The Appeal
Saturday, June 24, 1922
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
THE EMPORIUM
QUALITY CANDIES--SAINT PAUL
VOL. 38 NO 25
WHAT WAR DID TO VLADIVOSTOK
Development of Russian City Is Checked by Great Conflict.
Terminal City of Longest Railroad in the world, Place Where East Literally Meets West—Was on the Way to Rival San Francisco in Population and Beauty—Living is Extremely Dear and Human Life is Hold Very Cheap.
"On the eight-day trip from Moscow she had told fellow passengers on the trans-Siberian railway, of an Englishman who was dispassionate because he spent ten days in New York and had not seen an Indian.
"Just before alighting at the terminal city of the longest railroad in the world she inquired, 'Is there much danger from wolves in Vladivostok?'
"Not only there about as much danger of meeting a wolf in Vladivostok as there would be of encountering a mountain Lion in San Francisco; but there are other likenesses between these port cities, especially if the Vladivostok of just before the war be compared with the San Francisco of its earlier, Barbary Coast days," according to a bulletin from Washington (D. C.) headquarters of the National Geographic society.
Compared to San Francisco.
"The city of the Golden Horn is younger than our city of the Golden Gate, having been founded in 1800, and its normal development not been insulted by the war, its hinterland is Soviet by force, unsettled by rapid changes of government and now reported to be left without a cause of the attacking Chita troops, Vladivostok might soon have rivaled our own coast city in population and beauty.
"A tongue of hilly land thrust into a land-locked bay constitutes the site of 'The Mistress of the East.' The architecture maintains the European note struck by the station; which makes the presence of Oriental people, conveyances and customs all the more exotic. You no sooner accustomed yourself to the dreary routine of bazaar buying, flourishing lotteries, and Babel of tongues than you encountered the more familiar telegraph office, the university, the club and university. You may dodge a European racing car, under an American electric light, and run plump into a coolie burden bearer despite the warning cries of a Russian policeman. Breaks All Civic Rules. "Small wonder living was extremely dear in the old days and is an acute problem now, since the city subsisted formerly on supplies from China and Japan, Europe and even America. Its growth seems due to some inexplicable exception that proves the rule that a city, to succeed, should be self-sustaining, interchange products with the country around it, be thrifty, cultivate civic consciousness, be well governed, and possess some of the resources owned its commemorate to the fact that it was the most nearly ice-free port of Siberia, by which virtue it became the terminus of the trans-Siberian railway, and to the military and naval establishments maintained by the government of the czar.
"Now its patron government has disappeared, its railway has been cut into units by the national entities along its course, and Bolshevism looms as an economic as well as a passenger barrier along the far-flung rail ribbon that once extended some 7,000 miles to Calais.
"In the way of exports, in its palmest days, it had nothing more important to give the world than sea-cabbage, trepang and a fungus gathered from decayed wood, for all of which China was its principal customer. Trepang is the dried body of the holothurian, more commonly known as the sea slug, more appealing to the curiosity of children, and more like a creature can throw off, when frightened, its vital organs—digestive, respiratory and reproductive—and replace them all within a few weeks. Nature here seems to hold that two can live more easily, if not more cheaply, than one. When the sea slug becomes too hungry for comfort it divides in two parts and each, developing rapidly into complete units, goes on a search for food."
SWEDEN DOES ONE-THIRD WORK BY ELECTRICITY
Power Installation Still Increasing With Rapid Strides in Scandinavia.
Electricity has conquered one-third of the entire cultivated area of Sweden, according to the latest official reports.
If Sweden continues electrifying at the present rate, it will only be a few years till almost the whole country will be run by electricity.
Most of the farms within the electrified area are now tapping the new source of energy, and nearly all the power used in the daily labor on these farms is derived from the high-power plants span whole sections of the country.
Large power stations deliver most of the electric energy used in the rural communities; but in many places the farmers themselves have installed turbines and built private power stations, harnessing for this purpose swift streams and small waterfalls on their properties. Those enterprises, however, are generally co-operative.
A great deal of the most arduous farm labor is performed by electrically driven machinery at a cost far below the cost of machines propelled by steam or horsepower, or of hand labor. Water is pumped for cattle by electric thrumbing machines are driven by electric current, timers are sawed by motor power, and farm hands no longer ordered to cut firewood by hand because it is cheaper to have even that labor done by electricity. Candles have almost disappeared.
In many cases grain is dried and cleaned by being passed through electrically driven hot-air fanning machines. It is not uncommon to find on the larger estates electric elevators which lift entire wagon loads of hay or grain and dump them where desired in the barns. Our Swallow estate owner has installed an electrically operated irrigation system whereby a large field can be watered in times of drought. It is now only a matter of a short time till plows and harrows will be propelled by electric power.
INTERNATIONAL
The duchess of Portland, known to be the youngest appearing woman for her age in England, attributes her well preserved being to a strict vegetarian diet. She was, before her marriage, Winifred Dallas-Yorke, daughter of a prominent London sportsman. She married the duke of Portland in 1889 after a whirlwind courtship.
AX FOR FOREST GIANTS
Three Huge Oak Trees:Had to Give Way to Business Rush.
Three oak trees, estimated to be more than 200 years old, have beed cut down in the business district of Valparaiso, Ind., to make way for a new business building.
The three trees are fully 75 feet tall and three feet through at the base. It is estimated the trees contain 18 cords of wood and fence posts.
Many years ago hundreds of these giants of the forest stood on the present site of the city, but they have given way to the progress of civilization. At the Court House square, in the center of the business district, four of the trees remain.
Villa Asks More Land for His Ranch.
An extension to his 2000,000-acre farm near Torreon, Mexico, has been asked by Francisco Villa, former rebel chieftain, in a petition to the government. Villa has about 500 employees and says his land is not extensive enough. Villa and his men are ready to fight for Mexico, he says in the petition.
False Teeth in Stomach.
Carl Brand, city marshal of Anthony, Kan., is the champion "ostrich" of the state. He swallowed his set of false teeth recently and did not realize it for several weeks.
He has returned from the hospital, where he had the teeth removed from his stomach.
THE APPEAL.
ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS, MINN., SATURDAY: JUNE 24. 22
OLD GREEK TOYS ARE LIKE TODAY'S
Modern Children Find Dolls 2,000 Years Old Very Much Like Their Own.
HAD TOPS AND MARBLES ALSO
If Children of 2,000 Years Ago Could Come to Life They Could Play in Complete Understanding With Children Today.
London.—Do you know London's 2,000-year-old toy shop? Go through the terra cotta room in the British museum and ask the kind, fatherly looking attendant to point it out to you. It goes right to the heart. Here the most human little comedy was played by three little girls and a small boy.
They came wandering in, rather tired of the Pharaohs, thinking, no doubt, more about eating than antiquity.
Father, too, looked bored. His general knowledge evidently had given Suddenly they saw something which spoke to them down 20 centuries; horses and carts, tiny bronze chairs, for a doll's house, little animals which might have been saved from last year's Naoh's ark, tops, marbles and—sinister touch—a slate with a 2,000-year-old multiplication table scratched on it.
