The Appeal
Saturday, August 12, 1916
St. Paul, Minnesota
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BALK AT MARRIAGE
English Nobility Reluctant to Talk Matrimony With Servian Prince
WARMLY GREETED ON VISIT.
Alexander Makes Great Impression For Himself and His People, but Rumor of a Wife Hunt Causes Many to Place Themselfs on Guard Against Any Matrimonial Talk.
London. — Alexander, crown prince and regent of Servia, has been in England hunting a wife, it is rumored, as well as seeking political and financial assistance in recovering his country. He made a great impression and created a warm sentiment for himself and his people. But fathers with marriageable daughters from King George downward, did not appear anxious to meet any matrimonial advances from the prince. He went to Buckingham palace and was entertained by the king and queen. Prince Albert was delegated to meet him at the station and to see him off when he departed. But Princess Mary did not come in contact with him.
The hesitation manifested by English fathers and mothers of high degree to an alliance with Prince Alexander is largely caused by the uncertainty of his ever sitting upon the throne of his king and the certainty of his living in constance. It is also able to return to Beirge. It has taken some time for England to over-
Photo by American Press Association.
CROWN PRINCE ALEXANDER
come its feeling of apugnuation to the prince and his father, King Peter having always been held responsible for the murder of King Alexander and Queen Draga, whose deaths removed the obstacles in the way of his own accession, and thus blamed primarily for the assassination of the Archduke Francis Ferdinand and the Duchess of Hohenberg. The prince's gallant conduct in the war and the general feeling in England that the British government was responsible for unwise advising the Servian army to resist the invaders and hold out until the allies sent re-enforcements have created a reversion of feeling in his face.
The government took pains not to involve England in any way with the affairs of Servia except as relating to this war. The prince was the guest of Lord Kitchener, and at York House Prince Alexander met Sir Edward Grey, the secretary of foreign affairs, in a party which included the Earl of Derby and Walter Long, both members of the government. Edward Grey was likewise given at the dinner given in honor of the prince by Lewis Harcourt on behalf of the government. The Marquas of Crewe, leader of the government in the lords, presided at this dinner. The Russian ambassador, the Japanese ambassador, the Belgian minister, the Portuguese minister, the Marquas of Lansdowne, Lord Kitchener, Arthur Cromwell, the British Ambassador Curt Genel, General Sir William Robertson and the lord chancellor were present.
Sir Edward Grey was also upon the platform at Victoria station when Prince Alexander, accompanied by Prince Albert and Lord Kitchener, arrived to take the train for the coast and embark for the continent. The foreign secretary of the British government did not entertain the prince despite his hospitality. And, although the prince gent was accompanied by his prime minister, M. Pashitch, they were not received or entertained by the British prime minister, Mr. Asquith. Seldom has any visiting royalty ever received in England such a deputation of distinguished men in different walks of life as waited upon Prince Alex ander at his hotel.
Ring in Chicken's Crop.
Nellville, Ws.-Mrs. Ada Eagles, visiting her daughter in Bellen, dressed a chicken and found in its crop a gold ring which she had once given her grandson.
CHICKENS KNEW HER
And Kansas Woman Had No Trouble
Getting Them Back.
Wichita, Kan.-Mrs. John Matthews, residing on Kelly street, stopped abruptly in front of 312 West Third street one morning lately. Inside a chicken fence were many chickens. Among them were four large White Orpingtons. She observed them keenly.
"Those are mine," she said, satisfied, and then she sought out her husband. Together they went to city court and gave a search and seizure warrant. Then, in the courtroom, Ballard, deputy marshal, they went back again to 312 West Third street, opened the chicken yard gate and walked into the pen.
A woman ran out on the porch and demanded to know what business the party had in her chicken yard.
"Just came after my chickens," retorted Mrs. Matthews as she called to her "pets." The four big chickens ran up to her, and she picked them up.
He marked with blue ribbons the marshal as she lifted the feathers in the bags. Sure enough there were the ribbons.
"Yours!" said the deputy marshal. "But the judge will have to act before you can have them."
THEIR "AT HOME" IN JAIL.
Bride and Bridegroom Accused of Not
Telling Truth About Ages.
**FALSE** About Ages.
Hart, Michel. Albert a-wooling went—entire the way from Colafx township, Ocean县 backy, to Battle Creek. Now he's backy, and with him the bride he spent, but they spent that home" period in the Ocean县 county jail. Their offense against the peace and dignity of the state, as formally alleged, was that they didn't tell the truth about their ages when they got their license to wed.
The banana peel in the path of love was an angry mother. Albert slipped up and dragged down his bride when Mrs. Mary Decker, who objected to Manile getting married, heard that the sword she was eighteen when she was seven, as her mother reckon it. White. Manile's age as twenty is said to be nineteen.
The families lived on adjoining farms in Colafx. Decker and his family moved to Battle Creek last August.
17 SENIORS UNKISSED
Class President Says They Are Crosses Between Heroes and Darned Fools.
Muskogee, Okla.-Of the thirty-five boy members of the senior class of College High school in this city seventeen admits they have never kissed or been kissed.
Thomas Leech, president of the class, is not one of them. "As president of the class," he said, "I consider that the unkissed reflect great glory upon the seniors and upon Central High," a man, speaking unofficially. I did not know that are darned fools or perhaps martyrs; what is a martyr is anyhow—a cross between a hero and a darned fool."
The girl members of the class are, to put it mildly, astonished at the revelation. One of them declared that she was "for starting a campaign for the seventeen," and that, if necessary, she was perfectly willing to undertake the whole task by herself.
MUST RUN TO AVOID KILLING
Court Rules It's Murder to Stand When Life Is Threatened.
Trenton, N. J.-In an opinion filed here recently by Chief Justice Gummere sustaining a conviction of murder in the second degree the supreme court says:
"A person upon whom an assault is made to violent in its character as to endanger his life or threaten him with serious bodily harm is not justified or excusable in standing his ground and killing his assault if he can avoid the impending danger by retreating."
The case was that of Nunzlo d'Maria of Harrison, who was sentenced to from twenty to thirty years in prison for shooting Frank Barber.
The charge of the trial court to the judge was that of self defense was the only ground for acquittal of the conviction. The instruction objected to that the defendant had a right to save his own life.
SHIPS DOG FOR TREATMENT.
Injured Pet Sent Halfway Across Continent to Surgeon.
Milwaukee, Wis.—Struck by an automobile in a Los Angeles street, a pet house dog belonging to Charles Dyer was shipped to Milwaukee by express to be treated because the Dyer family insisted on having their family dog under his care, had him around again in about a week's time. A telegram from Mr. Dyer preceded the arrival of the dog. "He will not take a prize at the kennel show," said the message, "but he is one of the family."
Girl Born Blind Can See.
Lehighton, Pa.-Born blind, Miss Ida friend now can see. She has passed her full year. Respected came by an operation performed at the Wills Eye hospital, Philadelphia, Mrs. Eckley B. Coxe, owner of many coal mines, bearing the expense. Surgeons say she ultimately will have excellent vision.
Find Fossil Man in Mine.
Beckley Fossil. Moss digging in a coal mine of the Coal company unearth the body of a coalman. The fossil is a perfect specimen of the human body. It was found several hundred feet below the surface.
THE APPEAL. MINNESOTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY.
FOUR BROTHERS, EACH
SIX FEET, AT BORDER
Savannah, Ga., "Twenty-four feet of men." That is what members of Battery A, Chatham artillery, call the four McDonald brothers-Bill, Bob, Alex and Bernard. They are known also as "The Giant Quartet," "The Big Macks" and the "Fighting Four." But their father, Bernard L. McDonald of the city health department, towers over them all; he's six feet two.
Bill is the youngest and shortest, being scant six feet. Bob, next, is the tallest, exceeding Bill in height by an inch and a half. Alex, the eldest, and Bernard are just an inch shorter than Bob.
The four are a quartet in the musical sense also, each being possessed of a pleasing voice. Alex has been "end man" in most of the local amateur minstrel shows.
All four went with their battery to Mexico.
TELLS THE TIME BY HIS FAMILY'S FACES
He Is 1 o'Clock, His Wife Is 2, and Children Go According to Age.
St Joseph, Mo.-The flight of the hours are marked on the dial of C. W. Humbard's watch by the faces of his ten children and by his own face and the face of his wife. Thy photographs are set in the dial in place of the Roman numerals. Every time Mr. Humbard—who is a grading contractor here—looks at the time he sees his whole family.
He is 1 o'clock and his wife is 2. The children are arranged in the order of their birth, beginning at 8 o'clock with Carl, who is thirty-four, and continuing through Calvin, Albert, Bertha, Glen, George, Eva, Hobart, Varnon and little 12 o'clock Edith, who is three and the youngest of the family. The watch was made especially for Mr. Humbard a few years ago and who is to that he can tell the exact time at 12 o'clock. He arises at Albert o'clock in the morning, has lunchon at half-past Edith and is usually home by Bertha.
If he refers to the watch a score of times throughout the day he is reminded each time of his loved ones and there is little chance that he will ever forget his family in the rush of business. The idea of putting the family in the watch occurred to him as a sentimental novelty, unlike anything he could count in regard to his town frequently, but he does not so lonely as he used to be, since he feels that he can take a glimpse at his youngsters any time he cares to without attracting outside attention.
RETURNS AFTER THIRTY YEARS
Sailor Had Been In Almost Every Port, and Parents Didn't Know Him.
Townsend, Del.-Mourned as dead for thirty years, David Gusseyferd returned to the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Gusseyferd, who live on a farm near here. When sixteen years old young Gusseyferd went away on a boat plying between Smyrna and Philadelphia as a sailor. He was anxious to see more of the country, so obtained a berth as a sailor on a vessel plying between New York and the East Indies, and that was the last heard of him. He has been in practically every port in the world and on one occasion was knocked in midocean and he and the captain of the ship were the only survivors. He is said to have accumulated considerable money and will remain with his parents. They did not know him.
DRAINED ALL THE LAND.
Water Over Low Tract Disappeared When Ditch Is Dug.
Rockport, Mo.—The outlet ditch that drains Lake Nishnabnaita at Langdon is the talk of the whole Missouri bottom. The effects have been almost miraculous.
It seems that when the ditch drained the Nishna, water standing all over the bottom, whether it had a connection with the ditch or not, disappeared, often in the night, leaving the ground at for cultivation within a few days.
The Nishnabnaita river has been standing of water for about a year, and as the water level was almost as high as the great body of surrounding land, the water soaked through and saturated it all.
MOTORCAR "DEADLY WEAPON"
Judge Says it is Used For Offensive and Defensive Operations. Portland, Ore.—That a motorcar under certain conditions is a dangerous weapon was held by Judge Robert Morrow in the circuit court. The case was that of C. A. Warriner, accused of assault with a dangerous weapon in having with his motorcar ridden down a motorcycle on the Columbia highway which carried H. H. Beckman and his Mrs. Beckman was badly injured. Judge Morrow fortified his decision with citations from American precedents and observations on European battlefields, where, he said, the motorcar was employed as a weapon of offense and defense.
Defective Page
VATICAN HAS SHIP
For First Time Since 1870 Papal Flag Flies Over Steamer.
