The Appeal
Saturday, January 8, 1916
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
If you have ought that's fit to sell,
Use printer's ink, and use it well.
ARMY AND NAVY TO LOSE NOTED MEN
FAMOUS ADMIRALS TO GO.
Bradley A. Fiske, Cameron McRae Winslow and T. B. Howard Head List—Eight Naval Captains Will Be Promoted—Wilson Will Select the Successors of Army Generals.
Washington—Nineteen of the highest ranking officers of the army and navy will be retired from active service in the Army by May 1916. Included in this number are one admiral, four rear admirals and four brigadier generals. The naval retirements include that of the commander in chief of the Pacific fleet, the president of the naval war college, and a division commander of the Atlantic fleet, while among those who will cease to be active officers of the navy are the chief of corps of engineers and the president of the army war college.
The first of the naval retirements in 1916 will be that of Rear Admiral
Macomb copyrighted by Clindendt. The others are photos by the American Press Association.
REAR ADMIRALS/ ELETCHER AND WINLOW,
BRIGADIER GENERALS/ BRIGADIER
BRIGADIER GENERALS EVANS AND KINGMAN,
BELLOW, ALL ABOVE WILL RETURN
SAVE FETCHER, WHO REPIRES
IN 1917.
Bradley A. Fiske, with the possible exception of Admiral Frank F. Fletcher the best known officer of the American service. Until a few months ago Admiral Fiske was aid for operations in the navy department. He leaves on June 13.
The second officer to retire will be Admiral Cameron McKee Winslow, the commander in chief of the Admiral Fiske was another distinguished officer. He leaves the service on July 29. Admiral Thomas B. Howard, Admiral Winslow's predecessor as commander in chief of the Pacific fleet, retires on Aug. 10; Rear Admiral Clifford J. Boush, who commanded the second division of the Atlantic fleet at Vera Cruz, reaches the age limit on Aug. 13. Rear Admiral D威 Witt Coomman, commander of the Third division of the Atlantic fleet, on Nov. 28, who commanded the Austin M. Knight, president of the Navy War college, at Newport, leaves the service on Dec. 16.
Eight naval captains will be promoted to flag rank as a result of the above retirements. The officers are H. McL. P. Huse, who was Admiral Fletcher's chief of staff at Vera Cruz William R. Rush, who commanded the landing force during the fighting that marked the capture of the Mexican port; James H. Glennon, who commanded the flagship Wyoming at Vera Cruz; Chief Engineer Robert S. Griffin, Harry S. Knapp, George W. McLroy and William L. Rodgers. The army general officers who retire in 1916 are Dan C. Kingman, the chief of the corps of engineers; John P. Wisser, now commanding the First brigade in Hawaii; Montgomery M. Macomb, president of the War College, and Rob. K. Wisser, now commanding the Second brigade on the Mexican frontier. All of the officers are brigadiers. Kingman will retire on 0. Wisser July 19. Macomb Oct. 12 and Evans Nov. 13. President Wilson, under the law, will select the successors of Generals Kingman, Wisser, Macomb and Evans. The naval promotions are by seniority.
BOTTLE FLOATED 16 YEARS.
It Was Thrown, Wijh a Note, into the Pacific Ocean in 1899.
Hoquam, Wash. - After floating about in the Pacific ocean for years a bottle containing a note, probably written and thrown overboard by one of the officers of the schoner Transit, has been found on the beach by an Inland Bob Wayne, near Moopilus.
Bob Wayne, near Moopilus, and was perfectly legible, though the writing and the paper were considerably faded. The message with the note reads as follows:
Schooner Transit, Aug. 10, 1899. - Ten days out from Honolulu, H. I., bound to Hawaii, was dined at Moopilus. All is well. Latitude 99 degrees minutes north, longitude 156 degrees 7 minutes west.
J. PETENSON.
J. PETENSON, the record high title on the beach after the record high title of the Inland, which followed several days of a heavy offshore blow, which brought a heavy surf.
LEG BONE PATCHES SPINE
Altoona Boy Is Now Jubilant After Un-
usual Operation.
Altoona, Pa.-Kenneth Geist, aged
four, is perhaps the happiest child in
the United States, for recently he
received his discharge from the hospital
here.
He was admitted to the hospital on
Christmas, 1913, suffering from tuber-
colis of the spine. He could neither
talk nor walk, and the case was
thought hopeless.
The surgeons took a place of bone
from his right leg and inserted it in
the place where they removed the dis-
sessed vertebra. The operation was
successful, and Kenneth can run, talk
and play like other boys.
LEPROSY CHECKED BY
OLD INDIAN REMEDY
Doctor Insists Victim Is No Longer Menace to Workmen.
Ann Arbor, Mich.—Ignorant that he was suffering from leprosy in an advanced stage—the physician who had sent him had not diagnosed the disease—a man came to Dr. Udo Wile of the medical faculty of the University of Michigan last July. He was a pitable object. His body was covered with wounds. Dr. Wile took the sufferer into the university general hospital and has treated him with chalu-moogra oil, a remedy for leprosy that has been used for generations in India, unsuccessfully in the great majority of cases. Now his disease, which often condemns a man to life confinement in a colony of his fellow sufferers, is arrested. The patient is making a splendid recovery, Dr. Wile says. He is strong and walks two miles each day. He more man shame him by calling him. He is no more dangerous to any community now than a tuberculosis patient who is able to work. No one questions his duty and right to support himself and his family. Work should be given to this man, once the most despised and feared of 'humans' a leper. The man's name is withhold that, unknown, he may begin life anew and earn bread for his wife and their baby. His entry into the hospital was affecting, dramatic.
It so happened that a medical convention was being held here, and the different clinics were open to the visiting physicians. Dr. Wile had not seen the patient until he was wheeled into the clinic. The doctor's face went white. Vistors leaned forward and pointed to the nude body. Their faces were tense, for they knew—they thought him doomed.
The examination soon over, the patient was wheeled out, and Dr. Wile said, with emotion:
"That man has a well advanced case of leprosy. I must tell him, and it will seem to him like reading his death warrant. When his disease becomes known it is doubtful if we can keep him here. Even if the leprosy cannot be arrested the man has ten years yet living, and that he might earn a living were it not that he be housed from place to place; every man's hand will be against him."
"Is he cured—will he ever be absolutely cured?" Dr. Wile was asked.
"A cure is always relative," answered the doctor. "At present all the symptoms that characterize leprosy have disappeared in this case. He is strong, confident, hopeful. If you ask me whether the leprosy symptoms will reappear I can no more tell you than I can assure a man healthy today that he will be in health as good ten or fifteen years hence."
Left All to Employee.
Sloux City, Ia.—The good and faithful servant of ancient days found a modern example here when Charles Grubel, twenty-five years old, a clerk, received nearly all of the $50,000 estate left by Oto Mowitz, a grocer for whom Grubel had worked six years.
It's a Hummer.
Pine Grove Ark.—Katherine Lucy boasts, of being the possessor of the only brindle Boose to form in these parts. A few days ago tabby brought in a black snake thirty-nine inches long.
THE APPEAL.
Great Britain Prime Minister's Wife of Material Assistance to Him, and She is Probably Most Influential Woman in English Politics—Lady Haig Also Powerful.
London.—Two women, Mrs. Asquith and Lady Haig, are playing an active part in Great Britain's politics. To their work is accredited the elevation of their husbands to high positions.
The action brought by Mrs. Asquith, the prime minister, against the London House of Commons in editor from publishing any more letters from its readers indirectly referring to her as a friend of German prisoners of war interred in Donnington Hall had much more behind it than the extremely courageous action of an independent and fearless woman.
The prime minister's wife is probably the most influential woman in English politics in modern days. The late Duchess, Devonshire, the "Double Duchess," as she was called because she captured two dual titles in succession, that of the seventh holder of the Manchester title and the eighth of Devonshire, could perhaps have had greater political power if she could have persuaded the indolent Duke of Devonshire to accept the office of prime minister. Mrs. Asquith, on the other hand, is commonly believed to have materially assisted her husband to this its enemies have always been legion and friends not numerous, his character being that of the serious Scotman who forms emotional ties with difficulty.
Mrs. Asquith, brilliant, witty, temperamental and intellectual and invariably entertaining, has supplied this deficiency and by her tact and charm she has kept unimpaired many political friendships useful to her husband. The withdrawal of the British forces from the Gallipoll peninsula is credited to Mrs. Asquith's联动, coupled with the recounts of the General C. C. Monro, who succeeded Sir Ian Hamilton as commander at the Dardanelles, which was made public in the house of lords by Lord Ribblesdale, Mrs. Asquith's brother-in-law. Lady Haig, the wife of General Sir Douglas Haig, who has taken over the command of the British troops in France as the successor of Field Marshal Viscount French, is credited with her exerted great influence toward her army. She was the Head of the army. She was the Head of one of the "Vivian twins," who were famous as maids of honor to Queen Victoria and Queen Alexandra. Before his marriage to Miss Vivian ten years ago Haig was a favorite with General French, having served under French at Aldershot and then accompanying him to South Africa during the Boer war. Whatever French has been able to do for Haig has been done, but his present high command is the result more of the influence at court of Lady Haig, and Lord Kitchener has been the master of royalty's desires to advance the men, many of whom by his old enemy, General French. Sir David Haig was promoted to be a general only a year ago, although he had held the post as chief of staff in India for some years, having won it through the influence of King Edward and Queen Alexandra.
Sir Douglas and Lady Halg have not taken any particular pains to assume any leadership in London society since their marriage and have not kept up a London residence during visits home to his wife, the Dorset shot, where Halg earned the nickname of "Von Halg" on account of his Prussian thoroughness in military matters and his stern way of handling subordinates. He and Lady Halg have two children, daughters, named after the two queens whom Lady Halg married in Victoria, Marietta Louise, born in 1907, and Victoria Doris Bachelor, born in 1908.
CURES BICHLORIDE POISONING
Cincinnati Doctor Discovers Antidote For Deadly Drug.
Cincinnati—Physicians at the Cincinnati General hospital have discovered an antidote for bichloride of mercury, one of the most corrosive poisones known.
