The Appeal

Saturday, November 6, 1915

St. Paul, Minnesota

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VOL. 31. NO. 45 ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLI THE APPEAL'S THA St. Paul's Leading Grocery SCHOCH Seventh and Broadway ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS. MINN.. SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 6, 1915. THE APPEAL'S THANKSGIVING OFFERINGS! The Boston St. Paul NEW LOCATION--FIFTH AT ROBERT The Boston directs special attention to its new store, its new location and its new stocks of fine winter apparel It is better able to serve you than ever before. SIXTH AND MINNESOTA STREETS, ST. PAUL. Phone Nic. 3800 For Seas Solicits Your Business AND OFFERS PRICE SAVINGS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS Complete Clothing Outfitters For Men, Women and Children THE PLYMOUTH CLOTHING HOUSE Sixth and Hennepin, Minneapolis Soleits PRJ Northwestern Stamp Works. MANUFACTURERS OF Rubber and Metal STAMPS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION 110 EAST THIRD ST. ST. PAUL, MINN. Get your Turkey, Meats, Oysters and other fixings from Ed. Eisenminger THE BUTCHER S. & H. Green and Security Stamps given. 554 St. Anthony - Both Phones - St. Paul THE HOUSE THAT SAVES YOU MONEY The Wallblom Furniture and Carpet Co. PROFIT SHARING WITH CUSTOMERS 398 to 408 Jackson Street. ST. PAUL MINN --- if you have ought that's fit to sell, Use printer's ink, and use it well. E. E. ATKINSON & CO. WOMEN AND CHILDREN'S OUTFITTERS ECONOMY PLUS SERVICE is the accepted practice of Our Under Priced Annex The service it renders is Atkinson Service. It offers the same courtesies and privileges available throughout the entire store. This service insures satisfaction in every- thing it sells—no matter how little the price. Of particular interest in Our Under Priced Annex is the arrival of NEW COATS, NEW SUITS, NEW FURS ATTRACTIVELY PRICED SPECIAL THANKSGIVING SPECIALS Piano, Piano Players, Piano Benches, Piano Lamps AT Where Values Reign Supreme Borg's EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME SIXTH and MINNESOTA PARTIAL PAYMENTS PUTS THEM WITHIN YOUR REACH FINE FURNITURE FEATURES FOR FRUGAL FAMILY FUNDS PARTIAL PAYMENTS PUTS THEM WITHIN YOUR REACH FINE FURNITURE FEATURED FRUgal FAMILY FUNDS BOUTELL BROS. LARGEST HOUSE FURNISHERS IN THE NORTHWEST FIRST AVE. SOUTH AND FIFTH ST. MINNEAPOLIS. - MINNEBOTA MC QUAID'S FOR QUALITY AND KITCHEN ECONOMY THE FLOUR THE FLOUR BEST FILLSHURTS BE PARTICULAR Seventh and Broadway MINNESOTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY. In business, fortunes are not realized Unless your goods are amply advertised. $2.40 PER YEAR. OFFERINGS! R VICTROLAS, DYER & BRO MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS 21-23 WEST FIFTH STREET ST. PAUL 21-23 WEST FIFTH STREET ST. PAUL Thanksgiving Day Comes but once each year, but the man who buys the BEST GOODS at the lowest price should have Thanksgiving every day. You get the BEST FOR THE MONEY in all our departments every day of the year. One price to all people. DRUGS, MEDICINES AND TOILET GOODS F. M. PARKER & CO. 5th and Wabasha St. THE REXALL STORE ST. PAUL, MINN. Towle's Log Cabin Syrup Aside from being unsurpassed on Griddle Cakes, Hot Muffins, Waffles and Gems, it adds a new flavor to Candies, Sherbets, Desserts and all cooking. Get our book "Camp to Table." Its free. The Towle Maple Products Co. St. Paul, Minn. St. Johnsbury, Vt. Phone N. W. Cedar 3037 Work called for and delivered Ring the Belle for THANKSGIVING Buy it from CHESTER W. GASKELL JEWELER AND OPTICIAN Court Block Street, ST. PAUL, MINN. Diamond Ring GOLDEN MARK The Store That Lives Up To Its Name THANKSGIVING HEADQUARTERS FOR GOLD MARK FURNITURE BUY YOUR BOTH PHONES 1446 COAL AND WOOD FLOUR, FEED AND HAY FROM C. W. STAEHLE Baggage Transfer Moving Vans All kinds of hauling Everything at the right price Rice, Carroll and Iglehart Sts. In Business for YOUR Health HENRY McCOLL Prescription Druggist Moore Building Seven Corners Kindly Favor us with Your Drug Trade "You too?" Everyone smokes the strictest High Grade DUKE OF PARMA CIGARS HART & MURPHY NYERY STREET MISS HAVE YOU READ THE APPEAL? THE APPEAL AN AMERICAN NEWSPAPER ISSUED WEEKLY J. Q. ADAMS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER ST. PAUL OFFICE No. 301-2 Court Block, 24 E. 4th st. J. Q. ADAMS, Manager. MINNEAPOLIS OFFICE No. 2812 Tenth Avenue South J. N. SELLERS, Manager. TERMS STRICTLY IN ADVANCE SINGLE COPY, THREE-MONTHS.....$0. SINGLE COPY, SIX MONTHS.....1.10. SINGLE COPY, ONE YEAR.....$2.00. When subscriptions are by any means accepted, or by any means other terms are 60 cents for each 13 weeks and each odd week, or at the rate of $2.40 each week or at the rate of $2.40 each week. Ramittances should be made by Express Money Order, Post Office Money Order. Registered Letter or Bank Draft. Post New Stamps will be received the value as per the instructions of the issuer of only one cent and two cent stamps taken. Silver should never be sent through the mail, except for the envelope and be lost; or else may be stolen. Persons who own us in letters do so at their own risk. Marriages and death notices 10 lines or less. $1. Each additional line 10 cents. Payments to advance 10 cents. Advance to all must come in season to be newsed at all times. Advertising rates, 15 cents per agate line, each insertion. There are fourteen words in an agate line. No single advertisements less than that. No discount advertisements less than that. Cash must accompany all orders from parties unknown to us. Further details may be obtained. Reading notices 25 cents per line, each insertion. No discounts for time or space on notices. All notices type--about six words to the line. All read-lines count double. The date on the address label shows when paper shows when time is on the label. Paper should be made two weeks prior to expiration so that no paper may be used. The notices that appear on superbirs are less or stolen. In case you do not receive any number when paper is used by you, card at the expiration of the paper from that date, date of the missing number. Communications to receive attention must be neat, upon-important when paper is used by you, side of the paper; must reach us Tuesdays if possible, and hear the signature of the author. No manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for postage. We do not hold ourselves responsible for the views of our correspondents. Collecting agents wanted everywhere. In every letter that you write us never fail to give your full name and address, plainly written, post office, county and state. In every letter that you write us be written on separate sheets from letters containing news or matter for publication June 6, 1885 at the postoffice at St. Paul, Minn., under act of Congress, March 3. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1915. ASSAILS U. S. INDIAN POLICY. Brigader General R. H. Pratt, founder of the Carlisle Indian School declares that the policy of the gov- ernment in forcing the Indians to re- main on reservations would deter their civilization for hundreds of years. "If there had never been an Indian reservation," he said, "and if we had never had an Indian bureau, the Indians of the United States would today be a thousand times better off than they are, and this country would not now be called upon to appropriate $10,000,000 yearly for the management or mismanagement of the bureau. "I say without hesitation or reservation that the true policy of the government should be to permit the Indians to attend our schools and to eliminate the purely Indian schools altogether. I would have Indians enter government employ, and I would assist them as far as possible in entering business life. That will accomplish far more than reservations will." What General Pratt says is good sound sense and applies to all other nationalities and classes. The plan of segregating any class of Americans is both morally and economically wrong. The white Americans who insist upon jimcrow cars, jimcrow schools, jimcrow libraries, jimcrow public THE SIN OF SILENCE To sin by silence protest makes cov The human race has test. Had no voice in injustice, ignorance quisition yet would guillotines decide on The few who dare speak again to rip many.—Ella Wheel 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. parks, etc., etc., for colored Americans are traitors to true Americanism and the colored Americans who accept, without protest, the indignities and degradations forced upon them, have descended so low in the scale of humanity that there is no word in the English language to describe the depths to which they have gone. TROUBLE FOR HYPHENISM. From all parts of the country information is coming that true Americans intend to fight hyphenation. A national organization of American citizens of foreign birth or parentage to discourage "hyphenated Americanism" has been formed in New York. Twenty-four persons, who responded to a circular distributed by a committee headed by William Lustgarten, formed themselves into a provisional committee to encourage the fight on dual citizenship. A letter from Col. Roosevelt to Mr. Lustgarten was read at this meeting. It said in part: "I welcome the work of your society in working against the most shister and evil of all movements which would tend to destroy our national unity and to split us into a tangle of warring German-Americans, Irish-Americans, English-Americans, French-Americans and Scandinavian Americans. You and I are fellow Americans—just plain, straight out, ordinary Americans." The Christian Register has this to say on hyphenation: Why do we tolerate hyphens in the names we give to our several groups and classes? A hyphen is a danger-signal in this country—sometimes it is even a peril. Why not allow a man three years in which to get the hyphen out of his system, then test him by an oath or a choice of flags, and then amputate the hyphen or else send the man back home? We have the means of transportation—see all those