The Appeal

Saturday, January 7, 1922

St. Paul, Minnesota

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THE EMPORIUM QUALITY CANDIES - SAINT PAUL AT OUR PRE-INVENTORY SALE VOL. 38 NO. 1 TO SAVE FISH ALONG COAST TO SAVE FISH ALONG COAST Pollution of Water and Catching in Nets Is Cause of Serious Condition. NEW JERSEY STARTS MOVE Experienced Fishermen Say That Supply of Migratory Fish Has Been Seriously Depleted—Other Seaboard States Are Sufferers. Newark, N. J.—A movement has been started in New Jersey to save from extermination the migratory fish which spawn in one place and move along the Atlantic coast with the changing of the seasons—such as mackerel, menhaden, herring and numerous other varieties peculiar to certain localities on this coast. Experienced fishermen declare that the supply of these migratory fish has been seriously depleted by the pollution of the areas in which they spawn and by the reckless manner in which they inhabit the nets. The method chosen by the New Jersey Fish and Game Conservation league to prevent from extermination is to induce the United States government to take control of and regulate the catching of these fish and stop pollution of the spawning areas. It is contended that only in this way can the increasing cost of fish food to the consumer be checked or reduced. Four Fundamental Points. The four fundamental points in the New Jersey league's proposal for national legislation are: Protect spawning areas against pollution. Prevent fishing in spawning areas. Regulate the size of the meshes of nets so the immature fish cannot be caught. Protect the natural food supply of eatable fishes. The fourth point has to do with one of the most perplexing phases of the salt water problem—the matter of the menhaden industry. The menhaden, otherwise known as mossbunker, which once swarmed along the coast in incalculable numbers, attracting hordes of beaver that preyed on them, have been slaughtered to produce oil and fertilizer. In the view of experts their end is not far off, and with their passing will disappear from Atlantic coastal waters many of such edible species as now remain. Fisherles Board Breaks Down. Efforts to cope with the problem through state regulation here have failed utterly, the last straw being the complete breakdown of the state board of fisheries, which had been created by legislative enactment with a view to increasing the supply of food fishes and reducing the cost to the consumers. The five members of the board resigned in a body in July, 1919, and there have been no reappointments. Investigation by a committee of veteran coast men disclosed an equally探lorable condition. It is said, in other words, that fisheries officials of Connecticut and Maryland agreed with those of New Jersey that a federal law was the only remedy. INTERNAL ORGANS MISPLACED Hospital Patient in Vermont Has Heart, Liver and Stomach on Wrong Side. Rutland, Vt.-William Bowen of West Charleston, Vt., twenty-six, a patient at the Vermont sanitarium in Pittsford, is a curiosity to the medical world. All his internal organs are on the wrong side. He has tuberculosis, but this has nothing to do with the misplaced organs. Pulmonary infection was discovered when an x-ray picture was taken by Dr. Clarence T. Ball here to determine the condition of the lungs. It had been known that Bowen's heart was not in the customary place, but the x-ray showed the stomach on the opposite side, the liver on the left instead of the right and the vermiform appendix on the left. Bowen is expected to recover from tuberculosis. French Baby Has Heart in Pouch Outside Body Paris—Paris medical authorities were called to Soissons to examine an infant born to a working family with heart and intestines contained in a pouch on the outside of the child's body. The case was said to be the first of its kind on record. There is every indication that the child will live, as all the organs are functioning perfectly despite their displacement. Gas Well Rests on Sundays. Sharon, Pa.—A "religious" gas well which does not produce on Sunday is the only oil and Gas company of McKeesport. The well produced gas every day during July, except on the four Sundays, according to a report made by Sigmund Josephthal, secretary-treasurer of this company, addressing a meeting of stockholders here. ACC. OWN GAS KILLS HIM Chemist Commits Suicide Under Dramatic Circumstances. Pays All Debts and From Remaining Stock of Chemicals Mixes Compound to Generate Gas. London.-Composing his own lethal gas, Constantine D Mereschevsky, a chemist and botanist of international repute, former professor in the University of Petrograd, committed suicide in a Geneva hotel under dramatic circumstances. Mereschevsky escaped from Russia with a small fortune, which was exhausted after two years' residence in Geneva, where he continued his research and wrote a number of scientific works. Then his funds were gone he was too proud to appeal for help, though in view of his high standing he could have obtained a handsome subsidy to pursue his studies from scientific associations in America, France and England had he stooped to solicit aid. He preferred to die. He scrupulously paid all his debts and then from his remaining stock of chemicals mixed a special composition which he poured into a receptacle, to which he attached a tube. At the other end of the tube was a mask which he placed over his face, and then binding himself to the bed and released the gas which flowed off from the composition. He died from asphyxiation. Fireen had to wear smoke helmets to remove the body from the room. 26,869 ALIENS IN SHANGHAI Entire Population Estimated at More Than 2,000,000—No Census of City Taken. Shanghai.—A quinquennial census taken in October in the French concession and the international settlement gives Shanghai a foreign population of 20,869, according to official returns. A census of the entire city, native and foreign, has never been taken, but careful estimates place the population at more than 2,000,000. The international settlement has a foreign population of 23,307 and the French concession 8,562. In the two concessions the Japanese lead in point of numbers with 10,521. British are second with 6,885. Americans third, 2,813, and Russians fourth, 1,852. There are 846 Frenchmen in the two districts. The international settlement has 35 known different nationalities, with 18 of undefined nationality. The German population, which in 1915 totaled 1,155, has dwindled to 280. CONQUER YANGTSZE RAPIDS Hydroxide to Be Used to Effect Navigation Beyond Gorges in Chinese Stream. Shanghai.—By means of the hydroxide, which the British used successfully in Mesopotamia during the war, another effort, and one wholly novel to China, is to be made to conquer the rapids of the Yangtse gorges. At places there the current attains a velocity of more than thirty miles an hour. The ordinary head of navigation for steamers on the Yangtse is at Ichang, a thousand miles from the coast, but Shanghai, China is most populous province, and one of its richest. It nearly four hundred miles further up the river, beyond the wild band-ridden country of the gorges. The use of the hydroxides on the upper Yangtse is the enterprise of a French company with headquarters in Shanghai. A number of these craft were sent up the Yangtse from Shanghai in December for trial runs. MILUKOFF GIVES UP LIBRARY Former U. of C. Professor Presents His Russian Collection to Stanford University. Stanford University, Cal.-Prof. Paul Milukoff, Russian secretary of foreign affairs after the revolution of 1917, and formerly a professor at the University of Chicago, has presented to Stanford university his private library on Russian history, said to be one of the most complete collections in existence, it was announced. The bulk of the library was collected while the donor was professor of Russian history at the University of Moscow. It had been in storage for six years in Helsingforn, Finland, whence it was shipped December 2 to this country. WOMEN TALLER AND HEAVIER Increase in Stature and Weight Attributed to Outdoor Life by Athletic Director. Philadelphia.—Women are growing taller and heavier, according to Dr. R. Tait McKenzie, director of physical education at the University of Pennsylvania. "Statistics of women's colleges covering a period of 60 years show the average college girl of today is an inch taller than the college girl of 1800, he said. "These statistics also prove the modern girl is six or seven pounds heavier." Doctor McKenzie attributed this increase in stature and weight to the increased interest in sports and outdoor life. THE APPEAL. STORMS BALK ASCENT OF PEAK Mountaineers Make Daring Attempt to Climb Giant of the Himalayas. WILL RENEW ATTACK LATER British Explorers Get 21,000 Feet Up Mount Kinchinjunga and Are Compiled to Stop by Bad Weather—Encounter Difficulties. Manchester, England—A Manchester Guardian correspondent at Calcutta remarks that great interest has been aroused by an attempt to climb Mount Kinchinjunga, one of the giants of the Himalayas. Harold Raeburn, editor of Mountaineering Art, and C. G. Crawford of the Assam civil service, both members of the Alpine club, were known to be conducting preliminary explorations in the hope of finding an easy access to the summit. More than one alpinist in the vicinity of Kinchinjunga was made, though the rains at the time were heavy and the ever-shifting ice fields in the mountains were likely to come down in terrific avalanches, making all climbing impossible without serious risk to life. Their explorations led the climbers along the course of the Talung river, which takes its rise in the Talung glacier. Here they crossed streams, the bridges of which had been washed away, and passed impenetrable forests, through which they had to hew their way for several days. Undaunted by the rainy weather, they traveled almost straight north to Ambulance across the Gauja Pass, 16,480 miles, to the Talung glacier which is almost immediately to the south of Kinchinjunga, and there obtained a