Recently Miss Birdie Talbott took four of the deadly tablets. She was taken to the City hospital writhing in agony. The physicians gave her copious doses of a combination of drugs discovered by Professor Martin Fisher of the medical department of the Cincinnati university. The woman has left the hospital entirely cured.
OLD LADY DRIVES CAR.
Estherville (la.) County Claims to Have
Oldest Woman, Auto, Equestrian
Oldest Woman Auto Enthusiast.
Estherville, Ia. -- Estherville now
claims to have the oldest lady auto-
mobile enthusiast in the state, if not in
the country. Mrs. M. E. John tried seventy-three,
proprietress of the Estherville green-
houses, recently purchased a car and
after a few lessons from a demonstrator
took charge of the car and expects
to drive it regularly.
BOY A FINANCIER.
Lad Fourteen Years Old Makes Money Out of Sheep.
Ipswich, S. D.-Gerald Pershin, fourteen years of age, gives promise of being one of the financiers of the country.
On Sept. 5, 1914, the boy went to M. A. Slocum, a friend, and to.1 him that he had a chance to buy twenty-five old ewes from Robert Jones at a bargain. Mr. Slocum went with the boy to the bank and signed a note with him, thereby enabling the boy to get the funds.
The other day the boy entered the bank, paid over $83.60, his note with imprint, and remarked that he had cleaned up $110.80 clean on his sheep during the year. He had paid $28 worth of wool and had sold original purchase and their increase, less five sheep the coyotes had killed, for $168.40.
PUFFED UP LIKE A BALLOON
Rook Island (Ill.) Doctors Puncture
Rook Olin and Rook Olin Life
Boy's Skin and Save His Life.
Rock Island, Ill.-The body of Fred Lawson, eleven years old, swelled to twice its normal size as the result of an accident, and for a time his life was endangered.
While coasting the boy was struck in the neck by a piece of wagon wheel im protruding from the ground. The body of tube was punctured, and in exhaling much of the air passed through this puncture and under the skin, causing the body to inflate.
Young Lawson was at the point of suffocation when physicians arrived. Their first act was to puncture the skin of the neck and allow the air to escape. They say the boy will live.
Oil Producer Using Wealth on Women and Children.
Sand Springs, Okla.—This town was built for widows. They compose more than a fourth of the 5,000 population. The town was founded by Charles Page, multimillionaire oil producer of Tulsa.
His earliest recollections were of his mother's efforts to raise her large family unaltered, and he resolved that when he grew up he would take care of all the widows.
When he made his fortune Page founded Sand Springs. He built dozens of comfortable cottages in which gas, fuel and rent were free. Factories he bought to the widows might have employment.
He built a car line to Tulsa upon which widows ride free. There are a day nursery, free medical attendance and a vocational school. If a widow wants to get married Page helps her do that. He likes grandmothers too. There are a score of them here, with nothing to do but knit and read and reminisce.
Probably has more "children" than any other man in the world. An orphan's home in a nearby town recently went bankrupt. To provide better for the little inmates Page legally adopted the whole institution and moved it to Sand Springs.
WOMAN KILLS FAGLE
Pulaski County Resident Wins Record by Not Using Gun.
Rolla, Mo.-Mrs. J. H. Arthur, who lives near Laque, Pulaski county, probably enjoys the distinction or benefit of killing an eagle without the aid of a fire. Recently she heard a noise in the chicken yard and saw a large eagle swoop down on the flock. A watchdog rushed upon the eagle and knocked it to the ground. Mrs. Arthur grabbed the bird and struck it with all her might, breaking and right wing. The eagle measured six feet four inches from tip to tip.
TWO DRINKS, TWO YEARS.
Local Option Law Violator of Fort Worth, Worth, Tex. Gets Limit. Fort Worth, Tex.-Charles Pettigrew was defendant in the first case tried in Tarrant county under the law making it a felony to sell liquor in local option territory. He was convicted and sentenced to two years. He sold two drinks to the same man. Pettigrew was indicted in January, and his first trial was on an indictment that carried only a misdemeanor penalty. He escaped on a technicality. The next indictment under the felony law also was held defective, but the third one was sustained.
GEARY'S POPULAR SCHOOL.
It Boasts Seven Pairs of Twins.
Claims Record For Oklahoma
Claims Recorder for Oklahoma.
Geary, Okla. The Geary school lays claim to the unique disruption of having more pairs of twins attending the school than any other school of its size in the state.
At the present time there are seven pairs of twins enrolled and another girl attending who has a twin brother, who will probably start after the new year. This will bring the total number of twin pairs enrolled up to eight. These twins are scattered all the way through the school from the primary to the senior class.
Defective Page
Bedridden and Speechless For Three Years After Fall, Nured Exceeding Her Mind Fails to Register Fact. Los Angeles Teacher Led Her to Walk and Speak.
Los Angeles—One of the most remarkable cases known in medical history and one fraught with interest both to surgeons and to students of psychology has been called to the attention of scientists in this city. It is the case of Carolota Sausede, a fifteen-year-old schoolgirl.
For three years Carolota was considered a hopeless paralytic, who would never be able to speak or walk. She had been injured by a fall on her head from a swing when she was twelve years old.
It is declared now by doctors and her teachers that whatever body or brain injuries she may have received from that fall have been absolutely outgrown and that she is perfectly normal physically and mentally, except that her mind has failed to register the fact of her recovery.
In other words, according to the doctors, if the child's mind can be wakened to the fact that she has recovered from her fall she will be able to walk, talk and develop as other children do.
Three weeks ago Carolota could not speak and could not walk alone, today she speaks with ease, walks without help and can even walk up and down the school stairs alone.
Three years ago the little girl pitched from a swing to her head. She was picked up and stood on her feet. Instead of standing still she began to whirl round and round. She was entirely unable to stand still or to sit up. She was put to bed and pronounced a hopeless palpity. Her power of speech was completely stopped. The presence of the present school term Miss Ettie Lee, one of the grammar school teachers, discovered the child. There were five other children in the family, all normal, and Miss Lee inquired into Carlaot's history. Securing medical examination, she learned that, whatever bodily injury may have caused by the fall, it no longer existed.
"We cannot tell Carlaot she is not a cripple or sick, because her mind has to be upgraded to that fact." Miss Lee said, teaching her by degrees. She is placed in a special class at school, and her teacher invents little exercises and lessons for her.
"She had to be almost carried to school. Her teacher made a small sand pile in the playground and many times a day took Carlaot there and helped her walk over it. Today Carlaot can walk and down the school stairs.
"When school opened she could not talk. Now she talks to us and knows what she can count in English and Spanish and spells her name. Her father tells me she was unusually bright before the fall, and I see no reason to suppose that she cannot be restored to her former condition.
"She has been in bed for the greater part of the past three years, as the schools at Chino would not take her in. So while her body healed itself, apparently, her mind never recovered from the shock of the fall."
Little Carolota was taken to the Parent-Teacher clinic for further examinations to verify the diagnosis of other children. If a well-trained special teachers will continue as they have begun in their novel work of teaching the child's mind that her body is neither paralyzed nor injured in any way.
OLDEST RED CROSS MEMBER.
Is Pointed Cap, Canadian Indian, Who at 108 Senda Portrait.
Ottawa, Canada—A novel picture has been received by Sir Robert Borden, the Canadian premier, and forwarded by him to the local Red Cross rooms. It is that of the oldest member of the Red Cross society in the world and at that a western Indian, Pointed Cap, who belongs to the File Hills Indian reserve in Saskatchewan. He will be 108 years old on Nov. 14 next. The establishment of a branch of the Red Cross society for these Indians shows how deeply the people of all classes in the Dominion are interested in the war and eager to find a way of lending assistance. It is said.
PROFESSOR LOST IN WILDS.
Wife Sails to Search Australia For Missing Entomologist.
Berkeley, Cal.-Mrs. Genevieve Bridwell, wife of J. W. Bridwell, former entomologist at the University of Calgary, who went into search in search of her husband, who went into the wilds of Western Australia some months ago as the agent of the Hawaiian government in search of parasites to control insect pests.
Professor Bridwell was last heard from when he sailed from Sydney, N. S. W. (W. S. W.) to the coast of Australia, whence he expected to proceed inland.
Fowl Attacked Los Angeles Lad, Who Was Feeding Chickens.
Los Angeles, Cal.-John M. Seaman, two-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Seaman of this city, is dead at Ontario following an attack by a large rooster at the ranch home of the child's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. V. Lawrence of that city. John and his mother visited at the ranch. The chickens were a novelty to the boy, and he was anxious to feed them. With prodigious bravery that was thought only childishly cute he accomplished his desire. A few days later was so engaged when a large rooster came to the ranch below and buried its spurs deeply in his blood. Blood poisoning developed, and the child died in a hospital after much suffering.
"MISTAKE" MADE $2,500.
War Brings Profits to Gamer, Who Ordered Too Much Chloride.
Parsons, Kan-Anon Gamer, a dry cleaner, through a mistake ordered 100 instead of ten gallons of carbon tetra chloride to be used in his cleaning process last February, paying $1.29 a gallon.
He attempted to persuade the drug company to take back the ninety gallons, but it refused, and he figured he had lost over a hundred dollars in the transaction.
The war in the meantime caused the price of the chemical to soar, and rebounded the chemical company of whom he bought for $199. If it a gallon for the ninety gallons it refused almost a year ago. Gamer netted a profit of more than $2,500.
St. Paul.-Ralse up a cow in the way she should go, and before she is old she will richly reward you. C. N. Nelson, who lives just over the Anoka county line, a few miles from St. Paul, says. Thirty-two years ago, when he was in the early twenties, Nelson lauded in Minnesota fresh from Sweden. His total assets were 50 cents and the contents of a queer looking Swedish clothes chest. Half an hour after his arrival he was 50 cents pover. "When I off a train in Minneapolis all I had was me," card bearing the address of a counsel who had come to America a short time before," Mr. Nelson said. "I showed the card to a hackman, who also was Swedish. He took my 5 cents and drove me a few blockpointing to one of the windows marked 444, said. "There it is." I has supposed that the 'box' 444 written on the card was a street address. I did not know how my cousin was to apear from that box, but I stood with eyes glued on the number from 4 o'clock in the morning until the middle of the afternoon, afraid to look else where for fear my cousin would come in the meantime. "When at last I heard two men a one of the windows talking my laundry and them my story. The explained that was in the postoffice and that my cousin might not go there for several days. I should have been in a bad fix had not one of the men invited me to come and do odd jobs on his boarding house and earn my keep.
