The Appeal

Saturday, June 10, 1922

St. Paul, Minnesota

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THE EMPORIUM QUALITY CANDIES - SAINT PAUL VOL. 38 NO. 23 Landru Execution Cause of Renewed Agitation in France. Abolition of Capital Punishment or That Gullotting Take Place in Private, is Being Demanded—Man Whose Name it Beats Had Nothing to Do With the Construction of the Sinister Machine—Claimed Many Victims During the Revolution. Through the publicity given to the Landru execution, notice has again been attracted to the gullotting, and the Socialist papers, of which there are a number in Paris, are demanding abolition of capital punishment or that gullottingtnings take place in the privacy of prison. In fact the public is not admitted to executions, except when there is laxity on the part of the local officials, the publicity being due to the presence of reporters. It is urged that reporters as well as the public be attended such functions, as the public would accept as accurate any prison governor's announcement that a man had been gullothed without assurance by newspaper men. Operates 130 Years. In a few weeks the guillotine will have operated for 130 years in France. Before the Revolution, condemned persons were put to death in various ways. In some cases bones were broken by blows from an iron bar. Others were made to die in agony on the wheel. Many nobles were decapitated with the sword. The majority, however, were hanged. In 1790, a humanitarian, Doctor Guillotin, procured the issuance of a decree that a criminal should be decapitated by a simple machine with a knife, "which should fall like the thunder." Actually, Guillotin, who was a professor of anatomy in the Paris School of Medicine, had nothing to do with the construction of the sinister machine, and he died of chagrin because his name was given to it. A German harpischord maker named Schmidt built the first guillotine under the direction of Doctor Louis, secretary of the Academy of Surgery. Louis XVI, who prided himself in his skill as a locksmith and his knowledge of mechanics, is said to have advised the adoption of the triangular form of knife instead of the scythe-shaped form of the final device. This story of the king, who was subsequently to lose his head on the guillotine, is discredited in many quarters, although it appears in the "Memoirs of Samson, one of the great hangmen. Crowds in First To the first gullotining, which took place in 1792 on the Place de Greve, the people of Paris thronged in crowds. At the swift end of Nicholas Pelletier, a footpad who had robbed and stabbed to death a traveler, they clapped their hands with satisfaction. After that the gullotine was kept busy. From August, 1792, to July, 1794, 2,632 persons were beheaded, including 384 women. The amount of gullotining has largely depended on the personal views of the President of the moment. Thirty years ago President Carnot executed everybody who had been sentenced to death. Then President Fallerers went to the other extreme, being opposed to gullotining anybody. This led to an outcry, in consequence of which criminals guilty of particularly brutal murders escaped the penalty. From 1812 the death machine has worked with regularity. But there has always been a latent anxiety and the Landru case has brought about a criminal capital punishment there is a demand that a man is guilty before being beheaded, and in Landru's case certitude was not established. WELL-TRAINED DOG Would Not Give Up Postal Missive on Which 10 Cents Was Due. A story offered by Charles W. Jefferson, postmaster of Federalburg, Va. is vouchered for by Sewell Noble and concerns the sagacity of the former's pet terrier Rex. Jefferson has trained the animal so that if some one across the street from the postoffice calls for his mall he places it in the dog's mouth, points to the recipient and the dog trots over to deliver it. Not long ago Noble availed himself of the "free" delivery being across the street, and Rex ambled over with one letter in his teeth, but instead of giving it to the owner as usual he backed off and growled when Noble tried to take the missive. Puzzled, the postmaster went across to the recalcitrant dog, only to find that, without noticing it, he had given the terrier a special delivery letter on which was due 10 cents. On Noble's throwing a dime on the sidewalk, Rex promptly yielded the letter as his master retrieved the fee. Radio Concerts on N. Y. Tugboats. Radio concerts on tugboats operating in the harbor at New York city will make the harbor work faster and provide entertainment during tile moments, says a statement from the offices of the New York towboat exchange. EXTEND AIR ROUTES All Nations Making Effort to Develop Civil Aviation. British Observer Says 1922 Appears to Be Crucial Year in the Extension of Commercial Airways Air Travel Popular. London—All countries are making great efforts to extend their commercial airways this year, writes MaJ. W. T. Blake, the aeronautical correspondent of the Daily News. Indeed, 1922 appears the crucial year for civil aviation. In addition to new air service in England from London to Manchester and from London to Ireland, two new companies have been approved by the air ministry to operate continental services. Of these Daimler Hire, Ltd., will operate between London and Paris with a extension to Switzerland, whilst between London and Brussels the Aerial Services syndicate, Ltd, proposes to operate. The Instone Air line and Handley Page Transport will continue their services to Paris, whilst one or the other will probably start operations on the Dutch route. France, in addition to maintaining her present services to London, Brussels, Amsterdam, Czechoslovakia, Warsaw, Morocco, etc., has arranged to open up the route from Prague to Constantinople via Budapest and Bucharest. This will be a branch of the Paris-Warsaw service, the junction being Prague. A second route to Constantinople also will be opened up by the company, at present opposes the service from Bordeaux-Toulouse to Budapest. This service will be definitely opened to Marsellies and Genoa, and will continue to Constantinople if circumstances warrant a further extension. Denmark has recently sent a mission to Germany with a view to investigating the possibilities of purchasing large passenger-carrying machines for the opening up of various Scandinavian routes. Portugal—which so far has displayed little practical interest in commercial flying—is opening up a service from Lisbon to Paris via Valladolid and Bordeaux. The capital of this company is two million escudos, at the rate of exchange about $375,000. This will of course, bring London into direct airline communication to London. Other Portuguese air services contemplated are from Lisbon to Oporto; from Lisbon to Madrid; from Lisbon to Faro. Additional links in the European system which are being opened up by various companies will enable the aerial travel to proceed from London to Algeria via Paris and Marseilles and from London to Morocco via Paris, Toulouse and Barcelona. The new Portuguese route will give a direct service between London and Lisbon and the new French service will give a direct route from London to Constantinople. England is already linked up by air with Brussels, Amsterdam, Copenhagen and Berlin, so that there are now very few European capitals which cannot be reached by regular air services in, at the outside, two days' air travel. TEST EYES OF MILLION KIDS Vision of All Pupil in New York Publ School. Seems to be One Day by Physician. New York—Nearly 1,000,000 boys and girls of New York's public schools had their eyes tested in one day recently. It was health day in the schools, and the Eyesight Conservation Council of America cooperated with the school authorities in arranging the wholesale eye testing, and distributed 50,000 copies of a pamphlet on the care of the eyes. Teachers in the schools will cooperate in the examinations for defects of vision. Ears, teeth, nutrition and nasal breathing will also be tested. Goes Too Far for Death Data, New York—Seeking data for his book, "The Harcourt," Thomas W. Wegelius of Brooklyn, a three-year-old chemist, swallowed what he thought was just enough anesthetic to take him to death's portals. The book will never be finished for young Wegelius miscalculated the dose and the portals swide wide for him. Renton, Wash.—Residents of Cedar Falls, a mountain town forty miles from Puget sound, were terrorized recently when the entire place moved eleven feet toward Cedar Lake. Should the slide continue it will mean the loss of all property and the abandonment of the town site. It has been found that the clay formation upon which the foundations are erected lies in a slanting rock strata of extreme smoothness. There is really nothing but the weight of the clay subsolu to keep it balanced. The winter's deep frost and a supposed earthquake shock may have been cause of the earthship. As every section of the town moved exactly the same direction and space the only damage was a few broken window lights. Minnesota Historical Society THE A ST. PAUL AND MINNEA IE A PAUL AND MINNEA THE APPEAL. DISTANCES OF STARS MEASURED New Method Being Employed by Astronomers at Harvard College Observatory. BASED ON STUDY OF SPECTRUM Vast Collection of Photographs Now Being Used and Exact Figures No Longer Depend on Old System. Cambridge, Mass.