The Appeal
Saturday, April 21, 1917
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
If you have ought that's fit to sell,
Use printer's ink, and use it wen.
American Surgeon's Fluid Avoids Hundreds of Amputations.
CALL BENEFITS WONDERFUL.
Many More Could Have Been Saved Had Value Been Felt Earlier—Young South American Surgeon First to Attract Attention of French Government to Carrel Treatment.
Paris. — The official lethargy which for so long has impeded the development of the disinfectant fluid invented by H. D. Dakin and perfected by Dr. Alexis Carrel, both of the Rockefeller institute of New York, is rapidly giving way to a realization of the tremendous benefits accruing from its use.
It remained for a young South American surgeon, Dr. Shutro, to attract the attention of the French government to
DR. ALEXIS CARREL.
The Carrel treatment. As a result of an appeal by American admirers of Dr. Carrel to M. Franklin-Bouillon, the latter persuaded the government, in the person of M. Painleve, to study at first hand the use of the Dakin fluid.
The correspondent was present when the minister of public instruction, who was the first member of the cabinet to take such a step, visited the Buffon hospital, close by the Pasteur institute, to see for himself the miracles worked by Dr. Shutro with the treatment developed by Dr. Carrel. Dr. Shutro is perhaps the ablest of Dr. Carrel's few disciples in France.
M. Painleve was astonished at the simplicity of the system, which is merely the washing of the wounds with bleaching lime diluted in water, with a percentage of soda added to neutralize the caustic effect of the lime. At the foot of each bedstead in the Buffon hospital is strapped a wooden post, to which a bottle containing the fluid, plink in color, is attached. From the bottle a thin rubber tube carries the solution to four small glass tubes, from which the wound is flushed every two hours. Thus the dressings are kept moist and the wound is freed from infection.
WOULD EGG HENS ON TO LAY
Food Eugenist Has Plan to Control Their Output.
Washington.—Out of the din and clamor for federal legislation to dea1 a solar plexus blow to the high cost of living came a unique and eugene suggestion from a southern representative. The legislator announced his intention of introducing a resolution for compulsory egg control for bens. He expressed belief that it might be easy to curb output, but was perplexed as to the practicability of speeding up the lay to any appreciable extent. He says, however, he believes his plan makes the matter of investigation pale into insignificance.
Pays For Fan Stolen Years Ago.
Greenville, S. C.—A woman who is seeking to "make peace with her Maker," as she expresses it, and who finds that something is hindering her has sent to a local dry goods company 25 cents to pay for a fan which, she says, she took from that company twenty-five years ago. The woman now lives in North Carolina. In the letter she stated that she stole the fan and that her conscience has hurt her.
Railroad Director at Sixteen.
Aurora, Ill.—The youngest railroad director in the world lives in Aurora. The distinguished youngster is Henry Herbert Evans, sixteen years old. He was elected one of the Fox and Illinois Union railroad board at the last annual meeting. His father is secretary and treasurer of the railroad. The railroad is twenty two miles in length.
Business Man Send Youths to Drive Care Around Black.
Philadelphia.—Requirements for office boys have automatically risen with the new ordinance regulating the parking of automobiles in central streets of this city. Advertisements for "Boy Wanted" now conclude with something like this:
"Must be experienced in driving motorcars or willing to learn." Here's the reason:
Suburbanites who drive their cars to their offices in the city in the morning cannot leave the autos parked in the street as they could formerly. In a section of Chestnut street where there are several big office buildings, for example, cars must not be left standing for more than half an hour at a time. So every half hour the business man sends his office boy to the street to drive his auto around the block. If his office boy isn't a chauffeur the business man goes himself. But this takes valuable time, and, added to the expense of starting up the car and moving it around the block sixteen times a day for six days a week, it costs money.
Hence the demand for office boys who are also chauffeurs.
SPORTSMEN PLAN TO WIPE OUT THE ENGLISH SPARROW
Will Ask Governor of Every State to Aid In Work.
New York.—The League of American Sportsmen, whose object is the preservation of wild life, is considering the question of inaugurating a nation wide campaign for the destruction of the English sparrow. Its officials say this bird has made such headway here that it is driving out the smaller song and insectivorous birds and that it has become a question of whether we will have only the English sparrow to represent our bird life or destroy it and regain some fifty species of useful and beautiful birds that used to inhabit farms and countryside all over the land.
The league intends to issue a proclamation declaring war on the English sparrow and setting aside a week, possibly in April or May of next year, to be devoted especially to waging it. The governor of every state will be asked to aid the work. Printed instructions as to the plan of the campaign will be sent to the mayors of all incorporated cities and villages, to the heads of the school systems in every county, to college presidents, to principals of preparatory schools, to the heads of the boy scouts in each state and to other organizations which might be expected to extend sympathy and aid.
Four principal methods of action will be employed: Tearing down the nests, trapping the birds, shooting them under police supervision and under licenses issued by the police authorities, and, in cities where water pressure is available, turning the hose on the birds at night after they have gone to roost.
WOMAN 100 YEARS OLD.
Mrs. Van Sickle Takes Active Part In Her Birthday Celebration.
Sussex, N. J.—Surrounded by her six children, twenty grandchildren and four great-grandchildren, to say nothing of a host of relatives, friends and neighbors, Mrs. Sarah Van Sickle of Wantage township, two miles from here, celebrated her one hundredth birthday. She took an active part in the celebration and urged the younger ones to dance and play games while she looked on and directed things.
Mrs. Van Sickle was born and has lived in this part of New Jersey all her life. She said that her health was good and that she felt no older than she did thirty years ago. She is still able to read without the aid of glasses and is a daily reader of the newspapers. The sewing machine still claims much of her time, but she is not able to thread the needle as dexterously as once.
BABEL OF TONGUES.
Alien Residents to Be Taught English at Night Classes.
Bayonne, N. J.—In an effort to Americanize this city Preston H. Smith, superintendent of schools here, will institute this fall and winter night classes for the instruction of its population in the English language. Of its 70,000 inhabitants Bayonne has 35,000 who speak foreign tongues.
If these can be induced to adopt the language of the republic Mr. Smith believes that it will be better for business, better for education and much better in case of strikes. As he pointed out, when one side in a labor dispute does its arguing in a speech incomprehensible to the other side there is not much chance of a satisfactory settlement.
Financier Some Farmer Too.
Winsted—Connecticut farmers must take off their hats to George B. Case of Wall street, New York, who has grown on his estate in Norfolk one of the best crops of corn ever raised in the state. Here is what the crop cost him: Cost of plowing three and a half acres, $25; cost of phosphate, $40; cost of planting, $5; cost of cultivation, $30; cost of lime, $12.50; total, $12.50. Estimated yield of corn, 600 bushels, worth $300.
Milwaukee Historical Society
THE
ST. PAUL AND MI
THE APPEAL
ASLEEP, NOT DEAD.
Printer Woks Up In Time to Dodge the
Coroner and Undertaker.
Mount Pleasant, N. Y. - Harry Daugherty, a printer, was dead to all intents and purposes the other evening. The members of the household where he lived so reported to an undertaker and the coroner. The coroner immediately notified the man's parents of his death and asked the relatives if they wanted an investigation made.
When the coroner and the undertaker, carrying a dead basket between them, opened the gate leading into the yard they met Dougherty, hale and hearty, going to work.
Exhausted from a long day's work, Daugherty had lain down on the bed for a nap when another member of the household, seeing him, became frightened and, thinking him dead, notified the authorities.
OPERATES ON RIGID JAWS.
Surgeon Uses a Cushion of Fat to Make Them Work.
Philadelphia. A patient whose jaws had been rigid for twenty years, who had never learned to talk and who had been obliged to obtain all his nourishment through a tube, was the subject of one of the many operations performed at the various clinics here as part of the activities of the clinical congress of surgeons of North America.
