The Appeal
Saturday, March 24, 1923
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
ANTI-KLAN BILL PASSED BY HOUSE
VOL. 39 NO. 12
ANTI-
TO CONTEST WILL
LEAVING FORTUNE
TO COLORED GIRL
Former Sheriff in West Virginia
Leaves Entire Estate to
Colored Daughter
BROTHER WANTS $209,000
Document Warns That Others Will Try to Take Property From Her
Charleston, W. Va., Mar. 22—Legal proceedings to set aside the will of Roman Pickens anticipated since it was probated, have been instituted by John E. his brother, and a bitter fight is in prospect for the large estate left by the decedent to the daughter "outside the law."
Gives Advice.
Pickens, once sheriff of this—Kenawa—county and a picturesque figure, died in December last, bequeathing his estate to Garnet Pickens, locally known and generally accepted as his daughter by a colored woman, long a domestic in his household. The will gave the entire estate, appraised at $299,000, to Miss Garnet, with directions that she "treat with love and affection," the lawful widow, Mary E. Pickens (white), who holds legal rights during her life time. It also directed that she "well and comfortably provide for 'Cora,' the servant" during her life.
Much common-sense advice was conveyed to the heiress, a beautiful young woman who has since reached her majority, by the document. It directs her to consult with experienced lawyers during her official cautions her never to sign or endorse any notes, and warns her that she will be the object of the schemes of designing persons. The beneficiary is also commanded not to sell any of the real estate until she reaches the age of 60. Pickens is located in this city and in the farming sections of this and neighboring counties, rapidly is increasing in value. H. P. Brightwell, city treasurer and vice president of a local trust company, of which Pickens was a director, was named administrator by the state legislature, of the same institution appointed appraisers by the court.
Miss Pickens has had little or no association with other members of her race than her mother, with whom she lived in the home of her father on a farm at Tornado) Burles up Coal River in a white farming settlement. There being no colored school and her father being averse or too "close" to send her away, she has had the advantage of only what little education her parents and an occasional tutor could give her.
ABBOTT RECOMMENDED FOR SPINGARN MEDAL
Amsterdam News Nominates Editor of the Defender for 1922 Award
(Crusader Service)
New York, March 23.—In its current issue the N. Y. Amsterdam News nominates the veteran newspaper editor and publisher, Robert S. Abbott, of the Chicago Defender, for the award in the shining award for the year 1922, the following editorial: "We submit as our nominee for the Spingam Medal for the year 1922, Robert S. Abbott, editor of the Chicago Defender. We do so with a full realization of the fact that during the year Mr. Abbott did nothing spectacular. His services have been cumulative and of such a nature as not to attract attention. We nevertheless activities have stimulated the progress of the race along enough lines to entitle him to consideration.
"Starting with practically nothing and many handicaps he has made the Chicago Defender an institution. In position a secretary to the race in the position of nummerator of the university favorably with Horace Greely, Dana or Ralph Pulitzer.
"He has done more to educate the people than all of the schools combined.
"He has placed Negro journalism on a higher footing.
"Through him hundreds of young colored men and women find remunerative employment as editors, reporters, advertising agents, clerks, stenographers, bookkeepers and newsdealers.
"In broadcasting the intellectual, commercial and religious progress of the Negro to the Negro he has kept the spark of hope glowing. The Spiggar media had committee we needed to consider the name of Robert S. Abbott, our nominee, for the signal honor for the year of 1923."
Peon Case Decision Gratifies Marshall
New York, Mar. 23—Louis Marshall, one of the best known lawyers of New York, member of 3 state counsel for Leo Frank before the United States Supreme Court, has written a letter acclaiming the N. A. A. C. P. victory in the Arkansas cases as a great achievement in constitutionally responsible work of the Association, Mr. Marshall's letter is in part as follows:
"I am in receipt of yours of the 9th instant with enclosed copy of the opinion of the Supreme Court of the State which is exceedingly gratifying to me, especially in view of the fact that it has given the Supreme Court an opportunity to adopt the principle for which contended in Frank Magnum 223 which advocated in the dissenting opinion rendered in that case by Justice Holmes and Hughes. "I am returning the opinion to you with check the order of your Association for $100 as a thank-offering."
WIDE INTEREST IN RACE CONFERENCE
Six Organizations to Complete Preliminary Meeting in New York Today
(Crusader Service)
New York, March 23.—Announcement of a preliminary conference of six of the leading race organizations for the purpose of issuing a call and drawing up the atenda for a general United Front Conference has elicited considerable and enthusiastic comment from the press of the country. There are many indications, too, that the masses have been stirred to their depths by this move on the part of their leaders for united action and a common front against enemies of the Race. The preliminary conference was called by the National Equal Rights League and Prof. Kelly Miller, acting independently of each other at first, but later co-operating and communicating with them. The preliminary conference will be participated in by the National Equal Rights League, The African Blood Brotherhood, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the National Negro Program League and Prof. Kelly Miller as one of the callers. The meetings will be held today and tomorrow in the Lafayette Building. The sessions will be from 10 to 12 mornings, and from 2 to 5 after noon. The conference itself will be followed by a mass meeting tonight at Rev. Martin's Church, 124 West 18th Street, under the auspices of the National Equal Rights League, whose president Dr. Robert J. McCormick will be in New York, early this week to conclude arrangements for this public meeting.
CUTS DOWN POSTAL HOLDUPS
Post Office Department Has Reduced
Losses From $3,288,017 to $24,583
in Two Years.
Washington—Losses to the government through mail bandits in major mail robberies have been materially reduced by the relentless warfare waged by the Post Office department. They have aggregated only $24,583 for the last nine months, compared with $11,288 for the year. Marshals have stolen $65,497 stolen from the mails, of which $2,386,017 was recovered, leaving a net loss of $3,000,890.
There were no major train holdups or major mail-truck holdups in which the outlaws made their escape with loot in the last nine months. One major robbery at a post office station and two major robberies of post messengers or mail carriers involved $79,200, of which $54,947 was recovered, leaving a net loss of $24,583.
New Vessel for Nantucket Shoals Has Novel Fog Signal Device to Warn Mariners.
Washington—Nantucket shoals, off the Massachusetts south coast, one of the most important lightship stations in the world, and the point where many an incoming traveler gets his first glimpse of America, will be marked within a few months by the last word in light signals.
One of the new lightships under construction at Bath, Me, will replace the present ship on Nantucket south shoals. It will have a radio fog signal to warn ships which pass, will be equipped with electric signal lights and will have an oscillator in place of a submarine bell for use during fogs. The new vessel will be fully equipped for radio communication.
THE APPEAL.
Hundreds of Cabins Wrecked and Town of Savage Razed By Tornado
Damage Estimated at $350,000;
18 Dead, 25 Hurt Say
Reports
(Crusader Service)
Memphis, Tenn., Mar. 20.—Eighteen dead, approximately 100 injured and property damage estimated at $300,000 to $400,000 made up the known toll toon of a tornado which swept seven Delta counties in Northern Mississippi last night, demolished one village, Savage, and left a trail of property damage and dead and maimed in a dozen or more towns and farming settlements. Several hundred were homeless.
Dwellings Into River
Of the known dead, nine lost their 'lives when the storm battered the remnants of the town of Savage—badly damaged two months ago by a 'ornado—into bits, and carried half a dozen dwellings into Coldwater River. Five colored people were killed 'here. Several whites also lost their lives. Six others lost their lives when their cabins were wrecked near Lambert, and one colored child and woman were killed at Walnut Lake. Of the injured, about fifteen were reported seriously hurt. Ten colored people are among the seriously injured. The storm, a whirling wind which swept in from the Southwest, in its rush Northeastward tore paths through the towns of Olive Branch, Holly Springs, Sardis, Hernando and Phillip, after levelling the village of Savage and wrecking a dozen or more farming settlements and hamlets.
Holly Springs Hit.
Savage was tonight a mass of splintered wreckage. At Sardis a dozen buildings were wrecked and the front of a hotel was smashed. At Holly Springs the McDermott Hotel and the Frisco railroad station were damaged. Half a dozen buildings were wrecked at Hernando and at Walnut Lake the storm took its heaviest toll on the plantation of L. C. Cannon, where nearly a score of cabins were swept from their foundations and the plantation dwelling was damaged. Fected area was still crippled tonight and only meagre reports had been received from inland villages in the path of the tornado. Moving in a path less than a mile wide, the storm swept farming settlements about Lambert and stuck next to the water River, literally obliterating the village. The only buildings standing there were a portion of the Yazoo and Mississippi Valley Railroad station and a section house. Last night's storm was the second week's week in the Central Mississippi Valley, tornado wrecking the villages of Pinson and Leanburg, Tenn., 85 miles east of Memphis, and taking a total of 17 lives.
FAKE SOLICITOR GETS
FOUR MONTHS IN JAIL
New York, Mar. 23.-Ralph Morton, who pleaded guilty to collecting funds under false pretenses, alleging himself to be an agent for the Nassau County government of Colored People, the Lincoln Hospital of New York and other institutions, has been sentenced to jail for four months by Judge John P. Kellogg in the criminal session of the Court in Bridgeport, Conneckirk.