glorious view of the mountains. Encounter Great Difficulties The party returned to Darjeeling and made their final preparations, engaging coolers and large quantities of stores. The rains, however, were so severe that it was not until September 2 that the two explorers were able to get away. Traveling out by the Singha ridge, they attacked Kinchinjunga on the southwest side and explored the glaciers. Access to the summit by that direction was found difficult, but the party persevered and eventually camped out at a level of 20,000 feet. Here more difficulties were met and bad weather was experienced. Snow began to fall and the expedition became increasingly hazardous. A further thousand feet was overcome, but at this point the attempt had to be abandoned. Snow was made by a new snow snow at 18,000 feet high. The weather was at first exceedingly bad, but conditions became better later. There was no rain on lower level, although occasional snow showers were met higher up. Considerable difficulty was experienced when returning, owing to the depth of new snows on the Sikhkim side, which were probably due to the bad weather experienced in the latter part of September. Finally the party reached Darjeeling in the middle of October, having been away over a month. Both the explorers were greatly impressed by the peaks, but confident that, given good weather, the summit could be attained. Attempt Made in 1899. It is interesting to recall that a similar attempt was made by Douglas W. Freshfield in 1899. Mr. Freshfield was led to undertake the exploration by the fact that owing, as he says, partly to cost and the difficulty of travel in Sikhklm and partly to the obstacle presented by the Nepalese frontier, no European up to the end of the nineteenth century gone around the mountain. Even Sir Joseph Hooker did not approach near enough to explore the glaciers of the giant. As for official surveys, these, according to Mr. Freshfield, have alternately ignored and caricatured the glaciers. Mr. Freshfield did not think much of his tour from a climbing point of view. "It is, of course, impossible," he writes, "to go up and down 75,000 feet without some climbing in the popular sense of the word, but in the technically Alpine sense we had far too little mountaineering for my taste. Rope and ice-ax played but a very subordinate part in our journey." Toy Train Was for Himself. Louisville, Ky.-He was a middle aged man and had just bought a $35 electric.train. And shall I send it for the little boy, or will you take it with you?" the clerk inquired. "Little boy!" the man exclaimed. "That train is for myself. When I was a boy I missed the good things of Christmas time, and now that I am a grown man, I miss my childhood I'm going to have them. I'm going to have a lot of fun with this toy and then there will be the neighbors' children to help enjoy it." Wrecked at Journey's End Anchorage, Ky—Charles D. Yeager and wife, after an auto trip to Detroit and back, were seriously injured when their car was wrecked almost at the gate of their home. They were plenied under the wreckage for several hours. DRIVE ON SPARROWS 700,000 of the Pests Are Killed in Utah. State-Wide Campaign Results in Savi- ing of More Than $100,000 for the Farmers. Washington.-Seven hundred thousand English sparrows, each eating six quarts of wheat a year, would mean a feed bill of more than $131,000. Therefore the killing of 700,000 English sparrows means that amount of money saved for the farmers concerned. And nearly 700,000 sparrows were killed in a state-wide campaign in which 783 Utah farmers joined forces to get rid of the pests during the winter months. County agents helped in the campaign, which used 5,243 pounds of polished bait. In most cases the bait was poisoned with strychnine in accordance with a recipe sent out by the biological department of United States department of agriculture. It was put up in one-quarter-pound paper bags in the county agent's office. Full instructions were printed on the bags for the use of the polen. Each co-operator receiving the bait agreed to report on the results. Usually the sparrows were enticed for a few days by putting unpoisoned bait in places not frequented by other birds and also inaccessible to the poultry of the farm. Then a few grains of polsoned wheat were put out each day. The dead sparrows were gathered up, and either burned or buried every few days by the sparrow population from becoming sunnier. The number of sparrows counted by each farmer was reported to the committeemen or the county agent at the end of the season. As many as 240 dead sparrows were gathered up as the result of a single package of poisoned wheat. It is believed that where care was used in placing the poisoned bird an average of 100 sparrows per one-quarter-pound package. In each of several counties 50,000 to 100,000 sparrows were destroyed. Anchors of Craft Sunk in 1862 Found New York.—There are other things in the sea more interesting than fish to veterans in the perilous north Atlantic trade plied by smacks exclusively in the past and now more successfully by steam trawlers. Capt. Tom Miller of the trawler Petrel brought in from Georges bank two rusty anchors, relics that recalled to shellbacks of his crew the mighty December gale of 1862, in which 19 snacks were lost and 160 fishermen perished. The anchors were fished up on the southeastern edge of the shoal, where the larger part of the wrecks were in the great blow. The veterans say the anchors bore the handwork of Gloucester ship blacksmiths of the period just before the Civil war. STOP WORK AS CAT IS BURIED Animal Had Been at Station Ten Years and Was on Payroll Eight Years. Amarillo, Tex.-All activities in the Fort Worth & Denver City railway offices and shops here stopped for three minutes while the funeral services were held for the office cat. She has been in the railway's passenger station here for ten years and has been on the payrolls of the railroad for eight years. Before the war the official rat catcher of Denver used to receive monthly pay check of $1.50 regularly. After the war the salary of Puss was boosted to $2.50. The pay was for feed. At the hour of the funeral every wheel in the shops stopped for three minutes. The office force gathered about the grave in the station yard while the burial service was read. A marble slab will mark the grave. FARM LABORERS IN A PLOT Scheming for Great Strike as Spanish Crops Are Ready for the Harvest. Madrid—Discovery of a widespread plot among the Andalusian farm laborers to call a strike as soon as crops are ready for harvest is reported. Agitation has been simmering among farm laborers for a year. Last summer employers were forced to pay as high as $5 a day. Retribution came when winter set in, the farmers saying: "You exploited us in the summer; now we dismiss you." In most instances the men had spent their money. Thousands emigrated to North or South America. Meantime, owners of farms, have been forming co-operative societies for the purchase of machinery to make up for the loss of laborers, of which there still is a scarcity. Train Boy Loses His Chance. Dayton, O.—Diogenes can turn off the gas, George Miller, conductor, has just turned over to the company officials a package containing $5,000 in currency lost by a woman. BIG WEALTH IN HANDS OF FEW Fifty Families in United States Control More Than $100,- 000,000 Each. ROCKEFELLER AT HEAD OF LIST Oil King's Estate Is Now Estimated at Between Three and Five Billion—Veritable Dynasty in Every Important Industry. New York—Fifty families in the United States control over $100,000,000 each, 100 families control over $50,000,000 each, and 500 families control over $10,000,000 each. John D. Rockefeller's estate is now up to $3,000,000,000. Five billion dollars of wealth in the United States has been handed down to heirs, many of whom were incompetents, in the last fifteen years. Two hundred persons in the United States control $15,000,000,000; in France the same amount is controlled by 480 times that number of people, or 98,000. Dynasties to Fore. Industrially the United States is becoming dynastic—there is a veritable dynasty in each important industrial structure, some of which are: Sixty per cent of the tobacco trust wealth is in the hands of ten families. Twelve families, with the Rockefeller family away in the lead, control 50 per cent of the oil industry. The railroads of the country are controlled by 1.3 per cent of the stockholders. One and five-tenths per cent of the stockholders in the steel trust possess 51 per cent of the stock. Two families control 51 per cent of the stock in the harvest interests. These startling figures on the concentration of wealth in the United States were obtained from Henry H. Klein, deputy commissioner of accounts of New York city and a deep student of economic affairs. He has spent ten years' collecting concrete and the pyramiding of American wealth. Mr. Klein's attention was called to the recent statement of George P. Hampton, managing director of the Farmers' National council, that 33 individuals own 2 per cent of the entire American wealth. He estimated this 2 per cent at about $4,837,000. Mr. Hampton gave no names, but the following list of individuals and estates and their vast holdings, checked up to a recent date, was given by Mr. Klein: Estates or individuals—Amount. John D. and William Rocke- There are many families Mr. Klein mentioned in the $40,000,000 class, and this includes Mrs. William Leeds, now Princess Christopher of Greece, and Alexander Smith Cochrane, until recently "America's" *richest bachelor* of Mme. Ganna Walsh, opera singer. Mr. Klein's list, which is several pages long, does not go below the $10,000,000 class. Called Fire Department to Quench Flames Inside Him Seeing a man rush up to a fire alarm box and turn in an alarm, Patrolman Winner of the New York city police department, inquired where the fire was. "Inside me," gasped Joseph Marone of Wooster, "I drank booze and want the firemen to run a hose down my window and exerting the flames." The patrolman told the firemen where the fire was, but took Marone to the police station. Belgium Reclaiming its Soil. Washington.