The joints of the patient's jaws had hardened after an attack of scarlet fever when he was only a year old. Dr. W. Wayne Babcock laid open the stiffened joints, scraped away a hard bony substance which was found covering them and inserted a cushion of fat taken from another part of the man's body.
AUTO AIDS GUNNERS
Makes Adirondacks Accessible For Week End Trips.
Utica, N. Y.—in most sections of the Adirondacks game is plentiful. More and more each year the automobile is being used by gunners, particularly those who live in the cities and towns near the forests.
Thousands of hunters are going into the woods for week end trips, and machines are also used for the purpose of taking the hunters from one good ground to another. This of course relates to small game, and it is surprising how many good places can be covered by this method of gunning.
The new law prohibits any gunning from an automobile, but the machine makes the innermost recesses of the forests accessible to the gunner who has a car.
FLY SAVES .BOY'S LIFE
Accidentally Discharged Bullet Only Hurt His Arm.
La Crose, Wis.—A飞 saved the life of Carl Kaeeper, thirteen years old, while he was hunting in the vicinity of Swift creek with William Stellick, fifteen years old.
Carl felt something irritating his forehead and raised his arm to brush the fly aside. At the same instant Stellick, who was only a few paces distant, accidentally discharged a rife he was carrying.
The bullet passed through the fleshy part of young Kaeeper's arm and, although most of its force was spent, struck the boy in the head.
Physicians said he probably would have been killed had not his arm been in the way of the bullet.
COYOTE ATTACKS AUTOIST.
After It Was Run Over 'It Wanted to Bite the Driver.
Reno, Nev.-That a coyote that will attack the front end of any automobile traveling thirty miles an hour, allow himself to be run over and then get up and attack the driver of the car who out of curiosity stopped to see what damage was done must be mad is the opinion of P. Y. Gillson, who enjoyed this experience on Lakeview hill, near Carson, the other night.
The coyote was game, according to Gillson, but was so badly cut up that it was easily driven off with rocks before it bit any one. Gillson was accompanied on the trip by County Commissioner Henrich.
COUNTRY SHORT OF PENNIES.
Mints Working Twenty-four Heures a
Day to Relieve the Conditions.
Washington. — What this country needs today is more pennies, says the treasury department. To that end the Philadelphia and San Francisco mints are working twenty-four hours a day and the Denver mint sixteen hours a day turning them out.
A lot of reasons are given for the shortage, the chief one being the increased use of the copper coins, with every dealer in everything adding a penny every now and then.
Baseball an Element in Will Fight.
New York.—When Ernest G. Woez, millionaire brewer, on his deathbed ceased to ask whether the Giants won or lost, Katherine Haas, employed in the household, knew a "great change" had come. she testified in the $2,000,000 will contest before Surrogate Cohalan, in New York.
Old Woman Starts Ranch.
Salina, Kan.-Mrs. Minerva Conway, seventy years old, has gone to New Mexico, where she will settle on a claim under the rights of a civil war veteran's widow. She takes 220 acres adjoining a claim her son settled on two years ago. She will make it a stock ranch.
---
APP
NNEAPOLIS, MINN., SATU
EXPLORING BRAZIL
Wife of Dr. Rice With Party on Trip to Amazon.
Dr. Rice Has Mapped About 100,000 Square Miles In Vicinity of Mightiest Stream In World—Yacht Protected With Rust Proof Screens to Ward Off Flying Pests.
New York.—The people of the great forest are again to see Dr. A. Hamilton Rice. With Mrs. Rice he left on the yacht Alberta for the river of the Amazons to complete his explorations in the northwestern part of the basin of the mightiest stream in all the world.
Mrs. Rice, who was formerly Mrs. George D. Wildener of Philadelphia, is herself interested in science and will help in the work of the expedition. She has been directing until recently the building and equipping of the great library at Harvard university which is a memorial to Mr. Wildener, who was lost on the steamship Titanic.
The yacht will stop first at Barbados and then go up the Amazon to Manaos, Brazil, 950 miles from the coast, and then into the Rio Negro to Santa Isa-
DR. ALEXANDER H. RICE.
bel, the base of the explorations. The region to which Dr. Rice and the scientists accompanying him are to give their attention is bounded on the north by the Guaviare river, on the west by the Andes, on the south by the Caqueta river and on the east by the Rio Negro. The territory included in the plan comprises parts of Brazil, Venezuela and Colombia.
Dr. Rice has mapped about 100,000 square miles of this region. He proposes to make a survey of the tributaries of the Rio Negro and to complete as nearly as he can the maps of enormous tracts yet practically unexplored.
So well equipped is this expedition that it is expected that it will accomplish more work in the six months it will be away than could be done in twice that period under ordinary conditions. The yacht Alberta is in herself a veritable floating citadel armed against trouble. One of the plagues of tropical South America comes from the insects. There are many flies and mosquitoes that inflict painful bites and cause disease. To ward off the flying pests Dr. Rice has had the Alberta equipped with rustproof screens of fine copper mesh, so that every deck and every port hole will be protected.
There are other insects to be guarded against, among them various kinds of ants. One of the worst of them is the leaf cutting ant, the saubra, which will eat up the ordinary tarletan mosquito net as though it were so much cobweb. In the account of one of his previous expeditions Dr. Rice tells how the ants devoured not only a mosquito net, but a pair of trousers and the pockets of his coat. The tabano or blood sucking fly is a menace to life in this part of the Amazon basin. The chigos burrow into the skin and cause intense suffering. With the copper mesh screens and with other appliances for warding off the insects, the party expects to reduce the discomfort from this source to the minimum.
SIX HOUR DAY IN SING SING
Warden Cuts Down Labor of the Convicts.
Ossining, N. Y.—The six hour day has arrived in Sing Sing. By order of Warden Derrick the prisoners quit work in the various shops at 3 o'clock instead of 4, as was the custom before this time. The men start work at 8 in the morning and in the middle of the day have an hour off for dinner.
With the shortening of the day Warden Derrick announced the men must work steadily.
An Egg Every Day.
Baltimore, Md.—Mitchell Lingo of Trinity, near Federalburg, says he has the champion egg layer in a two-year-old hen. The hen has laid in the same spot in the barn all year, and Lingo, backed by officials of that town, states that she laid 365 eggs last year.
Defective Page
AEROPLANES QUICKEST
SUBMARINE ANTIDOTE
Speed and Range of Vision Three Times That of Destroyer.
Washington.—Rear Admiral Peary, chairman of the National Aerial Coast Patrol Commission, when the break with Germany came emphasized the bearing of the critical international situation on the necessity for an adequate aeroplane coast patrol.
"If congress," he went on, "should order the immediate mobilization of all air men in the country and the training of 5,000 aviators, should enlist the various aerial organizations and interests of the country in registering applicants and should make mandatory the training of 2,500 aviators in six months and of the entire 5,000 in a year it would go far toward remedying a present defect in our defense which presents possibilities of the gravest danger.
"The aeroplane will be the quickest and cheapest antidote for the submarine. Its speed and range of vision are three times that of the fastest destroyers. It can detect and follow a submarine that is entirely invisible to any surface craft. It can destroy the submarine when it comes near the surface. One thousand hydroaeroplanes along our Atlantic coast will double the efficiency of our destroyers and mosquito fleet and increase the value of our coast protection from 200 to 300 per cent."
BEAN SHOOTER MINDS
MAKE RACE OF BORES
All Too Much Alike, Says Dr. Vincent, Rockefeller Foundation Head.