"My cousin did not come to town for three weeks, and when he did he did not help me because he could not. He had all he could do to earn a living. "Then I worked in a railroad construction camp one summer and returned to the city with the intention of going to school and learning English. My first employer agreed to give me my board for helping with the work, but I had not gone to school many days and met with an accident. He persuaded me to learn English faster driving a milil route than by going to school, so I became a dairyman and worked until he had saved $1,000."
JUDGE A MODEL MAN
Eighty-four and Promised Lincoln Not to Smoke. Chew. Drink on Leaf.
Chester, Pa.-Federal Judge Jimmy Woodow King of Chicago, who a visit to relatives in this city is, is a remarkable man. He is in his eight-fourth year and has never been sick a day in his life.
He was appointed judge for the United States court for the northern district of Illinois when he was twenty-one years and six months of age by President Abraham Lincoln and has been sitting as a jurist all that long period.
"I have kept the promise I made to Abraham Lincoln." Judge King says "and that promise was that I would never smoke or chew tobacco, never touch liquor and never tell an untruth."
Fifty Years Near Father; Didn't Know Columbus, Ind.-Mrs. Margaret Jane Cather, eighty, of near Newbern, his just learned that she is a daughter of Drewery A. Massey, 168 years old, who lived in Rush county, and that she lived within fifty miles of him for half a century without knowing his whereabouts.
$2.40 PER YEAR
OUTDOOR CHILDREN NEEDED, SHE SAYS Make Better Men and Women, Mrs. E. T. Seton Asserts.
"If You Catch Humanity Young Enough Chance of Letting In the Light Is Greater," Declares Wife of Nature Writer—Lauds New Movement.
New York—"One reason why I am so much interested in the outdoor movement that is sweeping over the country," said Mrs. Grace Gallatin Seton recently, "is because I believe that a nation can rise no higher than the level of its women and that it is best to begin early to make our women all that they should be to become the fitting wives and mothers of the race."
Mrs. Seton, wife of Ernest Thompson Seton and a member of the Council of the Woodcraft League, went on:
"It is also important to begin teaching the men while they are in the receptive period of boyhood the proper
MRS. ERNEST T. SETON.
attitude toward women. If boys and girls are brought up side by side with certain fundamental ideas of equality there will be no time when the man, having attained his majority, will have to reconstruct his ideas concerning the equal partnership of men and women in the various relationships of life, social, marital and civic.
"Nowadays a boy in many instances is permitted to feel when he comes into young manhood that his mother's opinions no longer have the same value they did when he was a growing boy. He thinks she doesn't understand the important things of life. Later, when his reason begins to operate, he has to fight the inheritance of a secret sense of superiority or remain hopefully fixed in his view of humanity as a whole.
"One of the important things in the education of a boy is first of all to let him know the physical aspect of the country he lives in, the out of doors world about him and the natural laws that govern everything in it.
"And how important it is that the girls know outdoor life too! Therefore, the training shall be fundamentally alike up to the point where it naturally occurs, it is important that girls as well as boys shall have much of outdoor life in their younger years.
"A great deal of the value of outdoor life and work comes from the recovery of past knowledge of how to do things. It is a working out of the problem of development—a getting back to the source of creation in acquiring knowledge and efficiency in doing things.
"I see this outdoor movement as a vast picture. At the bottom is darkness, and ascending are layers of innermost life, until the sun rays out his full glory and help him moving and growing all through the layers is humanity—souls in all stages of development. If you catch humanity young enough the chance of letting in the light is greater.
"If we are to develop in America distinctive schools of art, music and handcraft we must lay the foundations on those things which were distinctly American—woodcraft, outdoor life in general, the beautiful customs of the North American Indians and their art and picture writing. These we must first understand. We must be founded on the fundamental natural laws which were known to the North American Indians; hence many of their designs and symbols have been used in seeking to get back to the big constructive principles that govern human life. For instance, much symbolism is used. These symbols have their outer meaning for the passivity and their deeper spiritual significance for those who seek it.
"For our people to get the full benefit of the occasional respires from the work of art, we must give them the wild by heart and this can best be done by studying it when young; hence the importance of woodcraft work for boys and girls."
HAVE YOU READ
THE APPEAL?
THE APPEAL
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ISSUED WEEKLY
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SATURDAY, JANUARY 8, 1916
WILL HE DO IT?
President Wilson has the opportunity to do a very graceful 'act by appointing ex-President Taft to the vacancy in the U. S. Supreme Court made by the recent death of Justice Lamar, who was appointed by President Taft, some years ago. A number of both Democrats and Republicans are urging him to make the appointment.
VICE IN MARYLAND
It seems that all is not well in the jim crow state of Maryland. So much time has been given to the segregation of the colored people, and efforts to deprive the race of the right of suffrage, that the white people are in a bad way. There is no question about the awful conditions as the most prominent men and women of the state testify to the truth of the matter. A report has just been issued by a commission appointed three years ago by Gov. Goldsborough of the vice conditions and it contains evidence of the most startling and astonishing nature as to personal vice traffic in girls, traffic in babies and kindred subjects. Some of the things exposed would be unbelievable were they not vouchered for by this commission of men and women whose inter-
THE SIN OF SILENCE
To sin by silence protest makes con
The human race ha
test. Had no voice in
injustice, ignorance
quisition yet would guillotines decide on
The few who dare speak again to right many.—Ella Wheel
To sin by silence when we should protest makes cowards out of men. The human race has climbed on protest. Had no voice been raised against injustice, ignorance and lust, the inquisition yet would serve the law, and guillotines decide our least disputes. The few who dare must speak and speak again to right the wrongs of many.—Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
rity is beyond question. Vice is so real estate men, store owners and highly paid employees use the most studied plans for the ruination of young girls or to keep women in lives of immorality. Hundreds of typical cases are given. Some of the orgies of "our best people," as described in the commission report in minute detail, would put the orgies of ancient emperors of licentiousness to shame. "Some of them would make Nero look like a piker," declared a member of the commission.
It might be well to state that this report refers only to members of the "superior race."
A REAL PHILANTHROPIST.
One of the most pleasing things we have heard of lately is contained in the will of the late Andrew Freedman of New York, the bachelor who left an estate valued at $7,000,000, the bulk of which is to be used eventually for the establishment of a home for the aged on original lines which the founder himself had formulated. It will be known as the Andrew Freedman Home. It will receive aged persons in indigent circumstances without regard to race, sex or creed, and especially will it care for old couples who, in the evening of life might otherwise be forced to live apart. Mr. Freedman selected twenty-four persons, who will be requested to act as trustees of the home. They represent various races and religions and their selection shows that the testator intended that the institution should have a representative board. Mr. Freedman, evidently, belongs in Ben Adham's class.
AN EAST INDIAN'S IDEA.
Dr. Krishna of the dethroned dynasty of India, scholar, literate, and intimate friend of Pierre Loti, Anatole France and other European brillants is in the United States, and his portrait of an American is nothing like the reflection the delighted gentleman draws from his own mirror.
In a recent interview Dr. Krishna said:
"The American lacks spirituality. He is material. He gives his wife of 40 $10,000. 'Now, you take a go to hell for what I care,' he tells her. I must have a little bird around that I can flatter and be flattered by.' And he gets his divorce."
To this cavalier treatment of the lady of 40, the American adds a fawning for anything British, and an amusing ingenuity in twisting scriptures to condone whatever he wants to do, said the distinguished East Indian.
Dr. Krishna, dark, polished, and of excellent diction, spoke with contempt of America's degeneration to a mere colony of England, gladly restoring the yoke that Washington and other heroes had cast off at great cost of blood.
"England says, 'I must control the seas,' and America says, 'yes, it is right that you should,' and America supports her. And yet, in 1812, your country fought England for just the reverse principle. There was a man, by name George Washington, and you call him the father of this country because he demanded and, somehow, won a free home for his people.
"Send us no more missionaries of Christ. I find that not a nation that proclaims Christ has not robbed another nation of its home. And you thank God and Christ for each conquest that brings the light to heathen peoples.
"Who has made this war? It is the Christian nations. Is that the light that you would have us brought by Christianity?
THE MAN WI DARAS
I honor the ma-
scientious dischair-
to stand alone; tru-
ant, intolerant ju-
demn, the counter-
may be averted, a
friends grow cold,
duty done shall be
applause of the w
ances of relatio-
I honor the man who in the conscientious discharge of his duty dares to stand alone; the world, with ignorant, intolerant judgment, may condemn, the countenances of relatives may be averted, and the hearts of friends grow cold, but the sense of duty done shall be sweeter than the applause of the world, the countenances of relatives or the hearts of friends.—Charles Summer.
once when we should
awards out of men.
us climbed on pro-
been raised against
me and lust, the in-
serve the law, and
our least disputes.
we must speak and
right the wrongs of
er Wilcox.
"In India the English have brought a heel of iron. There are thousands of our people starving, and yet we must support English bishops with handsome rings, carriages, automobiles, and heavy crosses of gold. If Christ was crucified on the cross' these gold ones typify, then his followers are nothing aback in crucifying their weaker brethren on their little replicas."
Dr. Krishna is a graduate of the University of Bombay, the University of Japan, and of Oxford. He is president of the Franco-Indian society of Paris and Bombay, is literary critic and philosopher.
Early in the month martial law was declared throughout Jefferson parish, adjoining New Orleans, Louisiana. Governor Hall said in his proclamation that "a reign of lawlessness exists in Jefferson parish, and it appears that authorities of the parish, charged with enforcement of the law, are in sympathy with the lawless element." The state troops confiscated and burned various gambling paraphernalia. The dispatch announcing martial law contained this statement: "Saloons serving both white persons and Negroes will be closed immediately, but other saloons will be allowed to operate as long as there is no disorder." And that is the gist of the whole affair—colored and white people are not allowed to drink together in Louisiana.
