The Appeal

Saturday, September 25, 1920

St. Paul, Minnesota

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If you have ought that's fit to sell, Use printer's ink, and use it well. VOL. 36. NO. 39 IOWA BOY WINS ESSAY CONTEST Writes the Best Article on "Ben- efits of Enlistment in United States Army." BIDDIE GRO Chicago Surgeon Hen Wi Transplanted Glau- Develop All of Cha Gets Free, Trip to Washington and a Gold Medal From Secretary Baker —The Prize-Winning Essay. Washington, D. O. —Donald L. Campbell, a fifteen-year-old Clinton (Ia.) high school pupil, has been awarded first prize in the army national school essay contest for the best essay on the "Benefits of Enlistment in the United States Army." The million school children participated in the contest, inaugurated to stimulate enlistment in the army. Young Campbell will receive from the war department a free trip to Washington, where Secretary of War Baker will pin a gold medal on his chest. Here's the Essay. Campbell's winning essay follows: "As Horace Greeley once said, Young man, go West,' we now say, Young man, join the army.' Why? It is the big opportunity of the age. "Are you physically weak? "Health is the first wealth,' and the army is a health builder. It provides wholesome food; clean, comfortable surroundings, proper clothing and equipment; and necessary. Physical exercise is compulsory, and every encouragement is given athletes. These, with outdoor life, make men strong, straight and healthy. "Do you seek an education? "You can attend school at any army post and study grammar and high school subjects. "Would you learn a trade? "The government has recently appropriated $2,000,000 for the establishment and maintenance of vocational schools, where you can learn to be a mechanic, auto repair man, electrician, telegraph operator, chemist or almost anything else you wish. These courses prepare you for a return to civil life or continued service in the army. "Do you long for travel and adventure? "Join the army. You can be an engineer at the Panama canal, a wireless operator in the Philippines, a lineman in Alaska, or an aviator flying in the clouds. Whenever possible, the government gives you a choice of station. "In the army you can travel, learn, and earn at the same time. "Uncle Worries for You. "You may think army pay is low. In addition to the $30 a month, Uncle Sam pays for your food, clothing, light and fuel. With the present high cost of living, why not leave all the worries to Uncle Sam? After thirty years' service, you can retire on three-fourths pay plus $15.75 a month. The army does all work and drilling. There are movies, libraries, games, music and dances; furloughs whenever conditions permit. "Do you admire courage, honest, square dealing, resolution and tenacity of purpose? You will find these qualities in men like Washington, Grant, Sherman, Roosevelt and Pershing—men developed in our army." "This training of body, mind and soul, and these opportunities for education, travel and adventure are more than sufficient reasons for joining the army; but there is another and greater motive for dionning the 'olive drah.' Do you love your country, and would you be worthy of her? You must be able to serve her both in war and peace. "Have you, like Nathan Hale, one life to give for your country? If so, join the army." Minister Quits Pulpit; More Money in Factory Peckskill, N. Y.-Rev. Ellis Slipher, pastor in three suburban Methodist Episcopal churches, has discarded his frock coat for a pair of overalls and began work as an apprentice pearl cutter in a factory here. He announced he had resigned his pastorate because he "could not make both ends meet," and would confine his preaching to interfaith interference with factory duties." His salary as a pearl cutter would be several hundred dollars a year more than his salary as a minister, he said. Not Referring to Human Kind. Martinsburg, W. Va.-Residents of this city like their pork, but they object to seeing it running around promiscuously. As a result, a hot election campaign is being waged over the question of allowing hogs to be kept within the city limits. Saving Her Own "Bacon." Kokomo, Ind.—"Trixie," pet dog of Charles Botoril, is the only dog known to pay her own taxes. She was given a $5 bill and immediately rambled to the tax assessor's office, paid her tax and returned to her master with the receipt. BIDDIE GROWS SPURS Chicago Surgeon Produces He- Hen With Knife. Transplanted Glands Cause Hen to Develop All Characteristics of Chanticleer. Chicago—The experiments of Dr. Victor D. Lospasnep of the Northwestern university in tinkering with the sex of the common hen and his demonstrations before medical experts have aroused the interest of chicken growers. "It was a simple enough operation," explained Doctor Lospasnep; "just the planting of the interstitial glands of a rooster to a hen. But the result was a success and perhaps no one was more surprised than the hen herself. Within a few weeks she began to develop all the characteristics of a chanticleer. "She grew a comb and wattles. Saddle feathers appeared next and finally a pair of spurs. She took to strutting pompously about the barnyard, lording it over the other fowls. "Instead of cackling, our nearrooster would essay a feeble kee-kee. A full-sized he-crow is about the only thing that it's lacking to complete her-or, I might say, his—roosterhood. The he-hen is now on a farm in the suburbs of Chicago. In further experiments with animals, Doctor Lospasnep succeeded recently in producing "Slammes Twin" dogs. These didn't live long, but were perfect specimens. Knudel Herbert Judge William Morris was cheered by tenants and court attaches when he removed his robe and, standing in his shirt sleeves, told one Chicago landlord he could "go to the Supreme court, or to h—" MRS. SPIKER NOW CITIZEN English Girl Is Made Happy by Action of Bureau of Immigration. Baltimore, Md.—Mrs. Emily Knowles Spiker, the English girl who married the brother of the father of her baby, Alfred Ray Spiker, in Fall River, Mass, was made happy by notification of the immigration of the department of labor she had been officially recognized as an American citizen and will not be deported. The bureau also informed her lawyer that the two Liberty bonds of $300 each, put up by Mrs. Cora Spiker, wife of the father of her baby, would be returned to her by the treasury department. The Spiker case has attracted widespread attention, owing to the attitude of Mrs. Cora Spiker, the wife of the returned soldier, who made affidavit that she had been her husband and that his confession no change in the marital happiness, and to the attitude of Guy Spiker, her brother-in-law, who, before he had seen the girl, expressed his willingness to marry her. IS READY FOR TOURISTS France Will Use Hospital Trains to Carry Sightseers Over Battlefields. Paris—Hotel accommodations in France being limited, French authorities designated to handle the tourists that will visit the battlefields in the country this summer plan to use hospital trains to carry the sightseers. Each train will be arranged with all the necessities for a week or ten-day tour of the British, French and American fronts. France expects 500,000 American tourists this summer. Steps have been taken to prevent hotels in the larger towns and cities from charging excessive rates. A New Plutocrat Looms Up. Bluedef, W. Va.—Before he left for the army a Coeburn bought a barrel of whisky and buried it. Recently he was discharged from service and to the he is $4,000 richer than he was. Revenue officers would be interested in learning how and to whom he needs the sale. THE APPEAL. JUNIOR RED CROSS WORKING AT HOME Production of Sound American Citizenship the First Aim, Says Dr. Farrand. On the badge of every member of the Junior Red Cross are the words "I Serve." That tells the story of the school children's branch of the American Red Cross and its efforts to bring happiness to children throughout the world. Realizing that the time never was so propitious as right now for teaching the highest ideals of citizenship, the entire present program of the Junior Red Cross happened under the very inclusive base, "Training for Citizenship Through Service" for others. Since the Junior Red Cross is the agency through which the American Red Cross reaches the schools and the schoolgirls, all its activities are designed to come within the regular school program, and without creating new courses or increasing the number of studies to lend its aid in vitalizing the work of the schools. "The thing that is needed," says Dr. Livingston Farrand, Chairman of the American Red Cross Central Committee, "is not a perpetuation of the Junior Red Cross, but the training and breeding of sound American citizenship inspired by the true, fundamental ideals of sound democracy. One of the challenges in making the Red Cross a continent in making the ship in our American democracy is the realization that after all the sole hope of any nation is with the children of the country." The plan of organization of the Junior Red Cross makes the school—public, parochial and private—the unit, not the individual pupils. Mutual service, helpful community work such as clean-up campaigns, care of the sick, promotion of health regulations, participation in civic and patriotic movements—all these creative agencies designed to translate into life and action the machinery program are parts of the machinery which the Junior Red Cross places at the disposal of the school authorities. Graded study courses give practical methods of civic training, supplemented by pamphlets and helpful suggestions, are supplied to the local schools by the Junior Red Cross. An elaborate plan for promoting an interchange of correspondence between children in different sections of the United States as well as with children in foreign lands is being devised and will take a prominent place in the establishment program. In promoting the general cause of child welfare, Red Cross courses in home hygiene and care of the sick, first ald, and dieting may be established in all Junior Red Cross Auxiliaries. The ideals and the objective of the Junior Red Cross are embodied in the pledge of service which the pupil takes when he signs the membership roll and plons on his coat the Junior's badge. The pledge which binds together service and citizenship reads: "We will seek in all ways to lure up to the ideal of the Junior Red Cross and devote ourselves to its service. "We will strive never to bring discredit to this, our country, by any unworthy act. "We will revere and obey our country's laws and do our best to inspire a like reverence and obedience in those about us. "We will endeavor in all these ways, as civic citizens, to transmit America greater, better and more beautiful than she was transmitted