Ancient Greek Toys.
All these once belonged to Greek children in Athens, in Corinth, in Kuldos, Naucratis, Cyrenaica.
"Oh, how perfectly sweet!" cried one of the girls, as the four fair heads were bent over the case. "I say, dad," remarked the boy, "that looks like a fine top."
Dad apparently quite unconscious that the far-off ancient world had suddenly become alive and palpating, solemnly out the mouth labeled: "That," he said, "is a doll born in a child's tomb in Athens 2,000 years ago."
"And its arms move, too!" cried the girls. "And do look, daddy, at those dear little shoes that come on and off! I'd simply shout, 'Shadow Children There.'
The girls went into raptures over a doll in a red caped peak. . . . Was it just imagination, or was there really a crowd of children there? Who were those others—a little shy, perhaps slightly annoyed? Just shadows, no doubt.
One thing is certain. If the children of 2,000 years ago had suddenly come to life these four little Londoners could have sat down and played with them. A full-greek Greek night on the slain dad at sight, but a six-year-old Corinthian would have met his children as friends and contemporaries on all matters of doll welfare.
REPAIR BRIDGE TO AID STORK
Neighbors Lay Planks and Officers Open it for Doctor to Reach Patient.
Philadelphia, Pa.—When Dr. Robert T. Elmer of Wayne the other night received a telephone call from a faraway place of Newton square, informing him that he was hovering around and that the physician was desired to greet the bird, the only road that was not blockaded by snow was one leading over a bridge, across Darcy Creek, that was condemned and closed to traffic two weeks ago.
Neighbors of the anxious farmer communicated with the Delaware county commissioners and obtained permission to open the bridge, with the proviso that Dr. Elmer use it at his farm. The farmers laid planks upon the structure and the doctor drove his car carefully over it and hurried to his patient, to be there when the stork arrived.
TO PLAY CHRIST ON STAGE
For the First Time an Impersonation of Christ on the English Stage is Permitted.
London. — An impersonation of Christ has been permitted for the first time on an English stage in the production here of Stringberg's symbolic play, "Advent." A fourteen-year-old girl appeared as the Redeemer. Dramatic critics are inclined to take the view that the English stage is broadcast in regard to religious plays, probably owed to the fact that representations of Christ have appeared often in the films.
In the past years, several plays have been refused licenses because they included Christ as one of the characters. Others received permission on condition that no character should appear symbolic of the conventional conception of Divinity in human form.
Dogs Guard Frozen Boys.
Kalkaša, Mich.—Their two dogs standing faithfully by their side, despite the cold, Leonard and John Glilde, thirteen and nine years old, respectively, were found frozen to death in fifteen inches of snow, about six miles west of South Boardman. The boys, sons of Conellus Glilde, a farmer, had left home with their dogs to hunt rabbits. They apparently lost their way in the snowstorm that came up late in the day and overcome with exhaustion, lay down to sleep, cudling against their dows.
United States Asked to Join in Great Celebration.
Foch at Head of French Committee Arranging for Observance of Death Anniversary.
New York.—American participation in the celebration by France of the hundredth anniversary of the death of Napoleon on May 5 next, was invited here by Prof. William Mulligan Sloane of Princeton, N. J., speaking for the French committee headed by Marshal Foch. A feature of the affair whose objects, it is stated, "to bind up the wounds of France," will be a great exhibition of Napoleonic relics at Malmison, France, to which collections will be loaned from all parts of the world.
Professor Sloane, who for 42 years held the chair of history at Princeton, and latterly of Columbia university, said that French letters, solders and men of law and letters, well as other professions compose the committee which is arranging the centennial.
"Making all allowance for every severe criticism of Napoleon's career," he continued, "it is still true that his work unified France, saved it from partition among its foes and in civil life prepared alike the foundation and structure of the society which in the World war saved France and helped to save all western civilization.
"It was by his impulse and guidance that the financial credit of France was restored, that the magistracy and administration took definite shape, that the civil code was promulgated, the Bank of France created, the University of France modeled on that of the state of New York and the council of state organized.
"He made private property safe, opened public charges, great and small, to all classes; founded schools, colleges and secondary schools, built magnificent highways, dug an elaborate system of internal waterways, terminated, terminated his institutions the commanding position of belles-lettres, the fine arts and natural science. The superb inheritance of order, progress and prosperity which he bequeathed made the France of 1914.
"The French committee especially desires American participation by contributions, by the loan of Napoleon from American collections and, above all, the moral support of intelligent interest on this side of the Atlantic."
MAKES CLOCK IN 25 YEARS
Workman of Delaware, O., Evolves
Elaborate Hand-Carved Affair
From Walnut.
Delaware, O.-After 25 years of
tedious labor, C. O. Cregmile has completed his construction of a grandfather's clock here.
The clock, on display in a local store window, is hand carved. It was made out of solid black walnut which formerly constituted part of a pulpit in the old William Street Methodist church here.
All polishing, carving and fitting was done at odd moments by Mr. Cregmile.
Standing eight feet six inches high, the clock is beautifully carved on its sides and face panels. All cutting is original. No design was followed.
Mr. Cregmile, although offered good money for the unique masterpiece, has offered to sell it for a relatively small sum to the William street church. The clock is built so that it will house cathedral tubular chimes.
Heir So Popular
Loses Job as Janitor
Malden, Mass. — William R. Hanson, who says he is heir to a quarter of a million dollars, lost his job as janitor in a drug store because of the sudden popularity that followed announcement of his inheritance. He said that he had determined to get away from the crowding buddy by finding work as steele jack, but had been forced to compromise by getting a job as rooster's helper. Since Hanson announced that he had received word that he was heir to one-seventh of the estate of James Moore of Chicago, an uncle, the telephone bell in the drug store has jangled much of the day, postmen have delivered bulky mail and callers claiming relationship have left him no time for his broom and shovel.
Didn't Get Much for Winning.
Walton, K. - Rivalry over the speed of their machines caused George W. Wayman and Charles Campbell to stalk theumbroots a road raid to Mountain Quincinnati a distance of 18 miles. Wayman got the lead and made the trip in 83 minutes. Campbell's car turned turtle several miles out of Cincinnati and was wrecked. The wrecked car was turned over to the victor.
Sovereign Scarce in England.
London. The golden sovereign has almost vanished from circulation in most countries. The currency has been issued, but in the west of Wales gold is as plentiful as it was before the war.
ASBESTOS SLOW IN DEVELOPMENT
Ancients Knew of Qualities but Technical Difficulties Delayed Its Use.
Used by Ramans for Funeral Dress of Bodies Which Were to Be Cremated — Asbestos Curtains Common in Theaters.