IT'S TOMMYROT ALL RIGHT.
Rev. Father Francis X. McCabe,
president of DePaul University, is
in favor of preparedness and doesn't
hesitate to say so. In a recent speech he
said:
"Talk of universal peace is tommy-
rot, and there will be strife between
man and man, nation and nation until
the last man has turned his toes to
heaven.
"Two men cannot live together without
out having their dissensions, and even
a man and a woman cannot abide with
each other without fighting.
"There are times when a man will
fight with himself."
Namby pamby mollycoddles of the
Bryan, Ford type ought to stop, look
and listen!
DANIELS DOURTED
Said Secretary, of the Navy Daniels at Washington recently, at fraternal night ceremonies:
"I pray to God that the day will come in Methodism when there will not have to be any fraternal night."
The Secretary added that he hoped that the day would come when there would be no Northern or Southern Methodist churches, but there will be but one church.
Of course he did not exactly mean that. What he meant to say was that he hoped the time would come when there will be but one WHITE church and that the yellow, black, red and brown Christians be forbidden to enter.
Better Chance in Life for Work If Educated Side by Side With White.
But even after graduation the colored youth who has been given the chance to work alongside of the white boy at his trade, has a better opportunity to demonstrate his ability and build his confidence with members of the dominant race than he could possibly have in segregated school.
who in the con-
ge of his duty dares
the world, with ignor-
gment, may con-
nances of relatives
and the hearts of
but the sense of
sweeter than the
world, the counten-
TWO
FIFTY
TWO
252
TWO
FIFTY
TWO
Mild, Rich, Satisfying!
5c
Try It Once and You'll Become a 252
"Fan"!
Sold by the Good Dealers
Ask any Cigar Dealer for "the King of Nickel Smokes"
MADE ONLY BY
HART & MURPHY
SMOKE MAKERS SINCE 1857. SAINT PAUL, U.S.A.
KARRAS DRUG CO.
Back to Old Home WM. EVANS Phone Cedar 8081
Tailor Repair Shop Shoe Shining Shop Shoe Repair Shop
339½ Wabasha Street, near Fourth
Suits Steamed and Pressed 25c.
Top Coats Steamed & Pressed 15c.
Mens Suits Dry Cleaned 1.00
Hats Cleaned and Blocked 50c
Pants Steamed and Pressed 15c
Overcoats Steamed & Pressed 25c
Ladies' Suits Dry Cleaned 1.25
Panama Hats Cleaned & Block'd 50c
Hamm's
BEER
50 years of
satisfaction
Theo.Hamm
Brewing Co.
ST. PAUL MINN.
AGENCIES
EVERYWHERE
RW BREWING 1000
TRISATE 939
THE FLOUR
Pillsbury's
BEST
XXXX
Minneapolis.Mnm.
FOR THOSE
WHO KNOW
BEST
ATHLETIC
EVERYBODYINVITED
This Store Offers the Man Who Wants His Money's Worth More Than Any Other Store in the Northwest—
The Wonder (Factory Branch)
64-East Seventh Street-64
Next Door to Bannon's
In Business for YOUR Health
HENRY McCOLL
Moore Building Seven Corners Kindly Favor us with Your Drug Trade
COAL AND WOOD FLOUR, FEED AND HAY FROM
Baggage Transfer Moving Vans All kinds of hauling Everything at the right price Rice, Carroll and Iglehart Sts.
Because
It is a factory branch of one of the greatest Clothing Organizations in the Country, which sells its own clothing direct to you at a saving of $5 to $8 on every garment.
Suits, Overcoats and Topcoats
Always $15 to $18 Values At Retail Stores $10
The Wonder
64—East Seventh
Next Door to B
In Business for YO
HENRY M
Prescription I
Moore Building
Kindly Favor us with Yo
BUY YOUR COAL AND FLOUR, FEED A FROM C. W. STA
1
(Factory Branch)
Street—64
annon's
OUR Health
McCOLL
Druggist
Seven Corners
ur Drug Trade
BOTH PHQNES 1446
WOOD
AND HAY
EHLE
WEEK'S RECORD OF HAPPENINGS
IN MINNESOTA'S CAPITOL.
The "Saintly City" and Saintly City
Folks—Newey items of Social, Retters Among the People.
Illegious, Political and General Mat-
PHONE N. W. CEDAR 5849
SATURDAY, JANUARY 8, 1916
Have you broken your New Year's
resolutions yet?
The Afternoon Art club met with Miss Mamie Goins on Wednesday.
Madame L. A. Porter-Heuderson is now located at 408 Cathedral Place.
Dr. V. D. Turner spent last Friday and Saturday in Rochester, Minn., on business.
Mrs. F. D. Parker, who was taken sick just after Christmas is now convalescent.
OFFICE CEDAR 8948 RES. DALE 1465
W. T. FRANCIS
LAWYER
SUITE 329
AMR, NATI, BANK BLDG.
COR, FIPH AND CEDAR
ST. PAUL
Chitterlings may be obtained at any time at Young's Cafe. Call or phone your order.
Next Tuesday evening go to the Carnival and Cabaret at Union Hall. Admission 15 cents.
The Maids and Matrons club met on Wednesday afternoon with the misses Mae and Bertha Williams.
Mrs. J. A. Lee, 700 Sherburne Ave., has been quite ill for several days this week under the care of a physician.
Ladies who desire Hair Goods or anything in that line should call on Madam E Gross, 250 Rondo street.
INSIST on
Purity
BREAD
FOR RENT—Two nice modern furnished rooms, heat, gas, bath, phone. Apply at 375 Jay street. Tel. Summit 204.
Articles mailed to THE APPEAL for publication must bear the name and address of the sender, to insure publication.
Watch meetings were held at Pilgrim Baptist and St. James Methodist churches on New Year's Eve night and both were well attended.
The $5.00 prize contest for the highest score at straight pool between the 15th and 31st of December, 1915, at Utey's was won by "Fur Cap."
FOR RENT—Two nicely furnished modern rooms, for gentlemen only. Phone Summit 204 or apply at 375 Jay street after 6:30 P. M. (1-8-1)
Both Phones 508. St. Paul, Minn.
T. H. LYLES
Funeral Directors and Embalmers
150 W. Fourth St.
Res. 678 St. Anthony, Tel. Dale 2947
Calls Answered Day or Night in
Twin Cities.
Active Pall Bearers Furnished If
Desired.
Lady Assistant When Necessary.
FOR RENT — Nicely furnished
rooms with modern conveniences.
Apply at 565 Robert street. Call
after 6:00 p. m. Tel. Cedar 9433.
ALBION W. HOLDEN
PAPERHANGER
527 ST. ANTHONY AVENUE
PHONE DALE 2055
The Pleasure Lovers may be on the
qui vive for the Mid-Winter Carnival
to be held in Union Hall about the
middle of February. Wait and watch for it.
A New Year's breakfast was served New Year's morning at Pilgrim Bap
SIMPLE
A savings account is simple. No bookkeeping is required—no figuring is necessary to find out how much you have in the bank. The bank, book shows exactly what is due.
A saving of $2 each week plus 4% interest added twice a year will in ten years amount to $1,267.11.
STATE SAVINGS BANK
93 East Fourth Street.
1890 1915
THE "HOME SHOP" ICE CREAM PARLOR NO. 598 WEST CENTRAL AVENUE, ST. PAUL, WILL BE OPEN AFTERNOON AND EVENING SUNDAY, JANUARY 9, 1916.
THIS SEASON'S CROP OF UNTAMED OATS—
—the boys are busy sowing, and some will soak their overcroats to keep the crop growing. The boys will sow the year around to sound of fites and whistles. Some seed will fall on stony ground, and some will fall 'mid thistles, but rain will fall on every seed, the growth will be alarming. No need to fear for pest and weed in any wild oats farming! I have a friend who in his youth sowed oats as in rabbits, till sowing came to be in truth, the strongest of his habits. Now he has bowls of wild-oat meal as an exclusive diet. He doesn't hesitate nor squel, but swallows it in quiet. He says the oats are somewhat sour, and hard on his digestion. He eats a bushel every hour, and that without a question. When I see youths in beer saloons, absorbing kegs of whisky, or acting like two-buffoons, so clumsy, loud and frisky, when I see youths in beer saloons that have earned by skimming, the fire to see it glow, or wasting it in betting, I always think of my old friend who lives on wild oats porridge. These younger sowers in the end will eat that self-same forage.
CHARLES B. DRISCOLL
[The above is dedicated to the gang of noodlums that infests St. Paul, and should be squelched at any cost.]
tist church just after the close of watch meeting. It was well patronized.
Messrs. William A. Lyles and Walker Williams will open a barber shop and pool hall at the corner of St. Anthony and Kent streets, next week.
If you wish to eat a good Turkey Dinner tomorrow go to Young's Cafe, 138 E. Third street, and you can get one or more from 12 M. to 9 P. M. Try it.
The Bellview, 412 Carroll street, 1. A. Gross, propr. Neatly furnished rooms with heat, light and bath. Rates reasonable. Tel. Dale 3316—Advertisement.
If you want to know all about Protection vs. Free-Trade send postal card request for free sample copies of THE AMERICAN ECONOMIST, 339 Broadway, New York.
The friends of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bell, now residing at Brainard, Minn., will doubtless be pleased to know they are the happy parents of a son born New Year's Eve.
For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whoever believeth in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. John 3:16—Selected by E. W. Gilles.
Mrs. Hazel Stranther died at City hospital Dec. 30. Her funeral was held at Lyle's mortuary chapel last Monday afternoon, Rev. J. R. Sims officiating. Interment at Forest.
Miss Constance Crane and Mr. Evan Anderson were quietly married on last Tuesday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Anderson are making their home with the parents of the groom for the present.
Mr. Phil Miller of Grand Forks, N.D. spent several hours in the City on Monday greeting old friends. Mr. Miller was en-route home from Indianapolis, Ind., where he had spent the holidays.
PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER — MRS. H. I. WILLIAMS, OFFICE OF ATTY. W. T. FRANCIS, SUITE 329 AMERICAN NATIONAL BUILDING, FIFTH AND CEDAR. ALL WORK CONFIDENTIAL.
A good resolution for the subscribers of THE APPEAL who are in arrears to make is: "GOD HELPING ME, I WILL PAY THE APPEAL WHAT I OWE, THIS YEAR." But, don't stop at resolving, PAY.
Mr. Earl Weber entertained at New Years dinner Mr. R. Skinner, of Minneapolis, son of a wealthy real estate dealer of San Antonio, Texas, and a former classmate of his at St. Thomas College. Covers were laid for eight.
Mr. Walter McKeever died at 521 Mississippi street of pneumonia Tuesday, Jan. 4. Funeral today at Lyle's Funeral Home. Vesicles conducted by Rev. E. H. McDonald. Interment at Forest cemetery.
The Chile Ball given by Mr. A. A. Coleman at Wood's Dancing Academy on Sanahula street was quite a pleasant affair for those who attended but for some unknown reason the number present was not what it should have been.
"SHINE 'EM UPI!" When you wish your shoes shined or polished in the most artistic and satisfactory style, go to the PEOPLES' SHINING PAR-LOR, W. H. Porter, Propr, 349 Minnesota street, between 4th and 5th—Advertisement.
The place to have your shoe repairing done in the best possible way and at the lowest price, is at JARVIS; 104-106 East Fifth street. He also has a complete stock of men's, women's and boys' shoes of the best grades for the money to be found in the city.
THE APPEAL was in error in the item published last week stating that Mrs. Sleet had given a dancing party for the young folks. Mrs. Sleet says she likes the young folks and is greatly indebted to them and when she does give a dancing party for them it will be the real thing.
Last Monday the filing of political candidates began for the various offices in St. Paul and the campaign is now fairly on. The indications are that there will be a large number of good men for the voters to choose from. Well, as the old saying goes: "The more the merrier." The first private social function of the Year was given by Mrs. "Dearle" Whitney at her residence, on West Central Avenue, in the New Year, last Saturday morning. It consisted of a coffee and doughnut lunch that was enjoyed by eight of her neighborhood friends. Mr. C. H. Miller, St. Paul's genial musician and comedian, was engaged at Christmas time to impersonate Santa Claus by one of the wealthiest clubmen of the City, at a private
party. Mr. Miller appeared again on Dec 31st, as Father Time, before the same company to the great delight of all present.
Miss Emma Archer died at her residence, 536 St. Anthony Ave. on Jan. 6 of tuberculosis, aged 35. She is a sister of B. C., Miss Teresa and William Archer, of St. Paul, and Mrs. Minnie Nesbit of Chicago. Funeral today at St. James church at 2 p. m. Lyles funeral director. Interment at Oakland cemetery.
Mr. L. A. Melker, 642 Rondo street, accidentally fell in the stairway of his house last Wednesday night and broke his nose and cut his forehead badly. He was taken to St. Joseph's hospital twenty-four stitches were taken in the wounds to close them up. He is resting easy and if no complications arise will shortly recover.
SAFE DEPOSIT AND STORAGE VAULTS—We invite your inspection, it costs little to place your valuable papers, cash, securities and other valuables in absolute safety. Boxes in our vaults can be had from $4 per year up. Store your boxes, trunks, etc., with us. NORTHWESTERN TRUST CO., Jackson between Fourth and Fifth streets
Last Tuesday was a banner day in Court for Lawyer Francis. He had eight cases, six white and two colored. He was successful in all of them. One of the cases was that of 17 Greeks accused of running and visiting a gambling house. After Francis exposed the "third degree" methods used upon the Greeks by Detective Grace the Court promptly dismissed the case. A committee of ladies viz. Mameses J. E. Cloak, G. W. Wills, Cleat Oliver, S. E. Hall, C. L. Smith, V. D. Turner and Grace Booker were the promoters of an impromptu New York public Banquet Hall, New Year's night. It was a very delightful affair in every way. Thirty couples were present. Dancing and refreshments were the features of the evening.
The Grand Ball given by Pride of Minnesota Lodge No. 5, Knights of Pythias, of Minneapolis, given at Union Hall last Monday evening, was a very successful and pleasant affair. It was a sort of invocation for a Minneapolis organization to come to St. Paul to give an entertainment but also their appreciation of our prosperity. In our hall so they came over to help us and the people turned out to help them, and the result was generally very satisfactory.
FLOWERS—Persons desiring cut flowers, floral designs for funerals, palms, ferns, or potted plants, for weddings or decorations of any kind, for any occasion, will do well to place orders with Geo. W. Bell, who has been appointed as agent for L. L. May is prepared to make special rates on all orders through Prompt delivery at all times. Leave or send orders to Geo. W. Bell, 1776 W. Minneaha street. Phone—Midway 1657. On large orders a reduction of ten per cent will be allowed.
The Mite Missionary Society of St. James A. M. E. church, on Thursday of last week, held an open meeting at the residence of Mesdames J. C. Black and Katie Crawford, on Rondo street, with Mrs. C. E. Charleston as guest. There was a fair attendance of the messengers who new invited guests present. After the business of the society was transacted a very, very dainty and delightful lunch was furnished with the delicious ice served in beautiful, fancy individual, souvenir cases. The entire lunch was an optical and gastronomic evidence of the culinary skill of the hostess that was enjoyed by all.
Friday evening, December 31, Miss Virginia L. Tibbs, though not yet "sweet sixteen," entertained a party of her girl and boy chums, at the house warming of the Home Banquet Hall. She had hoped to surprise her & Patricia with the presence of Mr. Harold Green, the presiding magistrate, but Mr. Clarence Johnson impress an able substitute. Those present were: Beatrice Greene, Grace Wills, Nellie Cloke, Martha Goins, Lucille Elliott, Edna Shull, Dorea Dearr, Sadie Johnson, Grace Lealtad, Corrine Parsons, Gladys Waters, Helen Brady, Marlene Jeffrey, Lillian Thomas, Kathryn Tandy, Ruth Hunter, Edyth Ella Adams, Alverta Philherson, Katherine Wilson, Jessie Beard, Ruth Charleston, Alice Beard, Hyde McKinley Brown, John Hunter Morris, Mark and Wendell Gibber, Minneapolis, James Henley, Courtney Hilyard, Peavey Johnson, Luke Vassar, Americlique Barksdale, Pardee Lealtad and others.
Handy for Rondo District People.
Our new coal office at Seventh and
St. Peter. Drop in. "Coal, not Clink-
mines" James & Hallowell, either
phone 401.
As Head of the Division of Records and Research of The Tuskegee Institute, I co-operated with the late Dr. Booker T. Washington, Principal, in keeping an annual record of all lynchings in the United States which record was sent by him from time to time to the public press. According to this record there have been, during the year just closed, 69 lynchings. Of those lynched 55 were Negroes and 14 were whites. This is six more Negroes and eleven more whites than were put to death by mobs in 1914, when the record was 55 Negroes and three whites, included in the record are three women. In at least five instances it later developed that the persons put to death were innocent of the offences charged. Eighteen, on more than one-fourth of the total lynchings, occurred in the State of Georgia.
Only 11, ten Negroes and one white, one put to death, or fifteen per cent of the total, are charged with rape. Other offences and number lynched for were: Murder, 17, five whites and twelve Negroes; killing officers of the law, 9, three whites and six Negroes; wounding officers of the law, 9, three whites and a family of four, father, son and daughters; poisoning mules, 3; stealing hogs, 2; white disregarding warnings of night riders, 2; white; insulting women, 3; entering women's rooms, 2; wounding a man, 2; stealing meat, 1; burglary, 2; robbery, 1; looting, 1; stealing cotton, 1; charged with stealing a cow, 1; furnishing ammunition to a man resisting arrest, 2; beating wife and child, 1, white; charged being accessory to the burning of a barn. Lynchings occurred in the following states: Alabama 9, Arkansas, 5 Florida 5, Georgia 18, Illinois 1, Kentucky 5, Louisiana 1, Mississippi 9, Missouri 2, Ohio 1, Oklahoma 3, South Carolina 1, Tennessee 2, Texas 5, Virginia 1.
Division of Records and Research,
Tuskegee Institute, Alabama.
"PAT WHITE'S GAIETY GIRLS."
The Attraction at the Star Theatre
Next Week.
With a reputation of being one of the best burlesque organizations on the road, Pat White's Gaiety Girls, which will be the attraction at the Star theatre, week commencing Sunday January 9th, should continue to uphold that reputation. The company is a new one, title, personnel and everything connected with it. Producer William S. Campbell has equipped the theatre with bright and fresh throughout with handmade magnificent costumes and elaborate stage effects. No expense has been spared to make the season's new production as attractive as possible. This production is of the old time burlesque order and it is promised it will prove amusing and entertaining. The comedy is called "Casey's Celebration" in two acts introducing the full street dance of the company. Abundant opportunities are given for fast and furious fun.
F. B. SIMPSON GEO. W. WILLS
D. B. SIMPSON GEO. W. WILLS
Office Dates: 67389, T.- S. 4835
Office Dates: 67389, T.- S. 4835
Undertakers, Funeral Directors and Embalmers.
Calls Answered Promptly Day or Night
Office and Chapel
423 UNIVERSITY AVE. ST. PAUL
SACRIFICE SALE
Practically new modern six-
room house, good neighborhood,
$200 cash and $25 per month
with interest.
A seven-room, house, furnace
heat, one block of Dale and
Rondo car lines, $2,000, your
own terms.
F. D. McCRACKEN,
410 Court Blk.
UNION HALL
Cor. Aurora and Kent Sts.
First and only hall in the north-west built by race enterprise, modern in every respect, may be rented by proper persons, at the following rates:
AUDITORIUM 45x70 feet.
Mass meetings.....$10.00
Socials, no admission.....15.00
Public affairs, to 1:00 A. M. 25.00
SMALL HALLS 20x40 ft.