—Belgium is making good progress rebuilding farms and rehabilitating agricultural production. Reports from the American consul at Brussels show that at the end of the first nine months of 1820 more than 61,775 acres out of about 148,300 acres of war-swept soil had been put into condition for cultivation. HE EMPORIUM QUALITY CANDIES - SAINT PAUL AT OUR PRE-INVENTORY SALE U. S. TRADE INCREASE Report Shows Record-Breaking Foreign Business in 1920. Exports to the Leading Allies in the War Fell Off Sharply, Says Commerce Department. Washington, D. C.—Increased trade with Germany, South America, the Orient, West Indies and North America accounted in large measure for the record breaking foreign business of the United States in 1920. A compilation of American exports and imports last year by countries, issued by the department of commerce, shows that exports to Great Britain, France and Italy fell off sharply. Those countries, however, increased their shipments to the United States, as did practically all the other important nations. American trade with the four principal South American countries—Brazil, Argentina, Chile and Uruguay totaled approximately $1,044,000,000 as compared with $917,000,000 in 1919. American exports to these countries increased more than $100,000,000 during 1920, totaling $457,000,000, whereas imports from these countries increased only about $25,000,000, the total being $587,000,000. Trade with Germany during the year nearly quadrupled, aggregating $400,000,000, but fell far short of that before the war. Exports to Germany reached $311,000,000, against $89,000,000 the year before, and imports from that country totaled $292,000,000, as compared with $10,000,000 the year before. American trade with Cuba alone in 1920 exceeded $1,200,000,000, increasing nearly $500,000,000 when compared with 1919. Exports of $515,000,000 to the island republic showed an increase of $247,000,000, while imports of $721,000,000 from the republic presented an increase of $303,000,000. Spain was the only principal European country which increased its purchases of goods in the American market. SNEEZE, STUDENTS GET GATE Offenders in Booston School Sent DIR to treatment and Examination. Boston.-Sneezing in a classroom at Massachusetts Institute of Technology draws the gate for the offender. Orders from Dr. George W. Morse, head of Tech's new medical department, instructed members of the faculty to send sneezers and coughers directly to the school clinic, where they can be taken care of. The epidemic of infectious colds, the order says, has brought the doctors to this drastic step. Not only those who give audible evidence of the possession of a cold through a cough or a sneeze, but even those who, perhaps through an over-red nose, apparently are in the grip of the thing are to be sent to Doctor Morse. CHEROKEES FORGET OLD ROW Indian Nation Reunited After Split Over Stripes Time of Civil War Talequah, Okla.—Tribal differences dating back to the Civil war, when the powerful Cherokee Indian nation broke into factions over the question of slavery, were wiped out here when several hundred delegates met and unanimously elected Levi Gritts of Muskogee, a full-blood, as principal chief, Levi Cookson, a mixed blood, living near Gore, Okla., was chosen assistant chief. For the first time in the history of the nation white men, members through intermarriage, sat at the council and voted. Many of them were unable to speak Cherokee and the proceedings frequently were halted while translations were made. SPEED CRAZE HITS INDIA Three Cartloads of Motorcycles Arrive at Jalibahad for Dispatch Service. Bombay—Life in Afghanistan is speeding up, writes a frontier correspondent of the Times of India. Three cartloads of motorcycles have recently arrived at Jalibahad for Prince Kasir Jan, the director of communications, who intends to organize a dispatch rider service throughout the country. Orders have been issued by the Amir's government for contracts to construct macadamized roads through the country to the capital, and for the importation of, automobile, vehicles Firms are also liaised to establish wooden mills and sugar refineries at Kabul, the capital. Beaks to Calm Married Life CAMIN Married Life. Seattle, Wash.—Justice of the Peace C. C. Dalton announced his purpose to establish a court of domestic relations for adjustment of family troubles under the Washington "lazy husband" act and cases of desertion and nonsecurity. It will be the first domestic relations court in Washington. Mennonites to Settle in Mississippi. Winnipeg—An agreement has been concluded between representatives of an American land syndicate and H. M. Klansen, representing Mennonites of Manitoba, Canada, whereby they will purchase 125,000 acres in Mississippi for colonization, a newspaper in Winnipeg has announced. $2.40 PER YEAR FIND LIKENESS OF AUGUSTUS FIND LIKENESS OF AUGUSTUS Archaeologist DiscoverS Splendid Statue of Roman Emperor at Tivoli. LIFELIKE STUDY BY ARTIST Valuable Addition to Portraits of Roman Emperors and is Only One Extant Done During Emperors Life. Rome—Tivoll, that lovely little city perched above Rome, called Tibar by the ancient Romans, has just given to the archaeological world two new art treasures—an augustumte, or hall, and a splendid head of Emperor Augustus. Prof. Alessio Valle, one of the archaeologists who have made Tivoll a special study, long believed that Tivoll should be an ancient hall of importance, considering the fountain state of the city in Roman days. He began to dig near a newly discovered weights and measures office, also dating from the Roman empire, thinking that the public weights and measures must surely be near some important hall. He was not mistaken. He has opened up a hall with a Roman parment of white and green marble which looks as if it were put down this morning, so fresh is it, and the statue of Augustus, broken but with the head intact, as the picture shows, with the lifelike lines cut out of the marble by some unknown sculptor of evident genius. Likeness of Augustus. The statue is a likeness of Augustus when he had grown old. An inscription underneath it, which dedicates the statue to the gods, "for the happy return in good health of our Augustus Caesar," proves it was done during the famous emperor's lifetime, a votive offering to the gods by a loyal Tivoli citizen who signs himself M. Veranus Dillius. The same man gave the public weights and measures to the city. History lets us date this statue between B. C. 31 and A. D. 14, when Emperor Augustus died near Napels, aged seventy-six. Experts say the face is the face of a man of fifty. In the worn lines, the ill-tempered mouth, its upward twist at the left side, we have no flattering picture of the great emperor, but a lifelike study by an artist who dared to cut his statue as he saw the human model. For this reason, and because of its surely being done in Augustus' lifetime, it is very unpleasant addition to the collection of historical and Roman emperors, and probably the only one extant of Augustus done during his lifetime. The figure, which originally sat on the pedestal at the head of the hall, is graceful, as Sutuelos, that gossip historian from whom later scribes have learned nearly all they know about the Roman emperors, told us; saying: Graceful Person. "He was a very graceful person through all the stages of life, though he was very careless in his dress and would set several barbers to work upon his hair together, and would sometimes clip and sometimes shave his beard, and at the same time would be reading or writing." Augustus, though emperor, called himself a democrat and, says Sutetius, "always abhorred the title of lord as a scandalous affront." He tells us, too, that the emperor was easily and wore woolen underwear in winter, "with a thick wool toga." This broken statue, with the base on which it stood, unearthened after so long bridges the gulf of centuries and brings one of the greatest rulers the world ever saw very near. NAVY NOT QUITE SOBER YET Drunkenness Leads as Cause for Trial of Men Despise Prohibition, Says Official. Washington.—Drunkenness continued to be the principal cause for trial of enlisted men of the navy for deserction or overstaying leave during the last fiscal year, according to the annual report of the Rear Admiral George & Clipk, Judge advocate general, to Secretary-Daniels. Of 1,232 such cases during the year pleas, of drunkenness were entered in 834 cases. The excuse, "having a good time," was given in 862 cases. Homestickness caused 90 sailors to take "French" leave, and in eight cases the plea was entered that the work on board ship was too hard. More than 41,000 cases were tried by court-martial during the year. Living With Bullet in Heart. Omaha, Neh.—James Freeman of this city has a bullet in his heart and is still alive. He told the police he was shot by his wife, from whom he had been separated, when he returned home after he is said to have threnched her. She met him at the door and fired pointblank. He walked to the police station, nearly three miles away, where medical attention was given him. He was rescued by the police. THE APPEAL AN AMERICAN NEWSPAPER ISSUED WEEKLY J. Q. ADAMS, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER ST. PAUL OFFICE No. 301-2 Com- munity 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, an second-class mail matter, June 6, 1885, under Act of Congress. March 8, 1885. TERMS, STRICTLY IN ADVANCE: SINGLE COPY, One Year.....