interned German ships? A hundred million dollars' worth of them! And the Thomas Cook agencies idle! The situation has suggestive points. Where is our Elijah who will say to these hyphenates, "If the Lord be God, follow him: but if Baal, then follow him?" THE ONLY SOLUTION. Recently at the Church of England Congress at Southampton, Sir Sidney Olivier, who was governor of Jamaica from 1907 to the end of 1912, put forward the claim that no solution of the American color question was possible except by a resolute disclaimer of the color line and the race differentiation theory. Sir Sidney Olivier certainly knows what he is talking about. In the island of Jamaica, where he was governor for five years, there are about 800,000 colored people and only 20,000 whites and yet there is absolutely no friction between the races. Jamaica is a British colony and the government is just. Colored men enjoy every civil and political right which white men have and there is no color line. Among other things Sir Sidney said: "My study and comparison of conditions in the United States and the West Indies," he said, "has brought me to that conclusion. American and colonial politicians and public men are not Exeter Hall abolitionists nor evangelical Christian missionaries. I do not expect them to adopt the methods of missionaries, nor do I sympathize with all their programmes. But it cannot be ignored that it happened that the faiths of the men who laid the foundations for the peaceful development of the mixed community in Jamaica were democratic and human- THE MAN WHO DARES I honor the ma scientious dischar to stand alone; thn ant, intolerant ju demn, the counter may be averted, friends grow cold, duty done shall be applause of the w ances of relati 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 counterances 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 counterances of relatives or the hearts of friends.—Charles Summer. ce when we should awards out of men. is climbed on pro- been raised against he and lust, the in- serve the law, and our least disputes. he must speak and light the wrongs of our Wilcox. "Were race differentiation held to it must increase civil discord. The balance of numbers is as it is in the South in America it must tend to foster obscure preparations for civil war and rebellion. If statesmen and citizens face in the contrary direction I do not say that they will attain immediately civil peace, but I am confident that they will be traveling the only road to it. "I do not suggest that race does not greatly affect facilities for combination between humans in healthy national life, but race difference is only one of many schismatic agencies. The solution of the difficulty involves discipline for the white man as well as the black." THE COLORED MAN'S ARDS. The Christian Register, the leading Unitarian publication of the country, prints so excellent an article on colored man's own standards that we are constrained to print extracts from it. "White men have set standards for the colored man for many years. During slavery days the standard was mainly one of health and strength, a "good disposition" was also esirable; a "bad nigger" was harder to sell than one who would make no trouble, 'raken altogether the standard of antebellum days for colored men was much the same as that for horses,—"warranted sound and kind," and the rest. During the war, with the splendid record of black men as soldiers, the standard held up for them by the white man shifted, though only slightly. After the war, and after the Fifteenth Amendment began to operate, the white man gradually altered his expectation of what the black could be and ought to be. Whites differ greatly to-day, both North and South, upon this question; as a rule, the more civilized the white man the reader he is, in judging the colored man, to see his great possibilities and his remarkable progress, as already shown. The subtler problem, and more vital to the colored people, is regarding the race's standards for itself in the various arts of civilization. And his most serious obstacle is—not the injustice of his white neighbors, evident and regrettable as that is, but the danger he continuously incurs of holding up low standards of attainment for himself. If he is to compete with the white man in business, manufactures, arts, scholarship, and other pursuits, he must hold him up to as high a standard of excellence as does the white man. As a rule, colored people do not quite come up to this; they have the faults of their qualities; they are too easily satisfied with attainment which is distinctly second-rate in the world's Bradstreet. The colored musician, or painter, or artisan, or writer is too apt to measure himself by the many people below him in skill instead of keeping his eye fixed on the few who surpass him. For this reason it is good for a colored boy or girl to attend a school or college which white boys and girls attend. Well-meaning friends of the colored people have pitched such pupils of mixed schools and academies because of the many slights put upon them by careless or unfeeling white schoolmates; but people who see more deeply into the real problems of the colored race believe that it is better for such affronted young people to undergo the affronts and to remain in the keen atmosphere of white standards of custom, costume, and scholarship than to live in a mild atmosphere of half-attainment, among brothers who in the con- ge of his duty dares the world, with ignor- gment, may con- nances of relatives and the hearts of but the sense of sweeter than the world, the counten- and sisters of their own race, all alike half blindly groping their slow way out of the darkness. Better that a colord boy should bear whatever alights are put upon him by certain narrow, selfish, white boys at Yale or Harvard than to drift comfortably along in some Negro school which has not got itself as yet squared to the world standards, in a world where white men rule." Oswald Garrison Villard's recent speech against hyphenated Americanism was a telling one. Mr. Villard was himself born on German soil and of a German father, yet he is amazed at the divided citizenship of some Americans of German ancestry. He referred to Carl Schurz, and his true Americanism and said "What would amaze him more than to find unnumbered Germans who, like himself, come to this country to escape the very militaristic autocracy they now uphold, today, denouncing the nation that adopted and sheltered and fed and clothed them." Other races have shown strong tendencies to form distinct bodies. Mr. Villard said, but the German propaganda, is so far, the most extensive. He then asked if it were true, as contended, that the German Kultur and political system were superior to the scheme of life and government in America, why the hordes who have flocked here did not go to Germany instead. Mr. Villard said, that to allow nationalistic groups to develop in this country such as they have in Austria, Hungary would be most disastrous. He said, such a proposal was "unthinkable to a true minded American." For many yearn it has been the custom to treat colored people as aliens, although they are more than ninety-nine per cent of American birth; and there is a growing tenency among the colored people to regard themselves as aliens. This is being encouraged by a class of leaders who call themselves "Negroes" and yell about "Negro Kultur" although they have not more than half and often less than one-eighth of Negro blood. Such men ought to stop the "Negro" propaganda and be Americans and demand justice because they are Americans and not by the false assertion that they are "Negroes." They should not have any rights as "Negroes" but every right of an American citizen should be and will be accorded them, if they fight for their rights as American citizens by right of birth. TINSEL CHIVALRY The Southern Caucasians are continually yelling about their chivalrous regard for women and their determination to protect females from assaults etc., but in view of many happenings in the Southland it is evident, that that their chivalry is of the tinsel variety. Last year a Caucasian went into the home of a respectable colored woman in Wagoner, Okla., and attempted to assault her, but was shot by the woman before he succeeded. When the chivalrous Oklahomaans heard of the happening, the colored woman who killed the white man in protecting her virtue was lynched by an "orderly mob of the best citizens." In another Southern state recently, a colored man was walking along the street with his sweetheart when a white man made an insulting remark about her. The colored man promptly killed the white man and a few hours later he was lynched by a mob of "leading citizens." The chivalrous men of Georgia have allowed a law fixing the age of consent for girls 10 years, to stand upon the statute boks, and in nearly every Southern state it is lower than it ought to be. The Southern boast about defending the honor of women is a LIE. Southern chivalry is tinsel. KEEP OUT OF HAITI. The United States government has no right to middle with the internal affairs of any nation however small. If the people chose to kill each other, it is their own affair. The ultimatum to Haiti is the act of a big bully nation to a pucky little republic which has maintained its independence through more than a century against tremendous odds. All this talk about the brutality of the Haitians is pure rot and is largely because of their color. Conditions in Haiti are no worse than in many other small republics in the Western Hemisphere. Before bullying the little country the United States ought to find some way of eliminating the lawlessness and burnings and mob murders which are so numerous within our own borders. More outrages have been committed in Europe in a single day than have occurred in Haiti in a hundred years but the fear of the big guns of the powers has prevented Uncle Sam from butting in. Let Haiti solve her own problems. Colored Lady Leads All. (From Martininsburg Pioneer-Press.) The world's record in stenography and typewriting is held by a colored pen, and people who write for people we lack in brain. Keep a coming sisters, for we are a new issue diffused through and through with the world's best blood, and with the tell, to tell, because it is in giant bodies. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People came as a direct result of the Springfield riots of 1908. After several conferences it was organized and permanent headquarters opened in November 1910. The growth of the organization has been phenomenal. Today it has fifty branches throughout the country and 7,000 members and the crisis, edited by W. E. B. Dubois has reached a circulation of over 35,000. The platform of the association is broad and uncompromising. The official statement maintains among other thinks the following strong statement and demands: "The National Association For the Advancement of Colored People seeks to uplift the colored men and women of this country by securing to them the enjoyment of their rights as citizens, the opportunity of their ability of opportunity everywhere. It favors and aims to aid every kind of education among them save that which teaches special privilege or prerogative, class or caste. It recognizes the race problem and no sectionalism; it leaves in the upholding of the constitution of the United States and its amendments, in the spirit of Abraham Lincoln. It upholds the doctrine of the law in no way down. It abhors Negro crime, but still maintains the conditions which breed crime and, most of all, the crimes committed by mobs in the mackey of the law or by individuals in the name of the law. It has no other belief than that the best way to uplift the colored man is the best way to aid the white man to the best content. It has no other desire than justice and no other motive than humanity." The proposed program for the advance of the colored people has been laid down by Dr. W, E. B, DuBols: "We need not waste time by seeking to deceive our enemies into thinking that we are going to be content with a hat load or by being willing to lull the enemy to sleep in order to difference and present satisfaction. The American Negro demands equality—political equality—and he is never going to rest satisfied with anything bragadocio demands this in no spirit of envy of others, but as an absolute measure of self defense and the only one that will assure to the darker races their ultimate survival on earth. "The colored people must have industrial freedom. Between the peons of shrewd capitalists, with the oppression of shrewd capitalists, of certain trade unions the colored laborer is the most exploited the colored laborer is the country, giving more hard toll for less money than any other American voice in the conditions of his labor. "In social intercourse every effort is being made today from the president of the United States and to the president of Church of Christ down to saloons and bootbucks to segregate, strangle and to give him the most man so chance to know and share civilization "The colored man must have power—the power of men, the right to do, to know, to feel and to express that power," he wrote. "He must not simply be free from the political tyranny of white folk; he must have the right to vote and to rule over all the citizens to the extent that he is a citizen of society. He must have a voice in the new industrial democracy which is building and the power to see to it that his children are not in the next generation and that they are not part of society. He must have the right to social intercourse with his fellows. "There was a time in the atomic individualistic group when "social intercourse" meant merely calls and tea parties; today social intercourse means theater, lectures, organization, and travel, hotels, it means, in short, life. To bar a group from methods of thinking, living and doing, is to bar them from the world and bid them create a world—it is to crucify them and taunt them with not being able to live." Dr. DuBols suggest five practical steps for action—first, economic co-operation; second, a revival of art and craft; third, education; fourth, education; fifth, organization. "For the accomplishment of all these ends we must organize. Organization among us already has gone far, but it is now that we must organize and organization is sacrifice, sacrifice of opinions, of time, of work and of money, but it is, after all, the cheapest way of buying the most priceless of freedom and efficiency. I thank God that this organization ports this association comes from colored hands. A still larger proportion must come, and we must not only support, but control, this and similar organizations and hold them unwaveringly to our objects our aims and our ideals. "With such organizations and with all the progress that they can point to let us never be satisfied with more progress so long as we fall so far afield in accomplishments of our desire. Remembrances are despised today by millions of people not because we suffer, but because we suffer like dumb, driven cattle, with even a smile on our faces. To what other race could it happen on our side, to the greatest set leaders here in New York, assembled thousands could congratulate his people because only fifty-two-colored men and women have in one short year been hired and shot and burned by mobs. If that can give 10,000 people satisfaction, in God's name what will it take to make them fight? "As for me and those that think with me, so long as one black man in the United States is illegally punished for treason or has the door of opportunity treated or has the protest and complain and protest again whether the world wants to hear us or not. We may not gain our ends, but we must treat it with the deeds. But the program I lay before you is not only reasonable and just, but it is a program of peace and patience, making it king in face of the full fact that we are great causes, if peace and patience cannot win, then, win and struggle must. In any case there can be no despair there can be no surrender, there can be no victory. But man draws a breath in America." Not Worthy of Freedom. When a race or an individual submits uncompromisingly to oppression it is a practical demonstration that the individual is not worthy of freedom. RACE PREJUDICE I am convinced myself evil thing in this present judice; none at all. I w the worst single thing it and holds together more abomination than any of world. Through its body of coarse lust, suspicion and all the darkest soul. —H. G. W. I am convinced myself that there is no more evil thing in this present world than Race Prejudice; none at all. I write deliberately—it is the worst single thing in life now. It justifies and holds together more baseness, cruelty and abomination than any other sort of error in the world. Through its body runs the black blood of coarse lust, suspicion, jealousy and persecution and all the darkest poisons of the human soul. —H. G. Wells in N. Y. Independent WALLER AGAINST "NEGRO" Noted Brooklyn Doctor Says It Causes Mental and Physical Segregation. (From Amsterdam News.) Editor Amsterdam News: Sir: I cannot too heartily congratulate you on a recent editorial discouragement. There is no greater delight enjoyed by the white people of the United States today than the spreading use of this unfortunate term. Why? They realise that the most essential factor at work at the present is about both a physical and mental segregation of the people of color. Its use is on the increase only because the people of color are specially Do Bols and Washington feel needy, ad nauseam, is necessary to retain the good will of the masses. The term "Negro" is not only absurdly应用 as applied to millions of colored people, it is infurious, for the following reasons: a. It has never stood historically or in the present, anywhere in the world, for any noble noun or uplifting. Most high-grade Africans repudiate it. A slave was never applied to the higher types, but to Gulaneas, Sudanese and Senegambians only. c. Its derivatives, "Negroism," "Negergy," "Negergy compounds," Negro-head, Negro-fly, Negergy, Negergy, in their associations, degrading. d. Its feminine form, "Negress," is justly and correctly used to define your wife and daughter and sweetheart to favor the use of the masculine term. e. It has been the word used by the Southern whites for two centuries, when formally speaking or writing about an unworthy or criminal man in the race. For when he speaks of the worthy he invariably says "colored." f. It is not differentiated in the mind and thought of the whites from their self and generally used (among themselves) terms, "Nigro" and "Nigger." g. As stated by an eminent Japanese diplomat it has an unquestioned influence in cutting us off from the thought and co-operation of the millions of colored Africans, Asiatics and Islanders of the Yonder world. Very truly yours, OWEN W. WALLER, M. D Must Judge A Group by Its Best. (From the Christian Register, Boston No one can be said to know any class of people who has not been in intimate and sympathetic relation with the best as well as the worst of the class. We compare many persons who live the South, and think they know the color of their skin, who have had no such contact, who have come into intimate and sympathetic relations with large numbers of that race whom their Southern bodies have never known, and of the two who have come by direct contact with the second knew the color of their better than the first. They know aspirations among them that the others do not know, or, knowing, do not enter into and appreciate; they know by direct contact with the best of the color of their virtuous of; they know qualities which only respect and sympathy can bring out; they know possibilities to which others by their very acquaintance are those who know the color of race; they know the mass and by observation merely possible by individual possibilities are demonstrated in growing numbers of the elect, and would be courageously candid with themselves, they would reaffirm judgments and possibly soften their heart; they ought to credit to those on whom they charge ignorance of the colored race the values that come from knowing how many of that race are the equal of any members of the dominant race the highest abilities and in the clearest aims. Definitive is worth much which does not take people at their best. (Gerald Stanley Lee in Mount Tom.) I am a human being. I do not propose to be cooped up or shut in in my love and criticism to mere geographical stresses or spots of people on a planet. This planet is small enough as it is, when one considers the height and depth—the starry height and depth—of the human spirit that wavers and glows through us all—Wagner and Shakespeare, Tolstoi and My ear is My soul is sick with ev Of wrong and outrage, There is no flesh in man It does not feel for man Of brotherhood is seve That falls asunder at the He finds his fellow guil Not colored like his own To enforce the wrong, "HUMAN NATURE'S FOULEST BLOT." 