Chicago.—Dr. George Edgar Vincent, president of the University of Minnesota and president elect of the Rockefeller foundation, spoke on "Crowd Psychology" to 500 members of the Chicago Dental society at their fifty-third annual banquet. Some of his epigrams were:
"The truth is, we are so much alike that we bore each other almost to distraction."
"Some people have tubular minds, like bean shooters. You load them at one end and shoot the contents out of the other."
"Idiots and children are the only ones you cannot hypnotize."
"A society for the suppression of the obvious remark would soon fill a city block."
Dr. Vincent is one of the most rapid of after dinner orators. His humor found ready response from the members of the society and their wives and daughters. He said that his standards of ideals were abstractions from human personality.
"The hard headed person," he ended, "is one into whose brain you cannot drill an idea when he is not looking."
PONDER FIRST RECRUIT.
Postmistress Gets Reward of $5 For "Soldier of the Sea."
Atlanta, Ga.—Ye feminine is rapidly outstripping her masculine rivals in military affairs, as a postmistress, like Joan of Arc, leads in the lure of the fighting man. In the activities of the postmaster campaign for recruits for the United States marine corps the first person to receive the $5 reward for the securing of a recruit for the "soldiers of the sea" was a woman, Miss Mary Rudhill, handler of the mails in Forsyth, Ga., who enlisted Richard Lewis Powder of that place, according to First Sergeant Ernest H. Galway of the local marine corps recruiting station.
"There may be nothing in a name," mused Galway, "but he was the first, and that makes one ponder."
SAWS WOOD AT NINETY-TWO.
Having Finished Job, Says He Wants Pickerel While Ice Lasts.
New York.-Garrett Iseman, ninety-two years old, dung the last neatly cloven stick on a seven foot woodpile behind his house at Sparkill, Rockland county, and went up to the attic to overhaul his fishing tackle. Having finished sawing and splitting his winter's wood supply, he is going after some pickerel while the ice lasts.
"You won't find any knots slung under the house either," he told neighbors who complimented him on his vigor.
Iseman worked on the first train that ran over the Erie railroad and was an engineer on that line for forty years. He retired more than thirty years ago.
WEDS HIS STEPMOTHER
Queer Family Tangle Arises After the Marriage.
Gallipolis, O.-Willard Houser was married recently to Mrs. Stella Houser, his stepmother, who is the mother of three children by Houser's father. Houser's father died three months ago. The newlyweds reside at Chapman, Jackson county, near here. By Willard's marriage to his stepmother he becomes stepfather as well as half brother to his wife's children.
Chinese Coins on Women's Hats.
Sioux City, Ia.—War prosperity has caused milliners here to add a fifth season to the four now recognized by the trade. The new one has a style all its own, say dealers, the advance in price of Chinese coins from 8 cents to $1.50 having lent charm to them as decorations for women's hats.
CHINA FINDS IT HARD TO DISBAND ITS ARMY
Soldiers Love Their Job, and If Not Paid They Loot.
Peking.—China's toughest problem now is how to disband the army raised during the revolution. The government, hard pressed for money, will have to raise at least $30,000,000 to pay off the 800,000 men under arms, and unpaid soldiers are always a menace in China. Coolies regard military service as a very desirable occupation. Once enlisted it is difficult to persuade them to retire. They riot and become extremely troublesome if an attempt be made to disband them without liberal payment. The commanding officers are frequently as mercenary as the soldiers. When the government fails to give its soldiers what they regard as adequate pay the troops frequently become bandits and loot.
Each province has its own military governor and a distinct military organization, presumably under control of the Peking authorities, but actually in most cases. Consequently the Peking government is forced to deal very diplomatically with the military organizations in the provinces, particularly in the remote provinces.
HARVARD MAN FOILS
SUN WITH INVENTION
Presses a Button In Bed and the Window Shade Goes Down as if by Magic.
Cambridge, Mass. — Every morning at 7 o'clock Henry R. Guild of Boston, a Harvard senior, rolls over in bed. Seven o'clock is too early for a senior to get up, so Mr. Guild presses a button and the shade at the distant end of his chamber rolls down as if by magic.
No rising sun is going to make him leave his bed unseasonably. Some morning he may miss a four alarm fire by pressing the button, but he's willing to take the chance, he asserts.
Getting up at 7 a. m. is a high crime at Harvard, the same as admitting Yale has a 'good football team this year.
Henry Guild framed up a motor, attached to the curtain string and laid wires to his bedside. When the sun throws its rays into his bedroom every morning, weather permitting, he presses a button and the curtain fills faster than in a vaudeville theater.
Mr. Guild's next invention probably will be a trap door to throw tiresome professors into the cellar by means of a button that any student can press. Life's attendant inconveniences aren't going to bother him while electricity can do the work.
FIREMAN SAVES BABY
Climbed on Pilot of Locomotive, Lifted Infant From Track.
La Crosse, Wis.-Coon valley residents are talking of applying for a Carnegie medal for Fireman Peter Hensgen of the La Crosse and Southeastern. He was in a freight engine cab when he saw a child in the distance on the track.
It was down grade and the brakes were slow to grip. Hensgen climbed out along the footboard to the pilot, grasped a rod and leaned down.
He grabbed the sleeping child with his free hand and lifted her from the track. The child was the little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Jacobson. She had wandered away in the afternoon and lay down tired between the rails and went to sleep.
NEW DIMES IN CIRCULATION
$180,000 Worth of Coins Distributed by the Philadelphia Mint.
Philadelphia. — The new ten cent pieces which have been coined in large quantities at the Philadelphia mint were recently put into circulation for the first time, about $180,000 worth being distributed to banks and trust companies. They were introduced simultaneously in the western states from the Denver mint.
The obverse side of the new dime shows a head of Liberty in profile, while the reverse side shows a bundle of rods in the center and the protruding battleaxel, symbols of unity. Surrounding the central design is an olive wreath, denoting peace.
The new coins are expected to be in general circulation within a few days.
Child Escapes Coyote
Bend, Ore.—Attracted to the dooryard by an unusual noise being made by her flock of turkeys, Mrs. Thomas Merchant, living east of Bend, found a coyote running toward her little girl who was playing in the yard. The animal was frothing at the mouth and is believed to have been rabid. Mrs. Merchant had just time to snatch her daughter up and return to the house before the coyote reached the spot where the little girl was at play.
Ants Kill Bees.
Oakland, Cal.—Dr. J. H. Callen, who had two bives of bees, much alive, on his Fruitvale avenue property, is now occupied in cleaning out two bives of dead bees, victims of an unsuccessful Verdun defense against a horde of marauding ants. The evidence shows that the ants attacked in solid mass formation, carrying the bees' first, second and third line of trenches and then attacking the entrances to the bives.
$2.40 PER YEAR
Financier Sees Somme Battle From an Aeroplane.
BEHIND THE GERMAN LINES.
Henry P. Davison of J. P. Morgan & Co. Courses Leisurely Up and Down In Wide Circles Over Battlefield For an Hour, Watching Mighty Drama Directly Below.
New York.—To climb into a French armed aeroplane during moments of a terrific final assault on the Somme, then to course leisurely up and down and in wide circles over the battlefield for an hour watching between ones snow sites the mighty drama directly below and finally to fly more than three miles straight back over the Germans' country during the battle and get away with it—that would be a flying trip which most Americans would want to talk about when they got home.
