The Appeal

Saturday, March 8, 1919

St. Paul, Minnesota

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In business, fortunes are not realized Unless your goods are amply advertised. BELL RULER IN REAL GRAUSTARK American General Is Only Constituted Authority in Luxemburg. Yankee Division Living Amid Kaleidoscope of International Spies, Revolutionists, Conspirators and Beautiful Princesses. By CAPT.-ROBERT J. CASEY, In the Chicago Journal. Gosselandge, Luxemburg.—General Bell is president of Graustark now. His division—to which we have finally become attached—is living amid a kaleidoscope of international spies, mysterious men with black beards, revolutionists, conspirators, counterconspirators and beautiful princesses. All day long the white highways are filled with dashing courtiers. All night long vigil committees lie awake trying to figure out what new plan of government to start off the next day with. It is certainly a strange situation for a poor, guillele lot of infantry and artillery. It isn't officially set down in the records that the general is the last word hereabouts, but no one—even the most ardent revolutionary leader—fails to admit that his is the only constituted authority. So long as he continues to sit in state at die kirche the plotters don't get much of a chance to raise a disturbance. The Storm Breaks. The storm broke in the teapot the day Battery F, 124th field artillery, arrived here after the long march from the Meuse. We were just turning across the River Alzette when a purple limousine all trimmed with gold and displaying a brace of silver braided admirals in the front seat came down the Luxembourg City highway and frightened the guildon's mule into hysteresis. The battery was called to attention and salutes were exchanged before it was realized that the beautiful Marie Adelade, grand duchsee of Luxemburg and royal princess by her own right, had just passed. Not knowing anything politics are could guess that something had gone wrong. That night, however, a bulletin was tacked to the door of the schoolhouse annex—now doing service as a battery kitchen—stating in French and German that Marie Adelade had abdicated in favor of her sister, Charlotte, and that if the populace would try to keep calm, the government would try to continue doing business at the old stand. The story of the revolt, when translated out of two or three mixed languages, is a Grimm's Fairy Tale sort of thing. The beautiful Adelade, it seems, had been something of a popular idle in Luxemburg prior to the war. There is a legend connected with her attitude toward the advancing Prussians that once was current and credited in all parts of the duchy of Luxembourg. The duchess was shocked when the Germans refused to respect the neutrality of her country, Luxemburg's army on paper consisted of 250 men and actually mustered some 70 sturdy troopers. The minister of war naturally figured that he didn't have much of a chance in opposing Germany, so the princess undertook moral saslon. She drove out to the border and lay down across the road and uttered the sentence famous for a time throughout the duchy: "You dare not pass." Duchess Was Mishformed. But, alas for the proper climax of the story, the beautiful Adelade had been misinformed. They did dare to pass. A couple of brawny hussars picked the princess up, deposited her alongside the road and executed a neat forward march. That night the invading generals dined at the princess' palace in Colmar-Verg. There is no way of determining what was the political persuasion of the populace during the four years that followed. Luxemburg seems to have been favored at the hands of the Hun—that is, so far as Hun hands ever favored anybody but the Hun. There was little of the conscription of foodstuffs and farming materials as practiced in Belgium and France. Luxemburg was present in the poles of the kaiser's empire might purchase the delicacies that war regulation had deprived them of at home. However gently the wily Hun may have treated Luxemburg on his first trip into France, pro-Germanism is an unpopular vice in this county just now. Nobody loves a loser. Hence the grand duchess, who had become engaged to a German noble during the war, suddenly found herself an object of suspicion. After a parley with some committees another throne was vacant. We don't know how long the Princess Charlotte remained in possession, but she stepped down, too, and the affairs of state passed into the hands of the revolutionists. What is a piece of a fair tale. It is called, truthfully enough, "Little Switzerland." and is peaceful, well kept, clean and simple. Fat fowl and fat bables play about the cobbled door yards. It's almost impossible to imagine such a country after having been condemned to the battered villages of the front for six months as we were. Famous English Specialist Expounds New Theory. Claims Color Schemes In Decorating Will Make People Healthier and Happier. London—Kemp Prosser, the famous English color specialist, has been conducting some interesting experiments which he hopes the British government will adopt for decorating houses during the reconstruction period. He maintains that the adoption of his color schemes will make the British both healthier and happier. Interviewed in his two "health rooms," one with walls of sunlight yellow and the ceiling sky blue, with blue net curtains at the windows, Mr. Prosser declared that his purpose is to bring outdoors inside. "I am doing away with my pictures," he said. "Instead I am installing these bowls of fruit, as you see, on pedestals against the background of the sunlight walls. These embroidered cushions on the chairs aid in carrying out my purpose with their flower designs." Then the color specialist led the way to the other room, in which the dominating color was apple-blossom pink. "This is the normal color," said Mr. Prosser, "because I have found that ninety-nine people out of a hundred are happiest in rooms of this shade." CAT JUMPS ON KING'S BACK Editors Told of Incident by Captain Merriam, Who Dined With Royalty. Chicago—A cat may not only look at a king but may even jump on his back and sink its claws into his shoulders—if he be the king of Italy. In proof Capt. Charles E. Merriam, formerly in charge of American propaganda in Italy, told Italian editors who tendered him a dinner recently the story of the cat that jumped on King Victor Emmuelel. The king was gracious enough to invite me to dine with him and his suite at his backroom near Paduac, Captain Merriam said, "I had a long conversation with him before concerning my work in Italy. He speaks excellent English and asked many questions. "Later, while we were dining, I was sitting at his right, a large Mattee cat—the royal cat—with a beautiful coat of fur, suddenly leaped up on my lap. I quietly nudged him off my knee. To my surprise he leaped up on the king's back. "The king uttered an exclamation, I seized the cat and pulled him off, although he nudged on for dear life. The king leaped heartily, I said: "Your modesty, this means either very good or very bad luck for our common cause." "It is very good luck for me," replied the king." "DIP" GETS $7,000 IN TUBE Morris Bleacher Lease Savings of Seven Years on Busway in New York New York.-While riding in the Fourth avenue subway on his way uptown in Manhattan or in an interborough train of the Seventh avenue line, to which he changed at Canal street, the pocket of Morris Bleender was picked of $7,000. Bleender came on a Sea Beach train from Brooklyn. He had in his trousers pocket four $1,000 bills and thirty $100 with which he intended to buy two motor trucks with which to start a business. He had saved the money for seven years. When he left the train he felt his pocket and discovered the money was gone. London—Rats can't live in high altitudes. Interesting as indicating a difficulty if not a danger in long distance flying which will have to be guarded against, is the story of an adventurous rat, told on their arrival at Karachi by Maj. G. Salmond and his party, who are flying from Carro to Australia by way of Persia and India. The rat, attracted by the food supplies, is believed to have boarded an airplane at Chabar, a previous stopping place, or earlier. At all events, it was heard gnawing after leaving Chabar, and at Karchchi the guard which protected the machine during the night heard the rat continuing its nibbling. The rat, however, could not be located or caught. After leaving Karachi its activities went on, and as it was thought it might be gnawing some important part of the machine, it was decided to see if cold would have any effect on its activities. The machine was accordingly taken to over 10,000 feet, and this was too much for a rat nurtured in the balmy warmth of the Persian gulf, and frozen or numbed with cold, it could apparently hold on no longer, and dropped off into space. THE APPEAL. ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS. MINN.. SATURDAY: 11:48 19 THIS TELLS HOW TO FIGURE INCOME TAX Squarely Up to Every Individual to Get Busy by March 15 or Suffer Penalty. "Don't wait until the final due date, March 15th, for paying your Income Tax and making your return. Avoid the last minute rush. Any person can figure out his liability today as well as he can next week, and if there is any point on which he needs advice he can mention it. This word of advice is from Edward J. Lynch, Collector of Internal Revenue, St. Paul, who is collecting the Income Tax in Minnesota. Collector Lynch is giving without charge every aid of his office and his enlarged field force to help the people get their payments and their returns in by March 15th. The Income Tax men will not pull your door-bell or your coat-tails, according to the Collector's announcement, is squirrely up to every individual to figure out his own case and to get busy if he comes within the scope of the new Revenue law. Did You Earn This Much? Every unmarried person who received income averaging $19.25 a week during 1918 and every married couple who jointly received income averaging $38.50 a week should secure at once from the nearest Deputy Collector or the nearest bank a blank Form 1040 A. That form contains the information he will need to enable him to figure his correct net income and any tax that he owes the Government. The law requires that every unmarried person who had a net income of $1,000 or over and every married person whose net income was $2,000 or over (including the income of husband or wife) the earnings of minor children, if any) makes a return on or before March 15th. And this requirement does not hinge on whether the person owes a tax. Taxable Income. Figuring the Tax. Before figuring the normal tax the dividends are deducted as credits from net income, together with the personal exemption. As in previous years, dividends of domestic corporations are exempt from normal tax when received by the stockholder. The normal tax rates for citizens and employees are as follows: On the first $4,000 of the income in excess of the credits the rate is 6 per cent; on any further taxable income the rate is 12 per cent. The surtax rates apply to net income of each individual in excess of $5,000. The personal exemption and the dividends are not deductible before computing surtax. In the case of returns by husband and wife, the net income of each is considered separately in computing any surtax that may be due. Form 1040 should be used for making returns of net income exceeded $5,000, and the instructions on that form will show how to figure the surtax. Business House Returns Employers and others who paid wages, salaries, rent, interest or similar determinable gains in an amount of $1,000 or over during 1918 to any person must file an information return with the Government. Blanks may be secured from the Collector. Every partnership must file a return showing its income and deductions and the name and address of each partner, with his share of the profits or losses during the past year. Personal service corporations will file similar information for 1918. **INCOME TAX PAYS FOR PUBLIC BENEFITS.