Reports of Morton's activities in Connecticut, New York State and New England came to the Advancement Association, which sent a warm message to the governor obtaining evidence which was used to bring about the conviction.
FIGURES SHOW COLORED
KANSAS LAW-ABIDING
New York—Extracts from a statement made by C. C. Ellis, Bertillon Superintendent in the Wichita, Kan. police department, and published in the Wichita Daily Journal on February 18, were quoted today by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to state that fewer colored than white people were arrested for serious crimes. Mr. Ellis' figures show that 560 persons were arrested during the crime, of which only 38 were colored
400 Colored Girls Solve Problem of French Servants
Paris, March 29 - France's servant problem has reached such a crisis that one of the philanthropic societies has imprinted a new name, the Martinique and Gundeloupe to work in French households. The dusky-skimmed colonials, wearing red bandannas around their heads and enveloped in bright calico Mother humbards, landed in Paris, where they were taken directly to the home of the society, whence they will be distributed throughout France.
PREDICTS COLORED
RACES WILL RULE
Berlin, March 23—The "international brotherhood," dream of well-meaning Socialists and pacifists, is still far off. Wrong holds the world, in which the United States is the World peace is not to come until the blinded 'civilized' nations bleed themselves white, and then the world will be dominated by the virile colored races. There will be another generation of wars, in which the United States will be repeatedly involved. These are the prophets of Anton Johanson, the aged peasant seer, whose prophetic warning that 'Beloved God will save you in many's coffin' and whose urgings against the great war which he fore-saw caused so much talk in court circles between 1907 and 1914, but were ignored. Dr. Drander, the former Kaiser's chief chapleman, became greatly interested in the peasant prophet and introduced him at that time to more than a dozen university professors, and specialists in occult science.
Amazing Fulfillments
Johansson insisted that "The Voice" instructed him to warn rulers sovereigns, especially the Kaiser, of impending danger against going to war. With visions, as seen at that time, were emerging fulfilled and that fact is creating intense interest in his latest prophecies. He predicts that America is to be involved in five big wars within 14 next thirty years. Some of those will be a complication with Canada. He says that about 1925, war will break out between England and India, beginning with a rising in Northern India. The English will be driven into the sea and 25,000,000 in that war. Decisive battles will be fought at Calcutta and Delhi.
Franco-Spanish War.
Egypt and other African colonies will follow the example of India in a series of uprisings.
In 1930 France and Spain will be involved in a war.
In 1932 Britain torn with internal dissensions and confeting revolutionary currents until 1958 before the country settles down and becomes quiet again.
Johanson forecasts a French-Russian alliance, and says that in the Summer of 1953 France will invade India. Russia is included in wedgeed, ending in the capitulation of the Scandinavian peninsula.
France's victories will be large, due to enormous air fleets, in which the French are the most powerful. The prophet's visions picture great revolutionary movements throughout Europe.
Houston, Texas, Mar. 19,—(Pacific News Bureau)—The American Mutual Benefit Association, one of the largest and most successful colored organizations in Texas, and whose headquarters is in this city, has established its second branch office in California. Several months ago the American Mutual invaded the Pacific Coast and opened up Southern California headquarters for the supervision of Treasurer W. B. Cogle, and Manager Normon Houston. Encouraged by their success in Southern California, a branch office for the headquarters of Northern California was established. Presly Winfield formerly of the "California Voice" as District Superintendent.
EX-WIZARD FAILS TO
APEAR; FORFEITS BOND
Atlanta, March 20.—Edward Young Clarke, former acting imperial wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, failed to appear or trial in the United States in a case of mails to defund. His bond of $800 was ordered forfeited by Judge S. M. Sibley and it was stated a bench warrior would be issued later in the day.
N. A. A. C. P. MAKES APPEAL FOR FUNDS TO SUPPORT WORK
Secretary Johnson Asks Aid on Basis of Work Done by Association
URGES BRANCH MEMBERSHIP
Peonage and Lynching Hard Hit by Organization, Officers Claim
New York, Mar, 23—The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, today made an Easter-time appeal to colored citizens throughout the United States to support the work of the Association. The appeal is signed by James Weldon Johnson is as follows:
Want Liberal Support.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People goes before the colored people of America, standing on its record of accomplishment, and the work by liberal financial support. Let me only briefly recall a few of the Association's accomplishments:
1. We have delivered a body blow at peonage in America by fighting the cases of the condemned Arkansas farmers tied to the Arkansas State supreme Court, winning a reversal in the cases of five defendants upon which the cases of 74 others in prison now hinge.
2. American lynching has been made a world-wide issue. The N.A.A. lynching Bill thouh it failed to engage in the Senate after being forced through the House of Representatives, is not yet dead.
3. We have taught the Southern States that they cannot extradite colored men where they are lynching instead of a fair trial.
4. In every part of the country, the N. A. A. C. P. interests itself in legal defense, and as far as its meager means permit, employs lawyers to defend them and prevents gross injustice against the Negro in America.
Urge Joining Branches.
This work costs money. If it is to continue as it has in the past, then colored Americans must give and give generously. The N. A. A. C. P. publishes a newsletter for every cent received and expended.
We make this Easter-time appeal, confident that the record of our achievement will speak for itself.
The Branches of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People throughout the country will drive for membership. You can help the Association by joining the branch in your community. If there is no branch there, you can help by sending your contribution, by check or money order, to J. E. Spingarn, Treasurer 70 Fifth Avenue, New York City.
(Signed) James Weldon Johnson
"Things Hard To Be Understood"
By E. W. Gilles
We are but children in God's school and the Bible is to be our textbook for years to come as well as for the present, and we do well to leave the "things hard to be understood" until we get more light on them later on.
ADVERTISE IN THE APPEAL THE DEPENDABLE MEDIUM
BY H
HOUSE
Dyer Presented Cane By Philippine Colony
New York, Mar. 23.—Representative Leonidas C. Dyer of Missouri who introduced the Dyer Anti-Lynching Bill in the House of Representatives has written to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, 70 Fifth Avenue, New York City, telling how, on a recent visit to the Philippine Islands, he was presented with a beautiful cane by colored citizens, resident in Manila in recognition of his services in behalf of the Anti-Lynching Bill. His letter says:
"During my recent visit to the Orient and while at Manila, P. I, I was waited upon by a committee of colored citizens of the United States, resident in Manila, presented to me very beautiful cane.
"I thought you might be interested in this. It was very much appreciated by me."
PICKENS CLEARS UP HELL ARTICLE
Author Say Important Words Were Omitted, Giving False Impression
New York—In a statement made public last week, Dr. William Pickens points out to the critics of his article on religion in the February Messenger magazine that he has been misquired and has accused him of saying:
"Our fathers used to say: "A false report can travel 40 leagues while the true report is pulling its boots on." The writer of this editorial said recently and incidentally among other things that he does not believe in a material hell, a material heaven, or universal bodily resurrection. The reporters of these words, perhaps to "boil down" (or to boil over) things, dropped the subject out anyway, "obviously," and reported: "Pickens says no hell, no heaven, no resurrection."
That is just as if we would say: "There is no golden moon," and some fellow would report: "Pickens says no hell, no heaven, no resurrection."
Most of the intelligent and all of the younger preachers we know, say also that these things are not material, but that they are spiritual. So that we did not regard ourselves as divine out any answer information. In the last 20 years we have heard, we supose, thousands of ministers use these terms, and none of the intelligent ones ever spoke of a fire-brimstone hell or a golden heaven, except as figures of speech.
People will learn by and by that it is risky to comment on any important report, unless we first verify the report. We must out an important qualifying word of a proposition, is to change the proposition, is to make another proposition. So we say: "Lies are like snowballs—the bigger they grow."
Vesper services at the "T" Center are growing with popularity, and the audience on last Sunday was treated to a most interesting lecture by Dr. Earl S. Baker. The services Sunday, which 28 percent of the health talks by Dr. Weber, and the public is cordially invited to join the regular attendance. The Tri-Mu Girls will hold a paper sale on April 14, and ask that if there are any old papers in your attic, for you to call the Center and they the glad to send someone for them. The dress-making and millinery classes are holding many profitable evenings, both from an educational viewpoint and from pure pleasure. Mrs. George Mundell is instructor in dress making and the class meets the mom is teacher of Military, and her class meets Tuesday at the same hour. You are invited to join these classes and may receive information at the Center.
GARVEY MUST PAY BILL
OF $1,700 FOR JAZZ
New York, Mar. —Jazz must be paid for, a jury in the City Court decided yesterday in the case of William Isles, colored, against the Universal Negro Improvement Association and the Union of Common League. On behalf of eightteen fellow dispensers of syngocated harmony, Isles sued for $1,700 due the Black Star Line Band for providing the above mentioned harmony at association meetings in Liberty Hall. The band severed relations with the association last month. It has been mentioned that our or our colleague Liberty Hall, but objected when asked to play at a Democratic meeting in the same place—nothing against the Democrats, just a case of not believing in overtime work without overtime wages. But when that matter was settled by bank disappending, there was still money, $1,700. Jury took twenty-due minutes to announce a verdict of $1,739.57 for the plaintiff.