But not so Henry P. Davison of J. P. Morgan & Co., who arrived "home from the wars" on the American liner Philadelphia, accompanied by Ma. Da-
W.
vison and daughter, Miss Alice. Mr. Davison had done all those things in the air while in France, but he did not seem to think much of the experience. Mr. Davison said that he ascended at Peronne. The French officer first had taken him to a great height—about a mile—and then had swung out over the great guns booming far below. The biplane in which they flew, Mr. Davison said, was arranged admirably for observation of the bombardments and infantry fighting below, and the great height at which he viewed the battle—it was on Sept. 27 last—enabled him to look down upon a tremendous sweep of battle ridden country at all times. He had made a pretty thorough tour of the trenches at Verdun also, he said in answer to further questions about experiences at the front. Then he had devoted six days solely to traveling by automobile and on foot along the whole line of trenches from Verdun to the British trenches on the Somme. On a nearby table as he spoke was a rusty looking German helmet and a rustler shell case which he had picked up on battlefields, and on the same table was the gray blue steel helmet of France which General Petain had given to him to wear in the trenches.
"No, it wasn't altogether idle curiosity that took me to the front." Mr. Davison said in reply to a final question. "As somebody has put it, there was an opportunity to see history in the making and I took it, not through curiosity, but because I wanted to learn something of military advancement at first hand."
POTATOES LIFT MORTGAGE
Jersey Farmer Raises 9,200 Barrels on
Eighty Acres.
Red Bank, N. J. — Henry Holmdel
raised 9,200 barrels of potatoes on
eighty acres this year. This was at
the rate of over 110 barrels and acre.
With the proceeds from the yield he
paid off a $20,000 mortgage still
remaining on his farm, which he
purchased three years ago for $57,000,
paying $7,500 down.
Holmdel's crops on 150 acres, where
he didn't plant potatoes, returned for
the year a profit which the farmer
calls "pure velvet."
Ring Upon a Radish.
Tiffin, O. — Four years ago Mrs. W.
H. Souger lost a heavy gold band ring
in her garden. The other day she pulled
up a radish and found the ring
firmly fastened about the root.
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—_—_—_—_—_—_————
THE APPEAL
AN AMERICAN NEWSPAPER
( IssvED WEEELY
4. Q ADAMS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER.
8T. PAUL OFFICE
No. 801-2 Court Bloek, 24 E. 4th st.
3. Qc ADAMS, Manager,”
MINNEAPOLIS OFFICE
No. 2812 Tenth Avenue South
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——=———___—
“Any prejudice whatever will
be insurmountable If those who
do not share In it themselves
truckle to It and flatter it and
accept It as a law of nature.”
—John Stuart Mill.
FUND TO AID AMERICANISM.
‘The following letter is self-explana-
tory.
St. Paul, Minn, March 30, 1917.
Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, National Asso:
ciation for the Advancement of Col-
ored people, New York City
«Dear Dr. DuBois: ‘The colored peo-
ple of the United States are passing
through one of the most dangerous pe-
riods of their existence.
Surrounded by foes without, some
ot whom come as wolves in sheep's
clothing, pretending to be friends, the
most subtle enemy is the foe within,
the creatures who are willing to com-
promise with the outer enemy and
barter away the rights of American
citizenship.
There is no need to write a long
statement of the many dangers which
beset the colored American, as the
conditions are well-known to every
thinking man,
In order to do in a humble way
what I can to change conditions I am
sending $5.00 to be the nucleus of a
fund which I trust the National Asso-
ciation for the Advancement of
Colored People will endeavor to raise
for the purpose of fighting any jim-
crow army legislation which may bob
up in the congress which convenes
April 2.
Bills for a segregated West Point
and other pernicious measures will no
doubt be introduced. Such infamous
legislation should be fought to a finish |
and the N. A. A. C. P. is the organ-
tatlon todo the work |
‘The money sent is to be used as di-
rected and for no other purpose what-
ever.
‘Yours for Americanism,
J. Q. ADAMS,
Raitor THE APPEAL.
THE REPLY. |
‘The National Association for the Ad-
vancement of Colored People, 70
Fifth Ave, New York City.
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Secretary of War Tells Rev. A. J. Carey of Chicago That He Will Build
‘No More Monuments Alorig the. Color Line.
SPECIAL TO THE APPEAL.
Washington, D. C., April 20—Have just left the Secretary of War.
Says there will’ be no Jim-crow West Polit. He will build no more monu-
ments along the color line. Will give colored soldiers every merited honor
and promotion. Colored officers for colored regiments. Interview eminently
satisfactry. .
(Signed) A. J. Carey.
Mr. J. Q. Adams, Editor THE AP-|West Side in Chicago, but you know
PEAL, St. Paul, Minn. it was not established by law. You
Dear Mr. Adams: Your contribution | Know further, that Rosenwald, Rabbi
lof five dollars “to defeat any jimcrow|Hirsch and~other Jews most promi-
army and navy legislation which may|nent in Chicago's business, banking,
bob up in Congress” is gratefully ac-|industrial and religious world, are not
knowledged and will be applied to the [residents of it. ‘They get as far away
salary of the legislative agent qwe|as they can. There is no doubt about
nave employed to watch for the intro-|their loyalty to the Jewry, but they
‘duction of such legislation in the pres-|neither advocate segregation nor re-
ent Congress: side “among their people.”
It goes without saying that the N.| 1 ask you to kindly think this matter
JA. A. C. P. will oppose any and ail|°Ver and do nothing which you may
fegislation which further restricts or |Fesret later.
abridges the civil rights of colored Very truly yours,
people in any respect, J. Q. ADAMS,
T hope your initiative may evn Editor THE APPEAL.
‘many others to contribute like| Jackson afd not reply to the courte-
amounts. Very truly yours, {US letter, but signed the “agreement”
(Signed), ROY NASH, | Which was intended to doom himself
Secretary, |and his people to the ghetto.
‘Those who desire to aid this work
should forward their contributions to
the fund, direct to the National Asso-
ciation for the Advancement, 70 Fifth
Avenue, New York City.
CHICAGO ROUTS SEGREGATION.
THE APPEAL has been greatly in
terested im the development of the
segregation spirit in Chieigo and dis
gusted with the knowledge that cer
tain colored men were aiding it,
For reasons best known to them
selves certain colored real estate deat
ers in Chicago attempted to commit
the entire colored population to the
Jim-crow plans of a section of the
Real Estate Board.
George H. Jackson, a colored real
estate dealer, was one of the colored
mombers of the committee to con:
sider the question. Learning that he
Was a segregationist at heart, the edt
tor of THE APPEAL addressed him
the following letter:
St. Paul, Minn., April 11, 1917.
pe George H. Jackson,
3416 Vernon Avenue,
Chicago, Mlinois,
My dear sir:
I was dumbfounded to read in the
Chicago Tribune that you have prac
tically indorsed segregation,
I trust that you have not beer
quoted correctly, for it is not to the ad
vancement of the colored people for a
colored man to give utterance to any
sentiment which may be construed in
any way to mean that even one col
ored person favors giving up the fun
damental rights of citizenship.
Your desire to live in a colored
neighborhood is a wish which may be
easily gtatified, but to say that the
colored people must be restricted by
law or even by public opinion, to a
ghetto, is quite another thing, and is
un-American and un-Christian,
Owing to your great wealth, what
you say will have great influence, 80
I hope for the future of your children
and your children’s children and for
the injury you may do others now and
in the time to come you will not
lightly cast aside inherent rights
which once lost may never be re-
gairted.
T have never heard of or read of a
Jew who publicly advocated the plac:
ing of any restriction upon his people.
There is a so-called ghetto on the
THE MAN WHO DARES
I honor the man who in the consci-
entious 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.
West Side in Chicago, but you know
it was not established by law. You
know further, that Rosenwald, Rabbi
Hirsch and~other Jews most promi-
nent in Chicago's business, banking,
industrial and religious world, are not
residents of it, ‘They get as far away
as they can. There is no doubt about
‘their loyalty to the Jewry, but they
neither advocate segregation nor re-
side “among their people.”
I ask you to kindly think this matter
over and do nothing which you may
regret. later.
Very truly yours,
J. @. ADAMS,
Editor THE APPEAL.
