPHER CAFE, 69% W. Third St. from 11:30 to 3:00 p. m. 55 cents. FOR RENT—Large furnished front room for man and wife or two gentle- men at 582 St. Anthony avenue. ANNOUNCEMENT. THE MISSION CLUB WILL GIVE ITS OPENING SOIREE THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 25, 1909, at BOWLY BALL. CARDS OF ADMISSION, 35 CENTS. HALE-MCULLough QUARTETTE ORCHESTRA WILL FURNISH MUSIC. Mrs. William Pettit, of Edmund street, has returned from a four-week's trip to Cincinnati and Chicago. Mr. Oliver Perry, of Oklahoma City, Okla. is in the city, the guest of his cousin, Mrs. Nat. Goins, 661 W. Central. NOTICE! L. X. L. Lodge, U. B. F. (Vissourd jurisdiction) will meet on the First and Third Fridays of each month at Tschida Hall Funeral Directors and Embalmers. 322 Wabasha St. Calls Answered Day or Night in Twin Cities Active Pall Bearers Furnished if Desired. Lady Assistant When Necessary. Both Phone 508. St. Paul, Minn. Mrs. C. E. Jones has recently purchased a 50-foot lot on St. Clair street and Hamline avenue and contemplates building a residence soon. If you get THE APPAL it is a weekly reminder to come and pay what you owe for it. Putting it off only makes the bill larger. One of the nicest places to get your meals is the St. Louis Kitchen. 317% Wabasha. All home cooking in the good, old-fashioned style. The "White Magic" entertainment at the St. Louis Day was a very pleasant affair and a large audience was highly entertained. NOTICE! White Rose Temple, S. M. T. (Missouri Jurisdiction) will meet on the Second and Fourth Mondays each month at Tschida Hall. WANTED a good female cook at Gopher Cafe, 69½ W. Third Street. A good position at good wages for the right person. Apply immediately. FOR SALE—Five-room house, 456 St. Anthony avenue, very cheap. Also vacant lot on Tschida street. Apply to Mrs. J. Williams, 27 Union Block. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hackerney and Mrs. J. B. Turner have returned from weeks' visit to Chicago. Mrs. Turner who was sick, is much improved. The Building Committee of the Old Follows are preparing to give a grand Minstrel Performance and Soiree at Tschida Hall Thanksgiving night, Watch and wait for it. Franklin Temple, No. 2, S. M. T. (Missouri Jurisdiction) meets every second and fourth Tuesday evening A REMINDER. THE STATE SAVINGS BANK Fourth and Minnesota Sts., St. Paul, lures not only absolute safety, but is an incomptible to practise economy and out away small sums whenever convenient. Interest compounded Jan- uary and July each year at 3½% per annum. Deposits Over $3,000,000.00. OFFICER, Charles P. Noyes, Prest. Kenneth Clark, V.Pres. Charles G. Lawrence, Treas. --- LOOK WHO'S HERE! CATHOLIC ORDER OF FORESTERS WILL GIVE A Dancing Party AT HIAWATHA TEMPLE CORNER OF SIXTH AND WABASHA STREETS ST. PAUL Monday Evening, Nov. 15 Music by Mme Hale-McCullough's Full Orchestra DANCING FROM 9 P. M. UNTIL 2 A. M. TICKETS . . . 35 CENTS at Tschida Hall. Alice Franklin, W. M.; Pary S. Anderson, W. S. The St. Paul Needlework Guild on Thursday distributed 6,000 garments among the poor of St. Paul through the 27 institutions of the city, no sectarian or color line being drawn. The only place in the city that makes a specialty of serving a first-class, regular dinner, for 20 cents, is the GHIL. James Legger, proprietor, 123 E. Third street. Try 'em. LOOK OUT! If you wish a good time wait for the good entertainment to be given by the L. Y. Brass Band, at Tschida Hall on November 18. Dancing until 2 a. m. Tickets 25 cents. George H. Evans, carpenter and builder, will build you a six-room cottage for $1,250.00. If you own your lot. Terms $250 down and $15 per month. Office 49 E. Fourth street, Room 237. Shoes mended while you wait, at Jaryls 354 Minnesota street. Halfoles, 354 Prices reasonable for all kinds of repairing. He can do it on short notice. Jaryls 354 Minnesota Street. VOCAL AND PIANO LESSONS given by MRS. Addie Crawford Minor at her residence 471 W. General aviation. Hours for instruction arranged due to suit patrons. Tel. Dale 2192. Terms reasonable. Enos Morgan, who was under indictment for a robbery committed during the summer, on last Thursday placed the five charges and was sentenced to five years in the penitentiary at Stillwater. The Third Annual Charity Entertainment and Ball, under the auspices of the trustees of the Crispus Attacks Home, will be given at Hiwata Temple at a date which will be given later. Watch and wait for further announcements. The Valet*Tailoring Co., 156 E. 6th street, had quite a serious fire Thursday night, in which several hundred dollars' worth of clothing were damaged. The origin of the fire is unknown. The loss is fully covered by insurance. Dr. H. I. Williams, our dentist, has moved his office from the Philipsburg building to Room 64 Medical Block corner of Seventh and Robert streets over Mansur's Drug Store, where he will be pleased to see all old as well as new patrons. Ty the regular dinners at GO PHER CARE 90% W. third street from 11:30 to 2:30 o'clock for 25 