Painted With White and Yellow Stripes - Safety Said to Be Guaranteed - Reported Von Buelow Beloved Best Way to Punish Italy Wants to Restore Temporal Power to Pope.
Rome - For the first time since 1870 the Papal flag is flying over a stemmer owned by the Vatican, and strangely enough, it is sheltered in the Civita Vecchia harbor with the consent of the government at Rome. When United Italy under Victor Emmanuel II. established the house of servant at Rome in 1870, the pops was deprived of all power and position as sovereign. He became a voluntary prisoner in the Vatican, while the king housed his court in the former palace palace the Quirinal. As every king has been devoted Catholic, the empathy between the king and pope has been a political expediency, a fiction in fact. Loyalty
Photo by American Press Association.
POPE BENEDICT XV.
to the Catholic church on the part of influential members of the Italian cabinet, combined with the fear of German submarines, has brought to the pope the privilege of flying his own flag once more in Italian waters. The steamer has been bought by the Vatican to convey officials of the Catholic church whom the pope desires to send abroad as his representatives. The first voyage will be to South America, to convey the new papal nuclo, Mgr. Bassallo di Torregrossa, to Buenos Aires.
The steamer, to be known as the Nuncius, is painted with broad white and yellow stripes easily distinguished by submarines. Its safety is guaranteed, it is understood, by one of those which the government has encountered various times by the quadruple entente. There would appear, however, to be no necessity for such a guarantee after the German government had been informed that such a vessel was on the high seas. Nothing would be gained in its destruction through a submarine, even when other hand, to grant it safety, even when required by the papacy, would warren the hearts of Emperor William's Catholic subjects and stimulate their loyalty to him.
Prince von Bueel, a diplomatic envoy at the Vatican in his younger years, long before he was German amateur. Rome has always been friendly to the papacy, and was reported in London and has been for eight or nine months that Bueel believes in the restoration of temporal power to the pope as the best method of punishing Italy for participating in the war against her former allies of the triple alliance. While making exhortations to Switzerland Bueel has had his consultations with Catholic cardinals and other dignitaries of the church.
The pope's refusal to align himself on the side of the quadruple entente and especially to make public any protest against the invasion of Catholic Belgium by the Germans is declared in England to be due to a promise made by the sovereigns of the central empires that his temporal authority is to be restored after the war. The plan is, according to these reports, to make the pope the political as well as the spiritual sovereign in Palestine. A small would be established, including Jerusalem and places as well as the port of Jaffa. The theory is believed to be enormously rich in natural resources and to be able to support a cardinal viceroy, who would rule there in the name of the pope.
The British government a few months after the beginning of the war made the extraordinary move of sending a minister to the Vatican, Sir Henry Howard, who had had a long diplomatic experience. This was a recognition of Pope's status as a sovereign, which British officials acknowledged in other governments, withdrew from the pope in 1870. Russia at the same time reopened her legislation at the Vatican, where there had been no envoy for some time on account of the refusal of Russia to grant Catholics the protection which the papacy demanded. Pope has had no representative at Vatican. Catholic countries like Spain had also broken diplomatic relations with the pope before the war.
SENTRY A CANDIDATE
FOR WALKING RECORD
Arizona Man Maker Forty: Miles to Find Relief—Reported "Missing."
Douglas, Arlz—Adam Dockery, a private in Company B, Arizona militia, recently reported as missing, returned to camp after walking nearly forty miles while on duty. The private, a recent recruit, it was said at militia headquarters, was placed on guard at the international line, with instructions to walk to the east until he met the sentry he was to relieve. Dockery missed the sentry. He kept walking until finally he met a patrol on guard, twenty miles east of the camp. "Dockery certainly obeyed instructions," an officer remarked, "but it is a good thing he met that patrol, or he probably would have walked to El Paso."
HOUSE CARRIED THIRTY
MILES BY TORNADO
Heavy Construction Literally Torn to Shreds—Parts Distributed Over Three Indiana Counties.
Brownstone, Ind.-Bits of books and pieces of boards have been picked up in Jackson and Scott counties which were identified as parts belonging to the house of Mrs. Elizabeth Wilcox, a widow living near Campbellsburg. Washington county, which was destroyed by a tornado and scattered along in the path of the storm for a distance of about thirty miles.
The house, a two story eight room building, stoutly constructed and in good shape, was literally torn to shreds in a few seconds. A barn across the road from the house was demolished, and of the corn crib, made of large wooden logs, no trace has been found. Two large logs, one off the floor of the house and carried by the mule, a heavy iron range was found a quarter of a mile from the house, and an iron kettle weighing about seventy-five pounds was found a mile away from the place next day.
Mrs. Wilcox felt a slight jar of the house just before going to bed on a cot near a large stone fireplace. Parts of the fireplace fell on her and pinioned her to the floor. The house was spinning, and the fire was by the storm. The tornado had drained it. The knoll just across the road from the house and scraped the sod off a space about twenty-five feet square.
Alex Brown, who lives near, stepped out early in the morning and found his front porch gone. Looking over toward Mrs. Wilcox's place, he noticed the ruins and hurried over. He found Mrs. Wilcox conscious and soon removed the stones that held her down. A doctor knocked, and it was found that one arm was broken, her chest crushed in brushes and scratches covered her body.
Three five-dollar gold pieces were carried away. One of them was found later about half a mile from the house. Rabbitts and fox squirrels were slaughtered by the storm when it struck the house. The squirrels on the place not more than twenty-five could be found, and several of them were stripped of their feathers by the storm. A black oak tree about three feet in diameter was found near the house, and one seems to know where it came from, as there are no black oaks in the woods near by. An oak tree in the woods near the place of a mule from the place, and there was not a fence or post left standing on the place.
POISON TROUT BIT HIM
Fish Leap Out of the Water to Assault an Angler.
Passadena, Cal.-An angler who is the proprietor of a Passadena cave has documentary evidence of the following:
While fishing in Deep creek recently he spotted a twelve inch trout and tried for an hour to land it. Following it he spashed through the water in pursuit of a game of hide and seek, the weary fisherman finally closed in on the fish under a ledge which overlooked the water.
As he peeped over the edge to land his game the trout leaped to his face and fastened itself in his jaw. It held on until two companions came to the rescue, beating off the assailant with the butt ends of casting rods.
The cafe proprietor's face became swollen to twice its normal size. He and his companions are warm in their hands, and the man is an antidote for venom bites. They declare that a bottle which they had handy saved the unfortunate angler's life.
INDIANS GAVE HIM NAME.
Chief of Police of Albany, Ore. Has Interesting History.
Albany, Ore.-John Cattin, chief of police here, has an interesting history.
He was first found by United States troops in 1882 among the Snake Indians of Oregon when he was three years old.
The Indians said his father and mother had been killed and that they gave him the name of John Cattin.
He served through the civil war as a bugler and was in the army for twenty-five years after that until he returned to Albany, where he has been a police official ever since.
In business, fortunes are not realized Unless your goods are amply advertised.
YOUTHFUL SNAKE HUNTERS.
Boys Handle Dangerous Reptiles Like Professional Charmers.
Galena, Kan.—Two small boys, Willie and Robert Scholr, the elder of whom is about fourteen, have produced a new sensation in the vicinity of their home at Five Mile, where they enjoy the work of writting snakes of many varieties. They play with these reptiles without the least sign of fear, going through with all the stunts of professional snake charmers.
The collection consists of black snakes, blue racers, chicken snakes and three ugly looking battlers. On Saturdays they usually go to Snake branch and hunt for more reptiles. However, these new reptiles are not withdrawn with the help of a separate cage, and are usually to owners of small shows and museums, from whom they get from $ to $ for each reptile.
Neither the boys has ever been bitten. The older boy gave a lecture on snakes before the pupils of the Shoal Creek school. He surprised teacher and pupils alike by his classi-
mation of snakes, their Latin names and discussing the harming dangerous varieties, taking each from a box as he explained their varied habits.
HIS LUCKY NUMBER 13.
Farmer Tella How Mystic Numerals Stuck to Him.
Live Oak, Cal. —No matter how other people may feel about the number 13, Howard Grimes of Douglas county, Ore., considers it a messenger of good luck rather than a barbinger of evil. Ore, once it was Oak recently on his way to Davis, while though he is skirty-four years of age, he is taking a course in agriculture.
On the back of his auto hung its license No. 1313. When reminded of his wooded proclivities the Oregonian smiled and volunteered a bit of history. "I was born on Sept. 13, 1832," said he, "and was the thirteenth child in the family. When thirteen years old I left home and fortune. At twenty I married, and our wedding fell on the 13th of the month.
"While riding a Northern Pacific train in 1912 I was in berth 13 and the train was wrecked. Every occupant in that car was injured but myself. In 1913 I made a little investment in mining property and cleaned up $1,000. I made money and purchased $1,300 of land, and I am farming a part of it and learning I bow to farm it better.
MUST BE EIGHTEEN TO DANCE
Girls If Younger Must Have Guardian's Permission.
Cleveland.-Girls who pride themselves on how young they look will have to take along their birth certificates when they go dancing at municipal dancing halls.
Those who can prove they're more than eighteen may keep on dancing after 9 o'clock. Those who not only look younger than eighteen and really are will have to press into service a parent or a guardian. No, no such luck. Any Tom, Dick or Harry won't be a guardian. The powers that won't provide with it. The guardian has to be a regular member manufactured by a court of justice.
City Dance Hall Inspector John, dance hall chapers and dancing masters got together at a meeting in the city hall recently and tried to have the "younger set" barred from the floors after 9 o'clock, parents or guardians notwithstanding.
GET $8,000 FOR KINDNESS.
Boy and Girl Rewarded For Favors to Invalid Woman.
Pittsburgh—Henry Paul McPeake of this city and his sister, Miss Lois McPeake of Canonsburg, have just been made aware that it pays to be kind to an old invalid lady, in the fact that her will, filed for probate here, provides for the boy in the sum of $5,000 and $3,000 to his sister.
Some years ago when Mrs. Anna Sutton Leech, a wealthy resident of Pittsburgh, was at a santarium at Markleton there was also there as a patient of George C. McPeake, Republican son of George C. McPeake, Republican vice for the legislature in Washington county, and when Lois came to visit her brother they got acquainted with the lonely widow. Between them they contributed to make life a little pleasanter for Mrs. Leech, and she promised not to forget them. She died recently.
UNCOVERED HEIRLOOM.
Silver Watch Was Lost and Lay in Ground Six Years.
Dayton, Wash.—An heliotroon watch, lost six years ago by George Jones, came to light recently when County Commissioner Lee Lindley turned a furrow in a field he was plowing and brought the relic to the surface.
Jones lost the watch while at the Jones farm and had never been able to find it. But he had looked carefully many times.
It was in a silver case, which was badly discolored from long contact with the earth, after Lindley had shaken the dirt from it and wound it it ran as well as the day it was lost
Indian Gold Heart Balm
Sisseton, s. D. — The first breach of promise suit in which Indians were both plaintiff and defendant was given a verdict of $3,500 against Smiley Finley for Miss Agnes Bear was given a verdict of $3,500 against Smiley Finley. As a result all is sad in Smiley Finley. Smiley, "no more white man snooky ookum for Smiley Finley!"