"Yours very truly,
"L. C. DYER."
---
"Y" NOTES
$2.00 PER YEAR
MEASURE BANS WEARINGMASKS BEFORE PUBLIC
Sponsor Myrtle Cain is Promised Passage in Senate Under Suspension of Rules
TWO DISSENTING VOTES
Wis. Senate Passes Similar Measure Without Any Opposition
Representatives Myrtle Cain, author of the bill aimed at the Ku Klux Klan, prohibiting the wearing of masks or other regalia on property within the view of the public, dragged the measure before the House Tuesday and had it passed under a suspension of the rules. The vote was 96 to 2.
The two members voting against it were Representatives G. A. K. Anderson and Lewis Duemke.
Representatives Cain explained to the House members that she did not have companion bill in the Senate, and that she had been promised its passage in the upper branch under a suspension of the rules if she could get it there within a few days.
LEGISLATORS HAVE
SMOKE ON REP. CAIN
For the first "me" in the history of Minnesota, legislators smoked cigars yesterday afternoon at the expense of the public. After the passage of her bill to prohibit the wearing of masks in public, Miss Cain brought several other legislators home to pages pass them in the to her men colleagues in the house.
WISCONSIN SOLONS
BAN MASK IN PUBLIC
Madison, Wis. March 21. Without opposition the Wisconsin senate today engrossed a committee on state affairs bill making it a misdemeanor for any person to appear in public for the punishment or for the punishment to conceal his identity. Violation of the proposed statute would be punishable by a fine of $1,000 or imprisonment for six months. His measure, aimed at the Ku Ku Klu Klu, a composite of bills introduced into the senate by individual members.
BRYAN NOW DECLARES
FOR WHITE SUPREMACY
Commoner Changes Views to Fit Mood of New Neighbors in Florida
Washington—Mr. Bryan left Nebraska for Nebraska's good and has been living in Florida during the past ten years. He wanted to be elected Senator in the last shake up in Florida but he failed to connect. The Boston Christian Science Monitor's Washington correspondent reports Mr. Bryan as follow:
"He argued that the Jeffersonian doctrine about 'all men being created free and equal' could not be literally interpreted or enforced where there is a manifest inferiority as between men of similar condition and another. Amid such condition, the civilization, he said, would and must be the ascendant factor. As such ascendancy has prevailed in the South, Mr. Bryan pointed out, it had made for justice for the black under laws, which are fashioned by whites, protected blacks and their rights in full measure.
"Mr. Bryan told how that for a decade he had seen those laws at work. They had convinced him no other system was possible. Men and women were both light and the south's way of meeting its race problem to be reprehensible, speedily would realize the unwisdom of such criticism, once they had, as he had had, direct contact with the real Bryan with the real method is imprecise, preferable to the 'theocratic doctrines of Massachusetts or the experiment of Illinois,'
INDIANS ON WARPATH
SHOCK STAID GOTHAM
Defective Page
(Crusader Service)
New York, March 23—Three Iroquois Indians got more dwarfwater than was good for them yesterday afternoon, went on the war path and descended with whoops worthy of their ancestors upon the corner of Myrtle Avenue and Bridge Street, two blocks from the heart of the shopping district. By the time the busiest corners in the borough was wilderness in which no white man was to be seen save two bruised and battered patrolmen in a gutter.
302 Court Block, 24 E. 4th St.
PHONE CEDAR 5649
Entered at the Postoffice in St. Paul, Minne-
sota, as second-class mail matter, June
6, 1885, under Act of Congress,
March 3, 1879.
TERMS STRICTLY IN ADVANCE
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AMERICAN MORALISTS
Gilbert K. Chesterton, the English writer in a recent address on prohibition, made a typical G. K. C. remark when he asked how a nation which permits colored Americans to be lynched and burned alive "has any right to set itself up as an exemplar of morality for the rest of the world." In another column we print the exceedingly interesting reply of an editorial writer on the St. Paul Daily News. Prohibition has all of a sudden become a question of efficiency; it never was a moral question; it came simply and purely as a means of increasing the efficiency of the Americans. All this, of course, since the comparative morality of lynching and burning humans has been brought into the discussion.
Until now, that objection that has been made against the Eighteenth amendment has been made on the grounds that it attempts to regulate private morality. Candidates have been swept into office upon the single plank of objection to the taking away of "liberty" by the amendment. Not a little of Governor Al Smith's plurality was due to this kind of a plank. It would never do, however, to admit that Americans are trying to regulate morals by prohibiting the manufacture and sale of liquor. That would throw their moral stand open to such nasty and inconvenient questions as Mr. Chesterton's. Hence we dodge the issue and set upon a subordinate argument for prohibition as the main one. The hope that Mr. Chesterton or any one of lesser intelligence will be deceived by this argument is in vain. He, with others, can still ask why Americans moralists and sentimentalists worry about "barbarians," "atrocities," and "outrages" in every corner of the world except within the borders of the United States. We would like to hear the writer of The News or any other paper explain why an atrocity committed by the Turks, say, on the Armenians is more deserving of the attention of American moralists and humanitarians than an atrocity committed by a Georgia mob on a black man? The fundamental point is that the morality of Americans, is hypocritical and opportunistic, and no amount of word fencing such as the "Take It or Leave It" editorial can hide the acts of Americans, which Mr. Chesterton has seen so clearly and interpreted so accurately.
TAKE IT OR LEAVE IT
Gilbert Chesterton, English writer, ridicules our prohibition as "that curious colonial experiment across on the other side."
Chesterton, who has mental hyperacidity, asks how a nation which permits negroes to be lynched and burned alive "has any right to set itself up as an exemplar of morality" for the rest of the world.
The answer to this is that the average American doesn't care whether the rest of the world drinks or not, and knows it's none of his business. But get this, Ches: Prohibition came in America not as a moral question, but as an economic one—a simple matter of efficiency.
Wet England eventually will have prohibition, or be unable to compete in foreign trade with dry America. Liquor lowers efficiency.
THE NULLIFIERS
Any American citizen, even though he has no interest in prohibition, cannot fail to be impressed by the discrepancy between the eagerness displayed in the south for the enforcement of the prohibition amendment and the expressed determination to nullify the thirteenth and fourteenth amendments to the same constitution Permit me to offer a quotation from an editorial attributed by our press clipping agency to the Columbia (S.C.) state of Feb. 10: "Is it any wonder that with the constant menace of Negro rule under the system of 'universal manhood suffrage' decreed for the south by the north, and the representatives of civ-
THE MAN WHO DARES
I honor the man
entious discharge o
stand alone; the w
intolerant judgmen
the countenances o
averted, and the he
cold, but the sense
be sweeter than the
world, the counten
the hearts of friend
I honor the man who in the conscientious discharge of his duty dares to stand alone; the world, with ignorant, intolerant judgment, may condemn, the countenances of relatives may be averted, and the hearts of friends grow cold, but the sense of duty done shall be sweeter than the applause of the world, the countenances of relatives or the hearts of friends.—Charles Sumner.
ilization here took measures to restrict that suffrage and perpetuate civilization?"
This paragraph constitutes one of innumerable public admissions by southern citizens, newspaper editors and public men that the United States constitution is to continue being made a scrap of paper when the white southerner does not happen to like its provisions. It remains a question whether there is greater danger to civilization in permitting the colored man to exercise his constitutional prerogatives or in nullifying the basic document of that civilization at the will of dominant majorities.
(James Weldon Johnson to the Chicago Daily News.)
OUT OF THE MOUTH OF BABES
(Chicago, Evening Post.)
Here is wisdom, O, ye poets and essayists and fiction writers! Here is wisdom from the mouth of a babe. May we, in our own craft, lay it to heart.
Miss Levine, who edits the Boys and Girls' Post, has just shown us a poem in three stanzas contributed by one of her young readers, to which the author appends the following postscript:
"There is much more to write, but it spoils the poem."
Blessed infant, who taught thee this golden secret of the writing art, this secret which so many never learn, though they live to be bent and gray in the service of letters?
You are too young yet to know how many a poem and essay and book, how many an editorial has been spilled by the needless word, the padding line the uninspired elaboration. But if you will cherish this secret, live by it in the realm of intellect and imagination, write by it in the joy of expression and creation, you may yet earn the glad praise of critics who know better than they can perform.
HOME BUYERS MUST HURRY
(St. Paul, Pioneer Press.)
Demand for homes and home building sites in St. Paul is stronger than it has been for years. No better evidence of reviving prosperity and confidence in the future could be found than this fact. After the brisk building campaign of last year, especially of residences and apartment houses, the present rush to buy cannot be attributed to much greater shortage in the supply than in 1922, inadequate as it is. The explanation is the prospective severe dreath of houses on account of the Ford plant and other new business establishments, with the consequent great increase in population. The homeless citizen—meaning the one who does not own his habitation—is coming to a decision to buy or build. He has hesitated in the past, because of a doubt whether present values of real estate would be maintained. If he is wise, he is no longer in doubt, but is sure that values are bound to rise. This consideration is a vital one when one is not able to pay all cash for a home. If he has 1,000 or $1,500 for a first payment, he need not fear to undertake building on the contract plan or taking over another person's contract, because the home will be worth, while he is paying for it and when he has it clear, as much or more than he agrees to pay.