New York—It is not so very long ago that a fire on the stage of a theater was an ever present menace to the audience. Today most playhouses possess an asbestos curtain which can be dropped at a moment's notice and which will absolutely confine any fire to that part of the theater. Asbestos is a mineral, found in the earth just like coal and iron, and mined. A few years ago it was merely a curiosity to be found only in the laboratory of the chemist. Today it is used in many ways and forms an important factor in the industrial market of the world.
This mineral is not a modern discovery. Asbestos was known to the ancients. The Romans used the substance, deriving their supplies from the Italian Alps and the Ural mountains. One of the uses to which asbestos cloth was put in those days was to wrap bodies which were to be cremated. In fact, it was called the "funeral dress of kings," as so much efficiency was found in making the cloth that ornamented it the extremely wealthy could afford it. The allowness of the modern development of the asbestos industry has been caused by the technical difficulties of weaving the short silky fibers into cloth or combining them in other ways to produce articles of commercial utility.
Comes From Canada.
The asbestos used in the United States comes almost entirely from Canada. There are deposits of the mineral in Arizona, California, Georgia and other states, but this is not of the high quality of the Canadian asbestos. There are various types of asbestos, and the sort that can be carded, spun and woven in a manner similar to wool, flax or silk is found mainly in the Theford mines of Quebec. It is this property of the mineral that fooled the Roman historian, Pliny, in thinking it to be of vegetable origin and that has given rise to its designation as the "mineral vegetable" and the "physical paradox." Nonburning Qualities, Krause
Nonburning Qualities Known.
The raw asbestos is subjected to a dressing process which consists of separating the asbestos from the rock in which it is placed. In the low-grade product machines are used for this, while in the high-grade material hand dressing is resorted to.
The fact that asbestos will not burn was known ages ago, and while that is responsible for a very important and valuable application of the substance today, it does not constitute the sole use of this product. The theater curtains are spun from asbestos fiber of the best quality. About 1,000 of these curtains are made each year. The theater curtains in the world is found in asbestos products, some theaters asbestos cloth is also used as a lining for walls and ceilings and there is also a tendency to make all the scenery on the stage and the draperies from this material.
Has Many Uses.
Asbestos cloth coated with rubber is used in making gaskets and packings for high pressure steam pipes. The cloth is also used in laundries, hotels, the automobile, the linings of brakes and for a host of other purposes. Perhaps the most interesting use of asbestos cloth is in the manufacture of garments. The firemen clad in asbestos cloth, trousers, coat, gloves and headgear wear fireproof to a high degree, and could fight ropes with much more comfort and effectiveness. Of us are familiar with asbestos table covers and pads, flatiron holders, baking sheets, stove mats and other articles common in the household.
The asbestos fiber can also be woven into a rope useful in fire fighting. These fireproof ropes are not heavy, do not become slippery and are not injured by water. Asbestos twine is made for use in the laboratory, sewing thread and incandescent lamp thread. Asbestos, being also heat insulating, is used in covering steam pipes, boilers and all sorts of housing surfaces to prevent the loss of heat radiation. Not only will an asbestos keeping the heat within the pipe but it will also keep heat from entering pipes, and it is used in covering refrigerating pipes and apparatus.
Aisleep, That Was All.
Lafayette, Ind.-Raymond Straub,
eleven years of age, a newsboy, was
found unconscious in the hallway of
a hotel here one night and was taken
to a local hospital in the belief that
he had been injured or perhaps
polished. The lad could not be
aroused, and physicians worked
several hours trying to determine what
was the matter. When the bow awoke
he was surprised to find himself in
the hospital. He told the doctors that
he was tired and exhausted when he
entered the hotel, and it was determined
that the boy was only sound
asleep when he failed to respond to
restoratives.
CHASTENED BY WAR
Old Travelers Find Port Said Much Changed City.
Gateway to East Has Been Cleaned Up and Is Now Safe and Nearly Respectable.
Port Said.—Old travelers come ashore and smile sadly. New travelers plunge into the stronghold of curio merchants with surprise and disappointment. Port Said, like the rest of the world, has been changed by the war. Port Said, to be quite frank, has been cleaned up.
Time was when a brief saunter through the ramshackle bazaar meant a terrific battle with tots. Shady gentlemen of all nationalities, most of them known to the police of two continents, piled their disreputable trades with impunity. An incredible amount of rubbish was carted away by tourists in memory of a few hours' stay. Murder was a pastime after dark, and many snister stories were told in the smoking rooms of departing liners of Port Said's wicked inhabitants.
Now this gateway to the East is safe and clearly respectable. The hand of the A.P.M. man been laid in no uncertain manner on the underworld which was the real Port Said. Deportions eased the town of its international rogues and vagabonds. A passport control second to none in effectiveness keeps a tight grip on the polyglot population. Murder, even routine robbery, which was a staple industry on steamer days, is discouraged by the representatives of British rule.
Gone, too, is the atmosphere of privacy and pillage maintained by brazen guides and other varieties of profiteers. They were wont to seize on amiable and inquisitive tourists with the persistence of a leech. They would extract money by entreaties, argument, threats, even violence. Now the tots and trinket sellers and their bootlegging approach their prey with marked diffidence. A single sharp refusal usually suffices to turn them off. They drop the trull immediately they see that no business is to be done.
An excellent photograph of Tachi Pascha, the renowned Turkish leader whose capture and arrest by General Milne has been reported as one of the incidents of the occupation of Constantinople.
So Popular It May Become Mascot at Normal School in California.
Chico, Cal.—A scorpion, alive and in vigorous health, with its stinger unremoved, is not the sort of creature usually adopted as a pet, but girl students of the Chico State Normal school have adopted one, and its popularity is such that it may become the school's mascot.
The scorpion, not yet christened, was brought from southern California by Mrs. Berta Chapman Cady, supervisor of biological science at the school, and is basking in the light of feminine admiration in a globular glass bowl. While intended primarily as a subject for study, the scorpion is rapidly becoming domesticated, proving, so Mrs. Cady asserts, that it has a docile disposition unless annoyed or attacked.
Ohio Relics Gone.
Cillichothe, O—When flames destroyed "Fruit Hill," historical mansion, the home of Gov. Duncan McArthur and William Allen, distinguished historic monuments and rare books were lost. The house was built in 1802.
Sidney, O.—Clyde Beeson hopes he is cured of sleep walking. His last experience was enough to satisfy him, for he walked head-on into a moving freight train, and broken shoulder, wrinkled ear, and broken ear are souvenirs of the occasion.
$ .40 PER YEAR
RACE ANTEDATES CLIFF DWELLERS
Harvard University Explorers Make Interesting Discovery in Northeastern Arizona.
RELICS ARE WELL PRESERVED
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. Kidder 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 secured by trained archaeologists until the Harvard expeditions 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 view of the basket 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 been made in the southwest. Instead of burning 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 skull, whereas the skull of the skull artificially flattened by the hard board headrest of the crudles in which the habies were placed.