$2.40 PER YEAR
IMPATIENT NATION
Guatemala, Mexico's Southern Neighbor, Suffers From Raids.
BIG LOSS BY DEPREDATIONS.
Northern Border of Country Attacked at Intervals, and Valuable Stores of Cicle Are Taken and Readily Sold to Nearby Dealers, Who Ship to United States.
Guatemala City.—The people of the republic of Guatemala, Mexico's neighbor to the south, are about as nearly out of the country as the Carranza government as are those of the United States. The depredations along the northern border of this country, which began as soon as Carranza found himself accepted by the American government as a real ruler, have continued at intervals ever since.
The damage suffered by the citizens living on the frontier has not been so great as that inflicted on Americans along the Texas, Arizona and New Mexico border, because the dividing line is much shorter and the country is less thickly settled.
The tactics against Americans, however, seem to be the same as those employed in the north—the quick raid upon some unprotected hamlet, the shooting of a few inoffensive and unarmed people, the looting and the hurried get away.
Although the Carranza government has steadily disclaimed all responsibility for these incursions and has placed the responsibility upon the omnipresent bandits, enough evidence has been collected, by government agents to show that many of the attacks were participated in by men known to be Carranza partisans maintaining a loose sort of military organization.
Among the few Americans in the northern part of Guatemala these attacks by Mexicans are spoken of as "chewing gum raids." In almost every case, particularly the frontier of the department of Peten, the object of the mauradurers is to steal the laboriously obtained and valuable stores of corn from which chewing gum is made, for which the forests of Peten are famous. The chicle finds a ready market among dealers near by and is shipped out of the country as a Mexican product, usually to the United States. A trip through the interior of the country is sufficient to convince the traveler that the republic was never in a more peaceful condition. The only revolutionary efforts that have been made to prevent the invasion of a most of whom are known to be in Carranza's pay. These gentlemen have been promptly deported. United States silver dollars in the district between Guatemala City and Puerto Barrios, the Atlantic port, are much more in evidence than they are along Broadway. No one seems to be able to explain the influx of coins, but they are welcomed, and the tattered and disorganized republic is a bad second in popularity. Only second in importance to the business boom among all classes is the effective solution of the high cost of living problem. Bread forms the most important part of the people's food, and bread has been steadily rising in price on account of the control of the grist mills by a few large syndicates. President Estrada Cabrera called a halt on this by an order from the government of the country, setting up mills and leasing them under suitable regulations.
These mills cut the price of bread, and the syndicate, unable to compete them by using steam power. Found beneath in the pantry of the republic broken.
Fish Yields Diamond Ring
Grand Rapids, Wis.—Andrew Musial, a fisherman, is a great admirer of suckers—the fshy kind. The other day while busy with rod and line in the Wisconsin river he pulled up one of these despised specimens and when cleaning it found a valuable diamond ring in the entrails.
Cripple Stops Runaway Horse. Shamokin, Pa.—Although handicapped with a permanently crippled leg, Connolly crowded thoroughly, made a dying dog at a worm animal's head and was dragged a considerable distance until the horse was stoned.
SAVE YOU RIDE
THE APPEAL!
J. Q. ADAMS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER
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J. Q. ADAMS, Manager.
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J. N. SELLERS, Manager.
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THE APPEAL prints in this issue the special report of an agent of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, who was sent to Texas to investigate the recent man-burning at Waco, the center of Texas Christian Civilization.
The report says: "This is the account of one lynching. It is horrible, but it is matched in horror by scores of others in the last thirty years, and in its illegal, law-defying, race-hating aspect, it is matched by 2,842 other lynchings which have taken place between January 1, 1885, and June 1, 1916."
"What are we going to do about this record? The civilization of America is at stake. The sincerity of Christianity is challenged. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People proposes immediately to raise a fund of at least $10,000 to start a crusade against this modern barbarism. Already $2,000 is promised, conditional on our raising the whole amount."
THE APPEAL has made a contribution to the fund and hopes that every American who believes in the supremacy of the law and the perpetuity of democracy to give to the cause according to his means.
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
The few who dare speak again to rip many.—Ella Wheel
To sin by silence when we should protest makes cowards out of men. The human race has climbed on protest. Had no voice been raised against injustice, ignorance and lust, the inquisition yet would serve the law, and guillotines decide our least disputes. The few who dare must speak and speak again to right the wrongs of many.—Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
NO JIMCROW WANTED.
No doubt attempts will be made to organize the colored people along jim-crow lines in the coming Republican campaign and the efforts will in many cases be made by shortsighted and misguided colored men themselves, men who fail to see the importance of not segregating themselves.
The colored people are American citizens? For about ten generations they have lived in this country and there is no hyphen in their make up. They have suffered from segregation and as this campaign is to be, to use Mr. Hughes' own words, one of "undiluted Americanism," there ought not to be any separation, but the people of every race, class and creed should work together as Americans for the election of a Republican president.
Every effort to reach the colored people should be-made through the Republican National Committee and not delegated by that committee to any group of self-seekers who may attempt to use the campaign to further their own selfish ends to the detriment of the masses of the people.
As a matter of fact the colored people are Republicans and the majority have remained true to the party. In the last campaign a large number did revolt against some of the injustices of the Republican party but the treatment they have received at the hands of the Democracy has taught them a salutary lesson.
Good colored speakers should be engaged in the campaign, but in the regular way, through the regular speakers' bureau and not through any segregated headquarters. Colored men and women stenographers and other employees ought to have a fair share of the campaign work at the regular headquarters.
The colored people feel very keenly the humiliations which have been placed upon them by the Democratic administration and if colored men and women are recognized and treated simply as Americans in the campaign it will make the Whole class enthusiastic for the ticket and win votes for the party.
To segregate the colored people in the campaign is to place the race be beyond the pale of Americanism.
FROM FRYING PAN TO FIRE.
Word comes from Denmark that there is great public discontent over the sale of the Danish West Indies to the United States. Many Danes say that the idea of disposing of Danish subjects without consulting them or the Danish people as a whole is unworthy of a Democratic government. Ninety-five per cent of the inhabitants are colored people and they are being sold to this country at the rate of about $800 a head. And their lot will be terrible if the sale is ratified by the Danish rigsdag, as they will have to live under a jimcrow government the same as the ten million colored people already here.
The statement of the Chicago correspondent of the Boston Guardian that Mayor Thompson of Chicago jim-crowed the colored delegation to the Republican National convention is without foundation in fact.
Mayor Thompson appointed Rev. A. J. Carey, the well known and eloquent minister of the Institutional Church, a member of the general committee of arrangements for the convention and he was present at nearly all of the meetings to see that there was a square deal all around.
THE MAN WHO DARES
I honor the man
entious discharge o
stand alone; the w
intolerant judgment
the countenances o
averted, and the he
cold, but the sense
be sweeter than th
world, the countena
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 Sumner.
once when we should
wards out of men.
has climbed on pro-
been raised against
me and lust, the in-
d serve the law, and
our least disputes.
we must speak and
right the wrongs of
her Wilcox.
The tickets for the automobile ride through the city were issued to the colored delegates just the same as to those of other nationalities and all delegates were instructed to take autos at the Congress Hotel. Shortly before the hour for the ride, some self-important colored men who wished to get a little glory for themselves and boom their club asked that the autos be sent to a club "out South" for the colored delegates.
Rev. Carey, the colored representative on the committee, objected to this and told the people so, but as a number seemed to desire it and rather than mar the proceedings by a row, he reluctantly consented to the arrangement. So the majority of the delegates were in this manner separated from the main body of the visitors. It was due entirely to the jim-crow ideas of some of the colored people themselves and was granted after Rev. Carey had protested against it. Mayor Thompson had nothing whatever to do with it.
A number of the colored delegates who were not pleased with the plans of the segregationists went to the Congress Hotel and were given seats in the autos which left from that place. THE APPEAL believes it is but fair to Mayor Thompson that this charge against him be refuted. He has been a consistent friend of the colored people for many years and has given the race better representation in high salaried places than any Mayor Chicago ever had.
LITERACY LAW DEFEATED
Oklahoma has been guilty of many crimes against certain classes of its citizens, but things seem to be looking up in that state, as the returns show that the proposed literacy test amendment to the state constitution has been defeated by a majority of about 15,000. The test would have disfranchised any person unable to read and write any section of the state constitution and was admittedly intended as a substitute for the famous "grandfather" law declared unconstitutional by the United States Supreme Court because it in effect deprived colored men of the right to vote.
Judge Charles E. Hughes, Republic can candidate for President, received the largest and warmest reception ever accorded to a candidate in St Paul last Wednesday. His speech at the Auditorium was listened to by 12,000 people with evident satisfaction and much applause Wednesday evening. If the enthusiasm exhibited here is to be duplicated everywhere he will be the next president sure, but that's sure anyway.
There is a division among the Southern senators on the Child Labor Bill, Bankhead, Bryan, Fletcher, Hardwick Smith (Ga.), Overman, Simmons, Smith (S. C.), Tillman and Williams voted against it while Swanson, Underwood, Vardaman, James, Beckham, Randell, Robinson, Culberson, Shepard and Shields voted for it. On all jimcrow bills the Southern senators stand together and vote as one man.
Senator Works of California is very indignant because the Japanese have been able to dictate to the Wilson administration what should go into the immigration bill. But the Japs have the battleships and the soldiers.
who in the consci- of his duty dares to world, with ignorant, ant, may condemn, of relatives may be parts of friends grow of duty done shall the applause of theances of relatives or
THE CROSS
THE TORTURE (Note the "Frenzied" Mob)
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MOB OF CHRISTIANS BURNING HUMAN BEING IN U. S. A.
Turkish, Bulgarian, Albania, Cossack, Fiji Islands, Moro (Head Hunters), Thug (Indian Stranglers)
and German (in Belgium) Papers Please Copy.
Fifty thousand copies of the story of the "Waco Horror" have just been distributed by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People through its official organ, the NAACP, as a result a campaign for an anti-lynching movement of 10,000 has been launched. Immediately upon hearing the details of this American atrocity, which for barbarity surpasses anything charged against the Germans in Belgium, Judge Moorfield Storey, National President of the Association, and formerly President of the American Bar Association, and chief G. Peabody, both of Boston, each offered to contribute $1,000 toward such a fund, condition that the remaining $8,000 be raised by August 1.
The N. A. A. C. P. sent a special investigator from National headquarters at 70 Fifth avenue, New York, who commenced gathering evidence in Texas, where the burning occured in Occupied Japan, the lynching, in Insamuch as fifteen thousand people had sanctioned the affair by their presence and dozens of pictures were taken, there was no difficulty in ascertaining the names of the leaders and the failure of both the judge and sheriff to make the slightest effort to protect their prisoner. The Association is bending every effort to secure a distinguished Texas lawyer with enough to bring the case against the sheriff. Politics, the investigator found, was at the bottom of the affair. Sam Fleming, the sheriff, is up for reelection at the Democratic primary in July. His opponent, Buchanan, though illiterate, has "three dead diggers to hold" in the popular. Unless he is to go back to selling buggies and cultivators for the
THE TORTURE (Note
hardware store, Sam needed a lynching to increase his popularity. The murder of Mrs. Fryer on Monday, May 8, came just at the right time. Vesey Washington, a colored boy of Jesse Washington, a colored boy of Jesse Washington, and rape. His trial was set for Monday, May 15. The crowd began gathering from the surrounding country on Sunday. When court opened, 1,500 crowded into the room, inside the rail. The judge's desk and jury box; and 2,000 more waited in the courtyard.
