The Appeal

Saturday, June 28, 1913

St. Paul, Minnesota

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VOL.29.NO.26. Companion Run Down by Car and Had to Be Shot. Kansas City.—For twelve hours a Newfoundland dog stood guard over the body of a bird dog run over the other evening by a street car at Independence and Indiana avenues. The bird dog was so badly hurt Policeman Lasley had to kill it. When a wagon was driven up in the morning to take the dog's body the Newfoundland was still standing watch. Considerable coaxing and sharp commands had to be used before the men could go near the spot. The two dogs have been seen together frequently by persons living in the neighborhood. The Newfoundland was close by when the car ran over its mate. Immediately after the policeman shot the injured animal the other dog took up the watch. When the officer attempted to go near the dog's body the Newfoundland resisted. Rather than disturb this "grieving companion" Policeman Lasley allowed the remains to lie all night on the street corner. JURY BOX BENEATH TREE. Justice, Ejected From City Hall, Holds Court on Lawn. St. Louis.-With his desk under a big oak tree and the jury box arranged under another tree near by, Justice Frank Ford of Upper Alton held court in the yard of the town lot in Upper Alton. Justice Ford was ejected from the village hall several days ago by the city officials, who allege that he is holding office illegally and has no right to city quarters. Ford had a child abandonment case to try, and he arranged everything outside under the tree, where his desk and law books still remain, just as they were piled outside by the police who ejected him. Twice little showers caused judge, jury and witnesses to run to the near by store. FIND MARKS OF AX ON PETRIFIED TREE Great Falls, Mont.-Going to prove that men inhabited this part of the world in prehistoric times and even then used axes and showed judgment in felling trees, Solomon Abbott of Shelby, north of this city, has developed startling evidence in this section. Not far from the Sullivan ranch and near the junction of Cut Bank creek and Two Medicine creek there is a butte, probably 450 or 500 feet above the surrounding country and about seven miles in circumference. It has cut banks so steep at every point that they are impassible for cattle and horses and at but one point is a fence needed to keep the animals on top of the butte. The butte is absolutely devoid of timber, but at one time on the summit there grew a fine straight pine tree two feet in diameter and not short of 50 to 100 feet high. This is proved by the fact that the tree now lies full length on the ground, cut into two foot lengths, the ax marks discernible in every cut of the wood, which is now petrified. Under the tree upill, as was done, it had to be chopped on the side to ward which it was to fall almost entirely, and the petrified stump shows that this was done. Every one of the cuts, which bint of commercial purposes for the wood, gives indisputable evidence of the woodman's ax. Abbott is a pioneer and is believed to have been the first white man to have climbed to the top of the butte. He found the petrified tree just as it is today, and the wonder is in what age was the tree cut and what sort of peope did it and what sort of an ax. CONVICT IS NOW A LORD. Will Succeed to Title and Large Estates on Release. Leavenworth, Kan.-A telegram has been received at the federal prison announcing that Convict Fred Grey, by the death of an elder brother in England, would succeed to a title and a large estate. He will become Lord Frederick Grey and will leave for England to assume his honors on his release from the federal prison. Grey received at the federal prison last fall from Texas, where he had been convicted for using the mala to defraud. He has been the black sheep of his family, having spent most of his time since 1902 in penal institutions of this country. JAIL HARVARD MAN AS SPY. Franzen Mistaken For German Secret Agent in Milan. Cambridge, Mass.-Walter Franzen of St. Paul, a Harvard junior who left college a few months ago for Europe, has recently been released from imprisonment in Italy, after being accused of being a notorious German spy. He was arrested in Milan in mistake for Franz Walther, a German secret agent, whose home is in St. Paul, Hesse Cassel. Franzen was tried by the military authorities at the Milan fortress and spent a week in a dungeon before the American consul had him released. TO HELP FARMERS UNCLE SAM'S AIM TO STUDY CREDIT NEEDS. Department of Agriculture Begins Movement, Financed by Education Board, Rockefeller Philanthropy, Splendid Results Expected. Washington.—The broadest investigation yet undertaken by the department of agriculture, designed ultimately to solve some of the great problems of farm life, is being planned for the rural organization service, which has just been established by Secretary Houston. The secretary and Dr. T. N. Carver of Harvard, who is at the head of the new work, are confident of splendid results. The rural organization service will work in closest co-operation with the newly created division of markets, which will devote its energies primarily to problems connected with the marketing of farm products at a profit. In many instances it is not the lack of a market that prevents the farmer from turning over a profit, but inability to utilize the means for reaching the market. Secretary Houston, Dr. Carver and students of farm economics in general long have felt that the weakness of agriculture was disorganization. This disorganization is the natural and often necessary result of the vast number of farm units, each one a separate unit of the organization. It is the result of the isolation of farm life and the fact that the farmer has learned to co-operate with nature better than with men. The rural organization service will be financed by the general education SECRETARY HOUSTON. board, one of the philanthropies of John D. Rockefeller. While backed by practically unlimited funds, however, the work will not be done on an extravagant scale. The general education board so far has appropriated only enough money to make a beginning and to effect an organization of thoroughly competent men. The southern education board, a branch of the general board, for several years past has been co-operating with the department in its farmers' co-operative demonstration work in the southern states. This work has met with phenomenal success and has solved many farm problems for the south. Effective organization in marketing crops will ultimately bring the farmer a much larger return for his work and also reduce the cost of living to the consumer by removing the middleman wherever practicable. "The farmer is quite capable of taking care of himself if he can be put in possession of the necessary information," says Dr. Carver. "Generally speaking, the farmer must do his own organizing and not depend either upon financial agencies or upon governmental agencies for the doing of the work. He must never, ever, has facilities for collecting, tabulating and spreading information which neither individual farmers nor groups of farmers possess. "It is not only necessary that the farmer's income should be increased, but that country life should be made sufficiently attractive to induce the farmer to remain in the country even when he has a large income. In the past it was generally true that the more prosperous agriculture was the fairest move to the more difficult "This problem is in some respects more difficult than the purely economic problems of marketing and credit. There must be some effective organization of rural interests to support an educational system in our rural schools at least equal to those found in the city schools. There must be organization to make country life so much more wholesome than city life that people will seek the country rather than the city for these reasons." Give Special Attention to Women in Distress at Newport. Newport—Policewomen—two"o"them, the first in the history of Newport—have been assigned to patrol the beach. Each of the "sister cops," Miss Minkle Smith and Miss Janet Buchanan, carried a parasol over her head and a mesh bag on her arm. Their uniform consisted of blue blouse with brass buttons, blue skirt and sailor style straw hat. They carried regular police waders. Their appearance at the shore started a rubberneck performance on the part of the crowds that caused the chief of police to detail a male patrolman to follow the two women police at a respectful distance to protect them from the curious throng. The "sister cops" were appointed at the request of the Civic league, and it is planned to have them patrol the beach, giving special attention to women in distress. RIDES ON A PORPOISE. Young Bather So Frightened That She Faints in Water. Venice, Cal. - A ride on the back of a huge playful porpoise caused Miss Violet Maitre of Minneapolis to have hysterical while in bathing. While a large number of bathers were enjoying the surf near Maitre Pier avenue a school of porpoises suddenly appeared and began to frolic with the bathers. All except Miss Nathan fed to the beach. When she observed the monsters she started to flee, but a big porpoise in a playful mood swam up and rubbed against the young woman. She screamed and jumped. The porpoise then swam directly under Miss Nathan, and she was carried several feet astride of the creature's back. She called loudly for help, fainted and fell off. David Moreno, a life guard, rescued Miss Nathan, and she was revived. AMPUTATES LEG OF PET CANARY Mistress Calls In Surgeon When Limb Was Fractured. Straighten the camera and then longing to Mrs. William M. Walker, wife of the manager of the Planters' hotel, chirped inquiringly as he stood on one leg on his perch in his mistress' room at the hostelry. The bird had often balanced himself on one leg before because it pleased him to do so, but on this occasion he was compelled to. The other leg had been amputated by a surgical operation. Bobby, who is allowed the freedom of the room and is seldom in his cage, had been hopping about the door when a domestic, not seeing him, pushed a chair against him. One of his feet was mashed, and the leg was broken. In such cases it is said to destroy the bird. But Mrs. Walker was attached to Bobby because he often sat on her finger or perched on her shoulder, so Dr. Frederick W. Shaffer, a veterinary, was called into consultation. He arrived with a case of instruments and promised to save Bobby's life. With a hypothetical syringe he injected cocaine into the broken leg just before he stepped on the feathers begin and then cut off the lumb with a pair of bone shears. RENOUNCES WEDDING FEES. Pastor Says They're Graft and Should Be Abolished. Chicago.-The Rev. Almer Pennew, pastor of the Euclid Avenue Episcopal church of Oak Park, has announced that hereafter he will not accept fees for marriages because they are "graft" and as such should be abolished. "If the church insists that marriage is that belongs to it," he said, "then the church should make marriages free to all. "The minister who does not need a fee should be ashamed to take it, and a church whose minister needs the fee should be ashamed and immediately raise his salary. No minister should be forced to stand at a wedding with his open hand behind him." Takes Sand For Stomach. Washington.-Jullan Emmons, doorkeeper of the house of representatives, sixty-five years of age, hale and hearty, swallows a teaspoonful of sand after each meal. He never leaves home in the morning without a vial of coarse sand. He says he was troubled constantly with sour stomach, heartburn, indigestion and kindred lilies until he started the "sand cure." Now he asserts that he is never troubled at all, relishes his food, sleeps like a baby and enjoys life to the full. Letter Fifty-two Years on Way. Pottsville, Pa.-A letter written at Fort Washington, Md., May 30, 1861, by Henry C. Russell of Pottsville, a civil war soldier, has just reached his widow in Pottsville through the regular channels of the United States mail. The letter had been intrusted to a comrade, M. E. Richards of Pottsown, pa. to mail and was never sent. Recently Mr. Richards died, and the letter, sealed and stamped, was found among some old papers. Russell died about five years ago. Defective Page President Mellon and Vice President McHenry, Arrested in April, Were Never Tried—Hence investigation of Most Recent Catastrophe. Stamford, Conn.-Close on the heels of a succession of wrecks which in the last two years have cost forty-nine lives and more than twice as many serious injuries on the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad, whose president, Charles S. Mellon, and vice president, E. H. McHenry, were arrested last April, charged with gross neglect and manslaughter and are yet untried, added on the afternoon of June 12, the thirteenth serious railway accident on its line since June 1, 1911. A most rigid investigation from several angles is now an progress and has placed the blame of the recent catastrophe on poor equipment, an inexperienced engineer, faulty brakes on the huge engine, lax enforcement of rules and the attempt to run express trains too fast over the road. And with the report of the interstate commerce commission attributing the Commerce wreck of October 2, 1912, to a neglect by the railroad of warfare is sued by the commission fresh in the minds of the public, the management has failed so far to give even a lucid explanation of the cause of the Stamford wreck. The New Haven's trouble, railroad men say, is in attempting to use an- Photo @ by American Press Association. PRESIDENT MELLEN OF NEW HAVEN AND VIEW OF LATEST WRECK. tiquated machinery and methods for maintaining modern passenger train schedules. Most of the recent wrecks, it was pointed out, were due to taking unsuitable crossovers at high speed. It was admitted that the company had rules which called for a slowing down of trains at antiquated crossovers, but it was added that an engineer had never been discharged for breaking those rules. This is the New Haven's record of wrecks in two years, responsible for forty-nine deaths; June 8, 1911, Fairfield, Conn, freight, four killed; signals were disregarded. July 12, 1911, Bridgeport, Conn, Federal express, twelve killed, a hundred injured; due to the carelessness of the engineer in taking a crossover at a high rate of speed. Aug. 28, 1911, Middletown, Conn, passenger train, sixty injured; rails spread. Oct. 15, 1911, Berlin Junction, Conn, passenger train, two dead, five injured; due to runaway heavy cars crashing into rear end of train. June 11, 1912, Clinton, Mass, passenger train, eight injured; ran into an open switch at high speed. July 15, 1912, Stonington Junction, Conn, passenger train, three killed, four injured; collision due to defective signals. Aug. 8, 1912, Dorchester, Mass, five killed, sixteen injured; passenger train (jumped track. Aug. 9, 1912, South Boston, passenger train, seven dead, forty injured; farreled. Oct. 3, 1912, Westport, Conn., Springfield express, nine killed, fifty injured; foe to taking a crossover at a high rate of speed. Nov. 16, 1912, Greenwich, Parma, Conn., missile limiter, thirty, five injured; foe to defective equipment. Nov. 17, 1912, Putnam, Conn., freight train, one killed, two injured; rear end collision. Feb. 22, 1913, Waterbury, Conn., passenger train, twenty-one injured; rear and collision in a fog. June 12, 1913, Stamford, Conn., Boston express by way of Springfield, six injured; collision caused by ignoring signals and failure of air brakes to work HEART MAY STOP BEATING. Physician Says Ten Minute Interruption Is Not Dangerous PARIS—The following very interesting statements, some of which are considered useful by the leading lights of French medical science, will be discussed by Dr. Alexis Carrel of the Rockefeller Institute For Medical Research, New York, at his first official lecture at the Paul Beajon hospital. Dr. Carrel announced that he was now able to operate in the chest cavity with as much ease and safety as in the abdomen. "It is now a simple cut," he said, "and we open the thorax and operate upon the lungs, heart and aorta as we treat the kidneys and the intestines. We now know also just how much the brain, the spinal cord and the heart can stand as regards the temporary anaesthetics required by operations. "The heart suffers very little from interrupted circulation as long as care is taken that it has enough oxygen, and it may be stopped for five or even minutes without danger, while in the spinal cord the circulation may be stopped as long as the brain may be stopped for four minutes. The brain, however, four minutes is the limit of safety, and after five it is very difficult to restore normal conditions." A huge field of work remained, he said in conclusion, to be done as regards operations upon the human heart, and the study of these was of the greatest possible importance. This was especially true of surgery for aneurisms and the shrinking of the aorta or pulmonary arteries. Tillman and Gonzales Reconciled, Even After Bloodshed. Columbia, S. C.