The Appeal
Saturday, November 28, 1914
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
THE APPEAL STEADILY GAINS
BECAUSE:
4-It is the organ of ALL Afro-Americans
5-It is not controlled by any ring or aliph.
6-It does no support but the people's.
BIG ARMY GUARDS NATIONAL HEALTH
WILL LESSEN DEATH RATE
E. E. HITTENHOUSE.
nest error to do these things:
"First.—To inform myself upon the subject of personal, community and household hygiene and to obey the laws of health.
"Second.—To encourage the practice of individuals having periodic health examinations to uphold physical efficiency and to deploit disease in time to check or cure it.
"Third.—To give support and encouragement and to urge my friends to do the same to the public health service and officials who are laboring to protect the most precious asset of the nation.
"Fourth.—To encourage schools, churches, social and civic bodies and employers to give as a patriotic duty all consistent help in stimulating public awareness and in spreading knowledge of the risks advancing science of health and life conservation.
"Fifth.—To co-operate with and advise the Life Extension Institute in its purpose to reduce life waste and to guard and strengthen the vitality and vigor of our race."
"During recent years there has been an extraordinary growth of popular sentiment in favor of the conservation of health and life," says President Rittenhouse, who initiated the new organization.
"The National Health Guard will give the average citizen an opportunity to give his moral support and encouragement to this health uplift movement at the cost of very slight effort and without charges or fees for membership.
"The urgent need of upbuilding American vitality is especially emphasized just now by the conflict in Europe, where modern methods of warfare have made the most extraordinary demands upon the strength and endurance of both soldiers and noncombatants. This lesson is of special importance. In certain evidences of apparent decline, the power of our young, as well as older people, to resist chronic disease.
"Yesterday about 2,500 unnecessary deaths occurred - 2,500 new and premature graves were filled-in the United States. A similar calamity happened today and will happen tomorrow and every day throughout the year. If these 2,500 premature deaths were scheduled to occur in a certain city or locality every day the needless sacrifices and accidently become a great tragedy, and persons would be overflowing with heart stirring accounts of the pending disaster. Then you would open your hearts and also your purses to any extent necessary to prevent the calamity.
"The wars of our country are fought not with trained and muscular hardened regulars, but with soft and untrained volunteers, unused to duties calling for a high order of physical endurance. They are taken from the ordinary walks of life, and it is upon the strength, vigor and physical endurance of our country may depend."
CANAL NEUTRALITY RULE.
Only Six Fighting Ships of Warring Nations May Pass at One Time.
Nations May Pass at One Time.
Washington.-President Wilson recently issued a proclamation announcing the neutrality regulations for the Panama canal zone.
It provides that all vessels of belligerent nations shall be allowed to pass through the canal in the order of their arrival at either end, but that twenty-four hours shall elapse between the departure of vessels flying the flags of two nations that are at war.
War vessels shall pass through as rapidly as possible and shall not remain in waters adjacent to the canal longer than absolutely necessary. No vessel shall remain in the canal more than twenty-four hours.
The docking and repairing facilities of the United States shall be used by belligerent ships only to make repairs that are necessary to their seaworthiness.
War vessels shall not be allowed to provision in the canal zone except when absolutely necessary and then shall take on only enough to meet their needs until they arrive at the next port.
Commanders of belligerent vessels are forbidden to embark or disembark troops in the canal zone except for the purpose of making necessary repairs. Not more than three vessels flying the flag of any belligerent nation shall anchor in the waters adjacent to the canal at one time, and not more than three, making six in all, shall pass through the canal at one time.
MOUSE TIES UP WHOLE TOWN
Causes Short Circuit at Light Plant and Everything Stong.
Hutchinson, Kan. — An undersized mouse short circuiting some wires in the city electric light plant here stopped the street cars, put out all the lights in the city, shut down certain parts of the salt plants, chemical works, newspaper mills, strawboard plant, newspaper typesetting machines, one telegraph company and other industries depending on electric motors for power for an hour.
Edward Benson, assistant engineer at the plant, tried to get the mouse out with a pair of tongs without shutting down the plant, and the little animal jumped into a connection that electricated it. causing several thousand people to take a vacation when the burned out switches and wires could be repaired.
Mr. Benson was badly burned about the hands, arms and face, but will recover.
PHYSICAL BLIGHT AS FRUIT OF THE WAR
Washington.—Over Europe of the future, no matter upon which side victory rests, declare medical men and scientists, will sweep the devastating hand of physical blight. Children with crippled forms, weak bodies and unbalanced minds will fill the cradles of every nation now at war, offspring of the men made unit for parentage by the great conflict. Dr. Alex Hirschman of the National museum and noted anthropologist, is one of the savants who has studied the effect of Europe's conflict upon the children yet to be born. To him the present war presents a vastly different aspect with regard to future generations than any conflict has ever presented before. Since men of science first began to study the effect of wars upon the human race it has been admitted that whenever it was best physical examples of a nation wounded the physical manhood of that nation suffered. Then it was discovered that for every man killed or fatally wounded four died of disease. As warfare approached its present modern character the number of killed and wounded in each engagement decreased, while the number who died from "natural causes" increased. Army physicians increased by percentage of mortality from wounds to the greatest conflict is likely to be far less than it has been in the wars of the past.
But the scientists—both medical men and anthropologists—add to that statement their belief that the loss of the men killed in the war will not detract from the physical welfare of Europe's future sons one-hundredth part as much as will the men who return unwounded from the field, because war is no longer primarily an annihilator of life, so far as the calculations of science are concerned, but a shatterer of nervous constitutions, a creator of neurosynthetic wrecks, weakened mentalities and sapped vitalities.
REASONS WHY MEN DRINK.
"Toothache," "Heavy Cold" and "stomach
Trouble." So They Say.
Columbus, Ind.-A, survey of the causes that take men into the city court here shows that toothache is to blame more than anything else. Next to "toothache" is a "beavy cold," and "stomach trouble" runs a poor third. Nearly every man who is arrested on an intoxication charge has some such experience, and when he admit they get drunk just to be drunk and have no excuse to offer.
THE APPEAL.
EDISON BANS CIGARETTES. BEING WOUNDED PROTECTION FOR "GE Workers Can't Use Them, Though He Smokes Cigars. Chic
Smokes cigars and chews.
West Orange, N. J. - When the 6,700 employees of the Edison plants here entered the shops the other morning they were confronted on every side with printed signs bearing this warning: "Cigarettes Not Tolerated. They Dull the Brains."
As a result of correspondence with Henry Ford, the Detroit automobile manufacturer, Thomas Edison decided to be a crusader against the cigarette. At the request of Mr. Ford, Edison made analyses of at least twenty brands of cigarettes. While he found the tobacco contained in them was of all qualities, he found poisonous matter in all the papers in which they were rolled. Said Mr. Edison:
"That poison attacks the brain and works havoc with man's mental activity. His mind becomes clouded. Evaristo Madero, brother of the late president of Mexico, told here a few days ago that men, women and children are invertebrate smokers of cigarettes in the southern republic. That is why Mexicans as a race are not clear headed."
Mr. Edison has always abbreviated cigarettes, but he is a heavy smoker of cigars, and he likes to chew tobacco.
WALKS 190 MILES TO ENLIST.
Boy Disappointed When Told War Had Not Been Declared.
Jackson, Miss.-Coung afloat all the way from Tate county, 100 miles, George Stark, a young farmer, went to the office of the adjutant general of the state and astonished everybody there by saying that he wanted to enlist as a private for the war in Mexico. The attaches of the office looked at the man in wonder. This certainly was unusual. Everybody else that had said militia about enlisting in the state militia would be a captain, a colonel or a major.
The simon pure patriot was told to keep up with the daily newspapers and return to the adjutant general's office when war should be declared and Mississippi would be called on for militia.
Starkis was disappointed. He wanted to get into the fight at once. He wanted no stripes, no honors—simply the privilege of being a private in the ranks to fight for the honor of the flag.
M'ADOOS WILL LIVE IN A LITTLE "COTTAGE"
Future Home Situated In Fashionable Washington Suburb.
Washington.—Now that the Wilson McAdoo wedding is over, one great postnuptial fact stands out prominently:
The McAdoos are going to live in a cottage!
This has come as something of a shack in Washington society, which, when it heard the news, elevated its eyebrows and emitted a little murmur of surprise.
But it will be jarring to certain of a sentimental cast of mind to learn that the "cottage" of the McAdoos will be a cottage in name only.
It's something on the order of the "cottages down at Newport" that Cohan used to sing about long years ago, and the cottage which the McAdoos are reported to be taking is stuated at Chevy Chase, not far from the city of which President Wilson is a member.
A cottage at Chevy Chase comes very near being the kind of house known in 1880 as a mansion. Chevy Chase is the most exclusive suburb of all the suburbs around the capital, and the man who buys a house there finds his deed quite full of clauses, stipulating everything from the price of the house he must build on the lot to the color and nationality of the man to whom he may sell his property, ever he goes broke.
A report that the McAdoo cottage is to be in Chevy Chase kills all the rosette dreams of the sentimental mind, who probably conjured up dreams of a bungalow where the red roses grow.
L00PS 15 L00PS; QUITS.
Aviator Retires, Saying There Is No Money or Glory For Professionals.
Paris—One of the foremost of French air men, Rene Didart, is retiring from aviation disappointed. That there is no longer either money or glory in professional aviation is the conclusion arrived at by Vidart after four years of activity.
To celebrate his retirement Vidart looped the loop fifteen consecutive times and then came to earth to remain there. He will devote his time in the future to automobile racing and to big game shooting, for after the dangers of the high alrs, according to Vidart, a man has lost all taste for the bumdum pursuits of life.
Ancient Crade Still Used.
Columbus, Ind—John W. Scheldt, treasurer of Bartholomew county, has presented his grandchild, Walter J. Koch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore K. Koch of this city, with a black waukru cradle that is fifty-two years old. Mr. Scheldt's father bought it. Eleven children in the family were rocked in the cradle and also eight children of John W. Scheldt Now Mr. Scheldt has a grandson, who will be rocked in it.
Defective Page
BADLY INJURED BUT HAPPY.
Women Give Up Hope For Boys as They Go to War, and Their Return. Although Disfigured, is Ocession For Great Joy—One Said, "We Not Disfigured; I am Decorated."
Caliats.—"You can't imagine the joy of mothers and fathers when their boys come back to them from the war minus an arm or a leg or some other portion of their bodies. Human nature is a queer thing, and war brings this queerness into strong relief," says one of the American correspondents now at the front.
"I witnessed the arrival of a Red Cross train here. The cars were loaded with young men fresh from the Belgian border. A soldier I talked to. We gave them hell, I tell you—but we caught a few pellets ourselves.
"From the looks of them they had indeed. Some hobbled out of the cars, their arms in slings or their heads tied up or a foot on the ground; others came on stretches to be transferred to the channel steamers waiting at the dock. One soldier limped out on the platform. His head was bandaged all around so voluminally that he couldn't wear his cap.
"One arm was in a sling; the hand was bandaged in a way betokening the absence of one or more fingers.
"Near by stood a woman. She was looking for some one. Suddenly the much older woman the woman and started. With an indistinct sound, partly smothered by the bandages, he touched the woman
"He uttered a cry and seached eagerly the bandaged face. Apparently her mother love, rather than her eyes, told her it was her boy.
"My son, my son" she exclaimed, enraptured. A Red Cross surgeon stepped up.
"Madam, he said, 'your son undoubtedly will recover, but I must tell you that most of his jaw is shot a way.
"Oh, I'm so glad, so glad!" the mother gripped, tears streaming from her eyes.
"I see that sort of thing many times daily," the surgeon said. "When a mother sees her boy march away to war she gives him up for dead, she scarcely hopes even in her mother heart of hope ever to see her boy alive again Always she lives in dread of the day when the brief announcement of the dead will contain the name of her boy when her boy comes back to her it doesn't matter how terribly he is shot up on disfigured. It is the same with mothers everywhere, any time.
"There is another cause for a mother's joy when her son returns maimed, broken physically, but alive. She knows the boy cannot return to the battle line, a mark for bullets, and shrapnel that kill.