cents. Can't be surpassed anywhere in the city for the money. Meals to order at all hours day and night. H. Florence, proprietor. Where do you get your laundry work done? Why not give it to the Valet Laundry Co. They do the best work at the lowest prices for good work. They call for and deliver the goods. Call up Cedar 4362, or call at 154-156 E. Sixth street. SUITS PRESSED VALET TAILORING CO 156 E. SIXTH ST THE ST LOUIS KITCHEN, Mrs Julia Martin, propriator No. 317 Wabasha, up stairs. Meals 25cts. Breakfast from 7:00 to 11:00 a.m., dinner from 12:00 m. to 3:00 p. m.; Supper from 5:00 to 8:00 p. m. All regular meals 25 cts. All home cooking. Charles Hesse was sented to the workhouse for 90 days on last Tuesday. Last Saturday he and a woman went into a second-hand store and while the woman went back in the store to look at some shoes Hesse opened a show case and stole three watches. Mr. W. Martin, of Winnipipe, Can., inspector for the C. P. R. railway, has been in the city for the past week, giving instructions to the men in the station. This evening for Winnipipe, then he goes over the Western district, of which he has charge. FOR RENT—Two unfurnished rooms, with bath for light housekeeping on iglehart st. $10; also two unfurnished rooms with gas, bath, use of kitchen and dining room. St. Anthony ave. $12; apply at the Afro-American Restaurant, 49 D. Fourth street room 237. When you want to get the bed 20 cakes in town, just go to "HE GRILL, the new restaurant just opened by James Legger at No. 138 E. Third street over the People's Bar shop. Meals a la carte at all hours at reasonable rates. Special attention will be given to ladies. First class service. Your patronage is solicited. The GOPHER CAPE, No. 691s West Third street, formerly conducted by Mr. Hamley, has changed hands and Mr. H. Florence is now proprietor. As before, the cafe will be open all day and all night. There will be a regular dinner served from 11:30 to 2:30 for 25 cents. Meals to order at all hours. Old and new patrons cordially invited. The Presbytery of St. Paul has made it possible for the Zion Presbyterian church to purchase a lot on the corner of St. Anthony and Furrington room which a church building will be room with not less than $2,000. The members have under consideration the changing of the name of the church to St. Anthony Avenue Presbyterian church. If you wish to rent a house or a room call at the Afro-American Renting Agency, Room 237—49 East Fourth street, Fifth floor. We have a list of houses and rooms that Afro-Americans may rent. Don't miss the necessary car fare and time and subject to our ref to embarrassment, come to see us, we will tell you where they are. Dr. Adam Speed, chiropodist, has arrived in the city and has arranged with Messrs. Ulley and Vass, of the Commercial Barber Shop, 94 E. 5th street, to receive patients there. He relieves cuts, bumps, ingrowing with incisions of the feet without pain. He will call at residence or place of business extra charge. Prices reasonable, and work guaranteed. Office hours 9 to 11 a.m. Telephone Cedar 2320. COMMERCIAL BARBER SHOP, No. 94 East Fifth street, between Minnesota and Robert streets. First class in every parish. Mahogany partitions, French plains, and Cold Baths. The only Baths protected by Sanitation Glass. Expert artists in white uniform. Hand-some reception and reading room. Ladies need not hesitate to bring to have work done. Messenger service. Phone N. W. Main 2330J. W. J. Uphage and James Vass. Proprietors. John Q. Adams, Jr., took advantage of a holiday Thursday of last week to go hunting with some boy friends. They had very poor luck and came home early, and while standing with the muzzle of his gun resting on his left muzzle, was discharged and the young inmate just between the fourth and fifth ticks. The wound is not serious, but he has been confined to his bed ever since, with a prospect of remaining there for several days more. YOU MUST NOT FORGET THE GRAND DANCING PART WHICH IS TO BE GIVEN BY THE LADIES' CATHOLIC HOME CIRCLE AND CATHOLIC ORDER OF FORESTERS IN ATHIA TEMPLE, COR. SIXTH AND SHA STREETS, MONDAY EVENING, VEMBER 15, FOR THE PURPOSE OF RAISING $300 FOR THE NEW CATHEDral FUND. A GLORIOUS GOOD TIME IS GUARANTEED TO EVERY ONE. MME. Hale-McCULLOUGH'S FULL ORCHHESTA WILL BE THE MUSIC. DANCING UNTIL 2 A.M. MARKETS OF ADMISSION 35 CENTS. YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED. There was a meeting of ladies held at the residence of Mrs. J. E. Cloak, 405 Western avenue, on last Tuesday afternoon, to arrange for the giving of some sort of entertainment for the old and needy poor. It was decided to promote at Hiawata Temple on Tuesday evening, Nov. 20, and the following committee of arrangements was selected: Mrs. J. E. Cloak, chairman; Mamedes Allen French, G. W. Hampshire, Valdo Turner, J. E. Johnson Williams, H. T. Hyles, S. E. Hell, M. L. Terrill, C. H. Miller, Della Pettis, M. L. Cloak, E. De Baptist, R. C. Minor, J. Q. Adams, M. J. Brown, F. L. McGhee, Geo