The spring demand by house buyers has set in much earlier than usual. Realtors report more home seekers in the middle of March than ordinarily appear in the second week in April. Not only are there more in the market than at any time in
THE SIN OF
To sin by silent protest makes co-The human race has test. Had no voice injustice, ignorance quisition yet would
To sin by silence when we should protest makes cowards out of men. The human race has climbed on protest. Had no voice been raised against injustice, ignorance and lust, the inquisition yet would serve the law, and guillotines decide our least disputes. The few who dare must speak and speak again to right the wrongs of many.—Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
1921 or 1922 but more than in 1919 and 1920, which were active years. The lesson of this story is that those who need a home in the near future and cannot wait to build will have to hurry to get what they want, as every day takes some desirable building out of the market. Those who intend to build cannot afford to delay while desirable sites are advancing in price.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Editor, The Appeal:
“Language”, said Talleyrand, “is used to conceal thought.” Now this requires an adroit hand; the thought ought to defy detection. Of the U. N. I. A. letter, written to Mayo McShane by some women of the New Orleans branch of Garvey’s organization, this can not be said. An angry gesture betrays them. They more than the Crowd” the newspaper to public view their hatred for ‘certain persons of importance.’ I repeat the paragraph: “We are not members of the Negro ‘400’ of New Orleans, which is composed of that class who are spending their time imitating the rich whites with card parties, eating parties, and studying Spanish so as to be able to pass for anything but a Negro, thereby getting
Is there not something menacing, sinister, here? Here? Is this not stirring race hatred with a vengeance? What is there more provocative to white Southern wrath than this insinuating "spending their time imitating the rich whites" and "studying Spanish so as to be able to pass for anything more sinister" thereby getting a chance to associate with you." Mark that last, especially!
In 1918, Dr. W. E. B, DuBois attributed the riots in Washington, in part, "to the infliction of a large number of Southerners (white) into Washington, and to the presence in Washington, and to the way they treatedives of the educated, well-dressed class of Negroes which white racial antagonists dislike." One takes it, that this "four hundred" is composed of a circle of friends, who, with definition, are not copied from others, enjoy themselves and are at ease with one another. One can not help but perceive a billious envy in this fulmination of Octavia Franklin, Essie Hathaway and Dan. Flanss. The letter that these women so angrily wrote to their mayor contains wretched English. Their "four hundred" they say is cultivating Spanish. Might it not be well for G. W. Hathaway and Essie Hathaway and Octavia Franklin, study English? They wrote, I believe, not because they loved "Jim Crowem" more but because they loved their "400 less"; not because they loved "400 more"; not because they were Neo-unity, because they were by a consciousness of their inferiority.
COLORED MINFRS NOT TO
DIG COAL IN RUHR
(Crusader Service.)
Washington, Mar. 16. — Official denial was made by the French Embassy today of reports that American colored miners are to be imported into the Ruhr to operate the mines in lace of German workmen.
The embassy officials did not go into details beyond stating the reports are false. At the State Department it was said this Government had received no information supoprting the story.
Washington, Mar. 16. —Secretary of State Hughes has never been consulted regarding the plan of Harry V. Gupta, international detective, to transport 5,000 miners from West Virginia to the Ruhr coal fields, it is learned at the State Department.
INSIST MASCOT BE SAVED FIRST
Crew Refuses to Budge From Sinking Ship Until Small Dog Is Resoued.
BECOMES HELPLESS IN GALE
Italian Freighter Montello Succumbs to Mid-Atlantic Storm After Days and Nights of Ceaseless Struggle.
New York—The Giuseppe Verdi steamed into port, two days late from Naples, with graphic details of the rescue of the crew of the Italian freighter Montello, which succumbed to a mid-Atlantic storm.
The rescued men—33 in all—were aboard, one of them in sick bay with a cracked skull and smashed feet. On January 10 the Monte salvo sailed from Philadelphia for Marselles, her wheat-filled holds pushing her far beyond the water, and about 400 miles north of Bernuda, it encountered, a whistling norwest.
MILITARY POLICE
"Nanett," the Montello's Mascot.
For three bleak days, with her crew never out of oilskins, straining engines shoved the Montello ahead at eight knots. On Monday night at 10 o'clock she healed over. Her rudder chains had jammed. Then they had broken.
The vessel was helpless 400 miles from land and in a hurricane sea.
Then the bulked grain shifted and the ship listed.
Ship Fills Rapidly.
Waves washed the deck at every lunge. The coal bunkers floated and water poured into the ship faster than the exhausted men could pump it out.
It was not until 8 o'clock Tuesday morning that Capt. Sturse permitted Wireless Operator Tomasco Montanari to ask aid. The Verdil, 100 miles away answered, and arrived at 3 o'clock that afternoon.
It was impossible to launch boats in that sea. So the Verdl, with 610 passengers aboard, spent the night circled about the waterlogged Montello, whose decks now were continually under water.
The Verdl's passengers knelt in prayer. Among them knelt four nuns. The ship's chaplain, Gluseppe Verdl, chanted the Te Deum, and plaintive Italian voices repeated it.
Boat is Launched.
The sea thwarted an effort to launch a boat at dawn. At 7:30 the Montello got a boat overboard.
The first lowered into the heaving shell was the Montello's mascot, Nanetti, a water spaniel. Twenty-two men followed the dog. The crew had refused to budge until the pup was saved. A battle of an hour and a half brought the weary sailors close to the Verdl's side. As they grasped for lines and life belts, a swell washed over their boat and eleven went overboard. All were saved.
A half hour later First Officer Stagnaro and members of the Verdi's crew rescued the eleven remaining aboard the Montello. The freighter sank as the Verdi turned her nose toward New York.
BILLWOULD REGULATE SLEEP
New Hampshire Legislator Protesta "Freak Measures"; One Probes Homes.
Concord, N. H.—The speaker of the New Hampshire legislature protested against the introduction of "freek legislation" after four bills had been presented to the house. One bill would make eight hours' sleep in twenty-four compulsory; another provided for the appointment of a commission to live in all homes to determine whether they are happy. A third measure would enact that no woman shall marry her grandmother's son. The fourth would ordain that the Ku Klux Klan must not call meetings unless authorized by the kleagle.
Meaneest Man.
Breckenridge, Minn.—A new type of the "meanest man" has been discovered here.
One-night recently some person or persons entered a graveyard here and cut down several evergreen trees and carried them away.
RESS CONGRESS URGES FREEDOM IN THE NEWS
St. Louis, Mo., Mar. 16—A state court unrestricted transmission of news was issued by the Executive committee of the Press Congress of the World, following a meeting here today.
"Before the next war comes, if it comes Governments and nations must convince that, in the long run, the United States will not start referring to the grand series of lies put over in the press during the last war."
WHY WE SHOULD CARE FOR
OUR TEETH.
By E. S. WEBER, D. D. S.
There is only one short period in life when the mouth is steril (free from bacteria) and that is just a few hours after birth. From the 6th to the 10th hours it begins to have a bacterial flora, recognizable at the mouth by microscopic examination. The first species found are various coci (staphylococci, Streptococci, the pigment-forming coci of the air) and the spore bearing air bacteria. From this time on the mouth is the normal habitat for these bacteria, and they are genic or disease producing bacteria. With the appearance of the teeth, the flora which was previously uniform throughout the mouth, changes; there are added certain other species which live by preference in the ginic or interproximal spaces. They are constant in the asteristic mouth bacteria, but their presence is to be explained not by any change in the constitution of the tissues of the mouth, but in the formation of spaces where food material may accumulate and produce infection may occur. This is the reason this then is one of the reasons why we should take care of our teeth.
There are some essentials necessary for the growth and life of bacteria, namely, light, heat, moister, food, and air. All these essentials are found in the mouth, hence we must imitate the mouth our mouths is so healthy and sanitary condition to arrest the growth and multiplication of these germs. It is through their growth and multiplication that they become strong and more virulent (very venomous; capable of producing disease). This growth is encouraged when the mouth is neglected and when we do not surround around the teeth giving them an abundant supply of food to live on. Decayed teeth also encourage their growth, because a decayed tooth is plainly speaking a rotten tooth, which harbors rotten and putresse matter, and it is in this kind of medium that bacteria derive and multiply more easily. How significant it is to keep the mouth free from deposits and broken down decayed teeth.
By keeping the mouth so, we automatically build up a strong power of resistance, a fortification, as it were, to subdue the attacks of the bacteria. Bacteria are rightly called "COW" because they are the most common an area that is strongly fortified. They lie in wait of some area where the resistance has been lowered, where the fortification has been torn down. There is where they lodge and cause constant destruction to the weakened area.