"There is another strange thing to be noted while talking to the wounded. They are quite happy to have bad wounds about the face and head, much preferring disfiguring face wounds to lesser wounds in body or legs.
"A train of wounded was on its way to southern France. When it halted at Bontoge those of the wounded who were able got out to walk up and down the platform. Among these was one whose face could hardly be called by that name. One eye was gone, the other was badly swollen until he could hardly see. Bandages covered all but discolored parts of his face.
"You poor dear, sympathized an Englishwoman who approached him timidly. You poor, poor boy."
"Madust: replied the soldier with as much pain and clearness as the bandages would permit, 'don't pity me. Pity my friends in the train there who cot it where it won't show."
"The Englishwoman couldn't understand."
"Why—why—why," she stunnered, I thought you wouldn't like to be disfigured.
"Disfigured! The soldier replied. I'm not disfigured! I'm decorated!"
OLD THIEF SAVES BOY PAL
Found In House He Stays to La
Youth Upstairs Escape.
Terre Haute, Ind. - Dan McCarthy,
died sixty-one years, calmly waived
for arrest when the police were sum-
moned to a house by a burglar alarm
over a telephone. He stood in the hall,
making no effort to escape. Later
explained that he acted as he did
order to give his pal, who was us-
stairs, a chance to escape.
The pal, he said, was only a boy, the
son of a Chicago saloon keeper, and
the old man did not wish the young-
ster caught "dead to rights," which
would mean a prison term. He said
that he had served so many terms he
did not mind another one.
In the city court he said he did not
wish a lawyer and waived examination,
speaking as one acquainted with
court procedure. He was bound over
to the circuit court, where, he says,
he will plead guilty. He talked freely
about his career, telling of his various
prison experiences.
PROTECTION FOR "GENIUS."
Inventors of "P perpetual Motion" Will Be Saved, Patent Fees.
Washington.—Owing to the growth in numbers of inventive "geniuses" who declare that they have solved the perpetual motion problem the officials of the patent office have had to take steps to protect them.
Any one can make an application for a patent, paying a fee of $15. An examiner investigates the claim and, if there is merit to it, calls for a model.
If there is no merit the patent is then rejected and the $15 goes into Uncle Sam's treasury chest. Nearly every one of these perpetual motion inventors is in financial straits. The loss of $15, according to the officials, is a severe blow, to them financially. Hereafter the patent office will not permit any one to file a patent for a perpetual motion machine unless the application is accompanied by a model of the machine, the model being one that will perform. A circular to that effect is being sent out.
"It would keep two stenographers busy practically all of the time writing a paper of chief of perpetual motion machines," said Clerk Woolard recently. "The circular time and saves money for the government, meanwhile saving money for the poor fellows who believe they have solved this problem."
There is at least one visitor a day to the patent office who has a perpetual motion machine.
VACCINATE OR GET NO CASH.
Minnesota Indians Must Be Examined Before Government Pays Them.
Bemidji, Minn. — The ninth installment of a fifteen installment treaty, made by the United States government with the Red Lake Indians, is now being paid at the reservation, and 1,479 Indians will participate.
The per capita payment is $61.75, which is a slight increase over last year. The total amount to be paid at this payment is approximately $101.075, twelfths of which has already been paid.
Prior to securing his payment each and every Indian must submit to an examination by the agency physician, who keeps a card index of all patients. If he finds any one who ought to be vaccinated he completes this work before payment is made to him.
MEAL OF 1,000 HEAT UNITS FOR 10 CENTS Reducing Cost of Living by Scientific Measures.
New York.—A scientific restaurant where one may obtain enough nutrition for 10 cents is to be opened here. It has been scientifically demonstrated that enough properly balanced food to keep an average man in good condition is not expensive. The food which it is proposed to serve at a restaurant for 10 cents contains enough calories for an average person doing light work. Professor Graham Lusk of the department of physics at Cornell medical college has arranged the menu, based on the assumption that persons engaged in different kinds of labor require different amounts of calories.
A man who lies abed twenty-four hours requires only 1,480 calories a day; a rider in a six day bicycle race requires 10,000 calories. A man abed for eight hours and in a chair fourteen hours and having moderate exercise for two hours requires 2,500 calories. The average farmer needs 3,500 calories.
The meal which will be served at this scientific restaurant will give exactly 1,000 heat units, enough for a luncheon for a man doing light work. Professor Lusk has arranged this menu, giving 1,000 heat units for 10 cents:
76 ounces of beans
1 ounce of pork.
21-3 ounces of butter.
5 ounces of milk and 5 ounces of coffee, mixed.
Three such meals mean 3,000 heat units, and if one eats a heavier meal in the evening with this scientific luncheon of beans and pork he will obtain enough calories for anything less than hard physical labor.
LIVES MONTH IN BEER CAR.
Cat Had No Food, and His Rib Showed, but Hell Recover.
Vancouver. B. C.-Out of a box of beer that arrived here yesterday there walked the shadow of a once robust tomb.
Pussy's ribs were showing, and he was so weak he could hardly move toward a bowl of milk that kind hearted customs officers at the Canadian Pacific wharf quickly provided for him. The car was sealed in Milwaukee thirty days ago, and the big cat no干结 no shrine. He will recover.
Mountain Lion Killing Elk.
Fort Collins, Colo.—A mountain lion is reported to be slaughtering the elk shipped into Estes park by the government a short time ago. Four or five elk were killed there recently a carried away bodily. The fact that there are no traces of dragging leads trappers to believe that an enormous lion is doing much of the killing. Forest rangers in the park are searching for the bear.
THE APPEAL KEEPS IN FRONT
RECORDS
1- In some places all the news possible.
2- In some places is impersonally, whistling in words.
3- In some places are shameless and insulting.
WILSON HELD UP BY HALLBOY.
Youngster insists on Announcing President Before Admitting Him.
New York—President Wilson on a recent visit here decided to pay a brief visit to Mrs. Anna Wilson Howe, his sister, who has apartments in the Hotel Anderson. One of the proprietor-of the house has had difficulty recently in impressing upon the elevator boys that no callers shall be taken up until they have first been announced to the guests. Recently the rule was violated by W. Higgins, a West India boy, whereupon Miss Anderson reproved him, and to impress upon his mind firmly that the rule was a fixed one. she cried:
"Understand now, Higgins, no one is to be taken up until he has been announced first—no one, understand? Not even the president of the United States," she added severely.
Higgins was on duty when two distinguished looking gentlemen, followed by several looking young men, entered and walked directly to the elevator. Higgins promptly intercepted them.
The rule is to announce all gentlemen "drive" he said.
"Very well replied the tailer of the two callers" "Just say to Mrs. Howe that Mr. Wilson is calling."
Higgins turned toward the telephone when one of the young men halted him:
"It's all right, boy," he said. "This is the president of the United States."
Higgins looked the party over, how
but continued off to the telephone.
"Don't make no diffence, boss," he said. "Mis. Anderson say even the president of de United States got to be announced that."
The president burst into a hearty laugh.
"That is perfectly right, my boy," he said. "Besides, he continued, if a certain sort of satisfaction in the fact that there is some one in New York who doesn't know me and to whom I have to be identified."
EAGLE BOARDS SHIP; FIGHTS.
Though Exhausted by Long Flight, it Injures Two of Crew.
Philadelphia — When the Longscape, the British tramp steamship, came into port from Huelva, Spain, her crew told how a brown feathered eagle measuring five feet from wing to wing had come on board in an exhausted condition when 150 miles from the Delaware capes and had given two of the crew a good fight before it was captured. Boatswain Smith had a cut over his left eye, and Seaman Hughes right hand was scratched and cut.
The eagle was seen asterin Monday morning, and after a three hour flight it seemed to spurt itself for a final dash and landed on the foremast. Smith went to pick the bird up, when it turned on him. The flight followed.
Streets Crowded and Schools Reopen After Months.
Paris—Paris is filling up again and appears to be getting back some small signs of being her old self. Her streets are fuller, shops are reopening here and there, the caferaces are less deserted, and the arrivals of whole families from the provinces grow in num ber daily. It is estimated that from a quarter to half a million people have returned within the last fortnight.
Reasons for the return are not far to seek. In the first place, the fear of being shut up in a beaigned city is so greatly diminished as hardly to count in the calculations of those who feed when those "terrible Germans" were coming on, and in life in a metropolis in winter, especially when one is in one's own familiar home, is preferable to the discomforts and rigors of an unknown countryside or provincial town. Schools have reopened, and parents naturally wish to be with their boys and girls at this important period.
Bombs from the enemy's Taubes are still ugly possibilities, to be sure, but reflection has led people to see that the chance of their being the individual victimized is so small in a city of nearly 2,000,000 inhabitants as to be small.
Consequently, though half or more of the shops are shut and nearly all the hotels are shut, though there are no motorbuses, the city is beginning to look normal, the sidewalks are crowded save at the sacred hour of dejeuner, and while the cafes are open, which is until 8 p. m., they are nearly as thronged as in the antebellum days.
FINDS VOLCANIC REEF.
Old Whaler Discovers Ledge Where Chart Calls For Plenty of Water.
San Francisco.—A remarkable phenomenon in Alaskaan waters is reported by Captain C. T. Pedersen, an old whaler and explorer, who returned to San Francisco a few days ago from the far north.
He says that on the chart the depth of the stretch of water between Hor island and Amakok island is given as nine and a half fathoms, while now there are only two fathoms to be had at high water. Volcanic eruptions probably caused the reef to spring up Captain Pedersen says.
$2.40 PER YEAR
WIFE IS EYES FOR
BLIND LAWMAKER
Mrs. Thomas D. Schall Run Her
Husband's Campaign.
BIG AID IN HIS ELECTION.
Ram His Automobile to 200 Towns and
His Act as Personal and Political
Guide—Will Now Go to Washington
as Congressman's Secretary—His
Oretory is Fascinating.
Minneapolis. Minn.—One of the new
Minnesota congressmen will see public
affairs through a woman's eyes.
This is Thomas D. Schall, a blind
lawyer, who enjoys the distinction of
being the first representative elected to
congress from the newly created Tenth
Minnesota district.
Mr. Schall was the political and
personal guide of her husband in the
campaign, driving his automobile to
the 200 towns where he spoke during
the campaign.
She will go to Washington with him
as his private secretary.
"I am sure Mr. Schall will make a great success in congress." said Mrs. Schall. "His speaking ability and convincing arguments will win him prestige. Sympathy for his blindness may
THOMAS D. SCHALL.
have won him respectful attention in the campaign, but it was his convincing oratory that got votes.
"I know his oratory is fascinating because"—the little woman hesitated and blushed and then added. "because it won me."
Mr. Schall while studying at the University of Minnesota won the northern oratorical contest, securing honors for Minnesota for the first time against seven other states. But his oratory won him more than honor. It won him the admiration of Margaret Huntley, a Minneapolis girl then in her junior college year. Next day they were introduced and two years later were married, and they have been married twelve years. He is thirty-seven, and she is thirty-five.
Seven years ago while lighting a cigar with an electric lighter Mr. Schall received a shock that destroyed his sight. The wife had to become his eyes. She went into his law office, read his books to him, wrote his letters and guided his physical as well as his mental footsteps.
Then came the determination to strive for congress. Mr. Schall is a Progressive, and the territory of the new district is said to be normally Republican and Democrat in this field was the task undertaken by Schall and his wife. He went into the campaign the first week alone. It ended with him almost exhausted and discouraged. His wife put her neck in the political yoke. She sat at the wheel of his automobile and guided his steps. She prepared his meals. She attended smokers and dinners with him. Wherever he went his wife was by his side. The result was told in a flattering plurality. And Mrs. Schall modestly tried to disclaim credit for her share in the success, but her husband insists: "Through her I must see the world. She is the light of my life."
THIS SQUASH IS A WHALE.
That is its Name, and It Weighs Forty-two Pounds.
Battle Creek, Mich.—One of the vegetables that weren't sold at the city market was a huge squash of the "whale" variety weighing forty-two pounds and measuring nearly a yard long and twenty-nine inches in circumference. The manmoth squash was exhibited by Frank Imus, who owns a farm in Battle Creek township, three quarters of a mile west of Battle Creek.