to us." At the foundation of this school program of the Junior Red Cross is a great love for America's children. RED CROSS ACTIVE IN DISASTER RELIEF When disaster hits a community—fire, flood, earthquake, explosion, bad wreck or tornado—the American Red Cross can be depended upon to follow right at its heels with help for the stricken people. Red Cross relief is almost immediately forcoming—food, nurses and special workers with long experience in handling similar trouble elsewhere. During the last year, ending June 20, there was an average of four disasters a month in the United States. One hundred and fifty communities in twenty-seven states suffered. The largest and most destructive of these were the tidewater in Atchin Church, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois. In these events of horror 850 persons were killed, 1,500 were injured, 18,000 were made homeless, about 80,000 families needed help, the property loss was nearly $100,000, and almost $1,000,000 in relief funds, not including emergency supplies was exposed. To the sufferers from all disasters during the year, the American Red Cross sent $120,000 worth of supplies, 110 Red Cross nurses and seven special relief trains. To meet the needs of the stricken, the organization set up ten relief stations, operated thirty food canteens and as many emergency hospitals. One hundred and fifty chapters will provide disaster relief services. If disaster ever strikes this town or county, the citizens can be absolutely sure the Red Cross will be right on hand to help them in every way. Captives Are Shot to Death With Revolvers. First Make Victims Big Graves, Then Execute Them for the Bolehweiki. Amsterdam—The correspondent of the Handelsblad, who recently returned from a trip in soviet Russia, gives the following account of his investigations of the activities of the Chinese employed there by the bolsehviki as executors. "Such horrible stories were being told in Europe about these Chinese that I thought it worth my while to learn more about them. As a joke, I asked everyone who asked my opinion of the bolsehviki to show me some 'real man-killing Chinese', but I always was told they couldn't produce any just now because they had all gone to the Denkine front. "I was told the Chinese, if commanded by their own officers were excellent soldiers, but they ran like hares if their officers were killed. Executions are now very rare in Moscow, but, in August, when thousands of counter-revolutionaries were slaughtered, it was carried out by the Chinese because the authorities feared the soldiers would refuse to do the work. "The Chinese do this work indifferently—like they do all other work they are ordered to perform. They are blind, conscienceless tools in the hands of the men who feed them and pay them and who ripped them from the position of coolies in which they came to Russia to the rank of soldier, of the guards. "If the 'boltskj' (his name for bolshevik) orders something, the Chinese does it, and he does it in his typically practical way. He first makes the victim dig his own grave and then shoots him with his revolver. He is not cruel about it, just practical. "When boltskj says kill, then he kills with an unperturbed face. And when boltskj says, You may stop now, with the same cool face he lets his victim go." The correspondent after some weeks in Russia left when he was refused permission to make investigations freely as he pleased. Assert Ancient Tribes Did Much Irrigating Albuquerque, N. M.—That prehistoric peoples of New Mexico did a good deal of irrigating is indicated by the remains of canals and ditches found in the state, as well as in other parts of the Southwest, according to H. F. Robinson, head of the Indian irrigation bureau here. The remains of 217 miles of ditches built by the Pueblo Indians alone are to be found, and there are evidences of elaborate water systems at the Salt River valley in Arizona. These ditches were all dug by hand, according to Mr. Robinson, and clay banks and were constructed where the way lay over a sandy plain, while the method of blasting through rocks was to heat the rocks, crack them with large stones and remove them from the way. $5,000 FOR MOSQUITO BITE Demand Is Made by Sailor in Suit Brought in Brooklyn Supreme Court. New York—The tale of a ship beset by swarms of mosquitoes during a voyage along the south Atlantic coast was unfolded in a complaint filed in the Brooklyn supreme court in a suit for $5,000 damages brought by Hendricks Do Reary, a sailor, who alleges that after he had been bitten by mosquitoes, officers of the steamship Guichenot, belonging to the Gulf Refining company, refused to give ointment to him. The company has asked for a bill of particulars, denying that the officers refused the ointment, and declaring that mosquito bites, were part of the assumed risk of employment. ITALY MAKES OYSTERS SAFE Removes Impurities by Keeping Them in Sterilized Sea Water for a Week. Washington—An Italian company has perfected a process for removing impurities from oysters, according to a report to the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce. On being taken from beds along the Venetian coast the oysters are shipped to Rome, the shells carefully washed and thrown into great tanks filled with sterilized water. The tanks are constantly replenished and the flowing water has been found to wash all impurities from the oysters which, after a week's "treatment" are shipped to the retailers. Hash? It Just Grows. Warren, O.—When Scout Executive Olsa asked a Warren boy scout for a definition of hash in an examination or a cooking merit badge the scout replied: "Hash is not made; it just accumulates." He won the medal. Defective Page MAKING WAR ON DISEASE MENACE American Red Cross Announces Budget of $48,200,000 For Current Year. NEW DISASTER RELIEF PLAN. Continuance of Heavy Work Abroad Desemned Necessary to Protect United States—$21,000,000 Less Than Last Year. A program of relief and service toward which appropriations of $48,200,000 have been made has been outlined for the American Red Cross for the fiscal year, July 1, 1920, to July 1, 1921, according to official announcement by national headquarters of the organization at Washington. The figures for 1920-21 are $21,000,000 below those of 1919-20, in which $69,400,000 was spent. Important among the items of the budget for the present year is the appropriation of $31,500,000 for relief in foreign lands, which includes $11,000,000 in purchased supplies on hand and not distributed. Must Protect United States Must Protect United States. This will enable the American Red Cross to continue its humanitarian effort to aid stricken people to re-establish themselves, to fight the disease epidemics which threaten many countries and to efface largely the remaining traces of the blight left by the World War. It is regarded as social as well as physical sanitation on a large scale that will have a direct bearing on future conditions in America. Central Europe, the chief sufferer from the conflict, today is facing another winter of famine, pestilence and ruin. Typhus decreased much during the summer months where last winter it had its greatest stronghold, but physicians who investigated the situation at the behest of the League of Red Cross Societies have given their unqualified opinion that this coming winter will see a recurrence on an unprotected scale. The Red Cross feels it must continue preventive measures abroad to keep this and other deadly maladies from the United States. Millions for Work at Home. When the disease was sweeping Central Europe last winter the American Red Cross, with the aid of the governments of afflicted nations, undertook the fight against it. Hospitals were established wherever possible and food and clothing were distributed to the undernourished populations, who by reason of their undernourishment were easy prey to the epidemics. Where disorganization contributed last year to the great inroads made by the disease and the lack of its knowledge of the disease and the need for proper established hospital centers, the American Red Cross this year will undertake the work with a new confidence. Including the total of $11,000,000 in supplies left from the last fiscal year, the $3,150,000 or $12,000,000 less than the expenditures for 1919-20. Appropriations for domestic activities total $16,700,000. The largest item of this "home" budget is $7,800,000 for civilian relief work. This includes service and assistance for families of soldiers, salaried workers, and incidental to disaster. Of the total amount for civilian relief, $5,000,000 is held in reserve for the carrying out of actual disaster relief. Reduced Overhead Expense. The Red Cross invariably is the first thought of a community visited by calamity. With this in mind, it was determined by the Executive Committee in preparing the budget of 1919-20 to which to draw in these instances. For assistance to soldiers, sailors and marines in hospitals and in camps this year $1,900,000 has been set aside. Four million two hundred thousand dollars has been appropriated for improvement of health and prevention of disease throughout the United States during the current twelve months. The Red Cross is co-operating fully with the Red Cross Service in this work and through its Junior Red Cross is doing much to spread among children the principles of sanitation. An appropriation of $1,000,000 has been made for developing the peace time program of the Red Cross by service to its chapters in all regions. The appropriation of the $48,200,000 is exclusive of the local expenditures of the chapters. Administration expires this year will be $1,800,000. Last year they were $2,300,000. for workers to come and ask you for a renewal of your membership. Send in your dollar to the nearest local chapter of the American Red Cross. Welcome the opportunity and privilege of replacing your fellowship by promptly answering the Fourth Roll Call November 11-25, 1920 In business, fortunes are not realized Unless your goods are amply advertised. HIS NAME WAS BIBLE So Judge Thought He Could Take Chance on Him. Almost Lost Confidence in Human Nature When Paroled Prisoner Showed Up. Tulsa, Okla.