Jackson did not reply to the courte-
ous letter, but signed the “agreement”
which was intended to doom himself
jand his people to the ghetto.
The colored people of Chicago, to
their honor let it be said, refuse to
|allow Jackson to deliver them bound
hand and foot to the enemy. A num-
‘ber of prominent leaders were pres-
ent at the meeting of the Real Estate
Board. After the secretary read a few
lines of the “agreement,” enough to
jgive them an idea of ite drift, théy
were so disgusted that they refused to
listen further and withdrew in a body,
leaving Jackson alone in his shame.
‘The Chicago papers now say that
the Real Estate Board will drop it and
{the matter is a “closed incident” 0 far
‘as the Real Estate Board is concerned.
THIS IS RICH.
| Governor Bickett of North Carolina
has cabled Foreign Minister Milyou
Kov of Russia greetings to the new
Tepublie.
_ “The State of North Carolina,” the
governor wired, “sends warmest greet
ings to the greatest republic of the
old world. The high tides of human
thought and feeling all set in your dt
rection and all the stars of destiny
‘smile on you. The Russian people
have asserted their divine rights in
Johiing the brotherhood of man, and
may the Lord of Liberty keep them
steadfast.”
Think of it! Old “No'th Ce’liny,
home of the K. K. K,, the jimerow car
‘mob murder, segregation and damna
tion congratulating the new-born Rus
sia, talkinig about the brotherhood of
man and hoping that the “Lord of Lib
erty may keep them steadfast!”
It's enough to make one snicker and
snort,
MORAL GRANDEUR,
‘Would that the cursed colored cow-
ards who cringe and cower and grin
and give up their liberties could read
in Caesar's Commentaries on the Gaelic
war of the brave “Belgae,” and then
come down to modern times and pon-
der over the valor and courage of the
Belgian people of today, who, although
their land has been despoiled, many
of their women ravished, and many of
their men reduced to practical slavery,
have not been broken in spirit.
Cardinal Mercier, primate of Bel-
sium, in his Lenten pastoral letter,
although in danger of his life, did not
hesitate to pay a glowing tribute to
the courage and devotion of the Bel-
‘wlan people in their fight for liberty.
He aid not, as many of the colored
churchmen do, tell his people that “it
is the will of the Lord that we should
[be oppressed and a Jot of rot like
that, but lauded their loyalty’ to theli
‘country and praised their retention of
self-respect under oppression.
‘Under the heading, “The Moral
Grandeur of the Nation,” Cardinal
Mercier says ‘
“Brethren of our armies of Liege,
Haelen, Antwerp, the Yser and Ypres,
the Kameruns and East Africa, it is
you who are our foremost ‘purveyors
of energy,
“Our good wishes follow in the wake
of these valiant men; all form a guard
of honor, proud and faithful, for our
magnanimous sovereign, who from a
sandbank, which now. is all of his
kingdom, gives to Belgium, and to the
whole world a perfect example of en-
durance and of faith in the future.
“We have listened to the mighty
Voices of wives and mothers; through
their tears they have prayed God to
‘sustain their courage and fidelity to
the honor of their husbands and sons
carried off by force to the enemy's
factories. These gallant men have
been heard at the hour of departure
rallying their energy to instill courage
into their comrades, or by a supreme
effort to chant the national hymn. We
‘have seen some of them on their re-
tum, pale, haggard, human wrecks;
‘48 our tearful eyes sought theit! dim
eyes we bowed reverently before them,
for all ‘unconsciously they were re-
Vealing to us a new and ‘unexpected
‘aspect of national heroism. After this
can it be necessary to preach courage
to you?”
Of course money is a matter of lttle
moment to so grand a man as Cardinal
‘Mercier, but it is pleasing to note that
the Academy of Moral and Political
Sciences yesterday awarded to Car-
}dinal Mercier, primate of Belgium, its
grand prize of 15,000 francs ($3,000),
destined to recompense “the finest and
Eee acts of devotion of whatever
kind”
FAILURE TO FIGHT CosTLy.
‘That strong defender of true Ameri-
canism, the Cleveland Gazette, edited
‘by Hon. Harry C. Smith, a man of
whom all Americans may well be proud.
printed an editorial in a recent issue
which is so accurate’ an exposition of
the costly blunder the colored people
have made in failing to fight for their
rights that we reproduce it. We trust
that every reader will read it care-
fully and ponder over the truths ex-
pressed,
“It has not been so very many years
since the adoption of the war amend-
ments to the Constitution and the be-
ginning of a systematic effort on the
Part of our enemies to nullity the ef-
fect they were expected to have and
its subsequent good. Since these ef-
forts at restriction began, they have
grown and multiplied rapidly and
much of it has been due to our refusal
to fight the issues raised with all our
Tesources, before they became opera-
tive. In the South disfranchising
constitutions have come, separate or
“jim-crow” railroad and street cars,
“peanut” galleries in theaters for our
men and women, separate bars in
saloons, “jim-crow” city parks, swim-
‘ming pools, schools, “jim-crowism” in
dental offices, churches, Y. M. C. A's,
ete. Indeed, there is apparently a de-
sire for a segregation of the races in
Heaven, if some of them ever get
there. These things have all crept
upon us since emancipation and the
elevation to a citizenship supposed to
be equal to that of all other Ameri-
cans.’ We have lost ground, South
and North, because we have not
fought, and when we have resisted,
have lacked leadership, while other
supposed leaders have played into the
hands of our enemies. As a race, we
have been burlesqued, abused and hu-
millated by the thoughtless (some,
members of the race), as well as by
those hostile to’ our interests, simply
because there was lacking proper re-
sentment on our part and a determi-
nation to take a stand for our rights
with all the power at our command,
‘The world loves a MAN, a fighter!
on who thinks as nmuch of himself as
any other like creature on earth, To
such aggressive MEN, unjust restric-
tions will in the end yield and break
down, because they will ever refuse
to recognize them. In cases of lux-
uries of life’ such MEN will not ac-
cept. the limitations though they
greatly desire them and have the price
demanded. In the case of necessities,
they will fight restrictions and limit,
as far as is within their power, the
demand for them.
A MAN CAN BE FREE IN A FREE
COUNTRY ONLY WHEN HE RE-
TAINS THE RESPECT OF HIS FEL-
LOW CITIZENS TO THE EXTENT
HE RECEIVES THE SAME TREAT-
MENT FROM THEM THEY EXPECT
FROM HIM!” i
| ALL AMERICAN REGIMENTS.
A recent issue of the Chicago Eve
ning Post, one of the leading papers
of the country, contained the follow.
ing editorial:
All American Regiments.
Men who are or who have assume¢
to be spokesmen for the differen
original nationalities” which go to
make up our American life have
offered to raise regiments composed
entirely of volunteers of German-
Americans, Swedish-Americans, Irish:
Americans, or of some other Kind of
Americans to serve this country in
time of need.
This is all very well as showing a
proper spirit of willingness to detend
the country, but the good of the future
of the land demands that regiments. be
composed of men of all origins. What
the United States wants to get rid of
4s the Americanism which has some
other kind of an ism coupled with it.
It will make for real Americanism
if into all the regiments which, un-
happily, may have" to be faised there’
shall enter all the elements of Ameri-
can life. . There fs-no melting pot like
the army camp kettle; and there is
no democracy like that of the dog
tent. Soldiers in the fleld get to know
one another. Their aims are the same
and their life becomes the same. They
carry back home the democracy and
the comradeship which they learned to
understand and to love in the field.
We never will get rid of hyphen-
ated Americanism if we have hyphen-
ated regiments in the service. “Men
of English, Irish, German, Swedish,
Scotch or any other extraction should
serve together when the cause {s that
of the country which they have made
their own.