$240 SINGLE COPY, Six Months.....1.25 SINGLE COPY, Three Months.....55 <em>emittances should / be made by Express Money Order. Post Office Money Order. Redemption of stamped bills will be received the same as cash for the fractional parts of a dollar. Only one dollar Silver should never be sent through the mail. It is alas sure to wear a hole through the envelope. People who send silver to us in letters do so at their own risk. Advertise and death rates 10 lines or less. 15 cents. Mail it directly to the 10 cents. Payment is strictly an advance, and be announced at an advertiser's rate, 10 cents per agate line, each insertion. There are fourteen agate lines on the adveriser's rate. No single advertiserizes less than three. No discount allowed on less than three. No discount allowed on all payment orders from parties unknown to us. Reading prices 25 cents per line, each insertion. No discounts for time or space. Reading prices 25 cents per line, each insertion. No discounts for time or space. Reading prices 25 cents per line, each insertion. <em>emittances on the address label show when subscription expires. Renewals should make two weeks prior to expiration, so that no paper may be missed, as the paper stops working.</em> 11 occasionally happen that papers sent to us not receive any number when due, inform us by postal card at the expiration of five days or forward a duplicate of the missing number. Communications to receive attention must be neway, upon important sub-prints, plainly written, and must reach us Tuesday if possible, anyway not later than Wednesday, and bear the signature of the author and the date for postage. We do not hold ourselves responsible for the views of our correspondents. Soliciting agents wanted everywhere. Write to us. in every letter that you write us never fail to give your full name and address, plainly written, post office, county and state. Kind ness letters of all kinds must be written on separate sheets from letters containing news or matter for publication. SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 1922. ONE MORE OF THE "OLD GUARD" GONE. In the death, in Washington, D.C., the latter part of last month, of Pinckney Benton Stewart Pinchback. at the ripe age of 84, we lose one of our most striking and historic characters. Few, if any, men among us had so varied a career as Pinchback. He was born in Macon, Ga., but at the outbreak of the Civil War he was living in New Orleans, La., and was made captain in the Louisiana Native Guards. He was a very fine looking man and made many trips to the cities on the Ohio and Mississippi rivers. Few men were more widely or more favorably known than Le Capitaine. During the reconstruction period after the war he was quite active in politics both state and nation. He was a member of the Louisiana constitutional convention in 1868 and at the following election was elected to the state senate. When Oscar J. Dunn, who was lieutenant governor, died in 1870, Pinchback was elected to fill the vacancy, and when Governor Warmouth was impassed Pinchback was acting governor for '43; days, since which ting he has been generally known as "Governor: Pinchback" having enjoyed the distinction of being the only colored man who served as governor of one of the United States. He was delegate at large to the Republican national conventions of 1868 and 1884. He was at one time a member of the school board, served as president of the board of police commissioners and was appointed surveyor of the part of New Orleans. He was elected on the returns representative at large from Louisiana but his seat was contested by Gen. Geo. A. Sheridan who won just one day before the term expired. Pinchback collected the salary for the nearly two years of the contest. At the same period Pinchback had been elected U. S. senator by the THE SIN OF SILENCE To sin by silence protest makes con The human race has test. Had no voice injustice, ignorance quisition yet would guillotines decide o The few who dare speak again to right many.—Ella Wheel To sin by silence when we should protest makes cowards out of men. The human race has climbed on protest. Had no voice been raised against injustice, ignorance and lust, the inquisition yet would serve the law, and guillotines decide our least disputes. The few who dare must speak and speak again to right the wrongs of many.—Ella Wheeler Wilcox. Louisiana legislature but after a long fight the senate refused to seat him. He published a weekly newspaper, "The Louisianan," for a number of years of which Henry Corbin, an uncle of the editor of THE APPEAL, was manager. He moved to New York and was a deputy U. S. marshal there. Later he moved to Washington where he practiced law. He is survived by his wife and two sons. His remains were taken to New Orleans for interment. He was one of the few survivors of the "Old Guard" whose members are rapidly thinning out. Peace to his obeses. CHARLES S. MORRIS, JR., RAPS JIM CROWMISM. Gipsy Smith, the evangelist, conducted a three weeks' revival campaign in Norfolk, Va., at the Tabernacle, which seats 10,900 persons. Colored seats were rigidly excluded from these meetings. Suddenly, because of financial reasons, an invitation was extended to them for a special afternoon meeting. Then a number of the colored ministers accepted the invitation to the jim crow meeting, and led something like 6,000 of their congregations to this meeting and they constituted the entire audience, the white seekers for salvation being conspicuous by their absence. This was the second time that such a meeting had been held in two years. The following Sunday at Queen Street Baptist church, Charles Satchchell Morris, Jr., "a chip of the old block," addressed a meeting of nearly 2,000 people including a body of clergy and severely trounced the ministers and their people for attending the jim crow Gipsy Smith meeting. He chose as his subject, "The Blocks with which we Build," and plead for character, courage, faith, aspiration and loyalty. He declared the colored man was too largely an imitator and not sufficiently a creator. "We have forty so-called Black Billy Sundays and not one of them is worth his weight in sawdust. Indeed we appear to have been dedicated to the proposition of enthroning everything white and dehonoring everything black. In speaking of loyalty to ourselves he waxed exceedingly bitter and vitilious when he referred to the Gypsy Smith jim crow meeting. And when he said, "Down with those weakneck, cringing, cowardly colored preachers, who led their flocks to the slaughter, ye to be crucified on the cross of the white man's prejudice," the great crowd leaped to its feet and attested that for that word it had been waiting. "Some of these old mothers," said he, looking to soma of the aged females of his audience, "with the snows of seventy winters upon their brow that can not melt, can practice more Christianity in five minutes than Gypsy Smith and his gang of profiteering discriminators in five years." We are very fortunate in having a man like Mr. Morris, and a few others who don't fail to rap jim crowism on all occasions. May his tribe increase. THIRTY-EIGHT LYNCHED WHILE CONGRESS DEBATES ANTI- LYNCH BILL. The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 70 Fifth Ave., New York, has made public a statement to the effect that since he introduction of the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill in Congress on April 11, 1921, there has been 38 persons THE MAN WHO DARES I honor the man entious discharge o stand alone; the w intolerant judgment the countenances o averted, and the he cold, but the sense be sweeter than th world, the counten the hearts of friend 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 courtenances of relatives or the hearts of friends. -Charles Sumner. ce when we should wards out of men. us climbed on pro- been raised against e and lust, the in- serve the law, and our least disputes. we must speak and right the wrongs of er Wilcox. murdered by mobs in the United States, of whom two were burned, four bodies being publicly burned after lynching. One of those lynched was a colored woman. Three were white men. Since the Dyer bill was favorably reported by the Committee on the Judiciary, on October 31, 1921, there have been seven lynchings, one body being publicly burned, in Helena, Ark. Among the causes assigned for these lynchings are the following: 1. A colored man called to inquire of a white girl why she had not replied to a note he had written her. He was lynched for this offense. 2. An old man was accused of assisting a man to escape. 3. Two colored men were lynched for aiding a third to escape. 4. One colored woman was thrown from a bridge and drowned for assisting a colored man to escape. Georgia leads in the list of lynchings since the Dyer bill was introduced, having had 10. Mississippi is second with 7, South Carolina third, with 5; Louisiana fourth, with 4, and Arkansas and Texas each have 3. From the above everyone may readily see the urgent necessity of writing to the state Representatives in Congress urging their support for the early passage of the bill. DEATH OF ABDUL BAHA A cable from Haifa Syria, announced the death in that city of Abdul Baha Abbas, one of the greatest men of the day and the leader of the Bahaist movement. Abdul Baha, "servant of God," traveled through the United States in 1912 and visited St. Paul among other places. He was the guest of the large congregation of Bahaists in Chicago the latter part of April and early in May in 1912 and on May 1, he dedicated the site at the Sheridan road bridge in Wilmette, a suburb of Chicago, where the Bahaists are now building a temple costing several millions of dollars, to be the world center of Bahaism. Abul Baha was born in Teheran, Persia. He was the successor of the Bab, "gateway of knowledge," who began about 1844 proclaiming throughout Islam the coming of a messenger of God and made much headway until executed at the age of 31. The noble father of Abdul Baha was Mirza Hossein Ali of Nour, a disciple of the Bab. Father and son were banished in 1868 to Akka, a prison city in Syria. Forty years later the Young Turks overthrew the desotic regime in Constantinople, and Abdul Baha was freed. The death of Abdul Baha will be mourned by millions of his co-religionists all over the world and it is now claimed that there is at least 50,000,000 of them, who practice as well as preach that "of one blood God made all nations." There are many thousands