** "Viewed in its largest and truest sense, the payment of taxes is payment for benefits received or expected. Only from a narrow and essentially selfish and shortsighted viewpoint can the individual propose to him- self the evasion of tax liability as a desirable course of action." —Daniel C. Roper, Commissioner of Internal Revenue. International Film Service Mrs. Hilda Wynne of the British Red Cross, probably the most medaled of all women war workers, who arrived recently in New York. Mrs. Wynne has seen service on the British, French, Belgian and Russian fronts and has been decorated with the Order of St. John of Jerusalem Order of Leopold, the Croix de Guerre Order, the silver and gold medals of the Order of George of Russia. The Italian silver medal of Valor, the Italian War Cross and the Red Cross Order of Merit. She is here representing the duke d'Aosta's committee to provide relief for wounded Italian soldiers. Pretty Senorita Gets Stories About Chief in American Newspapers. Juarez, Mexico—Mexico is as modern as she is ancient. Gen. Jesus Augustin Castro, the new commander in chief of the northeastern military zone, not only has a woman press agent but a pretty one, to see that the general's campaign against the Villa forces receives proper attention from the Mexican and American border newspapers. She is Senorita Teresa Rodriguez, daughter of a prominent Mexican politician of Mexico City, who came north soon after General Castro was relieved of active duties as subsecretary of war to conduct a campaign against the bandits of the north. Senorita Rodriguez does not speak a word of English, but she succeeded in having her photograph and a sketch of General Castro printed in all the American border papers as soon as arrived from Chihuahua City to host her publicity campaign for the Mexican commander. Yet Senorita Rodriguez said, in her most liquid Spanish, she did not wish to exert what the Americans called "petitcant influence" to get her stories printed. "Why should not the Mexicans adopt the best the Americans have originated?" she said at military headquarters to the Associated Press correspondent. "The much-abused press agent has served a very useful purpose in presenting to the public the good features of every worthy movement, every campaign conducted by military or political leaders, and even your President Wilson recognized this when he appointed a director general of publicity. General Castro does not order me to have his deeds and pictures published, although I have done many brave deeds and is a sterling man. What he instructed me to do, especially on the American side of the border, was to correct many false impressions subsidized Mexican papers have given the American public about Mexico and its internal conditions. In doing this I feel I am serving my country, and besides I enjoy the work." Largest Whistle. Pittsburgh—What is said to be the largest whistle in the world has been placed on one of the smokestacks of the Homestead Steel Works. The whistle, 200 feet above the ground, is five feet long and one foot in diameter and is connected with a three-inch steam pipe. It requires 150 pounds of steam to blow the whistle, which can be heard twelve miles. VENNESE MERRY DESPITE DEFEAT VENNESE MERRY DESPITE DEFEAT They Know They Were Beaten, Admit It, and Let It Go at That. SMART CAFES ARE CROWDED People Are Well Dressed, Cheerful, and Pay Enormous Prices for Chocolate and Cakes—Future Left to the Politicians. Vienna.—Perhaps the most striking characteristic of Vienna just now is its citizens' indifference. To enter the crowded, smart, beautifully decorated cafes and watch the lively, laughing public there is to ask: "Do these people realize that they have lost the war and an empire, and are reduced to being citizens of a poverty-striken state of under 8,000,000, with an enormous war debt, a bankrupt exchequer, and an ever-growing army of unemployed." If a foreigner visited this city's cafes and restaurants without being told that he was in a country that had been engaged in a disastrous war for over four years he would think its citizens themselves in peaceful prosperity. Laughter, careless talk about the opera, the ballet and a prominent actress' private life greet you from all sides. Not a word about war or politics. Officers in bright colored uniforms with much gold lace and with rows of decorations glittering on their turtles, are as lively as the civilians, while fashionable furs and lacey, costly, fashionable furs and lacey, nothing to those who enjoyed life here before the war. They are every whit as "chlc," as gray and up-to-date. The Smartest Cafe. Strange to relate, Vienna's smartest, dearest and most sought-after cafe was opened during the war. The Cafe Krantz is the last word in luxury and attractiveness. Money has been lavished on its decorations, and its music is supplied by the orchestra of the Volks opera, conducted by the popular violinist and composer, Willy Kleinberg. Here idlers sip chocolate made with water at 60 cents a small cup, eat small cakes of whitest flour at 70 cents each, flick, chat and listen to as good music as you can enjoy anywhere in the world. Each seat at one of the little round tables costs 12 cents on ordinary days, but on holidays, such as New Year's eve, you cannot get inside the place under 60 cents, while the best seats, which are in the gallery upstairs, overlooking the high hall, where the music is, and the main part of the cafe, cost $1. Every seat is taken, every occupant happy, careless and abashed merely in pleasure. You can be seen at Pucher's tea room, opened a year ago, with broccole bung walls and discreet corners. Here, a cracker costs 50 cents and a cupful of chocolate 80 cents, while a portion of imitation tea, without sugar or milk, can be had for 50 cents. The crowd here is as well dressed, as cheerful and as indifferent to the Versalles conference as that in the Cafe Krantz. The Atlantis, another magnificent cafe built during the war, is on the ground floor of a hotel, unopened only because Vienna cannot find furniture for it. At least it was till a couple of days ago, when the Italian military commission arrived here, General- Segre in command, and opened offices on the first floor. The Italian flag hangs from the balcony, over the heads of the cafe habitues, but nobody mentions it, or the war and its disasters. "Is This What We Fought For?" No, there were some battered officer in shubby uniform can be seen scowling on the thoughtless crowd with a look that says: "Is this what we fought for?" But such are few and far between. The majority of the military people take recent events like the civilians. A Viennese explained it to me: "They are so happy the war is over." It matters not what comes next: the problems of the future are left to professional politicians. The war is over, the cafes are attractive, the opera is open. These are the things which matter. No wonder you hear people say: "There is no fear of boishevism, for people are too careless to want it." This attitude is not the boastful one of the Germans, who tell the universe they are not beaten. The Austrian knows he is beaten and so. But so long with his pocketbook is stuffed with paper money he keeps smiling and goes to the restaurant and cafe of his choice to look at the pretty women and talk about the pallet. Nothing else is worth notice. Amsterdam.-Count Bentinck, host to William Hohenzollern, has a cook who is a dead ringer for the ex-kalser. He is frequently pointed out to strangers as the former German ruler, and has been a part with rare dignity and majesty of pose. Crewless Ship Proves to Be a Success. Army and Navy Experts Report That Wireless Control Is Possible. Washington.—Army and navy experts have reported the device of John Hays Hammond, Jr., for radio control of surface craft to be sent laden with explosives against enemy ships a success, and predict similar results with submerged craft showing above water only wireless antennae. Results of tests were made public in connection with the new fortifications appropriation bill, which carries $475,000 for construction of an experimental submerged boat. Secretary Baker wrote the house appropriations committee, which is considering the bill, that the joint army and navy board was "convinced of the practicability of the control" of the surface craft, and added that there had also been demonstrations of the possibility of the control of a craft completely submerged except for an air bridge. Before finally deciding on the purchase of the patents for $750,000 the board desires further experiment with the submerged craft. Construction of the submerged craft, which will be about 80 feet long by 7 feet in diameter, will take two years, according to Mr. Hammond, who told the committee he has spent ten years and $400,000 on his invention. "There is no question whatever as to the ability to control with great accuracy the torpedo or carrier," said a letter of MaJ. Gen. F. W. Coe, a member of the board, "so long as it is a surface vessel or has any antenna above the water, by direct radio waves, either from shore or from an airplane." With a shore station having a height of 80 feet above sea level radio control of the craft has been demonstrated to the board up to a distance of seven miles, but General Coe said that if controlled from an airplane there was no limit as to distance except the propelling power of the torpedo or the boat carried it or the airplane. MAJ. GEN. ARTHUR MURRAY Maj. Gen. Arthur Murray, retired, will be clerk of the military affairs committee of the next house, unless the war department objects. Representative Jullus Kahn, who will be chairman of the committee, has announced that he will have General Murray appointed to the position. FRENCH NAVY LOST 134 SHIPS Total of Tonnage, 110,000; Four Battleships and Four Armored Cruisers in List. Paris—A full list of French naval losses in the war includes four battleships, the Bouvet, Suffren, Gaulois and Danton; four armored cruisers, the Leon Gambetta, Amiral Charner, Cleber and Dupetit Touche; one fast cruiser, the Chateauenaut; fourteen destroyers, eight torpedo boats and fourteen submarines. One of the submarines, the Durt, was refroated by the enemy; Mine cruisers was subsequently recovered. Minelayer cruisers, five auxiliary cruisers, four gunboats, seventy-two submarine chasers, one sloop and seven small craft. The French loss totaled 110,000 tons, against 550,000 tons for England, 76,000 tons for Italy and 17,500 tons for the United States. 50,000 YANKS GO TO SCHOOL Hundreds of Former Instructors Are Chosen to Teach Soldiers of the A. E. F. in France. Paris—Fifty thousand soldiers of the American expeditionary forces have enrolled as students in the army post schools in France, conducted under the direction of the army educational commission. Hundreds of former college and academy professors and instructors drawn from the various branches of the A. E. F. have been sent to teach in these schools. The plan is to make these divisional in operation with the division until it is returned home and demobilized. If you hat ought that's it to sell, Use printer's ink, and use it won. $2.00 PER YEAR HUN NAVY CRAVEN JELLICOE SHOWS British Officer Surprised by Caution of Foe During First of War. GRAND FLEET IN DANGER Short of Cruisers, Destroyers and Had Defenseless Bases in Early Months of Conflict—Describes Big Bat London.