We have to our teeth all sorts of things can happen, such as, caries (decay of the teeth), spungy bleeding gums, foul breath, gingivitis (inflammation of the gums), and subsequent pyorrhea of the gums, abscessed teeth, and loss of the teeth entirely.
From some of the conditions aforementioned in the previous chapter, Science has discovered that broken down abscessed teeth and pyorrhea of the gums have been the source of many diseases such as, rheumatism, stomach disorders, heart diseases, infections in the eye, ear, nose and mouth, and so on, fact, such conditions can be the source of disease to the organs that are nourished through the blood stream.
The question might arise as to how pyrrohea or abscessed teeth cause such disorders? For purpose of ex-amination, a patient who has neglected his mouth to the extent that pyrrohea has set in, in the real sense of the word, or he has some broken down abscessed teeth.
The case of the pyrroytic patient, he is constantly swallowing these germs along with his food, saliva, and drinks. By this process these germs are introduced into the stomach where the food is partially prepared for the nourishment of the body. These germs of course accompany the food that is prepared for the nourishment of the body and its organs. Now, as stated before, bacteria are "COW, ABS, ABS, ABS, pick the weakest organ for lodgment, which lung, a stomach, a heart, or any of the vital organs. When they find one that is weak they constantly attack it until they have overpowered it. By these constant attacks they will lower the germ which an extent that any disease germ can gain entrance and produce disease.
In the case of the patient with abscessed teeth, the process is the same, except that the bacteria get into the blood stream directly, through the blood vessels and vymphs which the mouth contains. The mouth is called "THE GATEWAY TO INFECTION," and this is true in every sense of the word. Everything that we give our system for nourishment must primarily go through or rather pass through the mouth in a sanitary condition, free from all deposits, all decayed teeth, anticidia conditions, and abscessed teeth. (The subject of the next article by Dr. Weber will be PYORRHEA.)
COLORED WOMEN ENTER
BALTIMORE POLITICS
(Pacific News Bureau.)
Baltimore, Md., Mar. 16.—For the first time in the history of Baltimore, colored women were in attendance at the annual G. O. P. banquet. Headed by Miss Hazel MacBeth, vice-chairman of the 14th ward, a delegation of colored women were seated at tables at the great political banquet recently in Hazeraz Hall. Mayor Broening, the "next Mayor of Baltimore," was the main speaker, Miss Pearl A. Eader urged the women to vote saying, "Women should not call politics a nasty game, sit sugely at home, then complain of unsatisfactory officials whom they have made no effort in helping to choose." Miss Hazel MacBeth, the leader of the city education, produced of the city schools, a prominent and political worker, and a member of one of the best known pioneer families of the city.
New York, Mar, 16—The will of Horatio P. Howard, who died Feb. 20, at 205 W. 11th street, gives $5,000 to institute to establish scholarships for deserving colored students to be known as the Captain Paul Cuffee Scholarships. The residuary estate includes antigues. The will was filed yesterday.
NAVY KEEPS UP SALVAGE WORK
Service Developed During the World War Proves Important in Peace.
PROFITS FROM EXPERIENCE
Most Complete and Modern Salvage Vessels Ever Built Are Doing Good Service Along the Coasts—Remarkable Feats.
Washington—One of the interesting developments in the United States navy as the result of wartime experience was the building up of a salvage service, designed to aid in the saving of wrecked ships and the recovery of cargoes and valuable ship's gear. When the country entered the World war the navy possessed no regular salvage service, although collections of salvaging machinery had been made at several depots, and apparatus and been brought to a high degree of efficiency. But this was used mostly in connection with experimental work in dring at various targets simulating vessels.
However, when the gathering of United States vessels, large and small, in European harbors resulted in many incidental minor accidents, and the operations of enemy submarines called for equipment to save costly boats and their cargos, the navy was quick to respond. The ship soon repaid the cost of organization, but has since resulted in great savings.
Establish Salvage Stations.
Establish Salvage Stations.
The first step the navy took was the establishment of a section of the bureau of construction and repair, draw personnel and equipment from private salvaging companies. Salvage stations were established along the Atlantic coast by taking over many private concerns, and by August, 1917, a salvage unit had arrived in France. This consisted of the navy's first salvage vessel, the U. S. S. Favorite, a 1,200-ton ship equipped with the finest tools and machinery for recovering wrecked vessels. She was stocked with diving equipment, pumps, and cutting and welding tools for both underwater and surface work. A 25-ton derrick was additions.
Immediately upon her arrival in France she started salvaging operations that kept her buoy with not an idle day for eighteen months. Her work consisted in pulling boats, large and small, off the beaches, raising them off the bottom, rescuing torpedoed ships and towing disabled ships to port. The vessel played an important part in repairing the transport Mount Vernon, which was torpedoed after leaving Breast, and then placed a cofferdam, the largest that has ever been installed in a disabled ship, on the U. S. Westbridge. Almost any one of the vessels the salvage ship rescued resulted in saving more than the cost of outfitting and maintaining her.
Joined by Two Others.
This vessel was shortly joined by two others, the Chesapeake and the Manna Hata, all equipped with the most modern gear, and though they continued to do their valuable work for many months, it was not a spectacular task and the men who imperfect their lives received little recognition. One of the important feats they accomplished was the salvage of the British vessel Narragransett, after the attempt had been given up by the British. The American ships came along with advice and equipment that made a success of what had appeared a hopeless task. The Favorite, while in France, was the most complete and modern salvage ever sent out, and attracted the attention of the foremost American investigations of the infall of 1919, all salvaging operations having closed, the Favorite returned home, and the other two ships were sold to a British salvage concern with full equipment. The former then was placed in the service of the Pana canal, where she is now doing herloe work.
However, the wartime experience showed the navy the need of such vessels, so two were equipped especially for the purpose, the Falcon and the Widgeon. They are comparatively small, strongly built and have the finest equipment. They can work in rough and shallow waters where other vessels could not venture. The Widgeon, they are used on the west coast while the Falcon, which has been in service along the Atlantic for some time, has already been valuable in the recovery of two submarines sunk in accidents.
HITS EXCUSE-ME-BOSS CLUB
New York City Puts Beggars on Card Index System and Provides for Work.
New York.—The thousands of members of what is known on Broadway as the "Excuse-Me-Mister club" must either go to work or leave the city, under a decree made public here.
One hundred organizations have united with the city administration to rid the metropolis of thousands of beggars who have drifted here for the winter to lure the easy dime from naive New Yorkers.
A card index system is planned, recording the biography of pre-eminent "panhandlers."
BOY SCOUTS
(Conducted by National Council of the Boy
Scouts of America.)
BOY SCOUTS AND OTHER BOYS
"Fifty thousand boy scouts judiciously placed in Chicago would virtually put the delinquent department of the juvenile court out of business," says Judge Victor P. Arnold of the Juvenile court, Cook county, Illinois. "The scout program provides for the growing boy the opportunity of learning by doing, fills in his leisure so completely that he seidom has the opportunity or inclination to associate with questionable companions, or to do any of the hundred and one things that a real American boy can do when time hangs heavily on the hands. It is the most perfect program ever given to the boyhood of the world, training for citizenship through service." Scouting's powerful influence in character "training and citizenship building is recognized by observing people everywhere.
The prevention of juvenile delinquency and the respect for law and order that the boy scout gains is a wonderful result of the training. Scouting has completely turned around the old idea that boys and police are natural enemies. Today the boy scout stands for law and order, and is the policeman's co-worker and friend. Troop 96 of Minneapolis has the privilege of holding its meetings in the First Precinct Police station, and the police official in charge of the district declares that "The scouts know the police as their friends and helpers."
Boy scouts have acted under direction of the police in practically every city of the country, in directing traffic during congestion, in assisting children across streets, in patrolling at parades, and in performing first-aid in times of emergency and disaster. The boy scout movement is converting "the gang" into groups of healthy, wholesome boys, and directing their energy to community welfare and service to others.
Guardians of public safety In official co-operation with the police is a new role which scouts of Greater New York will soon fill, if plans mature which are now under consideration by officials of the New York police department and officials of the Boy-Scouts of America. The boys will have opportunity to qualify through certain regulated work as municipal aldes. A method will be worked out whereby scouts will in turn be permitted to do community work. Honor awards will be given to scouts performing outstanding work in community safety.
SANITARIUM HAS TROOP
Scouting is for every boy. There are troops of boys with all their faculties and troops of deaf, dumb, blind and crippled scouts. Sick or well, a "boy is a boy for a that," with the same hopes and ambitions.
At the Westfield (Mass.) Sanitarium for Tuberculosis, a most successful troop of 75 boys is in operation.
The patient scouts hall with glee their instructors when they come to the sanitarium, and because the scouts have the entire week to study up, they have become very proficient in all tests, passing except hiking and swimming which are beyond their strength, and keep their corps of examiners very busy.
Other authorities say the program has meant much to boys in their illness, because of the emphasis on cheerfulness, thought for others, out-of-door life and its incentive to a boy to keep physically fit, mentally awake and morally straight.