—When United States Senator Benjamin Ryan Tillman of South Carolina recently consented to the confirmation by the senate of President Wilson's appointment of William E. Gonzales, editor of the Columbia (S. C.) State, as minister to Cuba a famous political and personal feud of twenty-four years' standing in South Carolina came to an official end. The Tillman and Gonzales families have been bitter enemies, and the Palmetto State has been the scene of many heated battles fought by able leaders on both sides. On one occasion the differences were augmented by bloodshed. The Gonzales brothers—three of them—were exponents of views of the old aristocratic element—the exslave owners and wealthy planters who could trace their ancestors back hundreds of years and who composed the society element and the financial backbone of the state. Senator Tillman in his vigorous and stirring campaign for governor of South Carolina in the earlship of Smith was victorious over this opposition. He was elected United States senator and has served his state in this capacity for the past sixteen years. James Tillman, a nephew of the senator, was elected lieutenant governor Later he was a candidate for governor. The Gonzales' fight on the Tillmans had never let up—many stinging and rebuking editorials were published in their paper. James Tillman was defeated. Shortly after the election he met N. G. Gonzales, at that time editor of the paper, on the streets of shot hole town. He subsequently was a memorial. A monument now stands in Columbia honoring the memory of N. G. Gonzales. On this it is recorded that Gonzales was "murdered" near the spot where the monument stands. Jim Tillman, as he was known, was later retired from politics. He became ill with tuberculosis. The climate of the west failed to cause an improvement in his condition, and he returned to his native state. In the meantime he had quarrelled with his sister. He was an open one. The last days of Jim Tillman spent in a lonely little cottage at Asheville, N. C., and he died there about a year ago. The bitter campaign of 1912 against Cole L. Blesse came on in South Carolina in August, 1912. For the first time Tillman and Gonzales were on the same side, both winning the election of the opponent of Blesse. This tended to bring the two factions on closer terms. The fact that Senator Tillman permitted the senate to confirm the appointment of Mr. Gonzales as minister to Cuba officially ends the struggle of twenty years, marked by a continual and able fighting on both sides and, even by bloodshed. SOCKLESS MAN IS DIVORCED Wife Saye She Washed His Face and Hands Daily. Chicago—Because her husband was too lazy to wash his face and would not wear socks unless she put them on him, Mrs. Jessie Wood of East Eighteenth street, Paterson, has obtained a divorce. According to Mrs. Wood, her husband, James G. was the personification of laziness. She endured him for five years. She testified that Wood refused to work. He developed a great desire to sleep during the day. Then, she says, he became so lazy he would not take a bath. Rather than invite criticism she wished hands and face daily and put on his socks. He was abledobed, but his wife says he was just natural—"blood." KEEPBABESCLEAN WARNING ISSUED Bulletin Tella Why Babies Cry, Get Sick and Die—Common Essential—Communities Wipe Out Infant Mortality to Large Extent. Washington.—The children's bureau of the department of labor has prepared a comprehensive bulletin devoted to babies. It is the first general contribution that Miss Julia Lathrop and her assistants have made to the government's educational publications. It tells all about babies and their troubles—why they cry and get sick and die. And then it tells what a relatively simple thing it would be to reduce the great procession of little coffees if mothers would only use common sense and keep their babies clean. It points out the tremendous strides that have been made in New York and Philadelphia since communities have been making concerted efforts to wipe out the causes of infant mortality. Here is one of the opening paragraphs: "The efforts of city health officials have resulted in the last ten years in reducing the general death rate in cities below that of the rural districts and villages. Babies die of diseases which to a large extent are preventable and when welfare work is directed toward saving them, the response is immediate and decided. In certain large cities, such as New York and Philadelphia, the result of systematic baby saving campaigns has been shown in a reduction of between 80 and 40 per cent in the deaths of MISS JULIA LATHROP. children under two years in the wards where the work was concentrated." The bulletin complains of shortage of funds, and it commends the motto of the New York health department. "Public health is purchasable; within natural limitations a community can determine its own death rate." Here are some of the principles laid down for raising babies: The baby nursed by its mother has approximately ten times the chances to live that a bottle fed baby has. Clean milk is fundamentally necessary. Cities should not tolerate the sale of "dipped" or "loose" milk. The bulletin continues: "The ideal is nothing short of clean milk for everybody. But the need for the prompt remedy of bad milk conditions is more urgent in its relations to the welfare of babies than to that of cities, since dirty milk is largely response to the occurrences of diarrhea and enteritis, the most important causes of death among infants. The remedy lies in the intelligent and effective inspection of farms, the means of transportation and the shops where milk is sold." The bulletin advocates the establishment of municipal milk stations such as are maintained in some cities. "The milk station," it says, "is simply a room sufficiently large to accommodate the patrons and equipped with a large ice box, a desk, some chairs and a table. An ordinary store is suitable for a station, and sometimes a schoolroom may be used for the purpose. The station is usually under a nurse, and a physician is in attendance at stated rooms." "More attention should be given to the prenatal care of mothers. Mundipalities are just beginning to awaken to the importance of this sort of work and to understand that much of the waste of infant life is due to causes that were operative before the baby was born. Some cities have a special maternity nurse, who gives all her time to these cases; other cities direct the general nurses to take charge of them." To Wed Schoolmate Here. Milwaukee, Wis. - A romance of youthful days in the Milwaukee public schools was told when clara Keller of Fredericksburg, Tex., came north to wed her old schoolmate, who as a boy ten years old pulled her from under the feet of a runaway team as they were playing near a school. The hero is Harry Murphy of Jollet, N. D. $2.40 PER YEAR. AGED VETERAN A WOMAN. Soldiers' Home Invasion Posed Fifty Years as a Man. Quincy, Ill.-The sex of Albert D. J. Cashier, civil war veteran and an inmate of the Soldiers and Sailors' home here, has just been revealed by Colonel J. O. Anderson, superintendent of the home, to be female. The woman, whose real name will probably never be known, served three years in the Union army during the civil war, mustered out of the service in 1855 later was placed on the government pension roll. She entered the soldiers' home two years ago, and at that time her sex was known only to Colonel Anderson, who promised not to reveal her secret. A short time ago she was adjudged insane, and as a result she was committed to the state hospital. Revelation of her sex was made two years ago in Livingston county, Ill., where she was employed by ex-Senator I. M. Lish as chauffeur. It is said by the ex-senator that one day his man and the chauffeur crawled under the wall. He also was tampering with the mechanism the engine started suddenly, and the wheels of the car passed over her, breaking her right leg. When the chauffeur was taken to a hospital it was discovered that she was a woman. TO TRY FLIGHT TO ENGLAND. Aero Yacht to Start by July 1, Says Boston Official. Savannah, Ga., A-Batson aero yacht will start by July 1 for a flight across the Atlantic ocean, according to the statement made here by a representative of the company. It is the purpose of the Batson interests to fly from Savannah to New York with a letter from Mayor Richard J. Davant to Mayor William J. Gaynor. Then the trip will be extended to Washington, where, with a letter from President Wilson to King George, the start on the transatlantic flight will be on M. M. Batson, U. S. A., retired, is the inventor and designer of the new air craft. His officers express confidence of winning the prize of $90,000 offered by Lord Northcliffe through the London Daily Mail for the first transatlantic flight. SCIENTISTS NEARING LIFE'S BORDERLAND Baltimore—Recent investigations in the laboratories of the Johns Hopkins Medical school seem to indicate a state intermediate between life and death, since life in many organisms may be suspended by freezing in liquid air and by other processes and then may be resuscitated. The lowest plant organisms, have enormous powers of resisting death. Bacteria of various diseases are seen in the laboratory frozen in liquid air at a temperature of 360 degrees F. There are instances of the lives of frogs, rats, snails and fish being suspended by this freezing process, yet on being "thawed out" after several weeks they revive. These animals are perfectly normal when placed in a refrigerating jar filled with liquid air at a certain temperature. After it is thawed, the animal appears lifeless. A month later they are removed and on being massaged show signs of life, often reviving completely. Recently successful efforts were made in the medical school to revive the apparently dead heart of an animal. As explained by Dr. Alexis Carrel, who recently lectured before the student body here, in about five cases out of ten the heart of a chicken took on renewed energy several hours after the heart was frozen and preserved. A few hours later it was resuscitated by massage. TELEPHONE BREEDS INSANITY German Alienist says "Central" Drives Men to Madness. Berlin--Remarkable evidence as to the effect of the telephone upon the minds of people using it was given in a trial here. Dr. Strauch, a commissioner in lunacy, said that even phlegmatic men might have their mental balance upset by exasperation at getting no reply from "central." He mentioned the case of one of his own patients, a well known doctor, who became complacent innsane through telephone exasperation. Dr. Pacheter, another witness, asserted that he could bring evidence to show that government telephone girls had been permitted by the inspectors to utilize one of the big exchanges for the reception of their fancies. One amusement of the girls of this exhuse was to look up all subscribers having the same name, to connect all of them, ring them all up and laugh loudly at the result. Tacoma Birds Night Singers. Tacoma, Wash--Mrs. Clara Gillespie of 4189 South Yakima avenue reports that Tacoma has birds that sing and that we have birds that that is frequently visited by these night singing birds," said Mrs. Gillespie. "They warble and trill very prettily, although I have never been able to see one." THE APPEAL STEADILY GAINS BECAUSE: 4-It is the organ of ALL Afro-Americans. 5-It is not controlled by any ring or elbow. 6-It asks no support but the people's. Intentional Duplicate Exposure Companion Run Down by Car and Had to Be Shot. Kansas City.—For twelve hours a Newfoundland dog stood guard over the body of a bird dog run over the other evening by a street car at Independence and Indiana avenues. The bird dog was so badly hurt Policeman Lasley had to kill it. When a wagon was driven up in the morning to take the dog's body the Newfoundland was still standing watch. Considerable coaxing and sharp commands had to be used before the men could go near the spot. The two dogs have been seen together frequently by persons living in the neighborhood. The Newfoundland was close by when the car ran over its mate. Immediately after the policeman shot the injured animal the other dog took up the watch. When the officer attempted to go near the dog's body the Newfoundland resisted. Rather than disturb this "grieving companion" Policeman Lasley allowed the remains to lie all night on the street corner. JURY BOX BENEATH TREE. Justice, Ejected From City Hall, Holds Court on Lawn. St. Louis.—With his desk under a big oak tree and the jury box arranged under another tree near by. By Justice Frank Ford of Upper Alton held court in the yard of the town lot in Upper Alton. Justice Ford was ejected from the village hall several days ago by the city officials, who allege that he is holding office illegally and has no right to city quarters. Ford had a child abandonment case to try, and he arranged everything outside under the tree, where his desk and law books still remain. just as they were piled outside by the police who ejected him. Twice little showers caused, judge, jury and witnesses to run to the near by store. Great Falls, Mont.-Going to prove that men inhabited this part of the world in prehistoric times and even then used axes and showed judgment in felling trees, Solomon Abbott of Shelby, north of this city, has developed startling evidence in this section. Not far from the Sullivan ranch and the junction of Cut Bank creek and the Medicine creek there is a butte, probably 400 or 500 feet wide the surrounding country and about seven miles in circumference. It has cut banks so steep at every point that they are impassable for cattle and horses and to one point is a fence needed to keep the animals on top of the butte. The butte is absolutely timed, but at one time on the summit there grew a fine straight pine tree two feet in diameter and not short of 80 to 100 feet high. This is proved by the length of the butte, a length on the ground, cut into two foot lengths, the ax marks discernible in every cut of the wood, which is now petrified. To tell the tree uphill, as was done, it had to be chopped on the side toward which it was to fall almost entirely, and the petrified stump shows that this was done. Every one of the cuts, which hint of commercial purposes for the wood, gives indisputable evidence of the woodman's ax. Abbott is a pioneer and is believed to have been a pioneer. He have climbed to the top of the hutte. He found the petrified tree just as it is today, and the wonder is in what age was the tree cut and what sort of people did it and what sort of an ax. CONVICT IS NOW A LORD. Will Succeed to Title and Large Estates on Release. Leavenworth, Kan.-A telegram has been received at the federal prison announcing that Convict Fred Grey, by the death of an elder brother in England, would succeed to a title and a large estate. He will become Lord Frederico Grey and will leave for England to assume his honors on his release from the federal prison. Grey's received at the federal prison last fall from Texas, where he had been convicted for using the mails to defraud. He has been the black sheep of his family, having spent most of his time since 1902 in penal institutions of this country. JAIL HARVARD MAN AS SPY. Franzen Mistaken For German Secret Agent in Milan. Cambridge, Mass.-Walter Franzen of St. Paul, a Harvard junior who left college a few months ago for Europe, has recently been released from imprisonment in Italy, after being accused of being a notorious German spy. He was arrested in Milan in mistaken for Franz Walther, a German secret agent, whose home is in St. Paul, Hesse Cassel. Franzen was tried by the military authorities at the Milan fortress and spent a week in a dungeon before the American consul had him released. TO HELP FARMERS UNCLE SAM'S AIM Department of Agriculture Begina Movement, Financed by Education Board, Rockefeller Philanthropy, Splendid Results Expected. Washington.