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. Of One Blood. Molière! Though the cathedral quarrel together and sing praises with siege-guns to their own little foolish national souls, and rain bombs on each other's naves, I take my stand and sing in their towers, in their towers, by the souls overriding the years, by the prayers and songs of their heroes, artists, inventors, by the mothers and the little children. We are all in the same world. We are all in the world. I will not say of any one nation what I will not say of any man what I will not say of myself. OUR NEED OF JUXTAPOSITION. (FROM the Boston Guardian.) the Boston Guardian.) That we each rather be, and associate among our peers, Colored Americans that has become almost true. That is a mistake; it is a feeling of avowed cowardice and innate inferiority. It is an utter insult to a common government at the same time, each race work out its own salvation. The "theory" has been tried and resulted into a ghastly failure instead of making for harm and subserve to a common government between two races, it has increased race hatred and antagonism in leaps and bounds. We have heeded too long the advice from false and treachery, instead of making resistance wrong, that it only brings red and antagonism; that the thing for us to do is to get property and other rights will inevitably follow. We have followed this "advice" faithfully, and the terms of residence segregation, street segregation, confiscation and loss of property, anti-intermarriage—which is all of the blackest pieces of legislation that leaves our women defenseless and at the mercy of brutes — separate schools, fjuncrow cars, and even legislating to exclude further Negro immigration. These evil results from "non-resistance" and from "by ourselves." That with the same degree of efforty and terrible legislation with which our property is taken and confiscated, with this same efforty and non-resistance, with our political and manhood rights be taken. That is a fact. Every congress of fers legislation degrading and initial to our well being. Race prejudice therefore, can only be worn down by the laws of children, and go ourselves, to mixed institutions and other places where we can mix with the other races and consequently become accustomed to the laws of THINGS WE MUST WELCOME AND PRACTICE JUXTAPOSITION. Embitters All but Docile Negro. (From the Savannah Tribune). In many of the Southern States, in yearly disbanded troops were allowed and maintained and maintained states disbanded the colored troops Georgia was better organized than any of the other states, and was the last to disband the colored troops. In event of a duration the colored man will be legally allowed he has been trained or has he been encouraged to take up arms to fight in defense of his country? He has been proscribed and debarred of many states and are justly his and which would embolden any race but the docile Negro. Each Victory Encourages. (From the Martinsburg Pioneer-Press) All hall to our brave confrence the all-star team, the editor of the old reliable Gazette for the editor of the moral editor of Ohio, and preventing that infernal play, "The Nigger," to be exhibited in the great state of Ohio. To the many such impositions is the unfinishing deal that has among us. Every victory won by the few courageous agitators encourages others to step into the arena of defense when cowards will come soon and all stand united for manhood rhyme. Right You Are. Young man! Young woman! In whatever position, in whatever sphere of life, whatever your attainments, whatever your past accomplishments, whatever and whatever you are, if you are DISCONTENTED you are lost! ST. PAUL WEEK'S RECORD OF HAPPENINGS IN MINNESOTA'S CAPITOL. The "Saintly City" and Saintly City Folks—Neway Items of Social, Re- ters Among the People. Iligious, Political and General Mat SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1915. The Joseph H. Douglass Violin Recital Bear in mind the grand opening of Union Hall, Monday, Nov. 8. Mr. Fred Green, 962 St. Anthony Ave., was taken home very sick on Wednesday night. Chitterling may be obtained at any time at Young's Cafe. Call or phone your order. Both Phones 508. St. Paul, Minn. T. H. LYLES. Funeral Directors and Embalmers 150 W. Fourth St. Res. 678 St. Anthony, Tale Dale 2947 Calls Answered Day or Night In Lady Assistant when necessary. Mr. O. C. Hall, who recently underwent a minor operation, is again consolescent and will return to his duties as county auditor's office Monday, no preverifying. The numbers of the G. O. P. in St. Paul are included on the access the party had in the elections through out the country, and look forward to a general victory next November. INSIST on Purity BREAD AT YOUR GROCER'S For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whoever believeth in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. John 3:16—Selected by E. W. Gilles. PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER — MRS. H. I. WILLIAMS, OFFICE OF ATTY. W. T. FRANCIS, SUITE 329 AMERICAN NATIONAL BUILDING, FIFTH AND CEDAR. ALL WORK CONFIDENTIAL. James Fleming, who killed Emma Butler at her home, 275 Eagle street, Sept. 9, had his trial this week and was on Wednesday adjudged guilty of murder and was sentenced to state's prison for life. OFFICE CEDAR 8948 RES. DALE 1465 W. T. FRANCIS LAWYER SUITE 329 AMR. BANK BLOG. COR. FIFTH AND CEDAR ST. PAUL Mrs. Mattie R. Hicks desires to thank all who assisted in the collection of new garments for the inmates of Crispus Attucks Home, also those who donated. She had 167 garments and $3.75 for the shoe fund. "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 Minnesota, between 4th and 5th—Advertisement. The Women's Progressive Club meets the first and third Thursday afternoon of each month from 2:30 to Testimony William missed his coat and $2 one day last week. He could not find it. Among his friends to whom he mentioned the loss he gathered this testimony: Sam said, "I used to lose money, but now I deposit all I do not need in the Savings Bank." George, Henry and Mike told the same story. This made William think, and he concluded: From now on I will not carry money in my pocket, but when I get paid will at once deposit it in the 93 East Fourth Street. 1890 1915 MONDAY EVENING, NOV. 8, 1915 The people with public spirit and civic pride are requested to help make this, our greatest civic venture, a complete success. TICKETS $1.50 After many years of effort by the every man, woman and child people of St. Paul in an endeavor to his or her appreciation by bet erect a public hall, success has been ent. There will be a par secured by the Union Hall Association pulse promoting and pleasure composed of several members of the community supported by pr 4, F. and A. M. and Mars Lodge No. and patriotic people. 2202 G. U. O. of O. F. Great credit ent and participate and pro is due to the men who helped to bring progressiveness. Cason Bros. about this much needed building to tra will furnish the music, which we can point with pride and Everybody cordially invited, say "this is ours." The building is the program will start pro plain and substantial and is composed 8:30, so those who wish god of two stories and a large basement should be on hand early, and at a present is the meeting place of Mr. W. T. Francis will be m every fraternal body in this city. The members of the association feel that the people of the city are as proud of the hall as they are themselves and they believe there are enough people in the Twin Cities who have public spirit and civic pride enough, to pack the auditorium to its utmost capacity on the occasion of the grand opening Nov. 8. So they make this appeal to 4:30 o'clock at the Wilder Charity building. This club works exclusively for Crispus Attacks Home. Rev. Geo. W. Camp, chairman of the Syodical Committee on Freedmen and who is thereby entitled to preach in every Presbytery in the state, on last Sunday preached at Red Wood Falls. He returned Monday. WHEN YOU WISH FRESH FRUIT OR VEGETABLES, JUST TELE- PHONE TO J. H. THURSTON, THE PEDDLER, DALE 6299. NEVER TOO LATE OR TOO EARLY; IF YOU WANT ANYTHING CALL HIM AND HE'LL COME. RESIDENCE, 394 RONDO STREET. FREE COURSES are open in Expression, Cooking, Gymnastics for men, women and girls, Crocheting, Dressmaking, Millinery and Chorus Work at Central, Humboldt and Johnson high schools, Van Buren, Webster and Hancock grade schools. Don't fail to take advantage of them. THE APPEAL has received information that Mrs. Belle Tyler and her Sister Miss Irene Salters are touring in concert out west and are creating a furore. On their return to St. Paul shortly they will be featured in an entertainment under the management of Mrs. May Mason of which will be said shortly. Watch for it. GENTLEMEN: When you wish first class tonsorial service, call at THE PEOPLE'S BARBER SHOP, 138 East Third street, A. R. Ragland and S. W. Williams, proprietors. Expert