When a scout is cured, the santarium keeps in touch with the local scout executive, sees that the boy gets into a troop in his home town, so that he will continue his out-of-door life, and become what scouting would have him, a sturdy man fitted for citizenship responsibilities.
GOOD TURN FOR DALLAS
The Dalias script marked up another civic good turn when he recorded among recent activities, the assistance the scouts rendered at the City Fair association, in delivering tickets for the sale of thrift tickets sold for the purpose of erecting a manufacturing and automobile exhibition hall.
BOY SCOUTS DO GOOD SERVICE
Troop 1, Huntington Park, Cal., recently distributed 5,000 pieces of school literature and 3,000 Parent-Teachers' association notices.
BOY SCOUTS' GOOD TURN
Good turns by radio are a specialty with Troop 5, Providence, R. I. Recently these boys installed a radio set in the largest ward of the Rhode Island hospital, and shifted the serial from time to time so that all the patients could in turn be entertained. At Christmas time the boys repeated this good turn, and in addition installed a set of their own construction in the children's ward, and presented it to the small patients for their own use.
NEEK'S RECORD OF HAPPENINGS
IN MINNECOTA'S CAPITAL.
The "Saintly City" and Saintly City
Folks—Neway Items of Social, Religious, Political and General Matters Among the People.
SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1923.
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.
Miss Edythella Adams left Friday for a trip to Detroit and Chicago.
The O. N. T. 500 club met Friday afternoon with Mrs. C. H. Miller, 428 Edmund St.
Mr. Roy Wilkins spent last Saturday in St. Cloud on business for the United Charities.
Mrs. Lola Anderson, 881 Marion St. has been joined to her home with rheumatism.
Mrs. R. Allen of St. Anthony Ave., was hostess Tuesday afternoon to the Matrons of the Round Table Club.
The Adelphia Club will meet March 27th, at 2:30 P. M. at the residence of Mrs. Alice Gooden, 514 Fuller Ave.
PIONEER LODGE NO. I. F. AND A. M. at Masonic Hall, 588 Rondo St., at 8:00 P. M.; G. W. L. Jackson, W. M.; J. H. Dillingham, Secy, 569 Rondo St., Tel. Dale 0872.
Mr. and Mrs. G. Mundell and E. W. Lindsay were dinner guests Monday of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Miller, 428 Edmund St.
Office: Cedar 0508 Res.: Dale 2947
Res.: 678 St. Anthony Ave.
MRS. T. H. LYLES
Successor to
T. H. LYLE UNDERTAKING CO.
150 W. Fourth St. ST. PAUL
Mrs. R. N. Goins of Carroll Ave., who was in St. Louis, Mo., the past two months attending the Poro School has returned to the city.
The chicken dinner given at the home of Mrs. Cora Guissom, 1022 Rondo, for the benefit of Crispus Attucks Home, was a grand success.
HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH NO. 553, G. U. O. of O. F. meets the third Monday in each month. Mrs. Jessie Kents streets at 8:00 P.M. M. Mrs. Jessie Brown, M. N. G. Mrs. Carrie E. Lindsay, W. R. 426 Rondo street.
Mrs. Gee, Mundell, 417 Rondo St., was hostess Wednesday afternoon to the Ideal Club. Prizes were awarded to Mesdames, Ida Belle Covington, E. Harris and F. Brown.
Dr. E. S. Weber gave a lecture on "Why we should care for our teeth and the evils that can follow a neglected mouth,"last Sunday at the "Y" Center. The lecture will be continued tomorrow.
INSIST ON GETTING
CLOVER LEAF
BUTTER
TILDEN PRODUCE CO.
CHURNERS
Mrs. Cora Grissom, president of the city federation, urges all of the nineteen clubs that are on the drive for the benefit of Crispus Attucks Home to make their reports on April 6 at the "Y" Center at 3 o'clock.
Don't miss the minstrel to be given April 3, at Union Hall. It will be a scream under the auspices of the city federation. Director Charles H. Miller, chairman, Mrs. Maude Brooks.
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 528 W. Central avenue or calling up Dale 8412. Rates reasonable.
Mr. S. L. Hopkins, 545 Aurora Ave, while on his way to work Monday, was struck by an automobile at Kent and University and was seriously injured. He was taken to the Miller hospital for examination and later removed to his home.
Are You Interested In Getting INTEREST
Free Fur Storage for the Summer Months. See us first.
444 ST. PETER ST. TEL. CEDAR 2919
Mrs. Fannie Bakeman of Winnipeg, Man, arrived in the city yesterday, bringing with her the body of her brother, Weldon Howard, who died last week. The boy will be buried at Oakland cemetery beside his mother, Mrs. R. C. Howard, who died a few years ago. He is survived by a father, three brothers and three sisters. The Howard family was formerly a resident of St. Paul.
Keep in mind the minstrel to be given by the City Federation on April 3 at Union Hall for the benefit of Crispus Attucks Home, directed by Mr. C. H. Miller.
At the annual election of officers of the Handicraft Art, held last Thursday afternoon at Mrs. P. T. Caldwell's resident the following officers were elected: Mrs. Gertrude Harvey 'Pres.;' Mrs. Henreitta Goins, Vice Pres.;' Mrs. Julia Caldwell, Sec.;' Mrs. Mildred Johnson, Treas. and Mrs. Bessie Lucas, Instructress. The hostess presented each member a beautiful pin on which was the name of the club.
Income Tax Facts No. 6
To avoid penalty, income tax returns must be filed with the collector of internal revenue for the district in which the taxpayer lives or has principal place of business on or before midnight of March 15, 1923. Where additional time is required because of illness or absence of the taxpayer from home, the collector may grant, upon application before the return is due, March 15, an extension of not to exceed 30 days. If the return is not made, it will be within the 30 days extension period a request for a further extension must be made to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Washington, D. C. Collectors have not authority to grant an extension exceeding 30 days.
Failure to make a return on time subjects the delinquent to a penalty of $1,000 and an additional penalty of 25 per cent of the amount of tax due. If the failure is willful, however, or an attempt is made to evade the tax by filing a false return, the offender is liable to imprisonment and to a fine of not more than $10,000 and costs. in addition to a penalty of 50 per cent of the amount of tax evaded.
MR. RENTOR!
When a man spends his life paying for rent receipts, he has what he has paid for to bequeath to his wife and children when he dies.
Think It Over and Consult Your Real Estate Dealer
FRED D. McCRACKEN
323 Metropolitan Bank Building.
Tel. Cedar 8190.
THE LEWIS SHOP
"Women's Garments ON CREDIT
As Cheap As For Cash"
Bring in this coupon, it entitles you to all the privileges of the Lewis Credit System.
Saint Paul
744 Rondo
O. SPICER'S DRY GOODS STORE
Money's worth or money
refunded
Full line of Ladies' and Gent's
Silk Hose
Spring and Summer Underwear
at very reasonable prices
235 Rondo, cor. Louis Dale 8415
Exclusive Hatters
Fine Hats and Caps
at popular prices
Charter Gilman $4
Mallory . . $5
Stetsons . . $7
Caps $7.50 to $3.50
Two Stores
29 West 7th
Near St. Peter
7th & Robert
At McCliskey's
CHARTER GILMAN
THE HATTER
We money back our headwear
Semmler's Cash Grocery
Fancy Groceries, Fresh Fruits
and Vegetables
MUSTARD AND TURNIP GREENS
We give Red and Green Trading
Stamps
316 Rondo Dale 6478 740 Rondo
Neckwear Selections
Furnishings Main Floor Direct entrance on Wabasha
GOOD STYLE
BUY YOUR VICTROLA
VICTOR RECORDS
at
W. J. Dyer & Bros.
21-27 West Fifth Street
ianos Saxaphones Sheet M
YLE
OLA and
ORDS
Bros.
sheet
Sheet Music
```markdown
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W. J. Dyer & Bros.
21-27 West Fifth Street
Pianos Saxaphones Sheet Music
W.H.MYERS
STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES
H. DOROSHOW FUR CO.
Advance Showing of Fur Chokers at $4 up.
SAVE YOU 30 TO 40% ON REPAIRING AND REMO
BECAUSE OF OUR LOW RENT
Free Fur Storage for the Summer Months. See us for
PETER ST.
TEL.
DO YOU KNOW—
that there are nearly
50,000 Homes
in the City of Saint Paul and the
Forty-five per cent of them are own
by the occupants.
The opening of a Savings Account w
the beginning of thousands of the
homes. Regular deposits in a Savi
Account made them possible.
It Can Be Done!
Do It With a Savings Account
You can start with $1.00
THE
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF SAINT PAUL
MIFUR CO.
buyers at $4 up
LING AND REMODELING
RENT
months. See us first.
TEL. CEDAR 2919
GOW—
early
homes
Paul and that
m are owned
Account was
bonds of these
in a Savings
table.
Account
with $1.00
BANK
UL
H. DOROSHOW FUR CO.
Advance Showing of Fur Chokers at $4 up
WE SAVE YOU 30 TO 40% ON REPAIRING AND REMODELING
BECAUSE OF OUR LOW RENT
in the City of Saint Paul and that Forty-five per cent of them are owned by the occupants. The opening of a Savings Account was the beginning of thousands of these homes. Regular deposits in a Savings Account made them possible.