-Because his last name sounded all right, Judge Maxey of his own recognizance when he was arraigned on the charge of passing a bad check. "Your name," said the Judge, "sounds all right. I'm betting that you will come back on the day set for trial." The day name, and the hour-9 o'clock in the forenoon—and no Bible put in an appearance. The witnesses were there, both for the state and the defense. They had not seen Bible since the day he was released. "This is one time you have made a mistake," observed the county attorney to Judge Maxey. The judge shook his head. "His name is all right," he contended, "and he looked all right to me. But I may have been mistaken." At 9:30 the witnesses were discharged and the case set over to another day. Judge Maxey ordered that the sheriff be sent to him; he would have Lewis Bible apprehended. The o'clock came and a man on crutch looked at court room. He was Lewis Bible, when he leg done up in splints and bandages. "I got here as soon as I could, Judge," he said. Then he explained that after his release he went to Cometa and went to work. His leg was broken the first day, and he had been in bed ever since. A friend in Cometa volunteered to take him to court to answer the charge against him, but his automobile balked and he did not reach the court house in time. It then it developed that Bible had not passed a bad check. "You have restored my confidence in human nature and my ability to read it" said Judge Maxey as he discharged Lewis Bible. Madame Phisalie, head of the pathological laboratory of the Colonial Museum of Natural History in Paris, who claims she understands the language of frogs, beetles and other creatures. It was her husband, Doctor Bertrand Phisalle of the Pasteur Institute who discovered the curative germ. AUSTRIAN ARMY DRAWS FEW Efforts to Raise 30,000 Soldiers Meet Little Response in Vienna Centers. Vienna, Austria.-Austria is trying to organize an army to succeed the volksweir under the provisions of the bill hurriedly passed during the panic that followed the German revolution. It is to be composed of 30,000 men. The treaty prohibits any aviation force. The conservatives won their point in securing the allocation of recruiting in the provinces on a population basis and in provisions prohibiting political activity by the military forces. These provincial units are to be garrisoned within the province itself. No man may be foisted upon a unit in a province in which he was not recruited without the consent of the province itself, and the man must be bona fide citizens of their province. On the one hand will be an army of peasant lads, and on the other of industrial classes from the manufacturing centers. In spite of the active efforts of the Socialists to spur recruiting, few men have applied for enlistment in Vienna or the other industrial centers, while reports from the provinces are even more discouraging. Swamp a Beautiful Park Wellington, Kan—Women of this city are given credit for the transformation, within a few years, of an unsightly, swampy thirty-acre tract into a beautiful city park. It has been named "Community park." It is laid out with artistic landscape effect, replete with trees, shrubs and flower bed. It contains a park house, surrounded with large shade trees, a neat modern stone building containing a large reception room, dining room and kitchen, that will accommodate comfortably about 250 persons. The park house is used for entertainments, banquets and parties. $2.40 PER YEAR GARDEN OF EDEN WANTS NURSES American Church Crusaders Are Hampered by Lack of Medical Skill. CALL FROM "CRADLE OF RAGE" Arabs Show Willingness to Accept What Formerly They Fought—Mesopotamia Is Completely Changed by World War. New York—Wanted: Doctors and nurses for the Garden of Eden. The call comes from the "cradle of the race" itself, the land watered by the Tigris and the Euphrates—Mesopotamia. And the need stands between American crusaders and the answer to their prayers for 20 years. For decades the Garden of Eden and all the vast expanse of desert, steppe and fertile coast land that is Arabia have flamed with the fanatism of pagan and of Moslem tribes. For 30 years the mission workers among these Arabs, notably the Arabish mission of the Reformed Church of America, have prayed for a means to penetrate this barrier and reach these wild tribesmen. And they have prayed for a change in the spirit of the people. Prayers Are Answered. To both prayers have come answers. An economic, social and religious study of the country now being conducted by the Interchurch World Movement as a means to making practicable a closer co-operation of American Evangelical churches in their com- ments, shows that Mesopotamia has been completely changed by the world war and the Arabia has been affected. The survey shows that medical work is the best and in many cases the only possible method by which the initial contact may be established between the pagans and Moslems, on one side, and the crusaders of the cross, on the other. And now, when the Arabs show a willingness to accept what formerly they fought—when unparalleled opportunities for service are offered the crusaders—they are helpless for lack of doctors and nurses. The finest hospital of the Reformed church mission is standing idle, reports the Interchurch World Movement survey. And the survey reveals more than the medical men and women. There is a shortage of workers, both foreign and native. Large Unexplored Territory. Arabia, the survey shows, contains the largest unexplored territory in Asia—possibly in the world. It has a total area of 1,230,276 square miles and it lies in the southeastern part of the great peninsula. The crusaders of the cross have been limited to the eastern coast and the vicinity of Eden. Hejaz, the Moslem "holy land" where lie Mecca and Medina, has no missionaries, Hadramaut, with a population of 500,000, is untouched. There is not a single mission station far inland. At the hour of opportunity, created by the world war, the call comes from the crusaders, through the Interchurch World Movement survey; first for more doctors and nurses for the Garden of Eden, and then for more workers. On the basis of what the survey has revealed, the Interchurch World Movement is shaping a program for the cooperative effort of the Protestant churches in America to win the nomad tribes of Arabia, and the present dwellers in the garden, to the ideals of Christianity. Major Is Jailed for Gardening in Nightie Los Angeles, Cal.-Because he persisted in attending to his garden clad only in his abbreviated night shirt, Maj. E. A. Weed, seventy-nine, of Santa Monica, was arrested. Major Weed's arrest came following a complaint made against him by Robert H. Green. The police say that Major Weed was seen in his garden by many of the neighbors, who had remonstrated with him in vain. During the war drives, Major Weed did some excellent work. He is a widower. Falmouth, Ky.-The successful rattling party staged on the J. Eckler farm has suggested that "rat parties" would be a good thing for the farmers of that section. The rodents are particularly bad at present, but there are fewer on the Eckler farm than on the moving tobacco sticks three months after the party killed 83 rats and at the same time permitted six to get away. Food for the Judicial Intellect London, Ky.-Should fathers of girls have their rocking chairs strong enough to hold two people? That was the question involved in a $6 suit here. A father sued a young man for that sum for wrecking a rocking chair when the chair was broken and that their recovered damages in the magistrate's office, but Judge Luker reversed the decision, holding the chair was not as strong as it should have been. THE APPEAL AN AMERICAN NEWSPAPER ISSUED WEEKLY J. Q. ADAMS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER No. 301-2 Court Block, 24 E. 4th st. J. Q. ADAMS, Manager. PHONE: N. W. CEDAR 5649. MINNEAPOLIS OFFICE No. 2812 Tenth Avenue South J. N. SELLERS, Manager. Entered at the Postoffice in St. Paul, Minnesota, as second-class mail matter, June 4, 1885, under Act of Congress, March 8, 1885. TERMS, STRICTLY IN ADVANCE: SINGLE COPY, One Year.....$240 SINGLE COPY, Six Months.....125 SINGLE COPY, Three Months.....65 demitances should / be made by Express Money Order, Post Office Money Order, Request stamps will be received the same as cash for the fractional parts of a dollar. Only one cash stamp will be received as cash for the fractional parts of a dollar. Silver should never be sent through the mail. It is almost sure to wear a hole through the silver. People who send silver to us in letters do so at their own risk. Harrage and death noticees 10 lines or less. $1.50 is advance and to be announced at the person's door. Payments may advance in advance, and to be announced at the person's door. Advertising rates, 15 cents per agate line, each insertion. There are fourteen agate lines on the adagate line. No single advertisements less than three months old accounted for less than three months old. Many pany all orders from parties unknown to us. Further parties on application. Reading materials no discounts for time or space. Reading matter is set in a reverberate type about six weeks in the mail. These pages close once. *No date on the address label when no sales transaction occurs. Renewal may be made two weeks prior to expiration, so that no paper may be missed, as the paper stops working. 1) occasionally happens that papers sent to us may not receive any number when due, inform us by postal mail at the expiration of five days from the date of your return, or upon request of the missing number. Communications to receive attention must be neway, upon important subjects, plainly stated, and not to be misunderstood. We must reach us Tuesday if possible, anyway not later than Wednesday, and the sign the envelope is turned, unless stamps are sent for postage. We do not hold ourselves responsible for the views of our correspondents. Subjects to be written anywhere. Write for terms. Sample copies free. In every letter that you write us never full to give your full name and address, plainly written, post office, county and state. Business letters of all kinds must be written on separate sheets from letters containing news or matter for publication. "Any prejudice whatever will be insurmountable if those who do not share in it themselves truckle to it and flatter it and accept it as a law of nature." —John Stuart Mill. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1920. WILL YOU, MR. COX? Mr. Cox, in your speech of acceptance of the Democratic nomination for the presidency of the United States you failed to mention many things which are of great import to a group of 12,000,000 American citizens and which ought to concern every good citizen of the United States. In order that you may make your position clear THE PEALE will ask you a few questions. Mr. Cox, if elected, the first thing you can do without the "advice and consent" of the Congress, would be the issuance of an executive order abolishing segregation, which is carried on in the departments at Washington and in some parts of the country without warrant of law. Mr. Cox, if elected, will you issue such an order? Mr. Cox: The things asked for are not to secure special privileges, but to abolish special privileges, to the end that the rights of citizenship may be equal without regard to race, color, creed or sex. THE "NEGRESS" AT BIARRITZ. Here are some things which may interest the colored men who call their women "negresses" THE AP- THE SIN OF SILENCE To sin by silence protest makes cover The human race has test. Had no voice in injustice, ignorance quisition yet would guillotines decide on The few who dare speak again to right many.