Painless Extraction Have those old teeth removed and protect your health. Any number of teeth can be replaced by a plate or bridge, made to look natural. ^ Consultation Free. Or. P. W. Sawyer DENTIST Phone Doug. 7150. 220 S. 13th St. 13th and Farnam Sts. The Kashmir Beauty Shop FOR LADIES We Also Make a Specialty of TREATING MEN’S SCALPS 220 S. 13th St., I'pstairs 13th and Farnam. JFSSE half;, MOSS, Manager Douglas 7150. MADAME HENDERSON HAIRDRESSER and MANICURIST Agent fur the Celebrated Madame Walker Preparations. The W'alker Method Taught Diplomas Granted. Phone Webster 14at 2304 N. 25th St. Omaha, Neb. wanted" COLORED BOYS From 14 to 17 Years FOR PAGES Apply to DAN DKSDI NFS, CHAMBER OF COMMERCE 17th Floor, W. O. W. Bldg. The Jones Poro Culture College Positively Grows the Hair _ Try our scientific method of treat ing the scalp. We positively grow hair or money refunded. Electric massage for scalp and face. System taught. Sterilized equipment. Steam heated booths. All work private. MRS. ANNA EVANS JONES 1516 North 24th St. Webster 5450 Harney 6100 TEXAS WHEN IN TEMPLE, TEXAS STOP WITH Mrs. 1. S. Dawson 218 South 4th Street Who gains pleasure in making you comfortable. Satisfaction guaranteed. Rates reasonable. Write or wire for accommoda tion. Qualifications of Christian Leadership Sermon Preached By Rt. Rev. Thomas F. Gailor, D. I)., Bishop of Tennessee, at Consecration of Bishop Denhy. "I could wish that myself werei anathema from Christ for my breth ren, my kinsmen in the flesh. (Ro mans ix:3.) The love of one's own race and loy alty to its welfare is a primordial in stinct implanted in us bj God. St. Paul, who more than jjny other man, was God’s instrument in the founding of the Christian church, who j for that reason was hated by the Jews and made the victim of their re | lentless persecution and calumny, nev er wavered for a moment in his love and in his loyal effort for what he believed was the best interest of Is rael. The true Israel, he said, has not been discredited nor abandoned, hut has become complete in Jesus Christ. So in this epistle his heart I yearns for his own people scattered throughout the empire, oppressed, de spised and hating Roman and Chris j tian with spiritual pride and exclu j sive bigotry, and he breaks out in the ■ passionate appeal, “I could wish my i self accursed from Christ for their i sake.’’ “My heart’s desire and prayer j for Israel is that they might be saved,”] I and he concludes with the vehement j assertion, “I know all Israel shall be saved.” This is the way in which the Apostle to the Gentiles loved his own people, and though he lived for Christ, suffered for Christ and died for Christ, he was, first, last and all the.time a Hebrew of the Hebrews, a Jew in every beat of his heart and every thought of his mind. We are assembled here today to j consecrate a Bishop, a leader ami overseer in the church, who shall de vote himself exclusively to work among his own people and give his j life and thought to the moral and spiritual uplift of the Negro race. There is no nobler nor truer dedica j tion of a man’s life than that unselfish ] service in the name and faith of Christ to his own kindred and people; and it marks an epoch in the history of the American Episcopal Church, when leadership so important and so sig | nifiennt is entrusted to one of its own ! Negro priests. Its importance cannot easily be overestimated. “There are now about 10,000,000 peo ple of Negro blood in the United States,” Bishop Gailor sa d. “Under the federal constitution they are eli gible to all the privileges of citizen ship and are guaranteed the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happi ness. During the past fifty years, with the encouragement and assist ance of the white people, many in dividuals of the race have shown marked ability to take advantage of the opportunities which our American democracy has afforded them. Many thousand acres of land are owned by Negroes; many financial institutions are controlled by them; many schools J and colleges are administered by them. And yet, as a race, the Negro in ; America has still great need of direc tion and leadership. “According to Bishop Thirkield, at one time president of Howard univer sity, the Negro death rate is twice as high as that of the whites, and the death rate from tuberculosis three times as great; and there is a low moral .\undard, and ignorance and im providence arc prevalent among the masses. According to the last census report not more than 3,745,538 belong to any Christian denomination. That leaves more than fi,000,000 who are unchurched. Certainly here is a call to leadership and direction which it were treason to Christianity to ig nore.” What, then are the qualifications for Christian leadership? The*, are four, viz.-: 1. A leader must have a clear con viction in his own mind of the goal to wards which he is leading his follow ers. 2. He must have a clear and definite conviction of the means and method whereby that goal is to be obtained. 