—The distances from the earth of hundreds of stars are now being measured for the first time at Harvard College Observatory by recently developed methods based upon a study of the spectrum. It has been found that a huge collection of photographs of star spectra, assembled at Harvard during past generation and numbering over 300,000 plates, can be put to a new use in determining the distance of stars, and the work of measurement is going ahead rapidly. Many of the vast number of stars whose distances are still unknown are the bright, comparatively nearby southern stars, because nearly all the observatories where stellar distances are measured are located in the northern hemisphere. The Harvard astronomers are therefore concentrating much of their attention upon photographs of southern stars at the Harvard station at Arequita, Peru. New Method. The new methods of measuring the distance of a star by a study of its spectrum are based upon discoveries by a number of astronomers. A remarkable contribution to the subject has been made by Dr. Megh Nad Sah, an East Indian, who is assistant professor of physics in the University of Calcutta. Until recently the only available method for measuring star distances has been the parallax method, which consists of triangulation, using the diameter of the earth's orbit as a base line. In other words, observations of a star are made at intervals of six months. During this period of six months the observer is carried by the motion of the earth to a point some 186 million miles from that of his first observation, and using this distance as a base line he can work out the distances of the nearer stars. Almost in the stars, however, are so even in the universe that even with a base line of 186 million miles their distances cannot be triangulated. It is for these more distant stars that the new methods are used. At the Mount Wilson observatory, W. S. Adams and his associates have succeeded in developing a procedure depending on the lines in the spectra of stars as photographed with large telescopes fitted out with powerful spectroscopes. The lines are due to the absorption of light from the star's surface by the clouds of iron, nickel, calcium and other elements that form its atmosphere. Dr. Bertil Lindblad has provided another method, based upon the examination of the so-called "cyanogen" bands in the spectra. These new methods have been carefully checked by the older ones. The Next Problem. Now that methods of measuring star distances from a study of spectra have been worked out, standardized and checked, the next problem is to apply these methods to those thousands of stars whose distances are still unknown. One of the fundamental tasks of astronomy is to determine how the stars are distributed through space, and this can never be known until the distances are measured. It is this task of applying the new methods for which the Harvard collection of photographs of stellar spectra has been found to furnish excellent material. To give a single example, photographs made at Cambridge thirty-five years ago give the distance of Uranus, Uranus, one of the "pointers" in the big diopterus as about seventy-two light years. In other words the light now coming in from that star began its journey about 1850, and the light photographed on the Harvard plates in 1857 started in 1815. Cute Letter From Alphabet, Sofa—Determination by the government to eliminate a single letter in the Bulgarian alphabet was responsible for student riots here. Wine Cellar Walled Up Three Decades Ago Found Boston — A wine cellar, including Maryland rye, Kentucky bourbon and other good liquor, has been "unwalled" by laborers raising the old Studio building. Tremont and Broomfield streets, famed as the city's "inner temple of the fine arts." It is believed that the carefully stored liquor was the propensity of architect and clubman of the city, who died three decades ago, failing to mention on his deathbed his precaution against drought. The cellar was walled up in the foundations. DRIVE OUT RUSS REDS Persians Rid Their Country of Last of Communists. Failure of Bolshevik invasion of Persia Attributed to Quarrels of Three Bandit Chiefe—Russians Are Rather Cynical. Baku, Azerbaijan—The last of the Russian communists have arrived here from Persia, feeling before the troops of the shah, under the general direction of the prime minister, Ghavamos Saltane, who demanded that the terms of the Anglo-Russian treaty for both nations to let Persian work out her own destiny be observed. Rotten, the soviet ambassador to Teheran, has been sent home, among others. The invasion of Persia was undertaken in 1920, the Russian communists co-operating with three revolutionary bandit chiefs of Persia—Ehsanella, Kutchch and Haldar. The failure of the movement is attributed here to quarrels between the three bandit chiefs. Now that the effort of Soviet Russia to sovietize Persia has definitely failed, the Russians are taking a rather impartial if not cynical view of the events during the last year. They maintain that the 60 or so little shah, or feudalist landlords, each with his court and army, continue to weaken the central government by their quarrels and ambitions, and that, so long as they are nationalist movement is possible and Persia will remain almost in the same condition as England of centuries ago under the barons. Aside from the Anglo-Russian treaty, a multitude of reasons are given for the Red failure in Persia. One is that the soviet freedom to women, including abandoning of the chadhrad, or vell, pleased the women, but not their husbands, and made many enemies for the Russians. Another reason was that the Russians mistook the feudalists for reformers. These persons were ready for any revolution that would overthrow the power of the shah, until they realized that communism would wreck their own estates. The merchant class at first welcomed the communists, only later to grow cold, as they saw the fruits of a division of property, house requisitions and other odds and ends of communism. Yet another reason was that the peasants themselves, trained in the Islamic law to respect property, refused to accept a division of land belonging to their landlords. PROTEST HIP-HIGH TURNSTILE Liquor Flasks Are Imperiled in Rush Home Unless Owners Walk Backward. New York—"They save your time," apologized the busway management in placards to their patrons when turnstiles turned by a "nickle-in-the-slot" were installed recently at all stations. "But they lost your liquor," protested the patrons who were accustomed to carrying something "on the hip." The inventor of the turnstiles made the mistake of making them hip high and scores of full flasks were broken in their owners' pockets when they failed to step lively enough. But protests to the management were unavailing, and the only satisfaction the victims got was the advice to walk out backward. PEKING USING POLICEWOMEN Feminine Officials Are Employed to Cope With Smuggling by Own Sex. Peking.—Woman police are the latest addition to the Peking force, which has the reputation of being exceptionally good and easily comparable with police forces in the cities of foreign countries. It was found that in the Hatamen Octroi that goods being smuggled past the police by women, and in order to cope with the situation the ranks of the police in the district were augmented by ten policewomen. No report has yet been issued as to the success of this experiment, which marks the opening of a new field of work for the women of China. Bore into Big Hawaiian Volcano. Honolulu.