The District Judge of the Criminal Court, R. I. Munroe, elbowed his way to his desk, and the boy was brought from his chambers, where he had been secreted since the sheriff brought him from Dallas in the middle of the night. The boys were called, the crowd yelled, "We do not believe that the trial was allowed to be hurried through. The jury brought in a verdict of guilty of murder and assessed his punishment at death. The sessed his punishment at death. The defendant had waived his legal rights, and would have been hanged that morning. The was a pause of a full moon. The was a pause of a righthander rappled out with his records. Sheriff Fleming sneaked out, too. Then a big fellow in the back of the court room yelled, "Get the nigger!" They took him before the nigger had pronounced judgment, without the judge lifting a finger in protest. Down the back stairs they rushed him to the court room in his mouth. They put the chain in his mouth, and wouldn't choke too soon, and when those tugging at it broke it, the driver of the Anheuser brewery truck, who led the rabble, wound it around his
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own wrist rather than take chances that the boy should die too soon. Many had come a long way to attend this party and they didn't want it to happen; everybody was happy; they shouted and sang like a bunch of fans at a ball game, according to a Waco paper. When the boy's clothes had been cut up and distributed as souvenirs there were not enough pieces to go around, somebody cut off an ear for his keepsake. The Waco Times-Herald published the same afternoon, said the man, the one of the burning, people on every side a hand in showing their feelings in the matter by striking the Negro with anything obtainable; some struck him with-shoels, bricks, clubs, and others stabbed him and cut him until when the body was a solid color of red the bloody face of the many wounds inflicted covered him from head to foot."
They took Washington to a tree on the City Hall lawn just outside the window of His Honor, the Mayor, which he generously shared with Mr. whom he is indebted to, cut a Chain was thrown over the limb of this tree, and while the fire was being lit, this bloody thing was hoisted into the air where everyone had a full view. A mancurist who saw windows look out on it and Mingle, whose windows look out on it and the investigator she saw them unsexy the lad. As the chain tightened around his neck, this half-dead creature reached up convulsively to grab it, so they cut his fingers off. The Waco Times-Herald makes no bones of it. "Fingers, ears, pieces of meat, the Negro's body were cut off by members of the mob that had crowded to the
the "Frenzied" Mob).
"My son son can't learn too young the proper way to treat a nigger." At 12 o'clock the crowd adjourned for lunch, as usual; but by a quarter past one some of the boys were back and had ridden in off the range created a diversion by lassosing the corpse and riding all over town with the remains dangling at the end of his lariat. When the head bounced off as he left the street, the ghetto the Negroes and prostitutes are segregated, some little
1
boy sets it up on one of the doorsteps and extracted the loose teeth, which are reported to have brought as high as $10,000 dollars apiece from those who could afford it, and permanent souvenirs. The few fraternities held together till night, the undertaker was able to chuck into a very small ash can. Waco is a center of American culture and an important Southern college town. It is a Christian college, 40,000 population, boasting thirty-nine white and twenty-four colored churches. Yet no responsible voice was raised in protest that bloody Monday, which has been since. Those who have been called to cry to Heaven should be raised against this and every lynching, by legal prosecution, by publicity, by co-operation with the best white element of the South, for the negotiation, are urged to assist the national agitation, for the Advancement of Colored People to raise this $10,000 antifungin fund before August 1. Contributions should be sent to Oswald Garrison Villard, at the national headquarters of the organization, 70 Fifth ave. New York.
(REV.) WM. A. BYRD
(From the Crisis.)
The Crisis hastens to extend to you on your accession to the headship of Tuskegee the assurances of its good will and personal respect. The Crisis does this all the more willingly because it has to some extent been the occasion to have had occasion repeatedly to the words and deeds of your predecessor. It would be a matter of hope and rejoicing if your assumption of new duties could be the beginning of a new era of union and understanding among the various groups of Americans. But understanding and co-operation must be based on frank conference and clear knowledge. As a preliminary step to such understanding the Crisis ventures in this open letter to express to you publicly its hopes and fears. It hopes that the aims of the colored American have become sufficiently clear to admit of no misunderstanding or misstatement. We desire to become American citizens with every right that pertains to citizenship.
1. The right to vote and hold office.
2. Equality before the law.
3. Equal civil rights in all public places, and in all public services.
4. A proportional share in the benefit of all public expenditures.
5. Education according to ability and aptitude.
With these rights we correlate our duties as men and citizens—the abolition of poverty, the emancipation of women, the suppression of crime and the suppression of ignorance.
The Crisis is becoming needed, it knows—that in these matters you believe substantially, as we do, and that the real differences between us, if there be such, lie in matters of present emphasis and present procedure.
We will be following the late Booker T. Washington you will place especial emphasis on vocational training, property getting and conciliation of the cases, these cases are necessary and against these the Crisis speaks policies, but they have their pitfalls, this warning word:
1. Only the higher and broader training will give any race its ultimates leadership. This Mr. Washington came to realize, and this you must not forget.
2. Individual accumulation of wealth must gradually and inevitably give way to methods of social accumulation in equitable distribution.
3. Finally, the business and proper. But how far shall it go? It is here that the Crisis confesses to its deepest solicitude in your case. It cannot but remember its unanswered query of you in the case of the St. Louis luncheon. It has before it the power to open paper which gives as your opinion North one gets distorted view of South." And finally, there is the recent case of the Pullman car and your family.
The Crisis will assume in all of the cases that you have not been correctly reported; you did not voluntarily give up lunching at the St. Louis City Club; that you did not assert that the South was maligned usually at the North, and above all, that you did not say that you had no attempt of the attempt of members of your family to ride on Pullman cars in the South.
The Crisis knows only too well the way in which Southern newspapers put such sentiments into the mouths of their leaders; but the point upon which we should address that such atrocious statements cannot be always passed in silence. We do not wish the principal of Tuskegee to spend his valuable time in answering calumnies and misstatement of the future; when so monstrous a statement is made in the case of the Pulman car, something besides silence and acquiescence is called for.
We hope we see therefore, at Tuskegee, the future a laying out and development of the best past work and a continued attempt to come to terms of understanding with the best of the white South; but to these policies we hope to see added a deeper understanding of the clearly understood to the people of this region, the keegee does believe in the right to vote; that it does not believe in Jim-Crow cars; that it recognizes the work of the Negro colleges, and that it with Charles Sumner that "Equality of rights is the first of rights."
This, then, is the forward step at Tuskegee which the Crisis and its friends look for under your administration, and it desires to express its faith and indeed its faith, that you will not disappoint your fellow workers.
Has Shown His Hand.
Four days after the inauguration as principal of Tuskegee, Ala., Normal and Industrial Institute the South forces Major Moton to "show his hand" and there is not even a "deuce" in for the race. One thing sure and important is the new investment standpoint he is certainly no improvement upon Booker T. Washington.
This paper has no retraction to make in the Major Moton affair. It thought then and knows now that no improvement was made by his prosecution. Booker T. Washington's palliation for manhood rights not only with but with the North as well for untold what come, and his successor's ambition is to be patted on the back and be called "a good darkey" to the lower regions who goes back on his wife when abused for her rights paid for, to ride in a Pallium unit to teach and teach our children.
Major Moton, please don't assume the attitude of an apologist. We are hoping for big things from you. We appreciate and appreciate the difficulties of your life. Stand squarely and firmly for justice and face. apology is due from either Moton or yourself, because as a cultured and refined woman she preferred to ride in a Fulman rather than in a car in which "equal accommodations" are not provided, and in which the conditions are seldom sanitary or pleasant.
WEEK'S RECORD OF HAPPENINGS.
IN MINNESOTA'S CAPITOL.
The "Saintly City" and Saintly City
Folk—Neway Items of Social, Religious, Political and General Matters Among the People.
PHONE: N. W. CEDAR 5649
PHONE TRI-STATE 23776
SATURDAY, AUGUST 12, 1916.
Mr. A. W. Holden has returned from Duluth.
Mrs. C. R. Williams has moved to 597 Rondo street.
Mrs. L. W. Bradley, 795 Rondo, has moved to 632 Pine street.
Don't forget the SPECIAL DINNER at Young's Cafe tomorrow.
Mr. Earl Neal, of Chicago, is in the city visiting his uncle, Mr. Thos. Neal, 531 St. Anthony avenue.
There will be a special sacred concert at Memorial Baptist church on Sunday evening, August 20.
Miss Edyhella Belle Adams left yesterday for a trip to Chicago, Cleveland, Toledo and Detroit.
OFFICE CEDAR 8948 RES. DALE 1468
W. T. FRANCIS
LAWYER
SUITE 329
AMR. NATL. BANK BLDG.
COR. FIFTH AND CEDAR
Mrs. T. E. Franklin, who has been
at the hospital for some time, was
discharged Thursday and is again at
home.
FOR RENT—Five room dwelling,
modern except heat, rent $14.00 per
month. Apply at 272 St. Anthony
avenue. (8-5-16)
The Big Brown Skin Excursion and
Picnic on Friday of last week was a
Big thing. A Big crowd went and
had a Big time.
INSIST on
Purity
BREAD
AT YOUR GROCER'S
Miss Anna Foster, who has been the guest of Mrs. M. Thomas, of Jessamine street, left for her home in Chicago last Monday.
THE PEOPLE'S SHINING PARLOR, Porter & Casey, Props., 180 E. Fifth street, is the place to get six shines for 25 cents. Try 'em.
Miss Willa Daniel, 406 Edmund street left Friday of last week for Omaha, Neb., to be the guest of Miss Ruth Jeltz of that city.
Both Phones 508. St. Paul, Minn.
Funeral Directors and Embalmer
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.
FOR RENT—Four room second floor flat, 323 Farrington, $15.50 per month. Also furnished rooms at 378 Jay street. Call Dale 7557—(8-12-16)
Mrs. E. W. Lindsay and son left Saturday night for Chicago, where they will be guests of Mrs. E. F. Alley for the next three weeks.
Miss Lottie Patterson of Anoka, who has been visiting Mrs. Ferguson here, was taken to the hospital last Saturday for an operation.
Mrs. L. C. Sayles and her infant daughter, of Omaha, Neb., are visiting her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Sayles, 479 Rondo street.
BROWN
Earned good wages, left his family in want.
Brown was a good worker and earned well at a steady job.
His wife, an invalid, urged him to save something for future use.
This Brown promised to do, but put it off from week to week and year to year.
Suddenly—a broken rail—a crash—and darkness.
Brown's promise could never be fulfilled.
STATE SAVINGS BANK
$8 East Fourth Street.
Deposits $5,850,000.00.