artists. Four chairs, electric massage and hair dryer. Hot and cold baths. Shoes shined. Newspapers for sale. Headquarters for men wanting work. Tel., Cedar 8545. RAILROAD EMPLOYEES: BEFORE HAVING YOUR ACCIDENT OR SICK INSURANCE POLICY RENEWED, SEE F. D. M. CRACKEN, (OLD) MERCHANTABILITY BANK BLDG, AS HE IS WRITING THE PACIFIC MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY'S NEW POLICY, THE MOST COMPLETE AND LIBERAL POLICY FOR RAILROAD MEN EVER ISSUED. IF YOU WISH Chop Suey, Chill con Carne, Hot Tamales or any Chinese, Mexican or Oriental dish, go to the COSMOPOLITAN CAFE, corner of Third and Cedar streets, up stairs, or you may phone your order and it will be promptly delivered. They have first-class Mexican and Chinese chefs. A la carte meals at all hours, day or night, never closed. Any American dish can also be furnished. Phone Cedar 9128. FLOWERS—Persons desiring cut flowers, floral designs for funerals, palms, ferns, or potted plants, for weddings or decorations of any kind, for any occasion, will do well to place orders with Geo. W. Bell, who has been appointed as agent for L. L. May and prepared to make appeal rates on all orders sent through him. Prompt delivery at all times. Leave or send orders to Geo. W. Bell, 1776 W. Minneha street. Phone—Midway 1657. Mr. and Mrs. Bud Wilson have moved into the double brick building at 550 and 552 Wabasha street, just above 10th. They are prepared to keep roomers and boarders at reasonable rates. Mrs. Wilson will have charge of the cafe where home cooked meals may be had at all hours. Reg. aular dinner will be served from 11:00 A. M. to 5:00 P. M. for 25 cents. Al a carte meals will be served until 12:00 P. M. Beds 25 and 50 cents per night. Mr. Bud Wilson has his barber shop at 552 and is prepared to do tensorial work in first class order. You are invited to call. Mrs. W. T. Francis, at a meeting of the Women's Welfare League, the most prominent white women's club in St. Paul, with club rooms in the Studio Building, at its meeting last week presented the matter of "The Birth of a Nation" for their consideration and asked that some steps be taken to assist in the fight being made by the colored people to suppress this film. Mrs. Louis Benepe, Miss Julia Hess, Mrs. R. I. Ryppins, Mrs. L. C. Bacon, Mrs. L. A. Hamilin, Mrs. M. C. Bacon, Mrs. L. Co Davidson former president of the N. C. P. office in favor of suppressing the film. The league voted without a dissenting vote to send resolutions to the council and the same were read on Wednesday morning, when Mrs. W. J. Kenyon, of the Welfare League, also made a strong plea for the suppression of the entire film. A very sad death occurred in this city this week, that of Mrs. Jane E. Lethbridge. The deceased was enroute to St. Paul from Chicago to visit her sister, Mrs. Sarah Roberts, 388 Rice street, when she was stricken with an acute attack of peritonitis Saturday morning. On reaching the city she was taken in an ambulance to her sister's residence where she died Tuesday morning, Nov. 2, without having consciousness. She was a member in the Order of the hold of Ruth and the Order of the Eastern Star and for over 13 years was stewardess of Bethel A. M. E. church, Chicago. Her funeral services were held at Lyles' mortuary chapel, Wednesday afternoon, conducted by every man, woman and child to show his or her appreciation by being present. There will be a particularly pulse promoting and pleasure producing program presented by prominent and patriotic people, please be present and participate and prove your progressiveness. Cason Bros. Orchestra will furnish the music. Everybody cordially invited. The program will start promptly at 8:30, so those who wish good seats should be on hand early. Mr. W. T. Francis will be master of ceremonies. The speakers are: Governor Hammond, Mayor Powers, Geo. H. Woods, B. Buxton, Iowa, B. S. Smith, Minneapolis, R. M. Johnson and others. A splendid musical program will be reordered under the direction of Mr. C. H. Miller. Carriage call 2:00 a. m. Revs. J. P. Sims and E. H. McDonald and the remains were shipped to Chicago. The memorial is open to the Office of Eastern Star and Household of Ruth of St. Paul attended the funeral and accorded the obituary honors. "DIXON'S BIG REVUE OF 1916." The Attraction at the Star Theatre Next Week. Have you ever seen twenty shapely, prancing, dancing, beautiful and capricious young women gathered on one stage in a single production, and offered one of the most original ensembles introduced behind the footlights? If you haven't been wowed, advise you to pay particular attention to the advent of "HENRY P. DIXON'S' BIG REVUE OF 1916," which is to be the attraction at the Star theatre commencing week of Nov. 7. There are any amount of catchy songs, tuneful music, original bits, with dialogue and sparkling comedy along with a real play possessing a real plot and situations that are typically new and unique. Harry LeVan, Claire Devine, Joe Dixon, Mabel Howard, Marile Nugent, a charming young elephant, Greta Stealk, John Birch, Helenette, and Lettle Bolles are among the other fun-makers. Matines The Douglass Recital. quite a large and enthusiastic audience greeted Mr. Joseph H. Douglass of Washington, D. C., when he appeared in violin recital, under the auspices of the public and Literary Society at Pilller Baptist Church last Monday evening. And, all who were present were delighted with his exquisite playing. Mr. Douglass repertoire was wide in scope and stamped him as a true artist. He gave "Gypsy Song" and "Deep River" by Coleridge Taylor, "Minuette"—Beethoven; Scene from the Czavda; Bebray; Blesbiled, Vienna Waltz—Kreisler; "Sanee River" and "Wlenawski Mazurk" Gadenza, "The Birds"—J. Douglass; "Sanee River" D'Ambrosio; "Liebesfremd"—Kreisler; "Humoreske"—Dvorkar; "Ziguneweism"—Sarasate. Every one a gem. He was accompanied by Mrs. Lucille Douglass, of the Oberlin Conservatory who also gave a piano solo, "To Spring"—Greig that captivated her auditors. St. Paul furnished a quartet of musical stars, viz.: Pipe organ, "Barcaralle"—Offenbach, Mrs. Emma Archer, vocal solo, "Rose of My Heart"—Herman Lahr, Mrs. Cleat Schwert, vocal solo, "Serenade"—Schwert, vocal part, "Serenist" Mrs. E. O. James, accompanist, Miss Albreta C. Bell. The audience was enraptured by the performers all of whom were warmly and deservedly applauded. McWATT—LOWE. A Handsome Young Couple, Welided in Wedlock. The home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo B. Lowe, 726 Sherburne Ave, was the scene of a very pretty home wedding Wednesday, Oct. 27 at high noon; the contracting parties being Mr. Arthur McWatt and their daughter Miss Carrie B. Lowe. The house was uniquely decorated with autumn leaves and cut flowers, the floors being strenued with leaves to represent a woods effect. The ceremony was performed in the front parlor of home of which was a beautiful wedding bell of autumn leaves. Rev. J. P. Sims of St. James A. M. E. church performed the ceremony. Prof. W. A. W. Weir played Lohengrin's wedding march for the processional, and Mendelssohn's march for the recessional. The bride wore a gown of white cedar or carved a shower bouquet of white chrysanthemums. The maid of honor Miss Rebecca Love was gowned in yellow satin and carried yellow chrysanthemums. Mr. Lewis Tyrrel of Chicago was best man and he and the groom were attired in regulation costumes for daylight ceremonies. Just after the ceremony the bridal party motored to a photographers and had pictures taken and returned for the wedding reception as only relatives and intimate friends witnessed the ceremony. The dining room was decorated with carnations and ferns the dining table with ferns, carnations, cut glass and silver surmounted by the bride's cake and the wedding cakes. The young couple were the recipients of a number of costly and useful presents, among which were: cut glass fern dish, girls of Strongge & Warner where the bride held a position for four years. Leather rocker, Commercial club emblem. Cut glass nipple, M. M. Carrol. Set silver oyster forks, Mr. and Mrs. A. Rogers. Silver comb and brush set, Mr. Lewis Tyrrel. Silver candlesticks, Mrs. E. Talbert and daughter and Mr. A. Cotton. Silver sandwich plate, Mr. Wm. Thirl. Cut glass mayonnaise set, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hyde, Minneapolis. Lady Baltimore cake, and hand-painted plate, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Anderson. Linen lunch cloth, Mr. and Mrs. L. Coleman and Mrs. Lewis. Lace dresser scarf, and Mrs. E. Patrick. Linen Towels, Miss Eula Taylor. Marble fountain, Mrs. Dorothy Boon. Linen, Miss Rebecca Lowe. Linen table cloth and napkins, Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Lowe. Linen, Mrs. Snipes. Prof. W. A. Weir, silver carving set. Mr. and Mrs. D. Bridgefort, half dozen water glasses. The young couple will make their home with the bride's parents for the present where they are at home to their friends. MOVES TO LARGER QUARTERS. F. D. McCracken Making Success in Real Estate Business. True to the predictions of his many friends, Mr. F. D. McCracken for many years private secretary to former Congressman Stevens, is making good in the real estate and insurance business and owing to adding a new line, is now compelled to move to larger quarters and on Monday next will occupy Suite No. 410 in the Court Block. Mr. McCracken by his active and progressive methods of business has deep impression on the leading members of Paul Real Estate Board and has done a great deal of business for them. He has made good with his many clients in both the real estate and insurance lines and many wholesale and business houses have insured through him. Will Sell Farm Lands Mr. McCracken has interested a party of capitalists who have obtained option on several thousand acres of land in Wisconsin and Minnesota which he will place on the market on the easy payment plan and he has already received several inquiries from prospective buyers. Mr. McCracken seems to be the right man in the right