—Extensive drilling into the great active volcano of Kilauea, on the island of Hawaii, will be undertaken during 1922 in an endeavor to determine the heat of the volcano, the quantity of steam underneath, the mineral constituents and the solution of other related questions, Prof. T. A. Jaggar, Jr., government volcanologist at Hawaii, announced. Ranchmen Chase Wolf 20 Miles to Rope Him Miles City, Mont—Bud and Sol Nichols, ranchmen, discovered a wolf trying to "cut off" a calf from a herd of cattle. Recognizing the wolf as one that had been terrifying cattle herds for several seasons, the brothers took after the animal on horseback. The wolf, a large gray one, gave them a chase of twenty miles—but the ranchers stuck on his trail and finally succeeded in roping him. This feat stands alone in the history of wolf hunting in this section. TO BUILD CANAL FOR HOLY LAND Zionist Organization Resurrects Pian Brought Out by Duke of Sutherland. DIVIDED INTO TWO SECTIONS Proposed Cut Would Open Trade Route by Way of Sea of Galilee and Jordan Valley—Would Increase Humidity. Jerusalem. — The Zionist organization has resurrected the old plan of constructing a 250-mile canal through Palestine as a supplement to the Suez canal. This project was first brought out twenty-five years ago, but was buried unceremoniously by Sultan Abdul Hamid because of his opposition to progress. Traffic through the Suez canal has become so congested these days that it is claimed an alternate canal route is required. Zionist leaders have become convinced that the ever-expanding trade relations between continental Europe and the Far East have reached such dimensions that a canal in Palestine would fill an urgent need and reap untold commercial benefits for Palestine. Canal in Two Sections As planned by F. A. Maler of Holland, its ardent support, the canal would be divided into two sections, one of which would extend from Haifa, on the Mediterranean, to Aftelah, on the Lake of Tiberias, or Sea of Galilee. Then there would be an intervening part to be formed by a proposed Jordan lake to extend from the Lake of Tiberias toward the Dead Sea. This would be filled with Mediterranean sea water. Having crossed the Dead sea the canal would begin again at Arabah, at the foot of the sea, and extend to Akabah, giving access to the Red sea. While the building of such a canal would necessitate the submergence of a considerable tract of fertile land as well as a few towns and villages (along the Jordan), its champions claim that the advantages would far outbalance the loss. Would Increase Humidity. It is claimed that the proposed Jordan lake would increase the humidity of all Palestine, which now suffers from excessive heat and droughts, thus improving the climate as well as the vegetation. Also, it is asserted, the Jordan valley and the desert lying to the east with the prairies south of Houran, owing to the increased area of water, would become great centers for colonization and development. With these climatic benefits must be reckoned the commercial possibilities in the scheme. Hifaft must become a second Port Said, a touching place to ships of all nations. Raw materials from Europe and America, so much needed for the building up of industrial enterprises in Palestine, and which now are being held back due to scarcity of calling ships, would begin to flow more freely. Thus, it is claimed, there would be opened up to the residents of Palestine great industrial opportunities. KING'S CHAIR CN WHISKY BOX Feisul of Irak Horgeous Installation—Denouement Starties the Multitude. London.—At the installation of King Fesul of Irak nothing was left undone to produce the atmosphere necessary for such an occasion in the country of the Caliphs of Bagdad. The throne—or rather the chair of state—is a masterpiece in scarlet rep, tinsel and gilt. After the ceremony, which, it will be remembered, was an open air affair, the rifal required, that the throne should be removed, the elephant Ethiopian raised it above his head and bore it away past the assembled multitude. Then, and then only, was the nakedness of the land apparent. The frame beneath the seat was simple deal, and across the boarding was the legend in stencil of a firm that exports Scotch whisky. "DEAD": EAGLE KILLS SOLDIER Bird's Claws Clutch Trigger of Gun in Struggle, Fatally Shooting Owner. Santiago, Chile—A story of a soldier's fatal struggle with a huge eagle in a mountain pass near Los Andes is told by the newspapers here. The soldier shot the eagle and, thinking he had killed it, approached, but the bird had only snatched a broken wing and furiously attacked it. In the struggle which followed the eagle's claws clutched the trigger of the soldier's gun, which was discharged, the bullet entering the man's body. He died in the arms of his companions, who took his body, and also the wounded eagle, to Los Andes. Bride Wants to Grow Pies. Legrange, O.—Uxtra! Help! A young bride from Cleveland inquired about pie plants while visiting her aunt here. "We like pies. I'd like to see what kind of pies grow. If we like them, will grow some of the pie plants in the spring to bride from the nation's "fifth city" to her aunt. THE EMPORIUM QUALITY CANDIES - SAIN PAUL BONUSES CAME EASY Frenchman Quits Baking to Live on Soft Money. Found That Regimental Accounts Were Behind and Collected 35,000 France Before Crooked Work Was Discovered. Paris—In prewar days there was a baker in Paris as honest as a baker could be. Then he went to the front and fought well, receiving two wounds and two mentions in army dispatches. When he came home he found work hard to get, but that would not have interfered with his honesty except for the good or bad luck of getting paid his demobilization bonus twice over. He kept both and been to think. If two bonsies were sent to him there was no logical reason why three or four, or forty, might not equally well come his way, so he wrote to his former regiment complaining that he had not received his bonus, and because regimental accounts were not up to date, as has happened before, a third bonus was sent to him. He thought no more of baking bread. He wrote to the appropriate department, saying that he had lost his military papers and might new identity papers be sent to him. They were. Then he wrote to other regiments—dozens of other regiments—complaining that his bonus had never been sent to him, and let them send it and be quick about it or the ministry of war would hear about it. His regimental accounts were properly kept and the date. These took no notice or wrote in reply that he had mistaken his regiment. Others with less clear consciences, sent the bonus by return. In two years the hero "creep" baker made no less than 35,000 francs out of the fears of quartermaster sergeants and the like. Then the crash came, and now he is in prison awaiting his fate. SELLS CORN 5 CENTS KERNEL Washington Farmer Develops Giantic Type of Grain by Careful Selection. Prosser, Wash., J. D. Sutton, a well-known farmer residing near Byron, is selling seed corn at 5 cents per kernel. It is a species of huge growth developed within the confines of Sutton's farm. Last fall in county fairs around the northwest, Sutton took first prizes with twenty-five stalks of this corn, most of which were between twenty-one and twenty-four feet high. Each stock, some as large as a man's forearm, maintained several huge ears of corn. He received a letter from an eastern seed house asking for facts regarding his monster cornstalks. By correspondence and soon received an offer amounting to about 5 cents per kernel. Sutton developed the tall, heavy fodder corn by growing on rich bottom land and each season saving for seed only the earliest and largest specimens of ears, PRAISE NEW PEACE DOLLAR Assay Commissioners Also Find Unit ed States Coins of 1921 Washington. — All United States coins of 1921 have successfully passed their official examination, according to the report completed tonight by the annual assay commission appointed by President Harding to test the year's coinage. Examination of the 1921 coins was made at the Philadelphia mint, the commission testing a number of pieces out of each batch of metal melted for coinage during the year and reporting that all of them were found to be fully within the requirements of the law. Resolutions commending the operation of the mint and the new standard silver dollar were adopted by the commission to approve the coinage of "a silver dollar commemorative of the peace following the World war, thus completing the redesigning of the entire silver coinage of the government; and also that the designs of the new coinage have now been brought to a state of artistic excellence compared with the best coinage of existing nations." The commission is headed by Controller of the Currency Crissinger. Called late of ignorance. London.-Bardesy, a little island off the Welsh coast, near Pwllhall, has been described as the "island of ignorance," for it is only just recently that men of the age of thirty-four have begun to go to school. Up to three years ago the inhabitants believed in ghosts and fairies. Now they are to have the services of a minister of religion and a school teacher. Repentant Robber Is Given $5 by Victim A repentant thief who returned to apologize after being put to flight with a revolver, was given $5 by Frank Harris, a tailor, of Freeport, Ill., who was attacked by the would-be burglar. Harris chased the man away and a half hour later the bandit reappeared, begging forgiveness and saying he was penless. Harris gave him $5 to help him along. $2.40 PER YEAR Harvard University Explorers Make Interesting Discovery in Northeastern Arizona. Ancient People Were Intermediate in Development Between Basket Makers and the Pueblo Cliff Dwellers. Cambridge, Mass. — Explorations made by the Peabody museum of Harvard in the Marsh pass region of northeastern Arizona have resulted in the discovery of the remains of an ancient people who once inhabited that section and were intermediate in development between the basket makers, the earliest race known to have lived in that region, and the Pueblo cliff dwellers, whose remarkable stone villages along the Arizona cliffs have attracted wide-spread interest. The Harvard expeditions to this semi-desert region, over 100 miles from the nearest railroad, were begun in 1914 by A. V. Klder and Samuel J. Guernsey of the Peabody museum staff, and were later continued under the sole direction of Mr. Guernsey. Prior to 1914, commercial collectors