The squash is "Whale" by name and whale by nature. Mr. Imus has other squashes that weigh as much as 100 pounds, but none measures as long as the yard long one. The "Whale" squash is better for pies than for use as a vegetable, though it is not as watery as the regular pie pumpkin its flesh is golden, and the shell is nearly as hard as the Hubbard squash. The vines bear heavily, many of them having several large squashes on the same vine.
YOU RIDE
THE APPEAL
PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY
J. Q. ADAMS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER
49 E. 4th Street, St. Paul, Minn.
ST. PAUL OFFICE
No. 236 Union Block, 49 E. 4th St.
J. Q. ADAMS, Manager.
MINNEAPOLIS OFFICE
No. 2812 Tenth Avenue South
J. N. SELLERS, Manager.
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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1914
STANDING TOGETHER FOR RIGHT.
The unanimity with which the Colored press endorsed the action of William Monroe Trotter in his protest against segregation was remarkable. Only two or three editors of small caliber, who evidently have some personal grievance, against Mr. Trotter, abused the man who has against tremendous odds done battle for the rights of the race. These sore head publishers of papers of little influence will not be able to do much harm. What they have said is more than off-set by strong Southern Democratic newspapers which have rebuked the President for his action. Two Kentucky newspapers were especially strong against governmental segregation.
The Louisville Courier Journal: "The Courier Journal agrees with the New York World that the segregation business over in Washington spells rather small. During fifty years, including two Democratic Presidential terms there was no thought of separating the black and white official sheep. Why should the suggestion meet the assent of anybody now.
"The segregation order should be revoked. It has no real cause or interest to back it. The issue should not have been raised. Let Mr. Wilson take matters further into his own hands, and restore the status quo."
Says the Lexington Herald: "We regret that the President has again permitted himself to display irritation to those who went to him as Chief Executive of the Nation, and refused answer questions put to him about the treatment of public employees.
"For the second time he has permitted himself to lose his temper when confronted by a delegation of citizens, asking him to take action about a matter which is embarrassing to them.
"The humblest American citizen of full Negro blood is in the eyes of the law the law equal to the most power-
THE SIN OF SILENCE
To sin by silent protest makes c The human race h test. Had no voice injustice, ignorant quisition yet would guillotines decide The few who da speak again to r many.—Ella Whee
To sin by silence when we sh
nest makes cowards out of me
human race has climbed on me.
Had no voice been raised aga
stice, ignorance and lust, the
ition yet would serve the law,
notines decide our least dispu
few who dare must speak
tak again to right the wrong
y.—Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
To sin by silence when we should protest makes cowards out of men. The human race has climbed on protest. Had no voice been raised against injustice, ignorance and lust, the inquisition yet would serve the law, and guillotines decide our least disputes. The few who dare must speak and speak again to right the wrongs of many.—Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
SAYS PRESIDENT LOST HIS TEMPER
Leading Daily Newspaper of Lexington, Kentucky, Supporter of the Administration, Sternly Rebukes President Wilson for Losing His Temper When He Received the Trotter
(From the Lexington Herald, Lexington, Ky.)
We regret the President has an a-
tion to those who went to him as Chia-
to answer questions put to him about
When the women who are striv-
him, the women who are striv-
public official has the right to the
that he must refuse to be cate-
for. For the second time he has per-
formed a confrontation of citizen
ter that is embarrassing to him. A
New Yorkers, appealed to him
the departments of the public
him of campaign pledges made and
ask charity, but as American citizen
accorded other American citizens.
The President of the United State
the people; he is not the master, be-
proposed, and therefore, refrain from criticis-
there is no justification for any suc-
public official, the servant of any suc-
ter the affairs of government.
Every human being, whether a
teacher, a doctor, or a man, is
So the President and every other p-
that criticism which is just and prop-
hey, as every other servant, is the su-
s right to refuse to answer proper quo-
digity upon occasions when women
who are the weaker arm, are those
the policy of segregation should be ac-
he should have no hesitation in so
therefore. If he believes that the dif-
ference are composed, should be
believe and so state. Has he a right
belief?
Does the President of the Uni-
ternational policy, citizens of Africa
from citizens of Anglo-Saxon, Teuton-
Prussian, and the public world, in the
public world, willing to stand before
of all nations, willing to stand before
sanction of his great personality and
prejudice? Is it to be the policy of
people, for the people, that any race
of the law?
Is the President willing to have to
an example by those of lower order
where there are a large number of
one class above the law and another
of the law?
At this point will the governmen-
d of different races? As we conceive
treat every individual as equal before
red or yellow, Jew or Gentle, Prot-
whatever the creed matters not, at lea-
lical charged with the duty of American citizen
law the full equal to descent. The public servant elected to the humblest citizen the not
corded to the most powerful. Neither
voicenot should determine the treat-
ment in the present. That the Presi-
bative in the present has the private citizen, every man has the public official, the higher the office
tice and treat with patience those who
the protection of the law.
Keep in mind those who aggregate
in Washington who advocate lynch law.
be cited by the lower official as justi-
South that lynches in the night is be
that segregates because of color in the
We regret the President has again permitted himself to display irritation to those who went to him as Chief Executive of the Nation, and refused to answer questions put to him about the treatment of public employees. The women who were striving to secure equal suffrage approached him he took, and he expressed the negative that every public citizen but no public official has the right to exercise the display of temper, and a declaration that he must refuse to be catechized.
For the second time he has permitted himself to lose his temper when confronted by a delegation of citizens asking him to take action about a matriarch passing to him. A number of Negroes, representing various Negro organizations, asked the segregation of Negroes in the departments at Washington. The spokesman said that he did not come to him to ask charity, but as American citizens to demand equal treatment to that accorded other American citizens. The spokesman states is presumed to be the servant of the all the people; he is not the master, but the servant. Under the proper that the subjects should appear to believe "the king can do wrong" and, therefore, refrain from criticism or from questioning. In a Republic there is no justification for any such belief. The President is, as is every public official, the servant of those who elect him, paid by them to administer. Every human being, whether a servant or a master, is entitled to courteous consideration and should be safe from personally offensive criticism. So the President and every other public servant should be subject only to that criticism which is just and proper, uttered in a courteous manner. But as every other servant, is the subject of proper criticism and has not the right to refuse to answer proper questions upon the ground of offended dignity.
It is peculiarly fortunate that he should give the exhibitions of offended dignity upon occasions when women, who have not a vote, and Negroes, who are the weaker race, are those who appeal to him. If he believes that the policy of segregation should be adopted by the United States Government so as stating frankly and giving his reasons therefore. If he believes that the policy of segregation should be adopted by the people of the United States are composed, should each be segregated, he has a right so to believe and so state. Has he a right as President, to act in accord with that belief?
Does the President of the United States believe that as a mater of governmental policy, citizens of African extraction should be treated differently from Anglo-Saxon, Teutonic or Latin extraction? Is the President of the United States the officer of the greatest republic in the world, that has opened its doors as an express of all nations, willing to stand before the peoples of the earth as giving the sanction of his great personality and high office to the perpetuation of race prejudice? Is it to be the policy of the government of the people, by the people, for the people, that any race is to be set aside as distinguished from another?
Is the President willing to have himself quoted as authority and cited as an example by those of lower order and more brutal institutes, who in states where there are a large number of persons of different races have pitted one class above the law and another of different color beyond the protection of the law?
At what point will the government as government stop the segregation of different races? As we conceive the purpose of this government it is to treat every person before the eyes of the law—black or white, red or yellow, Jew or Gentile, Pride or whatever the breed, whatever the creed matters not, at least should matter not to the public official charged with the duty of serving all the people.
The humblest American citizen of full Negro blood is in the eyes of the law the full equal of the most powerful citizen of the purge Anglo-Saxon law the full equal of the most powerful citizen of the purge Anglo-Saxon law the public male elected by the people, paid by the people, owes to the humblest citizen the same power and the same treatment accorded to the most powerful. Neither breed nor creed militar nor vocation should determine the treatment accorded to a citizen by a servant. We are distressed that the President has allied himself with those who believe in the perpetuation of race prejudice and justify race passion. As a private citizen he has the right to determine his own course; as a public official, the highest office the greater the obligation to act with justice and treat with patience those who must look to the public officer for the protection of the law.
It is but a step in descent from the position taken by those public officials. Washington who segregate one race to the public official in a Southern state who elect officer a judge for his course. The mob of the South that lynches in the night is but a step further than the official order that segregates because of color in the day.
ful citizen of the purest Anglo-Saxon effort on the part of the Colored people, themselves, should be made descent.
"It is but a step in descent from the position taken by those public officials in Washington who segregate one race to the public official in a Southern state who advocates lynch law. The example of the higher official will be cited by the lower official as justification for his course. The mob of the South that lynches in the night is but a step further than the official order that segregates because of color in the day."
When Southern Democratic daily newspapers have the moral courage to write such strong editorials demanding justice for the race it ought to make the cowardly colored curses that condone jimcrowish hide their heads in shame.
Short Walk from Freeman to Serf. (Richmond Planet, Richmond, Va.) It seems to us that agitation is needed and that some well directed
THE MAN V
I honor the ma
scientious dischar
to stand alone; th
ant, intolerant ju
demn, the counter
may be averted.
THE MAN WHO DARES
honor the man who in the c
tious discharge of his duty da
and alone; the world, with ig
intolerant judgment, may c
, the countenances of relati
be averted, and the hearts
I honor the man who in the conscientious discharge of his duty dares to stand alone; the world, with ignorant, intolerant judgment, may condemn, the countenances of relatives may be averted, and the hearts of friends grow cold, but the sense of duty done shall be sweeter than the applause of the world, the countenances of relatives or the hearts of friends.—Charles Summer.
once when we should
owards out of men.
has climbed on pro-
been raised against
ice and lust, the in-
d serve the law, and
our least disputes.
we must speak and
right the wrongs of
aler Wilcox.
effort on the part of the Colored people themselves should be made to check this pale of oppression which has now settled down all over the country. With the elimination of our rights has come the interference with our property, rights and from freeman to serf is but a walk in distance. Colored men must stand up for their rights, and they should not depend upon others to stand up for them.
While the women are contending for the right of suffrage, the Colored must defend for the same thing. Political "political" plishing our ruin. We have never believed that the Colored people should eschew politics. This was the commencement of our undoing and the sooner we get back on the political road "again, the better.
Rights are controlled and curtiled by our favor. This is the lever to be used in our favor, just as the white peoples have used it against us.
A woman seldom makes a fool of a man; she merely points the way and he does the rest.
WHO DARES
in who in the con-
ge of his duty dares
the world, with ignor-
dgment, may con-
nances of relatives
and the hearts of
We, citizens of the District of Columbia and of the United States, meet in mass meeting today, under the auspices of the National Independent Equal Rights League, to enter our emphatic protest against the pronounced tendency in American law and public opinion to draw the color line against us American citizens, in most of the relations of life, and to appeal, first, to the State and Federal, to "stand fast and acquit them as men," in fearless contention for equal rights and in enforcement of the laws of the land, State and Federal, and second, to the American people, and especially to the sons and daughters of the old soldiers "who gave their lives freely that we might have life more abundantly," to give us their sympathy and active support in the contention we are making for absolute justice, equally with others, in the making and enacting the laws, State and Federal, and against vicious public opinion which would prevent the race and color between citizens and citizens and Christians and Christians, all we being the Household of Faith, because the Nation has so decreed it.
Federal Policy to Draw Color Line.
We make this appeal at this time from the highest authority in the Nato Government to draw the color line, country denominate and denounce as such the service, nor for inferior' that they may employ, service, nor hold employments that sort of citizens, but that they must the Government departments and in of their working and eating, and of other Government, such employment having some office examination color was the test of preferment.
Refuse to Accept Segregation as Nato Don't
The contention set up by those k we justify complain to the protest a works no forfeiture of other be degrading and humiliating in its we do not accept, and which we do we will accept, as just to the goverm nowhere justified by the Federal Cor Path, nor by the history of the pea tell us bluntly that we are incapable grading and humiliating, our nerv rather than blunted by the policy of b by the present administration of the The questions involved are not only essentially political, and we believe as we do.