place and it is gratifying to know that he is receiving the strong and loyal support of his people. THE NEW MIDDLEBURY SCHOOL Cor. Aurora and Kent Sta. THE FORMAL OPENING OF WHICH WILL OCCUR ON NEXT MONDAY EVENING AND WILL BE THE GREATEST EVENT OF THE YEAR. YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED. CHRISTMAS SALE. THE ANNUAL CHRISTMAS SALE AND EXHIBIT OF THE LADIES' HANDICRAFT CLUB WILL BE FIELD AT HALL ON THURSDAY FRIDAY DECEMBER 9, 10, 11. THE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED. ADMISSION FREE. DELICATESENE AND CHRISTMAS PRESENTS FOR ALL. MRS. W. B. TANDY, Pres. MRS. J. A. ROBERTS, Sec'y. ANNOUNCEMENT. MR. FREDERICK D. McCRACKEN HAS MOVED HIS REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE OFFICES TO SUITE 410 COURT BLOCK, 24 EAST FOURTH STREET. PHONE CEDAR 8760. THE DOUGLASS RECITAL. PROF. JOSEPH H. DOUGLASS, OF WASHINGTON, D. C., GRANDSON OF FREDERICK DOUGLASS, WILL APPEAR IN VIOLIN RECITAL AT MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH, RICE AND FULLER STREETS, ON NEXT MONDAY EVENING. HE WILL BE ACCOMPANIED BY HIS WIFE, MRS. LUCILE DOUGLASS, GIR DUATE PIANIST OF OBERLIN CONSERVATORY. SOME RARE LOCAL TALENT ALSO. TICKETS 25 CENTS. EXERCISES OPEN PROMPTLY AT 8 O'CLOCK. COAL HOLMES & HALLOWELL Seventh & St, Peter Sts $4.50 PER TON FOR Splint Coal for Stoves, Ranges and Heating Plants HOLMES & HALLOWELL CO. Phone 401 THE FLOUR Pillsbury's BEST XXXX Minneapolis, Minn. FOR THOSE WHO KNOW BEST W. A. YOUNG, PROP. First Class A La Carte Meals From 6:30 A. M. to 12:00 P. M. at Reasonable Rates Regular Dinner 11:30 A. M. to 2:30 P. M. 25 Cts, SPECIAL DINNER THURSDAY AFTER 4 P. M. 36 CENTS I positively guarantee to extract teeth and remove nerves AB50LUTELY PAINLESSLY I positively guarantee to ext ABSOLUTELY Get prices here befi A Written Guarantee for 20 Dr. Williams, TEL. C. 6132 KENDRICK B WILSON'S RAILROAD MEN'S HEADQUARTERS ROOMS AND BOARD. Mrs. Bud Wilson, Prop. FIRST CLASS HOME-COOKED MEALS SERVED AT ALL HOURS. REGULAR DINNER 11 A. M.—5 P. M. 25 Cents AL A CARTE MEALS 'TIL 12 P. M. Barber Shop in Connection. 550-2 Wabasha St. St. Paul THE FALL TERM of the Women's Christian Industrial Club ZION PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Farrington and St. Anthony Aves. Is Now Open. CLASSES IN DRESSMAKING, MIL- LINERY, COOKING, BASKETRY, EMBROIDERY AND CHILDREN'S GYMNASTICS ARE TAUGHT. For Further Information Phone or Write MRS. G. W. CAMP, Pres., 277 Farrington Ave. MRS. IRA S. ASHE, 325 Rondo Street. Phones N. W. Cedar 4362; T. S. 2681 J. H. CHARLESTON, L. HOWELL, Pres. and Treas. V. Pres. and Secy. O. HOWELL, MANAGER. VALET TAILORING Parcel Delivery and Messenger Four Suits Pressed for $1 VALET LAUNDRY OFFICE JESSE SPARKS ROY SPARKS PHONE CEDAR 5081 HAND LAUNDRY SPARKS BROS. PROPS. WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER WE GUARANTEE OUR WORK 52 WINTER ST.' ST. PAUL UNIQUE Week of November 8. MON.—Providence and Mrs. Uray. TUES.—For Her Brother's Sake. WED.—Jane of the Soil. THU.—The Accomplice. FRI.—The Smuggler's Ward. SAT.—The Fate of No. One. SUN.—The Timely Interception. 5c SEATS ALWAYS 5c ST. PAUL, MINN. Dr.H.I.WILLIAMS Announces his NEW method of PAINLESS DENTISTRY extract teeth and remove nerves BY PAINLESSLY before going elsewhere 10 Years Given With All Work. 27 E. 7th St BLDG. 2ND PLOOR ST. PAUL N. W. Dale 5194 Res. Dale 3248 ST. MARTIN & YOUNG EXPRESS AND FUEL COMPANY BAGGAGE MOVED TO ANY PART OF THE CITY WOOD AND COAL IN LARGE OR SMALL LOTS. WE APPRE- CIATE SMALL ORDERS FURNITURE AND PIANO MOV- ING 383 Rondo Street ST. PAUL Cor. Rondo and Western Of All Weapons, Beauty is the Most Powerful TOMBAL Further Enhance Your Beauty By Using CREME de ORIENT It itens, softens, makes the skin like velvet. It nourishes and cleanser combined; two shades, pink and white. When the pink and white are used in decoration, they give the complexion a delicate rose hue that is truly beautiful. Harmless and pure. A favorite with refined people. DE ORIENT MANUFACTURING CO. J. Berry, demonstrator, Lock Box 107 St. Paul, Minn. GOOD SHOES The Horsheim SHOE For the man who cares STANLEY SHOE CO. 92 E. 7TH ST., ST. PAUL. 422 NICOLLET AVE., MINNEAPOLIS N. W. DALE 8454 T. S. 5730 Brotchner's Pharmacy Rondo & Dale Sts. ST. PAUL VANDER BIE'S ICE CREAM IS THE BEST For Sale Everywhere J. C. VANDER BIE 496 Partridge ST. PAUL, MINN T and READ The Original Indian Hair Grower makes the hair soft and glossy—Prevents baldness—Promotes the growth of the hair—Cures dandruff and all scalp eruptions. As a dressing the ORIGINAL INDIAN HAIR GROWER is unequaled. For a quarter of a century thousands of Colored women have used it with gratifying results. It's the Hair, not the Hat, that makes a woman attractive FOR SALE BY MRS. BETTIE JONES, HAIRDRESSER 483 Charles Street, St. Paul, Minn. Made exclusively by Mrs. Mary J. F. Parke, Chicago, Ill. Manufacturer of all kinds of Hair Goods, Switches, Transformations, Etc. TWO SIZES 25 AND 50 CENTS. Office Cedar 1673 NEW DAKOTA BUILDING Cor. 6th and 7th Streets OFFICE HOURS 9 to 11 a. m., 12 to 1 p. m., 3 to 5 p. m. Sundays 10 to 11 a. m. Res. 36 St. Albans, Tale. Dale 812 PAINLESS DENTISTRY ```markdown ``` TEL, DELAR 8904 HOUSE: 10 18 A.M. 1 TO 6 P. M. SUNDAY & WEDNES BUNDET & BWINGS First Class, Guaranteed Work in All Branches of Dentistry Suite 400 Court Block Geo.W.Nelson Full Stock of Pure Drugs, Proprietary Medicines, Druggists' Sundries, Toilet Articles, Candies, Soda, Cigars, Etc. PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COM- POUNDED ORDEES DELIVERED Cor. Wabasha and Summit, St. PAUL T. S. 1296 N. W. Cedar 5599 Established 1887 We make Kugs from Ingrain and Bruss its Carpets, Silk Curtain and Rag Carpet Weaving. Cleaning and Refitting. Orders called for and delivered. 285 W. 7th ST. - ST. PAUL, MINN. W. W. GREEN WATCHMAKER Jewelers & Opticians 402 WABASHA STREET NYPS EXAMINED CONSULTATION FEE ST. PAUL Phone Dale 5029 Orders Delivered Grocery & Confectionary Mrs. F. Sears, Prop. STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES, VEGETABLES, FRUIT, BUTTER, EGGS, MILK, CREAM, BREAD, CAKES, PIES, ETC. SCHOOL SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS 441 Rondo Cor. Arundel ST. PAUL L. EISENMENGER MEAT CO Established 1870 THE MARKET OF BIG VALUES PURE, WHOLESOME SAUSAGE 34 VARIETIES 455-457 Wabasha MINNEAPOLIS THE DOINGS IN AND ABOUT THE GREAT "FLOUR CITY." Matters Social, Religious and General Which Have Happened and are to Happen Among the People of the City. J. N. SELLERS, MANAGER 2812 Tenth Avenue So. Tel. N. W. South 3372. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1915. You are invited to go over to St. Paul and attend the grand opening of the new Union Hall, Monday evening, Nov. 8. Come over to St. Paul next Monday night, Nov. 8, to the opening of the new Union hall, corner Kent and Aurora. The executive board of the Women's State Federation held an interesting meeting yesterday afternoon with Mrs. Hilda Kennedy of Dupont avenue. Lawyer W. H. Franklin, who has had his office in the Metropolitan Life Bldg., has moved to Iron Exchange Bldg., cor. 4th ave. and So. 4th St. Room 203. (Opposite Court House.) Minneapolis people are invited to come over to the grand opening of the new Union Hall in St. Paul, Monday, November 8. Tickets $3 per couple. Watch for further particulars. Everybody that is somebody is invited to the Thanksgiving dance to be given by Feezanese Court No. 7, Daughters of Isis, at Masonic Hall thanksgiving night, Nov. 25. McCulloch orchestra. Admission 35 cents. Persons whose pianos need tuning should call on Prof. L. W. Anderson, 2737 11th Ave. South, Phone N. W. South 3755. He is a piano specialist and does tuning and repairing, also voicing and regulating. His motto is: "Satisfaction or no pay." Prices reasonable. Go over to St. Paul Monday night and attend the violin recital of Joseph H. Douglass, the premier violinist of Washington, D. C., a grandson of the late Frederick Douglass, at Memorial Baptist church, corner Rice and Fuller streets. He will be accompanied by Mrs. Lucile Douglass, pianist of Oberlin Conservatory. Admission 25 cents. THE NOVEMBER SOIREES AND CLASS PARTIES OF THE AUTUMN LEAF DANCING SCHOOL WILL OCCUR ON TUESDAY EVENINGS, NOV. 2 AND 16, AT MRS. McCULLOUGH'S NEW HALL, EIGHTH AND NICOLLET AVES. THE SERVICE OF MR. ULRICH GATLIFF OF CHICAGO HAS BEEN SECURED TO INTRODUCE THE LATEST DANCES THROUGHOUT THE WINTER. REGULAR PATRONS INVITED. N. W. PHONE COLFAX 3596 MRS. ROBERT A, VAN HOOK FASHIONABLE DRESSMAKING AND LADIES' TAILORING PARTY GOWNS A SPECIALTY 3612 ELLIOTT AVENUE MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. PROF. L. W. ANDERSON, The Piano Specialist MY MOTTO: SATISFACTION OR NO PAY Prices Reasonable VOICING AND REGULATING 2737 11 Av. S. MINNEAPOLIS THANKSGIVING DANCE BY Fezzanese Court No. 7, Daughters of Isis MASONIC HALL, 24th & 5th Av. S. Minneapolis THURSDAY NIGHT, NOV. 25 McCullough Orchestra ADMISSION - - - 35 CENTS SAINT PAUL FOR RENT—A four-room lower flat, all modern except heat, apply at 281 Rondo, 10.9. There will be some swell gowns shown at the opening reception of Union Hall Nov. 8. Vanderbleie's special for tomorrow is Pineapple Fruit, 35 cents per quart; two quarts 60 cents. Mrs. Gertrude Barbour is steadily improving at the hospital and hopes to return home before long. FOR RENT—Nice furnished rooms for man and wife, or single men. Apply at 442 Olive street. Mr. Dudley Sykes, of Montreal, Canada, spent several days in the city last week, the guest of friends. You'll get your money's worth if you go to the opening reception and entertainment at Union Hall Nov. 8. Tickets $1.50. FOR RENT four-room flat, 646 Fullar Ave. Open for inspection Tuesday and Thursday afternoons; other days evenings. Inquire upstairs, 10.9. A number of social events are scheduled to take place in the new Union Hall in the near future. Watch for dates. On November 22 to 30 Zion Presbyterian church will celebrate its ninth anniversary. All cordially invited. Mrs. A. M. Askew of Sioux City, Iowa, was the soloist at Pilgrim Baptist church and sang "Let Us Have Peace." The State Savings Bank celebrated its twenty-fifth anniversary on last Tuesday. The deposits amount to $5,250,000. FOR RENT—Six-room modern home, gas and bath, hot and cold water, 582 Charles street. Apply at 579 Sherburne ave. Mr. and Mrs. William Martin have --- [Picture of a man in a suit and tie]. 