had found traces of the basket makers, but facts about these earliest people of the region had never been searched by trained archaeologists until the Harvard expedition began. Preceded the Cliff Dwellers. These expeditions have not only contributed a mass of information concerning the basket makers but now show the existence of a people who followed the basket makers in point of time, but preceded the cliff dwellers. The post-basket makers, as these newly discovered people are called, resemble the basket makers in many particulars, but were clearly in a later stage of development. The basket makers had no permanent dwellings, whereas these later people had stone houses in caves and in the open. They also had pottery, crude in some respects, but with the beginnings of decoration, and some of it was fired. This is the earliest pottery known to have made in the southwest. Instead of burying their dives in caves, as did the basket makers, they seem to have lived in the caves and to have conducted their burials in the open. Their more settled life is attributed to their success in agriculture. They grew corn or a primitive variety. Skulls Long Instead of Round. Skeletons show that both the basket makers and these successors had rather long skulls, whereas the cliff dwellers who followed them were a round-headed race and always had the back of the skull artificially flattened by the hard board headrest of the crates in which the babies were placed. The relationship of these various peoples is still a matter of doubt. It is believed the post-basket makers cobble stones with descendants of the basket makers, but when they were ancestors of the cliff dwellers is not certain. It seems doubtful on account of the marked difference in the shape of the head, even aside from artificial flattening. The basket makers had dogs. The mummified remains of two were found during the Harvard explorations and are now on exhibition at the Peabody museum along with a quantity of other objects illustrative of basket maker life. Many of the objects found in the dry caves in this region are in an extraordinary state of preservation, on account of the dryness of the climate, despite their great age. How many thousand years ago these primitive people lived in northeastern Arizona is unknown, or how they were related to the Indians of the present day. The scientific study of the region is still in its early stages. Italians Scoop Up Earth From Roosevelt's Grave Oyster Bay, L. L—Four Italianians got off the 230 train at Oyster Bay one afternoon, inquired the way to Young's cemetery and plodded the mile and a half up the hill to the grave of Colonel Roosevelt. They crossed themselves, knelt in prayer a moment, crossed themselves again and placed flowers on the grave. Then they astounded the attendant by scraping away the mow from a spot near the railing and goughed earth with their fingers, stuffing it into their overcoat pockets. "What's the idea?" demanded the attendant, strolling over to them. "This week," the spokesman of the quartette explained, "we go back to Italy. We loved Colonel Roosevelt. Colonel Roosevelt loved Italy. All Italianes love him. We take back with us this earth from his grave and all our families will be glad to get a little of it." The attendant said no more. It was learned that the four pilgrims came from Chicago, where they had lived for 20 years. ST. PAUL OFFICE No. 301-2 Court Block, 24 E. 4th st. 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 6, 1885, under Act of Congress, No. 3, 1870. TERMS, STRICTLY IN ADVANCE: BINGLE COPY, One Year.....$2.40 BINGLE COPY, Six Months.....1.25 BINGLE COPY, Three Months.....65 <em>mittances should / be made by Express</em> <em>Order Outside the Office</em> <em>Registered Letter or Bank Draft</em> <em>Postage stamps will be received the same as cash for</em> <em>the fractional parts of a dollar</em> <em>only one copy of the stamps taken</em> Silver should never be sent to the mail. It is almost sure to wear a hole through the envelope and be lost; or else it may be stolen. People who send silver to in letters to someone are not supposed to be news. Marriage and death notices 10 lines or less $1. Each additional line 10 cents. Payment strictly in advance, and to be announced at the time of the notice to be news. Advertising rates 18 cents per line, each insertion. There are fourteen agate lines in an inch, and about seven words in an inch. All ads allowed unless there is more than 31 lines. No disclosure less than three months contract. Cash must accompany all orders from parties unknown to us. Reading notices 25 cents per line, each insertion. No discounts for time or space. Reading master is set in brevier type--about six weeks to the line. All head lines count double. the date on the address label shows when the subscription expires. Renewals should be made by mail, so that no paper may be missed, as the paper stops when time is out. Communications to that papers sent to your solicitors are lost or stolen. In case you do not receive any number when due, inform us of the number and we will give two days from date date, and we will cheerfully or awkward a duplicate of the missing number. Communications to receive attentions must be written only upon side of the paper; we will reach us Tuesdays if possible, anyway, and upon the nature of the author. No manuscript turned, unless stamps are sent for postage. We do not hold ourselves responsible for the failure of the soliciting agents wanted everywhere. Write soliciting agents wanted everywhere. Write for terms. Sample copies free. In every letter that you write us never fail 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. SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1922. Bible Thought for Today THE RESURRECTION: — Jesus said unto her, I am the resurrection and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live! and whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall never die.—John 11:25. SEGREGATE COLORED AMERICANS AT LINGOL MEMORIAL CELEBRATION. Colored Americans were segregated in the seating of the audience during the dedication of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, at which President spoke, it was learned today. This information was contained in a letter sent to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 70 Fifth Avenue, New York, by Shelby J. Davidson, executive secretary of the Washington branch N. A. A. C. P. Mr. Davidson's letter says in part : "I am herewith calling attention to the dedication of the Lincoln Memorial here. The conditions which confronted us as a race were the most shameful and disgraceful in the annals of history. Platform tickets were distributed to the most representative of our colored citizens, and when they appeared, they found segregation running riot. Platform seats reserved for white were in chairs and within hearing distance of the speakers, that might be called reasonable, while back of those seats were those reserved for colored people, roped off from those occupied by the whites and placed about a block from the Memorial in the grass and weeds, with rough hewn benches without backs or supports. "Placed at the entrance to these seats were marines who were distasteful, discourteous and abusive even to swearing in the presence of our women who accompanied their husbands to the celebration. Some of our people, be it said to their credit, as soon as they saw the situation, turned and left the dedication rather than submit to the abuses offered them." It is a wonder that Lincoln did not turn over in his grave. IT PAYS TO KICK The American Legion city committee of Wilmington, Del., objected seriously to the plan of the general committee to having the Norman D. Scott Post to march in a separate division of colored people instead of with the regular division assigned to the American Legion on Memorial Day. The Legionaires insisted that the Scott Post be in line with the other three posts, and intimated that it would withdraw from the parade unless the discriminatory ban would be lifted. The manly stand of the American Legion bore good fruit. Col. Doherty hastened to explain that at no time had the committee planned to separate the posts of the American Legion. It always pays to kick. IT MUST NOT BE The proposition to establish a playground for COLORED childreh in St. Paul is un-American and THE AP-PEAL is opposed to it. One of the strange phases of jim-crowism in these days in the fact that nine-tenths of the plans to degrade the colored people into a parish class are conceived in the brains of people who call themselves Christians. In the majority of cases when the colored man is kicked down it is done "for his benefit" and "in the name of the Lord." No doubt some of the promoters believe that they are doing a great thing for the colored people of Saint Paul but they are mistaken. No greater evil could come to Saint Paul, to the white people as well as the colored people, than the attempt to segregate one group of citizens. It is a thing which will serve to inflame the fires of race prejudice. It is inconceivable that any colored people could so belittle themselves