Do It With a Savings Account You can start with $1.00 THE
"The Big Bank for the Small Depositor"
KLINKER PHARMACY
Prescription Druggists
MS—SODAS—CANDIES
Dale 2689
Walter W. Sig
FUNERAL DIRT
EMBALMEN
498 W. University
Mackubin
Residence: 424 W.
Dale 882
Walter W. Siggolkow
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
EMBALMER
W. University Ave., Cor.
Mackubin.
Residence: 424 W. Central
THE TIE ATTRACTS THE EYE.
IT OUGHT TO BE BRIGHT AND
RIGHT THIS SPRING.
WE ARE NOW SHOWING ALL
THE NEW EDITIONS IN CORRECT CRAVATS—
RICH COLORS, CLEVER
BLENDINGS, HANDSOME
STRIPES, CHECKS AND FIGURES—
ALL STYLES OF CLASS AND
CHARACTER, IN THE FAVORED SILKS.
Schuneman Evans
"The House of Better Values"
Dale_0482
Great Northern Railway Company
for a series of talks to its patrons, its employes, and the general public concerning transportation problems common to all.
There is an old saying that you cannot hate a man when you are well acquainted with him. Let us get better acquainted and cultivate good will. The entire business activity of the Great Northern's territory is so dependent upon good transportation at low rates that no farmer or business man can afford to be hostile to the Great Northern. Every blow aimed at the railroad, every act of the legislature imposing needless regulations or burdens of expense upon the railroad, damages other business and agriculture as surely as if aimed directly at them. What hurts them, hurts the railroad, and what hurts the railroad hurts them.
If their business is poor, the earnings of the railroad decrease; and if the railroad's business is poor or if its expenses are needlessly increased, that is a double injury to other business: First, it stops the enlargement and improvement of facilities necessary to furnish good railroad service when needed; and second, it makes higher rates necessary, because whatever increases the cost of producing transportation adds ultimately to the expense of other business. In the end, all transportation costs must be paid by the public.
Good feeling is an essential to the success of all partnerships. This one includes not only the railroad and all the people along its lines, but all railroad employees as well. If they will think well and speak well of their employer, realizing that whatever hurts one hurts the other, it will help amazingly to prevent misunderstanding and promote the welfare of both.
It will be our aim in subsequent talks to make these truths clear and plain to everyone.
OUR BUSINESS IS YOUR BUSINESS
LOUIS W. HILL
Chairman of the Board.
Besides our display of New Easter Modes, we are doing a wonderful business in remodeling and making to order.
Kent & Rondo Quality Corner
White Front Provision Co.
Formerly St. Anthony Provision Co.
GROCERIES AND MEATS
Full line of fresh Vegetables
Fresh Fish in Season
Watch for our opening date!
C. A. Frederick, Prop.
559 St. Anthony Ave. Cor. Kent
CASH PAID FOR OLD GOLD
Gold in any form including old jewelry, dental crowns and bridges; also platinum and silver.
FRANK A. UBEL
478 WABASHA ST.
We Satisfy
Busy Corner
Rondo and Western
Staple and Fancy Groceries
Cigars, Cigarettes, Tobacco and
Candy
Ice Cream and Soft Drinks
381 Rondo Dale 8807
STOP COUGHING!
BROTCHNER'S COUGH SYRUP
WILL STOP COUGHS
AND COLDS
Prescriptions Properly Prepaired
-at-
Brotchner's Pharmacy
Dale & Rondo
Tel. Dale 3454
Central Cash and Carry Grocery
263 W. Central, Cor. Jay
FULL LINE OF FRESH FRUITS
AND VEGETABLES.
Come and Give Us a Trial
Great No
$15.00
This Garland Steamer Trunk is built from best materials throughout. The box is 3-ply veneer wood, hard vuleanized fiber covered. The hardware is cold rolled steel.
This Trunk is full cloth lined, 37-inch and 40-inch.
Sixth at Cedar GARLAND LUGGAGE SHOP Sixth at Cedar
For
SHOES
Try
This Pair
High Grade Oxfords
Our fair policy and our exceptional low prices would mean little to you if the shoes themselves were not of the type upon which you could safely depend in giving you complete satisfaction.
The Edwin Clapp SHOE Custom like shoes and excise Stanley-Reem Shoe Co. 400 Robert Street—Ryan Hotel
MINNEAPOLIS
‘THE DoInas IN AND ABOUT THE
GREAT “FLOUR CITY." *
‘Which Have Happened and Are to,
Happen Among the People of can
City.
SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 1923. |
‘The Anti-lynching ‘ise
arters are located at 501 Kasota
Bidg.. phone Geneva 4484, resident
phone Dinsmore 7258. We would ap-
preciate the co-operation of all in-
terested. in the posing “of the Dyer
bill and especially the women of the
‘Twin Cities and vicinity.
Queen of Sheba Unit of Minneapo-
lis wil give a comedy in one act, en-
titled “How a Woman Keeps a
Secret” and a Grand Ball at Elks
Hal, on Thursday evening, April 5.
Make this entertainment a success!
‘Why? Because Electa Grand Chap-
ter O. E. S., Iowa and Jurisdiction.
will hold its Sixteenth Annual Com-
munication June 19 to 23, entertained
by Queen of Sheba Chapter No. 24
O. E. S., St. Paul, and this Unit ir
endeavoring to help do itg part to-
ward the entertaining. “King
Solomon” wil crown the “Queen of
Sheba” at our May entertainment.
‘Watch for the date and the place.
Recent Developements-At
Voteransville -
The “Soldier Town Where Dreams
Come True.”
The settlement of disabled sol-
diers at White Pine, near McGrath
Minn., under the auspices of the U
S. Veterans’. Bureau has _popular!:
deen called Veteransville since its in
ception. That name is now officialls
correct. because the postoffice depart
ment has so designated it and ap
pointed Charles C. Hatfield, one o
the veterans, as pees
‘The Woman's Overseas League o’
Minneapolis has interested itself ir
equipping a community club room a
Veteransville. It has already col
lected and shipped truckloads of fur
niture, rugs, pictures, bocks, a sew
ing machine, a phonograph ‘and rec
cords, subscriptions for magazine
have been made so that a regula
supply will be furnished. The effort
of these loyal women assures thi
soldier community of a splendid clu’
room to promote social life on th
project, and will be an aid to thi
ideal farming community.
Charles Bowe who hag been spe
cialist in charge of agriculture fo"
District No. 10 of the U. S. Veterans
Bureau has resigned that position tr
take charge of the instruction to br
given the disabled men, under thr
contract with the board’ of education
There will be three men on the staff
Mr. Bowe as supervisor and market-
ing specialist, one expert in land
clearing and’ livestock, and one for
bees and poultry.
‘Arrangements are made for these
men on the theory that nothing is
too good for them.
CITATION FOR HEARING ON PETITION
FOR ADMINISTRATION
STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF
Ramsey, ss, in Probate Court.
Inthe maiter of the estate of Mary E.
Lewis, decedent.
“The State of Minnesota to All Whom It
May Concern: ‘The petition of Ran Lewis,
having ‘been filed in this Court, representing
that Mary E. Lewis, then a resident of the
City of Winniper, “Manitoba, died intestate
fon the Sth day of March, 1928, and praying
That letters of administration of said estate
be granted to W. T. Francis,
It is order, that said petition be heard
‘and that all persons interested in said matter
be and hereby are cited and required to ap-
pear before this Court on Tuesday, the 17th
Gay of April, 1923, at ten o'clock in the
forenoon or as soon thereafter as said mat-
ter ean be heard, at the Probate Court Room,
in the Court House in the City of St. Paul,
in anid County, and show cause, if any they
have, why said petition should not be grant-
ed and that. this citation be served by the
Publication thereof inthe Appeal according
fo law, and by mailing a copy of this cita-
Hon at least 14 days before said day of hear-
Ing to each of the helre of said. decedent,
‘whose names ‘and addresses are. known and
Appear from the files of this Court.
Witness the Judge of said Court, this 22nd
day of March, A. O.. 1928.
HOWARD WHEELER,
Judge of Probate.
pehtttt: FW. Govewiseh," Clerk of) Pro
te.
'W. T. Francis, Attorney.
e2eas}
ORDER.
STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY | OF
TT oy Ona, MDNR Catt, Second Suet
ere
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See (ee alleen
Staple i Soe, ea
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Farsi iri aie
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“District Judge.
ust Man 1, en De
Brit Mak Ya,
PST toate
es
Elkhurst 4729
wo
University Electric Co,
ELECTRIC WIRING
—and—
FIXTURES
Old House Wiring a Specialty.
439 University ‘Saint Paul
C. M. Smith Meat Market
Home of the
FRESH DRESSED CHICKEN
POT ROAST .........-.-4:-,-124e
SKINNED HAMS .............-20€
PICNIC HAMS .............5...15e
WEINERS ......-00.50400000-slBe
CHOICE BEEF CUTS .