—The dangers to which the British grand fleet, short of cruisers, destroyers and with defenseless bases, was exposed during the first two and one-half years of the war, owing to the German use of submarines, mines and torpedoes, is described in a book written by Admiral Viscount Jellicoe, commander of the fleet, covering the activities of 1914-16. Admiral Jellicoe points out that the German high seas fleet possessed 88 destroyers, compared with 42 for the grand fleet, that, owing to the submarine menace, the grand fleet, in the fall of 1914, moved from Lough Swilly and only returned to the North sea when the anchorage in Scapa Flow became reasonably safe. Neither in October, 1914, nor in May, 1916, Admiral Jellicoe says, did the British margin of superiority justify him in disregarding the enemy's torpedo fire. The situation gradually improved after 1916, especially as the light cruiser and destroyer forces with the grand fleet increased steadily after the fall of Fulham, unsuccessfully during the danger of successful torpedo attack, while the inclusion of class K submarines made it probable that the enemy would suffer more severely from submarine attack than the British. Tables Are Turned. Regarding 1918, Admiral Jellicoe says: "The position was assured and we could have afforded to take risks which in 1916 would have been unwise. If the German fleet had come out to battle, a terrible punishment awaited them." One-third of the admiral's book is devoted to the battle of Jutland. In summing up the lessons of the battle, Admiral Jellicoe dwells upon "the danger involved in leaving too much to chance in fleet action, because our fleet was the one and only factor vital to the existence of the empire, and, indeed, to the allied cause." "We had no reserve outside the battle fleet which could in any way replace the event of disaster even should the main superiority be eliminated," the admiral continues. Admiral Jellicoe says he knew that his ships were inadequately protected with armor compared to the German vessels of the battle cruiser type, while the German fleet in the battle of Jutland was far better off in the number of destroyers. In addition, the Germans possessed "a most efficient armor-piercing shell." Describes Big Battle. The admiral continues: "When the battle fleets approached there was a difference of reckoning between the British battle fleet and the battle cruiser squadrons, due to the cruisers having been engaged for several hours and having repeatedly altered their course. Hence, instead of the encirclement just ahead the Germans appeared on the starboard bow." Instant action was necessary, the admiral says, and he decided to deploy on the port wing division, thus compelling the Germans to turn off to starboard to avoid being crossed. This maneuver, which has been described as masterly by reviewers, threw the enemy into complete confusion. The German commander in chief realized that his only hope lay in escape, profiting by his superiority in torpedo craft, low visibility, the approach of darkness and the proximity of his bases and minefields. The enemy at this period fired hundreds of torpedoes, as German officers have since stated, Admiral Jellicoe have continued, and although the Germans were in the gravest peril, the position of the grand fleet itself was menaced by determined torpedo attacks in thick weather. But the British fleet by turning its battle line four times during the action, the admiral, got clear of the torpedoes, which were racing toward the British ships, and defeated the tactics upon which the Germans base their hopes. The relative strength of the two fleets early in the war, Admiral Jellicoe expresses surprise that the Germans were so cautious and says: "If this country in the future decided to rely for safety against raids or invasion on the fleet alone, it is essential that we possess a considerate and well-organized force in a possible enemy in all classes of vessels than we did in August, 1914." Change Village Name. San Francisco. — Germantown, a prosperous community in Glenn county, has gone the way of sauerkraut, hamburger and pretzels. Hereafter, the Southern Pacific announced, the name of the station will be Artols, which carries more of an allied flavor. Recently the Southern Pacific rechristened a small station on its lines in southern California. As Berlin was it an anathema. Now, as Pershing, it looks forward to civic greatness. re See ee ae : =e s SC MeN Rear SA Ge pe re eee ea ee aaa ke ene THE APPEAL JIMCROWED OWN Si P ..u i unil FILES STRONG DEMURRER ‘AN: AMRRIOAN WEMERAPERY, by 4 50.090 * ASA ee ee z AGAINST. MOTON’S METHONC TERMS, STRICTLY IN ADVANCE: SINGLE CORT, these menttisynees 0. fect cont, ni wenn 22. tae songcenen cela. muy, Segue "Mouey Order. Post Omes Money Order, Re- He Sear ae Ee isan arhonss ce Sercasteae aie seiarantrncnct, seman isa crn wane amt ctor Pa Hote ie Gierabr re ce Eeateia deine force rng et ee ee eee de aes a en EE SUSR Te eh ater ahaa ve ae abrecara on tine catia nsorisu," There are fourteen agnteSnes jn.gn inch, and about seven words in an geht eat os ma ears tect Ee vamer ae aioe PLease eee eee nates ees gater eerie eng ee oes Words to the line, “Al heehvilaee count sega te uct oe zh it thy eT dienes dams niat whoa time ts out Sel nei bare spacer vferibere ar lontor swlen, fa cave you. By powal card at tho piraton ot Ave dayt from that dato, and wo will cheertully for Supa s chsren, conaantates pate stoners mb meee ree tn ah a iy See eee ee Sot later shan Wedscndnya and bear tha a eee Eee SSS acre sroteae it setae epee seer cara sate eri sgh gebe. Wie Hor wens Sample copies free. secgey ers ee ore eigen aes ‘written, post omce, county and state.” Bust Sinus sha SSE nihe otra atoed rom isha é , Soeeeerorererreserreseseos ° ° © “Any prejudice whatever will @ © be insurmountable If those who © do not share In It themselves @ @ truckle to It and flatter It and @ © accept tas a law of nature.” @ © John Stuart Mill. ° * ° CObeeeeeeteeEr es ereeeoeeee “SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1919. JEWS OPPOSE A SEGREGATED NATION, Short-sighted colored men who aré talking about “negro republic” in Africa, and forgetting to agitate for reform in the treatment of 12,000,000 colored citizens of the United States, ought to know that prominent non. Zionist Jews from all parts of the United States have sent with Presi dent Wilson to the peace conference their objectfons to the Zionist demand for a Jewish state in Palestine, ‘The petition was handed to the President by Congressman Kahn on February 5. There were 988 names on the petition representing the rich: est and most prominent Hebrews in the country. _ The objections to the establishment of a “Jewish Homeland in Palestine” are set forth under four specific head. ings, the chief one of which {s that “the Jews are dedicated heart and soul to the countries in which they well under free conditions.” “AN Jews,” the petition states, “re- pudiate every suspicion of a double allegiance, but to our minds it is nee- essarily implied in and cannot by any logic be eliminated from the estab- lishment of a sovereign state for the Jews.” ‘The petition also statés that “by the large part taken by them in the great war, the Jews have once and for all shattered the base aspersions of the anti-Semites, who charged them with being aliens in every land, incapable of true patriotism, and prompted only by sinister and self-seeking motives.” It says that those who would seek the establishment of a Jewish sover- eign state and yet “insist on their patriotic attachment to the countries of which they are citizens, are selt- deceived in their professions of Zion- ism, and under a spell of emotional romanticism or of a religious senti- ment fostered through centuries of gloom.” It the Jews representing to a great extent the leadership in commerce and industry and the money power of the World are opposed to a “jimcrow” state, why should not colored men pro- test against segregation in every form? Say Chicago Colored Officers After Figiting For Freedom In France, SEGREGATED ON THE OLYMPIA BY “SOUTHERN COMMANDERS” ‘AND GOLORS LOST, THEY GHARGE. sybinie A. Paes New York, Feb. 24—Colored offi- cers of the 365th Infantry, Chicago's colored draft regiment, who returned from France today, charged they had been “Jim Crowed” on the transport Olympic and that a brigadier general and colonel, ranking officers aboard the ship, had refused to rescind an order segregating them from the white officers. ‘Thefr charges, made in writing and presented to newspaper men by a colored Y. M. C. A. secretary, acting on behalf of the officers, wore sub- stantiated by colored officers of the 350th Field Artillery, the 367th In- fantry and the 317th’ Sanitary Train, the other colored unts on the trans: port. Officers Refused Justice. ‘They said “Brigadier General Charles Gearhardt, commanding all troops on the Olympic, and Colonel George H. McMaster of the 365th Infantry, were “southerners of the old school,” with all the old traditions, and refused to see justice done the colored officers.” British naval officers commanding the Olympic told a delegation of the Brotesting colored oficers the segre gation order had been issued to them by thelr white commander. ‘Twelve colored officers of the 365th and the other organizations gathered in the cabin of the regimental chap- lain while the Y. M. C. A. secretary gave a copy of the charges to report ers, The “¥" man said he was acting for the officers who feared court mar. tial proceedings ff their names were used. They substantiated his state ment, BURLESON'S SERVICE. Philadelphia is only a two hours’ run by train from New York, and there is a train every hour, but it took the Burlesonized postal service from a ‘Thursday afternoon to Saturday after. noon to transport an important pack age of medicine that distance, and de liver it. To expedite matters, the tele graph, the telephone and special de livery services were called into action, ‘but the medicine reached its destina tion an hour after the patient had died. What would you have to say if the patient had been a member of your family? Remembering the language in which President Wilson induced his demo. cratic congress to reverse itself on the subject of Panama canal tolls, against the interests of the United States, it will not be surprising if he tells the country that the proposed constitution of the League of Nations must be indorsed “in ungrudging measure” or he will not know how to deal with other vital international problems. “REBUILDING THE WORLD.” “Rebuilding the world,” is the in- scription surrounding the cross on the shfeld of, the “Missionary Centenary of the Methodist Episcopal Church,” which is working up a scheme to get Southern colored people to plant cot- ton in “God's Acreage” and contribute the money to the missionary fund of $120,000,000 which it is planned to raise. THE APPEAL does not believe that the colored people should give ono penny to aid the Methodist Episcopal Church until it reverses its present jImerow policy. ‘The Methodist Episcopal Church split into two branches over the ques. tion of slavery, but now the Northern and Southern branches are to come together again at the contenary. The weak-kneed Northern men have given in to the aggressive Southerners and have agreed to sacrifice their colored members who have been asked to form a jim crow church. So far the colored members have refused to get out, but they may perhaps be kicked out. ‘The Methodist Episcopal Church has given up all ideas of the “Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood of Man,” and at the centenary it is very likely that the brethren will recount the Wonderful thing the church has done for “the negro” and all will join in singing “Onward, Christiai Soldier.” QUIZ ON OFFICERS’ “JIM CROW.” /_ The colored officers of the 366th in- fantry regiment, the majority of whom are national army men from Tlinois, are very indignant because they were “HUMAN NATURE’S-FOULEST BLOT.” My ear is pained My soul is sick with every day’s report Of wrong and outrage, with which earth is filled. There is no flesh in man’s obdurate heart. It does not feel for man: the natural bond Of brotherhood is severed as the flax . That falls asunder at the touch of fire. He finds his fellow guilty of a skin Not colored like his own: and having power To enforce the wrong, for such a worthy cause Dooms and devotes him as his lawful prey. * * * * * * ‘Thus man devotes his brother, and destroys: *Tis human nature’s broadest foulest blot. : —Cowper. SAME OLD STUFF. Their specific charges were: ‘That colored officers of the 365th Infantry, 317 Sanitary Train, 367th Infantry and 350th F. A. were grouped together, irrespective of rank, in a separate dining room on board the Olympic, while white lieutenants, cap- tains and fleld officers of the same or. ganization, with nurses of enlisted men’s rank, Y. M. C. A. secretaries and field clerks were seated in. the main dining room