Social affairs.....$5.00
Apply to
CHAS. H. MILLER, Secy.
Union Hall
Phone Dale 7720.
WOODSEY JEMISON ARTHUR M'HUNT
Cosmopolitan Buffet and Grill
RAILROAD MENS HEADQUARTERS
40 EAST THIRD STREET
TEL. CEDAN 9128
ST. PAUL
VANDER BIE'S
ICE CREAM
IS THE BEST
For Sale Everywhere
J. C. VANDER BIE
496 Portridge
ST. PAUL, MINN
A number of social events are scheduled to take place in the new Union Hall in the near future. Watch for dates.
They Give You Expression and Extra Comfort
R. N TRAVIS, Prop
ELEGANT FURNISHED ROOMS
CAFE OPEN AT ALL HOURS
YOUNG'S CAFE
First Class A La Carte Meals From 6:30 A. M.
to 12:00 P. M. at Reasonable Rates
Regular Dinner 11:30 A. M. to 2:30 P. M. 25 Cts,
SPECIAL DINNER THURSDAYS AFTER 4 P. M. 35 CENTS
I positively guarantee to extract teeth and remove nerves
ABSOLUTELY PAINLESSLY
@ TORIC
LENSES
Phones: Buffet, Cedar 6245
Tri-State 2262
TEL. JACKSON 1910
YOUNG'
W. A. YOU
First Class A La Carte
to 12:00 P. M. at
Regular Dinner 11:30 A.
SPECIAL DINNER THURSDAY
138 E. Third St.
I positively guarantee to ext.
ABSOLUTELY
Get prices here before
A Written Guarantee for 20
Dr. Williams,
TEL. C. 6132
KENDRICK B
Tel. Dale 2026 Open All Night
CLARK'S DINING
LUNCH ROOM
J. W. CLARK, Prop.
Salads, 'Oysters, Sandwiches, Chitter-
lings, Pigs Feet, etc., always
on hand
Try my "Best Coffee in the City"
553 St. Anthony
Cor. Kent Street
ST. PAUL
COAL
HOLMES & HALLOWELL
COMPANY
Seventh & St, Peter Sts
$4.50 PER TON
FOR
Splint Coal for Stoves, Ranges and
Heating Plants
Phone 401
ST. PAUL
The Bellview
I. A. GROSS, PROP.
NEATLY FURNISHED ROOMS WITH
HEAT, LIGHT AND BATH
Rates Reasonable
412 Carroll St. ST. PAUL, MINN.
Tel. Cedar 6520 Trl-State 1678
S. S. Crooks
Typewriters, Office Appliances and Business Systems
Manufacturer's Agent for Filing Devices, Office Furniture, Supplies for Vertical Files, Cards, Cutler's Desks, Etc.
20 W. 4th St. ST. PAUL
Tel. Dale 5252
MADAME WILSON
563 Charles Street
Has the most beautiful and thoroughly equipped Hair Parlors in the Northwest.
Electric Hair Dryer, Dermal Light,
Manicuring, Facials, Hair Switches
and Wigs. Combings Bought.
AGENT FOR McBONE CORSET
Besides their slight extra cost
You Expression and Extra Comfort
and see me about Toyic Lenses
STER W. GASKELL
OPTICIAN & JEWELER
North Street
ST. PAUL
Chann's Buffet
First Third Street,
ST. PAUL, MINN.
HOTEL - AND - CAFE
Headquarters
Waiters, Porters and Theatrical Folk
FURNISHED ROOMS
OPEN AT ALL HOURS
Hotel and Cafe Phone, Cedar 9088
10 QUICK SERVICE
G'S CAFE
A. YOUNG, PROP.
Carte Meals From 6:30 A. M.
M. at Reasonable Rates
30 A. M. to 2:30 P. M. 25 Cts,
THURSDAYS AFTER 4 P. M. 35 CENTS
ST: PAUL, MINN.
Dr.H.I.WILLIAMS Announces his NEW method of PAINLESS DENTISTRY
to extract teeth and remove nerves
TELLY PAINLESSLY
me before going elsewhere
for 20 Years Given With All Work.
ms, 27 E. 7th St
BRICK BLDG. 2ND FLOOR
ST. PAUL
Night
Tel. Dale 7000.
Res. Tel. Dale 4199
RONDO TAILORING CO.
S. LEIFMAN, MGR.
SUITS MADE TO ORDER
Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing
at Moderate Prices.
LADIES TAILORING A SPECIALTY
497 Rondo, Cor. Mackubln ST. PAUL
W. W. GREER WATCHMAKER
F. H. HARM & BRO.
Jewelers & Opticians
492 WABASHA STREET
EYES BEAMINED
CONSULTATION FREE
ST. PAUL
MAKE NO MISTAKE, JUST SMOKE
Sight Draft
THE VERIBEST FIVE CENT CIGAR
Tel. N. W. Cedar 940 T.-S. 789
St. Paul
Steam Laundry
"The Sanitary Laundry"
Works: 289-291 Rice Street
Offices: 489 Wabasha St.
443 Broadway St.
B. G. Webster, Mgr. St. Paul
LOOK!
STOP
and
READ
The Wonder of the Age.
The Original Indian Hair Grower
makes the hair soft and glossy-Prevents baldness-Promotes the growth of the hair-Cures dandruff and al'scalp eruptions. As a dressing the ORIGINAL INDIAN HAIR GROWER is unequaled. For a quarter of a century thousands of Colored women have used it with gratifying results.
MRS. BETTIE JONES, HAIRDRESSER
483 Charles Street, St. Paul, Minn.
Made exclusively by
Mrs. Mary J. F. Parke, Chicago, Ill.
Manufacturer of all kinds of Hair
Goods, Switches, Transforma-
tions, Etc.
ISET
TWO SIZES 25 AND-50 CENTS.
FIRE INSURANCE.
YOUR ORDER SOLICITED
156 E. 6th St.
ST. PAUL
Res. 154 S. Fairfield
THE CUT PRICE FURNITURE STORE
WEYAND'S BETWEEN
CEDAR &
WABASHA
21-23 E. Eighth St. SAFETY FIRST.
YOU are SAFE always if you trade with us.
OUR business grows because our customers BOOST for us.
WE sell Furniture at 25 to 40% less than the stores in the high rent district.
AND we so treat our customers that they are pleased to BOOST for us.
BUY of us and you will be a BOOSTER too.
Goods called for
and delivered
All work
Guaranteed
HARRY LIGAN
YOUR TAILOR
Men's Suits and Overcoats Made to
Order. French Dry Cleaning, Press-
ing and Repairing of Ladies'
and Gent's Suits
MODERATE PRICES. PROMPT
SERVICE.
Tel. N. W. Dale 605
Res. T. S. 7152-4
Cor. Kent St.
Open 7:00 A. M. to 8:00 P. M. Sharp.
Dr. Valdo Turner
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
NEW DAKOTA BUILDING
Cor. 6th and 7th Ststreets
OFFICE HOURS
9 to 11 a. m., 12 to 1 p. m., 3 to 5 p. m.
Sundays 10 to 11 a. m.
Res. 386 St. Albans Tel. Dale 91P
PAINLESS DENTISTRY
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First Class, Guaranteed Work in All Branches of Dentistry Suite 400 Court Block
Geo.W.Nelson
Full Stock of Pure Drugs, Proprietary
Medicines, Druggists' Sundries,
Toilet Articles, Candies,
Soda, Cigars, Etc.
PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COM-
POUNDED
Cor. Wabasha and Summit, St. PAUL
Phone Dale 1761 Orders Delivered
Grocery & Confectionary
STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES,
VEGETABLES, FRUIT, BUTTER,
EGGS, MILK, CREAM, BREAD,
CAKES, PIES, ETC.
441 Rondo Cor. Arundel 8T. PAUL
AMERICAN TELEPHONE & TELEGRAPH CO.
LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE
BALL STREET
AND ASSOCIATED COMPANIES
Residence Service
$2.00
PER MONTH
Northwestern Telephone
Exchange Co.
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a OT OOOEEEESE A Rt Se ee eee 2s
MINNEAPOLIS
THE DOINGS IN AND- ABOUT THE
GREAT “FLOUR CITY.”
Matters Social, Religious and General
Which Have Happenea ana are 10
Happen Among the People of the
City.
v. N, SELLERS, MANAGER
2812 Tenth Avenue So.
Tel. N. WW, South 3372,
SATURDAY, JANUARY 8, 1916
Mrs. Baily is ot the sick list. |
Mr. Doston, is still quite ill at the
City “Hospital,
Mrs. Cora Hughs is ill at her resi-
dence on Elliot Ave.
Mrs, Anna Mason, is still quite ill
at her-home on Elliot Ave.
Little Winfred Lewis, has just re-
covered from an attack of the measles.
Mrs, Sam MeCracken, is quite ill
at the home of her sister on Fifth Ave.
South,
Miss Mildred Plummer, has been sut-
fering from a very severe cold for the
past week. 7
Mr. Matt Johnson, is quite ill at his
home on Fifth Ave, and has been con-
fined to his bed for the past month.
Mrs, Ferguson and baby, have re-
turned to the city, and are at the home
of Mrs, Minnie Plummer on Clinton
Ave.
Mrs. Wm, Garrett, formerly Miss
Ruby Danner, of this city, is in Min-
neapolis for ‘an indefinite length of
time.
There were two very wonderful
services at St. Thomas Episcopal
church, Sunday, January 2nd, which
Were well attended. You are cordially
invited to attend the service and Sun-
day School. You are as weleome as
the flowers in May.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Peoples entér-
tained at a three o'clock dinner
Christmas Day. Covers were lald for
eight, After dinner the evening was
passed with cards and dancing and at
a late hour the guests departed filled
with joy and Christmas cheer.
Persons whose pianos need tuning
should call on Prof. L, W. Anderson,
2737 1th Ave. South, Phone N. W.
South 3755. He is a piano specialist
and does tuning and repairing, also
voicing and regulating. His motto is:
"Satisfaction or no pay.” Prices rea:
sonable.