as to be parties to so infamous a scheme and it is infamous whether it is so intended or not. We are glad to know that the superintendent of playgrounds opposes the plan. The decent self-respecting people of Saint Paul must fight the nefarious scheme to a finish. If you are a good American you should oppose it. IT MUST NOT BE! Woman Beaten—May Die Mrs. Bertha Black, colored, received what is believed to be mortal injuries when she was struck in the head with a hammer at her rousing house, 146 East Thirteenth street about midnight Sunday. She was taken to the City hospital in the police ambulance with her skull fractured in three places. Robert Henderson, also colored, is sought by police. Henderson has rooms at the home of Ms. Black. Detective Joseph Costello, Frank Dusek, John Tuckner and Martin Ewald found the bloody mummy near the house. Henderson and another colored man Harry Stanton, had been arrested by police late Saturday night, disorderly conduct charge. Henderson had been released on bail but Stanton remained in jail. Work in Corn Production More than 14,000 colored farmers in North Carolina, Texas, and Virginia who raised 90,000 acres of corn last year under the advise of county agents, employed cooperatively by the United States Department of Agriculture, obtained State agricultural colleges, obtained fields of 35 bushels an acre. The averages for all farms in these states ranged from 17 to 25 bushels an acre. In Virginia nearly 5,000 of the colored demonstrators planted pure seed and about 3,000 selected seed for their 1922 crop. All these demonstration plats of corn were harvested except 87 acres, which were "hogged down". It is estimated that 70 per cent of the colored farmers there are following methods of growing corn taught by extension workers. Runs Same One Line Ad. Twenty-four Years. Howard, S. D.—Dave Theophilus, a local grain elevator operator, has carried the single line reader "Dave Theophilus sells salt," continuously in the Howard papers for twenty-four years. The ad has cost him approximately $60. He estimates it has been the means of selling thirteen thousand barrels of salt, besides indirectly aiding in many other sales. Burglar's Steal Jail Safe Holding $1,772 Fayetteville, N. C., June 6.—Police announced today they were seeking a band of bold burglaries which entered the Cumberland county jail Sunday night and departed with a safe containing $572 in cash and a check for $1,200, the personal property of Jailer W. A. West. Miss Gertrude McBrown recently graduated from Emerson College of Oratory, Boston, Mass., receiving the degree of Bachelor of Literary Interpretation. She is the first colored girl to graduate from this school. Democracy's Enemy. Race rioting in Texas, battling in Ireland, insurrection in Silesia and lawlessness between the fascist and socialists in Italy—all in one day's news—are enough to discourage profoundly all believers in democracy. Attempts to apply self-determination of peoples and self-government in place of autocracy in Europe seems to have resulted principally in bloodshed and more tyranny than ever. It is a strange example of our degree of progress in civilization that a criminal attack on a white woman by a Negro in Texas should not be a matter for punishment according to law but a signal for a battle between the two races in the immediate locality. Such divisions of the people into groups on the basis of race is only one of many. We have a situation similar to that in Europe, of the division people into many classes, except that in the United States the general welfare is despised in the struggle for occupation, previous nationality or religion. It is a disintegration of democracy. The experience of the world is that democracies have failed, because of civil war among classes. If the twentieth century democracies are to be preserved, it can be done only by unrestricted, open debate, the principle that no class can prosper long at the expense of the general good—St. Paul Pioneer Press. WEBER-ELLIOTT THE SWELLEST WEDDING OF SEASON IS SOLEMNIZED WHEN Dr. Earl S. Weber and Miss Lucille Elliott are Nuptially Knotted Amid Much Eclat Saturday Evening. Ever since the invitations were issued for the Weber-Elliott wedding society has been on the tip-toe of expectancy and it was the principal topic of conversation. So it is not surprising that last Saturday evening Pilgrim Baptist church was crowded to overflowing with the friends of the high contracting parties. On entering the church one's eyes were greeted with the sight of the beautiful altar which had been designed and built by the genius for decoration, Mr. Charles H. Miller. It was a bower of lattice work and flowers and electric lights that was beautiful beyond description in the center of which a large wedding bell hung under which the bride and groom stood and plumed their troth. Promptly at the appointed hour Mrs. S. E. Hall began to play the wedding march while the bridal party entered the church in the following order: First came the ribbon bearers, Miss Henrietta Bonaparte and Miss Erma Hall who unrolled the ribbon forming the aisle for the wedding party, then came the ushers, Messrs. Raymond Cannon, Roy Wilkins, Wendall Gibbs and Lloyd Stephens. And then followed the "avant courtiers," little tots; they were, Helene Hilyer, Elizabeth Lee, Valdora Turner, dressed in white with long white ribbons attached to them and they were driven up the aisle by Morris Gibbs, Jr., in a Lord Fauntleroy suit. Then with slow and stately tread came the six bridesmaids attired in beautiful fairy creations of green organdy, each one carrying a white shepherd's crook with white and blue ribbon streamers, and margarites. They were: Miss Kathrine Taudv, Miss Belle Taylor, Mrs. Beatrice Gibbs, Miss Grace Lealtad, Miss Elenora Castons and Miss Melle James. Next came the maids of honor, Miss Marvel Jackson, attired in brown, peach organdy and carrying pink roses and Miss Grace Wills, gowned in blue organdy and carrying margarite. Each wore a beautiful picture hat to match. They were folowed by Mrs. Francis Davenport, a sister of the bride, matron of honor, wearing lemon organdy and a superb picture hat of black horse hair braid, she carried a shower bouquet of orchids and sweet peas. Then came the ring bearer, "Chubby" Brady, attired in a Little Lord Fawtlever suit bearing the ring in a large red rose Last came the bride, Miss Lucela Genevieve Elliott, gowned in white charmuse, trimmed with pearls, white brocaded satin court train lined with green crepe du chine, attached to her shoulders, and her tulle rail was held in place by a crown of pearls; carried a shower bouquet of white roses and lillies of the valley. As she reached the altar she was joined by the groom, Dr. Earl S. Weber, accompanied by his best man. Mr. Orlander J. Smith, both attired in regulation full dress suits. Rev. Harris, the new pastor, then proceeded to read the ceremony that lined the altar with lives. Just as he pronounced them man and wife the bell opened and shook with roses. Then while they stood, Mrs. Barksdale sweetly sang, "Until You Come."—Medcalf. Accompanied by Mrs. B. C. Archer. Then Mrs. Hall played the recessional and in reverse order they left, the church The wedding reception was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Elkinson, who had been specially decorated while refreshments in abundance were served. The 'wedding presents' which were numerous and beautiful were displayed in the church. The bride and groom spent the first hours of their honeymoon at the home of Mrs. Davenport when they motored to Lake Pokegama in their new Ford sedan, a bridal gift of the groom to the bride. They were accompanied by Mrs. Davenport and Mrs. Dorothy Nicols. The bridal party will be at home to their friends on and after June 15. RADIO SINGERS FORCED TO REPEAT Heavens Delighted With Program Given by Jubilee Chorus at Camphor M. E. Church. Eighteen members of the Jubilee chorus of the Camphor Methodist Episcopal church Tuesday evening sang for one of the longest and most successful programs yet broadcast from the Pioneer Press and Dispatch-Commonwealth Electric radio station. Starting promptly at 7:50 P. M., the program continued for an hour and a half, including a ten-minute intermission. Confining their songs, with the exception of two numbers, to those which used singers have made peculiarly their theme, the organization sang with a unity and spirit seldom found outside of professional choruses. Work Commented Highly Telephone calls received during the intermission commended highly the work of the Jubilee singers and the clearness of the sending from the broadcasting station. One, from the Aberdeen hospital, asked that C. D. Jackson repeat his solo, "My Old Kentucky Home," and another that the quartet sing again "Ole Aunt Mandy's Chile." The chorus opened the concert by singing the colored spiritual "Couldn't Hear Nobody Pray." Other ensemble selections, interspersed with quartet numbers and readings, were "Every Time I Feel the Spirit" "Swing Low, Sweet Charlot," "O, Yes; O, Yes" (with the solo by C. H. Miller, bass); "Go Down, Moses," "Heaven," and "I Want