The relationship of these various peoples is still a matter of doubt. It is believed the post-basket makers probably were descendants of the basket makers, but whether they in turn were ancestors of the cliff dwellers is not certain. It seems doubtful on account of the marked difference in the shape of the cliff dwellers 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. These primitive people lived years ago 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.
Oyster Bay, L. L—Four Irishians got off the 2.30 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 snow from a cemetery the tall and goug'ing out frozen 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 Americans 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.
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.
March 3, 1879.
TERMS, STRICTLY IN ADVANCE:
SINGLE COPY, One Year.....$2.40
SINGLE COPY, Six Months.....1.25
SINGLE COPY, Three Months.....65
*remittances should/ be made by Express
Morgan County Post Office. Order
Registered Letter or Bank Drift.
stamps will be received the same as cash for
the fractional parts of a dollar. Only one
consecutive stamp takes.
Silver should always be sent to the mail.
It is almighty sure to wear a hole through the
envelope and be lost; or else it may be stolen.
Persons who send silver to us letters
Marriage and death notice 10 lines or less $1.
Each additional line 10 cents. Payment
surely in advance, and to be announced at
a later date.
Advertising rates, 15 cents per agency line, each
insertion. There are fourteen agate lines
in an inch, and about seven words in an
inch. The average advertising cost is less
$1. No discount allowed three months contract. Cash must accompany all orders from parties unknown to us.
Reading notices 35 cents per line, each insertion.
No discounts for time or space. Reading
master is set in brevier type—about six
wings to the line. All head lines count doub
the date on the address label shows when subscription expires. Renewals should be made on the same day as the expiration, so that no paper may be missed, as the paper stops when time is out. 13 occasionally happens that papers sent to subscriptions may not receive any number when due, inform us by postal card at the expiration of five days from the date of subscription. Forward a duplicate of the missing number.
communications to receive attentions must be energy, upon important subjects, plainly written only upon one side of the paper; and always if possible, anyway not later than Wednesday in the nature of the author. No manuscript returned, unless stamps are sent for postage.
We do not hold ourselves responsible for the views of our correspondents.
Solliciting agents wanted everywhere. Written
for terms. Sample codes free.
In every letter that you write us never fail to give your full name and address, plainly written, posse office, county and state. Business letters of all kinds must be written on separate sheets from letters containing news or matter for publication.
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 whoseover liveth and believeth in me shall never die.—John 11:25.
STILL THE OLD SOUTH.
The thirty-second annual reunion of the United Confederate Veterans which met in Richmond, Va., adopted a report submitted by the historical committee declaring the Civil War was "deliberately and personally conceived" by Abraham Lincoln, and that he was "personally responsible for forcing the war upon the South." The assertion was made in connection with a recommendation that Southern schools use a history of the war period written by Col. Huger W. Jackson of Curryville, Ga., which, the committee said, "proved the truth of its declaration regarding Lincoln's responsibility in the war."
Asserting that the states of Mississippi, Texas, the Carolinas and Louisiana were now using histories "fair to the South," the report declared that "the young children of the South will now be taught that the South was right, eternally and everlastingly right, in fighting for principles upon which our glorious country was founded."
JEWS TO PROTEST
A nation-wide protest against the anti-Semitic policies of Harvard University, and the treatment accorded Leonard Kaplan in the Lucky Bag, the United States Naval Academy publication, will be made by the Jewish population generally, Louis Friedman of Brooklyn has announced. Organizations already are being formed, he said, to seek legislative protection against what he described as the rising tide of racial antagonism. If the Jews, with all their wealth find it necessary to protest against racial discriminations, it is doubly necessary for the colored, with little wealth, to fight against racial wrongs.
A GOOD SUGGESTION.
Senator Arthur Capper of Kansas suggests that Secretary of War Weeks should resign.
"If a member of the President's cabinet holds the views Secretary Weeks says he holds, whether as a
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 senses
be sweeter than the
world, the counten
the hearts of friends
I honor the man who in the conscientious discharge of his duty dares to stand alone; the world, with ignorant, intolerant judgment, may condemn, the countenances of relatives may be averted, and the hearts of friends grow cold, but the sense of duty done shall be sweeter than the applause of the world, the countenances of relatives or the hearts of friends.—Charles Sumner.
private citizen or public official, he should resign immediately as an official of the government, for he has shown himself to be so wholly out of sympathy with what he has sworn as an official to maintain and uphold that he is in no frame of mind to uphold it."
And the colored people know that Weeks has jimcrowized the national guard and the training camps, degrading colored men to a segregated status below other Americans.
WILL PROBE JEW BAN.
The American Federation of Labor convention adopted a resolution favoring an investigation "of the alleged discriminatory action which is said to be contemplated by Harvard college" to bar admission of Jews as students.
The resolution declared the federation's disaproval of "any departure from true liberal tradition," and condemned as "un-American any policy which may deny to any racial or religious groups equal opportunities for education."
The resolution specified the federation should cause the investigation to be made and that the officers, if they found that a ban were to be placed on the Hebrews, should take "such action as they deem feasible to remove the discrimination contemplated and to assure equal opportunities to all, regardless of race and religious affiliation."
It will be noticed that the resolution declares as un-American any discrimination against any racial group. It is well.
NO FREEDOM NOW
President Harding told members of the Philippine parliamentary commission that he could not urge upon congress the desirability of Philippine independence.
Members of the mission who called on the President today at his request to receive his reply to the independence petition presented last Friday said the executive indicated that he was not unalterably opposed to Philippine autonomy, but regarded the matter as a question of time.
DEFEAT PALISTINE PLAN
The British House of Lords defeated the National Jewish State in Palestine plan when Lord Islington's motion condemning the Palestine mandate was adopted by a vote of 60 to 29.
The motion disapproved the mandate on the ground that it was opposed to the sentiments of the people of Palestine and would give Zionism political power in a country preponderatingly non-Jewish.
U. S. HEMAINS IN HAITI
The senate has passed the naval appropriation bill. An amendment by Senator King of Utah, Demcorat, providing for withdrawal of American marines from the two republics and Nicaragua, Dec. 31 next, was rejected, 42 to 9, after a nearly all day debate in which the American policy of intervention was both attacked and defended. Controversy on the Haitian and Dominican intervention policy divided both parties. Five Republicans, Senators Borah (Idaho), Johnson (Calif.), Ladd (N. D.), La Follette (Wis.), and Norris (Neb.), opposed Senator King's withdrawal amendment, and four Democrats, Senators King, Overman (N. C.), Walsh (Mass.), and Walsh (Mont.). voted in its behalf.
"HUMAN NATURE
My ear is
My soul is sick with ev
Of wrong and outrage,
There is no flesh in man
It does not feel for man
Of brotherhood is seven
That falls asunder at the
He finds his fellow guil
Not colored like his ov
To enforce the wrong,
"HUMAN NATURE'S FOULEST BLOT."
who in the consci- of his duty dares to world, with ignorant, ant, may condemn, of relatives may be parts of friends grow of duty done shall the applause of theances of relatives or s.—Charles Sumner.