‘We have reprinted the entire article
because we believe that every word
of it is true. All good American citi:
zens should Join in the effort to break
down the color line which at present
confines colored soldiers to four seg-
Tegated regiments, which are a relic of
the Civil war,
Now that war is really here, colored
patriots are ready and anxious to be-
‘come defenders of their country. They
should be allowed to enlist anywhere
and at any time in any regiment
of tho United States army. ‘They have!
proved their loyalty and valor trom
Bunker Hill to Carrizal,
Cut out the color line in the army,
WE ARE ALL AMERICANS.
ml
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THE WAR NOT IN VAIN.
It the revolution in Russia means
that the Jews and other eubject races
will be given full citizenship and that
the pale will be abolished, then the
bloody European war has'not been in
vain,
‘The new government has given this
pledge and the Jewish people and the
Poles and othier peoples who have felt
the iron heel of Russian tyranny are
rejoicing.
‘Whether the action will be sus
tained by the Russian masses is an
open question, but the chances are
that it will be approved as the masses
of all the various races have been
comparatively friendly in their deal-
ings with each other when uninflu
enced by government coercion.
‘The great danger is that the pres.
ent government may be overthrown
by the return of the Romanoffs or the
reactionaries to power. ‘The pogroms
or massacres of the Jews were in.
variably arranged either by the gov-
‘ernment or the Greek church authori
ties.
Let us hope that there will never be
a reversion to government by terror
jem, .
SANDSTONE WHISKEY
ea Bottled in Bond *
bd Under the U.S. Government
ey Supervision
“i
$700
/¢ % Pe
ie. Quart
SIT
oe el —Sold Only By—
as
OHO JACOB ESCH
BAN carers wa_over ous Inte
Pee 47 cedar Gt Bt Paul, Minm
‘Send for Our Catalogue.
THIS IS A YERY HIGH GRADE OF WHISKEY
PLUTOCRATS DOING HARM,
Says the Saturday Evening Post:
“The modern plutocratic ideal is to
soar far away from ‘the common lot
and then voloplane gracefully back to
it. Why take the trouble to soar at
all? Why not distribute the millions
tor the common weal before they are
collected in the capacious individual
reservoir?”
Many of the men who have made
reat fortunes by questionable methods
in some cases, and in nearly every
case, by paying employes low wages.
Carnegie made a great fortune and
is now alding race prejudice by en-
dowing jimerow libraries in the South
and Rosenwald the Jewish muitimil-
Honaire is using some of his money to
aid the Christians in proving that their
religion is a fake by building jim crow
Y. M. C. A’s all over the country.
EL
—
! HAVE YOU
| PREPARED FOR IT?
Start today and make a small deposit each pay-
day. Call it vacation money. It will enable you
} to enjoy a better time than you have had in years.
| #1 WILL TART THE ACCOUNT |
$1 WILL START THE ACCOUNT
| Merchants Trust and Savings Bank
Affiliated with ,
Merchants National Bank
‘Merchants Bank Bidg, St. Paul, .
| Open Mondays Until 7:30 P, M.
a ee ee ee ee
OPPOSES JEWISH REGIMENT.
} Dr. E, G. Hirsch of Chicago, is one
of the most learned Hebrews in the
World and he is quicker to see the
dangers of segregation than some of
his co-religionists. In a recent inter
view he said:
“The idea of raising a Jewish regi
ment, which you say they plan to do
in New York, seems to me utterly ab.
surd,” declared Dr, Emil G. Hirsch
oday, with reference to a report that
Samuel Untermyer and other Jewish
financiers of New York had pledged
themselves to do everything within
their means to recruit and outfit a
Jewish regiment. |
“It Jews want to join the army, let
them do so. But why organize a spe-
cial Jewish regiment? You don’t hear
of any one's organizing a Catholic regi-
ment, do you? The idea is ridiculous,
and Jews who promote such things
only add to the impression that the
Jews are clannish.”
DREXEL 1269 . PHONES AUTOMATIC 61 809
PATRONIZE THE
3753-55-57 CEDAR AVE., MINNEAPOLIS
HIGH GRADE SPECIALISTS IN SANITARY
WET WASH AND DRY WASH FAMILY
LAUNDERING
OUR WORK OUR BEST ADVERTISEMENT. WE CALL & DELIVER
STOVES & FURNACES REPAIRED
If your heating stove, cooking range, gas stove or
furnace is not in good condition, we are the people
to fix them. We have had many years practical ox.
perience and will guarantee our work. Castings for
stoves of all makes carried in stock.
St. Paul Stove Repair Works
SaUSPROG ane 126 E. SIXTH ST.
aaron ee RP aes hate
ANTI-RACE PREJUDICE BILL WINS.
| ‘The Illinois State Senate has passed
the Jackson anti-race prejudice bill by
a vote of 33 to 7.
The bill, already passed by the
House, goes to the governor. Should
he sign it, it would prohibit the pro-
ayetion of “The Birth of a Nation” and
similar pictures. It is believed that it
‘would ptohibit “The Lives of the Mar-
tyre" and publications of that kind,
It prohibits the showing in books,
payers, pictures or stage of represen-
tations of Iynchings or hangings, and
prohibits the manufacture of anything
that would incite race riots or preju-
dice.
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.
s COURTEOUS DRIVERS. GOOD SERVICE
CAPITOL STEAM LAUNDRY
NN. W. Gedar 4622 Tri-State 21939
Campaign Against Lynching.
(From the Christian Recorder.)
There {s no better time than NOW
to begin a National Crusade Against
Lynching in the United States, For
the rapidity with which this national
crime has spread, the barbarity with
which {t 1s committed and the utter
disgraceful complacency with which it
is regarded, should ‘arouse the con-.
ST. PAUL
WEEK'S RECORD OF HAPPENINGS.
IN MINNESOTA'S CAPITOL.
The "Saintly City" and Saintly City
Folks—Neway Items of Social, Religious, Political and General Matters Among the People.
PHONE: N. W. CEDAR 5649
PHONE TRI-STATE 23776
SATURDAY, APRIL 21, 1917
The city parks will be open tomorrow row.
HAMM'S BOCK BEER IS RIPE.
ASK FOR IT.
Mr. Ed. Williams, 561 Rondo street,
is in the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. A. Rogers have moved
to 164 Milford street.
Mrs. C. Roper was hostess to the
Handicraft Art Club Thursday.
OFFICE CEDAR 8948 RES. DALE 1465
W. T. FRANCIS
LAWYER
SUITE 329
AMR. MH. BLDG. ST. PAUL
CORF. FIFTH AND CEDAR
McRicken entertained the Whist club on Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. John Smith have gone to housekeeping at 99 Lawson street. Mrs. John Lewis, the sweet singer has returned from her trip to Chicago
Mr. C. Salters is out of the hospital and is expected to go to work soon.
Mr. A. Jackson was a dinner guest at Mrs. W. R. Godette's home Wednesday.
Miss Gertrude McBryant left for Alaska last week, for an indefinite stay.
SPRING MILLERERY
All The Latest Chic Styles and Shapes for Ladies and Children
MATERIAL & WORKMANSHIP GUARANTEED
Hair Goods Hair Dressing
Nu Bone Corsets
WILSON'S
Tel. Dale 5252 483 University
Mr. George Moore, who has been sick, is again able to attend to his duties.
Minnesota was in the second class in the Christmas sale of Red Cross stamps.
Mr. S. W. Williams entertained at dinner Sunday, Mr. Paul Jones of Seattle, Wash.
Sergeant J. H. Thurston, 301. 4th street, is in charge of the recruiting office for colored volunteers.
Dr. V. D. Turner is making his calls in a handsome new car, the latest model seven-passenger Overland six. Sergeant J. H. Thurston, located at 30 East Fourth St., is in charge of the recruiting office for colored volunteers. 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.