of colored people in the United States who have left orthodox Christianity and have become Bahais because of hypocrisy of the so-called Christians on the color question. NOT A MAGNA CARTA We are sorry to notice that some colored man has written an article in which he says that President Harding's Birmingham speech is a "Magnan Charta of Negro rights." Evidently the gentleman, like President Harding has not thought the question through. Instead of being a great charter of liberties, it is really a curse hurled at the colored people from which it will who in the consci- of his duty dares to world, with ignorant, nt, may condemn, of relatives may be arts of friends grow of duty done shall the applause of the ances of relatives or take a thousand years to recover. We have gathered together and reprint in this issue many columns of comment on the President's Southern speeches and we recommend that the people who have been disposed to swallow the discourses in toto, should read the articles carefully and learn of the dangers which lurk in the President's utterances. JIM CROW LEADERS We present in this issue a symposium of views of colored editors in various parts of the country on the speeches of President Harding in Birmingham, Ala., and Atlanta, Ga. One of the strongest of these is an editorial from the Richmond (Va.) Planet, by that fearless journalist, John Mitchell, Jr. Referring to the desire of President Harding to have more "negro" leaders developed, The Planet says: THE SOUTH IS FULL OF THIS KIND OF LEADERS. DR. BOOKER T. WASHINGTON DID HIS PART IN DEVELOPING THIS KIND OF LEADERSHIP. IN LATER YEARS HE REALIZED THAT HE HAD GONE TO FAR, TO THE EXTENT OF ELIMINATING THE PRINCIPLES OF MAN HOOD, WITHOUT WHICH NO RACE CAN RISE TO THE HULL HEIGHT OF AMERICAN CITIZENSHIP. This is a strong statement yet it is absolutely true. No single thing in the history of the colored people in the United States has done so much to prevent the full attainment of citizenship as that speech of Booker Washington delivered in Atlanta, Ga., in 1895. Since then the descent to hell has been swift and sure and the depths were sounded when the other day, Warren G. Harding, President of the United States, stood by the side of the Grady monument in Atlanta, pronounced a eulogy on Henry W. Grady, the most bitter, dangerous and insidious enemy of the colored people that the country has produced, declared that the race question must be settled by the segregation of American citizens. Lured on by the enthusiastic reception by the South of the B. Washington tone and the white man's "good negro" pat on the shoulder, the jimcrow leaders' tribe has increased so enormously that it is now a menace to be reckoned with in every community in which there are a hundred colored men. Before he died Booker Washington repented in bitterness what he had done and longed for life to wash out his unwide course but it was too late. Although it may be news to many, it is a fact that after his death an article, written by him, was printed in a leading magazine, in which he repudiated segregation which he had so long championed. No greater calamity could befall the colored people than the harvesting of a new crop of "jimcrow negro leaders." WERE THE CARDS STA Twenty-three years ago the United States occupied the Philippine Islands, promising independence for the Filipinos in about twenty years or as soon as the natives were "qualified for freedom." Shortly after coming into power the present Republican administration sent a mission consisting of Gen. Leonard Wood and W. Cameron Forbes to investigate present conditions and the report, which has just been made public, recommends that the United States must keep the islands. Months ago, long before the investigation had been completed, Gen. Wood was nominated for governor and is now in office. Did Ucle Sam stack the cards on the liberty-loving Filipinos? TRUE TO FORM. At the Detroit Methodist conference Emmett J. Scott declared "The Negro does not ask social equality and never has asked it. All he asks is social justice." But, pray how can the colored man get "social justice unless he has every kind of equality before the law and in public opinion?" Dominant people do not give exact justice to people they consider their inferior. Scott was private secretary to Booker Washington for nearly twenty years and was well trained to reiterate that the colored man does not want that and other things which would please the South. Now that he is away from Tuskegee he ought to learn a new tune. Under the heading "Gamaliel Emulates Gillean," the republican Publicity Association is sending out to Republican newspapers a lot of dope comparing President Harding to Jesus Christ, but the resemblances are not many. Christ did not teach that there were "fundamental, eternal and unescapable differences" between human beings. Rich and poor, bond and free, black and white all looked alike to the Galllean. HONOR GIVEN WHEN DUE. It is with very much satisfaction that we learn, Rene Maran, a young colored author, born on the Island of Martinique, French West Indies, has won the annual prize of the Goncourt academy for the best French novel of 1921. The novel, entitled "Batouala," deals with colored life in Central Africa, the race question and problems and aspirations of the colored people. France has a very pleasing way of giving honor wherever due and talent is duly and fully recognized even when found under a colored skin: Vive la France. CRINGING AWAKENES CONTEMPT. We cannot win by blinking at facts or by ignoring fundamental principles. Editor J. Q. Adams of the ST. PAUL APPEAL is sound to the core and we shall all have to accept his kind of leadership if we expect to attain our full stature and status under the American Constitution. Cringing may be comfortable for the time being put it is mighty humiliating for all the time thereafter and it awakens contempt for us as it should do in the minds and hearts of our adversaries. Editor Adams points the way, whether we accept his advice or not and sooner or later he will blaze the way to our financial, industrial and political enfranchisement in this country where none will dare molest us or make us afraid. Wise colored leaders will take notice and govern themselves accordingly. The foregoing from The Planet of Richmond, Va., edited by Hon. John Mitchell, Jr., who recently polled 20,000 votes as candidate for governor of the state, is pleasing to the editor but we accept it as a tribute to the cause for which THE PEALEAL has fought for nearly forty years rather than a personal compliment. The U. S. Senate has refused to confirm Henry Lincoln Johnson as recorder of deeds, even after he had declared for the President's segregation program. The fight against him was led by Senator Watson of Georgia. Porto Ricans are demanding the recall of E. Mont Reilly who was recently appointed governor. He is charged with deep-seated prejudice against the natives. "SPECIAL EXPERT." The following from the Richmond Planet upholds THE PEAELA'S contention and says truly that the policy to "fan the flames of race prejudices". Hon. Charles R. Forbes of Seattle, Washington, who was recently appointed Director of the United States Veterans' Bureau, has seen fit to appoint Michael Crossland of St. Joseph, Mo., "Special Office" in his department to look after the interests of coloured ex-service men. This is a fitting recognition of one of our ablest leaders. Nevertheless, it employs the drawing of the color line against the leadership of leaders of the colored people in this department have protested without seeming effect. Under this ruling, it may soon be expected that Irish-American citizens be appointed only with the understanding that they will look after the Irishman's interests, will look after those affairs, which affect the Jews. Indians will be appointed to look after the interests of the Indians, the Germans to look after Germans. Indians will look after the interests of the Ralians, and so on. Dr. Crossland gave an only son to the cause in Europe and as a result, he is confined in his operations to the race with which his son was identified. We understand now, that colored men will aid the race all right, but these offices will not work amongst the colored people exclusively. This will fan the flames of race prejudice rather than stamp out the crowning infamy of this age. Financially, we may be benefited, but the matter of fundamental principle, we must seriously humiliated and our progress in the American citizenship and its attendant privileges checked for many years to come. (From the Chicago Whip.) The Chicago Whip. Dr. J. R. Crossland of St. Joseph, Mo., has been appointed to the claims of the black veterans of the late World War. The claims of the black soldiers are the same as those of the white and Dr. Crossland has really accepted a Jim Crow job.orry Howard, another prominent "politician," also accented a Jim Crow job. or we take these political handouts, or our "leaders" are too hungry to refuse them, of course they will be tendered our race. (APPEAL Editorial Sept. 3, 1921) THE APPEAL is sorry to note that the color line has been drawn in the new Veterans' Bureau, the organization of a "Colored Division" and the appointment of Dr. J. R. A. Crossland as its head. Crossland lost a son who fell "fighting for democracy" in France, and it is a poor reward for the father to be given a segregated bureau. It is said that he was an effective speaker in the last campaign, in which it was given to the Republican party who abolished in the departments at Washington. If these things are true Crossland deserves better treatment at the hands of the victors, and he also should have refused the appointment as undemocratic and demanded the treatment as is given to other groups in what are known as clean citizens. One Lasker, a Jew woman, head of the U. S. Shipping Board, Representatives of other racial groups have been given places, but not in segregated bureaus. No President of the United States would dare offer a Jew place as