with passengers. ‘That the demand of colored officers for fair play in letters to Commander General Charles Gearhardt resulted in his dodging the issue by saying the colored officers got the same service as was given in the main dining room ‘That fecling among the officers ‘aggravated by the fact that the regi mental flag and colors of the s6sth Infantry were lost. The colored oft cers say this is the result of neglt gence and lack of regard for thelr flag Colored Captain in Tears. With tears rolling down his cheeks colored captain said if the regiment paraded in Chicago it would march without its colors, is “These colors, which were ald for by the pennies ‘of little colored chil dren in Chicago and formally present ed to the regiment at the Coliseum were taken away from us after hostil itfes ended to be salvaged,” he sald “Every colored officer and enlisted man in this regiment—and many o! them have been cited for bravery— burns with indignation because of this added insult.” Scores of enlisted men verified th ‘statement made by the captain. ‘segregated from the whites during the journey from Brest to New York on the White Star steamer Olympic. One Chicago colored officer, a grad. uate of two universities, who was a cabin passenger aboard the Olympic, said his fellow offcers were as happy as larks until they leaned, atte Doarding the vessel that they were to bo separated from the white officer {im the dining saloon. He said: “We ate in the side dining-room, first class, while the others ate in the main dining-room. Wo sent a letter to Brig. Gen, Charles Erhardt request ing an investigation and an explana tion. He answered that there was nc attempt to segrogate us, but that we were fed in different sections because ot the large number aboard. “There was no segregation on the battlefields of Burdpe. We all fought togetier Ae -Anterieans through’ and through, all intent on bringing victory to the American arms and peace to the entire world.” Every colored offer and man aboard the Olymple declared today that just as soon as they reached their homes they intended to institute an Investigation to determine who was re sponsible for the slight toward the colored officers aboard the Olympic. Siii, BRYAN Béla Ub, According to William Jennings Bry- an, federal control of the railroads doesn't work because there are still some railroad men connected with it. We suppose that the theater will at. tain its highest state of efficiency just as soon as all the actors are removed and that the churches will reach the pinnacle of success in removing evil from the world when the preachers have all been taken away. Better stick to grape juice and woman sut- frage, William! ‘JOBS IN U. 8. SERVICE OPEN. Permanent employment in the gov- ernment service and immediate reln. statement in the federal civil service of men who served in the army and navy is announced in a bulletin issued by the federal civil service commis. jsion at Washington. In expectation of the mustering out of thousands of for- ‘mer government employes trom the military and naval service who will be seeking reinstatement in the govern- ment service the federal civil service commission obtained an executive or- der by the president providing for the reinstatement at any timo within five years of discharge of any person leay- ing the classified civil service to en- Bage in the military or naval service ot the country. ‘Under the president's ruling it will not be necessary for the applicant to be. reinstated in his former position, but anywhere in the olvil service, pro- vided that at the time of reinstate. ment he has the required fitness to. “Fair Play Denied.” AN ABSOLUTE MONARCHY? No, An Absolute Democracy! But Wilson Reigns! ‘#rom the Cincinnati Union.) ‘There are more ways of killing a dog than hanging him.” Our Demo- cratic administration, so anxious to ‘make the world safe for democracy, ‘hae shown a sublime disregard for the Tights and safety of colored American citizens at home. It now seems to feel that, by refusing passports to representatives of thoge who complain of intolerable conditions here, that Europé will not know of the foul canker that gnawa the very vitals of our government! 'Tis another case of the ostrich sticking it head in the ‘sand and feeling that its body is hid. Europe knows that there is a skel- eton in Amerita’s closet and that that skeleton is the black citizen of the U. 8. occupant of the frontline trenches during: times of war; occu- perform the duties’ of the ‘position to which reinstatement is sought. ‘A long list of occupatianal opportu: nities for employment in federal pub- Ue works is contained in the bulletin. Application sbbuld be filed directly with the labor board at all govern ment plants. . WISE SPENDING. Are you # wise spender? Wise spending is regarded as a highly im portant preliminary to thrift by the U.S. Treasury. As part of its cam paign for promoting popular savings through Thrift and War Savings Stamps during 1919, it has iesued through {ts Savings Division the fol lowing definition of wise spending, which merits:the thoughtful attention of every family and every individual who would get ahead in life: ‘Wise spending implies the balan ing of all needs and of all means o! meeting these needs and, after bal ancing needs against means, spending in such away as to meet the mos! urgent needs, even if lesser ones have to be left unsatisfied; in essence i means a sort of budget-making. Wher a family, city or state makes a budget what it does essentially is to take ‘comprehensive view of both needs anc income. It is important that not all the income be spent on the first need: that may occur lest other more urgen| needs appear and no funds be left t meet them; that is, thought must be taken so that available income can be applied intelligently and wisely tc cover most important needs and -t satisfy them somewhat in proportior to their relative importance. ‘Perhaps the most important ané dificult problem in connection with wise spending (or saving) is to real ize the relative importance of future ‘as compared with present needs. "The temptation gf all of us is to satisty present needs at the neglect of future needs. It is very foolish to neglect the urgent necessities of today for the petty wants of the morrow, but few need very much persuasion to induc¢ them to take care of the present Where most of us are foolish or un. wise is in satisfying petty wants of the present rather than saving in or der that urgent needs of the future PREREMEEIER Ng GEORGE WASHINGTON THRIFTO GRAMS, ‘The 187th anniversary of George Washington's birthday was cele- brated Feb. 22, Washington, the sue cessful builder of a nation, gave voice to.rules for personal and national suc cess which are as applicable in this 1919 year of necessary thrift as in his @ay. Here are some of his words on the use of money and resources that might have been written for the pres: ent situation in America: T cannot enjoin too strongly upon you for a due observance vf economy and frugality. There is no proverb in the whole catalogue of them more true than a Penny saved is a penny got. Keep an account book and enter therein every farthing of your receipts and expenditures. Nothing but harmony, honesty, in- dustry, and frugality are necessary to make us a great and happy nation. ‘These statements by George Wash- ington as to wise personal economy might be paraphrased today in the in- junction of the National Thrift Cam- paign—spend wisely, save intelligent: ly, avoid waste—and invest safely; buy War Savings Stamps and Thrift Stamps. =— ‘Pichiatem asamatind:. ‘The National ASsociation for the Advancement of Colored People, through Sts Secretary, John R. Shi Indy of New York, makes public a let. ter to Secretary of War, Newton D. Baker, protesting against a memo- randum issued by command of Briga- GierGeneral Nicholson on February 14, at Camp Upton to the Commanding Officer of various colored units now at that camp, directing the command. ing officers to instruct their men and their families not to use any Hostess House in the camp except the one set aside for colored soldiers at Second Avenue and 13th Street. ‘The Association entered its protest and its request for action by the War Department for two reasons which it sets forth. First, because the one house provided for colored troops is totally inadequate to serve all of the colored troops at the camp at this time, particularly in view of the tact that the entire 92nd Division is either in America or on its way here, to- gether with other colored units. ‘Second, the Association declares that @ more inopportune time to issue such an order could hardly have been chosen, In view of the fact that these same men who are barred from the Hostess Houses of the camp are those who have just returned trom: France where ‘they fought for democracy, many of them being wounded and pant of the “Jim Crow” coaches dur- ing times of peace. ‘The pity of the whdle despicable business is that our country is not great enough to live up to its own constitution, not noble enough to fol low the precepts of its own Christian ity! It basely bows to the caprice of prejudice and condemns its own cltizens to scorn, contempt and humili- ation. The burden of this petty pass- Port problem need not be placed on the shoulders of France, for that glor- fous country has ever been great enough to honor and protect its. citi- zens, regardless of race, regardless of color. The tint of the skin, the curl of the hair, has never been the badgo of humiliation in La Belle, France; and so in her time of need, gloriously did her sable sons rally to her support. ‘The day will come when America on bended knee will ery for help. Will there still remain forgiv. ing black sons to come to her aid, or will they all have been brutally dono to death by the mob, the tree, the torch? aes ee ‘many of them having sven their com- rades Killed, and that such an order is not only an insult but a repudiation of the principle of democracy for which they fought. The Association ‘asks that Secretary Baker, as head of the War Department, take action immediately to correct this mistake. JIM GROW DAY IN BOSTON. (From the Boston Guardian.) Monday, February 24, was a typical tim Crow’day in Boston, and it seem to have been 0. planned. "The: day time was given over to welcoming the Foturning ‘president. ‘tn the evening there was a mecting held to honor cos Jorea soldiers. The two. occasions: a east have the alternatives ot the Jim Grow doctrine of “separate and de tinet Dut equator the Jim Grow ‘a angement of “Up to the big house find’ down tothe big gate” ‘The i Dressions of the events are signifieant ‘There aro strong and variant. views tere on the question ot the League of Nations. ‘There. aro” equally stone views" on the tace question’ and” the Tights of man. “But‘on thie occasion ‘Boston behaved herself proud” ‘her was no heckling of the president. The Feception was dignined and order But he left Boston stil in posses of her views, There was’ no rough-necking down at the big gate, “Mn Scott and Mr Moton. were’ received: with respect dignity.” But they left Boston with ‘eater disposition to compromise hv fan rights or to. barter with Iyneh fre" and. sim ‘Crow propagandist ‘Threefourihs of the audience. were white, Doubtegs they are riends 0 |the race.” Their presence points to lanother vital circumstance, The meet Ing was held under the auspices of a [settlement nouse—a. charitable’ inst {ution "Many white people are willing to assign a restricted mendieant statu to the best the colored man can pro duce, But the brainy colored man does not accept the principle of Ward and Warden any more than the principle Jor man and master. “They are allies nd are opposed to self determination, Boston ‘passed the. incident coolly but respecttally, ‘The results so ter as all-objectives go were a. boomer. ang. "To sum up Jim Crow day in Boston wee a ee “With a Smile.” (Prom the St. Paul Dally News.) “We are all decorated. Some with the war cross, but all with a’smilo’" ‘That's what one of New York's cot fred troopers “said when the. S08th Tafantsy paraded on Fifth avenue. | Of the regiment, 116 wore decora- tions “for “conepicuous, gellantty. creditable percentage for any" test eS But the smiles! Those boys were glad to get back. Thavs whet made them smile, "Are they going to stay gad? “Thats tp to the American pub c | American colored men have never had'e square deal," Knowing this: the Germans imagined they covld str Up rouble among ‘our Southorn. colored men. ‘They guessed wrong. “Not only on the firing line, but also fon the mean, tedious, hard” worl 2 {he ‘. 