Lucas, R. Butler, E. W. Lindsay, C. A. S. Mason, J. H. Sherwood, C. The object certainly is a most worthy doubt that it will succeed. The list of patronesses and other particulars will be published later. The entertainment given by the Improvement Club of St. Philips Church last Wednesday evening at Tachida Hall was a very pleasant affair, though the attendance was not so large as it should have been. There was a program rendered which pleased the audience from the vigorous aphouse. The program was as follows: Solo, "Sambo," Claude Harris, who gave as an encore "My Wife Gone Away." This was followed by Mr. Charles H. Miller, in one of his pleasing specialities, Little Miss Evelyn Rogers and Master Adolphus Turner next readened "Ada My Sweet most pleasingly for the little tots, a year, respectively, Mrs. Sykes of Indianapolis, sang very sweetly "Nothing Like the Old Folks After All." Miss Margaret Adams made her debut as a shaker and rendered "On the Road to Monterey" and "Down Among the Sugar Cane." She was in Spanish costume and looked the part and made a decided hit with her performance. The dancing was indulged in until a late hour. Music was furnished by Miss Brightie Lowe and Mr. C. H. Miller. THANKSGIVING BALL By the Lodges and Temples of the U. B. F, and S. M. T. There will be a grand THANKKS- GIVING BALL given under the auspices of Lodges and Temples U. B. F. and S. M. T. of Minnesota at Tachita Hall. Thursday evening, November 23rd. The ladies' drill corps of Minneapolis will be present and give an exhibition drill. A surprise souvenir will be presented to each lady attending. Music by the Hale McCullough orchestra. Tickets 35 cents. Committee of Arrangements. Mrs. B. R. Durant, Mrs. J. H. Charleston, Mrs. Ella Glass, M. A. Davis, O. Howell, M. T. Walker, D. E. Williams, T. Withers, Mrs. Fannie Buckner, Mrs. Ida Sellers, Mrs. Fannie Pierre. Rev. Carter's Testimonial The announcement of the Testimonial Banquet to be tendered to Rev. W. D. Carter, D. D., took the city like wild fire and the only thing now can be accommodated. The ladies who sent in their acceptance cards will constitute the ladies' reception committee and will have charge of the informal reception in the auditorium of Pilgrim Baptist Church, and are requested to be present at 8 o'clock, as it is the desire to have the banquet begin at 8:30. All who have tickets for sale are requested to report their sales and the proceeds at the church on Monday before the guests are seated at the tables. No one will be admitted to the church without a ticket. Tickets, however, may be purchased at the door, price 75 cents. A fine musical program rendered during the banquet. Every one who feels that Rev. Carter has merited this spontaneous public demonstration by his labors in our midst during the years he has been with us has a special invitation to be something of a dress affair there is compulsion to wear full dress. All will be welcome. Mrs. John Auter. On last Wednesday, in Chicago, Mrs. John Auter, new Tarquaria Harper, died. Her remains were brought to Minneapolis and the funeral was held at St. Thomas church on yesterday afternoon. HONOR TO WHOM HONOR IS DUE. "Tis said that a 'papet is not without honor save in his own country and among his own people," but such a papet was the case with Rev W. D. Carter, the good citizen and Christian gentleman who is at present pastor of Pilgrim Baptist church, but who has tendered his resignation to take effect Oct. 31. He does not intend to remove his residence from St. Paul but he has entered a new field College and Industrial Institute of Macon, Mo. During the years that he has lived in St. Paul he has doe good work and has proven himself to be a very worthy citizen and as evidence of this a number of the men of the city who have tried to give some public demonstration to give them the opportunity to tender him a Testimonial Banquet. These gentlemen have selected a committee of one hundred, of whom they had good reason to believe held the same opinions as themselves. Of course, all of the friends of Rev. Carroll have not been hundred and perhaps many of his warmest friends have been inadvertently overlooked, but those whose names are not in the list will understand that no slight is intended. However, all who desire to show their application in a substantial way are invited to attend the banquet, which is to be given at Pilgrim Baptist church on the evening of Monday, Nov. 8, at 8:30 o'clock. The tickets for the banquet have been placed at the insignificant sum of 75 cents, which places them within the capacity of the assembly room of the church will be insufficient to accommodate all who will wish to avail themselves of the opportunity. As only a limited number of tickets can be sold, if behooves those who desire to make sure to purchase them at the banquet, the capacity of the committee in whose hands they have been placed. The first plan that was originated had in contemplation the giving of a testimonial meeting in the auditorium of the church with music and sneeze-sweat, and a number of ladies were invited, and a number of ladies having been sent to them. The change in the plan precludes the necessity for patronesses, but the ladies who received the cards and sent in cards of acceptance will constitute the Ladies' Reception Committee. They will attend the banquet will assemble in the auditorium of the church, where an informal reception will be held, and when the proper time has arrived all will march into the assembly room. The questions are that this will be the largest and most representative function of its character ever held in the Twin Cities. The Testimonial Committee is as follows: **Testimonial Committee.