—Ella Wheeler To sin by silence when we should protest makes cowards out of men. The human race has climbed on protest. Had no voice been raised against injustice, ignorance and lust, the inquisition yet would serve the law, and guillotines decide our least disputes. The few who dare must speak and speak again to right the wrongs of many.—Ella Wheeler Wilcox. PEAL writes this for the men, because the colored women never call themselves that name. Even those who use the word "negro," refer to the female as a "negro woman." This is from Paris by Universal Service: "The star visitor of the week at Biarritz is Mamie Jones, a Negress, who sold a tiny Oklahoma farm for $200,000 when oil was discovered on it. She has taken a villa on the sea front, and, attired in the most gorgeous and colorful creations, is surrounded by a dozen or more ebony admirers. Mamie spent the first night here in the baccaret rooms at the Casino and lost a few thousand dollars. Thereafter she declared, "Ah prefers craps," and has remained away from the Casino." There is probably not a word of truth in the foregoing, but if Mamie prefers "craps" she is sustained by many "modern instances". For instance, there is a distinguished white craps shooter in St. Paul who has made thousands of dollars out of his "profession." And the game is more popular among the white people up in this neck of the woods than it is among colored people. Further, THE APPEAL read in the papers about a month ago, that a certain Greek gentleman, Mr. Tomsonandropopoulos, by name who resides at the Blackstone hotel in Chicago, which, by the way, is the last word in swell hostelries, in that city, cleaned up about $106,000 in a single sitting which was held on the "stenth floor of this hotel. The Chicago papers also said when he arrived in Chicago a few years ago he had exactly 50 cents in the pocket of his torn trousers. He started in business as a shoe shiner, and during the day he diligently wielded his brush and polishing rag, raking in the coin. His evenings were spent in study—studying the intricacies of "eraps." Atteh end of a few years, having mastered the game and acquired a few thousand dollars, he moved from South Halsted street to his elegant quarters in the Blackstone on Michigan avenue, and began the practice of his "profession." He has been so successful that his fortune is estimated at $500,000. Further, the Chicago papers said that games were played nightly at the various hotels, such as the Blackstone, La Sale, etc., at which enormous sums were staked on the "roll of the bones." THE APPEAL will state further that the colored patronage of the hotels named is not very large, their clientele being confined principally to white people. No, "craps" is not a colored folks' game. It was at one time the pastime of the most degraded people of all classes, but it has risen in the social scale and is now very popular in "high society." "INVISIBLE GOVERNMENT" THE APPEAL has long suspected that there is an "invisible government" headed by capitalists, working among and controlling certain organizations and institutions for the purpose of keeping the "niggers in their place," rather than making colored youth self-respecting American citizens. Now comes the Messenger, a magazine published in New York, which says, "The professed purposes and objects of those who represent them are by no means the real objects. An THE MAN WHO DARES I honor the man entious discharge of stand alone; the wintolerant judgmer the countenances of averted, and the her cold, but the sense be sweeter than the world, the countena I honor the man who in the conscientious discharge of his duty dares to stand alone; the world, with ignorant, intolerant judgment, may condemn, the countenances of relatives may be averted, and the hearts of friends grow cold, but the sense of duty done shall be sweeter than the applause of the world, the countenances of relatives or the hearts of friends.—Charles Sumner. ce when we should wards out of men. us climbed on pro- been raised against me and lust, the in- serve the law, and our least disputes. we must speak and right the wrongs of er Wilcox. examination reveals that there is an interlocking directorate in control." The Messenger will publish a series of interesting and illuminating articles which will be a complete expose, and in which the editors claim they will show that the aims of the directors are diametrically opposed to the real_welfare and advancement of the colored people. Definite attention will be given to certain personalities such as Thomas Jesse Jones, Charles H. Kelsey, Robert Russa Moton, Emmett Scott, Dr. Durkee, George E. Haynes, Julius Rosenwald, Eugene Kinkele Jones, John M. Gandy, A. S. Frissel, Bishop W. P. Thirkeld, Ex President Taft and a host of others. If it is true there exists an "invisible government" which seeks to conine the colored people to a "jimrow" plane in the United States it ought to be brought to light. THANKS, MR. HAYS. In 1918 THE APPEAL first took up with Chairman Will H. Hays of the Republican National Committee of the appointment of an advisory committee, in which all of the elements of the party would be represented as equal members, for the campaign of 1920. A segregated, jimcrow committee was opposed. Mr. Hays' attention was called to the fact that in 1900, twenty years ago, the then chairman, M. A. Hanna, appointed three colored men as equal members of an advisory committee of 15 persons for the McKinley campaign of that year. Mr. Hays said little, but replied that the position of THE APPEAL was right. Now that Mr. Hays has appointed such a committee and has included a prominent colored man, Hon. William H. Lewis of Boston, in its personnel, THE APPEAL feels constrained to give the foregoing facts and claim the credit for having "started the ball-a-rolling." Thanks, Mr. Hays. Congratulations Mr. Lewis. JAPANESE TO DEMAND RACIAL EQUALITY. Advices from Washington say that the Japanese government has broadened the issue arising over the proposed exclusion of her nationals from owning land in California, it was learned from official sources today. She, will now insist that the United States formally recognize the equality of her citizens with those of any other nation. Such recognition would take the form of an official declaration, similar to the one proposed at the Versailles conference and withdrawn by Japan. On that occasion two great Japanese demands were before the conference. Japan insisted first upon a statement recognizing the equality of her race; second, that Shantung with its vast resources in minerals, its great German developments and its 10,000,000 of people be given to her. The council compromised by giving Shantung. Now she demands that the United States alone give her the far more desirable concession which the council of nations, acting upon a plea from Australia, expressly denied. It is recognized both by Japan and the United States; it was pointed out in official circles today, that nothing whatsoever can be done to prevent the citizens of California from enacting the proposed land expulsion act. Such an act, Japan maintains, is an unjust discrimination at her alone. The final issue will come. it was who in the consci- of his duty dares to world, with ignorant, ant, may condemn, of relatives may be parts of friends grow of duty done shall be applause of theences of relatives or WILL GIVE JUSTICE AMERICA WILL NOT FAIL COLORED PEOPLE SAYS SENATOR HARDING IN ADDRESS TO COLORED DELEGATIONS Marion, Ohio, Sept. 14—The following is the full text of the address of Senator Harding, Republican nominee for president to visiting colored delegations, last Friday: “Americans: I greet you as worker and a noble religious purpose, and I shall soar as I am able to do so, without thought of my position as a candidate of a party for high political place, and with my interest centered upon you, upon your aspirations, and upon the contribution of your people to America, not to the earliest also upon the contribution of America to your people and upon the justice which, in America, must never relax vigilance, not to create an equality that is worth nothing if it be not earned, but an equal opportunity for all men and women to be and hold the full recognition of their own merit, capacity and worth. "To much doctrine based upon an another principle has been loosened upon a war-worn world. Abroad, particularly in Russia, there has grown up his need to have some impossible magic, a government some bounty by the mere fact of having liberty and equality written over its door, and that citizenship need make no deposit in the bank of common deal in order to write checks upon the government, and have had too much encouragement to the idea that a government is a something - for - nothing institution. But I say that citizenship is not based upon what one can get, but, rather, it is based upon what one gives. I say - I wish that I could speak through you to all Americans—Let's Serve! "Under that slogan of good citizenship there is no reason why you should not hold your heads high. You, who are assembled today, and your race in America, have the good Americans to have, knowledgeful Americans must have, knowledgeful in a country where the merit, capacity, and worth of men and women are recognized and rewarded, that merit, capacity, and worth are developed. You, and I, and good America whatever color, blood or creed, know the inspiration of all men is equal opportunity to recognize recognition of differences between themselves, and that no injustice known to man can be greater than that of the tyranny and autocracy that labels itself Democracy, or or Proletariat, and enslaves all men to the abuse and all their freedom with the band of mediocrity. The American colored man has the sense to know this truth, has the good sense and clear head and brave heart to live it and, I assuming to speak a truth and have ought to know, proclaim it to all the world that he has met the test and did not and will not fail America. America Will Not Fail. "I proclaim more; I assert to all the world that America has not, and will not fail the American colored man. If there are those who doubt me let them look to the record—the record of the colored race in American citizenship, and the record of America in giving opportunity. "Your very presence in the assembly coming from great organizations dedicated to high religious purposes, is enough to cause a recognition in his heart to the great contribution to