0. the colored soldier came {trough with fying colors, and aid hs fob well and glad. ‘While we are taking about Amert anism it would be less than ret i we did not manage to iron out "Sim Crow" regulations which the colored men’ naturally detest William “Monroe Trotter Reconse: ebbickede Beard We consecrate all of the powers we el arate Lae Oe pov supe a vee teak of te Me Seer Sa Sores i Gere a le eet oe Sa Seo ag oie se att Paes Tee a ie see of Sot aad aa bre Se ee eee eae nie, anl ase corre meas Go rece nse WaT oases Seas ip Rint Bons Bibs stb i at Pane Bi ies Ae cei ones an de ue eee ee a fa, a uni a etek Ege roe ot rs nig ate es ears i be te seat ee i eel, epee rvs oe nanetetly Tan mae BeOS Bs Be te wi sat ie areas runes to Be Give Richmond, Va, March 6—A private copy of the original portrait of Poca- jhontas will be presented by the Vir- ginia branch, Colonial Dames of Amer- ica, to Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, a lineal descendent of the Indian princess. A ‘committee has been named to present the gift to Mrs. Wilson in Washing. ton. Being a lineal descendent of Pocahontas is not a pute Caucasian but a mixed blood, with a small per: centage of Indian b'ood. Motons Advice To Soldiers Oversea Marts Big: Storm bee Paris, Jan.—Dr. Robert R. Moton, who came here to France on a “spe- lal” mission, made a trip, via automo- bile, to two or three points where havo been mobilized colored soldiers. He made an address to them, at each point visited, and especially urged upon them when returning to the United States, to be “modest and un- assuming.” ‘The Stars and Stripes Dublished in Paris, and in the interest of the A. E. F, and which heretofore has given very little space to mention of the colored soldiers, except pub- Ushing something assumed to be hu- ‘morous, and always using the alleged Southern dialect, gave Mr. Moton's address considerable space, emphasiz- ing the point he made that the colored soldiers should return “modest and unassuming.” The Paris edition. of ‘The New York Herald, which like- ‘wise has given but little space to the colored soldier, also gave Dr. Moton's address to the colored soldiers a prom- inent space, and particularly noted ADOPTED BY THE NATIONAL COLORED CONGRESS FOR WORLD DE- MOCRACY UNDER THE AUSPICES OF THE NATIONAL EQUAL RIGHTS LEAGUE AT WASHINGTON, D, C. DEC. 18, 1918. Colored America, through delegates assembled from 37 of the United States of America, sore and bleeding with persecution because of race and color, hails with Hope peace with victory, for the motto on the banners of the armies of the victors was “Away with tyranny and its injustice every- where.” Speaking for 12,000,000 Colored Americans, the National Colored Representative Assembly for World Democracy under the auspices of the National Equal Rights League congratulate thelr fellow Countrymen and their government on being the instrument by which the God of righteousness turned the tide of battle for the forces of Mberty. War Put On World Basis As To The Results. ‘Two hemispheres and the islands of two oceans furnished without regard to race or color the armies of this bloody and terrible war. Shameful it would be if its close did not mark a new humane era. ‘To the President of ‘our Republic, Commander-in-Chief of our army and navy it was given to name the principles on which the winners fought this war, and its purpose. By his declaration, accepted by France, Britain and the rest openly before the human race, the principles and the aim of this war were put upon a world basis. Secondly these principles and aims were for the wiping out of autoc- racy, inhumanity and injustice, and for the establishment of world justice, world humanity and world democracy, Wrongs To Individual On World Basis For Redress. ‘With the ushering in of the new year, 1919, the nations of the world are Assembled to settle the terms of peace for the world, for the establishment everywhere of the principles for which this world war was waged by the forces of democracy. ‘Therefore every denial or violation of Justice, humantty and democracy has bocomo a matter FOR CORRECTION AND ABROGATION ON A WORLD BASIS BY A WORLD COURT. Hence Colored America, which furnished 400,000 brave soldiers for this war backed by over 12,000,000 loyal citizens without a traitor, appeals to the allied World for justice and Democracy in the peace settlement. Utterly Undemocratic Treatment Of Colored People of U. 8. A. Citizens by law of the United States ot America, the famous Republic of the West, we first appeal to the clvilized world for the discontinuance of all race or class discrimination in the world peace settlement. At this supreme moment in the cause of universal humanity, when wrongs to man should be banished, we must call world attention to the utterly undomo- eratle conditions under which every person of color ts forced to live in this country. Because of race autocracy, our color in the Nation's Capital de- prives us of every civil right except in public carriers and subjects us to Fejection or to the restriction of the Ghetto aa employees of the federal Sovernment, Otherwise our color in many parte of the country deprives us of every civil, political, social and judicial right; subjects us to obloquy, imposition, deprivations, injustices, cruelties, atrocities, worse in degree than exist anywhere else in Christendom. Segregation in ‘public carriers, dls- franchisement, lynching are essentially violations of that world democracy for which the war was fought. Self-determination For Darker Nations. ‘That the tremendous material and appalling human losses of this world Yar may not be without result for good, we appeal to the peace conclave to grant self-determiation and rights without discrimination to all of the darker nations, ‘The Appeal Sent By Race Petitioners For Universal Abolition Of Color Proscription. On our part we shall send race petitioners to the assembly of the repro- Sentatives of the civilized world meeting to make good the promise of tho victors in the world war, to petition for the abolition of autocracy of race ‘against Colored persons everywhere, and to appeal to this world Court for. the discontinuance of color proscription and all distinctions based on color, cite, political and judicial IN EVERY NATION AS AN ARTICLE OF THE FEACH AGREEMENT, that the world may be remade truly on the basis of the liberation of the people of the earth, and of the enjoyment by every human being of world democracy." Else There Is No “New Day.” For without this there will not be the dawning of a new day of democ- racy, nor of 8 new era of permanent peace after the most terrible and Sigantic war ever known embracing two hemispheres in a death grapple between the forces of autocracy and of democracy. THE COMMITTED ON ADDRESS. William M. Trotter, Mass, Chairman. Bishop G. C. Clements, Ky. _ Rev. P. C. James, N. J. Atty. J.D, Ellis, W. Va, Dr. W. T. Coleman, Md, Rev. C. V. Page, Mo. Rey. M. L. Johnaon, Ark. Rey. Thomas W. Davis, Tenn, G. W. Goode, Va. Prof. L. B. Cash, Texas. Rev. W. L. Gibbons, Miss. W. C. Brown, D.C. Atty. L. A. H. Caldwell, Ind, Dr. R.H. Singleton, Ga. Rev. J. U. King, Del. Rev. R. A. Whitaker, Okla, Mrs. Ida Wells ‘Barnett, Ml. Hon, Isaac B. Allen, 'N. ¥. Dr. B.A. Walker, La, R. B. James, Mich. Dr. A. Porter Davis, Kan. G. W. Boyer, Ohio. | Rev. W. D. Carter, Wash. State. Bishop J. 3. Caldwell, Penn., Sec. Dr. C. 8. Long, Fla. Rey. J. ©. McDaniels, N.Y. R. W. Westberry, 8. c. Rav. 3. Sanbeas or a: THE MAN WHO DARES I honor the man who in the co entious discharge of his duty dar stand alone; the world, with igno intolerant judgment, may cond the countenances of relatives ma averted, and the hearts of friends ; cold, but the sense of duty done be sweeter than the applause of 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. that he “emphasized” the fact that the colored soldiers should return “mod- est and unassuming.” This advice given by Dr. Moton appeared to in- terest these two American nowspa- pers published in Paris, and it 1s ac- cepted that his “special” misston to France, at this time, and just at the time when colored soldiers who have been for months fighting in France are about to return to the United States, is to impress upon them that they should be “modest and unassum- ing" on thelr return, and to accopt quietly, and uncomplainingly what- ever discrimination and segrogation may be imposed on them in the States, on their return, after having fought for months for world democracy. ‘Moton was accompanied on his trip to the camps by Thomas Jesse Jones, of the Bureau of Education at Wash: ington, and who, at one time, was one of the white instructors at Hampton Institute, with which Dr. Moton was connected before being chosen princ!- pal Of ‘Tuskense. VEEK'S RECORD OF HAPPENINGS IN MINNESOTA'S CAPITOL. The "Saintly City" and Saintly City Poise—Neway items of social, Religious, Political and General Matters Among the People. SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1919. THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE Mrs. F. Mayo is ill at her home, 712 Rondo street. Miss Bessie Farr is able to be out after a month's illness. Miss Minnie Tobie was a dinner guest Sunday at the home of Miss Mildred Gardner. Lent began on March 5, Ash Wednesday, and will continue until Easter Sunday, April 20. The America First Association is planning for a state-wide observance of Memorial day. THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE OFFICE CEDAR 8948 RES. DALE 1488 W. T. FRANCIS LAWYER SUITE 829 AMR. NATL. BANK BLDS. COR. FIFTH AND CEDAR ST. PAUL THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE— Thursday Mrs. George H. Lucas was a luncheon guest of Mrs. E. W. Lindsay at Mrs. Floros' Cafe. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Goins entertained at dinner Monday in honor of Lieutenant Samuel Ransom. The Whist club met on Monday night with Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Thompson, 488 Western avenue. Mrs. G. W. Wills, 1004 Iglehart avenue, entertained the Hostess club at luncheon on Friday of last week. THINK IN INTEREST - SAVE Madame Love's Wonderful Hair Preperations MADAME LOVE'S HAIR GROWER Is absolutely pure and genuine. Stops hair from falling out, gives vigor to the roots and causes an abundant growth. Apply twice each week. MADAME LOVE'S PRESSING OIL Makes the hair straighter, softer and more glossy. Keeps its natural color, stops breaking off, and makes the hair beautiful. and makes the hair beautiful. Madame Love's Wonder.....50c0 Double Strength Hair Grower.....50c0 Madame Love's Temple Grower.....50c0 Madame Love's Pressing Oil.....50c0 Agents wanted everywhere. Make money orders payable to MADAME LOVE'S MNFG. CO. 310 RONDO ST. ST. PAUL, MINN. THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE— Mr. John H. Dillingham began his duties as janitor of the House Chamber at the Capitol last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Walker entertained at 6 o'clock dinner Monday for First Lieutenant Samuel L. Ransom. The Social and Literary Society of Pilgrim Baptist met on Monday with Mrs. F. A. Scott, 526 Central avenue. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Murphy entertained at breakfast Monday morning in honor of Lieutenant Samuel L. Ransom. THINK IN INTEREST-SAVE Office: Cedar 508 T.-S. 21508 Res. 678 St. Anthony Ave. Tel. Dale 2947 T. H. LYLES FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER Twin City Calls Answered Day or Night Lady Assistant When Desired THINK IN INTEREST-SAVE A "Father and Son Luncheon" will be given at Pilgrim Baptist church next Monday evening. Everybody invited; free. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Walker, 1383 Sherburne avenue, entertained at dinner on Tuesday for Lieutenant Samuel L. Ransom. The T. S. T. C. club was entertained at dinner on Thursday evening by Dr. J. H. Redd in Minneapolis, at the regular monthly meeting. THINK IN INTEREST-SAVE 4 PER CENT AND SAFETY STATE SAVINGS BANK MUTUAL 93 East Fourth Street Lieutenant Samuel L. Ransom was guest of honor at a luncheon given by Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Johnson, 319 Woodbridge street, on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Quarles, 318 Avon street, entertained at luncheon in honor of Mrs. Annette Gibson of San Diego, Cal. Covers were laid for 12. THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son to be the propitiation for our sins. 1 John 4:10—Selected by M. W. Gilles FOR SALE—A handsome antique oak sideboard with large plate glass mirror. Apply at 527 St. Anthony Ave. An excellent piece of furniture at a barkain. THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE Mrs. Annette Gibson, maid with leading lady of company playing at Metropolitan last week, spent a pleasant ant week in St. Paul renewing old acquaintances. The proprietorship of the Twentieth Century Tonsorial and Billiard Parlors, 30 E. Fourth street, is now nested in Messrs. J. W. Reed and L. E. Willis. See ad. elsewhere. THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE— The Matinee Whist club met Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Ida Belle Covington. the prize winners were Mrs. P. L. Caldwell, first; Mrs. Ida Smith, second, and Mrs. G. Harvey, third. The love of God toward us, because that God sent His only begotten Son into the world that we might live through Him—I John 4:9—Selected by E. W. Gilles. —THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE— RENOVATING AND REPAIRING of clothes, shoe shining, etc., at J. H. Lawson's corner of Fourth and Jackson streets. Expert artists. Orders called for and delivered. —Advertisement. HOUSEHOLDER OF RUTH NO. 558. G. U. O. OF, F. M. of, corner in each month at Union Hall, corner of Aurora and Kent streets at 8:00 P. M. Mrs. Addie Howard, M. N. G.; Mrs. Carle E. Lindsay, W. R. W. 118 Woodbridge The pre-lenten grand military ball given by Co's A and B, 16th Battalion M. H. G. at Union Hall last Monday night, was a very pleasant affair and all who were there had a very delightful time. Mr. A. C. Coleman of the New Fliros Cafe, 12 W. 6th street, who is "some pumpkins" as a chef, is also some brush artist and he renovated and painted up his cafe in first class shape. Just go and see. THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE Mrs. Lizzie A. Battles, formerly 972 Rice street, has moved her hair and millinery parlorors to 252 W. Seventh street, corner of Walnut, where she will be pleased to meet old and new customers. "His said that music is an aid to good digestion so A. A. Coleman, propriator of the New Floro Cafe, 12 W. Sixth Street, has installed an electric piano and now his patrons may have music with their meals. Ladies, doubtless you will want your hair washed, new switches, transformations, curle, etc. If so, call at the hair parlors of Mrs. Lizzie Battles, 252 W. Seventh street, and she will supply your wants. Switches dyed for 50 cents. Dr. Robinson, pastor of Universalist Church, will address the Sunday Forum at Pilgrim-on-the-Hill on Sunday at 4 P. M. His topic will be "Fifty Years of the Colored Man's Progress." Mr. C. H. Miller will direct the community singing. THINK IN INTEREST SAVE Mrs. W. D. Reed of Birmingham, Ala., spent several days in the city last week the guest of her daughter, Miss Mayme Reed. Miss Reed, who was injured several weeks ago by falling through an elevator shaft at the Golden Rule, is able to be out. PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER—Miss Harriet E. Williams, stenographer for Atty. W. T. Francis, suite 329 Metropolitan Bank Building, corner Cedar and Fifth Street, will do typewriting for anyone desiring her services, at reasonable rates. Tel. Cedar 8948. —THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE Elder James M. Webb of Chicago, author of "The Black Man's Part in the Bible," and who it will be remembered, spent some time in the city a few years ago, was in the city Thursday, en route to Seattle, Wash. He gave THE APPEAL a pleasant call. The annual sermon committee of the G. U. o. F. O. f. met Sunday afternoon at the residence of Mr. J. R. Washburn, a professor of conservatives from all branches of the order were present to make arrangement for the Thanksgiving services, which will be preached second Sunday in May. —THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE— Attorney W. T. Francis, one of the members of the committee to receive the Hon. Will H. Hays, chairman of the National Republican Committee, and as a member of the Minnesota State Central Committee, was guest at the banquet given Mr. Hays at the Radisson hotel at Minneapolis on Friday. Attorney W. T. Francis, who has been selected as one of the speakers for the Baptist drive, will speak at the 11 o'clock service at Pilgrim Baptist church tomorrow morning. At the evening service the sermon will be preached by Rev. C. H. Liggett of Philadelphia; subject, "The Coming of Christ." THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE— Mrs. V. D. Turner and Mrs. Lulu Bonaparte arranged a surprise party on Wednesday evening in honor of the eighteenth wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. George W. James. The friends assembled and repaired to the James home at 368 St. Anthony Ave., where a pleasant evening was spent. Refreshments were served. Julius Kennedy was charged with the larceny of an overcoat in the municipal court on last Tuesday morning. Attorney R. Augustine Skinner of Minneapolis was in St. Paul to try another case which was postponed. Kennedy learning that Mr. Skinner was a lawyer, he asked him to defend him, and the result was he was acquitted. THINK IN INTEREST - SAVE Have you been down to the Model Cafe lately? They have had Mrs. Amelia-Parker, as cook, for several weeks, and they do say, she is some cook. They serve a splendid regular dinner every day for 35 cents and special turkey dinner on Sunday for 60 cents. Call and see for yourself. 289 Robert street, just below Third. Mr. Henry Pryor, the famous chef, has purchased the cafe near the corner of Kent street and St. Anthony avenue, where his many friends may find him from early morn until midnight ready to satisfy their gastronomic desires in style on short notice. If you are wanting strictly first class cooking you may find it at PRYOR'S CAFE. Nothing but the best will be served. Call and be convinced. -Advertisement. THE MEMBERS OF QUEEN OF SHEBA CHAPTER, NO. 70, O. E. S. DESIRE TO ANNOUNCE THAT THEY WILL GIVE ANOTHER OF THEIR DELIGHTFUL CARD PARTIES AND SUPPERS AT UNION HALL ON WEDNESDAY EVENING, MARCH 9. ADMISSION 15 CENTS. PERSONAL INVITED. INVITED. COMMITTEE: J. E. GASLI CHAIRMAN; MESDAMES C. A. STANTON, S. L. MAXWELL, MATTIE R. HICKS. THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE The Astoria Sanitary System, the clothes cleaning, repairing and pressing establishment, $88 Wabasha street, formerly conducted by W. Evans and R. H. Anderson, has made a change in proprietors. W. Evans has retired the firm and Archel Brown succeeds it. Anderson & Brown. Mr. Brown brings to the firm considerable practical experience and customers may rest assured that wants will be properly cared for. Your patronage solicited. The interior of St. Peter Claver Catholic Church has been entirely renovated, walls and ceiling being redecorated and the already beautiful painting of Christ and the disciples above main altar being retouched and supplied with a reflector light which brings out each figure with startling distinctness. Father Stephen L. Theo bald, aided by communicants and friends, was also able to install new altars and stations of the cross. The church presents a handsome appearance of which the parish is justly proud. THINK IN INTEREST—SAVE— Lieutenant Samuel L. Ransom, who left St. Paul a year and a half ago, volunteered and joined the 8th Illinois Regiment at Chicago, after serving on the Mexican border the regiment went overseas; then became known as the 370th Infantry. Lieutenant Ransom returned to St. Paul Sunday morning, having been mustered out at Camp Grant last week. He spoke of his experience at Pilgrim Baptist church in Chicago, where he was Ransom was for several years superintendent of service at Minnesota club and will resume his position there on his return from Chicago, where he went Wednesday on a business trip. He was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Bolling, 971 St. Anthony avenue. It will be remembered that on January 31st Dowers McCowan, employed at the Athletic Club, had a row with one Bernard Os, white, in which the latter was so seriously cut, by McCowan, that he remained in the hospital for more than three weeks. McCowan was arrested and subsequently indicted in the first degree, upon which, if convicted, he was liable for a sentence of ten years in prison. His trial was held yesterday morning before Judge Michaels, with Attorney Hammond Turner representing him, in which he succeeded in getting him off with only a six months' term in the reform school. Atty. Turner is to be congratulated upon the successful outcome of his case. GO AND GET YOUR DINNER There will be a home-cooked dinner given by The Willing Workers' club, of Memorial Baptist Church, at the residence of Mrs. Edward Robinson, 790 Carroll avenue, on next Friday evening, March 14. The menu will include: Kentucky oysters, roast pork, chicken and dumplings, sweet and white potatoes, pickled beets, hot biscuit and corn bread, ice cream, cake, tea, coffee. Dinner begins at 6 o'clock. 35 cents Public cordially invited. Mrs. Edward Robinson, Chairman THIS IS FOR THE LADIES To meet the demand for instruction in home care of the sick, which has been tremendously emphasized this winter by the shortage of nurses to take care of influenza patients, a course of nine lessons in the home care of the sick will be offered at University Farm beginning' April 9. One lesson will be given every Wednesday from 2 p. m. to 4 p. m. for nine weeks. The course will be offered by Miss H. J. Fisher, a Red Cross nurse, who is instructor in home nursing at University Farm, and will be given in the west wing of the Ladies' Hall, where there is a complete equipment for use in demonstrations. The course will cover first aid, bed-making and bathing, improvising comforts for the sick, and the care of the baby. Any one may register. No examinations or prerequisites are required, and only a nominal registration fee will be demanded. BOGUS SOLICITOR CAUGHT. One Lillian Mahan, of Minneapolis, has been "working" St. Paul as so many others have done, but unlike some of the others, was brought to grief. She had been collecting money for Crispus Attacks Home without authority. Among a number of places, one call was on Mrs. M. Love, at her Beauty Parlor, 310 Rondo street, who believing she was doing a charitable act, gave a donation; but her suspicions were aroused by the call of Detective J. C. Black and he at once got busy and caught her just as she was boarding a car for Minneapolis, and took her to Central station, where she was charged with obtaining money under false pretenses, but was released on $15 bail. Her case was called in the municipal court last Tuesday morning. Attorney J. Louis Ervin was employed by the managers of the Home to prosecute the case, but it was postponed to Thursday morning. When the case was tried, a number of witnesses appeared. The Home and victimized. She was adjudged guilty and was fined $15, which she paid. Lawyer Ervin, although he had spent a portion of three days on the case, donated his services. The Board of Managers of the Home is making special efforts to catch any and everyone falsely representing the Home and intends to prosecute them to the extent of the law. As the Home work institution, these impositions on the public and the Home ought to be stopped. CITIZENS OF ST. PAUL HONOR FIRST LIEUTENANT SAMUEL L RAMSOM. By Tendering Him a