** J. H. Dillingham, Chairman. W. T. Francis Owen Howell E. J. Williams J. H. Howell S. E. Hall G. J. Charleston Walker Williams Geo. W. Wills F. D. Parker J. B. Johnson T. R. Morgan Alex Payne J. H. Charleston R. D. Chapman Geo. W. James F. B. Simpson Eller Walker Rev. J. B. Bodyy F. B. McAulay S. R. Harris Geo. B. Lowe W. R. Morris B. S. Smith J. W. Uffley H. W. Minow Jas. A. McFadden Dr. R. S. Brown W. L. Burton H. C. Booker R. B. Durant J. E. Glass J. G. Gelfand H. Richardson W. B. Elliott J. M. Allisoa John Jenkins C. H. Walker L. Howard L. J. Thewman Jodd. Dodd, Sr. J. R. Lawrence Nalo. Goins Andrew Jackson G. C. Terry J. R. Jones Milton Pogg Fielding Combs J. W. Kelley Kidd Rollins Rolla Beard Sidney Cuthbert G. W. Layton G. W. Henry Johnson Rev. M. W. Withers Rev. Augustus Gould C. H. Miller D. F. McCracken O. C. Hall T. H. Lyles J. H. Loomis Rev. A. H. Leatua G. McAulay Rev. H. S. Graves Rev. J. Jess. S. Strong Rev. D. E. Beasley J. H. Hickman, Sr. Dr. H. I. Williams H. B. Burk Dr. V. Walter Turner Henry High J. E. Murphy J. E. Johnson Jos. Adams C. M. Tibbs O. G. Allen W. E. Alexander Richard Anderson W. F. T. Chandler W. H. Johnson W. D. Douglass Dr. O. D. Howard W. H. McIntyre E. W. Lindsay S. J. Bellesen Rev. J. L. Wharton L. Liverpool Samuel Brown W. J. Warren Wm. Whitlow R. M. Johnson Leslie Roach Geo. Brown F. B. Lewis Geo. Lewis J. H. Dabins W. R. Hardy Rev. M. W. Withers Rev. Augustus Gould Anything the Matter With Your Stove? If there is anything the matter with your stove call on the St. Paul Stoves Repair Works, 126 W. Seventh street. They fix everything, water fronts, fire clay, mica, stove polish, stove hobs, stove grates, grates, tote. Repairs of all kinds made on short notice, new and second-hand stoves for sale. Whatever you wish to know about stoves call on us. Telephones N. W. 1206 LJ, Twin City 242. THE LADIES' CATHOLIC HOME CLUB AND THE CATHOLIC ORDER OF FORESTERS WILL GIVE A DANCING PARTY AT HIWATHA TEMPLE, CORN. SIXTH AND WABA SHA STS. ON MONDAY EVENING NOVEMBER 15, FOR THE BENEFIT OF NEW CATHEDRAL FUND EVERYWHERE PERIODALLY INVITED TO BE PRESENT. TICKETS 30 CENTS. I. X. L. BRASS BAND To Give a Grand Entertainment Thurs day, Nov. 18. The young men members of the new I. X. L. Lodge, U. B. F. (Missouri Jurisdiction) have formed a brass band of 24 members and have secured their instruments and a director from the St. Paul Symphony orchestra. They give a grand entertainment with Teen Hall, a concert hall on Thursday evening, Nov. 18th, Attorney B. S. Smith, of Minneapolis, will deliver an address on this occasion, entitled "The State of the Order." The ladies of the "White Rose Temple" and the newly organized "Franklin Temple" S. M. T. (Missouri Jurisdiction) will assist the entertainment the biggest thing of the season. The tickets for this occasion are only 25 cents. On last Sunday evening Mrs. Francis Maria, mother of Mrs. Rose Jamison, and grandmother of Mrs. W. E. Alexander, left her daughter's home in the city, and her parents are parently in good health. Just after crossing the Marshall avenue bridge, the conductor of the car asked Mrs. Maria for her second fare, and, being unable to get any response, investigator Dr. Robert H. Hancock was taken to the Hennepin county morgue. Later her body was conveyed to St. Paul. Her death was due to heart failure. Her funeral took place from the residence of the grandmother of Mrs. Wednesday officiating, assisted by Rev. W. D. Carter officiating, assisted by Rev. H. S. Graves and Rev. E. G. Jackson. P. E. of Chicago. There were a number of beautiful floral tributes. Dceased was 63 years of age. The funeral was conducted by the Naadar Understating Co. Interment at Forest cemetery. With Every Coal Order. "God Old Fashioned Honesty" goes with every ton of coal we deliver. Holmes and Hollowell Co., Seven Corners. ANNOUNCEMENT. THE MISSION CLUB WILL GIVE THE OPENING SOIREI THURSDAY EVER IN THE NUMBER 25, 1009, ad BOWLBY HALL. CARDS OF ADMISSION, 31.CENTS. Rose Meiville as "Sis Hopl 4 Rose Meivillle as "Sis Hopkins" at the Grand Next Week. Defective Page Died on a Car. MINNEAPOLIS DOINGS IN AND ABOUT THE GREAT "FLOUR CITY." Matters Social, Religious and General Which Have Happened and are to Happen Among the People of the City. Drink Golden Grain Belt Beer Read the ad of the "Magic Sham- 000 Dryer" on 4th page. Rev. E. G. Jackson will conduct