—The broadest investigation yet undertaken by the department of agriculture, designed ultimately to solve some of the great problems of farm life, is being planned for the rural organization service, which has just been established by Secretary Houston. The secretary and Dr. T. N. Carver of Harvard, who is at the head of the new work, are confident of splendid results. The rural organization service will work in closest co-operation with the newly created division of markets, which will devote its energies primarily to problems connected with the marketing of farm products at a profit. In many instances it is not the lack of a market that prevents the farmer from turning over a profit, but inability to utilize the means for reaching the market. Secretary Houston, Dr. Carver and students of farm economics in general long have felt that the weakness of agriculture was disorganization. This disorganization is the natural and often necessary result of the vast number of farm units, each one a separate business enterprise. Also it is the result of the isolation of farm life and the fact that the farmer has learned to co-operate with nature better than with men. The rural organization service will be financed by the general education PETER H. HARRIS board, one of the philanthropies of John D. Rockefeller. While backed by practically unlimited funds, however, the work will not be done on an extravagant scale. The general education board so far has appropriated only enough money to make a beginning and to effect an organization of thoroughly competent men on the board, a branch of the general board, for several years past has been co-operating with the department in its farmers' co-operative demonstration work in the southern states. This work has met with phenomenal success and has solved many farm problems for the south. Effective organization in marketing crops will ultimately bring the farmer a much larger return for his work and giving to the consumer by removing the middleman wherever practicable. "The farmer is quite capable of taking care of himself if he can be put in possession of the necessary information," says Dr. Carver. "Generally speaking, the farmer must do his own organizing and not depend either upon financial agencies or upon governmental agencies for the doing of the work. He is never, has facilities for collecting, tabulating and spreading information which neither individual farmers nor groups of farmers possess. "It is not only necessary that the farmer's income should be increased, but that country life should be made sufficiently attractive to induce the farmer to remain in the country even in the past it was generally income. In the past it was generally income, and the more prosperous agriculture was the faster farmers have moved to town. "This problem is in some respects more difficult than the purely economic problems of marketing and credit. There must be some effective organization of rural interests to support an educational system in our rural schools. We equal to those found in the city schools, but we must be organized for _rural sanitation_, which will make country life so much more wholesome than city life that people will seek the country rather than the city for these reasons." THE APPEAL. WOMEN COPS ON BEACH! Give Special Attention to Women in Distress at Newport Newport-Policewomen-two'them, the first in the history of Newport have been assigned to patrol the beach. Each of the "sister copa" Miss Minnie Smith and Miss Jussine Brown has carried a parasol over her head and mesh bag on her arm. Their uniform consisted of blue blouse with brass buttons, blue skirt and sailor style straw hat. They carried regular police whistles. Their appearance at the shore started a rubberneck performance on the part of the crowds that caused the chief of police to detain a male patrolman to follow the two women police at a respectful distance to protect them from the curious strong. The "sister cops" were appointed at the request of the Civic league, and it will have them patrol the beach, giving special attention to women in distress. RIDES ON A PORPOISE. Young Bather So Frightened That She Faints In Water. Venice. Cal.-A ride on the back of a huge playful porpoise caused Miss Violet Nathan of Minneapolis to have hysteria in while in bathing. While a large number of bathers were enjoying the surf near Marian Pier avenue a school of porpoises suddenly appeared and began to frolic with the bathers. All except Miss Nathan fed to the beach. When she observed the monsters she started to flee, but a big porpoise in a playful mood swam up and rubbed against the young woman. She screamed and jumped. The porpoise then swam directly under Miss Nathan, and she was carried several feet nstrial of the creature's back. She called loudly for help, fainted and fell off. David Moreno, a life guard, rescued Miss Nathan, and she was revived. longing to Mrs. William M. Walker, wife of the manager of the Planters' hotel, chirped inquiringly as he stood on one leg on his perch in his mistress' room at the hostelry. The bird had often balanced himself on one leg before because it pleased him to do so, but on this occasion he was compelled to. The other leg had been amputated by surgical operation. Bobby is is wedded the freedom of the room and is seldom in his cage, had been hopping about the floor when a domestic, not seeing him, pushed a chair against him. One of his feet was mashed, and the leg was broken. In such cases it is usual to destroy the bird. But Mrs. Walker was attached to Bobby because he often sat on her finger or perched on her shoulder, so Dr. Frederick W. Shaffer, a veterinary, was called into consultation. He arrived with a case of instruments and promised to save Bobby's life. With a hypodermic syringe he injected cocaine into the broken leg just above the place where the feathers begin and then cut off the limb with a pair of bone shears. RENOUNCES WEDDING FEES. Paster Says They're Graft and Should Be Abolished. Chicago—The Rev. Almer Penneish, pastor of the Euclid Avenue Episcopal church of Oak Park, has announced that hereafter he will not accept fees for marriages because they are "graft" and as such should be abolished. "If the church insists that marriage is a rite that belongs to it," he said, "then the church should make marriages free to all. "The minister who does not need a fee should be ashamed to take it, and a church whose minister needs the fee should be ashamed and immediately be forced to stand at a wedding with his open hand behind him." Takes Sand For Stormshoe Washington—Julian Emmons, doorkeeper of the house of representatives, sixty-five years of age, hate and hearty, swallows a teaspoonful of sand after each meal. He never leaves home in the morning without a vial of coarse sand. He says he was troubled constantly with sour stomach, heartburn, indigestion and kindred til until he started the "sand cure." Now he asserts that he is never troubled at all, relishes his food, sleeps like a baby and enjoys life to the full. Letter: Fifty-two Years on Way. Pottsville, Pa.—A letter written at Fort Washington, Md., May 8, 1961, by Henry G. Russell of Pottsville, a civil war soldier, has just reached his widow in Pottsville through the regular channels of the United States mail. The letter had been intrusted to a comrade, M. E. Richards of Pottsown, pa. to mail and was never sent. Recently Mr. Richards died, and the letter, sealed and stamped, was found among some old papers. Russell died about five years ago. President Mellan and Vice President McHenry, Arrested in April, Were Never Tried—Through Investigation of Most Recent Castrophile. Stumford, Conn—Close on the heels of a succession of wrecks which in the last two years have cost forty-nine lives and more than twice as many serious injuries on the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad, whose president, Charles S. Mellen, and vice president, E. H. McHenry, were arrested last April, charged with gross neglect and manslaughter and are yet on trial on an afternoon of June 12, the fifteenth of our railway accident on the life line above. And with the report of the interstate commerce commission attributing the Westport wreck of Oct. 3, 1912, to a neglect by the railroad of warnings is alarming. The wreck has the minds of the public, the management has failed so far to give even a heic explanation of the cause of the Stamford wreck. The New Haven's trouble, railroad men say, is in attempting to use an- THE MAYOR OF BROOKLYN Photo © by American Press Association. PRESIDENT MELLEN OF NEW HAVEN AND VIEW OF LATEST WRECK. titigated machinery and methods for maintaining modern passenger train schedules, most of the recent wrecks, it was pointed out that due to taking unsuitable crossrovers at high speed. It was admitted that the company and rules which called for a slowing down of trains at antiquated crossrovers, but it was added that an engineer had never been discharged for breaking those rules. This is the New Haven's record of their most responsible for forty- one deaths. June 8, 1911; Fatfield, Conn, freight four killed; signals were disregarded. July 12, 1911; Bridgeport, Conn, Federal express, twelve killed, a hundred injured; due to the carelessness of the engineer in taking a crossover at a high rate of speed. Aug. 28, 1911; Middletown, Conn, passenger train, sixty injured; rails spread. Oct. 15, 1911; Berlin Junction, Conn, passenger train, two dead, five injured; due to runaway freight cars crashing into rear end of train. June 11, 1912; Clinton, Masa., passenger train, eight injured; ran into an open switch at high speed. July 15, 1912; Stonington Junction, passenger train, three killed, four injured; collision due to defective signals. Aug. 8, 1912; Dorchester, Masa., five killed, sixteen injured; passenger train jumped track. Aug. 9, 1912; South Boston, passenger train, seven dead, forty injured; serailed. Oct. 8, 1912. Westport, Comm. Springfield express, nine killed, fifty injured; to take to a crossover at a high rate of speed. Nov. 16, 1812, Green's Farm, Conn. Merchants' limited, five-five injured; fine to defective equipment. Nov. 17, 1812, Putnam, Conn. freight train, one killed, two injured; rear end collision. Feb. 22, 1812, Waterbury, Conn., passenger train, twenty-one injured; rear end collision in a fog. June 12, 1818, Stamford, Conn., Boston express by way of Springfield, six stilled and about a score injured; collision caused by ignoring signals and failure of air brakes in work. Defective Page Physician Says Ten Minute Interruption Is Not Dangerous. tion is Not Dangerous. Paris—The following very interesting statements, some of which are considered striking by the leading lights of French medical science, were made Dr. Alexis Carrel of the Rockefeller Institute Medical Research, New York, at the official lecture at the Paul Beauston hospital. Dr Carrel announced that he was now able to operate in the chest cavity with as much ease and safety as in the abdomen. "It is now a simple cut," he said, "and we open the thorax and operate upon the lungs, heart and sora we as we treat the kidneys and the intestines. We now know also just how much the brain, the spinal cord and the heart can stand as regards the temporary anaesthetic required by operations. "The heart suffers very little from interrupted circulation as long as care is taken that it has enough oxygen, and it may be stopped for five or even ten minutes without danger, while in the spinal marrow the circulation may be stopped as long as twenty minutes. "For the brain, however, four minutes the limit of safety, and after five it is very difficult to restore normal conditions." A huge field of work remained, he said in conclusion, to be done as regards operations upon the human heart, and the study of these was of the greatest possible importance. This was especially true of surgery for aneurisms, and the shrinking of the aorta or pulmonary arteries. Columbia, S. C.—When United States Senator Benjamin Ryan Tillman of South Carolina recently consented to the confirmation by the senate of President Wilson's appointment of William E. Gonzalez, editor of the Columbia (S. C.) State, as minister to Cuba a famous political and personal feud of twenty-four years' standing in South Carolina came to an official end. The Tillman and Gonzalez families have been bitter enemies, and the Palmetto State has been the scene of many heated battles fought by able leaders on both sides. One occasion the differences were augmented by bloodshed. The Gonzales brothers—three of them—were exponents of views of the old aristocratic element—the exslave owners and wealthy planters who could trace their ancestors back hundreds of years and who composed the society element and the financial backbone of the state. Senator Tillman in his vigorous and stirring campaign for governor of South Carolina in the early nineties was victorious over this opposition. He was elected United States senator and has served his state in this capacity for the past sixteen years. James Tillman, a nephew of the senator, was elected lieutenant governor Later he was a candidate for governor. The Gonzales' fight on the Tillmans had never let up—many stinging and rebuking editorials were published in their paper. James Tillman was defeated. Shortly after the election he met N. G. Gonzales, at that time editor of the paper, on the streets of Columbia and shot him dead. He subsequently was acquitted. A monument now stands in Columbia honoring the memory of N. G. Gonzales. On this it is recorded that Gonzales was "murdered" near the spot where the monument stands. James Tillman, as he was generally known, after later retired from politics. He became ill with tuberculosis the climate of the west failed to improve in his condition, and he returned to his native state. In the meantime he had quarrelled with his uncle, and the breach was an open one. The last days of Jim Tillman were spent in a lonely little cottage at Asheville, N. C., and he died there about a year ago. The bitter campaign of 1912 against Cole L. Blease came on in South Carolina in August, 1912. For the first time Tillman and Gonzales were on the same side, both favoring the election of the opponent of Blease. This tended to bring the two factions on closer terms. The fact that Senator Tillman permitted the senate to confirm the appointment to Mr. Gonzales as minister to Cuba officially ends the struggle of twenty years, marked by a continual and able fighting on both sides, and even by bloodshed. SOCKLESS MAN IS DIVORCED. Wife Saye She Washed His Face and Hands Daily. Hands Daily. Chicago—Because her husband was too lazy to wash his face and would not wear socks unless she put them on him, Mrs. Jessie Wood of East Eight Street Paterson has obtained a divorce. According to Mrs. Wood, her husband, James G., was the personification of laziness. She endured him for five years. She testified that Wood refused to work. He developed a great desire to sleep during the day. Then, she says, he became so lazy he would not take a bath. Rather than invite criticism she washed her hands and face daily and put on his socks. He was abeloided, but his wife says he was just natural—"blood." THE APPEAL KEEPS IN FRONT BEAUSE: 1-It aims to publish all the news possible. 2-It does so impartially, waiting as words. 3-Its correspondents are able and energetic. KEEPBABESCLEAN WARNING ISSUED COULD SAVE MANY LIVES. Bulletin Tells Why Babies Cry, Get Sick and Die—Common Wipe Essential—Communities Wipe Out Infant Mortality to Large Extent. Washington.—The children's bureau of the department of labor has prepared a comprehensive bulletin devoted to babies. It is the first general contribution that Miss Julia Lathrop and her assistants have made to the government's educational publications. It tells all about babies and their troubles—why they cry and get sick and die. And then it tells what a relatively simple thing it would be to reduce the great procession of little white coffins if mothers would only use common sense and keep their babies clean. It points out the tremendous strides that have been made in New York and Philadelphia since communities have been making concerted efforts to wipe out the causes of infant mortality. Here is one of the opening paragraphs: "The efforts of city health officials have resulted in the last ten years in reducing the general death rate in cities below that of the rural districts and villages. Babies die of diseases which to a large extent are preventable, and when welfare work is directed toward saving their lives the response is immediate and decided. In certain large cities, such as New York and Philadelphia, the result of systematic baby saving campaigns has been shown in a reduction of between 80 and 40 per cent in the deaths of A. H. children under two years in the wards where the work was concentrated." The bulletin complains of shortage of funds, and it commends the motto of the New York health department, "Public health is purchasable: within natural limitations a community can determine its own death rate." Here are some of the principles laid down for raising babies: baby nursed by its mother has approximately 4 times the chance to live that a bottle fed baby has. Clean milk is fundamentally necessary. Cities should not tolerate the sale of "dipped" or "loose" milk. The bulletin continues: "The ideal is, nothing short of clean milk for everybody. But the need for the prompt remedy of bad milk conditions is more urgent in its relations to the welfare of babies than to that of adults, since dirty milk is largely responsible for the occurrence of diarrhea and amputes, the most frequent cause of illness. The remedy lies in the intelligent and effective inspection of farms, the means of transportation and the shops where milk is sold." The bulletin advocates the establishment of municipal milk stations such as are now maintained in some cities. "The milk station," it says, "is simply a room sufficiently large to accommodate the patrons and equipped with a large ice box, a desk, some chairs and an ordinary store is suitable for a station; sometimes a schoolroom may be needed for a pose. The station is usually, under charge of a nurse, and a physician is in attendance at stated hours. "More attention should be given to the prenatal care of mothers. Municipalities are just beginning to awaken to the importance of this sort of work and to understand that much of the waste of infant life is due to causes that were operative before the baby was born. Some cities have a special maternity time to these causes; other cities direct the general nurses to take charge of them." To Wed Schoolmate Here. Milwaukee, Wis. - A romance of youthful days in the Milwaukee public schools was told when Clarence Keller of Fredericksburg, Tex., came north to wed her old schoolmate, who as a boy ten years old pulled her from under the feet of a runaway team as they were playing near a school. The here is Harry Murphy of Joliet, N. D. $2.40 PER YEAR. AGED VETERAN A WOMAN. Soldiers' Home Inmates Posed Fifty Years as a Man. Quincy, Ill.