1890 1916
DON'T FORGET
That You and your many friends are invited and expected to attend THE GRAND
SHIRT WAIST PARTY
# 1930
Under the au
UNION HALL A
This is your hall, this is
and help the Associ
MUSIC BY PROF. C
COMMITTEE: THE UNIC
Charles H. Miller, President
J. E. Murphy, Sec. R. M. Johns
J. B. Johnson O. D. Howard
S. E. Hall J. H. Dillingham
C. H. Roper George L
UNION HALL ASSOCIATION
This is your hall, this is your party, so come and help the Association to lift its debt
MUSIC BY PROF. CLARENCE JOHNSON
COMMITTEE: THE UNION HALL ASSOCIATION
When you are out Mississippi street way, on your way to or from the commissary, drop in the MACEO CLUB, 743 Mississippi street, and see W. N. Corneal, he'll treat you right.
Miss Elina E. Rodney, who has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Ervin, has returned to her home in Duluth after a splendid visit of several weeks in the Twin Cities.
FOR SALE OR FOR RENT. Eight rooms and bath, hot and cold water, hot air furnace, newly papered and painted, in good condition. 682 Carroll, corner St. Albans. (7-29-16.)
Mrs. Wm. H. Talbert of Buffalo, N. Y., a sister of Mrs. W. R. Hardy, 518 St. Anthony avenue, was elected president of the National Woman's Federation at Baltimore Thursday.
FOR SALE—Six-room up-to-the-minute dwelling, corner St. Anthony and Chatsworth streets. Apply to the Virtue Printing Co., Globe Building, cor. Fourth and Cedar. Phone Cedar 1528.
Miss Lucella James of W. Central avenue, entertained at breakfast Wednesday morning in honor of Miss Elnora Rodney, of Duluth, and Miss Gertrude Howard. Covers were laid for six.
The picnic given by Memorial Baptist church at Phalen park Thursday was a splendid affair and was attended by between 200 and 300 persons, all of whom had a delightful time.
PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER — MRS. H. I. WILLIAMS, OFFICE OF ATTY. W. T. FRANCIS, SUITE 329 AMERICAN NATIONAL BUILDING, FIFTH AND CEDAR. ALL WORK CONFIDENTIAL.
Mr. J. L. Thompson, of Des Moines, Iowa, editor of the Iowa Bystander, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Quilt Hickens, 1000 Iglehart avenue, for dinner Tuesday. He left for his home Tuesday night.
FOR SALE - Duplex and eight-room house, same lot, near Rondo. Hard wood, water heating, gas ranges, ice boxes, electric lighting. Inquire at Hendrick's Drug Store, Seventh and Jackson. (6-10-16)
The big thing for next week will be the SHIRT WAIST PARTY given under the auspices of the Union Hall Association at Union Hall, Thursday evening, Aug. 17. You are invited. Tickets only two-bits.
Mr. J. F. Smith, formerly a resident of St. Paul, now residing in Spokane, Wash., was in the city a few days visiting his daughter, Mrs. J. W. Kennedy, 780 Buffalo street, and other old time friends and acquaintances.
Mr. J. H. Lawson has fitted up and opened one of the nicest clothes coatings and shoe shining parlors in the city at the corner of Fourth and Jackson streets. Expert artists. Call if you wish anything in his line.
Ladies wishing anything in the line of made to order Hair Work, Shampooing, Scalp Treatment, etc., should call on Mrs. Elizabeth Battles, 587 Broadway, second floor. Prices reasonable.
SECOND HAND FURNITURE—If you wish to get good, substantial second hand furniture at very low figures call to see me, Louis Liverpool, 586 Marion street. I have a lot of odd pieces left in storage and unredeemed. (6-20-10)
Rubber Neck Pete, Double-Jointed Ann, Bosco the Snake Eater, and others of their kind, are not to be invited to attend the Minnesota State Fair this year. Not only that but they have been barred from the fair for all time.
VOCAL AND PIANO LESSONS GIVEN BY MRS. ADDIE CRAWFORD-MINOR.AT HER RESIDENCE, 320 FARRINGTON AVE. HOURS ARRANGED TO SUIT PUPILS. TERMS VERY REASONABLE. TELL DALE 1597.
FOR SALE—By owner, 8-room house, modern with barn; may be arranged for two families. Walking distance. Good investment. Sell at a sacrifice. No. 253 Carroll street. Tel. Dale 3353 or call up F. D. McCracken, Cedar 8760.
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.
ADMISSION
If you wish a quick lunch of toothsome home-cooked food at reasonable prices go to J. H. Thurston's NEW GRILL ROOM, in the rear of Steele's 20th Century Barber Shop and Pool Parlor, 30 East Fourth street. Daily luncheon 11 a. m. to 8 p. m., 15 cents. Short orders, cold meats, sandwiches, ples, etc., at all hours. You are invited to call.
Mrs. J. B. Johnson, 863 Woodbridge street, entertained at dinner Friday of last week in honor of Mesdames T. W. Stepp of Duluth, and Mrs. Josie Battles of Grand Rapids, Mich.
Miss Gertrude Howard, after an absence of two years teaching in Prairie View, Tex., arrived at home Wednesday and will spend six weeks with her mother and other relatives.
Mr. J. H. Murray, of Seattle, Wash., was a visitor in the city this week. He lived in St. Paul in 1887 and is well known to the old residents, he having been steward at the Minnesota Club. He has for years been in the real estate business in the Golden West. He is returning home from an extended trip to New York, Philadelphia, Detroit, Chicago and other cities. The COSMOPOLITAN CAFE, No. 40 East Third street, up stairs, is now under new management, with L. Jackson manager. They serve first steps to treasurer at all hours day and night. They serve the best regular dinner in the city at 25 cents, from 11:30 a. m. to 2:30 p. m. Everything the best market affords. Service unexcelled. A trial will convince you.
Mme. L. A. Porter-Henderson has finished her class in hair dressing, facial massage, manicuring, scalp treatment, shampooing and hair manufacturing and has issued diplomas to her graduates. She will reopen her classes. He will have his prices are reasonable, diplomas issued, his class is finished. For further information call Dale 420 or write 978 St. Anthony avenue.
The "Commissary Cafe" at 753 Mississippi street, which has been in "Innocuous desuetude" for some time, is again open to the public with A. E. Buckner as proprietor. The place has been thoroughly overhauled, rearranged and redecorated, and now has a private dining room and a lunch counter and is better than ever prepared to care for the hungry public. First class a la carte service for all hours. Regular dinner from 11:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Tel. Cedar 8700. Public cordially invited.
Owing to failing health, Dr. Geo. W. Nelson, druggist, cor. Wabasha and Summit, has disposed of his interest in the drug store to the NEWBERT DRUG CO., by which the business will be conducted in the future. The management of the new firm cordially invites the continuance of all instruments and hopes by prompt, efficient service to give many new customers. If you need anything in the line of drugs, medicines, etc., etc., you are invited to call. Phone orders delivered. Phones: Cedar 6190, Tr1-State 26147.
LADIES, don't cook your own family dinner on Sunday, Aug. 13, but take your household to YOUNG'S CAFE, 136 E. Third street, where a special dinner will be served from 2:30 to 8:30 p. m. for 35 cents. The bill of fare is as follows: Celery, pickles, olives, chilled consomme, baked whitefish, Hollandaise sauce; roast beef au jus, roast chicken and dressing, corn pudding, mashed potatoes, Golden Rule vegetable salad, Southern corn bread, watermelon, ice cream, tea, coffee, milk, buttermilk. Can you beat that for 35 cents? Private booths for family parties.
John T. Bottle—that's the name he gave at the station—while meandering through one of the big department stores last Monday, espied a pair of lovely silk hose, such as all the girls are exposing liberally now a-days, and it struck him that they would make a fine present for his sweetheart, who was about to leave for a trip to North Dakota, so that she would have "something to show for a rainy day." So he brought no one was looking, he "lifted" the hose; but an eagle-eyed female detective John bottled the beauties and had him bottle the next day John pleaded guilty to petit larceny and was sentenced to the "works" for 30. He, however, thought the weather was too hot to work so he dug up $25 and paid his fine.
Moral—He'd better pay for them next time. It will be cheaper.
Thurs. Aug. 17
25 CENTS
Clark's Dining Car Lunch Room,
formerly on St. Anthony avenue near
Kent, has been moved around to 549
Rondo street near Kent, where the
same excellent service that made the
old place so popular with the people
is still maintained. If you are
hungry at any time call at Clark's,
549 Rondo street.
MASTER MASONS, NOTICE.
The Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted Masons of Minnesota and Jurisdiction will convene on Tuesday,
August 15, 1916, at Union hall, Kent
and Aurora, St. Paul, at 9:00 a.m.
sharp. All members of the Grand
Lodge and Past Masters are urged to
be present.
Huron J. Shelton, G. M.
G. L. Hoage, G. S.
"THE FOLLIES OF PLEASURE."
The Attraction at the Star Theatre Next Week.
Amusing, brilliant and clever is the perennial "The Follies of Pleasure" burlesquers which will be the offering at the Star Theatre one week starting with matinee Sunday; Aug. 13th. The company this season is a big one, the production is new and the book "The Girl From Broadway" has been re-written and brought up to the second, thus making this quite one of the best modern musical comedies before the public, because while there is plenty of humor and dancing in it, there is also an excellent little story which is at times dramatic. The principal parts are portrayed by Clyde J. Bates and Tom McKenna, a pair of unctuous comedians who sing and trip the stage with an air of importment, hinting that the audience take a fancy to them. Others in the cast are Violet Hilleen, Dot Leighton, Mae Mills and the Marvellous Millers. The chorus, numbering thirty, are young and well drilled. They go through intricate maneuvers with beautiful precision, forming ka leidoscopic color pictures that never pale. One of the features is the posing act of "Venus" the perfect woman with form divine.
ENORMOUS SUM OFFERED.
the premiums offered by the Minnesota State Fair, Sept. 4 to 9, aggregate 40,040. The larger sum than the premiums offered by any other fair or exposition in America.
MR. RENTER: YOU WOULD SAVE TIME, WORRY AND MONEY BY PURCHASING A HOME OF YOUR OWN. I HAVE SEVERAL FIVE AND SIX ROOM HOUSES, ENTIRELY MODERN WITH HOT-WATER HEAT, ON SMALL PAYMENT DOWN AND BALANCE LIKE RENT. COME IN AND TALK IT OVER. F. D. McCRACKEN, 410 COURT BLK.
GOVERNOR NAMES DELGATES
To National Negro Congress at Washington, D. C., Aug. 23 to 26.
Governor Burnquist has appointed as delegates to the National Negro Congress at Washington, D. C., Aug. 23 to 26; the following:
Mrs. W. V. Howard, Mrs. Henry High, Mrs. Harriet Williams, George Wills, Mrs. S. L. Maxwell, Mrs. W. T. Francis, W. B. Tandy, F. D. McCracken, Kiss Matherine Lealtad, B. C. Archer, Mrs. W. R. Hardy, Dr. Valdo Turner and Mrs. George Hoage, Dr. Paul; W. M. Fauplins, George H. Adams of Duluth, Charles W. Scrutchin of Bemidji; William R. Morris, Brown S. Smith, Dr. R. S. Brown, C. A. Reed, J. M. Allison, Rev. T. B. Stovall and James Eddings of Minneapolis.
GOOD
SHOES
The
Florsheim
SHOE
For the man who cares
STANLEY
SHOE CO.