73,000 Acres of Excellent Farm I WISCONSIN AND MINNES AND SCHOOLS. LOW PR 73,000 Acres of Excellent Farm Land in the Hardwood Districts of WISCONSIN AND MINNESOTA. NEAR GOOD TOWNS AND SCHOOLS. LOW PRICES AND EASY TERMS. Suite No. 410 Court Block. 24 East Fourth Street ST. PAUL, M "You to Everyone's strictly H DUE PAR CIGA HART & M MNFRS. ST ANNOUNC Attorney J. Louis E. will hereafter handle re investments, in connect tice. This business, requir knowledge should prop lawyer. I have a number of f and for sale, I also have Second Mortgages for s REAL ESTATE, MO J. Louis "You too?" Everyone smokes the strictly High Grade DUKE OF PARMA CIGARS HART & MURPHY, MNERS. ST. PAUL, MINN. ANNOUNCEMENT! Attorney J. Louis Ervin announces that he will hereafter handle real estate and real estate investments, in connection with his law practice. This business, requiring a great deal of legal knowledge should properly be handled by a lawyer. I have a number of flats and houses for rent and for sale, I also have a number of First and Second Mortgages for sale. returned to their home in St. Paul after spending several months in Spokane, Wash. Mrs. S. Cheers, of Nashville, Tenn., has arrived in the city to spend the winter with her daughter, Mrs. Owen Howell, of Charles St. Mrs. W. Rollins, who underwent an operation at the hospital, has returned to her home on Aurora Ave. and is very ill at the present time. Rev. Stephen Theobald, pastor of St. Peter Clavers Catholic church, announces that six hundred dollars was cleared at the recent fair at his church. Mr. and Mrs. George Bromley, of Marshall, Minn., are spending ten days in the city, the guest of Mrs. Bromley's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Elliot. Attorney Chas. W. Scrutchin, of Bemidji, Minn., enroute home from Franklin, Pa., was in the city last Sunday, the guest of Lawyer J. Louis Ervin. Mrs. D. S. Taylor, 555 Charles street, entertained a few friends at her home last Monday in honor of Mrs. W. J. Chicago, who was visiting in the city. The oyster supper given at Young's Cafe on Saturday evening was a grand success and special suppers will be a feature hereafter. Watch for the announcements. If you want to know all about Protection vs. Free-Trade send postal card request for free sample copies of THE AMERICAN ECONOMIST, 339 Broadway, New York. Wm. Ross was arrested at Phalen Park Wednesday. He is thought to be insane and is supposed to have come from Columbus, Ohio. He was placed in the county jail. The big thing for Thanksgiving night, Thursday, Nov. 25, will be the Grand Charity Ball at Union Hall for the benefit of Crispus Attucks Home. Watch for further particulars. Have you been to Young's Cafe, 138 E. Third street lately? Well, you want to go. They have renovated, rearranged and fixed things generally. You can get a good dinner there for 25 cents. Go try 'em. Please bear in mind that the UNIQUE, corner of Seventh and Jackson streets, W. H. Baker proprietor, has the BEST moving pictures. A change of program every day. Any seat any time 5 cents. The Handicraft Art club met this week on Thursday with Mrs. James A. Lee on Sherburne avenue. The ladies are completing the articles for the exhibit, which consists of everything dainty for my lady's wardrobe or home. PAPER HANGING.—Any one wishing paper hanging done on short no- FIRE. PLATE GLASS AUTOMOBILE. TORNADO. SICK. ACCIDENT. LIFE. Tel. Cedar 8477 Land in the Hardwood Districts of MINNESOTA. NEAR GOOD TOWNS PRICES AND EASY TERMS. 24 East Fourth Street MINNESOTA. "FOO?" smokes the High Grade MAKE OF RMA- ARS MURPHY, ST. PAUL, MINN. ACEMENT! Ervin announces that he real estate and real estate tion with his law prac- ing a great deal of legal perly be handled by a plats and houses for rent e a number of First and sale. PORTGAGES, BONDS is Ervin Art Block tice and at reasonable rates should address A. W. Holden, 527 St. Anthony Ave., Tel. Dale 2055. Painting and interior decorating also done.—Advertisement. VOCAL AND PIANO LESSONS GIVEN BY MIR, AT HER RESIDENCE, 320 FARRINGTON AVE. HOURS ARRANGED TO SUIT PUPILS. TERMS VERY REASONABLE. TELL DALE 1597. Mr. James A. Roberts, of St. Anthony Ave., while employed at the St Paul Hotel, was unfortunate enough to fall on the stairway Wednesday evening, seriously injuring his right leg. He was removed to his home and is doing as well as could be expected. Mr. J. E. Murphy received word last week of the death of two cousins, M. E. Wallace and M. M. L. Early, of Monmouth, Ill. They, with two other young men, on a pleasure trip down the Mississippi River in an electric launch, the launch capsized and all four were drowned. Mack Bradley on last Saturday night stabbed Frank Lamar, aged 35, from the effects of which he died. The stabbing occurred at the home of Lamar, 1422 Rice street. Bradley escaped, but was subsequently captured and will have his preliminary hearing Monday. The Wednesday Study Club held its regular meeting at Crispus Attucks' home Wednesday afternoon and an enjoyable afternoon was spent sewing for the inmates. Much was accomplished but still more could be done. Mrs. Evelia Maxwell, president: Mrs. McAdams, secretary. Mrs. Malinda Dean, of Winnipeg, Can., is in the city, having been called here by the serious illness of her sister, Moss, 654, 450 Rondo street, who was taken to Bethesda hospital two weeks ago and was operated upon Friday of last week. The operation was successful and the patient is slowly improving. EVERYBODY please bear in mind that the annual meeting of the National Association for the Advancement of the Colored People will be held at Pilgrim Baptist Church on Tuesday evening, Nov. 9. Rev. Pasteur pastor of the First Methodist Church will address the Association. Public generally cordially invited. Persons whose planes need tuning should call on PROF. L. W. ANDERSON, a graduate of the Boston Conservatory. He is a piano specialist and does tuning and repairing, also voicing and regulating. His motto is: "Satisfaction or no pay." N. W. Phone South 3755, Minneapolis. Res. 2737 11 Ave. S. Terms reasonable. Mrs. C. J. Walker, the wealthy hair store proprietor of Indianapolis, Ind., who is touring the country lecturing, SALES. RENTALS. MORTGAGES. LOANS. CARE OF PROPERTY. ST. PAUL FINEST ESTABLISHMENT OF ITS KIND IN THE UNITED STATES. Twenty Elegant, Steam Heated, Electric Lighted Rooms for Gentlemen Only. Free Bath. Rates Reasonable. Lobby, Reading and Lounging Room, Buffet and Grill Room, Billiard Room, Dining Room, Barber Shop and Bath, Private Dining and Reception Room for Ladies. A LA CARTE MEALS AT ALL HOURS. BEST SERVICE. REGULAR DINNER Dally, From 1 to 6 P. M. 25 to 35 Cts. Sunday, 35 to 50 Cents. Special Terms for Private Parties, Banquets, Etc. MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA. Phone Nic. 9769. Main 9592 T. B. 2073 PORTERS' AND WAITERS' HOTEL FOR MEN ONLY GLOVER SHULL, Manager Rates 50 cents per day 209 Hennepin MINNEAPOLIS Phone Main 2580 Quick Service The France Hotel & Cafe 300-302 Fifth Ave. So. Cor. Third Street MINNEAPOLIS will appear at Pilgrim Baptist church as a special Thanksgiving treat Thursday, Nov. 25, and lecture on "Negro Women in Business," of which she is one of the finest living examples. Every one who can should hear her. The lecture will be under the auspices of the Ladies' Aid society. Tickets 25 cents. The New Era Topic Club, which meets every Sunday at Zion Presbyterian church at 4 P. M., expects a large gathering tomorrow to take part in the discussion: "Resolved, That the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has proven to be a failure in St. Paul." Well as friends of the Association are invited to take part in the discussion. Mr. E. J. Murphy and Miss Mae Williams are expected to repeat their solos. Mr. Oscar Suddeth died at the city hospital Oct. 31, aged 30 years, of tuberculosis, which had confined him to the hospital for nine months. His funeral was held at St. James A. M. E. church, of which he was a faithful member for many years, Tuesday, Nov. 2. Rev J. P. Sims officiated, assisted by Rev G. W. Camp. The funeral was quite largely attended and many floral tributes were deposited on his casket. Lyles, funeral director. Interment at Forest cemetery. The One More Effort Club of St. James' A. M. E. church, which has been in a state of inocuous desurtec for quite a while, was re-organized at a meeting held at the parsonage Thursday evening. Mrs. J. Q. Adams was elected president, Mrs. Joseph Adams, vice president and Mrs. Zella Reynolds, will be held every second and fourth Tuesday in each month. The first supper of this season will be given next Tuesday at the residence of Mrs. Adam Williams on W. Central Ave. under the management of Bismark Archer and herself. Every body invited. The ordinance prohibiting the display of moving pictures and theatrical performances which tend to create race and religious hatred was approved as to form by the city council last Tuesday. This ordinance makes it a misdemeanor punishable by fine or imprisonment in the county jail for each offense, and was prepared as a part of the fight against "The Birth of a Nation," by the St. Paul branch of the National Association for the advancement of Colored People. If passed, the commission would upon which to base a fight against much pictures in the future. Although this ordinance was prepared by Lawyer W. T. Francis, Commissioner McCollass assumed the responsibility for it and bore the brunt of the unjust newspaper criticism about it. GASOLINE AND NAPHTHA. How to Use Them in the Home. Gasoline and naphtha can be made less dangerous for household use if the following six rules are observed," says Robert W. Hargadine, State Fire Marshal. 