to be a Christian in My Heart," given as the closing number of the evening. Quartet Proves Popular The quartet which, when not with the chorus, sings under the name of the Twin Cities Harmony Four, is composed of C. D. Jackson, Lonnie Jackson, John H. Hickman, Jr., and C. H. Miller. The work of the four proved exceptionally popular with the auditors of WAAH. Among the numbers they sang were "Look Away," "Old Black Joe," "Ole Aunt Mandy's Chile," "Absent" and "Sweet Sabbath Eve." In addition to these numbers was the solo by Mr. Jackson and two readings from Paul Lawrence Dunbar, excellently done by Mrs. A. McFarland—Pioneer Press. PAID ADVERTISEMENT Clement F. Sculley, 2179 Selby Ave., Prepared and issued by O. C. Hall, for which $1.00 per inch has been 727 St. Anthony Ave., St. Paul, for paid. 90 CLEMENT County Con RAMSEY ENT F. SCU FOR ty Commiss RAMSEY COUNTY T F. SCULLEY FOR Commissioner MSEY COUNTY CLEMENT F. SCULLEY FOR County Commissioner RAMSEY COUNTY PAID ADVERTISEMENT Prepared and issued by J. G. Mueller, 1670 Stanford avenue. St. Paul, for which $1.00 per inch is to be paid. J. GUS MUELLER announces that he is a candidate for the office of County Treasurer of Ramsey County The primary election will be held June 19th. PAID ADVERTISEMENT Avenue. St. Paul, for which VERTISEMENT Prepared by Burton E. Burton E. Aller revenue. St. Paul, for which $1.00 per luch is to be paid BURTON E. Deputy County T CANDIDATE County Tre SEMENT Prepared by Burton E. Allen for Burton E. Allen, 10 E. Summit ul, for which $1.00 per luch is to be paid. BURTON E. ALLEN Deputy County Treasurer CANDIDATE FOR County Treasurer PAID ADVERTISEMENT Prepared by Burton E. Allen for Burton E. Allen, 10 E. Summit Avenue, St. Paul, for which $1.00 per inch is to be paid. BURTON E. ALLEN Deputy County Treasurer CANDIDATE FOR County Treasurer In the office of county treasurer 14 years—10 years as cashier, 4 years as chief deputy. In the office of county treasurer 14 years—10 years as cashier, 4 years as chief deputy. PAID ADVERTISEMENT Prepared for C. A. Ingerson, 265 C. A. INGERSON Candidate for Re-election as CORONER PAID ADVERTISEMENT 57 W. College A. D. Scannell, for Prepared and issued by H. Meinke, is to be paid. VOTE FOR P. D. SCANNE FOR REPRESENTE 38TH LEGISLATIVE NORTH HALF A RESIDENT OF ST. PAUL VOTE FOR P. D. SCANNELL FOR REPRESENTATIVE 38TH LEGISLATIVE DISTRICT NORTH HALF A RESIDENT OF ST. PAUL FOR 42 YEARS The Amer HOUSE FU 22-24 E. 7th. S The American HOUSE FURNISHING CO. 22-24 E.7th.St. near Wabasha M. H. COLLEGE OF BUSINESS Dayton Ave., St. Paul, by J. Q. Adams for which $1.00 per inch is to be paid. T. C. 57 W. College Ave., St. Paul, for P. D. Scannell, for which $1.00 per inch is to be paid. POSTPONED! On account of the rainy weather Monday May 29th the big GOPHER LODGE I.B.P.O.E. OF THE WORLD GOPHER 105 CERVUS ALCES NO. 105 I.B.P.O.E.W. Red Wing and Barge Manitou Has Been Postponed Until Friday Even'g, June 23 Let us forget the past while sailing the Mississippi on our First Boat Excursion of the seeson. Great time for everybody. Some fun and frolics expected. Let's Go! EVERYBODYINVITED THE FLORSHEIM SHOE Ten Dollars Two Shops in St. Paul Florsheim Shoe Store Co 421 Robert St. 16 W. Seventh St. ST. PAUL UNIVERSAL CO. GENERAL SALES AGENCY STOP LIGHTS INSTALLED $3.00 6 VOLT OR 12 VOLT ELECTRIC VULCANIZERS $1.50 TICKETS 75 CENTS YBODY INVIT FLORSHEIM SHO INVITED M SHOE It always pays to buy Florsheim shoes—they are made to satisfy. You get value for what you pay. The name on every pair is proof of quality—something you do not get when you accept a shoe of unknown merit. Ten Dollars Two Shops in St. Paul rsheim Shoe Store Co Robert St. 16 W. Seventh St. ers d Store Co UL UNIVERSAL GENERAL SALES AGENCY 5 INSTALLED $3.00 6 VOLT OR 12 ELECTRIC VULCANIZERS $1.50 The Florsheim SHOE W. A. Yeiser C. Edwards A. Tarver The "Saintly City" and Saintly City Folks—Newsy items of Social, Religious, Political and General Matters Among the People. SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1922. THE APPEAL ASKS AS A SPECIAL FAVOR THAT ITS READERS GIVE PREFERENCE TO THE ADVERTISERS WHO SEEK THEIR PATRONAGE BY ADVERTISING IN IT. SHOP IN THE APPEAL BEFORE SHOPPING ELSEWHERE. Mrs. Ella M. Ridley has moved to 505 Rondo street. Mrs. Mary Barrett, has moved to 318 W. Central Ave. Mrs. Belle McCann of Shelbyville, Ill., an old time resident of St. Paul, is in the city. You must register Monday, June 12, or you can't vote at the primary election on June 19. Mrs. M. A. Johnson, 419 Rondo St., was hostess Friday afternoon to the Twin City 500 Club. Marcus Garvey will make an official visit to the local branch of the U. N. I. A. No. 310 on June 16-17. Evan Anderson, lawyer, has filed for nomination as state representative from the 38th district. Mr. W. H. Reams has taken charge of the Aeme Club Cafe, and is putting considerable pep into it. Vesper services are held every Sunday afternoon at the West Central Ave. branch of the Y. W. C. A. The weather conditions did not prevent the Unity Club from having a fine excursion Thursday, June 8. The Men's Episcopal Club are preparing for their annual outing at Stubbs Bay, July 21. Wait for it. Mrs. Paul Caldwell, 1399 Sherburne Ave., entertained the Handicraft Art Club Thursday at 6 o'clock dinner. PIONEER LODGE NO. I. F. AND A. M. meets first and third Monday in each month at Masonic Hall, 588 Rondo St. at 8:00 P.M.; K. H. Turner, W. M.; J. W. Thomas, Seyz., 515 W. Central—Advertisement. Office: Cedar 0508 Res.: Dale 2947 Res.: 678 St. Anthony Ave. MRS, T. H. LYLES Successor to W. M. LYLE UNDERTAKING CO. 190 W. Fourth St. ST. PAUL FOR RENT—Nice four-room flat for rent, after April 1st. Apply down-stairs, 686 Carroll street—Advertisement. Mrs. Dorothy Nichols came down from Duluth to attend the Weber-Elliott wedding and returned home Tuesday. Miss Rhetta, Dodd, prorietor of "The Henrietta," is having the entire hotel redecorated and electric lights installed. Miss Eva Ashworth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ashworth of Park Ave., has returned from the hospital and is slowly convalescing. Wednesday evening of last week Mr. and Mrs. E. Harris of Dale St. entertained a company of friends at a very enjoyable card party. Mrs. Earl Harris was a visitor at the Ideal Club which met Wednesday afternoon at the residence of Mrs. M. A. Johnson, 419 Rondo street. HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH NO. 553, G. U. O. of O. F. meets the third day in each week of a morning p. of Aurora and Kent browne, at 8:00 P. Mrs. M.莉, Browne, M. M. G.; Mrs. Carrie E. Lindsay, W. R. 426 Rondo street—Advertisement. WEEKLY SPECIAL—Seven-room house, modern, $2,500; $300 cash, $30 per month. F. D. McCracken, "HE KNOWS" 321 Metropolitan Bank Bldg. Mr. W. H. Reems of the Acme Club Cafe, will open a dining room formerly where the Grill was. First class meals at all hours. Ladies especially invited. You must register June 5 or 12 if you wish to vote. It does not matter if you were registered for the city election you must register again. Don't forget that. Mr. H. S. Sawyer has given up his clothes renovating shop, 368 Wabashe street, and has moved to his home, 663 Igleah street, where he will conduct a laundry. Tel Dale 4759. Mr. Theodor Charleston of Louisville, KY, formerly of St. Paul, fell USE A SAVINGS BANK FOR YOUR SAVINGS Organized and operating exclusively as a Savings Bank our facilities enable us to render the best of service to our customers. THE STATE SAVINGS BANK 93 E. FOURTH ST. 4% Interest on Savings Compounded quarterly 195 DPS ARTHUR E. NELSON. Who Was Inaugurated Mayor of St. Paul Tuesday. from the top of a 20-foot ladder recently which disabled him for about 4 weeks, but he is up and about again. Frederick Douglass Lodge 9005, and Household of Ruth 4671, G. U. O. O. O. T. will give their Annual Moonlight Belt Excursion on Steamer Red Wing and Barge Manitou, Monday evening, June 26. Through the courtesy of Mr. R. Francis Jones, B. S., we have received an invitation to the Fifty-third Annual Commencement of Howard University, Washington, D. C., June 9, 1922. Mr. Evan Anderson, youngest son of the late Lawyer J. P. Anderson, has opened up law offices in the Court Block. Attorney Anderson is no doubt the youngest colored lawyer in the Northwest. Mrs. W. D. Carter of Seattle, Wash., who was called to Missouri by the death of her sister, Mrs. Rutledge, stopped in St. Paul a few days on her way back home, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Wills. The Sunshine Charity and Art Club entertained a large number of guests at an evening party Wednesday at the Henrietta on Rondo street. Dainty refreshments were served and each guest received a pretty souvenir. Mr. S. W. Williams, proprietor of the tonsorial parlor at 440 Jackson street, has combined two shops into one at 188 E. Seventh street, where six expert artists are ever on the job to attend to all old and new customers. Mr. John A. Mauritz, who is a candidate for the legislature from the 38th district south at the last election, was only beaten by about 100 vote and is going to make try at it again and hopes to have better luck this time. 