Segregation Policy Will E
We believe this Nation is passiona crisis that the issues of life and the people of the Nato have the judgment for or against the respon unrighteous policy of discriminating on account of race and color; a policy it adopted, extended indefinitely to the compose the national population.
We make this appeal at this time because it has been ascertained by us from the highest authority in the Nation that it is the policy of the Federal Government to draw the color line, to make what the newspapers of the country denounce and denounce as "Jim Crow Government," in which one sort of citizen it considered to be, as Chief Taney declared it in 1856, "so thin that they may not associate together in the same governmental service, nor hold employments that place them in authority over another sort of citizens, but that they are segregated in the work places, in the Government departments and in the Rowan M. Service, in the matter of their working and eating, and other relations, eminent by a common Government, such employment having, for the most part, been obtained in competitive civil service examinations where actual merit and not race and color was the test of preferment.
Refuse to Accept Segregation as Not Humiliating—Reflection to Say We Don't Feel It.
The contention set up by those highest in authority that the segregation we just complain of and protest against is not political in character and works no forfeiture of citizen rights, and is not supposed nor intended to be degrading and humiliating in its operations, is an interpretation which do not accept, and which we do not believe fair-minded American citizens will be degraded and fair or to fair us, as such segregation is nowhere justified by the Federal law, nor our common Christian Faith, nor by the history of the persecuted Jews in the past two thousand years; and, withal, it is a reflection upon our common tell us bluntly that we are incapable of feeling such segregation to be degrading and humiliating, our nervous sensitivities having been sharpened rather than blunted by the policy of segregation and negation of us practiced in the administration of the Government during the past two years. The questions raised are not only political in character, but vitally and essentially political, and we believe the Nation will so construe them, even as we do.
Segregation Policy Will Extend to Other Race Groups.
We believe this Nation is passing through both a physical and spiritual crisis and that the issues of life and death will be decided ultimately, when the people of the Nation shall be called upon in the usual way, to pronounce judgement for or against the responsible Government at Washington in its unrightful actions, in ignoring against the citizenship of the country on account of race and color; in policy of discrimination that can, and will be it adopted, extended indefinitely to the one hundred and one race groups that compose the national population.
Appeal Against it to God and Our Fellow-Men.
In conclusion we appeal from the announced policy and practices of our Government to the God who made us, and to our fellow citizens, who love justice and detest injustice, "the canker and the worm" that out of the life of Nations, in the firm belief that we shall not appeal in valu.
TROTTER'S SPECIFIC DENIAL OF
INSOLEENCE TO PRESIDENT.
Interview in Boston Globe of Nov. 17, 1914.
William Monroe Trotter, whose remarks on segregation in Government departments stirred President Wilson at a hearing in the White House last afternoon, and, after denying anything offensive either in his speech or manner, told of the way in which the report of the hearing was given to the president. "As we left the President," said Mr. Trotter, "I told him I was very sorry if he still considered that I had offended him. The President smiled and said: 'O, we'll call it all right.'" He said he had caused in Sec. Tumulty's room as to what we should say for the newspapers. I told the newspaper men briefly about the conference, merely describing it as a warm affair. White House when Mr. Tumulty called me back and said: "Trotter, you violated every courtesy of the White House in quoting the President to the press." I told Mr. Tumulty that I had done in ignorance of the rules, and apologized. He accepted my apology. Then I asked the newspaper not to publish what I told them, and they replied that Mr. Tumulty said he was satisfied and I left.
White House Statement Issued.
"The report of the conference was then given out from the White House. It seems very peculiar to me, after the President had told me everything was all right, that a White House official had told me that I had offended the President of the United States."
Did Not Lose Temper or Catechize?
"I want to say," he continued, "that neither in manner, language, tone nor in any other way was I discourteous, impertinent or insolent to President Wilson. Whole attitude was that of endeavoring, on the spur of the moment, to answer a piece of masterful sophistry and to refute it successfully and feeling a great responsibility to do so, I spoke with positiveness, deliberateness and directness, looking the President. I did not quiz or catechize the President, and I did not attempt to debate with him. The difficulty did not come until the President had been permitted to declare for segregation of my race and to say that I should be held accountable for influence and so represent it to my race.
"Although it was a trying ordeal to listen, taq such a statement at length by the Chief Executive of the Nation, who was also the temper, much less lost my temper."
DID THE PRESIDENT LOSE HIS HEAD?
(From the Philadelphia Press.)
It looks as though the result of the last week's meetings nerves and made him unreasonably irritable. In no other way can we account for the extreme sensitivity and quirkyresentation which he exhibited. He was also chairman of a delegation of Colored men undertook to show him that Colored employees were unfairly disrespectful to some of the executive departments.
There is nothing in Mr. Trotter's remarks as reported which discloses any ground for the President's resentment. Possibly the speaker's manner and aggressive and aggressive to suit the President. He turned on him as he once before turned on the woman suffrage delegation whose assertions and arguments were not to his taste and drove the President into making the absurd statement that he was not at liberty to vote. He had no place in the National Democratic platform. He told Trotter that the Colored people were segregated in the departments to avoid friction. But there was no friction until Mr. McAdoo and Mr. Burleson got into the Cabinet and began to enforce in their deference to the principle of the Jim Crow law.
The segregation practiced is wrong in principle because it is disagreeable and unfair to one class of public employees
who have a right to be treated by their Government without discrimination. The race affected had a right to be heard in their own behalf and showed a proper spirit in going directly to the President for their grievance. We fear that the President lost his head. He is certainly not so hard to these extempore statements, made under the irritation that so easily besets him as in his more studied deliverances which compel the admiration of his political opponents and often skillfully covered up the fallacies of his reasoning character of the policy he is commending.
THE COLOR LINE VEXES THE PRESIDENT.
(From New York Evening Mail.) It is hard to discover, in the rather fully published reports, any sufficient reason for the President's resentment toward him to abolish the policy of several Cabinet officers in drawing the color line in the Federal departments. The subject under discussion was the cause of the customs of fifty years and the customs of institution in establishing "Jim Crow" government. If the spokesman of the Equal Rights League waxed warm in urging the cause of his race, it is not wondered at. That he overstepped the bounds of propriety is not shown. That the President was vexed is all that appears in the published record. If any adequate reason for his exaction was supplied by Mr. Troter, it would surely have been disclosed. That there was reason for the President's ill temper is quite true, but it was supplied by the Cabinet members or the narrow-minded policy of segregated colored employees from white jobholders.
The incident recalls the similar vexation shown by the President when he abruptly dismissed an equal suffrage delegation on June 30 on the ground that he could not "submit to cross-examine" him. When a man is right, he usually will listen patiently to the other side; when he knows he is wrong he is very likely to fly off the handle.
TELEGRAM TO PRESIDENT WILSON BY DR. W. SINCLAIR, UNABLE TO BE PRESENT WITH DELEGATION.
Unavoidable circumstances make it impracticable for me to join the delegation as field secretary of the conference of states who are to present a memorial you on Thursday, the 12th inst., invoking your intervention against the segregation of government employees on the ground of race or color. You fully submit that such segregation violates the spirit and letter of the Constitution of the United States, forces colored employees, degrades of Colored institutions, is subservient of American institutions, contravenes every principle of righteousness and justice and is a shameful reproach to our Christian nation, which represents not the ideals of freedom ideals of slavery. We pray that you as the Christian President of this free and Christian nation will use your knowledge that there are more than amply sufficient to remedy this foul blot from our civilization.
(Signed), WM. A. SINCLAIR, Field Secretary Constitution League.
J. E. Milholland's Congratulatory Telegram.
Philadelphia, Pa., Nov. 13, 1914.
Mr. Wm. Monroe Trotter, Race Lead
er, The Guardian, Boston, Mass.
You have rendered great service.
That interview with the president is
a memorable event in the history of
the race struggle in America. You
wrote to Writer. Never has Mr. Wm.
Willerson congratulated you on such a display of
moral courage, answering loyalty and
genuine Americanism.
JOHN E. MILHOLLAND.
Leading Daily Newspapers of the Country Rebuke the President for Condoning the Jim Crow Policy, of the Southern Members of His Cabinet.
NO JIM-GROW GOVERNMENT.
(From the New York World.)
No President ever suffered more from the foolish indiscretions of members of his Cabinet than has Mr. Wilson. He had a further illustration of it yesterday in his unfortunate interview with a delegation of colored men to protest against the segregation of races in Government departments.
The President should have foreseen this unfortunate issue when Mr. McAdoo and Mr. Burleson were carrying a campaign for democratic government. Mr. Wilson, the committee that there had been no discrimination in the comforts and surroundings of the colored clerks, but explained that he had been informed that the race had been started to avoid friction between the races, and not with the object of injuring the colored men." The President failed to explain, nevertheless why no such rule had been considered, and Mr. McAdoo got into the Cabinet.
For nearly half a century white clerks and colored clerks have worked side by side in the departments of Washington, under republican and under democratic presidents. The World keeps itself fairly well informed about Washington affairs, but the first time a clerk in a alleged friction to which William offers was when mr. McAdoo began his creeings in the Treasury. Department
The president thinks that this is not a political question, but he is wrong. Anything that is unjust, discriminating, and in- American in government, is not a political question. Servants of the United States Government, regardless of race or color. For several years a colored man has been Collector of Internal Revenue for York. He never found it necessary to segregate the white employees of his department to prevent "friction"; yet he would have had quite as much right to do so as Mr. McAdoo had to segregate the colored members of the Treasury in Washington. While the Democrats of the country have been trying to solve certain great problems of government, a few members of the Cabinet have been able to solve petty local prejudice at the expense of the party's reputation for exact justice. Whether the President thinks so or not, the segregation was promulgated as a deliberate discrimination against colored employees.
Worse still, it is a small, mean, petty discrimination, and Mr. Wilson ought to have set his heel upon this presumptuous Jim-Crow government the moment it was established. He is to set his heel upon it now. It is a republic's administration and to the great political principles which he represents.
THE PRESIDENT AND SEGREGATION.
{From the New York Evening Post.}
It is a sad blot upon the Wilson Administration that it has tolerated, nay, drawn the color one, without real cause, save, as Mr. Trotter truthfully said, the racial antipathies of Messrs. Burke, Burke's liams and McAdon. For an Administration which talks about a New Freedom and boasts of having bestowed a new liberty upon business men, not only to be blind to the wrongs of full American citizens, but to add all the mischiefs discouraging Mr. Wilson can feel keenly governmental wrongs of the "submerged 85 per cent" of the people of Mexico, of whom so many are Indians and of a mixed parentage, but he has yet to say a really sympathetic word to the wrongs of the millions in the South who do not voice in their own government.
The difficulty lies, of course, in putting yourself in the other fellow's place, in having some appreciation of what it means to be the victim of what it means to be wrong without the power to remedy wrong. That Mr. Wilson is unable to visualize this is, we repeat, the more disappointing because there are so many injured persons with whom he must deal, and in standing, His unusual vision and imminent leave him, however, when it comes to the disfranchisement of women and to permitting his subordinates to inflict indignities upon American citizens, he must be one of White House. If he could only be one of the submerged 10 per cent of our people in Washington for forty-eight hours he could never have palliated the wrong done, as he is reported to have done, by saying that segregation was enforced on him, and the interests of both races, in order to overcome friction. He would know then that it makes neither for the comfort nor for the best interests of the people, and it likely leads to added friction and creases lasting unhappiness among the segregated. This problem has vexed him and caused him heart-ache more than once in his Administration, and it will not be to plunge him to he lay down the power to us in equality of treatment of all employees in the Government service.