American citizenship which is found in the capacity for deep religious faith among people of pointed out today, with the first act under the California law. Formal demand of satisfaction will then be made. The Japanese question ought to be of intense interest to the colored people of the United States who are oppressed by the United States government under the laws as now interpreted by the ruling Democrats, by the Democratic state governments in the murder belt of the South and by a general vicious public opinion. To the colored men who are fighting for absolute racial equality of all American citizens, the action of Japan in demanding racial equality in a foreign land ought to be an inspiration. "Of one blood created God all men." "THE CONQUEST OF HAITI!" In an article in The Nation of July 10, 1920, Mr. Herbert J. Seligman gave the awful details of the occupation of the republic by the armed forces of the United States. Bishop Hurst, James Weldon Johnson and others have given further details in the Crisis and other magazines. There seems to be no doubt that the territory of a friendly country was ruthlessly invaded and thousands killed in the efforts to "pacify" the people. All accounts agree that the United States forces in their conquest of Haiti made the German invaders of Belgium look like a lot of pilkers. Now comes Franklin D. Roosevelt, Democratic nominee for vice president, who boasts that he wrote the new constitution of Haiti which was forced upon an unwilling people at the points of bayonets. And Mr. Roosevelt says that it is a "very good constitution." The Haitians, it seems, are not so sure about that and a delegation of Haitians is now in the country endeavoring to get some relief from the encroachments of the City National bank of New York city, which they claim acting under the new constitution has practically gobbled up all of the rich resources of the country. Senator Harding, the Republican nominee for president, does not approve of the occupation and it is likely that if he is elected he will order get out and States army and navy to get out and the Haitians to run their own country. your blood. America needs the deep religious faith. She needs it whether it comes from Catholic, Jew or mestizan. She needs it in her citizenship, and I believe that the best of America is our spiritual life and not our material possessions, and that if America ever let her spiritual life die, she will no longer be the lair of America. "The expression of that spiritual life, alive in the hearts of the people of your blood, has, I believe, been the basis for the achievements of the American colored man. They are great people, and they have been wrought not from words nor false claims, but by patience, tolerance, restraint, and by the earned rewards of that merit, capacity and worth in citizenship of which I have been born. "Let all true Americans know that the census of 1910 showed that over 87 per cent of the men and 54 per cent of the women of your blood were gainfully employed, a larger percentage of the cases, than the rest of us Americans. "Let America know that the churches of the colored race have increased during a little more than century from 700 to 43,000. Let her know that increased from 12,000 to 600,000, and farms operated from 20,000 to one million. Let America know that literacy among colored people has climbed from 10 per cent to 80 per cent. "Let all true America know and recognize, that during the war the colored race of America invested one dollar out of every five they owned in war bonds. Let them know that colored boys were in our army, willing to serve in the conviction for avoiding the draft. Let Us Not Forget. "But when we Americans of whatever color, render tribute to the record of the colored American, let us not forget to render tribute to the people of the colonies and among those people their reverence made. For I tell you—and through you I tell all Americans—that if your people have progressed in so amazing inking manner, it must have been brittle and unfortunate. If you have risen by your merit, capacity, and worth, and not by agitation and violence and revolt against our institutions, it is proof our institutions, and have loved them. "If the men and women of your blood have given, as we all desired to give, a great outpouring of treasury, upon the altar of patriotism, to the people who was in your hearts—America has given you her great blessing of justice. Good American Citizenship. "You have it, and you shall have it. It will be good American citizenship and will continue to accord it to your people. If I have anything to do with it, it shall also be good and unlawful because law. Brutal and unlawful consequences of such proceeds from those who break the law or from those who take the law into their own hands, can only be dealt with in one way by true Americans, whether they be of your blood or mine." "Fear it! Here upon this beloved soil you shall have that justice that every man and woman of us knows would have been prayed for by Abraham Lincoln. Fear not! Your people by their restraint, their paedication, wisdom, integrity, labor, and belief in God will earn the right to that justice, and America will best it." WOMAN'S SUFFRAGE. Carrie Chapman Catt, president of the National American Woman Suffrage association, recently said relative to the granting of suffrage to women, "It is not a Republican victory; it is not a Democratic victory; it is not a woman's victory; it is not a man's victory—but an American victory." And so it is. Jeanette Carter, a prominent colored suffragist, in a recent article in the New York Age, says: "The colored women of the nation have a duty to perform which they cannot well shirk. They are obligated by all of the wrongs heaped upon them in class legislation and contemptuous public opinion, more degrading and humiliating to them, it appears, than to our men, to organize for their own protection and the conservation of their citizen rights, and to use their power of the ballot and their power of organized agitation and protest to the very utmost to right the wrongs unlawfully heaped upon them in common with the men of their race. It is a duty, and I believe the colored women of the land will meet it wisely and fearlessly." THE APPEAL indorses what Miss Carter says and believes that votes of women will do much to right many wrongs which jimcrow colored men have allowed to be heaped upon the colored people. THEIR FEET OF CLAY. For many years THE APPEAL looked up with respect and almost reverence to some of the colored men who were leaders of affairs for advancement. The "Old Guard" is fast passing away and the jimcrow man is making a desperate effort to grin himself into power—and cash. Some of our idols have toppled over. After years of valiant battling for manhood rights, several of THE APPEAL'S "super men" have succumbed to the blandishments of entrenched power and have compromised their souls. Their feet are of clay. The Question of Segregation. (From the Richmond Planet.) Editor John Q. Adams endorses the action of Editor William Monroe GOD GIVE US MEN. God give us men! A time like Strong minds, great hearts, Men whom the lust of office Men whom the spoils of office Men who possess opinions are Men who have honor—men Men who can stand before a And damn his treacherous fife Tall men, sun crowned, who In public duty and in private "THE TRAGEDY THE I God give us men! A time like this demands Strong minds, great hearts, true faith and ready hands Men whom the lust of office does not kill; Men whom the spoils of office cannot buy; Men who possess opinions and a will; Men who have honor—men who will not lie; Men who can stand before a demagogue And damn his treacherous flatteries without winking! Tall men, sun crowned, who live above the fog In public duty and in private thinking. "THE TRAGEDY OF THE HALF LOAF" (From The Chicago Whip) THE APPEAL heartily endorses every word of the following editorial from our enterprising and uncompromising contemporary, The Chicago Phin. What a pity that there are so many papers on the papers edited by colored men: The strongest races of men, and the most indomitable characters of history have always either uncompromisingly made every scintillation of their just rights, or, being denied the full means of their ideals have spurned even life itself. Patrick Henry in crying out for "either liberty or death," voiced the sentiment of the Pilgrim Fathers, who preferred the unknown horrors of the great uncharted Western ocean and the savage-ridden land beyond to re-oppression in a comfortable home. But the American colored man is apparently satisfied with the HALF LOAF. For 250 years he was so told that he was entitled to NOTHING—that he even enjoyed life like so by suffering and liberately dwarfed and stunted that he could not even think to the contrary. So well was this psychology ingrained into him, that even today, race leaders of the old school, finding it impossible to break from this log cabin humphrey, "handed it down to free men." He was so thoroughly robbed of his mentality, that he complacently helped manufacture the shot and shell which enabled his masters to keep him in the city. We can learn that Citizens were grown him, his childish Trotter in an innocence, his childish Trotter in an innocence, his childish Y. M. C. A. for the colored people, Logically and under the sunlight of divine justice, both Mr. Adams and Mr. Trotter are right. There is not shadow of excuse for a separate building in the city, Mass., where all citizens are presumed to enjoy and are accorded their civil and political rights. The three great leaders now standing forth in this attitude and maintaining this position are William Monroe Trotter of Boston, John Q Adams of St. Paul, Minn., and Hon. H. C. Smith of Cleveland, Ohio. We can not say otherwise that under the American flag with the full glare of citizenship shining in their faces, they will recognize it will be the future that will accord to them the full recognition they deserve. OPEN LETTER TO WOMEN SUF FRAGE LEADERS. National Equal Rights League Urges Stand Against Color Line. The National Equal Rights League, in an open letter to leaders of the suffrage movement, congratulates them in their victorious fight for equal suffrage. They addressed to Mrs. Carie C. Catt, president of the National American Woman Suffrage Association; Miss Alice Paul, chairman of the National Woman Suffrage Party; and Miss Alice Stone Blackwell reads: Ladies—The National Equal Rights League of rights without exception for race, congratulates the National American Woman Association and National Woman's Party, to which some of us belong, on tehr remarkable achievement in gaining equal political rights without exception for sex. The Four Coincidences: At this, your hour of victory, we