THE FLOUR
Pilsbury's
BEST
Pilsburypolls.com
FOR THOSE
WHO KNOW
BEST
L. EISENMENGER MEAT CO
Established 1870
THE MARKET OF BIG VALUES
PURE,
WHOLESOME
SAUSAGE 84 VARIETIES
455-457 Wabasha
SUNDAY AUG. 13TH
136 East Third Street, Down Stairs
SPECIAL DINNER FREES
"YOU PAYS YOUR MONEY"
MUSIC WHILE
Celery P
Chilled Corn
BAKED WHITE FISH
OAST BEEF AU JUS P
Corn Pudding
Vegetable Salad
Aunt Jemima
Water Mellon
Tea Coffee
PRIVATE BOOTHS
TEL. CEDAR 9282
PROGRESS B
POOL HALL
J. A. SM
Shaving, Shampooing, Hair
Shoe Shining; U
ALL DINNER FROM 2:30 TO 8:30 P.M.
PAYS YOUR MONEY AND TAKES YOUR CH
MUSIC WHILE YOU EAT
Pickles
Chilled Consume in Cups
BAKED WHITE FISH HOLLANDAISE SAUCE
EF AU JUS
ROAST CHICKEN AND
Pudding
Mashed Pot
Vegetable Salad a la Golden Rule
Aunt Jemima's Corn Bread
on
Tea Coffee Milk Butter Milk
PRIVATE BOOTHS FOR FAMILY PARTIES
EDAR 9282
EXPERT A
PROGRESS BARBER SHOP
COOL HALL & LUNCH ROOM
J. A. SMITH, PROP.
Bing, Shampooing, Hair Cutting, Face Massage
Shoe Shining; Up-To-Date Service
SPECIAL DINNER FROM 2:30 TO 8:30 P.M. 30C "YOU PAYS YOUR MONEY AND TAKES YOUR CHOICE" MUSIC WHILE YOU EAT
PROGRESS BARBER SHOP POOL HALL LUNCH ROOM J. A. SMITH, PROP. Shaving, Shampooing, Hair Cutting, Face Massage etc. Shoe Shining; Up-To-Date Service Cigars, Tobacco, Newspapers and Magazines
Wabasha St. ST. P.
THE FLOUR
Callsbury's BEST XXXXX
Milwaukee, Minn.
FOR THOSE WHO KNOW BEST
NEW GRILL ROOM
J. H. THURSTON, CHEF
STEELE'S BARBER SHOP AND POOL ROOM
DAILY LUNCHEON 11 A. M. TO 8 P. M. 15 C.
Short Orders, Cold Meats, Sandwiches, Pies,
100 E. Fourth St.
ST. PAUL, M.
OUR BOTH PHOTO
OAL AND WOOD
FLOUR, FEED AND HAY
FROM
C. W. STAEHLE
age Transfer Moving
All kinds of hauling
at the right price
Rice, Carroll and
311 Wabasha St.
THE FLO
Pillsbury's
BEST
XXXX
Minneapolis, Minn.
NEW GR
J. H. TH.
STEELE'S BARBER
DAILY LUNCHEON
Short Orders, Gold M
30 E. Fourth St.
THE FLOUR
Pillsbury's
BEST
XXXX
Minneapolis, Minn.
FOR THOSE
WHO KNOW
BEST
STEELE'S BARBER SHOP AND POOL ROOM
DAILY LUNCHEON 11 A. M. TO 8 P. M. 15 CTS.
Short Orders, Cold Meats, Sandwiches, Pies, etc.
30 E. Fourth St. ST. PAUL, MN
COAL AIR
FLOUR, FE
FT
C. W. S.
Baggage Transfer
All kind
Everything at the right price
Baggage Transfer Moving Vans All kinds of hauling Everything at the right price Rice, Carroll and Iglehart Sts.
I positively guarantee to e
ABSOLUTE
Get prices here be
A Written Guarantee for 2
Dr. Williams
TEL. C. 6132 KENDRICK
TEL. JACKSON 1910
YOUNG
W. A. Y
rely guarantee to extract teeth and remove
ABSOLUTELY PAINLESSLY
prices here before going elsewhere
itten Guarantee for 20 Years Given With All
Dr. Williams, 27 E. 7th St
6132 KENDRICK BLDG. 2ND FLOOR
VEL. JACKSON 1910 QUICK SERVE
YOUNG'S CAFE
W. A. YOUNG, PROP.
First Class A La Carte Meals From 6:30 A.
to 12:00 P. M. at Reasonable Rates
Regular Dinner 11:30 A. M. to 2:30 P. M. 25 C
SPECIAL DINNER THURSDAYS AFTER 4 P. M. 35 CENTS
38 E. Third St. ST. PAUL, MI
I positively guarantee to extract teeth and remove nerves
ABSOLUTELY PAINLESSLY
Get prices here before going elsewhere
A Written Guarantee for 20 Years Given With All Work.
Dr. Williams, 27 E. 7th St
TEL. C. 6132 KENDRICK BLDG. 2ND FLOOR ST. PAUL
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 A P. M. 35 CENTS
---
BUY YOUR
DAM 2:30 TO 8:30 P. M. 3:4C
"AND TAKES YOUR CHOICE"
WILE YOU EAT
Bickles Olives
summe in Cups
HOLLANDAISE SAUCE
OAST CHICKEN AND DRESSING
Mashed Potatoes
a la Golden Rule
a's Corn Bread
Ice Cream
Milk Butter Milk
FOR FAMILY PARTIES
BARBER SHOP
LUNCH ROOM
TH, PROP.
Air Cutting, Face Massage etc.
Up-To-Date Service
UR
FOR THOSE
WHO KNOW
BEST
ILL ROOM
URSTON, CHEF
SHOP AND POOL ROOM
11 A. M. TO 8 P. M. 15 CTS.
eats, Sandwiches, Pies, etc.
ST. PAUL, MINN
BOTH PHONES 1446
AND WOOD
CED AND HAY
FROM
TAEHLE
Moving Vans
s of hauling
Rice, Carroll and Iglehart Sts.
Dr.H.I.WILLIAMS Announces his NEW method of PAINLESS DENTISTRY
extract teeth and remove nerves
BY PAINLESSLY
before going elsewhere
10 Years Given With All Work.
27 E. 7th St
BLDLG. 2ND FLOOR
ST. PAUL
QUICK SERVICE
'S CAFÉ
YOUNG, PROP.
Me Meals From 6:30 A. M.
At Reasonable Rates
A. M. to 2:30 P. M. 25 Cts,
SHOES AFTER 4 P. M. 35 CENTS
ST. PAUL, MINN.
PHONE DALE 2055
ALBION W. HOLDEN
PAINTER AND PAPERHANGER
527 ST. ANTHONY AVENUE
THINKING OF PAINTING?
You'll be delighted with the results you get from our guaranteed House Paint.
Beautiful—Durable—Economical
Get Our Color Card and Prices
Bazille & Partridge
EXPERT ARTISTS
F. B. SIMPSON GEO. W. WILLS
Tel. Dale 1914 Tel. Dale 2914
Office Phones: Dale 6798, T.-S. 4803
Undertakers, Funeral Directors and Embalmers.
Calls Answered Promptly Day or Night
Lady Assistant When Desired.
Office and Chapel
423 UNIVERSITY AVE. ST. PAUL
Office Cedar 1673
Dr. Valdo Turner
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
NEW DAKOTA BUILDING
Cor. 6th and 7th Streets
OFFICE HOURS
9 to 11 a. m., 12 to 1 p. m., 3 to 5 p. m.
Sundays 10 to 11 a. m.
Res. 386 St. Albans Tel. Dale 819
PAINLESS DENTISTRY
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First Class, Guaranteed Work to
All Branches of Dentistry c
Suite 400, Court Block
Cedar 6190 PHONES T. S. 26147
NEWBERT DRUG CO.
Geo.W.Nelson
Full Stock of Pure Drugs, Proprietary
Medicines, Druggists' Sundries,
Toilet Articles, Candles,
Soda, Cigars, Etc.
PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COM-
POUNDED
ORDERS DELIVERED
Gor, Wabasha and Summit, St. PAUL
Phone Dale 1781 Orders Delivered
Grocery & Confectionary
8STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES,
VEGETABLES, FRUIT, BUTTER,
EGGS, MILK, CREAM, BREAD,
CAKES, PIES, ETC.
8SCHOOL SUPPLIES OF ALL KINDS
441 Rondo Cor. Arundel 8T. PAUL
AMERICAN TELEPHONE & TELEGRAPH CO.
1900
LONG
DISTANCE
TELEPHONE
BALL STATTER
AND ASSOCIATED COMPANIES
Residence Service
$2.00
PER MONTH
Northwestern Telephone
Exchange Co.
LEE E. TURPIN & CO
PROPRIETORS
Cosmopolitan
Buffet and Grill
RAILROAD MENS HEADQUARTERS
40 EAST THIRD STREET
TEL. CEDAR 9128
ST. PAUL
Tel. Dale 3316
The Bellview
L. A. GROSS, PROP.
NEATLY FURNISHED ROOMS WITH
HEAT, LIGHT AND BATH
Rates Reasonable
412 Carroll St. ST. PAUL, MINN.
FRED TALBERT
PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING
INTERIOR DECORATING
TEL. CEDAR 8545 138 E. THIRD ST.
lene ie | GC
MINNEAPOLIS
THE COINGS IN AND ABOUT THE
GREAT “FLOUR CITY."
Matters Social, Religious and General
Which Have Happenea ana are to
Happen Among the People of the
City.
4. N. SELLERS, MANAGER
2812 Tenth Avenue So.
Tel. N. W. South 2372.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 12, 1916.
Worry gives the undertaker more
business than work does.
‘When a man is completely down
and out, his enemfes stop kicking him
and his friends begin.
The Colored Gophers will play the
Athletics of West St. Paul tomorrow
afternoon at 3 o'clock.
‘The Episcopal pienie at Parkers
Lake Thursday was quite largely at-
tended, and was a very delightful
cecasion.
Mr. Daniel Williams, who for many
years has been located at 306 South
rd St, has moved his restaurant to
407 Bth Ave. South,
Miss Elnora B. Rodney of Duluth,
who has been the guest of Miss Mil-
dved Plummer, returned home yester-
day accompanied by Miss Plummer.
Mr, J. H. Murray, of Seattle, Wash.,
has been the guest of Mr. M. J. Spence,
2844 Twelfth Ave. S. this week. He is
enroute to his home after an extended
eastern trip.
Miss Zelma LaForce left on Thurs-
day evening over the Canadian Pacific
line enroute to Portland, Ore., where
she will visit relatives. " Part’ of her
vacation will be spent at Seaside
Ocean Beach, a delightful summer
resort,
CRESPO O OOOH EY
N. W. PHONE COLFAX 3596
MRS. ROBERT A. VAN HOOK
FASHIONABLE DRESSMAKING
‘AND LADIES’ TAILORING
PARTY GOWNS A SPECIALTY
3612 ELLIOTT AVENUE
MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.
PESTS SEE SeOOOE
THE J. & H. WET WASH LAUNDRY
‘The Greatest Achievement of Its Kind
in the United States.