Steve Hopkins, our well-known athlete, was severely injured last week by being thrown from his motorcycle.
Miss Clara Howard, 638 St. Anthony avenue, entertained the Maids and Matrons' club on Wednesday afternoon.
LADIES WISHING ANY OF MME,
C. J. WALKER'S HAIR PREPARATIONS, PLEASE CALL SUMMIT 212
—(8-26) 31-1-8
Mrs. Fannie Eversole, Seattle,
Wash., who has been the guest of Mr.
Dimes grow to Dollars
Tips and other small change can be safely stored away in one of our vest pocket, dime banks. Just deposit ten cents and get a bank to accumulate dimes and add to your savings.
STATE SAVINGS BANK
93 East Fourth Street.
1890 1917
and Mrs. C. E. Jones, left this week for Cincinnati.
The legislature adjourned sine die last Wednesday night, without having passed any measures derogatory to colored people.
Mrs. Harriet Williams, Sherburne avenue, left Tuesday_night for Griggsville, ill, on account of a serious illness of her brother.
There was a large and well pleased audience at Pilgrim Baptist church last Friday to see the motion picture, "Trooper of Troop K."
Mrs. Harriet Williams, 700 Sherburne avenue, visited with Mrs. J. H. Redd in Minneapolis and attended the Forum at Bethesda church.
W. J. Utlley has put an electric piano in his barber shop and pool room, 311 Wabasha street. You may have music to play pool by now.
For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord. -Romans 6:23. -Selected by E. W. Gilles. (12-23-16)
ANY ONE WISHING THE PORO TREATMENT FOR THE HAIR SHOULD CALL THE AGENT, MRS. G.W. BELL. PHONE MIDWAY 1657.
If you wish to have some paper-hanging or house decorating done artistically call Ablion W. Holden, 527 St. Anthony avenue. Tel. Dale 2055.
RENOVATING and repairing of clothes, shoe shining, etc., at J. H. Lawson's, corner Fourth and Jackson streets. Expert artists. Orders called for and delivered.
The So-Lit Club has issued invitations for its Spring dance and play. "Ma's New Boarder," at Union Hall, Thursday evening, April 26, for the benefit of Union Hall Association.
Mrs. Gladis James, three children and her mother arrived from Helena, Montana, Tuesday. Her mother's health had improved to the extent that she was able to accompany her home for a visit.
The governor has signed the bill passed by the legislature under which any man who has been a member of the fire insurance patrol for 22 years can now retire on a pension after reaching the age of 50 years.
Lots of folks thought the war had come to St. Paul when shortly after midnight on Wednesday the whistles began to scream and the bells to clang, but 'twas only a reminder that the patriotic day had arrived.
The place to have your shoe repairing done in the best possible way and at the lowest price is 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.
Mrs. T. H. Wellington, now residing at 323 Farrington avenue, will move into her own home, 378 Jay street, about the first of May and will continue her trained nursing, facial and body massaging for those who wish her services. Phone Dale 7557.
WANTED--A middle aged man who has had some experience in farm work, to work on a small, suburban farm near this city.
Apply at Steele's barber shop, No. 30 East 4th St., St. Paul.
"UTLEY'S PLACE" 311 Wabasha between Third and Fourth streets, has been reopened after undergoing a thorough overhauling, renovating, redecorating, etc. Old and new patrons are invited. Barber Shop, Pool Hall, Lunch Counter, Shoe Shining, Newspapers and Magazines.
Mr. W. J. Utley has made some very noticeable improvements in his barber shop and pool room, 311 Wabasha street. He has added a fine billiard table to the pool parlor, has decorated his shop in white enamel and put in three of Theo. A. Kock's latest improved barber chairs. He also has Mrs. Edna Chapman as manicurist.
Mrs. Cora Bell Grissom, the manager of the "All-Star Concerts" that have been given at St. James A. M. E. Church for the benefit of the electric light fund, reports that the receipts from her last concert enabled her to pay $30.60 on the account, leaving a balance of only $46.00, which she hopes to wipe out with her next effort, of which due notice will be given. She thanks all who helped.
"Wake Up Day" in St. Paul Thursday was some day. Fifteen thousand persons, great and small, made up the grand parade that was witnessed by 100,000 spectators along the route of the line of march. The enthusiasm was great and applause was generously bestowed on various groups including the one made up of colored citizens who with the rest gave evidence of the love of their country and their loyalty.
Mrs. S. T. Graves, 296 St. Albans, entertained the Twin City Whist Club Friday, April 13th, in honor of Miss Carter and Miss Bolden of Detroit, Mich., who are visiting Mrs. W. R. Donaldson of Minneapolis. Five tables were played. The first prize was won by Mrs. Ella Charleston, second prize was won by Mrs. L. Willis, and Mrs. Donovan captured the booby. After the game the hostess served a nice luncheon.
Weakened and nearly overcome by smoke after all attempts to arouse him from sleep had failed, Robert Howard was forced to leave John Taylor, 57 year-old section hand, in a burning shack at Inver Grove last Thursday night. Taylor was burned to death. The shack, sleeping quarters for six workmen, was fired by Taylor's pipe, it is believed. Howard discovered it and tried to save Taylor. Howard was slightly burned.
Madam L. Porter's WONDERFUL HAIR GROWER, is a wonderful preparation. A woman's hair is her glory, I Corinthians, xi-15. Why not you have that glory? Just see Madam L. A. Porter. No matter what has failed to make your hair look, I must use this wonderful grower, it will handrush and promote a full growth of hair also restore its strength, and make the hair silky and soft. No harsh hair will grow. Try it. Price 50 cents. Call Dale 9185, or write to 421 Jay street. Agents wanted.
Mrs. S. W. Williams, 318 N. Grotto street, entertained the Willing Workers Club of Memorial Baptist church at a luncheon last Tuesday evening. The main feature of the meeting was the forming of plans for the annual fair that will be held at the church. corner Rice and Fuller streets, next Thursday and Friday evenings, April 26th and 27th. There will be enjoyments of many kinds for all. Admission, only 5 cents. We cordially in-
vite you all to visit our fair. We are praying it will excel all others. Don't forget the dates, April 26th and 27th.
Frederick D. McCracken, our real estate and insurance operator, reports that the month of March past, was the banner month for him in business. His real estate saes for March aggregated $12,000 and include the sale of duplex and residence properties. Most of the real estate was owned by the Michigan Land Company and sold by Mr. McCracken to members of our race. Among those who purchased were Mr. and Mrs. Belton, duplex on Minnehaha near Dale; Mr. W. Smith, modern six-room house, St. Anthony and Victoria, and Mrs. S. Smith, duplex, 861 Marion street.
ANNOUNCEMENT.
John H. Hickman, Jr., attorney, hereby announces that on and after Monday, April 23, 1917, he will be engaged in the practice of law, associated with Attorney Hammond Turner. Offices, 321 American National Bank Bldg., corner Fifth and Cedar streets. Mr. Hickman will be pleased to consult and advise with any who desire his services.
Madam Wilson Millinery
THE APPEAL man while meandering about the city the other day, dropped into Madame Wilson's Millinery Store, 483 University avenue, and found one of the most attractive displays of ladies' and children's hats to be found in the city, and at prices just as attractive as the up-to-date millinery. Madame Wilson is an artist in her line and puts workmanship, quality and style in her creations for the most reasonable prices. She also has a splendid line of hair goods and excels as a hair dresser. Nu Bone coats fitted to any figure. And, ladies, if you doubt these statements as coming from a mere man, just call and see for yourselves. You don't have to invest your money unless you are pleased with what you find.
THE MODEL CAFE.
No. 136 East Third Street Has Again Changed Pro propriets.