Again, Mr. Wilson is reported to have resented Mr. Trotter's statement that if this discrimination were not ended, the Afro-Americans who voted in the 2010 election conducted a ticket, and have declared that this was "political blackmail." But this is the time-honored American way of showing disapproval of an elective candidate for President. Mr. Wilson was a candidate for President in he declared: "Should I become President of the United States, they (the colored people) may count upon me for absolute fair dealing and for every advantage I could assist in advancing the interest of the United States. On the strength of this many colored people and their white friends advocated Mr. Wilson's cause, who would rather have cut off his son if they had known that he was intending to draw the color line in the departments upon the excuse that there is a certain point in the relations of the races where friction must be avoided, the absolute fair dealing not adversely because, but putting it back, because it sets the stamp of governmental approval upon color prejudice. To expect after this that the problem can be solved by politics, as Mr. Wilson is quoted as urging, is to expect the impossible.
With Mr. Wilson's feelings as to the ultimate solution of the race problem, we are not today concerned. He may or may not have a constructive solution. We simply whether a hateful East Indian estate shall be established in Washing-
ton or not. We had supposed, after the investigations of last winter, that the vicious policy had been checked; we understood that it was to be abandoned in numerous instances the Jim-Crowning incident has been stopped. The more discouraging it is to find the President apparently upholding what the World just calls the "foolish indiscretions of members" of the United States. There was no genuine complaint in Washington. Colored and white employees had worked side by side for fifty years. Some of them had been appointed by Grover Cleveland—one of his appointees to high place beware of the Fifty-fifth Massachusetts. But the Wilson Administration went out of its way to create the issue it now deplores, and cannot see its way clear to admitting its mistake and re-asserting only defensible position of absolute equality in the Government service.
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The way to deal with race prejudice in such matters is not to enhance it by yielding, but resolutely to conceive it with a refusal to give in. It is surprising how much prejudice away in a given situation when it finds itself wholly blocked. It is even more surprising how frequently it is merely a state of wind. Often there is no objection whatever to the presence of colored people on the most familiar side of the street, but it is clearly stamped as mental; let them deeply aspire to equal privileges, and those same people become at once too offensive to be permitted to breathe the same atmosphere. The situation in Washington would be restored in a separate, absolutely satisfactory status; if the same authority were simply to lay down the law that there was going to be a square deal for everybody in the departments without the slightest disjunction, that there can be only one dissatisfactory policy—all to be treated with courtesy, consideration, and absolute justice.
THE PRESIDENT AND SEGREGA TION.
(From The Indianapolis News.) The government, which makes laws for the state, from all, and summons all alike to from all, and time of war, cannot rightly make such distinctions. When men and women enter the public service they must be competent to the principle. No one is compelled enter it, but having made his choice he should comply with the conditions of his employment. It is not wholly economic, as Mr. Wilson seemed to think it was—it is political as well, not in the narrow partisan, but in the broad sense. The people of the United States, by their government, oppose the adoption by their government what thing resembles the Jim Crow policy.
THE PRESIDENT AND THE AFRO-AMERICAN.
We are not ready to conclude that any body of citizenship has less standing under the law than any other. If the south wishes to make any such issue as this it will find that the north, where there is prejudice, is nevertheless restless when as a part of the state we declare that the main principle of the nation is a piece of hypocrisy and does not apply where it is inconvenient.
DR. SPINGARN'S SECOND TOUR
Well-Known White Advocate of Justice to Tour Country Again.
Dr. J. E. Spingarn, chairman of the board of directors of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and one of the most conspicuous leaders in justice and equal rights for Afro-American students to make a second tour of the country in the interests of the cause of our race. It will be remembered that last summer addressed meetings in Detroit, Chicago, Topeka, St. Louis, Indianapolis, and Cleveland, attracting very large audiences wherever he went, and nearly everywhere winning wide publicity in the United States for the cause of justice to the Negro.
Dr. Springarn will speak at Wilmington, Delaware, on November 22nd, at Howard University, Washington, D.C. on November 23rd, and at Harrisonburg, Pa. on November 24th. His main tour, which will be the next January, and he then expect visits in Pittsburgh, Buffalo, Dayton, Columbus, Springfield, St. Joseph, Omaha, Des Moines, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Milwaukee, and other cities. He hopes by succeeding tours to cover every country and to carry his burning mission, the whole nation. All those who are interested in his coming tour, which like all his other work for our race is carled on entirely at his own expense, can obtain further information from the National Nerney, secretary of the National Association for the advancement of Colored People, 70 Fifth Avenue, New York City.
Dr. Spingarn was for twelve years Professor of Comparative Literature in Columbia University, New York, and he is a writer and scholar of Indian literature. He has taught this cause not only learning and ripe scholarship, but eloquence, practical experience, and a passionate sincerity. He was born in New York thirty-nine years ago, and for the last ten years he has given uninterrupted devotion to the study of Indian literature, of independent means, who has asked pay of any kind for this work. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, of which he is chairman, has a membership of about 5,000, with branches in over thirty cities all over the country; he has published under its direction, has a circulation of over 35,000 a month. Among its other directors are Miss Jane Addams and Dr. C. E. Bentley of Chicago, Archibald H. Ghrimek of Boston, John E. Garrison of Boston, and Oswald Garrison. John E. Mihiland, Rev. John Haynes Holmes, Dr. W. E. B. Du Buf, Charles Edward Russell, Miss Lillian D. Wald, Miss Mary White Owington, Mrs. Florence Kelley, Paul Kennaday, and William English Walling of New York. It is in which both white and colored people work together for the equal rights of black folk.
Superiors Never Burn Inferiors.
(Portland Advocate.)
A superior race will not lynch and burn an inferior simply because they have the power. Tenure crimes and brutalities will not be permitted against human beings by a superior race and then seek to find a peace for an injured conscience simply on the basis of color.
fs Ses eld
8ST. PAUL
WEEK'S RECORD OF HAPPENINGS
IN MINNESOTA'S CAPITOL.
‘The “Saintly City” and Saintly City
Folks—Newsy Items of Social, Re
ligious, Political and General Mat-
ters. Among the People.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1914
‘Thanksgiving 1s over, now get ready
for Christmas,
Would you know the value of
money, try to borrow some. i
Sunday, Nov. 29, is to be Tubercu-
losis Day in all the churches.
‘Mr. Charles S. Waldon, 415 Carroll
street, is still confined to his home
with pleurisy.
‘The fair at Zion Presbyterian church
which has been In progress this week
was quite a success.
Watch and wait ye all, for the
Grand Christmas Ball at Bowlby Hall,
Sixth and Robert, St. Paul.
FOR RENT—Furnished room for
man and wife or two men. Apply at
458 St. Anthony avenue. 10-28
The goosebone prognosticator, Uncle
Joe Patterson of Logansport, Ind., saya
this winter will be a mild one.
W. T. FRANCIS
WHO FOR A NUMBER OF
“EmRS WAS IN THE EMPLO
DF THE LEGAL DEPART.
MENT OF THE NORTHERN
PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY
AS OPENED OFFICES FOR
THE GENERAL PRACTICE OF
THE LAW AT 8 AND ©
UNION BLOCK, 8T. PAUL,
Advertisement,
ce
‘The three night bazaar at Pilgrim
Baptist church this week was fairly
roll attended and was tainly success:
ul.
‘The case of Maurice DeBaptiste was
called in Municipal Court last Wed-
nesday and he was held to the grand
Jury.
Rey. H. H. Wells left last Monday
for Seattle, Wash., where he will as-
sist Rey. W. D. Carter in a protracted
meeting.
Articles mailed to THE APPEAL
for publication must bear the name
and address of the sender, to insure
publication.
Get ready to attend the big enter-
tainment under the auspices of the
Colored Business Men's Association,
Jan, 26, 1915.
It you have anything good to say
of THE APPEAL tell it to you:
friends. If you have anything bad, tell
It to “Hustiing” Morgan, the agent.
Just bear in mind that the Union
Hall Association will give an enter-
tainment at Bowlby Hall, Wednesday
evening, Dec. 16. Further particulars
later.
Rev. A. H, Lealtad was the victim
of a sneak thief last Wednesday, who
ransacked the house but succeeded
in finding only. $2.50 with which he de-
camped.
"Both Phones 608 St. Paul, Minn |
1. H, LYLES. |
Funeral Directors and Embalmere |
so W. Fourth st.
res. 678 8t. Anthony, Tel, Dale 2047 |
Cate Answered Day or Night Ur
‘Twin Cities, ‘
Active Pall Bearere Furnished |
Desired, ‘
Lady Assistant When Necessary. ‘
eeeeeeerereeeeeeesetenesettem
FOR RENT—Nicely furnished and
decorated room with alcove. South-
ern exposure, quiet surroundings, near
car line. Apply at THE APPEAL of-
fice. 11-28.
Mr. Clifford A. Smith, the tailor, has
moved his business out on University
avenue between Western and Arundel.
Fine poreh and yard. Tel. T. S. 2557—
Advertisement 8-29.
Mrs, Dovie Campbell arrived at
home Wednesday to take a little need-
ed rest from her singing engagements
while visiting her parents Mr. and
Mrs, Joseph Adams.
‘Thanksgiving Day was, as usual,
quite generally observed throughout
the city, with services and dinners at
the churches. There were many pri
vate dinner parties,
‘Miss Clio and Master Gerald Hun-
ton who have spent several days in
the city with their grandfather Mr.
‘Wm, Liggins, left Tuesday evening for
their home, Montreal, Can.
SPIRELLA CORSET, Cora B. Ap-
derson corsetier. Any lady wishing
to be properly corsetted call or ad:
Wanted to buy a home.
He found one that suit-
ed; the price was $1,400,
payments $100 cash, bal-
ance $15 monthly. *
Did he have the hundred
in the Savings Bank?
If he did he got the
house. .
STATE SAVINGS BANK
$3 Eat Fourth Street
“HUMAN NATURE’S FOULEST BLOT.”
My ear is pained
My soul is sick with every day’s report
Of wrong and outrage, with which earth is filled.
There is no flesh in man’s obdurate heart.
It does not feel for man: the natural bond
Of brotherhood is severed as the flax
That falls asunder at the touch of fire.
He finds his fellow guilty of a skin
Not colored like his own: and having power
To enforce the wrong, for such a worthy cause
Dooms and devotes him as his lawful prey.
* * * * * *
Thus man devotes his brother, and destroys:
’Tis human nature’s broadest foulest blot.
—Cowper.
WANTED, A SAMARITAN.
Prone in the road he lay.
Wounded and sore bestead:
Priests, Levites past that way,
And turned aside the head.
vu They were not hardened men
In human service slack:
His need was great: but then
His face, you see, was black. '
From the New York Independent. :
ale 1345.—Advertisement,
Friends and well wishers of St
Philips Episcopal Sunday School are
invited to attend Sunday . School
exercises Sunday, November 29th, }
p.m, Rev. A. H. Lealtad, Rector.
Mr James A. Vass ls now the pro
prietor of the night lunch wagon on
Bighth street between Wabasha and
Cedar. When you are hungry call on
him, ‘Open from 5 p. m. to 2 a, m.
Mrs. C. 8, Waldon, 415 Carroll street
was tendered a little surprise party
Monday evennig of last week by a
number of friends from Minneapolis.
They spent a very delightful evening.
Mrs, Berdella Driver, proprietor of
“The Imperial” corner ’of Rondo and
Arundel streets, is now prepared to
serve meals and hot lunches at all
hours, on short notice. Go and try
‘em.
WANTED—At once, a neat appear-
ing, respectable couple to care for a
small house. Use of dining room,
kitchen and bed room in exchange for
the service. No washing. Tel. Dale
3316,
If your wife ts ailing buy her « GOS-
SARD CORSHT and she will be in
better SHAPH than ever before. For
sale by Mrs. J. B, Cloak, 292 St. Al-
bans street. N. W. Phone, Dale 2076.
—Advertisement.
HAIR CULTURE--Scalp Treatment
and Hair Culture. Any one wishing
the PORO treatment and PORO Hair
Grower, should apply to Mrs.'@. W.
Bell, 1776 W. Minnehaha street, St
Paul, Minn.—Advertisement, 5-2.
Have you tried the meals and
lunches at THE IMPERIAL, corer
Rondo and Arundel? ,They are low
priced and wholesome. ‘From 10 cents
up. Try the Special Sunday dinner
from 12 to 7 o'clock, for 30 cents.