One of the most wonderful and ex-
traordinary examples of what can be
done, where there is a determination
to succeed, was astoundingly brought
to the notice of THE APPEAL, this
week, by a visit to the “J. & H. WET
WASH LAUNDRY,” 8763-5557 Cedar
avenue, Minneapolis.
And, in the hope that what was seen
and learned by the visit, may furnish
an incentive for others ‘of our young
men, to dare and do, along some line
of endeavor, this article is published.
Something over five years ago, Mr.
Jasper Gibbs, Jr, then employed in
the Minneapolis postoffice, was asked
by a friend to look up a location for
& wet wash laundry. He did 0, and
found one, but his friend had then
decided to do something else that
caused him to abandon the idea of
starting a laundry. But Mr. Gibbs,
then less than 20 years of age, had
gotten the Idundry bee in his own
bonnet and decided that if the pros-
pects were as flattering as his friend
had pictured them, he saw no reason
why he could not go into the business
and succeed. So he and his brother,
Mr. Hiram ‘Gibbs, fourteen months
younger than himself, made a start
with six customers. They knew little,
or nothing, about the business but de:
termined to learn, and they have lost
no time. ‘They are both high school
graduates and had laid an educational
foundation which is absolutely neces-
sary now-a-days as a prerequisite in
almost all lines of business, Hence,
having this foundation, they built upon
it wisely and well. ‘They worked early
and late, very often the entire night.
‘They are quite modest and unassum:
ing young men and though very popu-
lar in soclety circles, they did not
allow social entities to interfere with
their business. ‘The result of the com-
bination of ‘sterling qualities being
brought to bear upon their business
venture, was a steady increase until
now, the boiler room of thelr new
establishment is larger than their en-
tire original laundry, and they now
have as many hundréds of customers
as they once had individuals, and
their new plant has a capacity of
fitteen hundred family washings per
Week, which they hope to have at no
very ‘distant day.
The laundry is now owned and
operated by the five Gibbs brothers,
viz: Jasper, Hiram, Morris, Mark and
Wendell; all working in the laundry,
but the ‘actual business management
is divided between Jasper and Hiram,
Besides the five brothers there are
five other employes.
‘The building, a picture of which 13
shown in this issue, has an area of
73 by 125 square feet, with a 16-foot
celling, making it ght and airy. Tt
is composed of vitrified brick and con-
crete and is strictly sanitary in every
respect. ‘There are 11 washers in
which 53 individual family washings
may be done at one time. ‘There are
two large centrifugal wringers from
which the clothes come almost dry
enough to trou. ‘They have 3 wagons
and 2 motor trucks and a splendid
sanitary barn with a capacity for 8
horses.
‘The Gibbs Brothers are quite exem-
plary in their habits and manners:
modest, courteous and affable,a typical
“band of brothers” all united in thelr
common welfare, and that of their
mother, Mrs. Ione E, Gibbs, to whom
they enthusiastically and unanimously
ascribe the credit for their phenomi-
nal success.
‘The laundry and equipment as it.
stands today—at a low estimate—rep-
resents an investment of $20,000.00
as the result of thelr fve years ot
labor and business acumen,
The plan is really the largest, most |
sanitary and up-to-date wet wash laun-
dry in Minnesota, if not in the United
States.
THE APPEAL is of the opinion that
this is the most remarkable achieve-
ment made by any family in the Unit-
ed States in a period of five years
and challenges successful contradiec-
tion,
a okra ‘btals ogi Batons wb
hope this: will inspire some of our
young men to emulate the splendid
example of the Gibbs Brothers.
Back to Old Home WwW M EVAN S _Phowe Codar 8081
339-339 1-2 Wabasha nearFourth St.
EE IIE
Suits Steamed and Pressed —25c. Pants Steamed and Pressed 1Se
‘Top Coats Steamed & Pressed 15c. Overcoats Steamed & Pressed 25¢
Mens Suits Dry Cleaned 1,00 | Ladies’ Suite Dry Cleaned 1.25
Hats Cleaned and Blocked 50c Panama Hats Cleaned & Block'd 50c
EXPERT SHOE REPAIRING WHILE YOU WAIT. REASONABLE RATES.
ne ee CE nz
Sudden Service We Buy and Sell Old Clothes We Call and Deliver
——————————
‘We aim to make every transaction so Satisfactory that the
chance purchaser will become a permanent patron. To accom-
plish this, We will depend upon—
SERVICE QUALITY PRICE
Careful, polite, atten- Only merchandise of The most of the best
tive, prompt and cour- standard strength and for the least money we
teous. purity. sive,
Money back if dissatisfied applies to each transaction.
F. M. PARKER & CO.
é DRUGGISTS,
THE REXALL STORE.
Fifth & Wabasha. St. Paul, Minn.
Northwestern Stamp Works.
Rubber and
wel” STAMPS
OF EVERY DESCRIPTION
110 EAST THIRD ST. ST. PAUL, MINN.
3753-3755-3757 Cedar Avenue
is a Te
1 s oe a
Be TU AMeeonece Hw FeO A Ss al ee ea
Ee ou a en Pe fe
Te cress eee oe
| . an |
a
ee ee
eerie Se
We maintain that we can do the family wash cheaper and better
than the housewife.
‘We make this claim because we have one of the largest, most mod-
ern and sanitary wet wash plants in the United States.
Our Price is 25 Pounds of Family Wash for 65c
(CLOTHES WEIGHED WHEN DRY)
OUR AUTO TRUGKS AND WAGONS DELIVER EVERYWHERE IN MINNEAPOLIS
SNELLING 1509 PHONES DREXEL 1269
SAINT PAUL
A man should have plenty of back-
‘bone for himself—and plenty of ham
‘bone for the rest of his family,
‘The Home Banquet Hall may be en-
gaged for private parties only. Sober
and gentlemanly conduct must be guar-
anteed. Clarence M. Tibbs.
But God commendeth His Love to-
ward us in that while we were yet
sinners Christ died tor us.—Romans
5:8.—Selected by E. W. Gilles. (71:16)
FOR RENT—Neatly furnished rooms
with every convenience. Walking dis.
tance. Apply to Mrs. L. C. Foreman,
308 W. Central. ‘Tel. Dale 7470.
(618-18)
‘The headquarters of the Republican
State Central Committeo will be es-
tablished at the new St. Francis hotel,
corner Seventh and Wabasha on or
about September 15.
FOR RENT—Nice, newly decorated
rooms, strictly modern, new. manage-
ment, $2.00, $2.50 and’ $3.00. Apply
at 249 ‘WW. Chestnut street. Phone
Cedar 288—(6-24-16)
FOR RENT — Nicely furnished
rooms with all modern conveniences
on reasonable terms. Men preferred.
Apply at 418 Rondo street. Phone
Summit 1028—(6-24-16)
It you wish to get a new or used
motor car be sure to see Fred Greene,
962 St. Anthony avenue, or 237 W:
Ninth street, Kissel Kar garage. He
can save you money.—(7-15.)
FOR SALE—A fine New Home sow.
ing machine as good as new, cost
$65.00 will sell for $20.00 cash. ‘Apply
at THE APPEAL office. Phone N. W.
Cedar 3649. ‘TriState 23776
The So-Lit club met at the home
of Miss Lucelia James, West Central
ayenue, Thursday evening. It was a
literary meeting, was .well attended
and a very pleasant occasion.
‘Tel. N. W. Cedar 940 _ ‘T.-S, 789
St. Paul
Steam Laundry
“The Sanitary Laundry”
‘Works: 289-291 Rice Street
ones: {48 Waban Se
B. G. Webster, Mgr. St. Paul
THE CUT PRICE FURNITURE STORE
BETWEEN
WEYAND’S sitet
21-23 E. Eighth St.
ORDER FOR CREDITORS TO PRE-
SENT CLAIMS, HTC.
STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF
Ramsey—ss, Probate ‘Court,
Innthe Satter, of the atale ot, Mary
dle, ‘alas Mary Poor Deceased
Letters of ‘administration on the Xo-
tate or" Mary ldlon ‘alias ptary” Pook,
Seceasea, late, of the County of Rawr
SeySand, State’ of ainuesstar belts
Sranted' to. Jessie: Johnsat
Et ds, Ordered, ‘That ‘six’ months. be
‘and the came fg hereby allowed frame
And titer the date of ehin Order, ih
‘whol all pergong haying slate. a” ae
Thands ‘against ‘the said deceases, ate
‘equired fo flo che same 1n the Probate
Court ot sald’ County: for’ ersminatton
Sind anlgwance, or be goeever barred:
Atte te Further Ordered What the frst
Monday in February, Toit, ar 16 Oclock
a. m., at a General ‘Term’ of said Pro-
Tate" court, to "be: meld” atthe “Court
Houngy tn the ‘Giey “ot ‘Bt, “Basle in
tald County, bo and the anime Nereby
ip aovolnted ‘sy “the tine ana piace
Whew and whore the anid Probate Gove
MID examine and “adjust. ‘said ‘claims
thd. demands
MANGE Further Ordered, That no-
uceron teh heating? ws elven to "a
‘greditors and persons interested in said
Shiate, “by” forthwith “pabilshing tne
Grader” onde ‘in egehy week fore tntas
‘Riscesslve weeks in tho’ Appeat a Weel
ewopaper “printed. nd” Pupllated “ts
pala’ Gaunts!
Dated at St. Paul this 26th day of
sug tole,
By the Court: w. BAZILLR,
Juage of Probate,
(Seal of Probate Court)
W, 2. FRANCIS, Attorney,
Maal’ am. Novi wanke BG. 1-29-16
‘Citation om Petition to Admit Will to
Probate.
STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY oF|
Ramsey—ss, In Probate Court.
In the Matter of Proving the Alleged
Last Will and ‘Testament of Mary G-
Peters, Decedent.
The State of Minnesota to AN Whom.
it May Concern:
Whereas, Benjamin N. Murrell of the
City ‘of St. Paul and State of Minne:
sgta has delivered to the Probate Court
of the County of Ramsey, an instruc
ment in writing purporting to be the
Last Will and ‘Testament of Mary G,
Peters, late of Ramsey County, Minne:
Sota, decedent, and filed therewith his
fetltion ‘to, said Probate ‘Court, pray:
ing that the said instrument may be
proved and admitted to probate’ and
that letters testamentary "be. granted
thereon to said Benjamin N, Murrell.
| Jt is Ordered, That said petition be
jheard and that all persons’ interested
in said matter be clted and required te
appear before this Court on “Monday,
the 4th day of August, 1916, at 16
e'elock a. m. or a3 soon ‘thereafter as
said matier can be heard, at the Pro:
bate Court Rooms, in the’ Court. House
In the City ‘of St, Paul, In sald County,
|and show ‘cause, if any they have, why
sald petition shoula not be granted anc
jsald Will admitted ¢o probate and tha
|this citation be served by the publica:
tion thereof in ‘the Appeal according
to law, and by mailing a copy of this
eltation at least 14 days before. said
day of hearing, to each of ‘the heirs,
Gevisees, legates of sald decedent
Whose names and addresses. are known
and appear from the files of this court
‘Withess the Judge of sald Court this
aist day of July, A. D. 1916.
Beal of Probate Court)
BW. BAZILLE,
Judge of Probate,
Attest:
F.-W. GOSEWICH,
‘Clerk of Probate.