Miss Beluah Vanhook, Miss Lillian
‘Thomas, Miss Maydrew’ Cunningham,
Miss Odett Johnson and Miss Clarist
Lucas carried flowers to Miss Mildred
Plummer after service Sunday and ex-
pressed their regrets-that she was un-
able to attend. Miss Plummer is a
¥. GB. C, gin
On Wednesday, Dec. 29th, the Ladies
Wednesday Afternoon Whist Club,
gave a formal card party, at Masonic
Hall, ‘The hall: was very beautifully
decorated for the occasion. Whist
was played at nine tables, atter which
dainty refreshments were served, con-
sisting of fruit punch and wafers,
there were three prizes, which were
awarded as follows: The first prize,
a grape juice goblet, Mrs. Humphrey;
second a cut steel’ mesh bag, Mrs.
Hawkins; third, a pretty pin cushion,
Mrs, Mary Pope. A very pleasant
afternoon was truly spent.
One of the very nicest affairs of the
season, was the New Year's Matinee
Party, given by the Y. G. B. C's at
Masonic Hall New Year's afternoon.
‘There were about two hundred per-
sons present, a large number having
come over from St. Paul, for the occa:
sion. The hall was prettily decorated
and’ the muste éxcellent, Misses
Beluah Van Hook, Florence Cunning-
ham, Mildred Plummer, Odett John-
son and Lillian Thomas served at the
punch bowl. Misses Ellen Lucas and
Maydrew Cunningham checked wraps,
Misses Rosella Sample and Leola Cok
man, attended the door and Miss
Clarist Lucas acted as floor manager.
‘The benefit girls worked hard to make
this the grand affair that it was, The
Y. G. B. C's are doing good’ work
which is being seen more and more
every day. They have grown from a
wee bud to a flower, that bids to grow
and grow and shail be named “suc-
cess.” All had a perfectly lovely time,
indeed a Happy New Year's day was
‘truly spent.
FEREOO OE SEOOO ON
N. W. PHONE COLFAX 3596
MRS. ROBERT A. VAN HOOK
FASHIONABLE DRESSMAKING
‘AND LADIES’ TAILORING
PARTY GOWNS A SPECIALTY
9612 ELLIOTT AVENUE
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.
Sa i acpi
SPELLING CONTEST
aD
Bethesda Baptist Church
1120 8th St. S., Minneapolis
Under Auspleee of ‘Trustees
FRIDAY EVENING, JANUARY 14
At Eight ‘O'Clock Sharp
‘The wotds will be taken from the frst
two tanuee Ine 196, ef TNE, Ate
PEAL, the TWIN CITY STAR, the
NATIONAL ADVOCATE. No prope
5 PRIZES 5
Awarded to the Beat Spellere
Attorney W. R. Morris Will Give
‘Only the Words 2
‘This Will Be a Big FREE for All Con-
feat Open TO ANYBODY in the
Twin Cities:
irom’ et pede A Gaod Sines
* Guaranteed for All.
Refreshments Served — Tiokets (5c
Office Phone Cedar 8760. Rbs. Phone Cedar 8286”
FREDERICK D McCRACKEN
Formerly secretary to Congressman Stevens.)
Be :
INSURANCE. | bo REAL ESTATE
fe / aan =
FIRE. yee SALES.
PLATE GLASS. ae S a RENTALS.
AUTOMOBILE. | 9. Wes MORTGAGES.
TORNADO. |) uae LOANS.
| SICK. ew ~ CARE
ACCIDENT. [Bae OF
LIFE. oo y PROPERTY.
a
73,000 Acres of Excellent Farm Land in the Hardwood Districts of
WISCONSIN AND MINNESOTA. NEAR GOOD TOWNS
AND SCHOOLS. LOW PRICES AND EASY TERMS.
Suite No, 410 Court Block. 24 East Fourth Street
ST. PAUL, MINNESOTA.
ANNOUNCEMENT! |
jAtiorney J. Louis Ervin announces that he
will hereafter handle real estate and real estate
investments, in connection with his law prac-
tice. %
This business, requiring a great deal of legal
knowledge should properly be handled by a
lawyer. .
T have a number of flats and houses for rent
and for sale, I also have a number of First and
Second Mortgages for sale.
REAL ESTATE, MORTGAGES, BONDS
J. Louis Ervin
303 Court Block i
Tel. Cedar 8477 ST. PAUL
oo ———————
FOR SIUALITY,
LAND KIVCHEN ECONOMY |
: N. W. Phone Nicolett 4995 ‘ 2
GENERAL PRACTICE. NOTARY PUBLIG
Wm. H. H. Franklin
: LAWYER
407 47H AVE, 50, 203, IRON EXCHANGE BLDG,
Som. arm ave. AnD ar or. MINNEAPOLIS;
STEER
Stoves and Furnaces Repaired
If your heating ‘stove, cooking range, gas stove or furnace 1s not tn good
condition, we are the people to do
your work. We have many years
x 2 ae pate +
Repairs for stoves of all makes car-
ded in stock
Ropaire for :
Cook Stove, Phones—T-8, 242; N. W. Cedar 1206, FIREROT,
FOR HEATER,
ST. PAUL STOVE REPAIR WORKS, "2." Severs” oe
See - SMOKE
4 a ia i THE OLD RELIABLE
en t
jee ‘Sight Draf
[ee = CIGAR
Y el The King of Nickel-Cigars
ML ae) W. S. CONRAD Co:
Se ST. PAUL
READ THE PLEASE oe Lonnie in ce
EVERY PERSON who receives
THE APPEAL knows whether he or
she has pafd for it or not.
EVERY PERSON who receives
THE APPBAL 1s expected to pay for
it; and, it is a violation of honesty,
honor and law not to do so, THIS
APPLIES TO EVERY ONE, WITH-
OUT EXCEPTION.
Are you, reader, honest; honorable
and lawabiging? “Think about it.
‘There is 1 law to compel any one
to recelve a newspaper who does not
wish to do so, but there is a law that
compels one to pay for a newspaper
At it is received.
‘There are many persons who re-
ceive THE APPEAL as regularly as
it 1s issued, but who have failed to
pay for it, Think about it.
Don’t stop at thinking “about it,
either, but Kindly come or send to the
office and pay what you honestly, hon-
orably, legally owe.
_ ‘Thete is not one single subscriber
‘on our list who {8 ACTUALLY UN.
ABLE to pay for the paper if the de-
fire to doo is strone enough.
‘There is no desire or intention td
offend any one, but if this article is
marked with a blue pencil it ts to re
tind you that YOU owe: for THE
APPEAL, z
Please come or send to the office,
SMTA. WEG Mcks Ma ee oe
301-302, third floor, and pay, what you
owe. ‘Take elevator.
Law of Subscription.
Few readers of newspapers fully an¢
“clearly understand the law governing
subscriptions. Below are the de
cisions of the United States Supreme
Court upon the subject: ,
Subscribers who do not give express
notice to the contrary when subscrip
tion expires, are considered as wish
ing to renew their subscription.
If subscribers order a discontinuance
of their periodicals the publisher, maj
continue to send them until all dues
are paid. .
If the ‘subscriber continues to: take
the periodical from the postoffice tc
which it is directed, or receives {1
from the carrier, he is responsible
until he has settled his bill and or
dered the papap discontinued.
If subscribers move to other placer
without informing the publisher and
the papers are sent to the former ad
dress the subscriber 1s held respon
sible. si
If subscribers pay in advance they
are bound to give notice at the end of
the time if they do not wish to con
finue, faking it, otherwise, the pub
lisher is auth to send it, and the
subscriber: will’ be responsible until
express notice with payment of al
atrearages is made.
| * 94650 FOURTH AVE 8.
| J.B. STEWART, Manager
FINEST ESTABLISHMENT OF ITS
KIND IN’THE UNITED. STATES.
Twenty Elegant, Steam Hested, Elec-
trie Lighted’ Rooms for Gentle-
men Only. Free Bath,
Rates Reasonable.
‘Lobby, Reading and Lounging Room,
Buffet and Grill Room, Billiard
| Room, Dining Room, Barber
7 Shop and’ Bath,, Private
Dining and Reception
Room for Ladies.
i
4 OA CARTS MWALS -AT ALL
HOURS. BEST SERVICE.
REGULAR DINNER
Dally, From 1 to6 P.M. 25 to 35 Cts
Sunday, 35 to 60 Cente,
Special Terms for Private Parties,
Banquets, Ete,
MINNEAPOLIs, “MINNESOTA.
Phone Nic. 9769,
———_——__.
Main 9592 ‘T. 8, 2073
PORTERS’ AND WAITERS’
FOR MEN ONLY
GLOVER SHULL, - ‘Manager
Rates 50 cents per day
309 Hennepin MINNEAPOLIS
———
Phone Main 2360 Quick Service
The France Hotel & Cafe
MRS. J. M. MASK, PROP.
300-202 Fifth Ave. So,
First Class A La Carte Meals at All
Hours, Chinese Dishes a Specialty.
REGULAR DINNER 25 CENTS
Cor. Third Street MINNEAPOLIS.
————
| Plano tuning X. W. Phone
{ina’eepahih, {South of82
PROF. L. W. ANDERSON,
The Piano Specialist
MY MOTTO: SATISFACTION OR
NO PAY
Prices Reasonable
VOICING AND REGULATING
2787 11 Av. & mtmaroiya
0 APR Es ag Set ee a gen eS
Presses BO° rronc onc aes BENS EMTS, BI
CLIFFORD A, SMITH
FASHIONABLE TAILOR
' 421 W. UNIVERSITY AVENUE
LADIES WoRK A SPECIALTY CALL FOR AND DELIVER
BveRseer $25 ST. PAUL
es
Save money on your laundry.
FLAT WORK 24 cents per dozen.
Washed and Ironed.
Phone us and our wagon will call.
_ Both Phones 939
CAPITOL STEAM LAUNDRY.
“The Old Reliable Laundry.”