CHALENGED CIVILIZATION.
In a commencement address at Northwestern University, Chicago, Chase S. Osborn, former governor of Michigan, said: "The white race has seized three-fourths of the area of the earth and placed two-thirds of its population in tributary slavery, he declared, and predicted that unless Americans learn the way of life and human justice this country will follow the descent of Babylon and Greece and Rome.
In chalenging present day civilization, Mr. Osborn said: "The Genoa parley, the arms parley at Washington, the council of Versailles are as those of yesterday, met in distrust and not in contrition; for safety first, rather than for right, justice, and humanity first."
IT MUST NOT BE
The proposition to establish a playground for COLORED children 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 pariah 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 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!
Through the courtesy of Mr. William W. Lark, THE APPEAL received an invitation to the public exercises of Commencement Week, including those of Boston University Law School, from which he graduated on the 21st.
The United States government will take notice of the murder of Christians by Turks in Turkey, but is silent about the murder of real colored Christians by alged white Christians in the mob murder belt of the U. S. A.
Frank Crane says that the black race has been the tragedy of history for it has lacked the combative spirit of other races. In other words the lickspittle crown has been dominant generally.
President Harding has given orders to Congress to pass the ship subsidy bill. He has put no pressure on the national legislators to make them come across with the anti-lynching bill.
The New York World won the gold medal for "the most disinterested and meritorious public service rendered by any newspaper during the year for its expose of the Ku Klux Klan."
"S FOULEST BLOT."
is pained
every day's report
with which earth is filled.
it's obdurate heart.
in: the natural bond
ered as the flax
the touch of fire.
city of a skin
own: and having power
for such a worthy cause
PROGRAMME
OF THE
17th Annual Convention
OF THE MINNESOTA
Federation of Colored
Women's Clubs
TO BE HELD AT
Little Pilgrim Church
June 28 to 30, 1922
ST. PAUL, MINN.
10:00 A. M.—Executive Board Meeting.
11:30 A. M.—Credentials Committee in Session.
1:30 P. M.—Formal opening of the Convention Devotionals—Chaplain.
THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 9:30 A, M:
Executive Board Meeting.
Devotionals.
Reading of Minutes.
Unfinished Business—New Business
Piano Solo
Welcome to the Church
Welcoming of Clubs and Visitors
Response
Singing of State Songs: "Stand Up
Reading
Paper
History of the Federation
Discussions—Announcements—Recess
Afternoon Session
Devotionals—Chaplain.
Reading of Minutes—Business.
Community Singing led by
Crispus Attacks Home
Paper: "The Rising Tide of Amb
The Bahai Movement
Vocal Numbers and History
President's Address
The N. A. A. C. P.
Offering—Announcements—Recess
8:30 P. M.—Entertainment by Wa
Hall.
FRIDAY, JUNE
Executive Board Meeting.
Devotion.
Reading of Minutes—Miscellaneous
Community Singing
Paper
Paper—Children's Relief Home
Juvenile Court Work
Social Service Work
State Institutes
Discussion led by
(a) Social Service. (b) Public We
Parliamentary Drill
Music—Announcements—Recess.
8:30 P. M—Entertainment by Ways and Means Department—Union Hall.
Afternoon Session 1:45 P. M.
Election of Officers, conducted by
Devotions.
Reading of Minutes.
Piano Solo - M
Talk—Civil Service
"The Profession of Home Making
Paul, State Home Demonstratic
School.
Piano Solo - -
Paper: "Fine Arts"
The Y. W. C. C.
Piano Solo -
Remarks by the President—Recess
Evening Sess
mers, conducted by - - - MRS.
rutes.
- - - MISS MARGUERETT
vice
of Home Making" by MISS JULIANA
Home Demonstration Leader of the U
- - - MISS LUCILLA
Arts"
- - - MISS MURIEL
- - - MISS BL
- - - MISS HC
President—Recess.
Evening Session 8:00 P. M.
Mrs. Susan Butler Evans, Presiding.
Duet—Violin and Piano
Invocation.
A Group of Songs
Address—"Housing"
(Recently Government
Piano Solo
Report of Resolutions—Committee
Soprano Solo
Collections.
Installation of Officers.
God Be With You
Adieus.
Ed Piano MISS
Wigs MISS
"Sing" MR. F. D.
Recently Government Expert in Housing
MISS LE.
Solutions—Committee.
MRS.
Officers:
God Be With You Till We Meet Again
Chicago Names Street in Honor of Hero.
Chicago, Ill., June—There was a grand demonstration here on the occasion of dedication of Giles avenue, named in honor of Lieut. Giles of the 370th Infantry (Eighth Regiment). In addition 142 trees were planted along its borders as memorials to the men of the regiment who lost their lives in the World War. The dedication was attended by thousands and was most impressive. A large bronze table was unveiled by a Gold Star mother while the regimental band played "Nearer, My God, to Thee." Mayor William Hale Thompson was the principal speaker.
Return Indictments in Klan Inquiry.
Return Indictments in Klan Inquiry.
Phoenix, Ariz., June 24.—Several indictments were returned by a special county grand jury inquiring into recent activities here of the Ku Klux Klan. Identity of those named and the nature of the charges were not divulged. The inquisitorial body has been in session a week and has heard about thirty-six witnesses including Governor Campbell and Secretary of State Ernest R. Hall.
Colored People Using Less Snuff.
Increased intelligence was given as the cause of the disuse of snuff among the colored people, according to George J. Falter, erstwhile "Snuff King" of Baltimore. Only a few of
---
MISS GENEVIEVE KELLY
REV. L. W. HARRIS
MRS. ANNIE JORDAN
MRS. IDA SELLERS
Up for Minnesota."
MRS. FRANCES PEEBLES
MRS. MARY L. COVINGTON
MRS. EDNA PENDLETON
Union, 2:00 P. M.
MRS. KATIE SMITH
MR. G. C. SHANNON
"ation" MRS. MARIE COLES
DR. O. L. WOOLSON
MRS. HATTIE HALL
MRS. SUSAN BUTLER EVANS
DR. VALDO TURNER
ys and Means Department—Union
E 30, 9:30 A. M.
Business.
Audience
MRS. EMMA WATT
MRS. REBEQUE FORD
MRS. MATTIE HICKS
MRS. BRYAN
MRS. FANNIE SEARS
by the President.
Welfare. (c) Child Welfare.
MRS. IDA SELLERS
- - MRS. IDA SELLERS
MISS MARGUERETTE VINEGARO
ROY WILKINS
by MISS JULIA NEWTON, St.
Leader of the University Farm
- MISS LUCILLE WILLIAMS
- MISS MURIEL ALEXANDER
- MISS BELLA TAYLOR
- MISS HONORA EVANS
on 8:00 P. M.
MISSES JORDAN
MISS KATE HARRIS
MR. F. D. McCRACKEN
t Expert in Housing)
MISS LEA MAY MINOR
MRS. IONA POORE
Fill We Meet Again.
the elderly colored still stick to the habit while the younger generation regard it as a disgrace, he said.