F. H. Harm & Bro. opticians and
Jewelers, are now located at 492 Wab-
asha street in the Shubert Building,
where they will welcome old and new
customers. It you want honest work
and goods at fair prices call on them.
VOCAL AND PIANO LESSONS
GIVEN BY MRS. ADDIE CRAW-
FORD-MINOR, AT HER RESIDENCE,
820 FARRINGTON AVE, HOURS
ARRANGED TO SUIT PUPILS.
TERMS VERY REASONABLE. TEL.
DALE 1597.
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Utley have is
sued invitations for the wedding re-
‘ception of their daughter Florence
Elizabeth and Mr. Henry Gilchrist
Johnson, Tuesday evening, Dec. 8,
from 8:30 to 10:30 o'clock, 818 Ed:
mund street.
“SHINE 'EM UP!” When you wish
your shoes shined or polished in the
most artistic and satisfactory style,
go to the PEOPLES’ SHINING PAR-
LOR, W. H. Porter, Propr, 349 Min-
nesota street, between 4th and Sth—
Advertisement.
Mrs. Julia Hinson, proprietor of the
St. Louis Kitchen, 136 E. Third street,
‘up stairs, has moved her dining room
Just across the hall from its old loca-
tion, She is also again serving regu-
lar ‘dinners at 25 cents and Sunday
dinners at 35 cents.
‘The Dale Street Provision Co., 393
Dale street, corner of W. Central, is
doing considerable toward reducing
the high cost of living by selling their
meats and groceries at greatly re-
duced prices, If you are trom Mis-
sourl call and they will show you.
The St. Louis Kitchen has been
moved from its former quarters to
‘just across the hall at 138 E Third
street up stairs, where the same good
home cooked meals may be found at
moderate prices. Mrs. Julia Hinson,
Cedar 6090. Regular dinner 25 cents
ST. LOUIS KITCHEN, 136 E. Third
street, up stairs. Mrs. ‘Julia Hinson,
proprietor. A la carte ‘meals at all
hours from 7:00 a. m. to 8:00 p.m.
All home cooking, Regular dinner
12:00 to 2:30 at 26 cents. Sunday
dinner 1 to 3 p. m, 35 cents. Tel.
ease 6090.
He. came unto His own, and His
own received Him not.
But as many as received Him, to
them gave He power to become ‘the
sons of God, even to them that believe
on His name—St, John 1:11, 12.
‘Your church néeds you in its serv-
ices —E. W. Gilles.
‘The piace to have your shoe re
| pairing done in the best possible way
at the lowest possible price is a
YARVIS', 104-106 East Fifth street
He has'a completé stock of men's
women's and boys’ shoes of the bes
grades for the money to be found’ in
tho clty.—Advertisement, ,
| QUICK LUNCH.—When you wish
to get something good to eat in a
hurry call at “Utley's Place,” No. 30
East Fourth street and try PRES
TON'S LUNCH. . Home cooked meals
and lunches at all hours from 7:00
a. m. to 11:30 p. m. Special break
fast ‘trom 7:00 to 10:00 a, m. 16
cents.
| THE BUSY BEE CAFE, 317 Waba-
sha street (upstairs), W. F. T. Chand.
ler proprietor. Unexcelled cuisine.
First class home cooked meals » la
carte at all hours, A splendid regu:
lar dinner served from 11:30 o. m.
to 3:00 p, m, at 25 cents, Open day
and night, Tel. N. W. Cedar 4525.—
Advertisement.
Owing to peculiar circumstances the
“Question mark” entertainment at St.
James A. M. E. Church last Thursday
evening was far from being what the
management had hoped. The features
were a plano solo by Miss Lora Cuth-
bert and a very clever performance
in parlor magic by Mr. Arthur White,
“the Boy of Mystery.”
‘The funeral of Mrs. L. Davis was
held at Pilgrim Baptist Church last
Monday afternoon. It was conducted
by Rev. D. B. Beasley assisted by Rev.
M. W. Withers. There was avery
large ‘turnout of the friends of the
deceased and the floral offerings were
quite numerous. Lyles funeral direc-
tor, interment at Forest cemetery.
There will be a meeting of the St.
Paul Forum at Zion Presbyterian
church, Farrington and St. Anthony
avenues, tomorrow afternoon at 4:00
oclock.' ‘There will the election
of officers and other business. Mr.
J.P, Anderson will deliver an ad-
dress. “J. H. Zedricks, chairman; A.
G. West, secretary. ‘Public cordially
Invited.
ST. MARTIN EXPRESS AND
FUEL CO. Vietor St. Martin, pro-
prietor, 383 Rondo street, corner of
Western, Baggage moved to all parts
of the city. Wood and coal in large
and small ‘quantities. Phone N. W.
Dale 5194; Residence, Dale 3248.
Your partonage solicited. Quick serv.
fee, satisfaction guaranteed.
One day this week Miss Cecile
Young, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Tracey Young, 892 Rice street, met
with a serlous accident. She was
leaning on the railing of the back
porch when it gave way and she fell
about 14 feet, spraining both ankles
and her right knee and has been con-
fined to her bed ever since, but 1s
improving slowly.
The So-Lit Club was entertained at
the residence of Mrs. Tennie E. White,
892 Rice Street, with Mr. J. R. White,
Jr, a8 host. There was a full turn:
out of members of the club and a few
friends, Whist was the feature. Dainty
refreshments were served. The occa-
sion was very enjoyable. The prize
winners were: Miss Charlotte Gillard,
Miss Ida Loomis and Mr. John Neal;
Mrs. J. H. Glass and Mr. Allie Fea-
man were awarded ““boobys.”
‘The Hilyard Orchestra, W. A, Hil-
yard, director, had the honor of sup-
plying the music for the banquet and
dance at the “Grand Opening and
House Warming” of the new Masonic
Temple, of Newport Lodge No. 118,
‘A. F. and A. M., at St. Paul Park, on
Noy. 18. This was brought about by
the friendship of some of the members
of the lodge for director Hilvard’s
father, the late James Kidd Hilyard,
who was an enthusiastic Mason and
musician and the founder of the Hil
yard Orchestra. It is needless to say
that the orchestra filled the bill in
every particular.
$4.50 PER TON
Splint Coal for Stoves, Ranges
and ‘Furnaces
HOLMES & HALLOWELL CO.
7 Corners Phone 401
The progressive dinner of the H. Y.
W. K. club last Tuesday evening was
a very enjoyable affair. The dinner
“hikers” asembled at the residence of
Mrs. Margaret Owens an St. Anthony
ave., at 8:00 o'clock, where soup and
fish "were served; then they hiked to
Mrs, O, H, Allens on Aurora ave. and
Partook of the meat course, then Mrs.
J. Riley’s on University ave. where a
delicious fruit salad was served; then
they meandered to Mad. Notah Wil-
son's on Charles street, where ico
cream, cake, coffee and chocolate were
served. Altogether it was a very de-
Ughtful occasion.
‘The Twin City Charity Club covered
itself with glory with its splendid
‘Thanksgiving Dinner that was served
at the residence of Mrs, B. C. Cole-
man, 574 Fuller street. From 1:30 to
10:30 p. m. Thursday the house was
very handsomely decorated with crepe
paper, purple and white, the club's
colors, palms, ferns and ‘cut flowers.
‘The dinner was delicious and the ser-
vice was perfect. This club is due
much more consideration than has
been given for it is constantly doing
something to help the poor and needy
fn & quiet, unostentatious way. The
public should respond when ever this
Worthy organization makes an appeal
in any way.
HERE
Under the Auspices of Minnesota Pub-
lie Health Aagociation.
“Health Week” begins tomorrow,
with Tuberculosis Sunday, when at
all the churches sermons will be
preached on the dread disease. To
help the fund, Red Cross Christmas
Seale will be on sale almost every.
where, be sure to buy some and paste
them ‘on your letters and packages
and thus help the cause. Price one
cent each.
FLL
Ag eae
NOES
eee
Ped
baa { iS
ie y EaRESS)
aad
Christmas is old, the SEAL is new,
May both bring health and joy to you.
King Tuberculosis squeals,
R Vets
See
\celtitas 9 a
| een :
Every time that you buy SEALS,
‘The White Plague Ghost goes whim-
pering round,
iid RE CROSS A)
ress oy
Pee
Ree
(his ae
Please DON’T buy SEALS, or I'll be
downed.
‘THE “LIVE TIMBER” RALLY
The “Live Timber”. rally of St.
James A. M. E. Church, owing to vari-
ous causes, was not so successful
as was hoped for, but,those who did
Lillie A, Porter.......6..0.00++ $6.25
Paul Caldwell ..0020000020001127"5.00
Wri. M. Camnon.....002000052 6.00
Bila B. Adams .002000000000.22 6.00
John Watson 000. 2..0000000052 8.00
A. Davenport oo... .icccceeees 5.00
T. HLyle6e.-cccscdececess eee B00.
Wm. A. Weir... 02D 8.00
Mary Stafford ..22../.022.0002. 6.00
Amelia Jackson 2.002.000.0111 5.00
8. J. Bellesen...22000000000221 5.00
R. W. Allen...00020000 000000000, 8.00
J.C. Broyles... 02... 22 2.0605 8.00
J. H. Charleston. 22.0002020012222 5,00
EB. W. Crancum....0.02020000001 5.00
J. H. Dillingham................ 5.00|
Mary Dillingham. ...00..00..002. 5.00
Sarah Dover....2..0.022.c0cce0 5.00
Mrs. England...2....22..0c.cccss 200
Sadie Johnson .....000.0..222111 5.00
Charlotte Lewis...00000000022111 5.00
Geo. B, Lowe. .....ceeceessceeess 5.00
Gertrude Milton. 2200200222111) 5.00
William Stafford. 20 20.000020.11 5:00
C. W. Williams..000000.000220111 5100
S.C. Waldon.:.0000.00000000012 5.00
Mrs. C. Brown.......cssccscesess 3:00
Mary MoClain ...0000.000000011" 2.00
Mra, C. Brown... .2..c0.c2.0. 2.00
Fannie Bennett ...0........0s005 2,00
Charles Alexander <..21......." 1100
Marguerite De Tienne.-........ 1,00
R. H, Meyera.......000000022) 1100
G. W. Bell... ccosessseteeseseice 100
Laura Greer e..e...cccscsssseee 1.00.
A. H. Lewla.... 02000200000 150
William Lyles ................ 50
SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE
VAULTS--We invite your inspection.
It costs little to place your valuable
papers, cash, securities: and other val-
uables in absolute safety, Boxes in
our vaults can be had for $4 per year.
Store your boxes, trunks, etc, wih
us. Northwestern Trust Co,, 138 En-
dicot Arcade—Auvertisement,
; “Beer ' Pact.”
| Professor Charles Frederick Chana-
ler of Columbia University, a well
known chemist, declares that beer is
the best brain food.? In a recent ad-
dress he said: “Beer is a beverage
prepared from barley, water, hops and
yeast. Beer is food. American beer
contains 6 per cent solid food, oniy
3 to 4 per cent alcohol and also
lecithin, which is real brain food.
Beer and bread both made from cer-
eals; bread with water and is solid;
beer with more water and ts liquid.
Yeast converts both into palatable and
readily digested food. Both contain
alcohol. Beer is not intoxicating in
ordinary quantities and beer is one
of the foods that is tree from bac-
teria, It {s appetizing and aids di-
gestion. I don’t believe there is any
beer made in the United States that is
whet you call adulterated. It may be
misbranded, but not adulterated. If
the prohibitionists drive beer from the
household they will deprive a large
part of the population of a wholesome
article of food.”
‘The Valet Tailoring Co.
The Valet Tailoring Co., 154 E. Sixth
street, Mr. Owen Howell, manager, s
about’ to branch out in great shape,
Mr. J. H. Charleston has secured an
interest in the firm and in a short
time they will open at 319% Robert
street the greatest establistment in
thelr iine in the olty, They will run
an all night tallor and renovating shop.