W, T. PRANCIS, Attorney,
329 Am. Natl Bank Blig. 7-22-16
Pein eat aah er Rae ON n a ee ee Ia CER EARS 8s MPL! Sena gn gee ee
Le
are atill being purchased by shrewd buyers who are taking advantage of the wonderful values we
are offering during our MIDSUMMER CLEARANCE SALE. This is a sale of factory stock and
comprises a number of our discontinued patterns, very refrigerator offered for sale is the very
best quality made at our plant, but some of them do not conform
to the patterns and designs for 1916 models, —————— ))
Below you will find just a few of the many extraordinary [oer ia
size_Yalte8 offered, l ages Oe 4
ze leo Former Sale. aes MER e LI
No. Width, Depth. Height. Capacity. Price. Price. fll Feggeesia oa Rea
201 34% in 19% in, 88% in, 65Tbs. —-$25100 $14.00 aS Ny i
a4 aTAin, ay in = 43 in’ 75 1bs, on ge 30 [|| Bete Ae
in, | 16%in 42% in, 0 Ibs, 50 $14.85 fill Peet gn NOE A
7 2 in, 18 in. 46 in. 801bn, $30.00 $17.40 Fl Ce ea
%& 42 in 24%in B1%in. 1501s. $45.00 $52.30 aS = Asis
73 26%in 19%in 6044in. 100lbs. $35.00 §2065 Fh ane Nae
4°48 im 26 in 55 in, 1651bs $42.50 $28.70 ii ae Al Ween
5 M8 in ae in 66 in moths, sono foci JU Ee
° ° eS INA ess Sar eee
All Porcelain Enamel Lined Ce] je
(Not “white enamel,” “poreeloid’’ or any other imitation.) Onn ci
° °
White Enamel Refrigerator Company
1400 University Ave.—On Interurban Liae. Get Off at Hamline Ave.
246-50 Fourth Ave So,
J. E. STEWART, Manager
FINEST ESTABLISHMENT OF ITS
KIND IN THE UNITED STATES,
‘Twenty Elegant, Steam Heated, Eleo-
trle Lighted’ Rooms for Gentle-
men Only. Free Bath.
Rates Reasonable.
Lobby, Reading and Lounging Room,
Buffet and Grill_Room, Billlard
Room, Dining Room, Barber
“Shop and Bath, Private
Dining and Reception
Room for Ladies.
A LA CARTE MMALS AT ALL
HOURS. BEST SERVICR,
REGULAR DINNER
Dally, From 1 to 6 P.M. 28 to 88 Cts
‘Sunday, 35 to 50 Cents,
Speclal Terms for Private Parties,
Banquets, Eto.
MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA.
Phone Nic. 9769,
yy ’ |
2 ES) |
um
a
a
‘Main 9992 ‘8, 2078
PORTERS’ AND WAITERS’
HOTEL
FOR MEN ONLY
GLOVER SHULL, - Manager
Rates 50 centa per day
209 Hennepin MINNEAPOLIS
MAN EXTENSION OR EXTRA
We, NG ELEPHONE LOCATED IN ANY
UC a) PART OF THE HOUSE FOR
( | Ls a 50¢ PERWONTH
AN THE ORS (OWE
! [ERM TelePae
ys! MRT ec
Phone Hyland 6851. Sugden Service.
NORTH SIDE CAFE
AMERICAN AND CHINESE DISHES
TO ONDER AT ALL HOURS,
Special Dinner Sunday, 2 to 6 P. M.
723 Sixth Ave. N. MINNEAPOLIS
LADIES!
Do You Know. that it is CHEAPER to send
your family washing to the "Old Reliable“ the
Capitol Steam Laundry
than to pay a "wash lady“ big wages, furnish
meals, soap and fuel--and then worry all day.
We iron all the flat pieces, and starch all the
rough dry ones.
COURTEOUS DRIVERS. GOOD SERVICE
CAPITOL STEAM LAUNDRY
N. W. Gedar 4622 Tri-State 21939
It you know of some news that you
would like to see in THE APPEAL
send it to the office. Do it yourself,
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haps, if YOU don’t see that it gets
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| omce Phone cedar #760, Res. Phone Cedar a24s
FREDERICK D. McCRACKEN
Former soeretary to Congressman Stevens)
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INSURANCE. |f 7 Mie REAL ESTATE,
FIRE. ro eo SALES,
PLATE GLASS. |g ge RENTALS,
AUTOMOBILE. : MORTGAGES.
TORNADO, a LOANS.
SICK CARE
ACCIDENT = OF
LIFE. ®&.. = a PROPERTY.
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78,000 Acres of Excellent Farm Larid 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
BE, PAUL, MINNESOTA,
SOCIETY DIRECTORY
BT. PAUL
F ALAM
SPO Ty
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(me hapa -
MOST WORSHIPFUL GRAND LoDae
eve
MINNESOTA, A. FL AND A. Ne
HL J, SHELTON, Grand. Master,
600 Sixth St Duluth, Mine
@. 1. HOAGE, Grand Seoretary,
80 Charles St, St. Pach atin”
PIONEER LODGE NO. 1. AND A.
Me eels A Seat KoA 4,
and, Rome Biteaty ot Stay SOTEE® Agrore
Bensaman, PWS PED Bi
Seay, BS Rae! —
PERFECT ASHAR LODGE NO. 4 ¥.
gd An ate ‘Mocks stgong aN di,
Hveaday in each month ae Gatos ett
Gor, Aurora and Kent streets, at 8:36
Bet John “A Sayles, Wee, hee ee
Rane, secy.3d8' Hondo burect:
ee ae rare
ands A Mt ects weasea SA
Brod I etn at Gaon
gormer urgra and” ont Stree aly
Fosgn He. Sherwood. Beets ht
Bavios, Seow, NO Winds street:
PILGRIM COMMANDERY NO. #2,
ER Zam A eNO 2
ayn each” erty at Goleta Mee
Beg B'S Sw Rte se ah
Honds Street isaac
FEQUAN TEMPLE NO. 26, NOBLES
gf the Matic Shrine, Meats PRES
day Ip each month'st Union Waik Ee
net of Arora and Rent atgeetae ye $280
Biot, Og Howares We pete 5
one, Hee, 890" Chasis setae
pe
is BAe
OF, Mat oe NO. 2202, G. UL O. OF
OF) Megta second and fouGin iy inOF
day ip each, month at Garter ean eae
Bab gar see Oe 2" pe AEE
som. N, Gerd. Wesiey Keely, BB
S508 "anthony Avenel
EREDERICK DOUGLASS LODGE NO,
3008, G. U. 0. of O. mest fosoud NOs
fourth Monday tn ‘east months Gots
Hoe peta Gage ead Bent Bite at
EULYin p. S, He CEN, Ga Se
ST. PAUL, PATRIARCHY No. 114
Meets third ‘Monday tn cack NOt
Sirgla at ey Mare ae ant
BW et Agua Tone Lome
HOUSEHOLD oF RUTH No. 553, a.
PB; ©. of 0. meste the tha mesiags
fn each monti at Union Hei 5 monday
Men, haa peak gtr aate AE 880 Sas:
Sle Bi Lindsay: we RS ois wie:
brldge street
a
H F RUTH No. 376 a
peer o eRe RUE No, 31 9
Fueeday tp oagh month’ at tetne Bee
is So? Posed gtawe cua atts
ve. South. “Mre, Saregen at WERE
Miss Cora Napier, W. Re”
————_____
GOPHER LODGE No. 105, F. BP. 0,
Hof, the World.” Mecte second Wodeee:
A8y tp Sach’ month at Unter epee
net, Autora. and Kent, CoUen, Sall, cop
Hall, BR: Re ae Tonnsos’ eoje- Sh
Kent Sirest!
——————____
JOHN H. HAYES LODGE Noe. ~+p
Meets frst and thia wues-
a7 in once meee
Coane mall Bat 7
Yotalty Neon. ain oY
Holabts of Bythien Wee
Feasting nage poe
James thomas, @ ov sset
Henderson, ¥.'G: Tae are
St; 0. games, et
and 8. 321 st Albany same
GIDEMTY COURT OF CALANTHR
NOMEN. 8 A,B ACA ANE
meets first and ‘third Monday’ (o°e,4,
month at ecof Pe Hall, Sit canes
Bree ap Minneapolia, “Mrs, Minarve Pat
Barnett, W. Ci Miss Arlene M acet
R of D,, 25 w. asth at
SS
NAT TURNER LODGE No. 3, x. oF
Foareinmeapolis, “meets Moods ge OF
fourth “Thursdays “In” each ona the
Gabor, Temple Bide, second" Hodt
corner, Fourth street and Gepen OOF.
fag aout a Sep, mA Kolehta
ip Food standing aFe wolcce HE!
Bptaon, CG: Win, Neweane alee
821 Washington Ave. NY
a ee
CHURCHES
rae PAPTIS? CHURCH, cp.
ser tteet nd Soin Ge Sunday
E00 ps, Sua AE LG 12:30, Be
sole opis, Beams "ShOO) at AEA ‘and
gholt_rehtaraaly Waanesiay" Pee, aad
Funerals. and’ weddings. probe: ge
fended. " Bev. Bou Nn SieybtoypDty at:
He6, 088 Weat central aantel® ,pastor.
study at church. Tel. acheey Bae
MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH,
gomer Rico and Fuller streets, Soeoes
services: Preaching, 1 a.m, anda?
m5 Sunday School 12:45; “Deecosey
meeting 7: B. ¥. PU. 7:30'p ee eet
Ue cordially invited. Rev. aa nen ae
/Ponald, pastor, 661 W. Central Sve,
ST JAMES A.M. . CHURCH,
Puller and Jay” streste. mance COR.
Wee 2 a T'S 2 vedanta
Prayer meating. d:00 9. mi™ plveanen
Segre easter Thay Wee:
Besday” ana’ "ena oue® nga, $0:
Enrmonage a6 ‘ay atrost. “Raves,
Jones, Pastor,
8. PHILIPS EPISCOPAL aission
freee, Sunday anr™ila, And Mackubin
airect. Sunday serie: rar
on ot Holy Busharise 7-ay cone
Selebration Yor Holy Bucharst ‘rgeMEh
third Sundays, 11:00 a. me Matin’ tached
and fourth Blindays, iivto asein™ econ
school 12:30 'p. im." ‘Brotheritoa “uf a
Andrei, 6:30 Dm Vespers 9) % Bt
clase, 85", Wpeagndnrey oo pre
8:00 Ds ta. Pricey yam RON
00" p.m.” Saturdays Hore Re Payer
Hoo 2 mt geatiniays Loaltad, Rector,
#85 Thomas Bt
ESBYTERIAN CHURCH, Cor.
Barrington and Se ARON CHURCH, Cor.
services, breaching W00 RM eg
Ho Bae era A100, A eM
reek meting Welntgla” Faas
Bers Gio Scamp paste, Whe, A
Ferrington aye
OVER 0s Yeas’
EXPERIENCE
Shape are:
te
A contre
aurea tenant corciney
Sores Mio na
se aaa
Selec Ero Lent Se
i Ese heh :
301 Broadway, York
INN §.Co,2etemeen, New