Grand Public Reception at Union Hall Last Tuesday Evening, Such as was Never Surpassed. The people of the Twin Cities are loyal, filled with race and civic pride, etc. If anyone had any doubts on those points they were dispelled by their actions in regard to First Lieutenant Samuel L. Ransom, our fellow townman, in tendering him the unsurpassed reception at Union Hall last Tuesday night. When it was learned that Ransom had returned from "over there," a few of the good citizens met and hurriedly formed a committee to take charge of welcoming him home. The committee was composed as follows: W. T. Francis, chairman; A. V. Hall, secretary; J. Q. Adams, F. B. Simpson, S. E. Hall, O. D. Howard, H. J. Sherwood, J. W. Kelly, R. L. Stokes, D. H. Smith, C. H. Miller, John La Coste, H. G. Johnson, V. D. Turner, M. L. Barksdale, B. C. Archer, S. L. Maxwell, Sid Cuthbert, Hammond Turner, M. Bolling, J. E. Murphy, R. M. Johnson, G. W. Wills, J. W. Walton, C. E. Charleston, C. W. Wingington, R. H. Cotton. The committee at once went to work and, though its members had but two days, which to work, the result was amazing. The Hall was packed to capacity, and many could not get in. The hall was beautifully decorated with the national colors, palms, etc. The order of exercises was as follows: Atty. W. T. Francis, chairman of committee presiding. Community singing of "America," "Pack Up Your Troubles," "Smiles," led by Mr. C. H. Miller. Then the chairman intro- LIEUT. S. L. RANSOM. duced Lieutenant A. C. Parker, who had been with the guest of honor over seas, who made a few remarks. He was followed by the Address of Welcome by Rev. A. H. Lealtad. The audience sang, "The Long, Long Trail" that may be of Minneapolis read may delightfully the following poem by A. V. Hall. From the shriek of the shell, From the turmoil of hell. Welcome home, friend o'mine, welcome home. From the sight of dead comrades, dark faces uplured. From a fair country, ravished and pillowed. From the Huns' "Kamrad" cry, From the Huns' treacherous lie, Welcome home, friend o'mine, welcome home. From the trench rat and cootie and wildewils. From the cateau and vineyard whose ruins best tell Of what that was there, And the steel in the air. Welcome home, friend o'mine, welcome home. To a pal's hearty grips, To a pal's hearty grips, Welcome home, friend o'mine, Welcome home, friend o'mine Mr. A. V. Hall, the author of the poem, was called to the front and received an ovation. This was followed by a song, "God Did Take Care of You." The chairman then introduced "one of the 'Black Devils', that gave the Huns Hell." Lieut. Samuel L. Ransom, who, after the applause had ceased, told the story of his doings from the time he left St. Paul until his return. It was very interesting and inspiring and was loudly applauded. As a finale the audience sang "The Marselles." At the close of the exercises some time was spent in shaking hands with, congratulating and welcoming Lieut. Ransom home. Dancing then began to the charming music of Moore's Jazz Orchestra, Minneapolis. The grand march was led by Lieut. Ransom and Miss Mayme Goins. During the grand march paper ribbon streamers were liberally thrown and entwined, about the marchers. When five other numbers had been danced a novel surprise innovation was sprung. A passage way was formed with two long ropes. Lieut. Ransom was invited to the front, but being a little slow in responding, he was grabbed by members of the committee and literally hauled to the platform. He was all flustered, more so than he was when a Hun shell covered him with dirt, all but his head, as he lay in a dug out in "No Man's Land." And when Prof. Stevens Jazz orchestra struck up "Here Comes the Bride," he prepared for the worst. The bridal party was composed of the bride, B. C. Archer, camouflaged into a blushing dam-sel leaned on the arm of her father, J. E. Murphy. The ring bearers M. A. Bolling and Mrs. J. H. Goins, bearing a large decorated hoghead hoop, followed. Then the bridal attendants, H. G. Johnson and Mrs. Ida Murphy, H. G. Johnson and Mrs. Miss Charlotte Gillard, Clarence Thompson and Mrs. Gladys Brown. Arriving at the altar Rev. (?) Chas, H. Miller pronounced his unique and comical ceremony, the "ring" was adjusted around the newly-weds and as the parson said, "you will now salute the bride," all the lights went out, leaving the hall in pitch darkness. What the groom and bride did will never be known but the people yelled so that the lights were again turned on, and the hilarity continued for quite a while. Dancing was again resumed and six numbers were danced and the people reluctantly repaired to their homes, thus passed into the history one of the most enjoyable entertainments ever witnessed in St. Paul. The members of the Committee of Arrangements are requested to meet at the office of Atty. W. T. Francis, 329 Metropolitan Bank Bldg., Thursday evening, March 13th, at 7:30 o'clock. The sub-financial committee of the general committee of the Ransom Reception makes the following report: Total amount received .....$159.00 Total disbursements ..... 110.70 Balance on hand ..... $48.30 M. A. Bolling, John M. La Coste, Hammond Turner, Financial Committee. It is the intention of the committee to hold the funds now in its hands to assist in financing some similar event which will doubtless shortly be necessary. The success of the whole affair was made possible by the moral and financial support of the following: # MESSRS. AND MESDAMES W. T. Francis, J. Q. Adams Frank B. Simpson W. B. Hilling, S. E. Hall R. L. Stokes H. G. Johnson M. L. Barksdale S. E. Maxwell E. D. Wilkinson Geo. W. Wills C. E. Charleston H. C. Heller M. H. Miller J. W. Kelly W. J. Kelly R. H. Anderson J. W. Milton W. J. Alston W. H. Toulouse R. N. Travis W. B. Brown N. Golns C. H. Roper Geo. G. Mundell J. F. Mundell Richard Artis A. L. Johnson T. C. Cuthbert M. A. Johnson W. R. Dyer W. R. Dyer J. M. Lewis C. B. Covington Will Haynes Will Dray A. Wright Jas Thomas Chas. V. McColl W. J. Utley M. Morgan Jake Giles E. W. Lindsay W. F. Benjamin W. F. Benjamin C. C. Beasley J. M. Echols W. J. Gardner J. McNell W. B. Waltong W. J. Walton A. J. Todd W. W. Waltong T. W. Stepp J. Louis Ervin T. H. Lyles J. T. Quarrell H. Clarence Thompson E. C. Walker, E. C. Walker, H. Harold Cage G. W. James Sml. Foster C. E. James C. E. James W. V. Howard J. V. Johnson J. V. Johnson M. A. Hickman M. A. Walt Goins Alex J. Homer Goins H. F. McIntyre J. F. Raines Jerry Fred D. Green G. Owens S. Red Chas. Walker J. E. Glass J. W. Mills Jas. W. Cleary A. S. Weber Jas. Weber J. C. Broyles J. W. Hilary J. W. Hilary Jas. H. Roberts C. H. Jackson, J. A. Lee E. E. Hatton, L. M. Terrill J. B. Johnson G. Weber C. A. Davis Jackson Sparks Jackson Sparks Geo. D. Green J. W. Clark W. H. Bolden L. C. Williams Geo. W. Stewart W. B. Walker F. C. Caldwell L. A. Melker Ross Harris W. B. Tandy W. B. Walker W. B. Walker W. H. Brown W. M. Riley DR. AND MRS. D. D. Turner C. E. Cheeks Q. D. Bauer MESSRS Hammond Turner J. Gilles A. V. Hall R. C. Minor John La Coste W. A. Lyles R. M. Johnson W. A. Winstead Idid La Coste W. J. Holmes Sid Cuthbert H. Parker Luis Liverpool Clifford A. Smith W. J. Holmes W. J. Holmes Danl. Pope Wm. A. Weir H. G. Johnson Geo. Butler W. Harry Holmes Lionel P. Allen W. Gryve J. W. Holmes V. J. Henley W. P. Crane N. H. Casey John Williams N. J. M. Strawder Paul Wigington Alonzo H. Leath W. S. Davenport W. A. Ashworth G. R. Manning V. Barksdale W. T. Joyce Roscoe Crump SPECIAL AGENCY FOR THE MAN WHO CARES The Florsheim SHOE STANLEY SHOE CO. 421 ROBERT ST. ST. PAUL MAKE NO MISTAKE, JUST SMOKE Sight Draft THE VERIBEST SIX CENT CIGAR Take Inventory of Your Habits Pay particular attention to your attitude toward thrift—your desire to save. Cultivate this important habit—depending largely upon it, start now with one dollar or more, and— Northern Savings Bank IN CONNECTION WITH AMERICAN NATIONAL CAM SANTA MARIA PAIS SEVENTH & ROBERT Original Mexican Chill Con Carne A Spalalty Exceptional A La Carte Meals And Service The Most Centrally Located Cafe And Best WHILE YOU WAIT ASTORIA -- SANITARY -- SYSTEM CLEANING REPAIRING PRESSING Dry Cleaning Suits Sponged and Pressed New Collars 368 WABASHA Near Fifth Street WE CALL AND DELIVER PHONE N. W. Jackson 2096 Shoe Repairs Dyed & Shined Laundry Baths R. H. Anderson Archie Brown NEXT TO PARKER'S DRUG STORE, ST. PAUL. DAY PHONES: TRI STATE 28 262 N. W. CEDAR 8245 NIGHT PHONE: N. W. CEDAR 9088 THIS IS THE NIGHT PHONE: N. W. CEDAR 9088 1 WHEN IN THE TWIN CITIES DON'T FAIL TO VISIT R. N. TRAVIS, PROP. THANN'S JERRY LEE, MGR. HOTEL, CAFE AND POOL ROOM HEADQUARTERS FOR RAILROAD AND THEATRICAL FOLK 40 E. THIRD ST. ST. PAUL TEL. CEDAR 7518 FREE BATHS ST. PAUL 40 E. THIRD ST. TEL. CEDAR 7518 FREE BATHS PORTERS' AND WAITERS' INFORMATION BUREAU GENTLEMEN'S HEADQUARTERS FINE FURNISHED ROOMS IN CONNECTION 7 EAST THIRD ST. C. E. COLEMAN, MGR. ST. PAUL KARRAS DRUG CO. (Fermerly Straight Bros.) FINE FURNISHED ROOMS IN CONNECTION 7 EAST THIRD ST. C. E. COLLEMAN, MGR. ST. PAUL ST. PAUL PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS 740 RONDO, COR. GROTTO Telephone Orders Promptly Delivered ELECTRIC SUPPLIES DRUG SUNDRIES KODAK SUPPLIES OVERTON'S HYGENIC "HIGH BROWN PREPARATION" Mrs. Olive Howard-Grothswalt, is still with us as pharmacist T. S. PHONE 85 407 N. W. PHONE DALE 151 Telephone Orders Promptly Delivered ELECTRIC SUPPLIES DRUG SUNDRIES KODAK SUPPLIES OVERTON'S HYGENIC "HIGH BROWN PREPARATION" Mrs. Olive Howard-Grothswait, is still with us as pharmacist T. S. PHONE 85 407 N. W. PHONE DALE 181 PHONES N. W. CEDAR 8081 TRI-STATE 28485 PHONES: N. W. CEDAR 8081 TRI-STATE 25485 QUICK SERVICE WE CALL AND DELIVER UP-TOWN SANITARY SHOP SHOES - REPAIRING - CLOTHES; UP-TOWN SANITARY SHOP SUITS SPONGED AND PRESSED GENTS SUITS DRY CLEANED $1.25 339 WABASHA ST. FRENCH DRY CLEANING LADIES SUITS DRY CLEANED $1.50 & UP ST. PAUL, MINN. TEL. DALR 8046 A. W. Bompel 35 PHONES Tri-State 77 172 VANDER BIE'S 839 WABASHA ST. ST. PAUL, MINN. MRS. C. MONJOY-JONES TRAINED NURSE ICE CREAM IS THE BEST For Sale Everywhere J. C. VANDER BIE Partridge and Brunsen Sts. ST. PAUL, MINN. OFFICE TEL. RBB. TEL. JACHSON 3869 DALE 7916 HOURS: 8 A. M. TO 1 P. M. AND 2 TO 6 P. M. SUNDAYS BY APPOINTMENT Suits and Overcoats Made To Order Ladies Work A Specialty. Clean- ing, Pressing A Repairing. Ladies Work A Specialty, Clean- ing, Pressing And Repairing. 329 Dale St. St. Paul F. B. SIMPSON GEO. W. WILLS Tel. Dale 1914 Tel. Dale 2541 Office Phones: Cedar 1024 Tri-State 24 240 FIRST CLASS GUARANTEED WORK IN ALL BRANCHES OF DENTISTRY 64 W. SEVENTH ST. DAKOTA BLDG. SUITE 203-84 ST. PAUL TEL. DALE 2845 RESIDENCE CALLS 64 W. SEVENTH ST DAKOTA BLDG. SUITE 208-204 ST. PAUL BEAUTY PARLOR MRS. M. LOVE, PROP. Undertakers, Funeral Directors and Embalmers and Embalmers Calls Answered Promptly Day or Night Lady Assistant When Desired Office and Chapel 224 WEST FOURTH ST. ST. PAUL LATEST ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT SCALP AND FACIAL TREATMENT HAIRDRESSING, SHAMPOOING MASSAGING, MANICURING CHIROPODY FLOUGHS FAMOUS BLACK AND WHICH PREPARATIVES REASONABLE HATES CONFIDENTIAL SERVICE 810 RONDO ST. ST. PAUL. THE DOINGS IN AND ABOUT THE GREAT "FLOUR CITY." matters Social, Religious and General Which Have Happened and are to Happen Among the People of the City. J. N. SELLERS, MANAGER 2812 Tenth Avenue So. Tel. N. W. South 3372. SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 1919. THINK IN INTEREST-SAVE Pride holds some people up and throws a great many down. Mr. J. F. Frierson has returned after a few weeks' visit in Boston and other eastern cities. Dr. J. H. Redd, 3253 Aldrich avenue, entertained the T. S. T. C. last Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Jones have returned after a visit to relatives and friends in the east. The Misses Dorothy and Louise Williams of St. Paul, were guests of Miss Lenore Fields last Sunday. Mrs. Ashburn, who has been stopping at the residence of Mrs. Simpson, 516 Humboldt avenue, died last Tuesday morning. The first masquerade ball under the auspices of Pride of the West, Co. No. 1, Knights of Pythias, at New Viking hall last Monday evening was a splendid did success. Thomas Cleary, who shot and killed Albert Murray Jan. 23 was convicted of murder in the second degree on last Thursday and has been remanded to the county jail to await sentence. Mrs. Fashion Williams, 3736 Fourth avenue South, had a fall one day last week by which she broke one arm and sprained the other. She, however, is getting on nicely, under the circumstances. TAKE NOTICE.