would call to your thought the following striking coincidences: The most notable male crusaders for the abolition of slavery and the bestowal upon Americans of color were also chief advocates of woman suffrage. The first American woman suffrage convention grew out of a world's anti-slavery convention, where the American abolitionist was denied a vote, given to the organ the movement now crowned with glorious success. The women pioneers of the suffrage movement, Lucretia Mott, Lucy Stone, Hubert Cady Stanton, Jalila Ward Howe, and Anthony, in whose honor the 19th anniversary was named and who wrote it, on the "HUMAN NATURE" My ear is My soul is sick with eve Of wrong and outrage, There is no flesh in man It does not feel for man Of brotherhood is severe That falls asunder at the He finds his fellow guil Not colored like his ow To enforce the wrong, f Dooms and devotes him Thus man devotes his b 'Tis human nature's bro "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. Defective Page live this demands true faith and ready hands; does not kill; cannot buy; d a will; who will not lie; demagogue batteries without winking! live above the fog thinking. —J. G. Holland. mind could not grasp their significance. He took what was given him with a thankful heart, thanks to the teachings of the old school. He has not yet demanded unequivocal that is due him! He fears to refuse to face the question and demand the WHOLE, trembling lest he be denied any at all. With apologetic men and smirking smile, he renders gratitude for Jim Crow Settlement Houses, Jim Crow Soldiers and Sailors' Clubs, Jim Crow Y. M. C. A.s, Jim Crow Officers' Training Camps, Jim Crow churches, fraternal institutions. He thus plays the begger's role in spite of the fact that he has proven himself to be an indissoluble and indivisible entity of the whole war and woof of America, economic, political, military and social. He is the economic backbone of the South. He holds the balance of political power as he is beginning to learn. He has the fangs of the american army. His blood is unsuspected, flows in more veins than any other one strain in America. He is still a slave if he accepts anything short of the full unstinted measure of recognition and respect. The New Colored American will never again be satisfied with EQUAL rights, when they are not the SAME REIGHTS. The NEW Colored American, repudiating the teachings of the old school, led him into the quagmire of peonage and sertum MUST and WILL spurn the Half Loaf and lay onto the WHOLE LOAF, "so help him God!" model of the 15th amendment, which gave suffrage to colored men, were devoted champions of freedom and equality of rights without distinction because of race or color. Lastly, in the dark days, when your champions were few and the cause weak and unpopular, the gifted orators of the genius, whose its rescue with their genius, and Praise to them was a friend prized by Mrs. Stanton and Miss Anthony till his死. Causes Linked by Pioneers. Such a linking of the cause of justice, equality and rights for the colored people of its country with that of women suffragette's struggle, inspires us to appeal our organization to stand firm and strong against any color line in the possession now of the suffrage won. Keep the Stain Off. In the presence of the crime of disfranchisement of colored men, in behalf of the millions of colored calls upon you to remain true to the traditions of your cause, to the memory of your pioneers, to friends in need, to principle pure and undefiled, to full power that your colored sisters have denied and the new political freedoms stained by race discrimination. N. S. TAYLOR, President, Illinois. MRS. MARIE CRAWFORD, 2nd Vice-President, New York. MRS. M. C. SIMPSON, Assistant Secretary. WM. MONROE TROTTER, Executive Secretary. Boston, Mass., September, 1920. True Race Pride. On equal rights do not be misled by the talk that you are lacking in race pride for wanting to be where you are not wanted if it refers to affairs for the public. Race pride, self-respect require that you insist on being permitted to be present where you are not required that the right to be as a citizen, and where there is no reason for you not being wanted except contempt merely for your race. Regular Southern Style Because he had bought Pullman tickets for his wife and daughters John Leonard, who runs a barber shop for him, was only taken at Yazoo City, Miss. was taken to the beaten by a mob, stripped and severely beaten with horse whips. Colored Men Nominated St. Louis. Mo.-Two colored men won Republican nominations for the state legislature from St. Louis in the primary election. They are Langdon Harrison and W! M. Moore, of the third and sixth districts respectively. IT'S FOULEST BLOT." he pained every day's report with which earth is filled. its obdurate heart. n: the natural bond red as the flax the touch of fire. y of a skin wn: and having power for such a worthy cause as his lawful prey. brother, and destroys: badest foulest blot. —Cowper. ST. PAUL WEEK'S RECORD OF HAPPENINGS. IN MINNESOTA'S CAPITOL. The "Saintly City" and Saintly City relics—Neway items of social, Religious, Political and General Matters Among the People. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1920. All newspapers now-a-days have the type for their reading matter set on typesetting machines. The cost used to be from 75 cents to $1.00 per hour for this work. Now the price has been raised to FOUR DOLLARS per hour. Just think of that when you wish something published as we must pay at that rate for every line set. Bear in mind that all social articles published, occupying more than Four Lines, must be paid for. Telephone this office, Cedar 5649, and arrange for the same. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hatcher have moved to 262 Rondo street. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel W. Wright have moved to 589 Arundel St. Mrs. Julia Billus has gone to Redlands, Cal. to spend the winter. Mrs. Hazel Craig, 428 Edmund St., entertained the Handicraft Art club on Wednesday afternoon. Mr. Jerry Lee, 994 Iglehart Ave., who has been very sick, is showing some signs of improvement. FOR RENT—Three nicely furnished rooms for gentlemen. Apply to Mrs. J. C. Smith, 140 Rondo street. Mrs. Bessie Lucas gave a theater party last Saturday in honor of Mrs. Annie Simons of Toledo, Ohio. The matrons of the Round Table club met on Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Dovie Wilsh, 411 Charles St. Mr. Richard Van Patter of Detroit, Mich., is spending a fortnight with his sister, Mrs. C. L. Sharp, 521 Rondo street. Cedar 508 Phones Garfield 1508 Res.: 678 St. Anthony Ave. Tel. Dale 2947 PIONEER UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING CO. Twin City Calls Answered Day or Night Lady Assistant 150 W. Fourth St. ST. PAUL Mr. Harold Cage, 495 Fuller Ave., federal meat inspector at one of local plants, has recently been transferred to Chicago. Rev. J. C. Anderson, pastor St. James A. M. E. church, left Monday night for Des Moines to attend the annual conference. Mrs. Annie Simons of Toledo, Ohio, who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Wm. Alston, left for Chicago this week on her way home. The first meeting of the fall term of the Adelphai Club will be held at the home of Mrs. Harriet Hall, 996 Iglehart Ave., this afternoon. The King's Daughters' club of St. James A. M. E. church held its regular meeting on Tuesday with Mrs. B. Roegers, 732 St. Anthony Ave. Readers will, doubtless, notice that Messrs. H. W. and C. A. Schuck have some desirable homes for sale. See their advertisement elsewhere. F. B. SIMPSON GEO. W. WILLS Tel. Dale 1914 Tel. Dale 2541 Office Phones: Cedar 1024 Tri-State 24 240 SIMPSON & WILLS Undertakers, Funeral Directors and Embalmers Calls Answered Promptly Day or Night Lady Assistant When Desired Office and Chapel 234 WEST FOURTH ST. ST. PAUL GET ONE! A deposit of One Dollar entitles one to the use of a handsome home bank for small change. Ask the man at window number 4. State Savings Bank 93 East Fourth Street 1910 THE BEST MAN IN THE WORLD CHARLES SATCHELL MORRIS JR. Charles Satchell Morris, Jr., the brilliant young orator, of Norfolk, Va., who has been speaking to capacity audiences throughout the country, will deliver an address at Memorial Baptist church Friday evening, October 1st. The orator's subject will be "The Blocks With Which We Build." Editor Adams, while working in his cellar last Monday, had a fail that wrenched his body so severely that he has been confined to his home ever since. Baby Roach died at the City Hospital on Wednesday and was buried on Thursday. Services were held at the Lyles chapel. Mrs. T. H. Lyles, funeral directress. Mrs. A. W. Jordan, and son, 791 Rondo street, returned Friday of last week from Indianapolis, Ind., where Mrs. Jordan had be in attendance at the Baptist Convention. Music will be for orchestra and other audiences throughout the country, will deliver an address at Memorial Baptist church Friday evening, October 1st. The orator's subject will be "The Blocks With Which We Build." General admission 50 cents. to be given by the Co. No.1 and Staff Hall. A good time one. Music by 1. Admission 50 cent. the concert and given by the Will at Memorial Baptist day night of last than a success, and thanks to the men who helped to make ta Majors, who sold a箱 of tickets, rec as a prize. Don't wait to buy your groceries on Sunday as you may not be able to get them. The authorities are arranging to enforce the law against selling groceries on Sunday. FOR RENT-Desirable two room suite, suitable for man and wife at Wilson Villa, corner Rondo and Mackubin sts. Tel. Elkhurst 1896 HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH NO. 553, G. Ursula, University of Wisconsin, in each month at Union Hall, corner of Aurora and Kent streets at 8:00 P. M. Mrs. Lella Harris, M. N. G.; Mrs. E. Lindsay, W. R., 918 Wood-bridge street. Ladies who desire anything in the line of hair work, will do well to call on Mrs. Lizzie Talbert Ave. No. 100 Park Place and Summit Ave. 1905 reasonable and satisfaction guaranteed. Mrs. Eliza Winters, 324 St. Anthony avenue, was found dead Thursday. She is survived by a niece living in Portland, Ore., who will arrive here Sunday to take charge of the funeral arrangements. The marriage of Mrs. Anna L. Belton and Mr. Orrison Leroy Griffin occurred Tuesday evening at the home of her father, Mr. M. Duncan, Rev. D. Beasley of Grand Forks, N. D., officiating. When you wish anything in the line of drugs, medicines, toilet articles, soda water, soft drinks, ice cream, cigars, tobacco, etc., call at Elmen Morris' drug store, Cor. Dale and W. Central Ave. He satisfies. Mr. I. A. Gross, the automobile man, wishes to announce that he will make a rate of 25 cents per passenger to or from