Celebrated 85th Wedding Anniversary
Atlanta, 85th, Texas. - June. — Joseph
Knight, aged 109, and his wife, aged
108, celebrated their 85th wedding
anniversary recently. This couple is
said to be the oldest in the state. Records
show that they were married 85
years ago during slavery days.
Mr. Knight says that he believes
the Lord has blessed him and his wife
with long life because they have obeyed
the laws of God and we never get
excited about anything. We just work
on quietly and eat three times a day.
"But we don't eat too much," he
added.
Honored by French Society
Honored by French Society.
Dr. Ernest E. Just, professor of biology at Howard University and winner of the Spingarn Medal several years ago, was recently made a member of the National Society of France.
Miss Anna Jones Robinson and Miss Enid L. Thorpe graduated from the School of Law, New York University at the commencement. Both these young women received the degree of Bachelor of Law and Juris Doctor of Law, and enjoy the distinction of being the first women in New York to graduate from a law school. Both are teachers in the New York public schools.
THE FLORSHEIM SHOE
DOLLY MOLLY HOUSE DRESSES, SUITABLE
FOR STREET WEAR, PRICE $1.10.TO $5.25
Repairs to Fit All Makes of Stoves, Ranges and Furnaces. We are Experts at Installing Furnaces.
DELEGATES, COME TO THE
15TH ANNUAL CONVENTION
of the
NATIONAL EQUAL RIGHTS
LEAGUE
July 4th to 8th, 1922
AT BOSTON
Abolition's Stronghold and Freedom's Birthright
THE CHIEF EVENTS WILL BE
Historical Tours To Boston's Old Landmarks Each Day of Convention
MONSTER ANTI-LYNCHING OUTDOOR DEMONSTRA-TION AND PARADE
A GRAND BALL—PICNIC—
A SAIL DOWN BOSTON
HARBOR
Afternoon Reception, Hospital
ity Headquarters, Affiliated
Outings, Auto Rides
ESPECIALLY
National Concerted Action for
Dyer Bill at Home of Senate
Leader Lodge
TO NATL ED. CONVENTION
DELEGATES
All Colored Americans going to the Convention of the National Educational Association which convenes in Boston, July 2 to 8, are invited to be delegates to the 15th Annual Convention of the National Equal Rights League, which convenes at the 12th Baptist Church July 4 to 8, with advance registration headquarters at 96 Hammond St., Mrs. M. E. Gibson, Chairman. All such delegates asked to send word in advance to the registration Chairman, also to Housing Chairman, Mrs. M. Cravan Chairman, Claremont Park. For General Advance Information write to W. M. Trotter, 34 Cornhill, Boston, Secretary.
Police Raid Opium Den.
Four white women, four colored men and one colored woman were arrested Tuesday night by federal narcotic agents and Minneapolis city detectives in a raid on an opium den at 1107 Second street south, Minneapolis, and locked up in 'jail.
When agents entered the place they found a number of persons smuggling opium and several were so overcrowded that the patrol wagon, John P. Wall, acting supervising narcotic agent, explained. Cocaine and morphine also were found. The prisoners will be charged with violation of the narcotic law and the Harrison act.
3,500 In U, S. Who Are Over 100, Says Dr. R. S. Copeland Urges Campain for Industrial Health and Welfare.
There are 3,500 men and women in the United States who are past 100 years of age, said Dr. Royal S. Copeland, health commissioner for New York City, in an address as chairman of the bureau of sanitary science and public health of the American Institute of Homeopathy at its session at the druke hotel. He asserted that by right living and right thinking the average person should live to be 100, with "eye undimmed and natural force unabated," but intimated that industrial hygiene was essential before this could be realized. "Every thoughtful person must appreciate that at least one-third of all adults are engaged in some industrial pursuit," the Dr. Copeland continued. The welfare of this great army must be considered most carefully or the failure of such will be destroyed. To my mind, industrial hygiene is, in many respects the most important of all the public health activities.
Old Man Methuselah.
"Because Methuselah lived to 169 the popular idea is that people lived to a ripe old age in those days. Go back three or four generations in American history and people didn't live long. They used to go in the house in the fall as soon as it got cold. They nailed their windows shut and tucked rags around the windows and didn't take a bath till the ice went out of the river in the spring. No wonder they died young.
"Go back fifty years ago in New York City. The average duration of life then was forty-two years. It is now fifty-three years. But we are not progressing fast enough to suit the present generation.
Must Protect Workers.
"There must be devised some reliable method of insuring to the worker such environment and protection from hazard as will guarantee the maximum of health and expectation of life.
"Let us begin today with a campaign for industrial health for the welfare of all those who work with their hands."
Offer to Take Colored Colony to Mexico Declined.
(Chicago Tribune Forengn News Service.)
Mexico City, June.—E. A. Kay, an American, in an interview with President Obregan, offered to bring 15,000,000 colored people from the United States and various parts of the world to Mexico. The president reiterated that Kay was a native of agriculture. The latter stated that the Mexico does not wish colored immigrants on account of the ethnic problem involved.
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.
SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1922
The Musolite Choral Club is plan-
ning to give a grand musicale the latter
part of the month.
Mr. and Mrs. Clark D. Chavis are
planning a trip through the state of
Iowa in the near future.
At the election of officers of Pride
of Minnesota Lodge, K. P., last week
all the principal officers were re-
elected.
Mrs. Harold Combs of Fourth avenue
north, gave a bedroom shower
for the bride-elect, Miss Edyth Stone,
Tuesday night.
Mr. C. M. Jones is having a great motor trip on his way East. He will visit Indianapolis, Hot Springs, Louisville and Columbus.
Mrs. Chas. Force is entertaining Thursday evening with a handkerchief shower in honor of the bride-elect, Miss Edythe Stone.
Miss Marienne Jeffrey will return home Friday, having completed her studies at the Northwestern Conservatory of Music in Chicago.
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.
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.
Miss Arnette Mason, young daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Mason, is going to Kansas City the latter part of this month to spend the summer visiting with her grandmother.
H. Massengal, a porter, was sentenced to ten days in the workhouse Tuesday for speeding speeding. He was arrested at University and Raymond去到 40 miles an hour. The Minneapolis Sunday Forum wil hold its third annual picnic Thursday at Minneaha Falls. The Forum is closed for the summer. It will reopen in September with a very interesting and extensive program for the winter session. 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 535pund, 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.
Mrs. John Sellers, 2742 10th avenue south, was hostess at a 4 o'clock dinner on Tuesday afternoon in honor of Rev. W. D. Carter of Seattle, Wash. Other guests were Rev. and Mrs. J. E. Evans, Mesdames S. E. Perkins and Valle, and Mesdames S. E. Hall, and S. L. Maxwell of St. Paul.
A new business venture has been started in Minneapolis under the name and style of the Twin City Undertaking Co., 716 Lyndale 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 room at theicken room from 11:00 A. M. to 8:30 P. M. to 8:30 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.