the head of a segregated Jew bureau, as there is no such place and never will be. Only colored people are segregated by this illegal democracy. Some people may think that the "special" appointments which have been handed out by the present Republican administration are forward movements, but they are really nails in the coffin of democracy and are dangerous to the social and political status of the people. The Administration wants to cut out these "special" jobs, eliminate segregation which was promised in the campaign, and if colored men are to have appointments let them be on a level with those given to other groups of American citizens. Better no places at all than those which lower the status of the race and automatically make their holders defenders of segregation. Colored Vote No Longer Wanted. (From the Philadelphia Tribune.) As the spokesman of the Republican party of the Nation the President serves notice that that party no longer wishes to be burdened with the responsibility of the solid colored vote of the country. THE STANDARD FROM OCEAN TO OCEAN TOWLE'S LOG CABIN SYRUP MAKES HOME SWEET H THE LOG CABIN PRODUCT SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA MAKES HOME SWEET HOME THE LOG CABIN PRODUCTS CO. SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA TEL. CEDAR 0871 PEOPLES MOVING AND H NOS AND We carry s 108 W THIRD ST SAF Phone: MINNES Great N Every LET Madam Walker's Toilet Pre High Brown Toilet Prepara Dr. Wetter's Antiseptic To Oakes WE PEOPLES FUEL AND TRANSFER MOVING AND HAULING OF TRUNKS, BAY NOS AND HOUSEHOLD GOODS TO PART OF THE CITY. We carry a full line of Goal, Coke and W THIRD ST. AFEMIL one: Elkhurst MINNESOTA MILLE Great News For You Everyone Loves To Be Beautiful! LET US SUPPLY YOU WITH Her's Toilet Preparations Sweet-Odor-Home Toilet Preparations Shaving Cream. Antiseptic Tooth Powder Hosiery. Cutlery. Makes-Hall-Ford WE WILL CALL ON YOU BLOCK Gamer Wardrobe T $2 Regulation Steel. It's fibre covered, lined, has brass hardware spring. Convenient in arrangement, SEE IT TODAY. 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SEE IT TO Webbuild our T in our own Sho Under Mr. Ga- personal supervie See the Trum are offering at $12.50 $12 and $15 "HUMAN N My soul is sick Of wrong and d There is no flesh It does not feel Of brotherhood That falls asum He finds his fel Not colored like To enforce the Dooms and dev * * Thus man devo "Tis human nat Steamer Wardrobe Trunk $20 Regulation Steamer Size. It's fibre covered, full cloth lined, has brass plated hardware spring lock, draw bolts. Convenient in arrangement, it's a wonder. SEE IT TODAY. Webbuild our Trunks in our own Shop----Under Mr. Garland's personal supervision. See the Trunks we are offering at $12.50 $12.75 and $15 Traveling Bags The Garland trade mark stamped on the bottom of your bag means quality. They are priced $8.25 $10 $12.50 and up GARLAND LUGGAGE SHOP Sixth at Cedar "HUMAN NATURE'S FOULEST BLOT." 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. Defective Page 306 COURT BLOCK SUDDEN SERVICE TRANSFER MISS. BAGGAGE, PIA- DDS TO ANY Y. Lake and Wood. SAINT PAUL ILK first 3163 ILK CO. For You! Satisfiful! WITH -Home. Soaps beams. Toilet Waters Cutlery Sets Ord Co. OU ST. PAUL, MINN. The "Saintly City" and Saintly City Folks—Neway items of Social, Religious, Political and General Matters Among the People. SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 1922. THE APPEAL ASKS AS A SPECIAL FAVOR THAT ITS READERS GIVE PREFERENCE TO THE ADVERTISERS WHO SOUGHT THEIR PATRONAGE BY ADVERTISING IN IT. SHOP IN THE APPEAL BEFORE SHOPPING ELSEWHERE. Dr. J. R. French is somewhat improved in health. Former Postmaster Otto N. Raths has filed for mayor of St. Paul. Miss Grace Leakad, who spent the holidays in Chicago, returned home Monday. The Ladies' Aid Society met this week with Mrs. W. H. Bolden of Carroll St. Mrs. C. H. Miller has gone to Des Moines, Iowa, for a few weeks' visit with friends. FOR RENT—Four-room first floor flat, 336 Rondo St. Tel. Dale 7557—Advertisement. One woman has been drawn for the Ramsey county grand jury that will report for duty on January 9. Vesper services are held every Sunday afternoon at the West Central Ave. branch of the Y. W. C. A. Mrs. O. D. Howard was taken to the hospital last Tuesday with pneumonia. She is slowly improving. INSIST ON GETTING CLOVER LEAF BUTTER TILDEN PRODUCE CO. CHURNERS Mrs. Harriet Hall, 996 Iglehart Ave, entertained the Handicraft Art Club Thursday at 6 o'clock dinner. Mrs. E. A. Hatton, 126 W. Arch St., was hostess Tuesday afternoon to the matrons of the Round Table Club. Mrs. Laura Adams, mother of Mrs. Wm. Hyde, Rondo St., fell and sustained severe injuries, but she is improving. The members of the Invincible Class Club presented Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Bolling an electric toaster, on last Thursday night. Wait and watch for the Masquerade-Valentine-Prize Ball to be given by the G. F. G. T. Club at Union Hall, Valentine Night, Tuesday, Feb. 14. The regular meeting of the Forum will be held at Pilgrim-on-the-Hill tomorrow at 4 P. M. Prof. J. S. Young of the U. of M. will be the speaker. The annual meeting of the Cannon Toilet Mfg. Co. will be held at the office of the company, 1012 Rondo St., Monday evening, Jan. 9, 1922, at 7:30 o'clock. Office: Cedar 0508 Res.: Dale 2947 Res.: 678 St. Anthony Ave. MRS. T. H. LYLFS SUCCESSOR to T. H. LYLH UNDERTAKING CO. 150 W. Fourth St. ST. PAUL 180 W. Fourth St. ST. PAUL Lewis F. Soukup who was elected justice of the peace-at-large by the council has resigned and E. A. Knutson, 435 Main Ave., has been elected in his stead. Miss Muriel Lucas, 406 Dale St., was in the City hospital a few days last week having her tonsils removed. She has returned to her home and is convalescent. Louis F. Soukup, 706 Rondo, was on last Tuesday elected justice of the peace-at-large by the city council, to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of D. F. McEvoy. Mrs. Horace Henderson entertained informally at breakfast Monday, the 26th of December. The occasion was the birthday of Mr. Henderson. Covers were laid for fifteen. The city council on Thursday approved the report of a subcommittee redistricting the city and making 68 new voting precincts, a total of 200 instead of 132 as formerly. Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Roper, 977 Fuller Ave., entertained Monday at a five-course 7 o'clock dinner Messrs. NOTICE Deposits made On or before January 10th Draw Three Months interest April 1st. State Savings Bank and Madames Jas. A. Lee, C. Thompson, W. B. Tandy and E. W. Lindsay. Ladies who desire anything in the line of hair work, will do well to call on Mrs. Lizzie Talbert Aven. No. 100 Park Place and Summit Ave. Prices reasonable and satisfaction guaranteed. FOR SALE—No. 179 Charles St. Seven rooms and summer kitchen; gas, pipeless furnace. Price low. Terms reasonable. W. T. Francis, Central Metropolitan Bank Bldg.—Advertisement. Mesdames Anna Moffit and E. W. Lindsay held a family reunion Wednesday evening at. Mrs. Lindsay's home, 918 Woodbridge St., entertaining for their relatives, Mr. and Mrs. Lional Hirch. NOTICE—For Madam C. J. Walker's Method of Hair Culture, for Ladies; also Wavo for men. Apply to Miss Zilda Hightower, Resident Work, 668 St. Anthony Ave., Tel. Dale 3492.—Advertisement. According to a list of bequests made in the Hill estate, Mr. Robert C. Minor on Nov. 24, 1919, was bequeathed the sum of $2,000 held in trust for five years by the Northwestern Trust Co., trustee. The Modern Priscilla Club met at the home of Mrs. J. Tresman, 408 Cathedral Place, Wednesday evening. Mrs. W. Johnson of Port Angeles, Wash., Mrs. J. C. Gray and Mrs. F. Schuck were guests of the club. Miss Katie Gayles of Cincinnati, Ohio, arrived in the city last Monday evening, having been called here on account of her cousin, Mrs. L. Raymond Hill, 686 Carroll Ave., who still remains ill, though somewhat improved. Minnesota started out the new year with $8,583,446.97 cash balance and permanent state trust funds totaling $44,767,351.09, according to figures from the offices of State Treasurer Henry Rines and State Auditor Ray P. Chase. Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Morgan entertained on last Monday afternoon in honor of Mr. and Mrs. John Warren who were recently married in Minneapolis by Rev. Evans. Mrs. Warren was formerly Miss Sara Morgan of New Jersey. St. James A. M. E. church is starting the New Year with a rally for the benefit of a new edifice. Rev. Jones preached a very able sermon in the morning, and in the evening a special sermon was preached for the benefit of the Lady Elks with special music by senior choir. CASE CAR SERVICE—Persons desiring motor car service for any occasion may get the use of an elegant new seven-passenger Case sedan, by calling at 526 W. Central Ave., between Mackubin and Kent Sts., or calling up Dale 4730. Rates reasonable—Advertisement. Two governors of Western states will be the principal speakers at the Lincoln club banquet to be held in St. Paul February 11. Governor Henry T. Allen of Kansas will deliver an address on the industrial court, recently established in that state, and Governor Samuel R. McKelvie of Nebraska will give a talk on Abraham Lincoln. The people of St. Paul are cordially invited to the second annual entertainment of the Children's Relief Association of Minneapolis, at St. Stephen's Auditorium, 22nd and Clinton Ave., on next Wednesday evening, Jan. 11, at 8:00 o'clock. Go over and help this good cause. See large avertissement on 4th page.