quarterly meeting all day Sunday at St. Peter's church. Mr. Z. E. J. Johnson and Miss Mattie Duna were married at the home of the bride last Monday evening in the presence of a few intimate friends. St. Thomas Mission 5th Ave. and 8th Str. So. Services every Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock. School Day at 3. Rev. A. H. Lealtad, Rector. All welcome. The Helping Hand Club will give an oyster supper and chicken fry at the residence of Mrs. J. W. Koger, 200 Oakland avenue, Wednesday evening, Nov. 10, 1908. Lawyer Harvey B. Burk, has opened a law office in room 528 Bos- ton Ave. or Hennepin Ave. and Third Street is prepared to take charge of cases in any of the courts of the state. Fidelity Court of Calanthe No. 345 will give a card party and dance Monday evening, Nov. 15, at 703 West Lake street. There will be first, sec. third prizes. Refresmements will be served. Mr. R. C. Marshall, Miss Sadie and Louis Marshall returned from an extended trip through the East last week. They spent several days in New York, Philadelphia, Atlantic City and Washington. The Helping Hand Club of St. Peter's Church gave a surprise party on Mrs. Eliza Jackson, aunt of Mrs. J. C. Marshall, and sentenced Mrs. Jackson an elegant black silk waist. Mrs. Jackson leaves for her home in Chicago in a few days. WHEN IN ST. PAUL go to the St. Louis Kitchen, 311% Wabash St, upstairs, for your meals. All home cooking. All regular meals 25 cents. Breakfast: from 7:00 to 11:00 a. m.; lunch from 8:00 to 3:00 p. m.; supper from 8:00 to 8:00. Mrs. Julia Hinson, Prop. Invitations have been issued for a Hallow-een Party to be given by the ladies of the Building Club of St. Thomas Mission, Thursday evening, Oct. 28, 1939, at Holcomb Hall. Mrs. Hale-McCullough's orchestra will be musicistic. Come out and help a good cause. The people of Minneapolis are cordially invited to come over to Teachida Hall on Thursday evening, Nov. 18, and attend the grand entertainment to be given by the I. X. L. Brass Band. Your own lawyer, B. S. Smith, will be the principal speaker. Dancing until 2 a. m. Tickets only 25 cents. The baby show held at St. Peter's church last Tuesday and Wednesday evenings under the auspices of the Wryman Home Circle, was a splendid financial success. Mrs. Vance's baby won the first prize and received a five dollar gold piece; Mrs. Goodboid's baby won the second prize; photos, and Mrs. Chas. Roberts' baby won third prize, half a dozen photos. COME OVER AND HELP US RAISE $300 FOR THE NEW CATHE- DRAL FUND BY ATTENDING THE GRAND DANCING PARTY TO BE HOMESCHOOL. HOME CLUB AND THE CATHOLIC ORDER OF FORESTERS AT HIA- WATHA TEMPLE, COR. SIXTH AND WABASHA STREETS. ST. PAUL, ON MONDAY EVENING, NO SUNDAY. LOUGH'S FULL ORCHESTRA WILL FURNISH MUSIC. DANCING UNTIL 2 A. M. TICKETS 35 CENTS. TYLER'S DANCING ACADEMY. South Side Auditorium Dancing Academy, formerly Normanna Hall, The 12th Ave. S. and 3rd St. The grand opening of the South Side Auditorium Dance Academy, formerly Normanna Hall, on last Monday evening, was a very well swair affair. The hall is beautiful and was beautifully decorated. There was a large crowd present and Manager G. W. Tyler, the principal dance teacher, the regular sores held every first and third Monday evening in each month no matter what the weather. Music by the Hale-McCullough full orchestra. Instructions in the latest dances from 9 to 10 p. m. by the A. C. Iwai, dancing master. THE COSMOPOLITAN MUTUAL CALUSUALTY CO. ine" at the Grand Next Week. Geo. W. Tyler, Manager. WARNING: DO NOT DRINK ONE FULL CROWD LOG CABIN CANE AND MAPLE SYRUP Valuable receipt book sent free. The Towle Maple Syrup Co. St. Paul, Minn. A NEW HOUSE BUILT FOR YOU My room is PETERS. "From Australia." I am now the St. Paul Manager of the Annual Walton Agency of New York, St. Paul and Minneapolis. After many years of diligent application we have succeeded in perfecting home plans designed for Minnesota to extent that today we defy competition in workmanship and price. If you own your own lot or have money enough to pay for one, we will supply the entire of the house, especially designed for YOU) which you repay monthly with 6 per cent interest, without bonus or commission. My offices are open all day, having till 8 o'clock, and on evenings by appointment. Come and see me. 445-447 Endicott Bldg Telephone 3299. There's A Delight In Knowing That It's Good Butter: Ordering Star Brand Always Gives This Assurance. Churned Fresh Every Day By The MILTON DAIRY CO. Both Telephones 9th and Wabasha fe “818 HOPKINS.” Which Will be Seen at the Grand Next Week. One of the most touching and beau- tiful sentiments expressed in any play on the stage today is in the seminary scene in “Sis Hopkins,” the charming Tural comedy drama, in which Miss Rose Melville will ‘be seen at the Grand again for the week of Nov. 7. ‘The fashionably dressed rich girls at Miss Peckover's school for young la- dies are teasing, quaint and simple “Siss" about her new white frock, whica, to tell the plain truth, doesn’t fit very