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 975 St. Anthony Ave., or calling up Dale 8412. Rates reasonable.—Advertisement. Mildred Walker, colored, pleaded not guilty to an indictment charging grand larceny. Her trial was set for June 13. She is accused of having robbed John Stamerin of $15 which a male confederate held him on the lawn of St. Joseph's hospital May 19. THE COSMOPOLITAN GROCERY, 558 St. Anthony, has been taken over by J. H. Webb who will conduct a first class store, containing everything in the grocery line. Purchases promptly delivered. Your patronage is solicited. Tel. Dale 4417. Under the direction of Mrs. A. W. Jordan, vice president of the Women's Federation of Colored Clubs, plans have been made for the state convention to be held in St. Paul at Pilgrim-on-the-Hill the last of this month. Mrs. May Black Mason has charge of the program. The clothes renovating establishment known as "The Pantorum," Messrs. John Walton and A. Wright, proprietors, have moved about a half block north on Wabasha street, to 547. They are better than ever prepared to take care of your clothes. Go try them. Gentlemen will find the NEW PALACE BILLIARD PARLOR and BARPER SHOP, John E. Ellis, proprietor, No. 9 West Third street, a good place to have tonsorial work done and also to spend leisure hours. Public corrally invited. Phone Cedar 7196.—Advertisement. Mr. and Mrs. George W. Wills has issued invitations for the marriage of their daughter, Grace Olive, to Mr. Wendell M. Gibbs, Saturday evening, June 17, at Pilgrim Baptist church, St. Paul, at 7:30 o'clock. Reception 1004 Iglehart avenue. At home after June 30, 3241 Columbus avenue, Minneapolis. The SYKES-SYDES-FORD CO., formerly located in Court Block, has moved their establishment to 916 University Ave., corner of Milton, where they have a large brick, modern building. They will manufacture their own goods. They also have the SUPERIOR BEAUTY PARLORS at the same place, with expert attendants and ask the ladies to call. Scalp treatment a speciality. Miss Susie Wilson has charge of the hair department. The Superior System will be taught to those desiring to learn. Tel. Dale 5104. Exclusive Models of Comfort and Elegance Distinctive of The Edwin Clapp SHOE Sole St. Paul Agency The Stanley Reem Shoe Co. 400 Robert at Sixth — William A. Reem Jr. PAID ADVERTISEMENT Prepared by and for John A. Mauritz, 779 Edmund street, St. Paul, Minn, for which $1.00 per inch has been paid. 195 LDF J. A. MAURITZ Candidate for REPRESENTATIVE 38th Legislative District South Was born in the district and lived there all of the 36 years of his life. Is married and lives with his family at 779 Edmund street. He is a master plumber, doing business on Grotto street between Edmund and Charles streets. Served fourteen months in the late World War, twelve of which were spent overseas. Mr. Mauritz was a candidate for the same office two years ago and was only beaten by less than 100 votes and deems himself worthy of your support in coming election and so solicits it. Primary election Monday, June 19. You must register Monday, June 12th or you can't vote. PAID ADVERTISEMENT Prepared by and for John Wagener, Court House, St. Paul, for which $1.00 per inch is to be paid. IDEO 20. WE WANT AGENER FOR SHERIFF AGAIN PAID ADVERTISEMENT Prepared by and for John Lind, 277 Rondo street, St. Paul, for which $1.00 per inch is to be paid. PETER H. HARRIS JOHN LIND Candidate For Re-election as COUNTY COMMISSIONER PAID ADVERTISEMENT Keating, 169 Carroll Ave., St. Paul, Prepared and issued by Joseph for which $1.00 per inch is to be paid. Hon. Marcus Garvey President General of the Universal Improvement Association AT ST.JAMESA.M.E.CHURCH Corner Jay and Fuller Streets, at Eight O'clock Sharp GOOD MUSICAL PROGRAM Under the auspices of St. Paul Division U. N. I. A. No. 310 J. L. COLEMAN, PRES. ADMISSION 50 CENTS (Recently Government Expert in Housing) OFFERS Personal Service Plus Personal Interest REAL ESTATE INVESTMENTS INSURANCE Expert Knowledge Backed With Practical Experience 321 METROPOLITAN BANK BLDG. PHONE CEDAR 8180 THE HENRIETTA SEARS & DODD, PROPRIETORS WHEN YOU ARE IN ST. PAUL STOP HERE We Serve The Best Food Special Dinner Parties Solicited For Any Time. Special Waiters or Waitresses For Any Occasion. Breakfast from 6 to 11 a. m. Luncheon from 12 to 2 p. m. Weekday 6 o'clock dinner $.50 Special Sunday dinner $1.00 Ice Cream, Cakes, Pies, Lemonade, Ginger Ale Soda and All Soft Drinks, Gigars Etc. 503 RONDO ST. SAINT PAUL —Our two large plants are an advantage in serving you with THE BEST Villaume Box and Lumber Co. Corner Chicago, Indiana Aves. and Water St. THE STANDARD FROM OCEAN TO OCEAN TOWLE'S LOG CABIN SYRUP DRAWN BY THE VIEW AND WEST SIDE Popular Prices 1222 THOMAS—6 rooms, hardwood throughout, gas, bath, electricity, laundry, cement basement, hot water heat, garage, stucco finish. Five years old, $6,000. Terms. 691 RONDO—6 rooms, hardwood throughout, gas, bath, cement basement, hot water heat, built-in features. Two lots. Excellent location, $5,000. Terms. 407 RONDO—6 rooms, pipeless furnace, gas, bath, electricity, screened porch, $3,200; $500 cash; $25 per month. 569 RONDO—5 rooms, gas, bath, double garage, excellent location, $2,500; $500 cash; $25 per month. 658 ST. ANTHONY—8 rooms, hardwood throughout, furnace, gas, laundry, large barn, $4,500. Terms. FOR RENT—2-room furnished apartment, gas, bath, electricity, excellent location, $30 per month. The Illinois/constitutional convenbath, electricity, cement basement. SCHUCK & SCHUCK REAL ESTATE TWIN CITY REALTY CO. O. U. BRAY, PRES. 411 UNIVERSITY AVE., ST. PAUL. TEL. FOREST 9553 PACE TO EAT B Cafe DROP. At All Hours And at tates T DRINKS St. Paul, Minn. MENT NIGHTLY N'S ST. PAUL ALL HOURS Specialty of ashes For Parties 9088 OFFICIAL HOURS 11 A. M. 18 TO 5 P. M. M. SUNDAY 19 GO 11 A. M. Acme Club Cafe W. H. REAMS, PROP. First Class Meals and Lunches at All Hours And at Reasonable Rates ALL KINDS OF SOFT DRINKS 317 I-2 Wabasha St. St. Paul, Minn. MUSIC & ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY THANN'S 40 E. THIRD ST. ST. PAUL CAFE OPEN AT ALL HOURS We Make A Specialty of Southern Dishes Tables Reserved For Parties Call Cedar 9088 DR. VALDO TURNER Tel. Atlantic 4876 OPEN DAY AND NIGHT PHELPS HOTEL AND CAFE MRS. SYLESTUS PHELPS, PROP. STRICTLY FIRST CLASS MEALS TO AT ALL HOURS FRIED CHICKEN AND HOT CORN FRITTER AFTER THEATER PARTIES A SPECIAL AND CAFE IPS, PROP. DEALS TO ORDER ISSUES BURN FRITTERS FOR A SPECIALTY PHELPS HOTEL AND CAFE MRS. SYLESTUS PHELPS, PROP. STRICTLY FIRST CLASS MEALS TO ORDER AT ALL HOURS FRIED CHICKEN AND HOT CORN FRITTERS FOR AFTER THEATER PARTIES A SPECIALTY 246 4TH AVE. S. MINNEAPOLIS Open Saturday and Monday Evenings Day Evenings Open Saturday and Monday Evenings GOODMAN'S - THE STORE OF DISTINGUISHED CREDIT A store where you may rest assured that your credit privilege is costing you nothing. Where you may set your own terms as low as At your Where Meet Goodman Wear Diamond uds Now convenience OFFICE DAKOTA BLDG. 54 W. SEVENTH ST. REEDINGTON 388 ST. ALSANS 246 4TH AVE. S. Open All Night ST. PAUL, MINN. Tel. Main 5662 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. Quite a lot of visitors are expected in the city this summer. Mrs. Frances De Leo, left for a trip to Chicago last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Allen have moved from 3629 4th Ave. S. to 1223 6th Ave. N. Dr. W. E. Burton has moved to Fredley, Minn., about 8 miles from the city on the Anoka road. Mrs. J. M. Smith of Tulsa, Okla., is the guest of her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. O. L. McMurray. The young sons of Dr. W. H. Wright who have been suffering from the whooping cough are able to be out again. Ladies who desire anything in the line of first class, fashionable dress-makin, should call on Mrs. R. A. Van Hook, 3612 Elliott Ave. Tel Colfax 3596. Miss Harriet Allen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Allen, who has been attending the School for Blind at Faribault has returned home for the summer vacation. Johnson's "Good Things to Eat," 2010 Cedar Ave. cor. Franklin, has a regular "Chicken Parlor" open all night. Telephone for reservations South 0805.—Advertisement. MISTER, if you are thinking of buying a car, new or used, you can learn how, when and where you can get a bargain by calling Drexel 0254 or Drexel 1683. DO IT NOW. —Advertisement. The Montana Auxiliary and the Montana Senior Club of Bethesda Baptist church, will give a concert and dinner at Elks' Hall, Thursday evening, June 15. Watch for it. Messrs. H. Turner and Perry The Printer, went on a fishing trip last Saturday at Ma Lac, they caught about 90 pounds of the nicest pike you ever saw. They are some fishermen. Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Stone have issued invitations for the marriage of their daughter, Edythe Adelle, to Mr. Arthur Jewell Wilson at St. Peter church, Wednesday evening, June 28. Reception following the ceremony, at 2742 Grand avenue. The Polar Wave Tailoring Company, Willie Weeks, proprietor, at 635 Dupont, near Sixth Ave. N., has associated Mr. Burt Lewis with him in his clothes cleaning establishment. Hats cleaned and blocked. We call for and deliver.