—Advertisement. Watch meeting was held New Year's Eve night at Downtown Pilgrim Baptist church and on last Sunday morning, Rev. E. M. Van Horn preached to a fairly good sized audience. Although this church has been without a pastor for some months, it is remarkable how the congregation holds together and new members are being added to the church almost every Sabbath. Mesdames Geo. Moore, C. B. Covington and E. A. Hatton, Wednesday of last week at Mrs. Covington's home, 712 Rondo St., entertained 32 on their friends at a progressive whistle host, the prime was awarded to Mrs. F. L. Brown, send to Mrs. M. A. Johnson, third to Jessie Brown, and consolation to Mrs. May B. Mason, Assisting the hostesses were Mesdames C. Roper, W. M. Pettit and M. A. Johnson. Miss Edythella B. Adams returned Tuesday from her holiday visit to Chicago, where she was the recipient of many social courtesies, including that of being one of the guests at the annual Christmas party of Mr. Jesse Binga, the banker, at Hotel Vincennes, which was superbly decorated for the occasion. It was perhaps the most magnificent function ever given by anyone in Chicago and is said to have cost nearly $1,000. STERLING CLUB NOTES. The Sterling Club, one of the oldest social organizations in the city is arranging to give its annual Dinner Dance in January. Mr. Eugene Gough is chairman of the committee of arrangements and he will be assisted by Messrs. George Sleet, W. Branch, B. F. Edwards and Thos. S. Neal. The date and place will be announced later. KOPPER'S TWIN CITY COKE. A Minnesota Product that Should Appeal to the People. In Minnesota one of the most serious problems the people have to deal with is that of fuel. All sorts of fuel may be obtained at some price but whether one gets the greatest amount of heat for the smallest outlay of cash is anything but certain. Because a strenuous effort is being made to educate people to the several advantages Koppers Twin City Coke has over other fuels among which are: It gives a clean, even heat. It is smokeless, sootless, and contains no slate. It solves the clinker and ash sifting nuisance by burning to a small amount of fine, dustless ashes which contain nothing to kill. It is easily regulated to increase the heat quickly in the morning or to give a slow, even heat during the day and night. It is more economical than hard coal —once the fuel standard. You wish to learn all about it and learn about the industry 7600 and demonstrators will call at once and tell you all about it free—Advertisement. CUPHEN T.U.B. I.B.P.O.E. OF THE WORLD 1793 VUS ALCEB Gopher Lodge, No. 105, I. B. P. O. E. W. will begin a series of Winter Dances on Thursday evening, Jan. 19, at union Hall. The committee in charge comprises: Edward Eastman, chairman, A. J. Todd, W. A. Yeiser, W. T. Thurston, S. W. Wright, Eugene Gough, Chas. Edwards, F. Gilbert. Watch for further particulars.—Advertisement. Six Room Flat, Toilet, Gas and Bath, 201 E. 13th St. $25.00. Three Room Flat, Toilet, Gas and Bath, 690 Broadway. J. Louis Ervin. 309 Court Block. WHY THE WORD "ADVERTISEMENT." Under a recent ruling of the United States Postoffice Department, publishers are compelled to "label all editors or other reading matter, other than displayed advertisements, for the publication of which money or other valuable consideration is paid accepted, or promised, with the word ADVERTISEMENT printed in full." TALKING By E. W. Gilles. We are told that talk is cheap, and no doubt a great deal of it is. Good talk, however, is very valuable. An ounce of encouraging words while he lives, is better than a wagon load of flowers after he is dead. One of the dangers is that of talking too much. We don't have much trouble about what we don't say. It is what we do say that often plays the mischief. A soft answer turneth away wrath, and no answer at all is often nearly as good. Von Motlke once said of the Duke of Wellington, that "he could hold his tongue in seven different languages." Shaking up troublesome makes more trouble. Silence is one of the sublimest forms of eloquence. "The truth should be spoken at all times," but we need not always tell all we know. Silence is soon mended, but words are often unmandable. To treat many things with silent and prayerful sorrow is often the best way to handle them. READ ADVERTISEMENTS You read your newspaper to get the latest news. To get all the news you should read the advertisements as thoroughly as you do items of local or worldwide interest. For every advertisement is a news item. Each advertisement tells a story of its own—a story of economical interest to you and your family. Advertisements tell you where you can place your money to get the greatest value or satisfaction out of it. Advertisements have established standards of quality for nearly everything. The advertisers in THE AP- PEAL ask for and deserve your support and patronage. READ ADVERTISEMENTS ORDER FOR CREDITORS TO PRESENT CLAIMS, ETC. STATE OF MINESOTA, COUNTY OF Ramsey-ss. Probate Court. In the Matter of the Estate of Annie Brook- s. Documented Letters of administration on the estate of Annie Brooker, deceased, late of the County of Ramsey and State of Minnesota, being prosecuted. It Is Ordered, That six months be and the same is hereby allowed from and after the date of this order in which person having the same name must be issued, are required to file this and dearest, is required to file this and dearest, is further Ordered, That the first Monday in July, 1922, at 10 o'clock A. M., at a General Term of said Probe Court, to be asked as in the Court of the city of Dearest, in said county, and the same hereby is appointed as the time and place when and where the said Probe Court will examine this order and demands. And it Is Further Ordered. That notice of such hearing be given to all creditors and addressees of this order with publishing this order once in each week for three successive weeks in the Appeal, a local newspaper printed and published in said Dated at St. Paul this 20th day of December, 1921. By the Court: A. E. DOE, Judge of Washington County, Minn., acting as and for Judge of Probe of Ramsey County, Minn. (Seal of Probe Court). T. A. ALEXANDER, Attorney. (12-24-21) MAKE NO MISTAKE, JUST SMOK Sight Draft THE OLD RELIABLE 8 CENT CIGAR Defective Page THE FLORSHEIM SHOE THE NEW YORK CITY FASHION MARKET THE PARKWAY A refined shape appearance wh to bring out. V fect comfort at defined shape with that dignified quarance which Florsheim knows ising out. Will give you style and comfort at a price that is mode A refined shape with that dignified quality appearance which Florsheim knows how to bring out. Will give you style and perfect comfort at a price that is moderate. Florsheim Shoes $10-$11-$12 Stanley Shoes $6 to $9 STANLEY SHOE CO. 421 ROBERT ST., ST. PAUL TANLEY SHOE CO 421 ROBERT ST., ST. PAUL FOR THE MAN GAL A STOVE & FURNACE REPAIR Manufacturers and Jobbers to Fit All Makes of Stoves, Ranges. We are Experts at Installing Furni STOVES STORED ST. ST. P LET TRY OUR NEW FAMILY W POUNDS FOR $1.5 pieces ironed and wearing nicely dried ready to iron NEW SERVICE IS SURE TO PLEASE Intol Steam Laun CEDAR 4622 A ST. ST. P A GIFT ELECTRIC We are sure would be appreciated Make it Reading Lamp. Vacuum or anything Electrical WE HAVE IT ST. PAUL STOVE & Manufa Repairs to Fit All Furnaces. We are STOV 105 E. THIRD ST. WHY NOT TRY O 18 POUN All flat pieces in el nicely d THIS NEW SERVIC Capitol St 743 WABASHA ST. Repairs to Fit All Makes of Stoves, Ranges and Furnaces. We are Experts at Installing Furnaces. STOVES STORED 105 E. THIRD ST. ST. PAUL, MINN. WHY NOT TRY OUR NEW FAMILY WASH? 18 POUNDS FOR $1.50 All flat pieces ironed and wearing apparel nicely dried ready to iron. A Ma TITY AVE. TEL. ELKH EAL ESTAT 665 UNIVERSITY AVE. REAL REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE CLARENCE A. SCHUCK IF YOU WISH TO BE PLEASED TO SER CITY HOMES CITY LOTS BUY YOUR COAL YOU WISH TO BUY OR SELL WE SHARE LEASED TO RENDER YOU WHATEV SERVICE POSSIBLE STEEL P FA IF YOU WISH TO BUY OR SELL WE SHALL BE PLEASED TO RENDER YOU WHATEVER SERVICE POSSIBLE COAL AND WOOD FLOUR, FEED AND HAY FROM C. W. STAEHLE Baggage Transfer Moving Van All kinds of hauling Everything at the right price Rice, Carroll and Iglehart IF YOU ARE PARTICULAR ABOUT YOUR CLOTHES CALL CEDAR 5764 CEDAR 1206 with that dignified quality which Florsheim knows how Will give you style and pera price that is moderate. LEY SHOE CO. ROBERT ST., ST. PAUL THE FLORSHEIM SHOE WHO CARES WHO CARES FURNACE REPAIR WORKS Facturers and Jobbers Makes of Stoves, Ranges and Experts at Installing Furnaces. ES STORED ST. PAUL, MINN. OUR NEW FAMILY WASH? IDS FOR $1.50 Oiled and wearing appar- ried ready to iron. E IS SURE TO PLEASE YOU Team Laundry DAR 4622 ST. PAUL, MINN. IFT ELECTRICAL We are sure would be appreciated Reading Lamp. Vacuum Cleaner or anything Electrical WE HAVE IT We will make delivery any date Minnesota Chandelier Co. 369 Jackson Street TEL. ELKHURST 2956 ESTATE HUGH W. SCHUOK BUY OR SELL WE SHALL RENDER YOU WHATEVER VICE POSSIBLE STEEL PLANT LOTS FARM LANDS TEL. GARFIELD 2446 AND WOOD FEED AND HAY FROM STAEHLE for Moving Vans lands of hauling Rice, Carroll and Iglehart Sts. GARFIELD 2918 If a dollar saved is a dollar earned, is a mighty good fuel investment because it saves many dollars in heating cost. Besides fewer ashes No Smoke—No Soot All Fuel Real Estate BE YOUR OWN I Choice City Property Beautiful Building Lots TWIN CITY REAL O. U. BRAY, 511 UNIVERSITY AVE., ST. PAUL. Tel. Cedar 9603 LEADING DOWN TOWN P Acme Club J D. SIMPSON First Class Meals and Lunches Reasonable R ALL KINDS OF SOR 317 1-2 Wabasha St. DAY PHONE: CEDAR 6245 WHEN IN THE TWIN CITIES DON'T FAIL T R. N. TRAVIS, PROP THANN'S HOTEL, CAFE AND POOL HEADQUARTERS FOR RAILROAD THEATRICAL FOLK All Fuel Dealers Real Estate Insurance BE YOUR OWN LANDLORD Place City Property Farm Property For Fairful Building Lots Sale or Trade TWIN CITY REALTY CO. O. U. BRAY, PRES. ERSITY AVE., ST. PAUL. TEL. FOREST 9553 Del. Cedar 9603 Open All Night LEADING DOWN TOWN PLACE TO EAT Acme Club Cafe J. D. SIMPSON, MGR. First Class Meals and Lunches at All Hours And at Reasonable Rates ALL KINDS OF SOFT DRINKS 7 1-2 Wabasha St. St. Paul, Minn. Real Estate Insurance BE YOUR OWN LANDLORD Choice City Property Farm Property For Beautiful Building Lots Sale or Trade TWIN CITY REALTY CO. O. U. BRAY, PRES. 511 UNIVERSITY AVE., ST. PAUL. TEL. FOREST 9553 Tel. Cedar 9603 Open All Night LEADING DOWN TOWN PLACE TO EAT Acme Club Cafe J D. SIMPSON, MGR. First Class Meals and Lunches