well, and looks just’ what it it, a home-made dress for the party. “Sis” has her feelings badly hurt by the nagging of the rest of the. girls and finally kuiets them by saying very simply and very quietly; but with a great deal of pathos: “My ma made this dress for me and what she is good enough to make is good enough for me to wear.” “Obadiah,” the under- taker, is one of tae quaint character hits of the play. He carries a tape with him always to measure prospec- tive customers; a hollow cough fills him with joy and rumor of accident, death and devastation are his constant hope. He writes epitaphs of rare wit and humor in which the follies and foibles of the good people of Posey county are hit off with delightful sim- plicity. J. 8. Stirling, Miss Melville's manager, has given her a company this season which is excellent to a su- perlative degree, and the production has heen refurnished as to scenery ‘aid costume, TOWN TALK. The Next Attraction at the Star The- atre. “Town ‘Talk; the Best Show on the Road” is the title of the newest show touring in burlesque this season, which comes to the Star next week, ‘This organization is the sensation of the present season in the burlesque field. being full of original ideas deal- ing with historical events from the be ginning to the end of the world. A twoact extravaganza in 12 scenes, en: titled “From Start (o Finish,” is’ the vehicle offered, and it is unlike any- thing else now before the public, ‘The presenting company includes a cast of people who are making a big hit in burlesque, among those are: Chas. Burkhart, Sam Hearn, James Mullen, Blanche Latell, Marguefite Lane “and the “Peewee Dancing Birds” and a chorus of 25 handsome “show girls.” As an aded attraction Louie Doue has been secured, Lonie starred last season in the “Ducklings,” and her sons. “Oh! Mr, Brown,” will be re- membered by the theatresoing public with pleasure. Also. Zbyszko, the champion wrestler of Europe, who is in America to meet Frank Goteh for the world's championship. He wil mieet all comers and forfeit $100 to any one he fails to throw in fifteen minutes, Card of Thanks. Died. Saturday, Oct. 30, 1909, Frank Hicks. aged 22 years, 8 months and 8 days, at 417 N. Pranklin street. We Kindiy thank onr friends for the lib- eral offerings of condolence and flow: ers. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Myers and Son, Henry Hicks. THE VALET ‘TAILORING CO., No. 151-156 W. Sxith street. ‘The most up-to-date establishment of its kind in the city. Clothing made to order, sponzed, pressed, renovated and re- paired. Goods called for and deliv- ered. Four suits pressed for $1. They also conduct a laundry business and are prepared to give best service at lowest rates. ‘Tel. N. W. Cedar, 4362 0. Howell, manager. ST. JAMES CHURCH NOTES. A great rally is on in St James church known as the Carnival of the States. Instead of assigning the mem: bers to clubs as hetore, each member will give his or her rally money ir the name of the state in which they were born. There will be governors and their staffs, on rally day, the sec ‘ond Sunday in November, the roll of the states will be called and each one will sive under the name of his state ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS IN JUST THIRTY DAYS is the watch: ‘word to send down the line throughont St. James chureh. Watch for the names of the governors and their stalls next week. Don’t be ashamed of your state. Sec the committee that represents the state in which you were born, and give five dollars in the great rally. If you can't give five, give what you can. If you can give more than five do So, and boost your state and helr the church. Cards are out, punch cards. calling for five dollars, take ‘one and fill it. . DON'T WORRY, JUST HURRY SeDUBLIN INN — ORIGINAL CHOP HOUSE R. S. HARRIS, PROP. 378 MINNESOTA sr. 7. PAUL, MINN ee FOR MEN WHO KNOW HABERDASHER Men's Furnishings, Hats, Caps, Umbrellas, Canes, Etc. Goods that Please the Eye Prices that Fit the Pocket. 53 East Sixth Street, St. Paul 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 {ff ee mot CARDOZOG c= Bond ures you Get our special against ad- Proposition today. 140-144 East Seventh oo . THE MODEL FURNITURE HOUSE = ane i ,, Best Heaters 0 Y K 9 enn RAS 2p he tee Do You Know? = &@ You Ought to Know! ae ou Ought to Know! SEOSS» r ! fam Yau Will K oA Ol Will KNOW; eI x AY og < Nie ANG | ocicirmaoceerets = me mm ce an REPU Mik s GEES, RANGES and HEATERS. Nie Pecraes, Vemme ‘THE WORLD'S BEST STOVES Oana Pa) ye You will never know what perfect heating or cooking 4s until Seb ee dO ABM you have used a Peninsular—the strongest of construction, Sane eae Baers handsomest of design, easiest of operation, most economical YG Spares Faege)) fo cmeomcon. Gee sian oem. Si eee s fe, You Try Them Before You Buy Them. Ae ae ENN 30 Days’ Free Trial Laren ea ts (game) deetteng eee, OUR FREE COAL PROPOSITION = (Coo e oe Every purchaser of a Peninsular Range or Heater will receive = b) ets eis ews Xt, an order entitling them to $2.00 