—All matter intended for publication in THE APPEAL must reach the office, thursdays, to insure its insertion. Communications must bear the name of the sender to receive any attention. Mesdames Price and Smeddler, of the Hair Shop, 715 Sixth Ave. N., have originated a new electric pressing comb that is superior to those now on the market and they cordially invite the ladies to call and test its merits. —Advertisement. Mesdames Price & Smeddler of the Hair Shop now have a full line of the Kashmir preparations for the toilet that are the "Royal Road to Beauty" manufactured by Kashmir Chemical Co., Chicago, the best in the world. Come and see. —Advertisement. Mr. Vessus A. H. H. Pope, railway mail clerk on the Milwaukee road, was killed by a train in the Minneapolis yards early Wednesday morning. Mr. Pope was the son of Sergt. and Mrs. Z. A. Pope, 216 W. 31st St., and was well and favorably known among the young people of the Twin Cities. Information has been received that he is Quartermaster Sergeant Martin Brown now, promoted from corporal. He, with the assistance of Mr. Blake of Rockford, Ill., has organized a branch of the N. A. A. C. P. that is progressing finely. Q. M. Sergt Brown contemplates coming home from Camp Grant about April 1. Mrs. M. W. Withers, dramatic reader, captivated her audience on Friday evening of last week with her clever up-to-date monologue, "Food Conservation Club Meeting," at the Twin City Conservatory of Music and Dramatic Art, 806 Nicollet avenue. She was heartily applauded and graciously responded with an encore. MRS. ROBERT A. VAN WOOK FASHIONABLE DRESSMAKING AND LADIES' TAILORING PARTY GOWNS A SPECIALTY 1006 SIXTH AVENUE NORTH MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. NATIONAL HOTEL WAITERS Make a Donation to Crispus Attucks Home. Minneapolis, March 3, 1919. To the Officers of Crispus Attucks Home: On Monday evening, Feb. 24th, the waiters of the National Hotel gave their first ball, which they hope to make an annual event. It was a social and financial success, and after the profits were ascertained, the boys voted to donate $10 to Crispus Attucks Attucks as they belonged. It is a worthy institution, accordingly. I am sending you through the editor of THE AP-PEAL, the said amount, and wish to have the same credited to the Minneapolis division, which is collecting under the direction of Mrs. Koger. Respectfully, Geo. W. Holbert, Chairman of Committee. Order to Present Claims Within Three Months. STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF Ramsey-ss. — Probate Court. In the Matter of the Estate of Mary H. Pauliament, the Letters of Administration on the Estate of Mary H. Dellingham deceased, late of the city of Ramsey State in Minneapolis being granted to John H. Dillingham. Appearing on proper proof by affidavit of John H. Dillingham made and filed herein, as provided by law, that the debts against the estate of said deceased. It Is Ordered. That three months be made from and after the date of this Order which all persons having claims or deeds, are required deceased, if any here are, are required same in Probate Court of said County, for examination and allowance, or be forever bound to it. It Is Further Ordered. That the first Monday in July, 1918, at 10 o'clock A. M., in Probate Court, to be held at the Court House in the City of St. Paul, in County, be the time and the place when and where the said Probate Court will examine and adjust said claims and demands. It Is Ordered that notice of such hearing be given to all creditors and persons interested in said Probate Court. The Order once in each week for three successive weeks in the Appeal a legal newspaper printed and published in said Probate Court. Dated at St. Paul this 6th day of March, 1478. By the Court: E. W. BAZILLE. W. E. of Probate. (Seal of Probate Court, W. T. FRANCIS, Attorney, 329 Met Bank Bldg. To Discharged Men of the Service The Merchants Trust and Savings Bank is desirous of cooperating with you in your new start in life as a civilian. It therefore makes you the following offer: To each Soldier, Sailor or Marine of the United States who honorable discharge papers or orders within six months after being discharged this institution will give the sum of Says one who has been in the service and knows: "START YOUR SAVINGS ACCOUNT NOW!" Combined Capital, Surplus and Undivided Profits, $5,000,000. J. W. REED REED TEL. CEDAR 6659 HOTEL NOBLES FIRST CLASS NE BY THE D STEAM HEAT HOT A HOTEL LUMIN NOBLES L. HOUSER, MANAGER BEST CLASS NEATLY FURNISHED ROOMS BY THE DAY, WEEK OR MONTH STEAM HEATED ELECTRIC LIGHTED HOT AND COLD BATHS E. SEVENTH ST. DR. KRONICK'S ST. PAUL BY PRYOR B. C. COLEMAN TEL. DALE 4046 FIRST CLASS NEATLY FURNISHED ROOMS BY THE DAY, WEEK OR MONTH 60 E. SEVENTH ST. OVER KRONICK'S PRYOR & COLEMANS' CAFE 388 KENT STREET COR. KENT & ST. ANTHONY ST. PAUL EMPHET ARKOTS IMAGAZINES FOR IMPLOYMENT SHOP Peoples' Barber Shop A. RAGLAND, PROP. A. H. WASHINGTON, MGR. Shaving, Hair Cutting, Shampooing, Face Massage, Manicur- ing, Hot and Cold Shower Baths, Shaves Shined CIGARS, TOBACCO, MAGAZINES AND WEEKLY PAPERS 289 ROBERT ST. ST. PAUL MINN. ing, Hair Cutting, Shampooing, Face Massage, Manicur- ing, Hot and Cold Shower Baths, Shoe Shined MAGARS, TOBACCO, MAGAZINES AND WEEKLY PAPERS ROBERT ST. ST. PAUL MINN. Shaving, Hair Cutting, Shampooing, Face Massage, Maniour- ing, Hot and Cold Shower Baths, Shower Shined CIGARS, TOBACCO, MAGAZINES AND WEEKLY PAPERS 289 ROBERT ST. ST. PAUL MINN. Tel. Cedar 3549 Quick Service OPEN ALL NIGHT First Class A La Carte Meals From 6:30 A. M. to 12:00 P. M. at Reasonable Rates Regular Dinner 1k80 A. M. to 2.80 P. M. 20 Gts. 289 Robert Street ST. PAUL, MNN THE FLOUR Pillsbury's BEST XXXX Minneapolis, Minn. FOR THOSE WHO KNOW BEST HENRY PRYOR COR. KENT & ST. ANTHONY BENNET ARTISTS TWENTIETH CENTURY TONSORIAL & BILLIARD PARLORS FIRST CLASS SERVICE BY EXPERT ARTISTS IN ALL TONSORIAL LINES OPEN FROM 7:00 A. M. TO 12:00 P. M. SHOES SHINED 30 E. FOURTH ST. SAINT LAUNDRY SERVICE ST. PAUL B. C. COLEMAN TEL. DALE 4046 388 KENT STREET ST. PAUL Victor HIS MASTERS VOICE The world's best music for every home The Philadelphia Orchestra, Sousa's Band, Pryor's Band and other bands and orchestras of world-wide renown—All are yours, right in your own home, on the VICTROLA. HOME FURNISHINGS BUY BOUTELL BROTHERS' ARGAINS DECAUSE BEST TERMS TO SUIT MARQUETTE AVE. AT FIFTH MINNEAPOLIS St. Paul Steam Laundry "The Sanitary Laundry" Works: 289-291 Rice Street near Summit Branch Office: 443 Broadway St. W. B. Webster, Mgr. St. Paul HARRY LIGAN MERCHANT TAILOR Men's suits and overcoats made to order. French dry cleaning pressing and repairing of ladies' and gent's suits. Moderate Prices. Prompt Service Goods Called For And Delivered. 313 RONDO ST. ST. PAUL Tel. Dale 2294 Tri-State 84 972 J. TROST GROCER Corner Rondo and Dale ST. PAUL Tel. Dale 4420 Tri-State 85 085 Elm & Roehl DEALERS IN Fresh, Salt and Smoked Meats, Sausages, Hams, Lard, Etc. 614 Rondo Street Near Dale ST. PAUL SMOKE THE OLD RELIABLE Sight Draft CIGAR The King of 7 Cent Cigars W. S. CONRAD CO. CAROLYN E. PRICE Phones: Office, Hyland 5 Residence Calls by THE HAIR For Ladies and PRICE & SMEDY All the Latest Electrical Sanitary E in Scalp Treatment, Hairdressing, Massage, CI ELECTRIC HAIR PRESSER—DE TON'S HYGIENIC "HIGH B WILL BE USED ALL PRICES VER PRICE IDA Bones; Office, Hyland 5683; Res., Colfax 413 Residence Calls by Appointment THE HAIR SHOW For Ladies and Gentlemen PRICE & SMEDDLER, Props. Electrical Sanitary Equipment, Licensed ment, Hairdressing, Shampooing, Mani Massage, Chiropody. HAIR PRESSER—DERMA BEAUTY L HYGIENIC "HIGH BROWN" PREPARA WILL BE USED AND SOLD. ALL PRICES VERY REASONABLE 1. E. NO. MINN FE MILK ONE: SUMMER T. S. 84 MINESOTA MILK COMPANY THE HAIR SHOP All the Latest Electrical Sanitary Equipment, Licensed Expert Artists in Scalp Treatment, Hairdressing, Shampooing, Manicuring, Facial Massage, Chropody. ELECTRIC HAIR PRESSER—DERMA BEAUTY LIGHT—OVERTON'S HYGIENIC "HIGH BROWN" PREPARATIONS WILL BE USED AND SOLD. SAFE PHONE: MINNESOTA MI SAFE MILK PHONE: SUMMIT 80 T.8.84002 MINNESOTA MILK COMPANY LADIES! Do You Know, that it is your family washing to the Capitol Steam than to pay a "wash ladies meals, soap and fuel---and We iron all the flat pieces rough dry. COURTEOUS DRIVERS. CAPITOL STEAM N. W. Cedar 4622 CLOVER LEA Best in the FAULTLESS B A close You Know, that it is CHEAPER to family washing to the "Old Reliable TOL Steam Launcher to pay a "wash lady" big wages, fuel soap and fuel—and then worry all on all the flat pieces, and starch a rough dry ones. TEOUS DRIVERS. GOOD SERVICE TOL STEAM LAUNDER Cedar 4622 Tri-State 2 ER LEAF BUY Best in the World ULTLESS BRAND BUT A close second Do You Know, that it is CHEAPER to send your family washing to the "Old Reliable" the 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. Cedar 4622 Tri-State 21939 CLOVER LEAF BUTTER Best in the World FAULTLESS BRAND BUTTER a close second TILDEN PRODUCE CO. CHURNERS Here's the break that makes men s Golden brown wheat cal —packed full of nouri ment—and TOWLE'S LOG CABIN CANE AND MARINE Here's the breakfast that makes men smile It's the delightful way of getting the wonderful food value of wheat—mankind's most dependable and economical food. Log Cabin P St. Paul. St. Paul, Minn. SUITE NO. 1, 715 SIXTH AVE. NO. MINNEAPOLIS MILK SUMMIT 80 T. S. 84 002 MILK COMPANY it is CHEAPER to send to the "Old Reliable" the Team Laundry lady" big wages, furnish and then worry all day. pieces, and starch all the dry ones. RS. GOOD SERVICE TEAM LAUNDRY Tri-State 21939 LEAF BUTTER in the World BRAND BUTTER use second he's the breakfast that makes men smil Golden brown wheat cakes —packed full of nourish- ment—and TOWLE'S LOG CABIN CANE AND MAPLE SYRUP Log Cabin Syrup not only makes wheat cakes a real treat, but adds nourishment—makes a balanced meal. Products Co. Mul, Minn. MASONIC LODGE MEETINGS. Worthy Visitors Welcomed. Union Hall—Kent and Auror PIONEER LODGE NO. 1. Meets First and Third Monday. J. I. Dillingham, W. M. 569 Rondo St. Ira S. Ashe, Secretary, 325 Rondo St. PERFECT ASHLAR NO. 4. Meets second and Fourth Tuesday. L. A. Melker, W. M. 455 St. Anthony Ave. Ira S. Ashe, Secretary, 325 Rondo St. Minneapolis. HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH NO. 776 G J. O. G. I meet second and fourth Tuesday in each month at Lobby Pleagle Hall. Cor. Fourth street and Eightkth Ave. South. Mrs. S. Darager. M. N. G.: Miss Cora Napier, W. R. Stewart Hotel 246-50 Fourth Av. So. J. EDW. STEWART, Proprietor CHARLBS BRODY, Manager FINEST ESTABLISHMENT OF ITS KIND IN THE UNITED STATES. Twenty Elegant, Steam Heated, Electric Lighted, Rooms. Free Bath. Rates Reasonable. Lobby, Reading and Lounging Room, Gentlemen's Grill Room, Blinded Room, Dining Room, Barber Shop and Bath. Private Dining and Reception Rooms for Ladies. SPECIAL TEMPERANCE BEVERAGES. Special Terms for Private Parties. Banquets, Etc. TELEPHONES Office: Main 2869; Auto 36 774; Dining Room Main 2861 MINNEAPOLIS. MINN. N W. Main 2592 PHONES Auto 38 072 PORTERS' AND WAITERS' HOTEL FOR MEN ONLY RATES REASONABLE GLOVER SHULL, PRBS. & E. L. BOYD, SEC. L. WHEELER, MGR. PAINLESS DENTISTRY ```markdown ``` Tel. Hyland 3005 Hours: 9 A. M. to 12 M. 4 to 5 P. M. Sundays and Earnings by Appointment DR. W. ELLIS BURTON DENTAL SURGEON First Class Guaranteed Work in All Branches of Dentistry 715 Sixth Ave. No. Suite No. 1. MINNEAPOLIS N. W. Cedar 8199 Res. Dale 8038 HAMMOND TURNER ATTORNEY AT LAW Suite 221 American Nat'l Bk. Bldg. Fifth and Cedar Sts. ST. PAUL MRS. C. MONJOY-JONES (Trained Nurse) recently returned from England, where she has been engaged in Red Cross service, announces that she has resumed the practice of her pro- fession in St. Paul and violence. Res- dence, 718 St. Anthony Ave. Tel. Dale 6846. ---