3. He must be endowed with sym pathy to know and understand his fel low men. 4. He must have power of will and force of personal character. These are the qualifications of a leader in any kind of movement, whether in war or peace; hut we are speaking now more especially of Christian leadership and therefore we may venture to define more specifical ly what these qualifications mean as ideals to be aspired after by a bishop in the Church of God. 1. First of all. then, a leader must know and-be able to declare the na ture of the goal to which he desires to direct men. To St. Paul that goal was salvation in Jesus Christ, the de/elop ment of moral and spiritual character by the power of the spirit after the type and model of the perfect man. All the money, all the lands, all the wealth of the world, nay, all the trained intel ligence with the widest knowledge of scientific facts and methods, will not save a people unless they have morai and spiritual character. This is the lesson of the Kihle everywhere, of the Old Testament, of the New Testament, and salvation in Christ is the attain ment of moral and spiritual charac ter. The Germans have taught us, if we did not realize it before, that intel lectual efficiency without moral prin ciple is the attribute of the Prince of Devils. It is character, not mere in telligence nor brute courage, that-is going to win this war. The first qualification of leadership is a sure conviction of whither the leader wishes to go and tin goal; the end of Christian leadership is the at tainment of moral and spiritual char acter in the power and spirit of Christ. 2. And the second qualification of leadership is a clear conviction of the truest and surest method and means by which this goal can be reached, and the Bible leaves us no room to doubt about that. St. Paul says to the young bishop whom he placed at Ephesus: “Give attendance to reading, to ex hortation, to doctrjne.” A bishop must “be apt to teach.” “Hold fast the form of sound words.” And to the bishop he left at Crete he says: “Speak thou the things that become sound doctrine. Speak and exhort and rebuke with all authority.” That means preaching and teaching the faith that has been hand ed down to us. But there is something more than preaching necessary. “By grace he are saved through faith.” The apostle says: "Stir up the gift of grace that is in thee,” for we are not only ambassa dors of Christ, hut “I could wish that but stewards of the mysteries of God.” The purpose of Christian leadership is not merely that we should hear about Christ, but that we should be joined to Christ, not merely that we should know the good news of redemption, but that we should be partakers of the life of the redeemer; not merely that we should have aroused in us the feel ing of need and the desire for help, but that we should actually receive within ourselves that power that over comes evil and builds up character. So Christianity is more than the preaching of doctrine. It is the com munication of a new life; it is a sac ramental system. When St. Peter preached to the people on the day of Pentecost they were “pricked at the heart”—they were, as we say, con verted, but St. Peter told them that was not enough. They must repent and be baptized. So some years after wards when St. Peter went to Samaria and found those who had been bap tized he completed their baptism by the laying on of hands. And from that day until this ministers of the Christian church have been no* only preachers of the word, but ministers of the sacraments of baptism, confir mation and holy communion. And from that day to this church has been what the prayer book calls “The Church Militant,” an army in the field, trained and equipped to fight for truth and goodness, to overcome er ror and unrighteousness. And that implies organization and discipline. It implies authority and those who are commissioned to exercise it. It im plies sacraments and those who are commissioned to administer them— obedience to orders and the reign of law. In our view of it, according to the teaching of scripture, the goal which the Christian leader must have clear before his mind is the attainment of Christian character; and the means by which that is to be achieved is obedience to the doctrine and the rev erent use of the sacraments which Christ has ordained. III. The third qualification for leadership is sympathy. A leader must know his people and understand them, go in and rut among them, and sympathize with them in their weak nesses and strength, their ideals ami hopes. The intelligent sympathy of a Christian leafier s the greatest powei that God can give a man for the work of helping and saving souls and the lack of it has often wrecked and ruined the career of men of great ability and genius. I remember reading the words of,an eminent historian who said that the greatest social regeneration that was ever wrought since Christianity came into the world was accompl'shcd by an humble-minded man whose chief distinction was his abounding sym pathy as a sincere servant of Jesus Christ, anj) the man’s name was St. Francis and he was born in a little Italian town called Assisi. St. Fran cis, in a wild and turbulent age, sim ply tried to live and act like Christ. He .