1. Never keep gasoline or naphtha in a glass bottle or other breakable container. 2. Never keep it near a fire or in a warm place. 3. Never rub any article in gasoline or naphtha; because these products are easily electrified. An exception to this rule may be made in cleaning kid glove detached upon the hands, providing the cubbing is not done in the fluid, and is done in the open air. 4. Never press or iron goods that have been cleaned with gasoline or naphtha until they are thoroughly dried in the open air. 5. Never sprinkle gasoline or naphtha about the edges of carpets or rugs to kill moths. 6. Never keep a supply of gasoline or naphtha in the cellar where the vapor from a possible leak might accumulate, but if it is absolutely necessary to keep the product in the house place the container on a shelf at least four feet from the ground. The observance of these simple rules will eliminate the hazards of handling these extremely inflammable products in the household, and none is expensive, onerous or impractical. TEMPERANCE NUTRITION PURITY HEALTH On the Right Track Hamm's BEER THEO. HAMM BREWING CO. SAINT PAUL, MINN. TBL. DALN 6230 Madam E. Gross 250 RONDO STREET ST. PAUL, MINN. FACULTER OF AIR GOODS SCALP TREAT SHAMPOO SUITS ED 35¢ PHONE DALE 3823 MEN'S SUITS DRY CLEANER MANUFACTURER OF HAIR GOODS MEN'S SUITS PRESSED 35¢ PHONE DALE 3823 ME DR CLIFFORD A. SMITH 421 W. UNIVERSITY AVENUE LADIES WORK A SPECIALTY CALL FOR AND FULL SUIT OVERCOAT $25 ST. F Save money on your laundry. FLAT WORK 24 cents per dozen. Washed and Ironed. Phone us and our wagon will call. Both Phones 939 CAPITOL STEAM LAUNDRY. "The Old Reliable Laundry." LAW OFFICES OR J. LOUIS ERVIN ATTORNEY AT LAW SUITE 303 COURT BLOCK PAUL MINNE Sedar 9282 Laundry BUTLEY'S PLACE NUMBER SHOP POOL PARLOR LUNCH ing, Hair Cutting, Shampooing, Head and Massage. Best Brands of Cigars and Tobacco Afro-American Newspapers LIGHT EXPRESSING POOL PARLOR OPEN SUNDAYS 'TIL 10:00 P WABASHA ST. ST. PA Tel. Cedar 9282 Tal. Cedar 9282 Laundry Office UTLEY'S PLACE BARBER SHOP POOL PARLOR LUNCHES Shaving, Hair Cutting, Shampooing, Head and Face Massage. Best Brands of Cigars and Tobacco Afro-American Newspapers LIGHT EXPRESSING POOL PARLOR OPEN SUNDAYS TIL 10:00 P. M. 311 WABASHA ST. ST. PAUL UTLEY'S B BARBER SHOP POOL PARLOR Shaving, Hair Cutting, Shampooing Massage. Best Brands of Cig Afro-American New LIGHT EXPRESS POOL PARLOR OPEN SUNDAY 311 WABASHA ST. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO We did the editor's laundry doing it today. Why not prices in the city. Perfect teed. did the editor's laundry work. We ing it today. Why not yours? Lov es in the city. Perfect service guar We did the editor's laundry work. We are doing it today. Why not yours? Lowest prices in the city. Perfect service guaranteed. SPICERS LAUNDRY 228-230 W. PHONE JACKSON 899 QUICK SERVICE THE I. A. & C. ASH CO. H. DAVIS, MGR. We will haul ashes by the week, month or job. We do light jobs of grading and sodding, remove dirt and fill lots We also furnish a bed linen. ME JACKSON 893 QUICK SERVI THE I. A. & C. ASH CO. H. DAVIS, MGR. will haul ashes by the week, month or jo do light jobs of grading and sodding, ren we dirt and fill lots We also furnish THE I. A. & C. ASH CO. H. DAVIS, MGR. We will haul ashes by the week, month or job. We do light jobs of grading and sodding, remove dirt and fill lots We also furnish sand and black dirt We will put your coal in at the same price that it will cost you at the yards 1430 Rice Street ST PAUL РHOЯ . SAINT PAUL HOSS ET SCALP TREATMENT SHAMPOOING MEN'S SUITS DRY CLEANED $1 SMITH TAILOR AVENUE HALL FOR AND DELIVER ST. PAUL Meets this Union Hall Streets, at R. V. P; HOUSEH U. O. O. O. day in e. corner Au- p. m. Mr. m. Carri- bridge Str. HOUSEH U. O. O. Tuesday 1 plee Hall, e. Ave. South Miss Cora. GOPHER E. of the day in ea- ner Aurow Hall E. H. Kent Streets. JOHN H. ST. PAUL P. Minne fourth Fri Labor T corner Fo nue south in good s Watson, C 521 Washi RVIN LAW BOOK PILGRIN dar street services: 3:00 p.m. P. U. 6:40 choir rehe Furcasis tended. Res. 633 W Laundry Office PLACE FOR LUNCHES Big, Head and Face Papers and Tobacco Papers ING TIL 10:00 P. M. ST. PAUL work. We are yours? Lowest service guaran- MEMOR corner A rservices: m.; Sunday meeting 7 lc cordia Donald, p. ST. JAM Fuller and loes: 1100 prayer mee on Monday morning and Parsonage Sims, Pas- Jones, Pa. S. PHIH corner A street. Su- turday of No celebrations third Sunday and fourth Sunday. Andrew, 6; Week servi- class. 8:00 m.; 8:00 s. m.; 9:00 a. m.; $35 Thomas ZION PR Parrington day service 9:00 P.M. Young Prev week meet Rev. G. W. Parrington 228-230 W. 7th St. QUICK SERVICE FISH CO. MR. month or job. sodding, remo- tors black dirt Anyone se quiclily secu invention in those wounds sew free. O Patents to special notice MINNESOTA, A. F. AND A. M. H. J. SHELTON, Grand Master, 609 E. Sixth St., Duluth, Minn. G. L. HOAG, Grand Secretary, 580 Charles St., St. Paul, Minn. PIONEER LODGE NO. 1. F. AND A. M. and third Monday in each month at Union Hall corner Street, at 8:00 p.m. W. A. and Kent Streets, at 8:00 p.m. W. A. M.; J. H. Dillingham, Secy., 569 Rondo. PERFECT ASHAR LODGE NO. 4. F. AND A. M. and fourth Tuesday in each month at Union Hall corner Aurora and Kent Streets, at 8:00 p.m. M. Johnson, W. M.; Oliver Taylor, Secy. BETHEL CHAPTER NO. 28, R. A. M. meets second Thursday in each month Hall, Aurora and Kent Streets, at 8:00 p.m. John A. Sayles, Secy., 479 Rondo Street. PILGRIM COMMANDERY NO. 22, R. A. M. complain, Meets fourth Thursday in each month Hall, Aurora and Kent Street, W. M. meets fourth Thursday in each month John A. Sayles, Secy., 479 Rondo Street. MARS LODGE NO. 2202, G. U. O. F in each month second and fourth Wednesday in each month Hall, Aurora and Kent Streets, at 8:00 p.m. N. G. J. Wesley Kelly, P. S. 850 St. Anthony Avenue. FREDERICK DOUGLAS LODGE NO. 122 of O. F. Meets first and third Friday in each month at Union Hall, corner Aurora and Kent Streets, at 8:00 p.m. E. A. Hatton, N. G.; James R. Lynn, P. S. 375 Carroll Avenue. ST. PAUL PATRIARCHY NO. 114 Meets third Monday in each month at Aurora and Kent Streets, at 8:00 p.m. George B. Lowe, R. V. P.; Augusta Jones, W. P. R. HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH NO. 553, G. U. of O. F. meets first and third Monday in each month at Union Hall, Aurora and Kent Streets, at 8:00 p.m. Mrs. Kartha Wilson, M. N. G.; Mrs. Carlie E. Lindsay, W. R. 918 Wood- bridge Avenue. MINESPOLIS. HOUSEHOLD OF BISHOP NO. 744, G. U. of O. F. meets second and fourth Tuesday in each month at Labor Temple Hall, Aurora street and Eighth Ave. South, Mrs. S. Singer, M. N. G. Miss Cora Mara, W. R. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA BIDDLE CIRCLE, LADIES OF G. A. Rumers first and third Tuesdays of each A. Rumers room Court room, old cap room building, Mrs M. J. Leavitt, Pre Mr J. R. White. Seev., Phinney Ridge FIDELITY COURT OF CALANTHO NO. 345, N. A. G. A. E. A. A. and A. Rumers meets first and third Monday in a meeting P. Hall. 211 Hennepin Ave. Minneapolis Mrs. Minneva M. Barnett, W. C.; Miss. Arlene M. Scott R. of D. 25 W. 29th H. NAT TURNER LODGE NO. 2, K. OF P. Milneapolis, meets second and fourth Tuesdays each month at Labor Temple Bldg., corner Fourth street and Eighth floor. 135 p. m. All Knights in good standing and welcome. Ralph Watson, C. C.; Wm. F. Newton, K. R. 521 W. Washington Ave. N. PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH. CELEBRATE and Summit avenue. Sunday services and Summit avenue. Sunday services and Summit avenue. 11:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. Schooling at 11:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. Schooling at 11:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m. Prayer service. 3:00 B. Y. U. 6:45 p.m. Prayer service. 3:00 B. Y. U. 6:45 p.m. Prayer service. Wednesday 8:00 p.m. Funeral services, Promptly attended. Rev. B. N. Muir pastor. Res. 633 Went Central avenue. Pastor study at church. Tel Jackson 346. MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH. corner Rice and Flower streets. Sunday services: Preaching. 11 a.m. and 8 a.m.; Sunday School 12:45; Deaconess meeting 7; B. Y. P. U. 7:30 p.m. Public cordially invited. Rev. E. H. McDonald, pastor, 651 W. Central avenue. ST. JAMES A. M. E. CHURCH. COR. Fuller and Jay streets. Sunday services. 11:00 a.m. and 7:20 p.m. Wednesday 8:00 p.m. Paster visits on Monday and Tuesday. Wednesday Wednesday 435 Jay street. Rev. f. J. P. Simmons, pastor. S. PHILIPS EPISCOPAL MISSION courtesy, miraora avenue and Mackubla street. S.S. Episcopal celebration of Holy Eucharist, 7:30 p.m. of Holy Eucharist first and third Sunday, 7:30 p.m. Matts, second and fourth Sundays, 11:30 p.m. school, 12:30 p.m. M. Brotherhood of St. Bishop Matts, 7:30 p.m. Week week services, Wednesdays Holy Eucharist, 8:00 p.m. M. Fridays, evening prayer class, 8:00 p.m. Fridays Holy Eucharist, 9:00 a.m. Rev. A. H. Leakton, Rector, 35 Thomas St. ZION PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH, Cor- ferrington and St. Anthony avenue. Mission services, preaching, 11:00 a.m. M. and S. M. services, 11:00 a.m. Young Peoples meeting, 7:00 p.M. M. Me- ngy meeting, Wednesday, 5:00 p.M. M. Re- kley meeting, pastor, Mansse 377 Farrington ave. OVER 65 YEARS' EXPERIENCE PATENTS TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPY RIGHTS & C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patented. On patentes strictly confidential, HANDBROOK, on Patents serves the oldest agency for securing patents. Patent taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Term, $2 a year; four months, $1. Sold by all newdealers. MUNN & Co 391 Broadway, New York Branch Office, 6th P. St., Washington, D. G. HAIR DRESSING MINNESOTA = ODD FELLOWS AYES LODGE No. 5. — P first and third yrds sunday at Castle Hall 221 Lyndon cor. Farrington. James cor. Farrington. ikings in good standing, always James Thomas, C. C. Jas. Sanderson, V. C. I. E# H St Albans, K. K of St Albans stxssk. CHURCHES