-The sex of Albert D. J. Cashier, civil war veteran and an inmate of the Sailors and Sailors' home, has just been revealed by Colonel J. O. Anderson, superintendent of the home, to be female. The woman, whose real name will probably never be known, served three years in the Union army during the civil war. She was mustered out of the service in 1855 and a few years later was placed on the government pension roll. She entered the soldiers' home, and at that time her sex was known to be a colonel Anderson, who promised not to secret. A short time ago she was adjudged insane, and as a result she was committed to the state hospital. Revelation of her sex was made two years ago in Livingston county, ill., where she was employed by ex-Senior I. M. Lish as chauffeur. It is said by the ex-senator that one day his machine would not run and the chauffeur came under the car. While she was unarmed she bumped the car, the glove started suddenly, and the wheels of the car passed over her, breaking her right leg. When the chauffeur was taken to a hospital it was discovered that she was a woman. TO TRY FLIGHT TO ENGLAND Aero Yacht to Start by July 1, Says Boston Official. Savannah, Ga. A-Batson aero yacht will start by July 1 for a flight across the Atlantic ocean, according to the statement made here by a representative of the company. It is the purpose of the Batson interests to fly from Savannah to New York with a letter from Mayor Richard J. Davant to Mayor William J. Gaynor. Then the trip will be extended to Washington, where, with a letter from President Wilson to King George, the transatlantic flight will be attempted. Captain M. A. Batson, U. S. A., retired, the inventor and designer of the new air craft. His officers express confidence of winning the prize of $99,000 offered by Lord Northcliffe through the London Daily Mail for the first transatlantic flight. SCIENTISTS NEARING LIFE'S BORDERLAND Tests Tend to Show a State This Side of Death. Baltimore—Recent investigations in the laboratories of the Johns Hopkins Medical school seem to indicate a state intermediate between life and death, since life in many organisms may be suspended by freezing in liquid air and by other processes and then may be resuscitated. Bacteria, the lowest plant organisms, have enormous powers of resisting death. Bacteria of various diseases are seen in the laboratory frozen in liquid air at a temperature of 360 degrees F. There are instances of the lives of frogs, rats, snails and fish being suspended by this freezing process, yet on being "thawed out" after several weeks they revive. These animals are perfectly normal when kept in a refrigerating jar filled with liquid air at a certain temperature. After a short time they appear lifeless. A month later they are removed and on being massaged show signs of life, often reviving completely. Recently successful efforts were made in the medical school to revive the apparently dead heart of an animal. As explained by Dr. Alexis Carrel, who recently lectured before the student body here, in about five cases out of ten the heart of a chicken took on renewed energy several hours after death. Immediately after death the heart was frozen and preserved. A few hours later it was resuscitated by massage. TELEPHONE BREEDS INSANITY German Alienist Says "Central" Drives Men to Madness. Berlin.-Remarkable evidence as to the effect of the telephone upon the minds of people using it was given in a trial here. Dr. Strauch, a commissioner in lunacy, said that even phlegmatic men might have their mental balance upset by exasperation at getting no reply from "central." He mentioned the case of one of his own patients, a well known doctor, who became completely insane through telephone calls. Dr. Pacheter, another witness, asserted that he could bring evidence to show that government telephone girls had been permitted by the inspectors to utilize one of the big exchanges for the reception of their fancies. One amusement of the girls of this exchange was to look up all subscribers having the same name, to connect all of them, ring them all up and laugh loudly at the result. Tacoma Birds Night Singers. Tacoma, Wash—Mrs. Chira Gillespie of 4180 South Yakima avenue reports that Tacoma has birds that sing in the night. "We have an orchard that is frequently visited by these night singing birds," said Mrs. Gillespie. "They warble and trill very prettily, although I have never been able to see one." LAVE YOUR READ HE APPET National Afro-American Newspaper PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY J. Q. ADAMS, EDITOR AND FISHER 49 E. 4th Street, St. Paul, Minn. ST. PAUL OFFICE No. 236 Union Block, 49 E. 4th St. J. Q. ADAMS, Manager MINNEAPOLIS OF Metropolitan Bldg., Room 1020. JASPER GIBBS, Manager TERMS STRICTLY IN ADVANCE SINGLE COPY, ONE YEAR....$2.00 SINGLE COPY, SIX MONTHS.....1.10 SINGLE COPY, THREE MONTHS.....6.00 When subscriptions are by any means allowed to run without prepayment, the terms are 60 cents for each 15 weeks and 10 cents for each week at the rate of $2.40 per year. Remittances should be made by Express Money Order, Registered Letter or Bank Draft. Postage Stamps will be received the same as the envelope and be lost or else it may be stolen. Persons who do so in letters do so at their own risk. Marriage and death notice 10 notes or less each insertion. There are fourteen antegate notes in an inch, and about seven verticements less than $1. No discount allowed on less than three months compared to parties unknown to us. Further particulars on application. Postmaster notes on cover or line, each insertion. No discounts for time or space. Reading matter is set in brewer. All head lines count double. The date on the address label shows when subscription expires. Renewals should be sent to the address label so that no paper may be missed, as the paper shows when time is out. You should have the address label sent to subscribers are post or stolen. In case you do not receive any number when you send the address label and in the expiration of five days from that date, date of the missing number. Communications to receive attendances plainly written only upon one side of the paper; must reach us Tuesday if postponed, plainly written only upon one side of the paper; and bear the signature of the author. No manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for postage. We do not hold ourselves responsible for postponement of the letter. Solitely agents wanted everywhere. Write for terms. Sample copies free. In every letter that you write us never to give your full name and address. In every letter that you write us state. Business letters of all kinds must be written on separate sheets from letterhead. Entered as second class matter June 6, 1883 at the postoffice at St. Paul, Maunder act of Congress, March 3, 1883. SATURDAY, JUNE 28, 1913. There are a whole lot of people who are howling about the income tax which unquestionably is a good thing for the country and ought to be rigidly enforced. Of course it does not hit us because incomes of $4,000 and less are not affected by it and therefore we can make the above statement easy. Our only regret is that our income is not big enough to be taxed. Wish it was. Mrs. Peter Hicks of Passalc, N. J., must be something of a disagreeable woman to get along with. Her husband has applied for a divorce and in the hearing of the case he testified that he went to work in a powder mill in the hope that an explosion would end his woes. The judge granted the divorce. The National Press Club at Washington, D. C., had a very interesting spelling bee between fifteen statesmen and fifteen newspaper men the other day which was won by Representative Frank B. Willis of Ohio. The newspaper men were not in it with the statesmen very much to their chagrin. The eminent Dr. William J. Mayo the noted surgeon of St. Mary's hospital of Rochester, Minnesota, speaking on the authority of his study in 1,000 cases of cancer declares that cancer of the stomach is curable. This gives new hope to those who are suffering from that dreaded disease. The Supreme Court of the United States has decided the great Minnesota rate case in the favor of the state. It will prove to be very far reaching in more ways than one and if it does not reach out to the great detriment of Afro-Americans, we miss our guess. Watch out for it. Carl Settle, aged thirteen, a somnambulist, jumped from a third story window to the roof of a porch, thence twenty-six feet to the ground, ran two blocks and plunged into a pond, when he awoke. Evidently Carl was born to be hanged. LEGACY TO GREEK KING. His Murdered Father Bequesta Love For Mother and Country For Mother and Country. Athens.—In his political will, which has now been made public, the late King George, after giving directions for the disposition of his belongings, urges his children to remain united. Addressing himself to the new king, Constantine, King George says: "Love your dear little country. Serve her and your dear people and have confidence in them, and may your brothers follow the same example." The will urges King Constantine to be courageous and patient, "for you are reigning over a southern people whose temper and irritability take the place of any moment may say and do things which it is possible will be forgotten the following day. It is preferable that the king should suffer, even morally, rather than his people and his country. The interests of the people of the country must always be placed before all other interests." In conclusion King George declares his love for Queen Olga and urges his son to love and protect her. WON'T CHECK THEIR BABIES Churchgoing Mothers Sure They Can Identify Their Own. Evanston, Ill.-A proposed system to check babies during service was resorted to by several mothers at the Wheaton Methodist Episcopal church here. The mothers were willing to have their little ones cared for in an anteroom by the sermon, while they listened to the sermon, but when they were offered checks as a guarantee that no mistake would be made when the babies were reclaimed they objected. The attendants were finally persuaded to take care of the infants without handing out checks for them, being assured by each mother that there would be no mistake made when she came to claim her own. The checking congregation had been let by the ladies' aid society of the church, the members of which desired to relieve the congregation from the annoyance of the babies crying. SHOWS A HOUSEFLY AS LARGE AS A CAT New York. — Many sights may be seen in the new hall of public health, lately opened by the American Museum of Natural History, which have more relation to the affairs of everyday life than many of the scientific treasures which the big institution houses elsewhere. The principal igneous and non- igneous are not prehistoric monsters, but this is the laric insects of contemporaneous human interest—the fly, the mosquito and the flea. A housefly as big as a fair sized cat occupies the place of honor in the collection. This model has cost nine months of work and study on the part of ignaz Matsuach, a Hungarian model maker in the service of the museum. It is constructed on a scale of 64,000 times the size of the living insect, and is furnished with a microscope with the minutest care. Mr. Matsuach having made his drawings and casts for the head, body and various members of the insect from dissection. Larvae and pupae of the fly are shown in models molded on the same scale, as are the eggs, which appear as little cucumber shaped pieces of paraffin about two inches long. A real fly's egg is just about to visible to the naked eye. The same artist has painted an enlargement (1,500 diameters) of the bairy foot of the fly, showing the typhoid bacillus, of which the insect is the common carrier, on the clawlike tip of the member. The exhibit as at present constituted, however, covers a good deal of ground that is not so well known to the public as it should be. The connection between the rat and the bubonic plague, for example, is shown in the reproduction of a section of a dwelling in San Francisco. This represents two adjoining rats, in one of which several rats are seen feasting upon the refuse of which, while in the next, the wall of which is built, the holes, are several more taking their ease in a room which is evidently a pantry. These rats, of course, are supposed to be infested with the fleas which transmit the plague. One of the most striking groups is that of the *lil ill* farm, which has as a companion piece "the well kept farm." In the first model are shown a farmhouse and farm buildings of the old fashioned type. There is a well maintained farmhouse and has a large manure heap, the outhouses are of a primitive character, and adjoining the farmyard is a malarial mosquito breeding marsh. The companion group shows a windmill, indicating that the shallow well has been replaced by a driven well, insuring an unpolluted water supply. A dry tight box has been substituted for the unsightly and insatiant manure heap, and the water supply has to date, the rain barrels in which the anopheles "wriggers" used to breed have disappeared, and their last refuge the hams, has been drained. Charlottenburg, the fashionable western suburb of Berlin, is known as the "widows' town." At the last census no fewer than 14,543 widows were registered as residing within its boundaries. This is very nearly half of the total surplus or women over men that is to be found in the town 20,240. In no other town in Germany can such a proportionate surplus of the female sex be found. The number of widowers is extraordinarily small in proportion, being only 2,358.-London Telegraph. The heart of a coquette is like a rose, of which her lovers lovel the leaves, leaving only the thorns for her husband. A BARGAIN-There is a splendid lady's blue chevotit suit for sale at Clifford A. Smith's, the tailor, 109 B. 8th street. Size No. 40. Will sell cheap—Advertisement. FOR SALE—A full dress coat and vest for medium size man, will sell vest for a little boy. Apply online at Room 161, Union Block, corner 4th and Cedar. Mr. R. M. Johnson has been commissioned a notary public in and for Ramsey County by Gov. O. A. Eberhart and he is now fully equipped to do business for any person needing his services. Barrett & Mueller, Funeral Directors and Embalmers, 490 St. Peter street, for $75 will furnish for a funeral service. Embalming and service, two carriages, hearse and grave—Advertisement. PROF. C. S. PATTYS HERB MEDICINES can be had only at the corner of University avenue and Mackinub street. If you are not feeling well, you can call while to learn about these remedies. Tr1-State phone 5732. *Advertisement.* SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE VAULTS. *We invite your inspection.* it costs little to place your papers, cash securities and valuables in absolute safety. Boxes in our van canoe for he $4 per year. Store your valuables in the us. Northwestern Trust Co. 138 Endicott Avenue. *Advertise.* RELIABLE DENTISTRY at reasonable prices. Dr. H. I. Williams has opened offices in suite 202 Kendrick Building, 27 E. Seventh street, and has all the necessary equipment for doing dental work painlessly. He will be available to any one who appreciates honest work at honest prices. *Advertise.