—Advertisement. Mr. Martin Brown of the New Way Home Builders, was host to a party Saturday night of about 100 of the younger set at Wayzetta town hall. Mr. Sidney Williams and D. Walker furnished the music and they danced until morning having a very enjoyable time. A new business venture has been started in Minneapolis under the name and style of the Twin City Undertaking Co., 716 Lydale Ave. N. The firm is composed of B. Ellis, president; E. Drew, treasurer, and A. D. Richardson, manager. Mesdames Ellis and Richardson are licensed embalmers. The Original Barbicue, 712 Sixth Ave. N., has been taken over by Mr. Samuel Allen who has opened the upstairs and has rooms for ladies and gentlemen. He will endeavor to make his place one where there may be no fear to take ladies. He will have a special fried chicken dinner Sundays from 11:00 A. M. to 18:30 P. M. $1.00. Weekday lunches from 11:00 A. M. to 8:30 P. M. 40 cents. Open all night. Tel. Hyland 3956. Remember the place, 712 Sixth Ave. N. VIVIAN CRAWFORD YANEEY Public Stenographer 1122 6th Ave N. Phone Hyland 2182 Minneapolis All Work Done by Appointment Prices Reasonable. LOOK $37.50 We will build you a home on the $37.50 per month payment plan. Call at our office and talk it over. NEW-WAY HOME BUILDERS, 501 Kusota Building, Minneapolis, Minn. Ge. 4484. Martin Brown, President. Game Wardens Arrest Modern "Adam and Eve." Houlton, Me, June.—Carl A. Sutter and his wife, who, as the "modern Adam and Eve," had been living the simple life in the woods of Northern Maine for some weeks, were arrested by game wardens, charged with violating the state game laws. According to the wardens, Sutter and his wife killed deer and partridge in the closed season. They will be arraigned in municipal court here today. "Adam and Eve" undertook to spend six weeks in the wilds without civilized clothing, weapons or utensils. They claimed to have killed a deer in a pitfall trap set by "Adam." Corner of Rondo and Mackubin The Henrietta wil serve a special dinner tomorrow, June 11. Dinner $1.00 MENU Grapefruit Cocktail Fried Spring Chicken or Roast Beef Creamed New Potatoes Carrots Peas String Beans Macaroni Combination Salad Ice Cream Cake Pie Watermelon Iced Tea Coffee Milk ST. PAUL BAPTIST CHURCH Last Sunday's services were highly enjoyed. One week's revival meetings resulted in nine additions. Rev. B. F. Simmons returns tomorrow and revival meetings will be resumed. Our financial report for the month of May showed $850 raised for that month. Preaching tomorrow at 11 A. M. and 8 P. M.; S. s at 9:30 A. M.; B. Y. P. U at 6:30 P. M. The public is invited. Fifty-Ninth Commencement at Wilberforce University June 15 will mark the close of a very successful year's work at Wilberforce University, and on that day more than 200 young men and women will complete the prescribed course in the several departments. Notwithstanding the fire and the many hindernaces incident to it, 1414 students have registered in all departments outside of the Summer School. As has been previously announced, Hon. Robert Wilberforce, great grandson of the man whose name the institution bears, will deliver the commencement address before the gradnating class at ten o'clock. Mr. Wilberforce of Oxford, England, is the director of the British Library of Information in the United States. At 2:30 p. m., Wilberforce Lodge No. 21 Free and Accepted Masons, together with the allied branches of Masonry of the State of Ohio, will lay the corner stone of the new James A. Shorter hall. Montana Auxilliary Club OF Bethesda Baptist Church Will Give a Grand MUSICAL CONCERT AT ELK'S HALL Lyndale and Sixth Ave. No. ON THURSDAY EVE. JUNE 15 Ekhel Baller, Chairman Mrs. Charles M. Porea, Alma Mater, President Fried Chicken and Green Dinner Served From 5 to II P. M. BY MONTANA SENIOR CLUB Mrs. R. D. Ware, President Mrs. Maldie Renix, Secretary Mrs. Jessie Shannon, Chairman 4% 4% A FRIENDLY BANK BANK WITH THE NORTHERN SAVINGS BANK Seventh at Robert In the Heart of the Retail District ```markdown ``` 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 P. B. SIMPSON GEO. W. WILLS Tol. Dale 1314 Tel. Dale 2841 Office Phones: Cedar 1324 Tri-State 24 240 SIMPSON & WILLS Undertakers, Funeral Directors and Embalmers Callie Answered Promptly Day or Night Lady Assistant When Desired Cedar and Chapel 224 WEST FOURTH ST. ST. PAUL ORIGINAL BARBECUE Samuel Allen, Proprietor JOHNSON'S HOTEL, CAFE, LUNCH, ROOM CHICKEN AND OYSTER PARLOR PORTERS' & WAITERS' CLUB WHY NOT TRY OUR NEW FAMILY WASH? 18 POUNDS FOR $1.50 All flat pieces ironed and wearing apparel nicely dried ready to iron. THIS NEW SERVICE IS SURE TO PLEASE YOU IF YOU ARE PARTICULAR ABOUT YOUR CLOTHES 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 A GIFT ELECTRICAL A Ma MAY BLACK MASON Mezzo Soprano available for CONCERTS AND RECITALS OPERA ORATORIO FRENCH, GERMAN, ITALIAN Res. 1045 Cross Ave. Phone Dale 2665 St. Paul, Minn. IF YOU WANT YOUR WORK DONE MECHANICALLY see T. J. FARR PAINTER AND DECORATOR 550 Como Ave. : Saint Paul OFFICE TEL. RES. TEL. GEDAR 4044 DALE 7818 HOURS: 9 A. M. TO 1 P. M. AND 2 TO 8 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 PAUL MINNESOTA Tel. Dale 8399 We Call For and Deliver ELMER MORRIS DRUGGIST 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 We will make delivery any date Minnesota Chandelier Co. 369 Jackson Street BLKHURST 3478 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 FURNITURE AND HOME FURNISHINGS DUY BOUTELL BROTHERS' ARGAINS ECAUSE EST TERMS TO SUIT MARQUETTE AVE. AT FIFTH MINNEAPOLIS HARTMANN MILITARY $38 The clothes you pack the price of the trunk which the trunk you hanger would be very Top prevents broken SP BOHN S 60-lb. Ice Capacity, Porcelain M BOHN S 40-lb. Ice Capacity, 1-Piece Po ALL OTHER BOHN REI TAKE UNIVER REFR OPEN TEL. VAN BUREN 1821 VANDER BIE'S $35 Wishes you pack into your price of the trunk, and there the trunk you buy will care would be very apt to run revents broken hangers and GARDEN LUGGAGE Sixth SPEED WHILE JOHN SYP Capacity, Porcelain Lined Refrigerator JOHN SAN Capacity, 1-Piece Porcelain Refrigerator ALL OTHER MODES JOHN REFRIGERATOR TAKE UNIVERSITY AVENUE REFRIGERATOR OPEN ALL DAY BUREN 1831 TEL. DAY R BIE'S The clothes you pack into your wardrobe trunk are worth many times the price of the trunk, and therefore you should consider the way in which the trunk you buy will carry your clothes. A broken clothes hanger would be very apt to ruin your gown. The Hartmann Cushion Top prevents broken hangers and wrinkled garments. Step in and let us explain why. GARLAND LUGGAGE SHOP Sixth at Cedar. ICE CREAM IS THE BEST For Sale Everywhere J. C. VANDER BIE Partridge and Brunson Sts. ST. PAUL, MINN. HOURS: 8:30 A. M. TO 1 P. M. AND 2 TO 6 P. M. SUNDAYS BY APPOINTMENT DR. EARL S. WEBER DENTAL SURGEON FIRST CLASS GUARANTEED WORK IN ALL BRANCHES OF DENTISTRY 54 W. SEVENTH ST. DAKOTA BLDG. SUITE 203-204 ST. PAUL TEL. CEDAR 8190 HAMMOND TURNER ATTORNEY AT LAW 321 MET. BANK BLDG. FIFTH AT CEDAR St. Paul AR 8100 ALL KINDS Shoe WALKER Wm. B 554 ST. ANTW AT LAW N. W. CEDAR 3087 Chester W. Casnell OPTICIAN & JEWELER 22 E. FOURTH ST. SAINT PAUL into your wardrobe trunk and, and therefore you should buy will carry your clothes. You apt to ruin your gown. The hangers and wrinkled garments explain why. ARLAND LUGGAGE SHOP Sixth at Cedar. PECIA WHILE THEY LAST SYPHON Dined Refrigerator, Was $63.50, Now SANITOR Decolain Refrigerator, Was $50, Now R MODELS GREATLY FRIGERATOR SITY AVE. CAR—GET OF IGERA ALL DAY SATU TEL. DALE 4417 THE COSMOPOL J. H. WEBB, First Class Staple and Fancy Confectionery, Ice Cream, 558 ST. ANTHONY TEL. DALE 6781 Learn to Play Pocket Billiards at THE GENTLEMEN'S RESORT Always Clean and Comfortable 5 PERFECT TABLES 5 Open every Evening until 12 o'clock First Class Staple and Fancy Groceries, Vegetables, Fruits Confectionery, Ice Cream, Cigars, Tobaccos, Cigarettes. 558 ST. ANTHONY SAINT PAUL 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. WALKER WILLIAMS, Prop. Wm. Burley, Attendant. 554 ST. ANTIONY AVE. ST. PAUL ```markdown ``` HARTMANN $50 be trunk are worth many you should consider the w or clothes. A broken gown. The Hartmann Co cled garments. Step in why. AND BE SHOP dard. SPECIAL! BY LAST ON $44 $3.50, Now OR $32 $50, Now GREATLY REDUCED STOR COMP —GET OFF AT ALBER RATOR SATURDAY POSMOPOLITAN GROO J. H. WEBB, PROPRIETOR e and Fancy Groceries, Veget ice Cream, Cigars, Tobacco NY THE COSMOPOLITAN GROCERY TEL. DALE 5104 WILL MA OAKES-SYDES-FI MANUFACTURES SUPERIOR HAIR AND SKIN F IMPORTED PERFU TEMPLE INSERTS SUPERIOR BEAUTY PARLOR EXPERT ATTENDANT SCALP TREATMENT AND F A SPECIALTY 916 UNIVERSITY WE worth many times consider the way in A broken clothes Hartmann Cushion parts. Step in and let AL! $44.50 $32.75 REDUCED COMPANY AT ALBERT TORS SATURDAY WE DELIVER ITAN GROCERY PROPRIETOR Groceries, Vegetables, Fruits Cigars, Tobacco, Cigarettes. SAINT PAUL 1 WILL MAKE SPECIAL CALLS S-YDES-FORD CO. MANUFACTURERS OF HAIR AND SKIN PREPARATIONS REPORTED PERFUMES TEMPLE INSENSE SAUTY PARLOR IN CONNECTION EXPERT ATTENDANTS TATMENT AND FACE MASSAGE A SPECIALTY SINITY SAINT PAUL