the different churches within a radius of a mile on Sundays from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. T. Telde 3316. Mrs. Bismark C. Archer, 314 Western Ave., for many years organist of St. James A. M. E. church, left Sunday night as accompanist with the Buckner Concert singers for a trip through Western states and Canada. Mrs. Amanda J. Lyles wishes to announce to the public that she will continue the undertaking business of her late husband, T. H. Lyles, with Listeo & Wold, 150 W. Fourth St. corner of Franklin. T. H. Calder 0508; residence Dale 2947. Mr. and Mrs. J. Q. Adams, 527 St. Anthony avenue, are in the list of "satisfied customers" of the "Buck Furnace" now being demonstrated at the store of the Adam Decker Hardware Co., 347-349 Jackson street. See ad elsewhere in this issue. A Yale lock key was found on the Red Wing last Tuesday night that was used for the excursion of Frederick Douglass Lodge and Household of Ruth, which the owner may obtain by calling at THE APPEAL office, proving property and paying for this notice. The "People's Restaurant," 527 St. Peter street, corner of 10th, is the latest venture in the food furnishing line. It opened its doors to the public on last Monday. Messrs. F. Ware and George Christ are the proprietors and they cordially invite the public to call and give them the "once over." You and your friends are invited to come over to Minneapolis Wednesday evening September 29, and attend the first of a series of dances W. J. UTLEY 311 Wabasha THE NEW YORK TIMES Music will be furnished by Hedge's orchestra and other local talent. This will be an opportunity for the public to enjoy a rare treat, and a record-breaking audience is confidently expected. General admission, 35 cents; reserved seats, 50 cents. to be given by the Pride of the West Co. No. 101 and Staff, K. P., at Yeoman Hall. A good time is promised everyone. Music by Stevens orchestra. Admission 50 cents. The concert and dinner that was given by the 'Willing Workers' Club of the Baptist church. Thursday night, of last week, was more than a success, and the club tenders thanks to the members and friends who helped to make it. Mrs. Armetta Majors, who sold the largest number of tickets, received a silk quilt as a prize. Mrs. Eliza Pogue and daughter, Miss Lucy, of Kansas City, Mo., arrived in the city last week to permanently reside. Mrs. Pogue is the mother of Mr. J. A. Lane, 682 Broadway, whom she and her daughter are visiting. Later they will go to housekeeping. Mr. Lane is the proprietor of the Macer Club, 743 Mississippi street. Have you ever attended a Harvest Ball? If not, now is your chance, for that's the name of the first dance of the Fat and Winter dances to be given to the Men's Association at the Side Side Auditorium on Monday evening, September 27th. "Surprises galore" says Alex Irwin, and you know that Alex knows. An eight - piece syncopated orchestra Admission 50 cents. First class, light alty furnished rooms with table board if desired. Reasonable rent by the day, week or month. Call Mrs. R. L. Milton, 619 Temper-Street, Telephone Gedar 7734 One of the very pleasant social affairs tendered to Mr. B. F. Tutt of Seattle, Wash., during his visit to the Twin Cities, was a little smoker or stag party given at the residence of his hostess, Mrs. W. Burton, 753 Ashland avenue, last Monday evening. There were sixteen gentlemen of the Twin Cities present, most members of the Sterling Club, and they certainly had some jolly good time, "if anyone should ask you." The Midway Auto Get-together Club invites auto owners to become members. The object of the club is to entertain strangers who, from time to time, visit St. Paul. There is a 25-cent membership monthly fee which will be used in giving dinners for the club and its guests. They hope to promote the pleasure of auto owners by touring the highways of Minnesota. The club entertained Mr. Burchurne on a drive through the Summit highway, Riverside Drive and the Lake of the Isles, Minneapolis, Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Willis, 1460 Burhurne Ave., Mrs. W. S. Burton, 753 Ashland, and others composed the party, Mr. E. M. Hill, 1373 University, leading. MEMORIAL MENTIONINGS. Pastor Carr returned from the National Baptist Convention at Indianapolis last week and left again this week for Rock Island, Ill., where he will deliver the annual address for the tri-city celebration of the Emancipation Proclamation. Bro O. S. Woodard drives his auto 90 miles each week to and from his beautiful country home beyond Minneapolis to attend both services at Memorial. Memorial is growing in favor with God and man. All members are urged to attend services regularly. There will be a feast of season and a flow of soul at Memorial next Friday night. Don't miss it. New Church Opening. Pastor Joseph S. Strong and his congregation held their first services ```markdown ``` ACME CLUB 317 Wabasha FOR RENT and one great-grandchild, all of Tacoma. The funeral was held last Monday, Sept. 20, at C. C. Mellinger's mortuary chapel, Rev. A. W. Williams officiating. Interment at Tacoma cemetery. Memorial for the Late T. H. Lyles. The Sterling Club has perfected arrangements for a public memorial to the late Thos. H. Lyles. Dr. Anderson of St. James' A. M. E. Church has kindly offered his church for the testimonial, which will be held the Sunday, October 3, at 8 o'clock p.m. Atty. Hammond Turner will act as master of ceremonies, Rev. A. H. Lealtad will deliver the innovation, special music will be sung by an augmented choir, directed by Mme. L. A. Crafton. A symposium of ten-minute speeches will be given by: Dr. J. C. and for the order of the Chairman, Harris, for the chair of the Star; Hon. C. D. O'Brien for the citizens; Mr. J. H. Hickman, Sr., for the pioneers; Mr. F. B. Simpson, for the Masons, and Atty. J. Louis Ervin for the Elks. William B. Walker, Chairman. O. C. Hall, D. T. Reed, W. E. Alexander, C. W. Wigington, CALL UP, HANG UP, OPEN THE DOOR AND LET WE HAUL By the Hour or by the By the Piece, Job or Furniture, Trunks or Our Rates are Moderate and Service Go GOINS EXPRESS 661 W. CENTRAL AVE. Tel. Dale 2211 SAINT CEDAR 7063 PHONES RES. D J. H. LAWSON TAILOR SHOP & SHOE SHINING PAN Suits Made To Order. Dry Cleaning, Pre Repairing, Shoe Shining. Ladies Work A Sp WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER GOODS 321 JACKSON ST. ST. P THE FLOP THEIM S The True Measure IN THE DOOR AND LET US IN. By the Hour or by the Day, By the Piece, Job or Dray. Furniture, Trunks or Wood, Orate and Service Good. XPRESS CO. Dale 2211 SAINT PAUL, MINN. CALL UP, HANG UP, OPEN THE DOOR AND LET US IN. LAWSON HOE SHINING PARLOR r. Dry Cleaning, Pressing g. Ladies Work A Specialty AND DELIVER GOODS ST. ST. PAUL HEIM SHOE The Measure J. H. LAWSON TAILOR SHOP & SHOE SHINING PARLOR Suits Made To Order. Dry Cleaning, Pressing Repairing, Shoe Shining. Ladies Work A Specialty WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER GOODS 321 JACKSON ST. ST. PAUL THE FLOPHEIM SHOE THE true measure of value is what you get for what you pay. You can buy shoes for less but you do not get the long service, perfect fit and lasting style of The Florsheim Shoe. Florsheim quality proves from the first to the last day's wear that Florsheims cost less in the end. They give you value for what you pay. STANLEY SHOE CO. 421 Robert at Seventh Furnace Time Is N time Is Near Furnace Time Is Near SELECT YOUR PIPELESS FURNACE THIS MONTH To avoid penalties in the form of higher prices and the delayed installation of a Round Oak Furnace, see us now, please. These furnaces, built with strict adherence to the high quality standards of the Round Oak Folks, are in great demand and soon may be unobtainable. Heavy, over-size parts, precisely fitted, and patented features which render it permanently leak-proof, are indicative of its superiorities. Stop in and examine this furnace. Special terms now. allblom and Carpet Co. 1234 Main Street New York, NY 10001 Page The Wallblom Furniture and Carpet Co. Defective Page in their new church—Bethel A. M. E. 196 Thomas street, near Marion, last Sunday, Sept. 19th. Quarterly meeting was held in the afternoon, and despite the rain there was a splendid gathering, largely made up of members of St. James, the mother church. Dr. J. C. Anderson preached the sacramental sermon. Rev. Jonas S. Strong of Canada was present and assisted. A collection of $70.00 was washed. Services tomorrow at 10:45 a.m. with general class and prayer services in charge of Bro. Andrew Jackson. Rev. C. E. Ward of Union Gospel Mission will preach. Good singing. Please bring Bibles. All welcome. THE APPEAL is in receipt of the sad information of the death, on Sept. 16, at Tacoma, Wash., of Mrs. Susan Talbert, aged 69 years. Mrs. Talbert, formerly resided in St. Paul, but for the past six years has lived in Tacoma with her daughter, Mrs. C. D. Anderson, also a former well-known resident of St. Paul. The death occurred at the family residence, 1825 South J street. The deceased is survived by her daughter, Mrs. Anderson, two grandchildren N. W. GOINS, MANAGER N. N. GOINS, MECHANIC PHONES CEDAR 7063 ROSE ROUNDHAM TURBACE ARTTECH DRIFT N. GOINS, ESTIMATES P. GOINS, UTILITY RES. DALE 6796 Do you remember the flavor of mother's bread? It's lacking in most breads today. But you'll find it in every loaf of crispy SNOWFLAKE. Ask your grocer TODAY DAY PHONES: TRI STATE 23 262 N. W. CEDAR 6245 NIGHT PHONE: N. W. CEDAR 9088 THIS IS THE MAN Ask your grocer TODAY DAY PHONES: TRI STATE 23 262 N, W, CEDAR 6245 NIGHT PHONE: N. W. CEDAR 9088 PETER M. BURGESS 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 KNOWN AS "THANN" HOTEL, CAFE AND POOL ROOM HEADQUARTERS FOR RAILROAD AND THEATRICAL FOLK KNOWN AS "THANN" ST. PAUL 40 E. THIRD ST. [Name not visible] F. WARE GEO. CHRIST THE GROUND FLOOR RESTAURANT PEOPLES' RESTAURANT FIRST CLASS MEALS TO ORDER AT ALL HOURS REGULAR DINNER SERVED FROM 11 A. M. TO 5 P. M. ICE CREAM AND CAKE, SPECIAL TABLE FOR LADIES 527 ST. PETER ST. CORNER OF TENTH STREET ST. PAUL P TENTH STREET ST. PAUL TEL SUMMIT 2450 COSMOPOLITAN GROCERY R. J. SOLOMON, PROP. First Class Staple and Fancy Groceries Vegetables, Fruits, Confectionery, Ice Cream Cigars, Tobacco, Cigarettes. Strictly Cash and Carry System 558 ST. ANTHONY SAINT PAUL BUS. TEL, CEDAR 5061 BUS. TEL, CEDAR 5061 RES. TEL, ELKHURST 2956 Are You Looking For A Home? Do so the new way We have an Auto at your service and will be pleased to show you the many houses we have for sale. No expense to you whatever. No obligation on your part to buy. Let us show you. H. W. & C. A. SCHUCK REA ESTATE Are You Looking For A Home? We have an Auto at your service and will be pleased to show you the many houses we have for sale. No expense to you whatever. No obligation on your part to buy. Let us show you. [Picture of