* THE BUSY BEE CAFE, 317 Wabash street (up stairs) W. F. T. Chandler, proprietor. Everything new but the name. First-class meals will be served on a carte at hours. A splendid regular dining will be offered from 11:30 a.m. to m. 3:00 p. m., at 25 cents. Open day and night. Tel. N. W. Cedar 4525—Advertisement. ALBION W. HOLDEN—Fine a house painting, hand oil painting, varnishing, staining, wall tinting, etc., done on short notice. First class, durable work guaranteed. General repairing and jobbing of all st. Anthony st. or leave orders at 527 St. Anthony st. or telephone Dale 2055. Estimates furnished—Advertisement. WHEN YOU ARE HUNGRY, and want a quick meal, just go to the LITTLE ST. PAUL CAFE, 130 E. Elighth street, between Robert and Jackson. James H. Thomas, proprietor. There you may get first-class meals at all hours, day and night. Regular service from 11:30 to 2:30 for 25 cents. Tel. Dearen 9021—Advertisement. THIS MEANS YOU. If there is a one cent postage stamp on your paper, that means that you have not paid your subscription for more than one cent to the Government compulsory us to pay the Government compulsory papers to delinquent subscribers. Now if you are honorable and square, you will come and, say what you owe. It certainly does not reflect any credit on you to have us pay one cent on your account and to you and for which you have not paid. Is this fair and square? OATH FOR AFRO-AMERICAN YOUTH. I will never bring disgrace upon my race by any unworthy deed or dishonorable act. I will live a clean, decent, many life; I will have a clean, decent, many life; I will fend the virtue and honor of womanhood: I will uphold and obey the just.laws of my country and of the community in which I live and will encourage others to live in harmony; not allow prejudice, injustice, insult or outrage to cower my spirit or humilitate my soul; but will ever preserve the inner freedom of heart and conscience: I will not allow my enemies to be overpowered; but will strive to overcome evil with good: I will endeavor to develop and exert the best powers within me for my own perseverance; I will strive unceasingly to quicken the sense of racial duty and responsibility: I will in all these ways aim to uplift my race so that, to everyone bound to it by God, I shall become a bond of enmoblement, and not a byword of reproach. "CHICKEN MEANS A GAL TO YOU." A Rag Time Song and Chorus Composed by Don. P. Birdsall, Chorus Why honey I jes been around, De.chicken roost in dis yere town You does me wrong when you gets mad, For honest babe your maint bad, A bit of chicken now and den Aint gripe to hurt the best of men. It's simply a corker. If you play the piano you'll want it. Price 500 per copy. Our readers will receive a copy of the above postpaid by sending 150 in postage stamps to the Globe Music Co., 1193 Broadway, New York. GILT-EDGED INVESTMENTS. Mr. Williams, the real estate man, still has many lots for sale at low prices in Brandon, Moose Jaw, Leth- $01 to one-third cash per lot. Monthly bridge and Basana, Canada. Lots from $60 to $225, each in the industrial sections of these cities. Are good investments. Terms from $100 to $200 per block. Reference: International Security Co., Winnipipe, Can—Advertisement. FLOWER LOVERS. Send for Green's Imperial Imperial Seed Mixture. A rare treat and a delightful surprise to lovers of flowers. Ten cents per package, by mail, prepaid. Fred Green, Poppy Specialist, 962 St. Anthony Ave. St. Paul, Minn. The MENS' EPISCOPAL CLUB Will give its Second Annual Picnic at Beautiful ANTLER'S PARK You and your friends are invited to go with us and enjoy an outing where there will be FISHING, SWIMMING, BOATING, and all manner of amusements for men, women and children. The LADIES GUILD will serve lunch and refreshments on the grounds. The DANCING PAVILION has been greatly enlarged and is the finest in the Northwest where a splendid orchestra will be in attendance from 3:00 P. M., to 9:00 P. M. The DAN PATCH TRAINS will leave the 54th and Nicollet avenue station at 8:30 and 10:30 A. M., and 2:30 and 5:00 P. M. Will return from Park at 9:30 P. M. To reach the "DAN PATCH LINE" take 54th and Columbia Heights car on First Avenue South or Lake Street and Nicollet car 30 minutes before the train leaving time. Round Trip Tickets 65 Gts. Children 40 Gts. Winn Boston Frank Terry E. Bludsoe Tickets may be purchased at NELSON'S DRUG STORE, 121th street South FLY WITH US SAINT PAUL Rev. Father John A. Williams of Omaha was in the city several days the guest of Mrs. W. R. Gumble, 395 Thomas street. He left Tuesday for S. Peter to visit Geo. W. Parker in the city and will then proceed to his home. For nice home cooking, try the LITTLE DIAMOND CAFE 476 Oobstreet, Mrs. M. J, Hicks, prop. Daily dinner, 11 to 3 o'clock, 25 cents; Sunday dinner, 10 to 6 o'clock, 30 cents; breakfast at 6:30; supper to 8. A la carte meals at all hours—Advertisement. Herein is love, not that we loved him that he loved us and sent His Son to the city for his suns. 1 John 4:10. Be not discover God is not mocked, for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap Galatians, 6:7—Selected by E. W. Gilles. At the last it bites like a serpent and stingeth in an adder. Proverbs 23:32. For if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the Son, much more being reconciled we shall be saved by His life. Romans 5:10—Selected by E. W. Gilles. F. H. Harm & Bro, the popular jewelers and opticians, formerly of 227 Robert street, have moved to larger and better quarters at No. 14 East Sixt street, between Wabasha and Cedar, where they will be pleased to see old and new patrons.—Advertisement. The place to have your shoe repairing done in the best possible way at the lowest possible price is at the ARVIS' 104-106 East Fifth street. H. H. has a complete stock of men's women's dress and bower of the best grades for the money to be found in the city.—Advertisement. THE ST LOUIS KITCHEN, Mrs Julia Hinnan, proprietor, No. 138 3d St., up hairs. Meals 25 e. breakfast from 7:00 to 11:00 a. m.; Dinner from 12:00 m. to 3:00 a. m.; Supper ELECTRIC LINE July 10, 1913 to go with us and enjoy an outing MIMING, BOATING, and all manner children. nch and refreshments on the grounds. been greatly enlarged and is the finest orchestra will be in attendance from leave the 54th and Nicollet avenue 3:00 and 5:00 P. M. Will return from take 54th and Columbia Heights car t and Nicollet car 30 minutes before 5 Gts. Children 40 Gts. ARRANGEMENTS own, Chairman x Terry E. Bludsoe NELSON'S DRUG STORE, 121 Sixth from 5:00 to 8:00 p. m. All regular meals. All home cooking. Tel N. W. Cedar 6090—Advertisement. 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 14:12—Selected by E. W. Gilles. Why not patronize the business houses that invite you to trade with them through their advertisements in THE APPEAL? They are helping to support your paper, show them that you are interested in you, or your enterprises. Trade with the people who advertise in THE APPEAL. Mr. Clarence L. Smith returned to the city Monday after an extended visit to Chicago and Detroit. Mrs. Smith will return about July 1st. While in Chicago they were guests of the French; in Detroit they were the guests of Bishop and Mrs. C. S. Smith. Mr. Smith reports a splendid time in both cities. Thames Tunnels. The first tunnel to be built under the Thames was the work of Sir Isambard Brunel, who was the inventor of the shield method of excavation. This tunnel, known as the Thames tunnel, was commenced in 1825 and took eleven years to complete. Since 1865 it has been used for railway communication only and now gives through communication by electric trains between the whole of London north of the Thames and New Cross. In addition to the new Woodswick tunnel, the London county council has provided tunnels at Blackwall, Green Wall, Kotherhite, and the total cost to the owners of these four undertakings has amounted to nearly 44,000,000—London Mail. Ethas—Was Jack put out when you told him he couldn't have a kis? Kitty—Oh, no! He took it as a matter of course—Boston Transcript. ITH US nd Special Kawley Building Boy's Hall Stone Hall Cid's Hall Model Home ATLANTA UNIVERSITY Atlanta Ga Is beautifully located in the City of Atlanta, GA. The courses of study include High School, Normal School and College, with manual training and domestic science. Among the teachers are graduates of Yale, Harvard, Dartmouth, Smith and Wesley. Forty-one years of successful completion complete the course for South Graduates are almost universally successful. For further information, address President, EDWARD T. WARE, Atlanta, GA. HOWARD UNIVERSITY The Collegeof Arts and Science—KELLY MILLER, A. M., Dean The Teachers' College—LEWIS B. MOORE, A. M., Ph.D, Dean The University of Colorado J. CUMMINGS, A. M. Dean The Commercial College—A. M., Dean School of Manual Arts and Applied Sciences. PROFESSIONAL SCHOOLS The School of Theology—ISAAC C. The School of Medicine; Medical Colleges—EDWARD O. BAL The School of Law—BENJAMIN F. For Catalogue and Special Informa Beautiful Situation, Healthful Locati Environment—A Splendid Noted for Honest a Offers full courses in the follow High School Grammar School and in Good water, steam heat, electric very reasonable. Opportunity for Ses Fall Term Opens Sept. 27, 1911. PRESIDENT R. W. McGRANAH TUSKEGEE Normal and Industrial Institute TUSKEGEE, ALABAMA. (Incorporated.) Beautiful Situation, Healthful Location. The Best Moral and Spiritual Environment—A Splendid Intellectual Atmosphere—Noted for Honest and Thorongh work. Offers full course of the following departments: College, Normal, High School, Grammar School and Industrial. Good water, steam heat, electric lights, good drainage. Expenses very reasonable. Opportunity for Self-help. Fall Term Opens Sept. 27, 1911. For Information Address PRESIDENT R. W. McGRANAHAN, Knoxville, Tenn. Organized July 4, 1881, by the State University of Pennsylvania formal school. Exempt from taxation. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON, Principa- Warren LOGAN, Treasurer. In the Black Belt of Alabama where the blacks outnumber the whites three to one. ENROLLMENT AND FACULTY. Over 1,500 students, more than 100 instruction. COURSE OF STUDY. English education combined with industrial training; 28 industries in constant operation. VALUE OF PROPERTY. Property consisting of 2,850 acres of land. 103 buildings almost wholly built with student labor, is valued at $1,250,000 and no mortgage. NEEDS. $50 annually for the education of each student; ($200 enables one to finish the school and labor). Money in any amount can be paid to the sup. Students pay their own board in cash and labor.) Money in any amount can be paid to the sup. Through the Tuskegee Negro Conference. Behind the work done by graduates as class room and industrial leaders, students are taught through the Tuskegee Negro Conference. Tuskegee is 40 miles east of Montgomery and 138 miles west of Atlanta, on the Mississippi River. Tuskegee is a quiet, beautiful old Southern town, and is an ideal place for a winter retreat at all times mild excellent winter resort. Founded by the Solitaires of the 69th and 69th Regiments of the U. S. Colored Infantry. Supported by the State of Missouri. Has Normal, Collegeate, Agricultural, Mechanical and Industrial Courses Buildings and equipment unassupposed Thirty teachers representing the best schools of the country. Students from all sections of the country. For catalog and further information address BENJAMIN FRANKLIN ALLEN, President. New England CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC BOSTON, Mass. All the advantages of the finest and most completely equipped Conservatory building in the world, the architecture and the association with the matters in the Profession are offered students in the New England Conservatory at BOSTON, CALIFORNIA. Master's and M.S. Courses can be taught in Education and Oratory. All participants and your work will be on application. SOAP up. Why do sible way? bending ove work to spe rubbing. matter how or howe fabric, it Pearl WANTED, SOAP Straighten up. Why do you wash it the hardest possible way? Use PEARLINE, there's no bending over the tub, no back kinks, no work to speak of no wear and tear from rubbing. Millions use PEARLINE. No matter how or when you use PEARLINE or however delicate your hands or the fabric, it is absolutely harmless. 636 Pearline is right Prone in the road he lay. Wounded and sore bestead: Priests, Levites past that way, And turned aside the head. They were not hardened men In human service slack: His need was great: but then His face, you see, was black. From the New York Independent. LOCATION. NEEDS. BARK, D. D., Dean. DENTAL and Pharmaceutical LOCH, M. D., Dean. LEIGHTON, LL. D., Dean. Station Address Dean of Department. Union. The Best Moral and Spiritual Intellectual Atmosphere— and Thorough work. ing departments: College, Normal, Institutional lights, good drainage. Expenses help. For Information Address AN. Knoxville. Tenn. GAMMON THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY ATLANTA, GEORGIA. AIMS AND METHODS. to practical work in helping men towards success in the ministry. Its course of study is based on the work of its work is thorough; its methods are fresh, systematic, clear and simple. SPHERICAL SPHERICAL The regular course of study occupies three years, and covers the lines of work in the ministry. Its instruction usually pursued in the leading theological seminaries of the country. Tuition and room rent are free. The apartments for students are plainly furnished. Good board can be had for several per month. Buildings located by sten. A from loans without interest, and gifts of friends, are granted to deserving students who do their work with selfhelp. No young man with grace can afford the advantages now opened to him in this Seminary. For further particiature address THE PRESIDENT, Gummon Theological Seminary, Atlanta, Georgia. Washington Conservatory of Music and School of Expression 902 T STREET, WASHINGTON, D. C. Piano, Voice and Violin, Piano Tune Theory, Analysis, Harmony, Counterpoint, Fugue, Vocal Expression, Wand Instrument, History of Music, Methods. Scholarships Awarded Artists' Recitals HARRYE GIBBS MARHALLI, President. GORGIE WILLIAM COOK, Treasurer. ABBY WILLIAMS Secretary. ANNIE E. GRANDEK, Financial Secretary. Sham University This-institution of learning, established in 1865, offers a variety of courses for both young women, as well as college, normal and preparatory departments. There are also Schools of Nursing and Health, planned for the facilities have recently been increased Oversee the nursing and health planning that will be completed within the next five months or Applications should be made several months or so prior to the enrollment during the last few years to receive all who apply. The present enrollment is over 500. The Thursday nearest the first day of October and continues for thirty-two weeks, with charges are moderate and malefactus furnished upon request. Address: THE PRESIDENT Shaw University, Raleigh N. C. AVERY COLLEGE TRAINING SCHOOL NORTH SIDE, PITTSBURGH, PA. A Practical Literary and Industrial Trade School for African American Boys and Girls. Unusual advantages for Girls and a separate building. Address Joseph D. Manoney, Principal. Box. 154. North Side, Pittsburgh, Pa. raighten to you wash it the hardest pos- Use PEARLINE, there's no over the tub, no back treads, no skid, no wear and tear from Millions use PEARLINE. No or when you use PEARLINE, never delicate your hands or the is absolutely harmless. line is right A SAMARITAN. independent. heel) || | tft * WERK'* RECORD |N MINNESO- TA'S CAPITAL me “Saintly City” ano Saintly City Folks—Newsy Items of Social, Re: Nglous, Pelitical and: General Mat- ters Among the People SATURDAY, JUNB 28, 1913. SWAT THAT FLY! DO IT NOW! False modesty leads to false ways of living. Rey. H. P. Jones is enjoying a two weeks" vacation. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Hanly have mov- ed to 771 Aurora ave. Rev, E. H. MeDonald has returned from his vacation trip. The weather has been some hot if anybody should ask you. And there are also a few women who don’t understand men, Mr. and Mrs, S$. L. Maxwell have moved to 558 Arundel street. Chhaknwnkuin ae em Your Credit is good at the GLOBE FURNITURE CO. 47-475 St, Peter St. ‘The leading New and Second Hand Furniture store of the city ‘Tel. Ceder 3817 A.B, Camaniss, Mgr UN ee: Grand Cabaret entertainment at the Marquette Club every night. FOR RENT—A nice large furnished room for rent at 330% Rondo street. Mr. W. J. Uttley has moved his bar- ber shop and pool parlor to No. 30 5. 4th Street. Attorney R. O, Lee has been com- missioned ab a notary public by Gov. A. 0. Eberhart. And sin when it is finished bringeth forth death—James 1:15.—Selected by B. W. Gilles, Pee See eeeereaes Ww. T. FRANCIS WHO FOR A NUMBER OF YEARS WAS IN THE EMPLOY OF THE LEGAL DEPART- MENT OF THE NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY, HAS OPENED OFFICES FOR THE GENERAL PRACTICE OF THE LAW AT 88 AND 99 UNION” BLOCK, ST. PAUL, Advertisement. PoP HSS See E See Dr, Valdo Turner is taking a sum- mer ‘course in medicine at the Uni- versity of Minnesota, ‘The office of the “Small Loan Co.” has been moved to rooms 25 and 26 fith floor Union Block. Mr. Lightfoot West was in the city for a few days this week, the guest of Mr. and Mrs, W. T. Pranets, Mrs. 0. C, Hall is taking a summer course in domestic science at the University of Minnesota. It you have some news you would like to see in THE APPEAL, write it on a postal card and send to this of- fice. ‘Wait and watch for the big boat ex: cursion by the Knights ‘Templar ‘Thursday evening, July 3—Advertise- ment. Ren. 678 St, Anth Tel. Dale 2047. 