at All Hours And at Reasonable Rates ALL KINDS OF SOFT DRINKS 317 1-2 Wabasha St. St. Paul, Minn. OPEN IN THE TWIN CITIES DON'T FAIL TO VISIT THANN'S W. A. YEISER, MGR. CAFE AND POOL ROOM QUARTERS FOR RAILROAD AND THEATRICAL FOLK D ST. ST. PAUL AR 8081 QUICK SERVICE TOWN SANITARY SHOP OWEN HOWELL, MANAGER SHOES - REPAIRING - CLOTHES SUITS SPONGED AND PRESSED FRENCH DRY CLEANING ENTS SUITS DRY CLEANED LADIES SUITS DRY CLEANED HEADQUARTERS FOR RAILROAD AND THEATRAL FOLK UP-TOWN SANIT OWEN HOWELL, M SHOES - REPAIR SUITS SPONGED AND PRESSED GENTS SUITS DRY CLEANED 339 WABASHA ST. TEL. ATLANTIC 4876 UP-TOWN SANITARY SHOP OWEN HOWELL. MANAGER SHOES - REPAIRING - CLOTHES SUITS SPONGED FRENCH DRY AND PRESSED CLEANING GENTS SUITS DRY LADIES SUITS DRY CLEANED CLEANED PHELPS HOTEL AND CAFE MRS. SYLESTUS PHELPS, PROP. STRICTLY FIRST CLASS MEALS TO ORDER AT ALL HOURS FRIED CHICKEN AND HOT CORN FRITTERS F AFTER THEATER PARTIES A SPECIALTY 246 4TH AVE. S. MINNEAPOLIS TRICTLY FIRST CLASS MEALS TO ORDER AT ALL HOURS RIED CHICKEN AND HOT CORN FRITTERS FOR AFTER THEATER PARTIES A SPECIALTY STRICTLY FIRST CLASS MEALS TO ORDER AT ALL HOURS FRIED CHICKEN AND HOT CORN CRITTERS FOR AFTER THEATER PARTIES A SPECIALTY TEL. DALE 9265 COSMOPOLITAN GROCERY First Class Staple and Fancy Groceries Vegetables, Fruits, Confectionery Ice Cream, Cigars, Tobacco, Cigarettes. Strictly Cash and Carry System 558 St. Anthony Saint Paul use Pearl Don't argue with don't earline use Don't argue with dirt Pearline 40 E. THIRD ST. TEL. CEDAR 8081 NIGHT PHONE: CEDAR 9088 THIS IS THE MAN L TO VISIT W. A. YEISER, MGR. SCHOOL ROOM ROAD AND K ST. PAUL KNOWN AS "THANN" QUICK SERVICE ST. PAUL, MINN. MINNEAPOLIS Matters Social, Religious and General Which Have Happened and Are to Happen Among the People of the City. Mrs. E. L. Boyd is still confined to her home with illness. A movement is well under way to establish a sub branch public library at Border M. E. church, Lyndale and Fourth Aves. N. Under the efforts of Mrs. Susie Bogie and Mr. W. C. Jeffrey the Sunday Forum has been revived and will meet every other Sunday afternoon at Border M. E. church. Johnson's, "Good Things to Eat," 2010 Cedar Ave. cor. Franklin, has a regular "Chicken Parlor" open al. night. Telephone for reservations South 0805—Advertisement. Prop. W. T. Johnson, has secured the services of the popular waitress, Miss Essie Langum, at his Cafe, Chicken and Oyster Parlor, 2010 Cedar Ave—Advertisement. Dr. M. W. Judy, who has been in Duluth for some time, has returned with his "better half" and has opened a Dental Laboratory at 316 Nicollet ave., on the same floor with Dr. Ellis Burton, the dentist. Mrs. Ollie Phelps, who is widely known as the "Fried Chicken Queen of the World," has purchased what was formerly Stewart's hotel, 246 Fourth Ave. S., and will conduct the "Chicken Shop De Luxe" there. The Polar Wave Tailoring Co., Willie Wicks, proprietor, is now located at 656 Dupont, near 616 Ave. N. Custom tailoring, repairing, dry cleaning, pressing. Hats cleaned and blocked. We call and deliver. — Advertisement. See the living pictures and style revue at the entertainment of the Children's Relief Association at St. Stephen's auditorium, 22nd and Clinton Ave., next Wednesday evening, Jan. 11. See display advertisement on this page for further particulars. — Advertisement. Combs Brothers, the Tailors and Dry Cleaners, 809 4th Ave. S., are making a special offer to sponge and press men's suits for 50 cents, ladies suits, $1.00 and up. All hand pressing, Relining and remodeling done at reasonable prices. Work called for and delivered. Tel. Main 5040—Advertisement. Mrs. Mary H. Moseley Withers received a certificate of graduation from Mme. Bacon's School of Scientific Method of Hairdressing, Manicuring and Facial Massage on last Tuesday. Anyone desiring to take a course may learn full particulars by calling at 717 Sixth Ave. N., or by phone, Hyland 0074. The ladies of Minneapolis are quite fortunate in having Mme. Bacon's Beauty Parlors, 717 Sixth ave. No., to supply their needs in that line. This is the largest and most up-to-date establishment of its kind in Minneapolis. To be appreciated it must be seen. An invitation is extended to all to call and inspect it.—Advertisement. FEATHERING ONE'S NEST. By F. W. Gilles The time to feather ones nest, is when one has something to feather it with. The rainy day, as we call it, is sure to come. It may come in the form of sickness, or something else, at any time; and, it will surely come in the form of old age, if one lives long enough. If you are simply earning money and spending it, that is an awful thing. Mr. Blank earned from $100 to $200 per month for a dozen years, and then lost his job in the midst of a financial depression. In the meantime the money had gone to the bow wows; and, now, with a wife and two babies on his hands, and no job, and no money, he was in a bad fix. I hope to encourage you to put one-tenth of your income in a savings bank as a permanent reserve fund. I hope to encourage you to get a home of your own, on the installment plan, if necessary, but get a home of your own. Thus, with your own home and with your savings bank account increasing from week to week, you will have something to go on in case of reverses, and something to live on when old age overtakes you. TRUTH TERSELY TOLD! WHAT BETTER THING CAN ONE DO THAN TO REMEMBER ONE'S FRIENDS? THE TRADES PEOPLE WHO ADVERTISE IN THE APPEAL, THUS SHOW THEY ARE FRIENDS AND WANT YOUR TRADE. THEY RECOGNIZE YOUR PAPER AND INVITE YOU THROUGH IT TO TRADE WITH THEM. ACCEPT THEIR INVITATIONS AND SHOW YOUR APPRECIATION. THERE ARE NO BETTER PEOPLE TO TRADE WITH THAN OUR. ADVERTISERS; SHOP IN OUR COLUMNS BEFORE YOU DO YOUR SHOP- TEL. CEDAR 7998 IF YOUR EYES REBEL SEE UBEL EVERYBODYINVITED Directed by the Entertainment Committee, Mrs. Charles M. Foree Chairman. Assisted by the Montana Club of Bethesda Baptist Church, Mrs. R. D. Ware, Chairman. St. Stephens Auditorium 22nd and Clinton Avenue, Minneapolis LIVING PICTURES illustrated with songs and dances STYLE REVUE presented from some of our leading shops Social Hour Following Program Good Refreshments Served PRIZE VALUED AT $5 GIVEN TO LADY AND GENTLEMAN SELLING THE LARGEST NUMBER OF TICKETS Admission: Adults 35 Cents, Children Under 12, 15 Cents PORTERS' & WAITERS' CLUB 311 Hennepin Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. Phone Main 2592 Excellent Food at Minimum Prices. Soft Drinks of All Kinds. TOBACCO CIGARS CIGARETTES GLOVER SHULL, Pres. and Treas. O. A. McNAIR, Night Manager. Meals A La Carte at All Hours Housewives Supplied With Barbecued Meats on Special Orders. Ladies who do not wish to leave their cars will be specially served. W. P. THOMPSON, MGR. FOR THE NEW YEAR LOWER PRICES ON FURNITURE AT BOUTELL'S A Great Sale Now Going On --All Departments Besides wonderful opportunities to save—big price reductions—up to $ \frac{1}{2} $ off—we offer you Liberal Credit Terms. You can get the benefit of the sale prices and pay for your purchases by the month. WHY HESITATE-This is the time to come to BOUTELL'S and furnish your home-AT A BIG SAVING Rugs—Draperies—Furniture—Dishes Kitchen Ware—Cut Glass—Aluminum Ware—Stoves, Heaters, Ranges all at a saving to you. BOUTELL BROS. Tel. Hyland 3956 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. Tel. Dale 0605 HARRY LIGAN MERCHANT TAILOR Full line of Gents' furnishings and a lot of odd trousers for sale at prices ranging from $2.50 to $6.00 313 Rondo St. St. Paul OFFICE CEDAR 8848 RES. DALE 1468 W. T. FRANCIS LAWYEP SLUITE 329 AMR, WAVL, BANK BLDG. COR. FIFTH AND CEDAR FICE TEL. CEDAR 4044 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. COR. 4TH & WABASHA SAINT PAUJ MINNESOTA Dale 9747 Elkhurst 2658 J. TROST GROCER Cor. Rodo and Dale St. Paul N. W. CEDAR 3037 Chester W Casswell OPTICIAN & JEWELER 22 E. FOURTH ST. SAINT PAUL Tel. Dale 3454 Brotchner's Pharmacy All Prescriptions Carefully Compounded COR RONDO & DALE ST. St. Paul INSTRUCTIONS GIVEN HYLAND 0074 HAIR GOODS AND TOILET REQUISITES BACON'S BEAUTY PARLORS Hairdressing, Manicuring, Shampooing, Facial Massage, Scalp Treatments, Massage Rest Baths, Hair Dying, Electric Treat- ments, Marceling, Etc. New Year Suggestions FROM W.J.Dyer&Bro. 21-23-25 West Fifth Street, St. Paul. More Heat Less Cost duced to 400 the ton December 10th. freight rates and next season should 1.00 price. duction is made added induce- ave you adopt like as your per- Lower freight rates and coal costs next season should justify a $14.00 price. The reduction is made NOW as an added inducement to have you adopt Koppers Coke as your permanent fuel. PETER H. HARRIS NOW $14.00 PER TON Koppers Coke For sale by S. BRAND Rice and University. Garfield 7501 MAY BLACK MASON Mezzo Soprano available for CONCERTS AND RECITALS OPERA ORATORIO FRENCH, GERMAN, ITALIAN Res. 1045 Cross Ave. Phone Dale 2668 St. Paul, Minn. $12.60 HARD COAL HARD COAL SHOULD BE $12.60 INSTEAD OF $17.95 WHEN COMPARED WITH COKE AT $14.00, BECAUSE IT HAS BEEN DETERMINED BY UNIVERSITY EXPERI- MENT DEPARTMENT THAT COKE GIVES 11½% MORE HEAT THAN HARD COAL. THEREFORE BUY COKE. HOLMES & HALLOWELL 12 E. SIXTH, NEAR WABASHA. $11 COAL "Furnace Chunks" hold fire over night, for stoves, ranges and furnaces. The Very Best. Liberty Bonds Accepted. Holmes & Hallowell, 12 E. Sixth, near Wabasha. VANDER BIE'S ICE CREAM IS THE BEST For Sale Everywhere J. C. VANDER BIE Partridge and Brunson Sta. ST. PAUL, MINN. 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 306 RONDO ST. ST. PAUL, MINN. Tel. Dale 8339 We Call Por and Deliver ELMER MORRIS DRUGGIST Drugs, Medicines, Soda Water Soft Drinks, Toilet Articles Candles, Cigars, Tobacco, Ice Cream Brick or Bulk. Gas and Electric Fixtures Fishing Tackle Dale & W. Central St. Paul OFFICE TEL. CEDAR 8104 RES. TEL DALE 9244 HOURS: 8:30 A. M. TO 1 P. M. AND 2 TO 6 P. M. SUNDAYS BY APPOINTMENT DR. E. S. WEBER DENTAL SURGEO FIRST CLASS GUARANTEED WORK IN ALL BRANCHES OF DENTISTRY 84 W. SEVENTH ST. DANOTA BLDG. SUITE 203-204 ST. PAUL 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