per ton rebate on every ton oy SHEmANO) Of coal purchased this season for use in said stove. Get a / = cuunmfee” Peninsular by all means. The “largest heaters—the small- = est eaters.” Four Rooms THESE TWO ITEMS WERE OUR LAST WEEK'S SPECIAL a but as we were unable to supply all that called for them, wo Furnished have decided to put them on sale again. We have enough now to supply most any demand. Cardozo's specials are always good. 6 | t! t Dining room Ap = me =r, ompletely oan ae box seat, uphol- if stered in’ genuine 9 H i leather. Hl te i fe "TY Colonial Dresser, Ga = ai 1 beautiful style, H |" Pie ba massive in ap- [/Pmpemeeeee RPE $8 down, $8 per month, pearance, Mahoe fc T Vie Prices always lower, rem ale $2.85 any, with heavy i i | i | ie ver rt conse ee UM LL CARDOZOS, of Course! Supeial at ee ZL Pex bom Its Easy to Buy and Easy to Pay at Cardozos, of Course (Or) \amaes LP a) pg Sa) Venti GY The Wise’s (Maow': [fons fw) di EMfseeS... inp. aaa Kept No Maid (es) by PEGE, / 1) Ga US ept No Mar WA 78 Ee ae) 4 pea de NTE A hy, sage a economical and satisfying CSEAEs eae cdf UA] iP to Mrs. Wise. Things seemed right SSeS a Ma a only when she did them. Ss \ hag ‘ It worked fine—everybody satisfied. Busy eg I 7.) } hands are happiest;—but the strain told— physi aK is (i! cally first, then mentally. One day she gave out — oH yy \i- had to quit—“Ail run down” she said. ; | NWA AT TIE) We the facts were—complete physical exhaustion and jj | Ren xe | Nl ragged nerves, due to never-ending monotonous tasks. { |! a eee W The Wise’s doctor said “DIGESTO”—a wine glass RANG SS 257) WY three times a day. BPS RRR | ill to good, DIGESTO made good and PE \\RETEE| PBi sot ete cond DIGESTO, made sued and [At SSN cay ean , | A) VAN SRG. Moral: Don’t wait—take DIGESTO now. A perfect BV A \ ‘Wit liquid food and body builder, =] Wwo= ' For Sale by All Druggists ’ = yw THEO. HAMM BREWING CO. | \ See ST. PAUL, MINN. \ FA” Fc run oiarere orn care anv ste vo coven unuina /| \ > —— Fon weauviruLty nivsrhare waar aceon wont i a a AY a ee _ GOLDEN BEERS ee N. W. Main 939 PHONES Twin City 1643 Capitol Steam Laundry 743 Wabasha St., First Class Work Satisfaction Guaranteed ST. PAUL, MINN. JOS. TROST. The Grocer Is now located at 616 Rondo street with a splendid, New Stock of Staple and Fancy Groceries ff Tae Macias Tee TES ARCEH MAR RETURETT TE QW CONG, = ——— fe aS SHAMPOO ee ges MAGIC AER p ull nn FR __ Ano HAIR:STRAIGHTENER., i u 4 pre ANYWHERE IN U.S $100! | iN cI ane UNE US 9] 28 Wu COT essere ay of S3 ASE Non legs ° ° Youcan get along without of course, but greatly Ladies you need this, 222 Jady.can, haven begutifuland [Oot aiptace eiarineeat toilet nee- Evireitincn urea ile Dossipitetaiericea tae qhistolictuccesitr Alters hampencr imitate, Che eeotinig tbesess Hatha tlagie'dTeatueatermmmence daitatins. At sentra the dandruff; and it will straighten the ‘The aluminum comb is easily detached Stina head ot Wak, giving Weeasturel geameauieshpuemnet ally detached fluffy appearance, Peated (as shown below) the comb goes HeORSET TSE ae atagic never buns Haat shanna ela ts coat Beet untges Vieumehalake ETAT eundeetaygre never heated direct. "The steel heating bar | ‘The Magic Heater, islalso suitable for Megcle sino weASaceH CHARS, neve A crag ie QE ST sae aa femme ste coring. re, ’ GEO WS = LiKe 7 Sot ss, Bae Hh rae IRGC aS Saas ee RCTS Sa Top i “ fe ——=—_ = = AD RY SS le = Agents wanted in every town, SCS Se Mace Shampoo Diet, $1.00 ee ery cs SBF Marc acanotoner’ oe Eastern Agents, New York Hair Co,, 738 Broadway, N.Y. SHAMPOO DRIER CO., “Sixes MAGIC ay MINNESOTA: Bo: OO ge ge | “You too?’ \ tr : Fines Aa eee dere 0 Ol ae UR eager ee We Ree) eae ayy 5 , WS PUY s Sorc Us Pea Za, ULL KYaY ANT Pa, Telephone Cedar 2622 6“ ? ” CURLEY’S BAR 122 East Third Street Finest Brands of Imported and Domestic Wines, Liquors and Cigars N. E. Cor. 8rd and Robert St. . ST.PAUL ee oe ooo Dimes are little young dollars. They grow on- ly when locked up together. Treat yourself to a savings account and prove it to your own satisfac- tion. ‘‘Planted” dollars will add to your earn- ings. 93 East Fourth Street | AGT? guicn ON Lg i . EYE DEFECTS AND SYMPTOMS, Wye 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. Or too short in whole—the Hyperopic eye. Combine the two im one eye and we have Astigmatism. Properly adjusted glasses will sorrect these defects, Medicines or waiting, never, Symptoms that spring from these two simple eye mal- ormations are manifold; such aseye and headaches, Indi- gestion, 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, HARMS OCULO CURES SORE EYES 25¢ PER BOTTLE. OPTICIANS, 39? ROBERT STRENT, ST. PAUL, MINN. . e ei ann We ce ¢ leg Bercy 7 a ae 2 mS ie a ao ae enter aa ee eee The Most Proper Line of FALL WOOLENS NICE SUITOR OVERCOAT (lilo A. Sth Defective Page —_—<—————aw * ‘ST, PAUL ‘MASOXIO Dir G aa Te NEO oft Fee Hida ee lec 3 aL a eS _ | iae— tt ri oo MosT WORSHIPRUL: GRAND LoDGR MINNESOTA, AF. AND A M. J. H, SHERWOOD, GRAND MASTER, TW Sok PANDA C.,RORINSON, GRAND