7 " tr. H. LYLES -rst Dywstore and: Eimbalmers Seabed 8 wie Ananeoa Bay see. Nghe rh, Bib scive alt Gearry Furloned di asian When weer coin Phones 608 Bt Paul Minn Tomorrow night at St. James church the meeting will be under the au- spices of the Christian Endeavor so- ciety, Dr. L. D. Cook, M. D., of La Grange, Tex., is in the eity visiting his sister, Mrs. George Bell, 1776 W Minnehaha street. Mrs. O. H, Allen and the little Misses Kemp returned from a four- day trip to Chicago on last Tuesday morning. FOR RENT—Four room modern flat with alcove, $16.50 per month. Apply at 554 Aurora, Phone Dale 6436— Advertisement. According to the reports from the health office there were ten deaths among the Afro-Americans during the month of May. Mrs. James A. Vass has opened a dainty Japansese Tea Garden on her lawn, 450 Roudo street. Will be ready for business tomorrow. ‘The B. Y. P. U, of Pilgrim Baptist Church meets each Sunday at 6:45. P. © KEMINDER, (ay OE: ae eee aal a tae re Tua 1B i H Talal hs He Ua aa a ae Lo Soe ZZ ZT ene THE STATE SAVINGS BANK, 93 East Fourth Street. Invites the saving accounts of fru- gal wage-earners, it tg well fitted to ‘take care of them. Interest rate »* 3%4% per annum, DEPOSITS OVER %,350.00 ‘Taaries B. Ni Louls Betz, or eaten rresasurve: PILGRIM COMMANDERY NO. 22, K. T Dy tenga Gunes «DUN SpdRaucce ow EXCU- LIGHT fiir Set RIN On GULLS HIAWATHA AND BARCE F GRAND MID-SUMMER CARNIVAL \ WONDERFUL MOVING PICTURES KANGAROO COURT SUFFRAGETTE POLICEWOMEN GREATEST THING THAT EVER HAPPENED THE BAZAZAS COMMITTEE 178 PEOPLE—COUNT ’EM 178 PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH UPSTAIRS AND DOWN ONE SOLID WEEK JULY 7 TO 12. COME AND SEE MAUD 3,000 TICKETS TO BE SOLD AT 10 CENTS = UNF Ok Vi 1B, On account of the rain last Tuesday evening the SECOND ANNUAL. MOONLIGHT gasece valle EXCURSION Under the auspices of the CULTURE cLuB) Meamet PURCHASE au Barge ‘Was postponed to | Monday Night, July 7 RAIN OR SHINE Good Music REFRESHMENTS Good Time | ‘COMMITTEE ON ARRANCEMENTS A Sin Ws Onan gt ate TICKETS - 50CENTS \T7REMEMBER NIGHT AND DaTEa M. The meetings are very interesting. All are cordially invited, FOR RENT—Nice room for one or two gentlemen—near both commissar- ies, Apply to Mrs. Hattie Williams, 780 Butfalo street —Advertisement, Mr. C. W. Patterson secured places as kitchen girls for five Afro-Ameri- can girls at the Union Depot restau- rant this week. Good for Patterson. -Mr. 0. C. Hall left Tuesday for Wauxegan, Il, to attend the District Sunday School Convention of which he is superintendent. He will return home today. ‘You should go to the Little St. Paul, 130 Past Eighth street, and try some genuine Mexican Chili made by its ex- cellent chef, Jerry Beasley. It’s fine! Advoiisnsek: If the readers and well-wishers of THE APPEAL will send items of so- clal news to this office it will be ap- preciated and the news will be pub- lished. ‘When you have any baggage to be taken to the train or other hauling you wish done, call Mr. Louis Liverpool, N. W. Cedar 245; he will take care of you promptly. Capt. John Clark formerly assistant chief of police here who resigned last year, has been appointed chief of po- lice of Portland, Ore, at a salary of $5,000 per year. When you buy ice cream, why not buy the best? It's made by J. C. Vander Bie, 496 Partridge street. It’s for sale, too, at all’ places handling first class ice cream. Bert Sale was in the police court Tuesday charged with breaking the nose of Dix Warren and was sen- tenced to the workhouse for 60 days or pay a fine of $50. WANTED—A well known man, who intends to get married shortly, wishes to rent three nice unfurnished rooms. Call or address “J., No, 561 Rondo street Advertisement. Remember that Pilgrim Comman- dery, K. 'T,, Moonlight excursion is the next big thing. Get ready and go next Thursday evening, July 3.. Every- body is going.—Advertisement. At great expense the Bazazas Com- mittee of Pilgrim Baptist church has secured the Copyrighted moving pic- tures of Tuskegee Institute and will show them at the church the week of July 7. SPIRELLA CORSBT, Cora E. An derson corsetier. Any lady wishing to be properly corsetted call or ad: dress 365 Aurora Ave. Tel. N. W. Dale 1845.—Advertisement. “The Favorite Shining Parlor,” Messrs. Beard & Alexander, propriet ors, has been moved to 105 B, 5th street, where first class work is done on short notice at all times.—Adver- tisement. It your wife is ailing buy her a GOS- SARD CORSET and she will be in better SHAPE than ever before. For sale by Mrs. J. B. Cloak, 292 St. Al- bans street. N. W. Phone, Dale 2076. —Advertisement. VOCAL AND PIANO LESSONS given by Mrs. Addie Crawford Minor at ner residence, 392 Carroll street only. Hours for instruction arranged rie, to snit patrons Tel. Dale 2192, terms reasonable—Advertisement, SHINE 'EM UP! If you wish a good first class shine or polish, go to the Peoples’ Shining Parlors, 127 H 6th street, between Robert and Jackson, 'W. H. Porter proprietor. Special chairs for ladies —Advertisement, A chance to go to Tuskegee without paying railroad fare, by going to Pil grim Baptist church during the week of July 7. Moving Pictures of all the scenes and incidents of the greatest institution of industrial education in the world. If you wish any typewriting- done call on Miss Alice Vassar, public stenographer and Notary Public, Room 25 Union Block, corner of Fourth and Cedar. Tel. Cedar 5552. Res{dence 384 Rondo. Phone Dale 665—Adver tisement. ‘The Globe Method—To sell Furnt- ture that will Satisfy, at prices that will Gratity. We give Furniture and Stoves you do want, for Furniture and Stoves You don't want —Globe Pura! ture Co,, 473-475 St. Peter street—Ad- vertisement. Zion Presbyterian church, Western avenue near Aurora, Sunday services, morning 11:00 a, m.; Christian En- deavor, 7:00 p. m.; Bvening worship, 8:00 p. m.; Sunday School 12:00 m. Public cordially invited. Rev. G. W. Camp, pastor. Put MENS’ EPISCOPAL CLUB Bt. Paul WILL GIVE ITS SECOND ANNUAL Scere LAKE MINNETONKA Thursday, July 17 Games of all kinds, Satie PAU os MINNEATOLE WAIT FOR THIS ONE FAVORITE GOOD TIME. cOMMIETES OPTANBANG ENENTE: Clarence L. Smith, Chairman eS ane Round Trip 65¢ Children 40 N. B.—Patrons when buying tickets at the depots will please ask for picnic tickets. DELEGATES TO N. N. E. CONGRESS. For Minnesota are Appointed by Gov. ‘A. 0. Eberhart. Governor A. U, Eberhart has ap- pointed as delegates to the National Negro Educational Congress which will hold its sessions in Kansas City, Mo., from July 15 to 19 as follows: St. Paul—Thos. H. Lyles, Dr. O. D.) Howard, 0. C. Hall, Dr. Valdo Turner, W. T. Francis, Esq, Rev. H. P. Jones, W. H. Johnson, Dr. J. R. White, Rev. A. H. Lealtad, J. Q. Adams, R. H. Anderson, Mrs. J. H, Hickman, Misses Wdith A. Leonard and Miss M. Farr. Minneapolis—W. R. Morris, Dr. R. S Brown, B. 8. Smith, Bsq.,, J. M. Allis. son, C. H. Robinson, Mrs, Jone B. Gibbs and Mrs, Ida Sellers. WONDERFUL HAIR’ GROWER. A woman to be really pretty must have luxuriant ‘hair regardless of her complexion, and if you wish this try, MME L. A” PORTER'S HAIR CREAM It will keep the hair clean and soft, prevent or remove dandruf, invigor ate tne roots and produce a healthy condition which 1s necessary to pro mote a healthy growth of hair. TTY Ht and Fam sure you wilt ike it. Read the following testimontal which is only one of many: "To whom it may concern. I take great pleasure in recommend- ing Mme. L, A. Porter’s Hair Cream. I began to use it one year ago, my hair was very dry, like bristles, hard and stubborn. It was a brownish red having been turned that color by fever. After using Mme. Porter’s Cream my hair soon became soft and silky, my scalp free from dandruff. It will straighten your hair without using a hot fron -and as an agent for Mme. Porter's Hair Cream I am greatly encouraged over the success I am hay- ing selling it. My patrons are all well pleased and highly recommend it, as it will do-just what is claimed for it if used according to directions, I sincerely trust that this will induce others to try this cream for it is cer- tainly fine. (Mrs.) JohnH. Matthews, 720 6th Ave E., Duluth, Minn. Price, 25 and 50 cents per Jar. Mme. L. A. Porter, 194 W, Central Ave.,‘St. Paul, Minn. ‘Advertisement. JAPANESE TEA GARDEN. Now that the warm weather has come in earnest and the ladies, gentle- men and children will want something cool to eat and drink, MRS. JAMES A. VASS, 450 Rondo street has ar- ranged to supply their wants in that respect. She has fitted up a charming JAPANESE TEA GARDEN on her lawn and is prepared to furnish Cold Lunches, Iced Tea, Cold Soft Drinks, Ice Cream, Fruit and other refresh- ments. DAINTY DISHES FOR DAINTY + sDARLINGS, Music Evenings, The public cordially invited. ‘Men, Women and Children. 450 Rondo Street. ‘ST. PAUL. “Advertisement, FARGO, N. D. Mr, Leroy Fort of this city. an- nounces the matrimonial engagement of his daughter, Alberta, to Mr. L. W. Pleasants of St. Paul, Minn, The wedding will be solemnized some time in Joly. LOW ie) ‘Aavertisement, THE STATE SAVINGS BANK. Total Deposits, $5,200,000.00; Surplus Fund $190,000:00. ‘The trustees have declared the reg- ular semi-annual interest dividend on deposis at the rate of 3% per cent per annum, for period ending June 20, 1913. Interest will be credited on Pass-books as of July 1, on or after July 20, 1913. Deposits made now will draw six months’ interest January: 1, next. 93 E. 4th st—Advertisement. OWING TO THE FACT THAT THE FOURTH OF JULY OCCURS. NEXT FRIDAY AND IS A NATIONAL HOLI- DAY, THE APPEAL WILL BE IS- SUED NEXT WEEK ON THURSDAY INSTEAD OF SATURDAY. ALL MATTER FOR PUBLICATION MUST REACH THIS OFFICE NOT LATER THAN THURSDAY MORNING. "The So-Lit Club held-a social. meet- ing at the home of Miss Bertha Wil- liams, 415 Charles street, on last ‘Thursday evening. ' Cards were the feature of the evening. Mr. Join White and Miss Charlotte-Gillard. won first prizes; Mr-R. Stokes and Miss-Besste Johnson won’ the boobles. Mr, John White will entertain the Club om the second Thursday in July, ‘The members of St. Philips Episco pal chureh: will give @ public recep tion in honor of the several scholasti “Graduates from the ichurch: member ship on next: Tuesday. evening. Jul; JOU are hereby invited to the 4 MOONLIGHT EXCURSION eee neta Catholic Men’s Club @@} ox cas srxamex [i PURCHASE AND BARGE TUESDAY EVENING, JULY 15 MIQULLOUGH ORCHESTRA COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS A,B, Weber O. Tuomgn J. W. Lee CD. deensee Os: Paterson TICKEIS - = - 50 CENTS Biveylaras weororegsceseeleranse We mnade gue Ocioe “A DAY AT TUSKEGEE” MOVING PICTURES SHOWING VARIOUS ACTIVITIES OF DR. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON’S GREAT INDUSTRIAL INSTITUTE AT THE MID-SUMMER CARNIVAL, PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH JULY 7 TO 12—-ONE WEEK A DIFFERENT REEL EVERY NIGHT SEE THEM ALL AND GET THE WHOLE STORY ADMISSION 10 CENTS Will Be The Grand i : ANG Ady That Will be Given on the STEAMER ane ‘ ¢ f Frontenac and MMisisipp will accommodate 3,000 people and 500 dancing couples. Monday Evening, ‘June 30 - Two orshetise=-Stsam ialloner Se bipes=rag tine: piaeslaantan tuck ad $20. Gold Prizes Awarded COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS: Wc cinpislbered EOE Fon eine Gabac Ss “Wen vieries: FLOOR COMMITTEE: Andy Combs Lila Shaw” Joe Brown. SPECIAL OFFICERS. ~ | reas nar Mey ok Win Gait, ie Adults 50 Cents; Children 25 Cents P Boat Leaves Footof Jackson Street, St. Paul, at. Eight Retuéns at Torelee Thiety” lat, of which there are several, the latest_of which are the Misses Cora and Marion Cuthbert. The public cor- dially invited. Admission free. Fine program and refreshments, You must watch and wait for the grand Moonlight Boat Excursion to be given on the steamer Hiawatha and barge by Pilgrim Commandery No. 22, Knights Templar, on Thursday even- ing, July 3. This is to be the event of the season, and you must not miss it. Good music and refreshments. Tickets 50 cents.—Advertisement. ‘Mrs. B. DeBaptist accompanied by her father, Mr. R. Thompson, left last Wednesday for Winnipeg, Can., where she will join her husband and they will permanently reside. Mr. and Mrs. DeBaptiste have been residents of St. Paul over twenty years and they have made-a host of friends here who regret their departure and wish them every success in their new home. _ THE VALET TAILORING CO,, No. 134-156 B, Sxith street, ‘The most uptodate establishment of its {ind in the city. Clothing made to order, svonged, pressed. renovated and re: paired. Goods called for and. deliv- ered. Four suits pressed for $1. They are prepared to give best service at lowest rates, Tel. N. W. Cedar. 4362. ©. Howell, manager—Advertisement. The first_anniversary celebration of Frederick Douglass Lodge No. 9005 announced for last Thursady evening attracted quite a number of people de- spite the sultry weather. ‘The pro- gram was announced to begin at 8:00 and although at that hour but few per- sons were in the house, the master of ceremonies, A. J. Roberts, started the program on time and at 9:00 o'clock had brought it to a close with only ‘two numbers filled, those of Mrs. Emma Archer and Mr. W. R. Morris, ‘There were really 29 numbers on the program but the persons who were 10 fill hem were not present when called for and Mr. Roberts went right ahead. It is a shame that we have gotten into the very deplorable habit of not getting to our meetings and enter- tainments on time, so that usually they last until after midnight before they close; and, while a number of people on the program and in the audience were disappointed, chairman Roberts is to be congratulated for teaching them a lesson they need to learn. An extra effort had been made by this progressive young lodge to have the occasion one of extra merit. ‘They had secured splendid talent for the exercises, furnished a finely ar- ranged and printed program and had the church most beautifully and pro: fusely decorated. They also had pre- Pared . seasonable refreshments in abundance all without money and without price and ft is very much to the discredit ‘of taose who were on the program and the public as well for them not to put in their appear- ance ON TIME. It is hoped that on all other occasions that the managers will follow the good example set by Mr. Roberts and begin and close on time hereafter, Oifice Cedar 5552” PHOMES Res. Dale 241 DEALER IN Real Estate 2m Insurance Handles Farm Lands and City Prop- rtys Builde, Buys: Selle or Renta tae nee yous Lite Tone Hewes aor Household Goods lnairess mpalnee Cause. Wy’ E18 caattanrs comese. See STRONG before closing. a deal : cesarers Office 25-26 Union Block Corner of Fourth and Cedar. ST. PAUL MINN. Your Looks Gan Ladies 4% cea %, Madam Notah Wilson’s Sp pee a ioe ee ee nae cncan ae 563 Charles St. ‘ST. PAUL if ‘Wine Cote S521 eare:9 om 0 EL te Spm ‘DR. W. T, MITCHELL DENTIOY “ase =~ ST, PAUL Mrs, M, J. Hicks, Prop. | First Class Home Cooked [Meals { to order at all hours | Daily Dinner 11 to3 at 2%. Sunday Dinner 11 to 6 at 30c. Breakfast 6:30 Supper 5 to8 476 Robert, ST. PAUL, . \aNeR BIE'S #1ICE CREAMs IS THE BEST For Sale Everywhere e J.C, VANDER BIE MRS, W. B. ELLIOTT CO, Staple and Fancy Groceries, Ice Cream, Cigars, Confectionery and Notions 411 University Ave. ‘ST. PAUL Phone Cedar 6132 Dr.H.1. WILLIAMS DENTIST Formerly of the New York Dental Coy 27 EAST SEVENTH STREET Room 202 Kendrick Bldg. Hours—Daily 9 A. M. to 8 P.M, Sunday 10 A. M. to 2 P. M, 7 ST. PAUL, MINN. Ss ‘Tel. N. W. Cedar 911 ‘Tel. ‘rn-State 1964 MONTANA MEAT MARKET G. H. Risser, Proprietor Fresh and Salt Meats Ona aCe 666 ROBERT ST. ST. PAUL ‘Tel. Cedar 9104 Opp. Union Depot ——————eeee M. GUEST, Mgr. Cleaning, Pressing, Dyelag, and Repairing Four Suits Sponged and Pressed $1.50 CONTINENTAL HOTEL Entrance on Sibley Cor. Third and Sibley-st., ST. PAUL, eee as F. M. PARKER & CO, Gor. 6th and Wabasha. Best place in the'city for Pure Drugs and Proprietary Medicines, A complete stock of Druggiste’ Sun- dries, Soaps, Perfumes, Toilet Arti- cles, Pure Candy, Fine Stationery, Kodaks and Supplies, Best Brands of Cigars, ete, etc, F. M. Parker & Co... Prescriptions Dellverd. Open all night The REXALL Store. Both Phones 316 tt ) THE BUSY CORNER A. J. McMURRAY & CO. Staple and Fancy Groceries, Candies, Con» fectionery, Cigars, School Supplies, Btc. Ice Cream Parlor and Cafe, Lunch at all Hours. REAL ESTATE AND RENTALS HANDLED. Cor, Wenternand Rondo ST, PAUL Office Cedar 1678 Dr, Valdo Turner PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Kendrick Block, 27 H. 7th OFFICH HOURS 9tolla.m,12tolp.m,8 toby. m, Sundays 10 to 11 a.m. Res. 386 St. Albacs Tel. Dale S18 ————_——— ALBION W- HOLDEN Painter and Dscorator 527 8t. Anthony Avenue ST. PAUL, - MINN SUITS PRESSED \ VALET TAILOALAG CO ‘| 166 E. S10TH ST Mivcesoanescy. Intentional Duplicate Exposure * WERK'< RECORD IN MINNESO. TA'S CAPITAL Me “Saintly City" ano Saintly City Folke—Newsy Items of Social, Re- lglous, Political and. General Mat- ters Among the People SATURDAY, JUNE 28, 1913. SWAT ‘THAT FLY! DO IT NOW! False modesty leads to false ways of living, Rev, H. P. Jones is enjoying a two weeks! vacation, Mr. and Mrs, J. A. Hanly have moy- ed to 771 Aurora aye. Rev. E, H. McDonald has returned from his vacation trip. ‘The weather has been some hot if anybody should ask you. And there are also a few women who don’t understand men. Mr, and Mrs, 8. L, Maxwell have moved to 558 Arundel street, Oi abi atee sete Tra oe Your Credit is good at the GLOBE FURNITURE CO. 473-475 St. Peter St. ‘The feading New and Second Hand Furniture store of the city ‘Tel, Ceder 3817 A.B, Commie, Mgr 8OO0SSO00s4SR00000E8600C02 Grand Cabaret entertainment at the Marquette Club every night. FOR RENT—A nice large furnished room for rent at 330% Rondo street. Mr. W. J. Uttley has moved his bar- ber shop and pool parlor to No. 30 B. 4th Street, Attorney R. 0. Lee has been com- missioned ai a notary public by Gov. A. O. Eberhart. And sin when {t is finished bringoth forth death—James 1:15.