■-aw Christ on earth in man and ^ast and flower, and he was a poet who: e poetry expressed itself not in verse, but in character.” He knew not so much the doctrine as the person of Christ and spoke only of Christ’s lave. He opposed no man, he de nounced nothing, he framed no sys tem, he did not wish to found an order of monks. He had no interest in being imitated. He merely wished to live his life as he conceived it, wandering about without money or possessions so that he might be free from care. And yet that life of his changed the world in which he lived, fascinated and com pelled the rudest men of a barbarous age, created art, revived literature, awakened learning, remade society. It was the power of sympathy in the | name and faith of Jesus Christ. IV. And the fourth qualification of leadership is that grace of God, call it what you please, force of will, sense of responsibility, resolute optimism which comes from the power of faith. It was this that enabled St. Paul to fight the good fight and to keep the faith even unto death, though his own people misunderstood and perse cuted him, though the Romans im prisoned him. “Woe to me,” he said, “If 1 preach not the gospel and ‘Israel (f'ontinued on Eighth Page.) Classified Advertising KATES—1V4 csnts a word for single Insertions, 1 cent a word for two 01 more Insertions. No advertisemoni for less than 16c. Cash should ao company advei ilsement. FURNISHED ROOM8 FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Newly furnished room, 1518 North 24th st. Web. 4419. FURNISHED rooms for rent. 2622 Grant st. WANTED—Middle-aged woman as companion for lady. Apply 2521 Miami street. j Furnished room at 2512 M st. Mrs. | Pauline McCurtis, South Side. i FOR RENT—Right at 24th st. car line; two nice, large furnished rooms for couple; also a smaller room. 2317 Charles. Webster 4745. A furnished room for rent. Mrs. E. M. Wright, 2620 Burdette st. Webster 5543. FOR RENT—Furnished rooms. Call Webster 5639. For Rent—Newly furnished rooms. 1518 North 24th street. Tel. Web. 4419. FOR RENT OR FOR SALE—Six room house, furnished. Call Webster 5639. 1809 North 23d st. Furnished Rooms—Strictly modern furnished rooms for man and wife or for men. 2417 Caldwell. Mrs. G. Holmes. Furnished rooms. Strictly modem. 2705 Douglas street. Harney 6829. Mrs. I. Falls. A neat furnished room in modem home for man and wife, 3702 North Twenty-third street. Webster 3727 9-21 Neatly furnished rooms in private family. Strictly modern. Webster 1196. 9-21-4t First class rooming house, steam heat, bath, electric light. On Dodge | and 24th si. car line. Mrs. Ann- Hanks, 924 North 20th st. Doug. 4372. Furnished Rooms—Neatly furnish ed rooms in a strictly modern home; one-half block off car line. Tel. Web. 4983. 1516 North 16th. Furnished Rooms—Strictly modem furnished room for man and wife. Mrs. Hueston, 2805 Ohio. For Rent.—Four rooms furnished or unfurnished, 2624 North 25th St. Phone Webster 5560. FURNISHED rooms for rent; strictly modern. Res. 2212 Seward. Tel. Web. 3733. Furnished Rooms—Strictly modern. W. Harvell. Webster 4760. FOR RENT — Furnished rooms, 1549 N. 17th st. Web. 5230. Floyd Carlton. FOR RENT -Furnished rooms, ail modem. 2706 Parker st. Web. 1250, Nicely furnished rooms. Phono! Webster 2941. Furnished room; strictly modem; gentleman only. Mrs. M. Murray, 2714 North 25th St. Web. 979. Furnished room for gentleman. Mrs. E. M. Wright, 2620 Burdette St. Web. 5543. • _ 1 First-class modem furnished room». < Mrs. L. M. Bentley Webster, rl02' North Twenty-sixth street. Rhone • Webster 4769. Neatly furnished rooms in a prl '• G. R. Kinney Co. Incorporated “Shoes for the Entire Family” 207-209-211 North 16th St. Hotel Uyal Building. Shoes are high priced. Everybody says they are, but the Kinney stores are able to solve the footwear problem. By large purchases»from the largest shoe factories in the world, by fast turnover, quick sale, a small profit on each pair of shoes, we are able to turn out dependable, stylish footwear at one-third of the prices asked by other stores. MEN’S SHOES! of course. But j LADIES’ SHOES A few of our great money savers shown below'. Ladies’ medium heel, brown, black and gray wid— $2.98 to $5.98 Black, brown or gray kid, fancy heels, very stylish and dressy, per pair— $3.98 to $6.98 We carry a complete line of children’s shoes at surprising ly low' prices. [ Grand Patriotic Ball | _-_» ^ ^T" _g X \ 3 In Honor of the October Draftees •{* |: MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 14, 1918 | i* A -At- £ MECCA HALL Y I A :• Patronesses $ f. . A j. Crispus At tucks Auxiliary, Mrs. James G. Jewell. Chairman !• Admission, 35 Cents. Desdunes Orchestra .*. !. ••• I..;..;..;..;..;..;..;..;..;..;..;..:..:..:..:..;..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:..:-:-:--:-:-:":”:":":-:":":-:":":-:-:-:-:-:":":":":":": f \ ^ O |L| C" 2506 NORTH 24TH ST. lyl E#V^ |\ 111 Em WEBSTER 1412 Women’s Dark Grey, High Cloth Top Shoes, $8.00 value, for $5.98 Boys’ Heavy Solid School Shoes, regular $4.50 values, for $3.50 Girls’ High Top Dark Brown Shoes, regular $5.50 values, for $3.98 Men’s Dark Brown Shoes, regular $9.00 values, for $6.75 Men’s Dress Pants, $3.50 values, for $2.75 Men’s Hosiery, pair •--25c Women’s Waists, at $1.25 toys’ Wash Suits, ages 2 to 6, at $1.45 Men’s Arrow Brand Shirts $1.98 Men’s Monarch Shirts 99c Millinerv, Bungalow Aprons, Children’s Dresses, Hosiery, Notions. 25 PER CENT UNDER DOWNTOWN PRICES rate home. Modern except heat. Men For Rent—Two furnished rooms, inly . Webster 1760. strictly modern, 1923 North 27th St. Neatly furnished rooms, 1842 North ^ ehster ..l.iO,_ !7th St. Call Webster 2812. For ]{enj—Modern furnished rooms. Two furnished rooms, 2415 Indiana 2320 North 28th Ave. Phone Wei - ivenue. Tyler 3399-W. _ ster 2058.