SECRETARY, Han ve ena PIONEER LODGH NO, 1, F. AND A. a Meets ROPE Nh F AND A BF nat stindk ae ANAM, MongTS 8€ 8850" on Wanker Whe ag aet Wahinn ahiand ey 30 Palate PERFECT ASHEAR LODGE NO. 4, Bend kr De RAR EODGE NO. Factltya at rachise ase ah ced and Thpmag sirgioneat’ $05 "Alene George Ee Hoare, WM Sone MARS LODGE NO. 2202 G. U. 0. of (0. Br meets second and fourth Wesnest Say alee at Ota Bellows Hall "331 West” University, comer Farrington Byehue, Bagance on arringion Be BDurang We Gs J Wesley Kelly, B: 5, 445" West University Avenues ‘HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH, NO. 553.4. VU, 0. of 0. F. mects Arse and third Monday! in’ cash month at Oda ‘Peis Town, Hally NW. Cor. University and Farrington, Sirs Carrie We Duane at 3 G, Mrs, Ida M. Johnson, W. R., No. 916 ‘Marlon st. PAST GRAND MASTER'S COUNCIL NovlHh, GOS. of 0. fe meots the sec: ond and gourin Evidey tn each manth a Sta “Petiowsr ial del” We niversig, omer Farrington. entrance on Fatring” fon, Wm. Ee Morris, W. G. Mt Thos. Hickman, G: Se No. aay" Bt! Anthony ST, PAUL PATRIARCHY NO. 114, meets, second Monday, in exch, month. ai Gia reliows “Hall 221 We Universiey. corner Farrington. “Entranas on arsine: fon" avenue, “Thos, Rv Hickman (acting) Ee we de Morris, Pe MWe Bt Geo. B, Lowe, W. P. He 378% Wabasha. Minneapolta, HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH NO. 776 3. UO von imests second and fgurch Tuesday’ tn each month at Labor Tem ple Hall, Gon Fourth street and Eighth Ave. South: Mrs, Emily Newton, MN. Gif nite ‘Margaree Williama, W! Re UNITED BROTHERS OF FRIENDSHIP. NOwtH Stak LODGE NO. isk Us 2 Feameets fat and thiyd,Tossaay in éagh month at ‘Téelida Hall, Con Arundel and ‘Lafond. Brothers in good. stand: ing always weleome, 0, Howell, W. My g-. Adams, W. Sec’y, 49.5. Fourth Steak: John H. Hayes Lodge No. 6, Ki of P. peeks Brat and third) Buea: GE ays in eneh month at hal, Age cor. of University and Far: BB sinzcon “Avenues, “ae ‘s00 ey i) Cclock P.M. Knights of BAG) bythias in gooa standing al- wi Hohn He Haves, ©. C, B. Wr Guiiy, of Rand Se 383 Rondo. TIDDLE CIRCLE. LADIES OF G. A. Rimeets frst and third ‘Tuesdays of each month in Supreme Court Zoom, old cape {tol building.” Mrs, St J, Leavitt, Pres, Mr. 5. BR. White, Secy.,, Phoenix Bldg. FIDELITY COURT OF CALANTHE NO, 5, NA, Ay BAC AS and A. teeta first_and third Monday” in each month aK of Br Hall, 211 Hennepin Rives” Minnéapolis, “Mrs, "Minerva. Ramiett, W. C2 Miss Aslene BM. Scott, Riot Dy, 35 w. 29th St GOPHER LODGE NO. 105. 1. BP. 0. B. of the World, meets second and fourth huraday 4m engh month at Bikes Hai No GSE wast “Bhind "strees, Se Paul, ‘W. He Johnson, Ey Ra it. Mt, Soimsony ‘secretary, 376 AMinnesotd. PiLGHIM BaRLIST CHURCH, Cor 2th ‘and Cedar, "Suuday Serviced: brenct ig! at 11 gems aud. 755 pestis Sunday Scloal at. ist" ofclock.” wWeaucsday ‘eves igegeueral pases mectiog. “Friday oven mig Seudy Sunday. setool iesscu, overate aia weddings nromptly attended, Revs W Dilcarton, ‘Pastor, o62 St Anthony av. St. JAMES’ A, Mf, 5 CHURCH, COR roller ‘ana vay Streets.” Sunday services, Iitdb am 780'prm. Wednesday. prayer meeting. "8:00. p.m, Pastor wicks "on masepek owou Fe sexupsoiny pay kta, Jay and Thursday. Weddings, funerals and the slok attended on notice. Hey. Wee Graves. Pastor, Parsonage, Corday and Fuller Si PHILIP'S EPISCOPAL Missi cormer Aurore avenue and Stackubln strex Sanday series’ arty celebration nf Holy Buenorist, 7:30 a, m. “Bligh celebrations & Boy’ Eacharis: “oowt and tnira, sundays 11:00 a.m. Mating, Second and. four Sundays, 31:00. mt Suneay school. Tam p. 3. Brotherliood of St. Andres, 6:30 p th Vesper, 1290 p.m.’ Weel ervieae Wetnendars, contronation,cines, 8:00 p.m rianye, evéalng praver. A200 n: mo Sst days Holy. Bucharist, 9:00 (A. Mt, Rev. SPR. Tedeaa Rector, cae wuntee Re Ford’s Hair Pomade | ity years of euceoes nave oroved _ the merits of this preparation. Whatis more attractive than a beautiful Beanie tater tact hee BGNeai Ratner Eis tyae teste etait ta eetierteaeeer ir cateened aloe tize are usually suc Ford’s Hair Pomade yemoves and prevents dandruff. invicorates the soalpandkeops it from gctuine harsh and gry, stops tobing and prevents the hair from falling out or breaking of and elves. st new Mfe ‘and vigor. Absolutely harmless. Used with splendid results even on children and Infante, "Delloately’ perfumed, its uso in a gonstant pleasure. A most satisfactory tolx ich preparation for ladies, gentlemen and “Don't buy anything clag alleged to be “just aif yga want the best revults bu: Bods inle’Bomade, Look for this nae Ityourdaggistor local dealer cmsaoe ae ru fant, 8 ply you with the gouuine, we will send you One bettie, regslar size, for. . $ 80 Three eer er FD Six ee aa One oma DS gst ten Sederiog tend Poot or Sayed Wines Sede” ait Orden ppd prommpey ou recipe 0 pice The Ozonized Ox Marrow Co. 18 Wort Kine 8. Ohteage, I. TGR BAIR POMADE ts made ony in Calengo ‘Ageata Wanted Everywhere: SS DR. HURD Specialty — Pain- less extracting, Crown and Bridge Work