a man in a suit and tie]. Barber Shop in Connection, open evenings until 8, Saturdays to 12. P. M. The most Popular Lines of Cigars and Candies For Sale ALL KINDS OF SOFT DRINKS ON ICE. Shoe Shining Parlor. TEL. DALE 4963 SUDDEN SERVICE TEL. DALE 4963 SUDDEN SERVICE ROYAL CAFE B. C. COLEMAN, PROP. MRS. ANNA GAMALE, MGR. REGULAR DINNER FROM 12 M. TO 8 P. M. MEALS TO ORDER AT ALL HOURS, 388 KENT ST. SAINT 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. Mr. W. E. Green is now chef at the Midland cafe. Miss Edythe Stone, 2712 Grand avenue, is visiting her cousin, Miss Dorothy Pelkey, in Chicago. Mrs. Ione E. Gibbs entertained at dinner last Sunday Editor Adams and family. Covers were laid for eight. Mr. Howard Shepard, who has been summering in various points East, has returned home to take up his studies in the "U." THE APPEAL has information from Martin Brown, who is at present in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, that he is doing remarkably well with his book agency. Strangers who come to this city to start housekeeping can get valuable pointers on purchasing furniture at the best prices by calling on C. W. Dwyer at the Twin City Exchange, 507-509 Fourth street south. Medames Price and Smeddler, proprietors of the popular "P. & S. Chicken Shack," have moved to 629 Sixth Ave. No, a few doors east of their former location, where they are better than ever situated to serve their many customers. Pride of the West Co. No. 1 and Staff, K. P., will give the first of a series of dances at Yaean Hall on Wednesday evening, September 29th. You and your friends are cordially invited. A good time is promised everyone. Admission 50 cents. The Railroad Men's Association will give the first of their Fall and Winter dances on Monday evening, Sept. 27th, and the Harvest Ball is the name of it. "It is going to be a sweetheart," says Alex Irwin, and you know what that means. Admission 50 cents. MRS. ROBERT A. VAN HOOK FASHIONABLE DRESSMAKING AND LADIES' TAILORING PARTY GOWNS A SPECIALTY 722 SIXTH AVENUE NORTH MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. Stewart Hotel 246-50 Fourth Av. So. J. E. STEWART & E. D. STEWART PROPRIETORS FINEST ESTABLISHMENT OF ITS KIND IN THE TWIN CITIES Twenty-nine Steam Heated, Electric Lighted, Rooms. Free Bath. Rates Reasonable. Lobby, Reading and Lounging Room, SPECIAL TEMPERANCE BEVERAGES. Special Terms for Private Parties. Banquets, Etc. TELEPHONES PUBLIC-MAIN 2869 OFFICE-ATLANTIC 4867 MINNEAPOLIS. MINN. CITATION EX. OF FINAL ACCOUNT. STATE OF MINNESOTA, County of Ramssey, ss. CITATION EX. OF FINAL ACCOUNT OF RAMESE, INNESOTA, County of Ramesse, ss. On reading and filing the petition of the representative of said estate, praying for examining, adjusting and allowing his FINAL ACCOUNT, and for the assignment of the residue of said estate to the person represented, ordered. That petition be heard and that all persons interested in said matter be cited and required to appear before this Court, on Monday, 1993, at 10 a.m. o'clock A. M. or as soon thereafter as said matter be heard, at the Probate Court Rooms in the Court House in show cause, if any they have, why said petition should not be granted and that this citation be served by publication of the said decedent in the said decedent whose names and addresses appear from the files of this Court. Witness the Judge of said Court this 14th day of September, A. D. 1920. E. M. MAILLE. Judge of Probate. Attost: F. W. GOSEWISCH, Clerk of Probate. (Seal of Probate Court.) W. T. FRANCIIS 329 Met. Bank (9-18-20) One of the Finest Examples of Family Fealty_in_Minnesota. The Gibbs brothers, Jasper, Hiram, Mark, Morris and Wendell constitute the best bunching of business and brotherly love to be boasted of in the Twin Cities, or, in Minnesota, for that matter. All five of these brothers were reared in Minneapolis; all are educated and all work together in conducting the "J. & H. Damp Wash Laundry," situated on southeast corner of 38th street and Cedar avenue, which is their property and worth in the neighborhood of $25,000. They have conducted this business very seriously for a number of years, adding every improvement necessary and few, if any, of the laundries of the city equal theirs in volume and quality of work done. They have recently built a garage on their ground that will house twenty-five cars and are conducting a motor car business in all its branches. They are special agents for the famous "Beggs Six" and "Anderson" cars. They have acquired a few used cars also which they are selling at low prices for cars of their class. See advertisement elsewhere in this issue if you desire a good car. N. W. Main 2592 PHONES Auto 33 07s PORTERS' AND WAITERS' HOTEL FOR MEN ONLY RATES REASONABLE L. WHEELER, PRES. E.L. BOYD, SEC. 311 Hennepin MINNEAPOLIS PAINLESS DENTISTRY TEL. CEDAR 6975 HOURS 9 A.M. TO 1 P. M. & 2 TO 6 P.M. SUNDAYS & EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT DR. L. RAYMOND HILL DENTAL SURGEON First Class Guaranteed Work in All Branches of Dentistry 303 COURT BLOCK 24 E. 4TH ST. RONDO TAILORING CO. MAX JAFFE, MANAGER SUITS AND OVERCOATS MADE TO ORDER Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing at Moderate Prices. LADIES TAILORING A SPECIALTY 499 RONDO ST. Cor. Mackubin SAINT PAUL Tel. Elkhurst 3987 ELMER MORRIS DRUGGIST Film Developing and Printing, One Day Service. Drugs, Medicines, Soda Water Toilet Articles, Soft Drinks Candies, Cigars, Tobacco. Ice Cream by Brick or Bulk Dale & W. Central St. Paul OFFICE TEL. JACKSON 2686 RES. TEL DALE 7816 *HOURS: 9 A. M. TO 1 P. M. AND 2 TO 6 P. M. DR. JOHN R. FRENCH SURGEON DENTIST FIRST CLASS GUARANTEED WORK IN ALL BRANCHES OF DENTISTRY SUITE 2 DETROIT BLDG. SAINT T COR. 4TH & WABASHA MINNE SUITE 2 DETROIT BLDG. COR. 4TH & WABASHA SAINT PAUL MINNESOTA N. W. Bompat 35 PHONES Tri-State 77 172 VANDER BIE'S ICE CREAM IS THE BEST For Sale Everywhere J, C. VANDER BIE Partridge and Brunson Sts. ST. PAUL, MINN. OFFICE TEL. JACKSON 2339 RES. TEL. DALE 7816 HOURS: 9 A. M. TO 1 P. M. AND 2 TO 6 P. M. SUNDAYS BY APPOINTMENT DR. C. E. CHEEKS DENTAL SURGEON FIRST CLASS GUARANTEED WORK IN ALL BRANCHES OF DENTISTRY 84 W. SEVENTH ST. DAKOTA BLDG. SUITE 203-204 ST. PAUL THE HARVEST BALL FALL AND WINTER DANCES TO BE GIVEN BY THE RAILROAD MENS ASSOCIATION South Side Auditorium Twelth Avenue South and Third Street, Minneapolis. Good Music by an Eight Piece Syncopated Orchestra PRIDE OF THE WEST CO. NO.1 AND STAFF, UNIFORM RANK SERIES OF DANCES Seventh and Third Avenue South, Minneapolis Sergeant Clarence A. Hughes, Chairman, Sergt. Thomas B. Stovall Jr Tela Burt, James R. Ellis, James Hughes Jr., Lovel Douglass H. Poore, Col. F. G. Thomas, Lieut. James Burke, Permission General Wm. R. Morris, Captain W. C. Jeffrey, Commanding. Own Your Own Car Own Your Own Car We have a few used cars that can scarcely be told from new ones. All are freshly painted and in perfect running order. If these cars were not right we would not offer them to you. They were traded in on "Beggs Sixes" and "Andersons," for which cars we are dealers. You will be proud to own any of these cars. In your spare time you might unite business with pleasure by doing a little taxi work on the side. 5-Passenger 1920 "Elgin Six" $1350.00 5-Passenger 1920 "Patterson" 1550.00 7-Passenger 1918 "Reo" 1300.00 If these do not appeal to you, let us demonstrate a "Beggs Six" or "Anderson" for you. GIBBS BROTHERS MOTOR EXPRESS GARAGE 38TH STREET AND CEDAR AVE. PHONE DREXEL 5063 MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. FALL CLEARANCE SALE PHONE: SUMMIT 80 T. S. 84002 TorreyShoes $9.85 to $11.85 THE FIRST OF A MES OF DANCE AT WOMAN HALL South and Third Avenue South, Minneapolis ON Tuesday Eve. Seven RICHESTRA DANCING COMMITTEE OF ARRANGEMENTS E. A. Hughes, Chairman, Sergt. Thomas James R. Ellis, James Hughes Jr., B. Col. F. G. Thomas, Lieut. James Burke R. R. Morris, Captain W. C. Jeffrey, C. IN Your Own ACT QUICKLY have a few used cars that can scare ones. All are freshly painted and older. If these cars were not right them to you. were traded in on "Beggs Sixes" and which cars we are dealers. will be proud to own any of these or spare time you might unite busi- doing a little taxi work on the si THESE ARE BIG BARGAINS Menger 1920 "Elgin Six" $13 Menger 1920 "Patterson" 15 Menger 1918 "Reo" 13 we do not appeal to you, let us den- ture six" or "Anderson" for you. BBS BROTHER MOTOR EXPRESS GARAGE 185TH STREET AND CEDAR AVE. XEL 5063 MINNEAPOLIS CLEARANCE 2 LOUGHBY'S SHO 400 ROBERT ST. FE MIL ONE SUMM WESTERN WESTERN WESTERN WESTERN EDWIN CLAPE A 30N Clapp Shoes $12.85 and $13.85 Here They Are, Buck and Rudy BUCK'S STOVE & RANGE COMPANY Pipe and Pipeless Furnaces NOW IT'S UP TO YOU TO COME TO OUR STORE and see why our satisfied customers recommend your buying a Buck or Rudy Pipe or Pipeless Furnace. Demostration daily at our store. SEE WINDOW DISPLAY! The explanation of our low prices on fine furs is simple---farsighted buying that supplied us with pelts for this season's business at last year's lowest prices and our policy of basing our selling price on the low cost of skins when bought instead of the high costs in 1920. But the results of this policy are most important to you---a saving of anywhere from a few dollars on an inexpensive neckpiece to several hundred dollars on one of our fine fur garments. Come in and see for yourself Immediate Delivery The explanation is simple---farsing with pelts for the lowest prices and ing price on the instead of the h But the results o to you---a saving on an inexpensive dollars on one o Come G. & F. GORDON & FERGUSON ELKHURST 3473 QUICK SERVICE CALL ONCE AND YOU WILL CALL AGAIN ELK TAILORING CO. M. LOVE, PROPRIETOR SUITS MADE TO ORDER CLEANING, PRESSING, DYE- ING AND REPAIRING Madame Love's Wonderful Hair Preparations 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. Mad. Love's Wonder Hair Grower.....50c Double Strength Hair Grower.....60c Madame Love's Temple Grower.....50c Madame Love's Pressing Oil.....50c Agents wanted everywhere. Make money orders payable to MADAME LOVE'S MNFG. CO. 310 RONDO ST. ST. PAUL, MINN. Telephone Summit 3473 OFFICE CEDAR 8948 RES. DALE 1465 W. T. FRANCIS LAWYER SUITE 329 AMR. NATL. BANK BLDG. COR. FIFTH AND CEDAR ST. PAUL Dry Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing and General Repairing OF EVERYTHING YOU WEAR NO MATTER WHAT IT IS CLOTHES-SHOES-HATS-LAUNDRY OUR AUTO SERVICE COVERS THE CITY PURITY Every bite—a special delight that's PURITY SPECIAL BREAD Every loaf wrapped in wax paper to keep it fresh until ready to eat. Ask your grocer PURITY SPECIAL Purity BAKED products FLOUR STATE BAKING CO. Terms If Desired ces on fine furs nat supplied us ess at last year's basing our sell- ns when bought 0. most important from a few dollars several hundred perments. urself R SHOP FOURTH AND SIBLEY