Monday night, when the crowd came from the boat excursion, there was considerable excitement on Sixth avenue north and a policemen had some trouble with a colored man who got the best of him although he fired four ineffectual shots. He knocked the policeman down and forbade him to rise. He took his pistol from him and escaped and has not been heard from since. Tuesday night another policeman who undertook to make a man "move on" when he was knocked down and had to be taken to the hospital. There was considerable unrest on the "North Side" for a few hours but it quieted down.
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 Kasota Building, Minneapolis, Minn. Ge. 4844. Martin Brown, President.
ORDER FOR CREDITORS TO PRESENT CLAIMS, ETC.
STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF Ramsey County, Probate Court. In the Name of Joseph S.
Prostate Court.
In the Matter of the Estate of Joseph S.
Strong. Deceased.
ORK, of administration on the estate of Joseph S. Strong, deceased, late of the County of Ramsay and State of Minnesota, it Is Ordered, that six months be and the same is hereby allowed from and after the death of Joseph S. Strong, having claims or demands against the said deceased, are required to file the same in the Commission and allowance, or be forever harried. It Is Further Ordered, that the second Mention of the Commission at a General Term of said Probate Court, to be held at the Court House, in the City of Minnesota, is appointed as the time and place when and where the Probate Court will examine and adjust said claims and demands. And It is Further Ordered, that notice of the three successive weeks in the Appeal, a legal paper printed and published in said county. Dated at St. Paul this 13th day of June, 1913.
Dated at St. Paul this 13th day of June,
1922.
By the Court:
HOWARD WHEELER.
Judge of Probate.
(Seal of Probate Court)
W. T. FRANCIS, Attorney.
(7-17-22)
CITATION FOR HEARING WILL.
STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF
Ramsey—as. In Probate Court.
In Illinois. Proving the Ligged Last
Will and Testament of Clifford Ash
Smith, Decedent.
The State of Minnesota to All Whom It May
Whereas, Louis S. Smith of the City of
Elgin and State of Illinois, has delivered to
the Probate Court, the testimony to be
provided, and the testimony to be the
Last Will and Testament of Clifford Ash
Smith, as. in Ramsey County, Minnesota, de-
cided. Probate Court, praying that the said in-
strument is proved and admitted to probate
and that letters of judgment be granted
Witness the Judge of said court, this 17th day of June, A. D. 1922.
HOWARD WHEELER,
Judge of Probate.
(Seal of Probate Court.)
Attest: F. W. Gosewich,
Clerk of Probate.
HAMMED TURNER, 321 Metropolitan Bank Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. (7-24-22)
SUMMONS
State of Minnesota, County of Ramsey, in District Court, Second Judicial District, Jackson, plaintiff, vs. Earl Hodson, defendant.
SUMMONS.
THE MINNESOTA TO THE ABOVE NAMED PLaintiff.
You are hereby summoned and required to answer the complaint of the plaintiff in this action, which has been filed with the clerk of the court of the county of said County in the City of St. Paul, and to serve a copy of your answer to the said complaint on the subscriber hereto, plaintiff's Block, in the City of St. Paul in the County of Ramsey and State of Minnesota, within thirty (30) days after the service of this complaint, such service; and if you fail to answer the complaint within the time aforesaid, the plaintiff in this action will apply to the said court for the relief demanded in said complaint.
Dated April 22, 1922.
T. ALEXANDER of summons against the plaintiff's Attorney,
514 Court Block. St. Paul, Minnesota.
(7-24-22)
Exclusive Models of Comfort and
Elegance Distinctive of
The Edwin Clapp
SHOE
Sole St. Paul
Agency
The Stanley Reem
400 Robert Shoe Co.
at Sixth — William A. Reem Pg.
4% 4%
A
FRIENDLY
BANK
BANK WITH THE
NORTHERN
SAVINGS
BANK
Seventh at Robert
In the Heart of the Retail District
TEL. CEDAR 8190
HAMMOND TURNER
ATTORNEY AT LAW
321 MET. BANK BLDG.
FIFTH AT CEDAR
St. Paul
Tel. Dale 3941 : Work Guaranteed
IF YOU WANT YOUR WORK
DONE MECHANICALLY see
T. J. FARR
PAINTER AND DECORATOR
550 Como Ave. : Saint 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
MAKE NO MISTAKE, JUST SMOKE
Sight Draft
THE OLD RELIABLE 8 CENT CIGAB
JUNE SALE Bohn Syphon—Sanitor Refrigerators
```markdown
```
36½ ins. wide, 21½ ins. deep, 50 ins. high.
Solid oak case, one-piece porcelain lining; reduced from $75.00 ....
BOHN REFRIGERATOR
1340 UNIVERSITY
Take Minneapolis Car
We Deliver Any Place in
HOME BU
FREDERICK D
N REFRIGERATOR COMP
1340 UNIVERSITY, MIDWAY.
Take Minneapolls Car and get off at Albert.
We Deliver Any Place in St. Paul or Minneapolis.
ME BUYERS=
FEDERICK D. McCRACK
BOHN REFRIGERATOR COMPANY
1340 UNIVERSITY, MIDWAY.
Take Minneapolis Car and get off at Albert.
We Deliver Any Place in St. Paul or Minneapolis.
(Recently Government Expert in Housing) OFFERS
Personal Service Plc
REAL ESTATE INVESTMENT
Expert Knowledge Backed
321 METROPOLITAN BANK BLVD.
Tel. Hyland 3956
COSMOPOLITAN
AND
ORIGINAL
Samuel Allen
TRY OUR SPECIAL FRI
SUNDAY $1.00 FROM
WEEK DAY LUNCH 40 CTS.
712 Sixth Ave. N.
TEL. SOUTH 0805
RAILROAD MEN'S
JOHNSON'S HOTEL,
CHICKEN AND O
W. T. JOHNSON, PROP.
First Class Furnished F
and Trai
First Class A La Carte
at Pre-Wa
2010 CEDAR AVE.
Personal Service Plus Personal Interest
STATE INVESTMENTS INSURANCE
Knowledge Backed With Practical Expertise
OPOLITAN BANK BLDG. PHONE GE
Hyland 3956 Open All
OSMOPOLITAN ROOMS
AND
ORIGINAL BARBECUE
Samuel Allen, Proprietor
BY OUR SPECIAL FRIED CHICKEN DINNER
SUNDAY 81.00 FROM 11 A. M. TO 8:30 P. M.
K DAY LUNCH 40 CTS. FROM 11 A. M. TO 8:30
Sixth Ave. N. Minneapolis
L. SOUTH 0805 OPEN ALL NIGHT
RAILROAD MEN'S HEADQUARTERS
JOHNSON'S HOTEL, CAFE, LUNCH, ROOSE
CHICKEN AND OYSTER PARLOR
W. T. JOHNSON, PROP. JAS. BOOZER, MGR.
First Class Furnished Rooms for Railroad M
and Transients.