—Selected by E. W. Gilles. PSS o ee ee raeeoes W. T. FRANCIS WHO FOR A NUMBER OF YEARS WAS IN THE EMPLOY OF THE LEGAL DEPART- MENT OF THE NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY, HAS OPENED OFFICES FOR THE GENERAL PRACTICE OF THE LAW AT 88 AND 89 UNION BLOCK, ST. PAUL, Aavertlsement. PSS OSES e eee ee Dr, Valdo Turner is taking a sum- mer ‘course in medicine at the Unt- versity of Minnesota, ‘The office of the “Small Loan Co.” has been moved to rooms 25 and 26 fith floor Union Block. Mr. Lightfoot West was in the city for a few days this week, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Franels, Mrs. 0. C. Hall is taking a summer course in domestic science at the University of Minnesota. If you have some news you would like to see in THE APPBAL, write it on a postal card and send to this of fice. ‘Wait and watch for the big boat ex: cursion by the Knights ‘Templar ‘Thursday evening, July 3—Advertise- ment, Ren, 678 St, Anthy Tel, Dale 2047. ; : — T. BH. LYLES Ss Wabaane EE wi Ameueted Bay sor Night tn ) iy Bae active Pall Banzara urmtened it duh AtaieSRU Whe Cwadbaary: 1m Plonee Baa 6 Paul MIRE ‘Tomorrow night at St. James church the meeting will be under the av- spices of the Christian Endeavor so- ciety. Dr. L. D. Cook, M. D., of La Grange, Tex., is In the city visiting his sister, Mrs. George Bell, 1776 W Minnehaha street. Mrs, 0. H, Allen and the little Misses Kemp returned from a four- day trip to Chicago on last Tuesday morning. FOR RENT—Four room modern flat with alcove, $16.50 per month. Apply at 554 Aurora, Phone Dale 6436.— Advertisement, According to the reports from. the health office there were ten deaths among the Afro-Americans during the month of May. Mrs, James A. Vass has opened a dainty Japansese Tea Garden on her lawn, 450 Roudo street. Will be ready for business tomorrow. ‘The B. Y. P. U, of Pilgrim Baptist Churen meets each Sunday at 6:45 P « KEMINDER, Fee qb Gel Gee 7 i pel eek pee ine Tet 1Bu FT Ve aap TU LUM LL ipsa | im oS fy i Ea Gs, SS eee 2AZEE oe, THE STATE SAVINGS BANK. 93 East Fourth Street. Invites the saving accounts of fru- gal wage-earners, it 1s well fitted to ‘take care of them. taleree ate 34% per adaae! DEPOSITS OVER $4,350.00 ‘Toartea P, Noyes, Louls Betz, Prettant, Treasurer. PILGRIM COMMANDERY NO. 22, K. 1. GUN Ppahyacee x EXGU- LIGHT ogiaeeceeece sea, RS|uN ON STEAMER HUA WATRA\ AND BARCE ‘ GRAND MID-SUMMER CARNIVAL . WONDERFUL MOVING PICTURES KANGAROO COURT SUFFRAGETTE POLICEWOMEN GREATEST THING THAT EVER HAPPENED THE BAZAZAS COMMITTEE 178 PEOPLE—COUNT 'EM 178 PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH UPSTAIRS AND DOWN ONE SOLID WEEK JULY 7 TO 12. COME AND SEE MAUD 3,000 TICKETS TO BE SOLD AT 10 CENTS POSTPONED! OG account of the rain last Tuesday evening the | SECOND ANNUAL. MONLER coalpet ICUSION Under the auspices of the CULTURE CLUB Seamer PURCHASE a Barge Was postponed to | Monday Night, July 7 | RAINORSHINE | a Music REFRESHMENTS Good Time is D. ae 1, Going, Shaina : Moots |. G. Johnson W. T. Godette E. C. Walker TICKETS _- SCENTS DT Ese ea ye Te ta tat All are cordially invited, FOR RENT—Nive room for one or two gentlemen—near both commissar- ies, Apply to Mrs. Hattie Williams, 780 Buffalo street —Advertisement. Mr. C. W. Patterson secured places as kitchen girls for five Afro-Ameri- can girls at the Union Depot restau- rant this week. Good for Patterson. Mr, O. C. Hall left Tuesday for Wauxegan, Ill., to attend the Listrict Sunday School Convention of which he is superintendent, He will return home today. You should go to the Little St. Paul, 130 Bast, Highth street, and try some genuine Mexican Chili made by its ex- cellent chef, Jerry Beasley. It’s fine! —Advertisement. If the readers and well-wishers of ‘THE APPEAL will send items of 80- clal news to this office it will be ap- preciated and the news will be pub lished. ‘When you have any baggage to be taken to the train or other hauling you wish done, call Mr. Louis Liverpool, N. W. Cedar 245; he will take care of you promptly. Capt. John Clark formerly assistant chief of police here who resigned last year, has been appointed chief of po- lice ‘of Portland, Ore, at a salary of $5,000 per year. When you buy ice cream, why not buy the best? It's made ‘by J. C. Vander Bie, 496 Partridge street. It's for sale, too, at all’ places handling first class ice cream. Bert Sale was in the police court Tuesday charged with breaking the nose of Dix Warren. and was sen- tenced to the workhouse for 60 days or pay a fine of $50. WANTED—A well known man, who intends to get married shortly, wishes to rent three nice unfurnished rooms Call or address “J.’, No. 561 Rondo street—Advertisement. Remember that Pilgrim Comman. dery, K. T., Moonlight excursion is the next big thing. Get ready and gc next Thursday evening, July 3.. Every. body is going.—Advertisement. At great expense the Bazazas Com. mittee of Pilgrim Baptist church has secured the Copyrighted moving pic tures of Tuskegee Institute and will show them at the church the week of duly 7. SPIRELLA CORSET, Cora E. An derson corsetier. Any lady wishing to be properly corsetted call: or ad: dress 365 Aurora Ave. Tel. N. W Dale 1345,—Advertisement. “The Favorite Shining Parlor Messrs. Beard & Alexander, propriet ors, has been moved to 105 B. 6th street, where first class work Is done on short notice at all times—Adver ‘tisement, It your wife is ailing buy her a GOS SARD CORSET and she will be in better SHAPE than ever before. For sale by Mrs. J. B. Cloak, 292 St. Al bans street. N. W. Phone, Dale 2076. ‘= dlvertiagment: VUUAL AND PIANO LESSONS given by Mrs, Addie Crawford Minor at her residence, 392 Carroll street only. Hours for instruetion arranged rae. to suit patrons Tel. Dale 2192, terms reasonable,—Advertisement, SHINE ’EM UP! If you wish a good first class shine or polish, go to the Peoples’ Shining Parlors, 127 B 6th street, between Robert and Jackson, 'W. H. Porter proprietor. Special chairs for ladies—Advertisement, A chance to go to Tuskegee without paying railroad fare, by going to Pil grim Baptist church during the week of July 7. Moving Pictures of all the scenes and incidents of the’ greatest institution of industrial education In the world. If you. wish any typewriting done call on Miss Allce Vassar, public stenographer and Notary Public, Room 25 Union Block, corner of Fourth and Cedar. ‘Tel. Cedar 5552, Res{dence 334 Rondo. Phone Dale 665.—Adver tisement. The Globe Method—To sell Furni ture that will Satisfy, at prices that will Gratify. We give Furniture and Stoves you do want, for Furniture an¢ [Stoves you don't want—Globe Furni ture Co,, 478-475 St. Peter street.—Ad vertisement. Zion Presbyterian church, Western avenue near Aurora, Sunday services, morning 11:00 a, m.; Christian En- deavor, 7:00 p. m.; Evening worship, 8:00 p. m.; Sunday School 12:00 m. Public cordially invited. Rev, G. W. Camp, pastor. SS THe MENS’ EPISCOPAL CLUB ‘St. Paul | WILL GIVE ITS SECOND ANNUAL OUTING das he ale LAKE MINNETONKA Thursday, July 17 Foot Races, Out Dook Sports and Games of all kinds. Base Ball SAINT PAUL. ve.- MINNEAPOLIS DANCING FROM 2:30 to 8:30 P. M. Trains Leaving St. Paul 9:00 A.M. 1:30 P. M. 4: 40 P.M, Trains Leaving Minneapolic 9:30 A.M. 2:00°P. M. 5:10 P.M. Traing Returning 5:15 P.M, 9:15 P.M. WAIT FOR THIS ONE FAVORITE GOOD TIME. COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS: Clarence L. Smith, Chairman John La Coste Firston White GoW. Edwards Edw: 0. James Clarence M. Tibbs. N. B.—Patrons when buying tickets at the depots will please ask for pienie tickets. DELEGATES TO N. N. E. CONGRESS For Minnesota are Appointed by Gov. ‘A. . Eberhart. Governor A. U. Bberhart has ap- pointed as delegates to the National Negro Educational Congress which will hold its sessions in Kansas City, Mo., from July 15 to 19 as follows: St. Paul—Thos. H. Lyles, Dr. 0. D.\ Howard, 0. C, Hall, Dr. Valdo Turner, W. T. Franels, Esq, Rey. H, P. Jones, W. H. Johnson, Dr. J. R. White, Rev. A. H. Lealtad, J. Q. Adams, R. H. Anderson, Mrs. J. H. Hickman, Misses Edith A. Leonard and Miss M. Farr. Minneapolis—W. R. Morris, Dr. R. S Brown, B. 8. Smith, Esq. J. M. Allis: son, C. H. Robinson, Mrs. Ione EB. Gibbs and Mrs, Ida Sellers, WONDERFUL HAIR’ GROWER. A woman to be really pretty must have luxuriant hair regardless of her complexion, and if you wish this try, MME L. A’ PORTER'S HAIR CREAM It will keep the hair clean and soft prevent or remove dandruff, invigor ate tne roots and produce:a healthy condition which is necessary to pro mote a healthy growth of hair. Tt Ht and Tam sure you will ik Read the following testimonial which is only one of many: ‘To whom it may concern. I take great pleasure in recommend ing Mme. L. A. Porter's Hair Cream I began to use It one year ago, my hair was very dry, lke bristles, har¢ and stubborn. It was, a! brownish rec having been turned ‘that color by fever After using Mme. Porter’s Cream my hair soon became soft and silky, my sealp free from dandruff. It” wil straighten your hair without using s hot fron ‘and as an agent for Mme Porter's Hair Cream I am greatly encouraged over the suscess I am hav ing selling it. My patrons are al well pleased and highly recommend it, as it. will do-just what is claimed for it if used according to directions I sincerely trust that this will induce others to try this cream for it is cer tainly fine, (Mrs.) JohnH. Matthews, 720 6th Ave E., Duluth, Minn Price, 25 and 50 cents per sar. Mme. L. A. Porter, 194 W, Central Ave.,'St. Paul, Minn “Advertisement. JAPANESE TEA GARDEN. Now that the warm weather has come in earnest and thé ladies, gentle- men and children will want something cool to eat and drink, MRS. JAMES A. VASS, 450 Rondo street has ar- ranged to supply thelr wants in that respect. She has fitted up a charming JAPANESE TEA GARDEN on her lawn and is prepared to furnish Cold Lunches, Iced Tea, Cold Soft Drinks, Tee Cream, Fruit and other refresh: ments, DAINTY DISHES FOR DAINTY » sDARLINGS, Music Evenings. The public cordially invited, ‘Men, Women and Children. 450 Rondo Street. ST. PAUL. ‘Advertisement. FARGO, N. D. Mr. Leroy Fort: of this city. an- nounces the matrimonial engagement of his daughter, Alberta, to Mr. L. W. Pleasants of St. Paul, Minn, ‘The wedding will be solemnized some time in Joly. OV it) ‘Aavertisement, THE STATE SAVINGS BANK. Total Deposits, $5,200,000.00; Surplus Fund $190,000:00. ‘The trustees have declared the reg- ular seml-annual interest dividend on deposits at the rate of 3% per cent per annum, for period ending June 20, 1918. Interest will be credited on pass-books as of July 1, on or after July 20, 1913. Deposits made now will draw six months’ interest January. 1, next. 93 E, 4th st—Advertisement. OWING TO THE FACT THAT THE FOURTH OF JULY OCCURS NEXT FRIDAY AND IS A NATIONAL HOLI- DAY, THE APPEAL WILL BE IS: SUED NEXT WEEK ON THURSDAY INSTEAD OF SATURDAY. ALL MATTER FOR PUBLICATION MUST REACH THIS OFFICE NOT LATER THAN THURSDAY MORNING. The So-Lit Club held'a social meet- ing at the home of Miss Bertha Wil- ams, 415 Charles street, on last Thureday evening. | Cards were the feature of the evening. Mr. John White and Miss Charlotte Gillard won first prizes; Mr, R. Stokes and isi-Bessic Johnson: won the boobles, Mr, John White will entertain the Club om the second Thursday in July. The members of St Philips Episco pal church: will give a publi¢ recep tion in honor of the several acholasti graduates from the church member ship on next Tuesday. evening, Jul; | JOU are hereby invited to the 4 MOONLIGHT EXCURSION 9 Catholic Men’s Club ai on com wrecces fa PURCHASE AND BARGE TUESDAY EVENING, JULY 15 MIQULLOUGH ORCHESTRA COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS ‘Ava Weber Gs Monmyeots 3-WE Les Ds dacaaas 0. WY, Paterson TICKETS - - - 50 CENTS Bosn Uxavas Mooror:sccusoy Comers ax muon alter Occoa “A DAY AT TUSKEGEE” MOVING PICTURES SHOWING VARIOUS ACTIVITIES OF DR. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON’S GREAT INDUSTRIAL. INSTITUTE AT THE MID-SUMMER CARNIVAL, PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH JULY 7 TO 12—ONE WEEK A DIFFERENT REEL EVERY NIGHT SEE THEM ALL AND GET THE WHOLE STORY ADMISSION 10 CENTS Will Be The Grand i : Ade eth That Will be Given on the STEAMER Ban Ge - D | Frontenac and Misi ‘This is the first Afro-American excursion for this season on this boat city ecto eee en eo oe a ele Monday Evening, June 30 High class vaudeville programme—Cabaret service—German Village— Scenes esuigrane cabaret eyiee commen Ve ‘wing contest—Singing contest, Minneapolis Big 4 vs. St. Paul Glee Club, etc. $20. Gold Prizes Awarded COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS: N. C. Campbell, Pres. E. Foy Elliott, Vice Pres. W. M. Yeiser, Sec, FLOOR COMMITTEE: % Andy Combs Lila Shaw” Joe Brown. SPECIAL OFFICERS, ~ Frank Kingry- i Henry Hicks. Will Smith. i: Adults 50 Cents; Children 25 Cents ! Bost Leaves Foota Jackson. Street, St.Paul at Eight Returns at Twelve Thirty” Ast, of which there are several, the latest. of which are the Misses Cora and Marion Cuthbert. The public cor- dially invited. Admission free. Fine program and refreshments. You must watch and wait for the grand Moonlight Boat Excursion to be given on the steamer Hiawatha and barge by Pilgrim Commandery No. 22, Knights Templar, on Thursday even- ing, July 3. This is to be the event of the season, and you must not miss it. Good music and refreshments. Tickets 50 cents—Advertisement, Mrs. B, DeBaptist accompanied: by her father, Mr. R. Thompson, left last ‘Wednesday for Winnipeg, Can, where she will, join her husband and they will permanently reside. Mr. and Mrs, DeBaptiste have been residents of St. Paul over twenty years and they have made-a host of friends here ene Peerer peers See en tes eee woe them every success in their new home, ‘THE VALET TAILORING CO., No. (64-156 B. Sxith street. ‘The most up-to-date establisbment of its | ind in the city. Clothing made to order, stonged, pressed. renovated and re- paired. Goods called for and deliv- ered. Four suits pressed for $1. They are prepared to give best service at lowest rates, Tel. N. W. Cedar. 4362. ©. Howell, manager.—Advertisement. ‘The first anniversary celebration of Frederick Douglass Lodge No. 9005 announced for last Thursady evening attracted quite a number of people de- spite the sultry weather. The pro- gram was annotnced to begin at 8:00 and although at that hour but few per- sons were in the house, the master of ceremonies, A. J. Roberts, started the program on time and at 9:00 o'clock had brought it to a close with only two numbers filled, those of Mrs. Emma Archer and Mr. W. R. Morris. There were really 29 numbers on the program but the persons who were to fill them were not present when called for and Mr. Roberts went right ahead. It is a shame that we have gotten into the very deplorable habit of not getting to our meetings and enter. tainments on time, so that usually they last until after midnight before they close; and, while a number of people on the program and in the audience were disappointed, chairman Roberts is to be congratulated for teaching them a lesson they need to learn. An extra effort had been made by this progressive young lodge to have the occasion one of extra merit. ‘They had secured splendid talent for the exercises, furnished a finely ar- ranged and printed program and had the church most beautifully and pro- fusely decorated. They also had pre- pared. seasonable refreshments in abundance all without money and without price and it is very much to the discredit of taose who were on the program and the public as well for them not to put in their appear- ance ON TIME. It is hoped that on all other occasions that the managers will follow the good example set by ‘Mr. Roberts and begin and close on time hereatter, Oifice Cedar 5552 PHOMES Res. Dale 241 DEALER IN Real Estate xp Insurance Handles Farm Lands and City Prop- Seve auiice, Savas Sele Ree Houses. insures you” Lite your House: your Household Goods Ineurse againat-demnge by FURS Lightning on Tetnade” See STRONG. before closing. @ deal clewhere: Office 25-26 Union Block ornet. oF buf 'and “Geter ST. PAUL MINN. i Your Looks Can Ladies ka oe 9, Madam Notah Wilson’s Sra te aces Fois Haeeg Moon, me eae net cae 563 Charles St. ST. PAUL “Paes Cola 621 Wears: 9 om to 1? 