Like “Cascarets” they will “work
while you sleep.” Send. your clothes
to them at night when you go to. bed
and-they will deliver them to you
Dr.H.1. WILLIAMS
‘Announces bis NEW method of
PAINLESS DENTISTRY
I positively guarantee to extract teeth and remove nerves
ABSOLUTELY PAINLESSLY
Get prices here before going eleewhera
A Written Guarantee for 20 Years Given With All Work,
Dr. Williams, 27 E. 7th St |
TEL. C. 6132 KENDRICK BLDG. 2ND FLOOR ‘ST. PAUL
HOWARD UNIVERSITY |
Stephen M. Newman, A. M,, D. D., President
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND | COMMERCIAL COLLEGE
SCIENCES Bookkeeping
* A.B. and B. 8, Courses Stenography |
TEACHERS COLLEGE Typewriting |
SCHOOL OF MANUAL ARTS Economics, Eto.
AND APPLIED SCIENCES LIBRARY SCHOOL
Courses In Engineering PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS
estic. Science
Seen SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY
Renee ‘Arts SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
College of Medicine
CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC
‘ACADEMY College of Dentistry
Three Preparatory Courses| -_-ollege of Pharmacy
(Classic, Scientific, Normal) SCHOOL OF LAW
All Courses Begin September 30th, 1914
For Catalogues, Address, Howard University
‘Washington, D. 0. ”
in good order the next morning. They
will have a special messenger, auto,
taxi and parcel delivery service, night
and day. The Sixth street establish-
ment will be continued also. Watch
for the opening of the new place about
Dee. 1.
CAN YOU DANCE?
Winstead's Dancing School, 185 E.
Seventh street is opening for the fall
season after running for the past thir-
teen years continuously. This is the
only dancing school in St. Paul that
teaches by mail. Among the dances
taught are: Lulu Fado, Maxixe, Fox
Trot, One Step, Castle Walk, Castle
Polka, Half and Half, Baltimore,
Crown Princess Waltz, Lame Duck,
Tango, Congo ‘Schottische, Walking
Boston, Dream Waltz. etc. These
are the latest dances. Appoint.
ments made only by phone or mail.
Seven private lessons $16.00. Regular
class lessons consisting of eight les-
sons $12.00. Phone Cedar 8101. Learn
to dance gracefully, not to walk, and
don't be a wall flower.
‘Attention Elks!
|, The members of Gopher Lodge 105
1. B. P. 0. E. are hereby notified that
the ‘next meet of Gopher Lodge will
be held on Wednesday evening, Dec.
16 at 8:30 o'clock. Please bear in
mind that the election of officers will
occur on that evening and all mem-
bers. are urged to be present. Of
course the members of the order will
temember that the joint annual ser-
‘mon will be held at St. James A, M. E.
church on the first Sunday in Decem-
der, 6th, at 8:00 o'clock p. m. It is
desired that every Elk in good stand-
tng will be present.
—_—__—_.
| SENATOR MOSES CLAPP.
To be the Speaker at the Great Meet-
Ing at Plymouth Congregational
Church.
‘The St. Paul Branch of National As-
sociation for the Advancement of Col-
ored People has secured Hon. Moses
Clapp. junior United States Senator
for Minnesota to deliver an address
Before the Association at Plymouth
‘Congregational church, Sunday even-
ing, Dee. 6, at 8:00 o'clock sharp, Ev-
erybody urged to be present.
LEARN SHORTHAND.
Owing to difficulty experienced by
our young men and women in securing
instraction in the Business Colleges in
St, Paul, Mrs. W. T. Francis has been
asked to give regular evening instruc:
tion in SHORTHAND, and those de-
siring to join an organized class in
shorthand may do so by applying to
Mrs. Francis, 606 St. Afthony avenue.
ygReeuler classework begins October
Russians and Americans Alike.
(Nashville Globe.)
It will be a “commendable event in
the march of civilization” if the war
brings freedom to the Jews in Russia,
but we fear the Russians are wholly
like their cousins, aunts and uncles in
America and will, after the war, drop
back into the time-worn habit of see-
ing around the beam in their own
eye the mote in their neighbor's.
Employes Who Get By.
(Chicago Defender.)
‘That our men and women are su-
perior in every way to the average
wage earner found in these stores is
count when prejudice steps In, so we
must fight fire with fire, and those that
are able to “get by” peace be with
them and it is our duty not to hinder
them in any way.
THE EMPORIUM AND THE BENE.
FICIARY LODGES.
The Emporium Dept. Store has
opened a bureau for the convenience
of Lodge members who-cannot atte ad
thelr meetings to pay thelr dues. Such
persons may leave their money with
Mr. F. D. RALPH at the general of-
fices on the 4th floor, taking a receipt
therefor; td be passed on by Mr.
Ralph, at the proper time, to their
financial officer. ‘This will prove a
great convenfence’and a genuine sav.
ing to those folks who now spend time
and car fare perhaps making two or
more trips, to the homes or offices of
their finance secretaries, or | buy
money .orders and pay postage... The
Emporium offers this service without
any charge whatsoever, just as an ac
commodation to such’ as desire t
make-use of it. A number of Orders
‘in the clty are arranging to accept th
convenience, beginning with Novers
ber.
a
For the Bigges tHit of
the Season
GIVEN BY THE
D. Y. W. Y. K. CLUB
THE CHARITY FUND
—aT—_
TSCHIDA HALL
Lafond and Arundel Sts.
Friday Eve., Dec. 11
Good Music and a Good
Time For All
EVERYBODY INVITED
ADMISSION 25 CENTS
We Only Pay Sick Benefits
ational Bureau of
Eureka Council
Of America
J. L. MURCHISON
2815 Gravier St. NEW ORLEANS, LA.
i wine Raita as
‘ ST. MARTIN
EXPRESS AND FUEL
COMPANY
Victor St. Martin, Prop. |
BAGGAGE MOVED TO ANY PART
OF THE CITY |
WOOD AND COAL IN LARGE on
SHALE QUANTITIOS
$89.Rondo Street «ST. PAUL
Cor. ‘Rondo and Western
Brotchner’s Pharmacy
Rondo & Dale Sts, ST. Page
MRS, W. B. ELLIOTT & CO,
Staple and Fancy Groceries, Ice
Cream, Cigars, Confectionery
and Notions
411 University Ave, ‘ST. PAUL
suITe RESSED
j VALET TAILORING Go |
166 &. SIXTH ST
THE 7
&, |
BEST
nS SS Bo) Mates
: AAs LOM en leh as
Bie
‘2 DENTISTRY
De JOHN R. FRENCH
DENTIST .
First Class, Guaranteed Work in
All Branches of Dentistry
“Snir. Be ST, PAUL
a
Phone Dale 5029 Prompt Delivery
The Imperial
BIRDELLA DRIVER, PROP.
LUNCH ROOM IN CONNECTION,
A LA CARTE SERVICE AT ALL
HOURS.
Confectionery, ice Gream, Soda and
‘Sundaes, Cigars
GROCERIES
Fresh Fruita and Vegetables
M1 Rondo ST. PAUL
Office Cedar 1673
Dr. Valdo Turner
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Kendrick Block, 27 H. 7th
OFFICE HOURS
$tolla.m.,12tolp.m,3toS9.m.
Sundays 10 to lla. m,
Res. 386 St Albans Tel. Dale 918
—X—X—X—_—
Cear «190 PHONES «=m. 8, 947
Geo.W. Nelson
DRUGGIST
Full Stock of Pure Drugs, Proprietary
Medicines, Druggists’ Sundries,
Toilet Articles, Candies,
Soda, Cigars, Etc.
High Brown and High Brown De Luxe
Powder a Specialty.
ORDERS DELIVERED
Cor. Wabasha and Summit, St. PAUL
Ms W. PHONE DALE 3678
Mrs. A. Wilson
PASHIONABLE DRESSMAKING
—a~no—
LADIES’ TAILORING
491 University Ave, ST. PAUL
Tel. Dale 7817 City References
MADAME L. A. PORTER,
Shampooing, Halr Dressing, Manicuring,
Facial Massage, Scalp” Treatment.
Switches Made to Order, Sore Corns.
Ingrowing Nalle, Bunlone, Removes.
TRY PORTER'S WONDERFUL HAIR
anowen.
860 Fuller St, ST. PAUL
7m, maRe ww. onmEr
oPrommenrer waremuaren
F. H. HARM & BRO.
Sewelers & Opticians
402 Wanaewa Sranez
see ST. PAUL
Otfiee Cedar 8582 rons, Res. Dale 2419,
J. S. STRONG
DEALER IN
Real Estate 4p Insurance
Handles Farm Lands and City Prop-
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THE COINGS IN AND ABOUT THE
GREAT "FLOUR CITY."
Matters Social, Religious and General
Which Have Happened and are to
Happen Among the People of the City.
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1914
J. N. SELLERS, MANAGER
2812 Tenth Avenue So.
Tel. N. W. South 3372.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Donaldson
are now located at 720 Bryant Ave. N.
The Twin City Maids and Matrons
have issued invitations for a dancing
party, Monday evening, Nov. 30, at
Masonic Hall.
The Lee Sewing Circle will hold a
fair at St. Peter A. M. E. church on
Tuesday and Wednesday evenings,
December 1st and 2nd.
There is a rumor current in the city that Mr. Donaldson of the Glass Block will not give employment to any but person of the Catholic faith. The rumor is without foundation in fact and no attention need to be paid to it.
WHEN IN ST. PAUL, go to the St. Louis Kitchen. No. 136 E. Third street upstairs, for your meals. Meals to order from 7:00 a.m. m. to 8:00 p.m. m. Regular Sunday dinner to 1 to 3 p. m. 35 cts. All home cooking. Mrs. Julla Hinson, Prop. Tel. Cadar 6090. Regular dinner 25 cents.
Mr. and Mrs. B. S. Smith entertained the So-Lit. Club Friday evening of last week. Whist was the feature. Dining refreshments were served. The first prize was won by Miss Adina Adams, the second by Miss Clara Howard and the booby by Miss Lucille James, all of St. Paul.
The Thanksgiving Ball of Judge Johnson last Thursday night was a hummer. There was an immense crowd present and everybody had "one more time." His next ball will be the great "Maxie Ball" on Thursday, Dec. 10. If you're looking for a good time don't miss it.
Miss Edna Shull celebrated the anniversary that made her "sweet sixteen" Friday evening of last week at the residence of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. There were upward forty of the young folks present and all had a splendid time. The young lady received a large number of beautiful and useful presents.
The Young Men's Progressive Club gave its Thanksgiving Eve Ball at National Guard Armory on last Wednesday evening and it was a swell, grand affair. The only thing that was wanting was a larger number of patrons. They had enough to pay extras, not much over to put in the treasury, but the able work they are engaged in. Why the good citizens do not rally to the support of this organization is something no one can understand.
SAVE TO BUY A HOUSE.
Make your deposits in the STATE SAVING BANK. Deposits made on or entitled to the 6th of December, will be entitled to the 7th months' dividend. July 1st, 1915.
RIGHT YOU ARE!
A person who publishes a weekly newspaper is a candidate for both the poor-house and the lunatic asylum. In he stays in the business long enough to eventually appear as to which place finally secures his person as 'R'-rohmond (Va.) Planet.
Mighty Tired Waiting. (Richmond Planet.)
Colored office-seekers are "mighty tired" waiting. Living on Wilson promises for more than twelve months is not a very pleasant performance and it does not satisfy the cravings of political hunger or of any other kind.
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Directors Spurn Attempt of Hired Secretary to Exclude Persons from Membership Because of Color-Re-affirm Non-Segregation Policy of Last 60 Years-Fight Made by New England Suffrage League and Branch of N. A. A. C. P.
THE FLOUR
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Painting, Plumbing, Paper-Hanging, Plastering, Brick and Concrete Work
(Special to the Guardian.)
Providence, R. I. At last the decision of the board of directors of the Y. M. C. A. has been handed down and it resolved itself into a very resolution which was set forth in a resolution offered to the committee on membership, which was as follows:
The Victory.