First Class A La Carte Meals at All Hours
at Pre-War Prices.
0 CEDAR AVE. MINNEAPOLIS
A GIFT ELECTRIC
We are sure would be
appreciated
Make it Reading Lamp, Vacuum
or anything Electrical
WE HAVE IT
We will make delivery any
COSMOPOLITAN ROOM
AND
ORIGINAL BARBECUE
Samuel Allen, Proprietor
TRY OUR SPECIAL FRIED CHICKEN DINNER
SUNDAY $1.00 FROM 11 A. M. TO 8:30 P. M.
WEEK DAY LUNCH 40 CTS. FROM 11 A. M. TO 8:30 P. M.
JOHNSON'S HOTEL, CAFE, LUNCH, ROOM CHICKEN AND OYSTER PARLOR
A
Mal
A GIFT ELECTRICAL
AIR 8051 QUICK
TOWN SANITARY SHOP
OWEN HOWELL, MANAGER
SHOES - REPAIRING - CLOTHES
MITS SPONGED
AND PRESSED
FRENCH DRY
CLEANING
MITS SUITS DRY
CLEANED
LADIES SUITS DRY
CLEANED
ASHA ST.
ST. PAUL
TEL. CEDAR 8081
UP-TOWN SAN
OWEN HOWEL
SHOES - REPAIR
SUITS SPONGED
AND PRESSED
GENTS SUITS DRY
CLEANED
839 WABASHA ST.
UP-TOWN SANITARY SHOP OWEN HOWELL, MANAGER
MINNESOTA MILK CO.
$73.50
$57.50
ERATOR COMPANY
UNIVERSITY, MIDWAY.
s Car and get off at Albert.
place in St. Paul or Minneapolis.
BUYERS===
K D. McCRACKEN
ACE Plus Personal Interest
INVESTMENTS INSURANCE
Packed With Practical Experience
BK BLDG. PHONE CEDAR 8190
Open All Night
POLITAN ROOM
AND
BARBECUE
All Allen, Proprietor
FRIED CHICKEN DINNER
FROM 11 A. M. TO 8:30 P. M.
CTS. FROM 11 A. M. TO 8:30 P. M.
Minneapolis
OPEN ALL NIGHT
MEN'S HEADQUARTERS
EL, CAFE, LUNCH, ROOM
AND OYSTER PARLOR
ROP. JAS. BOOZER, MGR.
Rented Rooms for Railroad Men
and Transients.
A Carte Meals at All Hours
Pre-War Prices.
MINNEAPOLIS
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
QUICK SERVICE
ANITARY SHOP
OWELL, MANAGER
PAIRING - CLOTHES
FRENCH DRY
CLEANING
LADIES SUITS DRY
CLEANED
How Much Are Your Clothes Worth?
HARTMANN
$35
The clothes you pack into your
the price of the trunk, and there
which the trunk you buy will ca
hanger would be very apt to ru
Top prevents broken hangers an
GAR
LUG
Six
OFFICE TEL.
CEDAR 5104
RES. TEL.
DALE, 9244
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
84 W. SEVENTH ST.
DAKOTA BLDG.
SUITE 203-204
ST. PAUL
OFFICE CEDAR 8948
RES. DALE 1465
into your wardrobe trunk and therefore you should ouy will carry your clothes. apt to ruin your gown. The changers and wrinkled garmer us explain why.
ARLAND
LUGGAGE SH
Sixth at Cedar.
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.
A.
THE COSMOPOL
J. H. WEBB,
First Class Staple and Fancy
Confectionery, Ice Cream,
558 ST. ANTHONY
SUITE 329
AMR. NATL. BANK BLDG.
COR. FIFTH AND CEDAR
ST. PAUL
ELKHURST 3473 QUICK SERVICE
CALL ONCE AND YOU WILL CALL AGAIN
First Class Staple and Fancy Groceries, Vegetables, Fruits Confectionery, Ice Cream, Cigars, Tobaccos, Cigarettes.
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
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. ANTHONY AVE. ST. PAUL
306 RONDO ST. ST. PAUL, MINN.
OFFICE TEL. RES. TEL
CEDAR 4044 DALE 7816
The most Po
Car
ALL KINDS
Shoe
PORTERS' & W
311 Hennepin Ave., Phone M
Excellent Food at Minimum Price
TOBACCO CIGAR
GLOVER SHULL, Pres. and Treas.
O. A. McNAIR,
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
DR. L. RAYMOND HILL
DENTAL SURGEON
303 COURT BLOCK 24 E. 4TH ST.
W. T. FRANCIS
LAWYEP
ELK TAILORING CO.
SUITS MADE TO ORDER CLEANING, PRESSING, DYEING AND REPAIRING
OFFICE TEL.
CEDAR 4044
HOURS: 9 A, M, TO 1 P, M,
AND 2 TO 6 P, M.
DR. JOHN R. FRENCH
FIRST CLASS GUARANTEED WORK
IN ALL BRANCHES OF DENTISTRY
SUITE 2 DETROIT BLDG. SAINT
CORN, 4TH & WABASHA MINNE
Tel. Dale S339 We Call For and Deliver
JACKSON
TEL. UCDAR 6975
HOURS 9 A.M. TO 1
P.M. & 2 TO 6 P.M.
SUNDAYS & WEDNESSES
BY APPOINTMENT
First Class Guaranteed Work In All Branches of Dentistry
HARTMANN
No. 1922
$50
be trunk are worth many times
you should consider the way in
clothes. A broken clothes
gown. The Hartmann Cushion
skirted garments. Step in and let
why.
LAND
GE SHOP
edar.
TEL. DALE 5104 WILL MAKE SPECIAL CALLS
OAKES-SYDES-FORD CO.
SUPERIOR HAIR AND SKIN PREPARATIONS
IMPORTED PERFUMES
TEMPLE INSENSE
SUPERIOR BEAUTY PARLOR IN CONNECTION
EXPERT ATTENDANTS
SCALP TREATMENT AND FACE MASSAGE
A SPECIALTY
SUPERIOR BEAUTY PARLOR IN CONNECTION
EXPERT ATTENDANTS
WE DELIVER
COSMOPOLITAN GROCERY
J. H. WEBB, PROPRIETOR
e and Fancy Groceries, Vegetables, Fruits,
Ice Cream, Cigars, Tobaccos, Cigarettes.
THE COSMOPOLITAN GROCERY
S' & WAITERS' CLUB
Hennepin Ave., Minneapolis, Minn.
Phone Main 2592
At Minimum Prices. Soft Drinks of All Kinds.
CO CIGARS CIGARETTES
Pres. and Treas. EDDIE L. BOYD, Secy.
D. A. McNAIR, Night Manager.
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.
Capitol Steam Laundry CEDAR 4622
THE PANTORIUM
Dry Cleaning, Pressing, Dyeing and General Repairing
TEL. DALE 4417
WE DELIVER
SAINT PAUL
A. E.