81 to Spm DR. W. T. MITCHELL oannier “esoumrree gn PAUL LITTLE DIAMOND CAFE Mrs, M. J. Hicks, Prop. | First Class Home Cooked Meals | to order at all hours i Daily Dinner 11 to3 at 25c. Sunday Dinner 11 to 6 at 30c, Breakfast 6:30 Supper 5 to 8 | 476 Robert, ST. PAUL, 5 VaNber BES wICE CREAM «+ IS THE BEST For Sale Everywhere : Teas omreatrues ims W. B. ELLIOTT & CO. sae and Fancy Groceries, Ice | Cream, Giza, Sentestionery ai University Ave. ST. PAUL 5 Phone Cedar 6132 . DENTIST Formerly of the New York Dental Co, now located at 27 EAST SEVENTH STREET Room 202 Kendrick Bldg. Hours—Daily 9 A. M. to 8 P. My Sunday 10 A. M. to 2 P. Me ST. PAUL, MINN, ToLN,W. Cedar 911 Te. 11-Stato 1964 MONTANA MEAT MARKET G. H. Rieoer, Proprietor Fresh and Salt Meats Cote Heat” 666 ROBERT ST. ST. PAUL ‘Tel, Cedar 9104 Opp. Union Depot CONTINENTAL TAILORING 60, —_———_ ee: e M, GUEST, Mgr. Cleaning, Pressing, Dyslag, and Repairing Four Suits Sponged and Pressed $1.50 CONTINENTAL HOTEL Entrance on Sibley Cor. Third and Sibley-st., ST. PAUL, F. M, PARKER & CO, Cor, 6th and Wabasha. Best place in the'city for Pure Drugs and Proprietary Medicines, A complete stock of Druggists’ Sun- dries, Soaps, Perfumes, Toilet Arti cles, Pure Candy, Fine Stationery, Kodaks and Supplies, Best Brands of Cigars, etc., etc. F. M. Parker & Co... Prescriptions Deliverd. Open all night The REXALL Store. Both Phones 815 “THE BUSY CORNER” A. J. MeMURRAY & CO. Staple and Fancy Groceries, Candies, Com feetionery, Cigars, School Supplies, te. Ice Cream Parlor and Cafe, Lunch at all Hours. REAL ESTATE AND RENTALS HANDLED. Cor( Western and Rondo #8, PAUL Office Cedar 1673 Dr, Valdo Turner PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Kendrick Block, 27 B. 7th OFFICE HOURS 9tolla.m,12tolp.m,8toSp, m Sundays 10 to 11 a. m, Res. 386 St Albans Tel. Dale 018 ALBION W. HOLDEN Painter and Decorator 527 St. Anthony Avenue ST. PAUL, - MINN Cee ee SUITS PRESSED A VALET TALOALAB_cO S| 156 E. SIXTH ST PONS POPC COUTTS COCO OOO PET MLNNEA POLIS UNS IN AND ABOUT THE At. “FLOUR CITY.” Matt. « Socvas Rellalouetana “asneea Wich Hae “Haegelledandsares angen: Amen the lpedplal old cu Mr. E. W. Gilles, the missionary teacher, has moved to 1027 27th ave hue southeast Rev. J. P. Howard, the evangelist, is holding revival meetings at St. James A. M, E. church. Everybody cordially invited. Every Afro-American in the Twin Cities should see Tuskegee at Pligrim Baptist church July 7 to 12, a differen reel of 1000 feet of film every night. Bom't mise any of them. ‘Advertisement SOSH SSEHT EOL OO ESS Phones, N. W. Nicollet 9556 T.S. Center 3638 Geo. W. Nelson Druggist and Druggist Sundries SOOSOOROHEOEHOS Keystone Hotel and Buffet, 1313 Washington Avenue South. Rooms and Meals by Day, Week or Month. Rooms $1.60 per month and up, Spe- cial rates for theatrical people. Kidd F. Mitchell, Prop—Advertisement, Should you need anything in drugs or medicines, or druggists’ sundries, toilet articles, cigars, soda, etc,, ete., call at Geo, W. Nelson's drug ‘store, 121 Sixth street south. Prescriptions carefully compounded, Cut rates. MIGHTY, MID-SUMMER_ MELANGE. —THE— BAZAZAS’ COMMITTEE'S BAZAAR FUN, FROLIC AND FINANCE PILGRIM BAPTIST CHURCH ONE WEEK. JULY 9th to feth. Owing to the rain the Culture Club Moonlight Boat Excursion announced for last Tuesday evening was post- poned until Monday evening, July 7, When they will go “rain or shine.” ‘Tickets for former excursion good for this—-Aflvertisement, Owing to the inclement weather the boat excursion of the St. Paul Culture Club was not given last Tuesday even- ing, but they announce that “rain or shine” they will go “down the Missis- sippi” on Monday evening, July 7th. Come over and go with them—Adver- tisement, Best Service Good Music “LA FRANCE” Guor sumer cars Mrs. J, M, Mask, Prop. & Mgr. AMERIGAN AND GHINESE DISHES Regular Dinner from lla. m. to 2p. m, Open FROM T ALM. TO2.A. Me a Fint Av, Minneapolis OWING TO THE FACT THAT THE FOURTH OF JULY OCCURS NEXT FRIDAY AND IS A NATIONAL HOLt DAY, THE APPEAL WILL BE IS SUED NEXT WEEK ON THURSDAY INSTEAD OF SATURDAY. ALL MATTER FOR PUBLICATION MUST REACH THIS OFFICE NOT LATER THAN THURSDAY MORNING. WHEN IN ST PAUL ge to the St. Louis Kitchen, No. 138 B. Third St, upstairs” for your meals, All home coakin; AN regular-meals 25 cents Breakfast from 7:00 to 11:00 a.m: dinner from 12:00 m, to 3:00 p.m: sioner from 5:00 to 8:00 Me Juli Hinson, Prop. Tel. Cedar 6090.—Ad vertisement. The celebration of the one hun dvedth anniversary of the birthday o Henry Ward Beecher which was held in the assembly room at the Court House Tuesday evening was seriously handieapped by a drenching rain. How. ever, there wwas.a fair audience to lis ten to the magnificent program _ ot speeches ‘and musical numbers. | Mr GP. Hilyer was chairman: of the cit izens' committee and W. R. Morris ¥sq, master of ceremonies, B.S Smith, Bsq., on “Beecher the Agita tor,” ‘made’ a historical resume of Reecher's work against slavery an¢ urged the application of his principles to achieve a second emancipation. A. H. Hall, Hsq., spoke on “Beecher, the Friend of the Negro.” He delivered an earnest and forceful address and told his hearers that the near future would see the breakdown of ages-old prejudices and the enthronement of brotherly love. “We are tired,” he sald, “of sham christianity and need a, little "more of the religion of Jesus Christ.” The last speaker, Rev. 8. M. Dick, entertained his heaters with a fine plea for fair play and held out great hope for the race for the fu- ture. HOT TIME FOR DELINQUENTS. ‘We clip the following from one of our exchanges to warn our delinquent subscribers what a hot time they will have if they fail to pay their news- Paper bills. The same fate awaits our slow-paying advertisers: “An editor who dled of starvation was helng escorted to Heaven by an ange! sent for that purpose. “ May I just glance in at the other place be- fore we ascend to eternal happiness?” So they went below and skirmishing around, taking in the sights. It so happened that the angel lost track of the editor and went around Hades hunting him. He found him sitting by an enormous furnace, fanning him- self and gazing with rapture upon crowd of lost souls in the fire. Over the furnace was a sign beating the words, “Delinquent — subscribers,” editor, "Im not going. This is heaven ‘Come,’ said the angel, ‘we must be going now.’ ‘You go on,’ said the enougn for me,”” PARCELS POST {NFORMATION. S St, Paul, Minn., Jan. 4, 1919. Publisher, THB APPHAL. : Sir: Although the newspapers from time; ‘to time have published information = - with reference to the parcel post sys- ‘tem, in operation since January 1, 1913, At 1s evident that many people do not fully understand the essential points with reference thereto, and therefore L respectfully request that you publish for the information of your readers, that: 1. Distinetive parcel post stamps must be used on all fourth-class mat- ter, that such matter bearing ordin- ary stamps will be treated as “held for postage,” 2 for postage.” a 2. That parcels will be mailable only at the post office, the branch post offces, or the numbered stations des ignated by the postmaster, or pre- ‘sented to rural or other carriers duly authorized to receive such matter; at 8. “All. parcels must bear the re- turn card of the sender, otherwise they will not be accepted for mailing, 4. It will also be understood that parcel post stamps are not valld for Payment of postage on matter of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd class, nor can any of ‘sald classes be accepted at the parcel post rate of postage. 5. Registration of parcels has been discontinued, but instead parcels are Insured against Iossin an amount equivalent to Its actual value, up to $50, g : Respectfully, 0. H. Neegaard, Supt. of Mails. CITATION ON PETITION FoR. late ‘of Minnasota:, Count® or tee State of Minnesota, County of Ram- Sey. 8. dn Probate Court. Inv‘The Satter of The Estate of Ellen ‘sitgaveth Yenting, uo’ State ‘of ‘Atinmézota to AN Whom ete Stay" Concern: ‘he petition of John N. Jenkins hay- Ing Woon filed fa tals coats wane ey ing that giten Bilzabeth JénidRee ton |avFesldent. of the County ot Reman Seats “or actnnosera ated’ intestate as ‘the toch aay of May 1918; and’ praying hae letters of admintstiation Poet state be granted: to. Jona yon {dt Is Ondored, that said petition. bs hneurd ‘and’ that’ all "persons" interested in'sata’' matter be’ and hereby ave sited nd. redulred to ‘appenr borers “ite Gorton Huosaay GRPSEy ues A 1918, ab to o'clock in the forenbon or aa Soon thoreatten aa'sald_ matty tan Be heard, ‘at ‘the Probate Court Room, Pe the Gourt House in the Gity of St Bauk InSsaia’ Counter ana shoo datea ig aoe thes have, wh sala petition aout Bot be" grantéa and’ that this eltation "hs Served. by. the publication ‘there 2s the" Appeat ‘necarding: to awe aget Eo Matling’ a copy of this cltatiga at leas TW day's "petore "sald day" oe" weatsaet {9 cach of the melts ofsald_ decedent Whose names and nadsesses areseeuer ‘and appear from the tiles of this eeanee Nrithess ene Judge of sald Cours ges th day of Tune AC Deore Seal of ip. Ww. BAZILL, Probie Court Jaye’ of Probate ‘eons EN, Gosewiser, = Cietic et “Probate, J. rouls Baise Atty. for Petitfoner, 808 Court Bike, SE pain, Silage Tee Re <Puown Cnpan 0140 LAW OFFICES OF ; J. LOUIS ERVIN ATTORNEY AT LAW SUITE 903 COURT BLOCK SAINT PAUL - MINNESOTA CITATION FOR EXAMINATION OF aaa RATES: Fee re. State of Minnesow, County of Ramsoy stu Probate Court Inthe Matter of the state of Atexande “tucker, Decetent: ‘Phe State of Siinmésota to All Whom i May. Concerns On reading nd fling, the. petition o the representative of ala stale: previ the fhe Court eva te and beef examining, adjusting ‘and “allowing i BINAL “ocOUNH and! for" tee eS thent of the residue, of sald’ estate’ to the bersons. thereto ‘entifeds Tels Ordered, “Phat. sald petition, be hoard and that all persons Interested. 1s said patton pol and rotived to ap ear ‘before this Court: on Mongas, the Both dayof Sune, toa. at" 10 o'clock, At, ‘oF ais soon ereatior ag" said wt eal “he heard, atthe” Probate "Gose Rooms in the Gourt House mane Chota Se°Rtul sala’ County, and show ease, if" any they" have, why “aid petition shot not be granted ‘and that tins eta ion he Served by. publteation: thereof th the. Appeal aecoralne ta. taws "and, by mailing copy of this ‘citation at ‘Teast iF day tpefore, atid’ 'das" of heating’ ts colipt the helte, govisees and Tetsiees of said decedent ‘whose names. and Aas dresses appear fromthe flee ‘of dhl cae WITNESS the Judge of sald Court this ahh day of June, Ae Deg 'e, Wt Bait, “Iudge ot Probate. (Seal of Probate Cour’) “thee F, W, Gosmwiscn, ‘cleric of Probate WoF. BRANCTO Shomer IN REACH OF ALL |. WEST STH AND 7TH STREETS _ F. M. PARKER & CO, Cor. 5th and Wabasha, Best place in the city for Pure Drugs. and Proprietary Medicines. A complete stock of Druggists’ Sua- dries, Soaps, Perfumes, Toilet Arti- | cles, Pure Candy, Fine Stationery, | Kodaks and Supplies, Best Brands of Cigars, ete, etc. | ¥.M. Parker & Co. | Prescriptions Delivered Open all night ‘The REXALL Store. Both Phones 315 —_—__e) MEET ME AT— py sé Hf 7 The Budweiser” Nic. HERGES, Prop. CHOICEST WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS ‘Tri-State Phone 5004 Gor. Dale and University, - ST. PAUL ————_ Main 9592 'P. 8,3073 PORTERS! AND WAITERS’ FOR MEN ONLY /GLOVER SHULL, - Manager ‘Rates 50 cents per day. 309 Hennepin MINNEAPOLIS Steam Eleotrie and Hot Water Wiring Heating A Special M. J. O'NEIL ELECTRIC GAS AND COMBINATION _ FIXTURES PLUMBING = ge pre0 RAST SIXTH STREET Both Phones 82 ST. FAUL, MINN. Northwestern Stamp Works. wanorAcruness oF Rubber and Metal § T A M P $ OF EVERY DESCRIPTION” 110 EAST THIRD ST. STi \PAUL, MINN. aS. 8 8.0. f= "il Fishing Parties know i REY / makes the ‘Th | wort nfile Se i y MT ene Theo.Hamm wn ee eee R. O. LEE ATTORNEY AT LAW e Marea Onsen ST. PAUL Two Two FIFTY FIFTY an (e) » TWO Mild, Rich, Satisfying! ‘Try It Once er Become a 252 . ‘Sold by the Good Dealers ‘Ask any Cigar Dealer for ‘the King of Nickel Smokes" # HART & MURPHY SMOKE MAKERS SINCE 1857. SAINTE. PAUL, U.S.A. . ‘TELEPHONE CEDAR 9142. ¥ “ : Cm ” CURLEY’S BAR 122 East Third Street Finest Brands of/Imported and Domestic Wines, Liquors and Cigars S. E. Cor. Third and Robert, ST. PAUL, MINN, J. H. Bannister & Co. No. 258 W. Seventh Street "Painting, Paper Hanging, Calcimining. White- washing Done on Short Notice COLD WATER PAINTING AND WHITEWASHING BY MACHINE Eostimates Given ST. PAUL, MINN. SAY, JUST A MINUTE! — WELL, WHAT IS IT? Are you in a hurry? Then-- OFFICE: 7th & Wabasha, 430 up stairs, with J. P. Anderson Call Us GARAGE and Residence: 244 W Central, Phone Dale. 6632 BRANCH: Utley's Barbershop, 90 E. Sth, Phone Cedar 9282 Edwards’ Auto Express, Baggage and Storage. B. F. EDWARDS, Prop. We Move You so Quickly, itis a Pleasure. Polite, Prompt and Composite Personality is the way we treat you. Try us and be Convinced WATCH FOR “LITTLE BENNIE” AND HIS RED CHASE CAR, BUZZING AROUND. Cheerfully and Willingly we avait Your Call SAINT PAUL MINNESOTA ee, a Ke — a ellie go Y fa 7 eee ae Dimes are little young dollars. They grow_on- ly whe~ ‘ooked up-together. Treat yourself to a Savings account and prove it to your own satisfao- tion. ‘‘Planted” dollars will add to your earn- ings. THE STATE SAVINGS BANK 93 East Fourth Street “FOR FIRS? OL4B8 TONSORTAL WOR ae UTLEY’S Shaving, Hair-Cutting, Shampooing, Elec, Sanitary Baths, Shoes. uae SES EE re Tel. ie 9282 ae ‘ST. PAUL, MINK. GOOD SHOES ae For the man he cares, _ STANLEY - SHOE CO. | 421 Rebet Street, St Pee eer cen oe St. Paul - Steam sages Works: 289-201 Rice Street - Omer: {12 Beets se aN rece AY Mice) —_TOWLE'S L06 CABIN SYRUP Sou ean - ee dg Se ‘Aside trom being unsurpase- UN og i ~ ed on Griddle Cakes, Hot Mut- ty A fins, Waffles and Gems, it adds as ies te a new flavor to Candies, Sher- iF Ne aeaaie [ berts, Desserts and all cooking, a eran of Get our book “Camp to Table” FLRiZ ae its free. \ A 7 or The Towle Maple Products Go. a ere eee St Paul Minn, St. Johnebury, Ve ee Se ag ete eit ee AE ERE OSS For Your Spring Sultor Overcoat TRY THE TaTeee yoru surr $25 ovszcoaz vn Tce For i Cool i> | ese | Health 4 /riaesto i isa] | \ necessity, Pp size | {F EVERYONE KNEW THE GOODNESS oe GORDON CAPs NO ONE WOULD. BE WITHOUT Oe SULIETY RIRSSy ue : ‘SY. PAUC masowr0 I A I g are ot) Sc a ey y ae ea a ani Guiwsh i | lira a7. a i MosT WORSHIPFUL GRAND Lopes MINNESOTA, UF. AND A M. C. H. ROBINSON, GRAND MasTan. 3596. Clinton Aver Minneapolie Mt, AP BOLLING, GRAND SECRUTARY. Goa W. Central Avenue. PIONBER LODGE NO.1, F. AND a ag Qdeta feat and third “Monday Of each ‘month at Wagner Wall, cor West ero Ave. and: hates street at 9:00 p.m Novie ‘Pryot, W. Att J. i. Charleston Scey., 636 Wi, University, PERFBCT ASHI iR LODGE No 4 B'and AM, “meeta' second. and Tourtt ‘Tuesdays ae Wagner Hall. cot. ‘Weaterr Arend, Giese acetate 8 aim 2B. Simpson, We ats J. Mun Secy., 1364" Thomas street. es BETHEL CHAPTER NO. 28 R. A.M Meete second Thursday in each month at Wagner Hall, cor. Western ave. and Charles strect, at 8:00 P. at. W. wT. Ghandler, HB, Claude Gavi, Sécks Sha Mibicd oe, AULGRIM COMMANDERY NO. 22, Knights Templar, meets fourth Thuse: day, dm gach month at Wagner. all, comer Western “and” Chanfen atear, W, Be gorce, 8, Cr son Saves See Mo Ronde ‘street, ao Non pete Ee Saeed MARS LODGR NO. 22° GU, O. of 9. F. meets second and fourth Wetnes! Say (nights at Odd" Pe:lows walt S3) West” Universita, | cotner’ wartiigian avenue. “Entrance on Farrington, "ff Dihiingham, ‘No G., 3. Wesley Welly, B. 550 Se. anthony “Ave. HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH, No. 553 @ BO. of 0. F, mocks nest ana this Monday 1m eagn” month at ‘Oda ‘Fei. lows Hail, NW. Gor. university std Harrington. tra, Nellie Trancis, Mt. Gy Mrs. Carrie i Cindsay, W. R156 Aven street. PAST GRAND MASTER'S CoUNCIL No, 123, G. 0. 0 of 0. . meets the see ond and fourin rlaay. fn exch months" Goa Feuons Hall. fay We. Unhverate corner Farrington. “Bnttanes on Perrin fon, “Wm, Re Morrig Wes Mf Tack Hickman, G)8°"No, 423. St Anion ST, PAUL PATRIARCHY No. us Reete_ second Monday. in’ each month ei Gag “rellows “Hall, 221" W: "University corner Farrington." Entranse on "Warring fom avenue. “Thos. (Rv Hickman, (acting) Br VOB Ww. Mornin ea eee Seo, B. Howe W. PR! 178% Wabasha Miowenpal. HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH No, 776 0 0. 0. Bzmeats second and fourth ‘Twenday’ in cach month at Labor heme ple Hall, Gore Fourth atrect and Raenth Ave, South. Mrs. 8. Darager Mt. Wee Rai Cove Note eee OH OEOTHERS OF FRIENDSHIP. NORTH STAR LODGE NOW TS TS ¥. Meets $d ‘Thursday in each month ax Wagner Hall, cor. Weitern Ave. and Churles street. Brothers in’ good ‘stand: ing always welcome. 0. Howell. W. Sf, 3.Q. Adams, “We Sy 49 4an' st RAMSEY LODGE No.3, U. BF, Meets second Friday in each month at Wagner Hall, cor. Western Ave. and Charles Street. Brothers in good stand- ing always welcome. M.A. Davis, W. M, A. D. Adams, W. S, 411 Charles Streat. JOHN H, HAYES LODGE No.6 K. OF P. Meets frst and third: Puce: day in each ‘megen Caseig Hall Bar tt Yorsity “eon, Partington, Eitnkts of Eytntas in god | Standing “aivaye weldites : James thomas, ¢ Cy Jas A | Hondersgn, vc; $8" oth St B.Or'Jaines, ie be Jana §. 221 St Abang’ sieece BIDDLE CIRCLE. LADIES OF a. a ince heat and hind Tesedase of ack Ronth in Suprerna Court your nid sae {al Dusloing, Airs, S03. Tent tl peat Me a Be Whe Seek onan ands FIDBUITY COURT OF CALANTH NOMEN ACR ALE aca Na thebts frst ana thitd.Noitiag in” Sach Thonth ge iceof f Wial Sti chnetit Ave,” Minneapolis, «Airs. atinerg Bardett, W. Cs Miss Ariene Mf Scott Riot by 36 W 20th st FILGHIM “UAPrIST CUCM cs uth and Coane. Srmday Serves Px eset ing’ atta am. aad Fae te tae Seas jeboul at Fi feta, Sadtagay tes ig evueral-praser testing’ igey eh Ing Sealy" SUuday wchoot Ease Ey, ae i weddings promptly "attended Ka Bl'tg Mebonaid, Pastor, Bi Wi. Contra GOPHER LODOR NO. 108.1. B. P.O pot ihe World, meets sacond ace Fourth dhuraday th cmak a ongnone Ane Hail Nor ise want third ate ae Paul Dp areen gies mihaa Si, Solmson, Beoys S98 sent St JAMES’ A. a1, B. CHURCH. Con vrler ‘and. day Sirestss’ Sunday. seesiges 11:00 a.m: 740 pm Wedron ieee fheeting, 8:00. p.m. ast) Monday'and Tuesdays: athe too = tay ana “Thureaay. “iveadings, Se 2 ST, JAMBS A. M. B, CHURCH, COR Fullgr AMES A. M. BE. CHURCH, COR. Oiird Sundays, 11:00 a.m Matins, second sae 1% 8; me prothertaog, of at WER Tatitta? eanceae et tet aD be eetONinyy Ba beara Ps eae Be ee pie Mann hater oxime ecaer ak invention’ a probably patentable. Commnnien. ephitts Gabon tkepaei ata, f, co Fovsive eerie ey ete Scientific American, Aleserytsieseaaot clare sbrndeope tart 5 iwi fain a6\trmeer. NEW WUNN &.Co,serersem New Yor ‘Born Prowns 600 HAAS BROS. (corporates) General Meat Dealers . Blue Ribbon Hams and Bacon U8 ears aren of all Cattle, Hoge Family, Hotel and Restaurant 2 Trades Specilty