GOOD
SHOES
Zz
SHOE
STANLEY
. SHOE CO.
aed NICOLLET AVE. MINNEAPOLIS
Tel. Cedar 9282 Laundry Office
>
UTLEY’S PLACE
BARBER SHOP POOL PARLOR LUNCHES
Shaving, Hair Cutting, Shampooing, Head and Face
Massage. Best Brands of Cigars and Tobacco
Afro-American Newspapers i
LIGHT EXPRESSING
POOL PARLOR OPEN SUNDAYS ‘TIL 10:00 P. M.
311 WABASHA ST, ST. PAUL
Lyne tica
wie
aan
Mrs. Birdie Reynolds is convalescing
of pneumonia,
VOCAL AND PIANO LESSONS
GIVEN BY MRS. ADDIE CRAW.
FORD-MINOR, AT HER RESIDENCE,
320. FARRINGTON AVE. HOURS
Oltation om Petition to Admit Will to
‘Prokate.
STATE OF MINNESOTA, County of
Ramsey, ss. In Probate, Court.
In the Matter of Proving the Allegea
‘Last Will and Testament of James
Zang, Decedent.
The Slate (of Minnesota to AN Whom
fay Concern:
inergag ullel Murray Lang, of the
City of Saint Paul and State of Minne-
fote, has delivered to. the” Probate
Court of" the County ‘of ‘Ramsey, ‘en
fettumtent in ‘writing purporting te
bo the last “will and Testament of
James Lang, late of Ramsey County,
Minneseta, “decedent, ard. filed_there-
Wit, Ter. petition * to" sald "Probate
Gourt, "praying that, the sald Inetru:
ment ‘may ‘be ‘proved and admitted. to
probate ‘and’tnat letters testamentary
granted thereon to Her, anid: Jullet
Murray Lange
nelt.@#, Ordered, That sald petition be
heard and that’ ail ‘persona’ interested
fn aaid matter be. cited and required
$2 tPRens totore this Court on Mon.
lay, the 3rd day of January, at
10"orclock’ A, St! or as soon inereettor
a8 sald matter’ can be heard. at the
Probate ‘Court, Rooma in. the ‘Court
House in the city of St. Paul, in said
Goumty, and’ show cause, if any’ they
ave, Why said petition should not ‘be
ranted and ald” Win admitted’ to
Probate and ‘that ‘this ‘citation, be
Served by ‘the publication thereof tn
The Appeal according to law, and by
mailing’ a copy of ‘thie ‘cltation et
Joust 26 days betore sald day of hear:
tam, to each of the heirs” devisees,
lenatece Of aatg decedent whose names
gad addresses “are known and, appear
from the flies of this court,
Witness the’ Judge of sald Court,
this 8th day of December, A.D. 1915,
A, Beata,
Judge Of Probate,
ons Probate Courts)
FW, GOSewiscH,
Clerk of Probate.
FP nectar Yor Potttonen,
GE Chote wlan Be bau, wtinn,
’
fa,
£9 Here’s the breakfast
a that makes men smile
i a
PWIA. Golden trown wheat cakes
CREGM,; Xs packed full of nourish-
SSS}. ee
8 ee TOWLE'S
Zaeae LOGCABIN
an CANE AND
; MAPLE SYRUP
It’s the delightful way. Log Cabin Syrup not
of getting the wonderful only makes wheat cakes |
food value of wheat— a real treat, but adds
miankind’s most depend- nourishment —makes a
able andeconomical food. ‘balanced meal,
The Towle Maple Products Co.
‘St.Paul, Minn.» F goo
NEW YORK. OFFICES: | ‘A2nd Street Bldg., New York City
io— — = fa
Fe oe ==
Oe}
i ba ae
Oy } Oa Je as //
=. ee
—_ ee < | fe Siete E
|e rages |\ || of Pa Y
a ae { i »€
Meets a arm | LS Alia
ea la a \
- Van \~ 1 es a
: cee
i . 1 '
i Ty
| Leads Them All
| You take awe, the Crown, but it still remains the
| Peer of Bottlea Beers. |
{ “Segueste in your home will be sure to remember that they
1 sda royal good time at your house, if during their visit
j fou regoled them with Hamm's preferred stock. It will
I Inake them remember you as a Prince of entertainers.
;{ Kor luncheon, for dinner, or with the “bite” before bed-
,j time, drink Hamm's. It adds a zest to every meal.
| 9
6 Ln
t PHONE
, powont — THEO.HAMM BREWING CO.
ST. PAUL
SOCIETY DIREUTORY
‘ST. PAUL. ‘
qi A
ke
hat] Peay 43
| ‘at se
(ae ee
MOST WORSHIPFUL GRAND LODGE
oF
MINNESOTA, A. F. ANDO A. M.
H. J. SHELTON, Grand Master,
609 B. Sixth St.. Duluth, Minn.
G. L. HOAGE, Grand Secretary,
800 Charles St, St, Paul, Minn
PIONEER LODGE NO. 1, F, AND 4.
MM. Meta first and third ‘Moni.
ech month at Union Hall corner Serots
and Kent Streets, at 8:00 p.m. Wray
Benjamin, W. M. J. HE” Diitingiadt,
Secy., $89 Roo.
PERFECT ASHAR LODGE No. 4, F.
and A.M. “Meets. second ange raurth
Tuesday, In each month at Onion Hatt
corner “Aurora and Kent Streets, at 8:06
agit BM. “Johnson, Wedd’; “Oise
Baylor, Stes. :
BETHEL CHAPTER NO. 28,R. A.M.
‘Meets second ‘Thursday Invéack month oe
Hig Hall ror a cent trots a
300"'p. om.” “ohn 5
Honad’ street) ee Pes
FILGRIM COMMANDERY No, 22,
Knights ‘Templar. Meets: fourth’ nut
$8y In each monty at’ Union Halk wee
Bere, BE, Tan Sate a
Rondo Street. ema Bears
re
ODD FELLows
MARS LODGE NO. 2202, G. U, 0. OF
SisFin Mogte second and tousin Wr OinO®
ay in cach nionth at Union Hea Renee
Eee ees 9 ieee Se
som N, Gerd. “Wesiey Real, SEs
980 St. Anthony Avenue.”
FREDERICK DOUGLASS LODGE No,
9005, GU. ©. of 0. i ineste sooo NO,
fourth Monday in enctraern second, and
£3 goin Alege REA eatat
“00pm on OR, a datas
BLY 8 ane Seat NS
ST, PAUL, PATRIARCHY NO. 114,
Meets tuird aronaay tn cack NO tM
Unlon, Hall, “corner Aweoaeh manth at
Beet ie eaateet et rae
RW pT aigusta Jones BE
HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH No. 599, ¢.
B, 0. of 0. F mosts frat ana hind SoG:
Shela fash month af Galen Bah
comer Aurora, ang Kent Burst na eiel
Rincon Mee Murtha Wissneeke SE 8:06
TgeC ee: Lindsay, WOR, is Woot
bridge Street
Minneapolis.
HOUSEHOLD ‘OF RUTH NO. 176 0
Bagaad anges sean Sn) He
lay ta each month at iis, et
Ble Hull, Cor. Fourth strese ae aes
Sig; South. stra 5 Darseten "a, RENEE
Mas Cora’ Napier, Wek
|
SOPHER LODGE No. 105, FB P. o,
Hist te, World. Nrects setond Wek ieO-
87" tn Gach” month at Uiseen aatyeanes-
Ben, BR 8 aps aiteet OS
Kent Street’ HORE
JOHN H. HAYES LODGE Now. =p
PEL RE iy it
go eS ed ig
OS
a) Bak, chatiee
We) aii otbvoleriege
oY) ecg inere cl at
ere wid
wots an dae fen
<PRD Giana amie oF oe
gta OF 8
Brag ey aol
Be Pte tami
pee
FIDRUEY, come gr omamgus
NO. 845, N. A BA, AS A. and 4
Bautista" Bote ee
Ene gi WG Noda nea
et re eng
Ee lies:
J
Ag. ruRNER LopgR No, 4 on
2AARIUBNIE topap wo, 2c op
Biya, Hee did
isis Beal cease at
aA ory oo en Re
irae napa Bat
gels Sees Caste HERE
EARL ES Wank §
” ea
LT
f eae *) PART OF THE HOUSE FOR
(| Ke PULL
fe THEO FLEPHONE
= 4 ERM TH
| “ly Ve
CHURCHES
Pion Baptise cuuncn, op
ep ee" BRE Sum ge Gundy
USS, REA, ered
Boll stab My ante sericea
Hess Wi Ene atral ai
MEMORIAL, Barmier’ nanton
ins Sunoayseveel ithe 8B
meeting 13, yea, Deacon
Us" corday"moteg” REO PSM, Pee
Bonaidy pastor as. ME
St. sas AB crunch men
Ruler and: Jay” atresia, CHURCH, COR
Barats Ie Mee Bonga for
Prayer meeting, $:00 p.'m. "Pasta ‘Visite
eet Me ar wi
seaming A, Reuter apna Wat
Peeeshadt* al Ses real aaeen
erage
See et
a Prizbe “amsobitaiésion
sty aut SERS manos
feet, uta renee, eed aa
Us OO at
east PUTS ata a
SEV Sth Hay eechas, i ane
eee aaNet 8, eon gocend
sont abies id Odea
fare, soars ee
a Tati? Peay eee
jap fi erie se ae
EO me geetiniy nol Belo
em,
PRESETERIAN CHURCH oon
Rarringtan Gd Be RIGO CTURCEE Cor.
ere ease ae a
Yet Peopies mesure on Ee and:
Revs ow oamemeatey: ge BM
Revs owe
THELA.&C.ASH CO.
Hi. DAVIS, MGR.
We will haul ashes by the week, month or job.
We do light jobs of grading and sodding, remo-
ve dirt and fill lots
We also furnish sand and black dirt
We will put your coal in at the same price that
1 it will cost you at the yarde
1430 Rice Street ST PAUL
OVER 65 YEARS:
orrenienee
‘Trace Manne
cee
Copynicuts &c.
bali aetareait er Spann eee
Eee rae cme
Seen ita
ay aac ea gE in
_ Scientific. Fimerican,
iifeee ert
36 1Breedway,
HU $0.20 Fork