The Providence Journal published the following report:
That no distinction because of race or sect will be considered in receiving applications for membership in the Providence Young Men's Christian Association was the decision reached by the board of directors of that institution at a meeting held last evening. This action was taken by the directors because of objections from some persons to the admission of Colored men to membership in the organization and particularly in the many advantages offered by the new building. As soon as it became known that objection had been offered the matter was taken by different colored organizations and other interested parties and the directors were urged to take action. Following is a statement given out by the directors after last evening's meeting:
The Note.
"The Providence Young Men's Christian Association for more than 60 years has served the young men and boys of our city in a broad and liberal spirit, making no distinction in receiving applications for membership because of race or sect. We believe that the only test of eligibility must continue to be as it always has been, character and moral worth, and that by such standards of selection the MR. WIILSON AND "SEGREGATION." New York—To the Editor of THE APPEAL. Sir: The interview of William Munroe Trotter and the delegation of colored gentlemen with the President of the United States brings forward again the burning question of the treatment of colored civil servants of the Washington. The whole incident shows grimly and forcefully the colored people of this country feel the injustice which Mr. Wilson's government has inflicted upon them and still inflicts.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has been fighting segregation in federal departments ever since the first rumor of it was made public. Over a year ago an investigator was sent to Washington to investigate. Since that time a representative of the civil service association has kept in close touch with the local situation, and on one occasion this representative appeared before the civil service committee and helped kill the bill of Edwards of Georgia and Aswell of Louisiana making segregation legal throughout the federal civil service. Much of the segregation has disappeared. The segregation of the postoffice in Washington has abolished all the colored men employed best their positions, but through the intervention of this association three
association will exemplify its high ideals. We therefore believe it is sufficient for this board to declare that no reason exists for any change in the principles which have heretofore governed the association in its requirements for membership."
And we demand Mr. Hawkins resignation, we seem to believe that if Mr. Hawkins could be bound by that he would send in his resignation and not wait until it was asked for. We hope that he will remember that he is in Providence and not in the South nor West; now let the board of directors exact of Mr. Hawkins an explanation of his actions which has caused them to be held up to the ridicule of the world.
This was one of the times when the board of the united in an effort and they should be given much credit for their united stand. They are very illiquid over the victory.
The fight was led by Rev. J. H. Wiley and Rev. S. W. Smith for the New England Suffrage League and Mr. J. C. Minkins, Rev. J. Harrison and Dr. Robinson for the N. A. A. C. P. Board. We have gathered our membership. We hope that every reader of the Guardian will read the letter from the pen of M. E. L. Slingen, a white man, to the Providence Sunday Journal and see if you think that all our friends are dead. We wish to say to those who live in towns and cities where segregation is present, to say to your might and if you need any points, we will gladly give you the benefit of our experience here.
Respectfully,
S. W. SMITH.
of them were reinstated. When the bureau of engraving and printing moved to its new quarters it was the original idea to segregate colored and white people throughout the entire building, but through the efforts of this association there is no segregation in the lunchrooms or on the roof. Segregation, nevertheless, still exists in the Treasury Department and in the Treasury, and possibly here and there in a small degree in other places.
It still remains true that for the first time in half century a President of the United States and distinguished members of his Cabinet have deemed it necessary for the peace and quiet the federal services that clerks in the federal services have made same examinations and record the same rate of pay, must be separated in their work if the ancestors of any of them had a drop of Negro blood. In some cases the "colored" clerks have been so white in appearance that the officials themselves have made mistakes in classifying them. In other cases clerks of all colors have protested against the attempted separation of the separation has caused humiliation and inconvenience and added cost.
J. E. SPINGARN,
Chairman Board of Directors National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.)
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Phone Nic. 9769.
Main 9592 T. S. 2078
PORTERS' AND WAITERS'
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Rates 50 cents per day
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Residence
1210 Sixth Av. N.
Phone
Hyland 3770
Cason Bro's Orchestra
Music Furnished for All Occasions;
Fine Collection of Standard
and Popular Dance Music.
T. E. CASON,
Manager.
EARL C. CASON,
Asst. Mngr.
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.
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You and your friends
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Thursday Evng., Dec. 10
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KINK-NO-MORE FOR SALE $1.00 PER BOX
HAIR STRAIGHTENING A SPECIALTY
LEADING AFRO-AMERICAN PAPERS FOR SALE
Tel. Cedar 9282 ST. PAUL, MINN.
PHONE DALE 8001
"THE BUSY CORNER"
A. J. McMURRAY & CO.
Staple and Fancy Groceries, Candies, Confectionery, Cigars, School Supplies, Etc.
Ice Cream Parlor and Cafe, Lunch at all Hours.
REAL ESTATE AND RENTALS HANDLED.
Cor. Western and Rande ST. PAUL.
STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF Ramsey—ss. Probate Court. In the case of the Estate of Prentiss M. Clark, Deceased. Letters of Administration on the Estate of Prentiss M. Clark, Deceased, late of the age of 75, of the estate of the sota, being granted to Adeladee W. Clark, it Is Ordered. That six months be and the same is hereby allowed from and after the date of the sota. The sons having claims or demands against the said deceased, are required to file the same in the Probate Court of said County. In the possession and allowance, or be forever barred.
It is Further Ordered. That the first Manor laid the lake in the village by at a General Term of said Probate Court to be held at the Court House, in the City of St. Paul, in said County, be and the same heyday is appointed as the time and place when and where the said Probate Court will examine and adjust said claims and And it is Further Ordered, That notice of such hearing be given to all creditors forthwith publishing this Order once in each week for three successive weeks in printed and published in said County. Dated at St. Paul this 25th day of November, 1914.
By the Court:
E. W. BAZILLE, Judge of Probate
(Seal of Probate Court.)
S. P. CROSBY, Attorney.
(Seal of Probate Court.)
Quality in it
Every Minute:
Hamm's
BEER
MOST
MODERN
BOTTLING
PLANT
THEO. HAMM BREWING CO. ST. PAUL
Preston's Lunch
UTLEY'S NEW PLACE
30 E. FOURTH STREET, ST. PAUL
FINE MEALS AND LUNCHES AT
ALL HOURS
SPECIAL BREAKFAST 15 CENTS
OPEN FROM 7 A. M. TO 11 P. M.
CLIFFORD A. SMITH
421 W. UNIVERSITY AVENUE
FULL SUIT
OVERCOAT $25
PHONE CEDAR 4877
John Brown Cigar Co.
MAKERS OF
FINE HIGH GRADE CIGARS
SPECIAL BRANDS
JOHN BROWN THIN DIME BLUE HEAD
115 E. THIRD STREET
THIRD FLOOR
ST. PAUL
AR 9140
LAW OFFICES OF
J. LOUIS ERVIN
ATTORNEY AT LAW
SUITE 303 COURT BLOCK
INS' SANITARY SYSTEM OF TAPE
HOE SHINING AND HAT CLEANING
Steamed, Sponged and Pressed, 25c; French Dry Cl
Steamed, Sponged and Pressed, 50c; French Dry Cl
INS' AND GENTS' CLOTHES MADE TO O
pressed, shoes shined, hat cleaned--whi
Shops 337½--343--381 Wabas
INS, PROP. ST. PAUL,
939 PHONES T
The House of Quality and Service
Capitol Steam Laundry
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First Class work. Satisfaction Guaranteed
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Our Wagons go Everywhere
sha Street, ST. PAUL
W. EVANS' SANITARY SHOE SHINING AND Gents' Suits Steamed, Sponged and Ladies' Suits Steamed, Sponged and Houses
LADIES' AND GENTS' CHEST
Your suit pressed, shoes shine
Three Shops 337%--33%
W. EVANS, PROP.
N. W. Cedar 939
The House of Quail
Capitol Steam and Dry
First Class work. Safer
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743 Wabasha Street.
W. EVANS' SANITARY SYSTEM OF TAILORING
SHOE·SHINING AND HAT CLEANING
Gents' Sults Steamed, Sponged and Pressed, 25c; French Dry Cleaned, $1.00.
Ladies' Sults Steamed, Sponged and Pressed, 50c; French Dry Cleaned, $1.25.
LADIES' AND GENTS' CLOTHES MADE TO ORDER
Three Shops 337%--343--381 Wabasha St.
W. EVANS, PROP. ST. PAUL, MINN.
SUNGRAIL
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PHONE CEDAR 9140
SAINT PAUL
MEN'S SUITS
DRY CLEANED $1
SMITH
TAILOR
AVENUE
CALL FOR AND DELIVER
ST. PAUL
ST. PAUL
Meets Uni-
lity and F
on Farring
P. August
HOUSEI
U. O. O.
Tuesday I
ple Hall
Ave. South
Miss Cora
UNITED
NORTH
F. Meets
Wagner, L
FIDELI
NO. 345, I
meets first
month at
Ave. Mif.
Barnett,
R. of D.,
FILGRID
12th and 9
EM OF TAILORING
AT CLEANING
GOPHEI
E. of the
nesday nig
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St. Richard M
ST. JAM
M. A. BOLLING, GRAND SECRETARY
929 W. Central Avenue.
PIONEER LODGE NO. 1. F. AND A. M.
Meets first, and third of each month at Wagner Hall, cor. West
F. D. Gamble, W. M. Street, at 8:00 p. M.
F. D. Gamble, W. M. Street, at 8:00 p. M.
589 Rondo.
PERFECT ASHI. R. LODGE NO. 1.
F. and A. M. meet first and fourth
Tuesdays at Wagner Hall, cor. Western
and Charles street at 8 p. M.
M. W. F. Chandler,
Secy. 317 Wabasha.
BETHEL CHAPTER NO. 28. R. A. M.
Meets second Thursday in each month
at Wagner Hall, cor. Western Ave. and
Charles street, at 8:00 p. M. Arthur D.
Adams, H. P. W. L. Green. Secy.
PILGRIM COMMANDER NO. 22.
Knights-Templar, meets fourth Thursday
each month at Wagner Hall corner
corners, and Charles street.
W. T. Joyce, E. C.; John Sayles, Sec.
479 Rondo street.
MARS LODGE NO. 2202 O. U. of O. meets second and fourth W. Wednesday at Odd Fellows Hall, 22. West University, corner of Farrington avenue. Entrance on Farrington. H. B.ingham, N. G. J. Wesley Kelly, P. G. 650 St. Anthony Ave.
HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH. No. 563 O. U. of O. meets first and third month at Odd Fellows Hall, N. W. University and Farrington ave. Mrs. T. E. Franklin. N. M. G.; Mrs. Carrie E. Lindsay, W. R. 918 Woodbridge street.
FREDERICK DOUGLASS LODGE NO. 9006 O. U. of O. meets first and third nights in each month at Odd Fellows corner of Farrington and University avenue at clock. All Odd Fellows in good standing welcome J. Roberts, N. G.; James L. Lynn, P. S., 376 Carroll avenue.
ST. PAUL PATRICIAH: No. 3rd Monday in each month at Odd Fellows corner of W. University and Farrington. Entrance on Farrington. George B. Lowe, R. V. P. Augustus Jones, W. P. Lyman.
HOLD OF RUTH NO. 776
Q. U. meets second and fourth
U. U. meets second and fourth
Pie Hall, Cor. Fourth street and Eighth
Pie Hall, Cor. Fourth street and Eighth
Miss Cora Napier, W. R.
UNITED BROTHERS OF FRIENDSHIP
OF NORWAR LODGE NO. 138 F.
Meets 6 thursday in each month A.
Wagner Hall, Western Ave. and
Charles street. Brothers stand
always welcome. O. Howell. M.
J. Q. Adams, W. S., 49 E. 4th St.
JOHN H. HAYES LODGE NO. 6 K OF P
Meets first and third Tuesds on
each month A.
Castle Hill 222 North
University cor. Farrar's
Knights of Pythias in good
weather welcome
James Thomas. V. C.; 148 H.
Henderson. V. C.; 148 H.
J. O. James. K of R
and S. 321 St Albans street.
BIDDLE CIRCLE, LADIES OF C.
R. meets first Tuesds of each
month in Slippes Court building.
Mrs. M. J. Lovett
Mr. J. R. White. Secy. Phoenix Bldg
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AYES LODGE N. 6 K. OF F
first and third Tuesd
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James Thomas, C. C, Jas-
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St. Ralbans, K. of R
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