The Model Cafe, 136 East Third street, which has been operated for some time by Mr. J. Smith quite successfully, has changed proprietors, Messrs. J. M. Fugate and W. M. Jones having purchased the cafe. They will continue to conduct the establishment in the first class manner in which it has been operated. Meals to order at all hours. Regular dinner from 11:30 a.m. m. to 2:30 p.m. 25 cents. Old and new patrons cordially invited.
"BEAUTY, YOUTH AND FOLLY."
The Next Attraction at the Star Theatre.
At the Star Theatre next week, will be played an entirely new version of "Beauty, Youth and Folly." The book and lyrics were written by the noted author, Billy K. Wells, and the ensemble numbers staged by Raymond B. Perez. The entire production was arranged under the personal direction of the writers who have spared no amount of money to make "Youth and Folly" one of the best burlesque shows on the road today. Amongst the various members of its large cast may be mentioned the following well-known artists: Bert Weston, Dan Gracey, Don Trent, Wainwright, Mary Margaret King, Sarah Hyatt, Dan Catherine, and Minnie Harrison, Alpine Trio, and John equally prominent, not forgetting a large and comely chorus of singing beauties.
Give Up Potatoes For Other Foods.
Potatoes are not now the "poor man's food," says R. W. Thatcher, chief of the division of agricultural biochemistry, University Farm. Potatoes contain, on the average, 78 per cent of the division's 22 per cent of actual food material. A pound of potatoes, therefore, contains only a little over 13 pounds of actual food substance. At the present retail price of potatoes, $3.20 a bushel, each pound of food which they contain costs over 24 cents. A pound of rice which contains 88 per cent of food and 12 per cent of water costs $8½ cents, so that one pound of food almost exactly like that in potatoes can be bought as rice for a little less than 10 cents. A ten-cent bread contains about 12 ounces of food and 8 ounces of water; hence a pound of food is much a much better balanced food than either rice or potatoes, can be bought for 12½ cents. Wheat flour furnishes a pound of food at a cost of 6 cents.
At present prices, potatoes are four times as costly as wheat flour, twice as expensive as baker's bread, and two and a half times as expensive as rice, the food which most closely resembles them in the character of food furnished. People can well afford to stop eating potatoes altogether until the price falls to less than half what it is at present.
AVOID
the
High Cost
Of Living
By Grow-
ing Your
Own
Vegetables
in
Your Own
Garden.
Get The Right Sorts Of
SeedS
FROM
HOLM & OLSON
20 W. 5th Street, St. Paul
While From Appearances Was in the Vigor of Manhood, He Was Stricken By the Grim Monster and Fell a Victim to His Deadly Shafts.
No death recently was more unexpected and none so shocked this community more forcibly than that of Mr. William Hopkins Johnson, who died at his home, 948 Union street, on Friday morning of last week, aged 39 years.
Mr. Johnson was the only son of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Johnson, 281 Randolph street, and was born in New Orleans.
He attended the public schools of that city and subsequently graduated from Southern University, also located there.
After leaving school he took up the torsional art which was one of the most lucrative professions of the Crescent City at that time and developed into a splendid artist.
He came to St. Paul about twenty years ago and followed several avocations more or less successfully.
He met, wooded and won handsome Mr. Hopkins, the daughter of the well known and highly esteemed Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Farr, and the result of their matrimonial alliance is three girls and a boy, who are left to mourn his early demise.
After his marriage, Mr. Johnson, who was both ambitious and efficient, took the study of civil engineering and drafting, graduated and followed the profession until his death. He was quite proficient as a draftsman and was employed in the State Drainage Department for twelve years. One of the largest and most complete maps ever exhibited in this city was made by the deceased. He was the designer of the beautiful charter of National Grand Lodge of the Independent Benevolent Progressive Order
WILLIAM HOPKINS JOHNSON. of Elks of the World and for several years was an officer of the Grand Lodge. He also served a term as Exalted Ruler of Gopher Lodge No. 105 of this city, in which he has always been a very faithful member, and was several times sent by the lodge as its delegate to represent it at the Grand Lodge.
He was one of the organizers of the Knights of Alpha and was Sir Knight Controller, or presiding officer, of Eureka Assembly No. 1 (now defunct).
The deceased was a man of excellent parts, both as to appearance and ability and was held high by all who knew him. He was frugal and industrious and was the owner of a handsome home in which he lived very happily with his family.
For some months recently he had some apparently minor physical troubles, which had probably undermined his constitution to such an extent that he was not able to successfully combat the insidious attack of pneumonia that sent him to his bed and from the effects of which he died one week later.
In funeral of the deceased was held at his late residence last Monday afternoon at 2:00 o'clock under the auspices of Gopher Lodge No. 105. I. B. P. O. E. W, the ritualistic exercises being conducted by Exalted Ruler, George W. Stewart.
The funeral service was read by Rev. A. H. Lealadt, rector of St. Philips Episcopal church. A solo, "Beneath the Cross of Jesus," a favorite of the deceased, was very sweetly sung by Miss Lucille Elliott, accompanied on the piano by Mayme Luckey. The floral tributes were very beautiful and quite numerous. Notably among them was the usual emblem of the Elks and those sent by Secretary of State, Julius A. Schmahl; present President of the State Drainage Department, E. V. Willard; former President of State Drainage Department, G. A. Pugh; County Treasurer, M. J. O'Malley; and Union Benevolent Association. The palbearers were: R. M. Johnson, G. W. Stewart, Geo. Shannon, D. E. Beasley, Harold Cage and Chas. Saunders. Schroeder, funeral director; interment at Oakland.
The deceased leaves to mourn his untimely departure: Father, mother, widow and four children, who desire to tender thanks to many friends who expressed sympathy or gave aid of any kind during the illness of the deceased and at his sad departure.
The Bellview
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Thomas Taylor, Prop.
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740 RONDO, COR. GROTTO
Telephone Orders
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Ballard FIRE AND
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THE FLOU
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Railroad Rates on Shipments to Chicago and W. Office and Warehouse, 20 East Fourth Street
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FOR THOSE
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Dr.H.I.WILLIAMS Announces his NEW method of PAINLESS DENTISTRY
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fled Vans and Motor Trucks
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, 20 East Fourth Street
1 Tri-State 25826
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Res.—N. W. Dale 4373, T. S. 84780
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Tel. Dale 6731
St.AnthonyBarberShop
AND
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234 WEST FOURTH ST. ST. PAUL
N. W. Cedar 8190 Res. Dale 8835
HAMMOND TURNER
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Suite 321
American Nat'l Bk. Bldg.
Fifth and Cedar Sts.
ST. PAUL
PAINLESS DENTISTRY
TEL. CEDAR 860
HOURS 7 TO 18 A.M.
1 TO 6 P.M.
SUNDOYS & EVENINGS
BY APPOINTMENT
DR. JOHN R. FRENCH
DENTIST
First Class, Guaranteed Work
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SUITE 409, COURT BLOCK
N. W. Cedar 7321 Tri-State 23176
Res. N. W. Midway 5057
"Wire Resler to Wire"
RESLER ELECTRIC CO.
WIRING AND FIXTURES
370 Minnesota ST. PAUL
LEE, E.TURPIN & CO.
PROPRIETORS
Cosmopolitan
Buffet and Grill
RAILROAD MENS HEADQUARTERS
40 EAST THIRD STREET
TEL. 0240 8138 ST. PAUL
Office Cedar 1678
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 $12.
AMERICAN TELEPHONE & TELEPHONE CO.
LONG
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TELEPHONE
BOLL SYSTEM
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$2.00
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ALBION W. HOLDEN
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527 ST. ANTHONY AVENUE
FRED TALBERT.
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Tel. Summit 1518 409 JAY ST.