312-Rondo e St. Paul
381 Fuller Ave. Bik 2364
J.P.Schroeder
_ MEATS AND PROVISIONS: |
aDOY
Paes
Winter camping is a glorious thing!
Boy scouts, always-on congenial terms
with: the weather man, -are biking, in
Increasing numbers, to winter week-
end camp sites to enjoy the adventure
‘and thrill of life in the open. Skating,
snowshoeing, skiing, toboggantig, fish-
Ing through’ a hole in the ice—these
are part of the fun that the sturdy
scout gets from the experience: Scout
fathers are joining in, More than one
week-end camp has welcomed scout
“dads” who through scouting activi-
ties are enjoying splendid comradeship
with thelr sons,
‘Three big things in any winter scout
camp are: freedom, food, and fun:
freedom, under good leadership, for a
boy to discover his own talents; food,
and plenty of it; and fun with the
boys’ own trademark on it, These re-
sult in Americanism, appetite, and ad-
ventare—three big factors in the scout-
ing’s mental, physical and moral prep-
aration for the future citizenship.
‘The winter camp offers more adven-
ture than the summer camp, It is
more strenuous and more thrilling.
Breaking ice in the morning to get
water, pulling supplies on sleds over
the snows, building radio communica-
on in the forest so that the folks at
home can hear often of camp doings,
piling wood around a gorgeous camp
fire—are duties for real, red-blooded
wcouts.
Each new snowfall presents a clear
Page on which storles of the open are
‘written for scouts who know tracking
and trailing. They may follow the
trail of the fox, pursue the rabbit,
learn the way to the home of the
muskrat or beaver, and even discover
how the fleld mice, pheasants, quail
and game make thelr living during the
winter months.
For winter camping the boy must
practice the scout motto—“Be Pre-
pared.” He must have heavier shoes,
well olled; extra thick socks, wool
shirt or sweater, stocking cap, and ex-
tra five pounds of wool blankets more
than he requires in summer time.
Pilgrimages in honor of famous men
of scout deeds and character“have
thelr place in the winter camp life.
‘The boys of Denver visit the grave of
Buffalo Bill on the mountains near
Denver. Scouts of the Middle West
go to Lincoln's boyhood homes in Ken-
tucky, southern Indiana and Dlinois,
Chicago scouts visit the site of old
Fort Dearborn. Philadelphia members
spend Washington's birthday at Valley
Forge, and New York lads journey to
the tomb of Theodore Roosevelt.
BOY SCOUT WINTER CAMPERS
ee ( Se
ee
me
. VS
| Fa Se.
5
(ar 1 pr j mth
“Outing 18 a big part of scouting,”
say the boy scouts, who, in increasing
numbers are enjoying winter week-end
camping, and all the wholesome, out-
door winter fun that goes with it.
SCOUTS FIND LOST BABY
Scouts of Charleston, Ill, brought re
Nef to an anxious home when they
found two-year-old Robert Mahan, who
had been lost for 12 hours, and deliv-
ered him safe and sound to his rel-
atives, Robert had strayed from a
party of children who were nutting in
the woods near Whetstone Ford. La-
ter unable to find the little boy the
children gave a frightened call for belp
at ‘a house nearby. After a fruitless
search by neighbors, word was sent to
the Charleston scouts, Under their
scoutinaster, a number of the Older
boys hiked rapidly to the spot where
the child had been seen last. There
they divided into squads and began
their search. Within a quarter of an
hour they came upon the baby asleep
In the hollow of tree 15 feet from a
tall bluff,
TEXAS BOY SCOUTS’ RECORD
‘The boy scout spirit of service was
well interpreted at the recent South
‘Texas State fair, where the. scouts
stood at all times to help. In“addl-
tion to performing other good turns, the
‘boys found 72 lost children, as traffic
officers handled six parades, acted as
runners for officers of the fair asso-
elation, furnished escorts for children
during the baby parade, parked auto
mobiles in the fair grounds, met all in-
corfiing trains, and maintained an in-
formation bureau.
STEIN’S
nics MEATS
“Wey Or Presh Meats and Fish
__spussep PouuTRY
SUMMONS.
STATE OF. MINNESOTA, COUNTY | OF
Tamer. In "District Court, Secoud 30th
eink Ditret
Gate "Me "Brasley, Patntif, va. Peter
Brasley. Defendast.
ae
You are hereby, summoned and te
ansver the complaint ofthe vaioo in th
above entitled action, which complaint has
Seen’ aled and is now on file with the clerk
of sald court at hip efice in the Court Howse
ot ‘auld ‘County of Bamsey Im, the Clty of
St. Paul, and to serve = copy of your anever
fo. the “ssid. complaint “an, the eubecribe
Kereto. plant's attorney, at hia ofie, 614
Goart Bik in the Oley of St, Foal, Ramer
sft The occ st Tai, vemmona en Fr
Sxciueive of the day of such service? andi
Jou fail to, anwar the auld complaint with
Bele atornaid the plata fm thie Seti
will ‘apply ‘tothe ‘ecid court for the rele
Scmanded” in sald complaint
Balad Pareaey Saas
wR ALEXANDER,
‘Attorney, for” Plalate
“lt ‘court Bleck.
ont
FOR ADMINISTRATION.
STATE OF MINNESOTA, COUNTY OF
Thameegoee, “in rebate Cour
Inthe Matter of Ge Erte of Willard I.
‘neysolds Decadent”
rig Biate af Minosota to All Whom Tt May
Sev patidon, of Zella M. Reynok having
been sel in this coure, Reoreserting’ W
Basiesidl then “eoveaident of the Coun
Bt Harney Sinte, of "Minnesota, died. tate
Cheon iis loth dy of Desembtr, 1o2t, and
Drang that eins of adintrtion ot i
cre etanted to elie Me Reynold
Re oniaede That auld petition be beard
asd tat all pens Interred si
Sort “Deore the "court on Tosser the
37 ar ok March, 18%, tem, Slt,
Stute"can, behest bela
ee nerd atthe Pegs. oe
raatter #0, 0° Gacrt owes in. toe Clg
Be "Gaal (esaideconty snd show canst,
ey ‘hey faver why ent petition abould bat
Boy pttetad "aca hat thie ltation be serra
5 e'Statienson thereof tp the Apnea
wractding’ to ines and by tailing cov ol
Beeraittacg WT tit ‘Za "are octore al
Be or Netting to aach of the betre of tal
$e Shea, Sucmce “End algremey “ar
Esoqa "asd covet fromthe “fle of th
lines the Judge of said Court, thi 23th
Ontgen of Probate Court)
HOWARD, WHEELER,
indew of raoate
Atta: FW, Gonewich
Slark of Probate.
Lawler, Kinkead 2° icBonneloge, Attor
nlawler,, Kinkead &, MeConnsion® sium.
Tel. Cedar 5295
} B. BRAVERMAN
FASHIONABLE
TAILOR
3 AND HABERDASHERY
458 St. Peter. St. Saint Paul
‘ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE.
STATE OR MINNESOTA, COUNTY , OF
ameyoin District Court, Second Judi
ial Distr,
fn the Matter of the Application of Aaron
Van, Bicker for the aguanee. to bim of 8
Ucridente ot ‘Tile for Lot one (1) in Block
See tay is Palisade Addition. to” St, Paul
Ramsey, County, Minnesota, eccording” to the
Fecorded (plat thereat on fle and of record
Tete etlce of the Register of Deeds, in and
for said County, ip lieu and place of & cer
heute number 32806 originally rewistered. by
gree entered in. fle ‘number 1456.
Ge" sending thee Pelton’ ef Aaron Van
Sictler"“in. the ‘above entitled matter, from
shiek appears thatthe duplicate. certs
ate of ‘registration ot ‘Title a, 82806. for
thet above described premises, iscved to the
seid "Aaron ‘Van Sickler, has’ been lost, and
that ‘he said petitioner prays. that a, new
certificate ‘of, registration of sald. Title be
{S"intm feoued ‘in lea. and in ‘place of sai
Sertifeate covering’ the real” estate therein
tind Inn the caption, hereof described, it ta
Ordered”, That, the egietrar of Wis
said County of Rameey, State of Minnesots
thd. ail other. persona” or perties” unknows
Siniming any right, title, estate, lien” or in
terest in the real extate ‘described herein and
Aif‘sthers concerned; show ‘eater, if any ther
Be, belore hla Court, at m special term there
of to be held (nthe Cour House of sai
Gounty in the City of Se. Paul on. Saturday
the iath “day of April, 1828, at ten o'clock
fo Ma ST aye prayer st sald petitioner
. pevver, oer
should ‘not be granted and a. new certificate
frued, fo. the ssi peldoner "soveriog ei
Demise.
Tat this order be published and served on
ite “ana "ptaserbed™ by the “russ of thi
vw Sand prescr ‘rules "of this
Court”
(By the Court)
JOHN W. BOERNER,
Jone SF Bet Coat:
PORTERS’ & WAITERS’ CLUB
18 8. 3d St, Minneapolis
Phone Main 2592
Excellent Food at Minimum Prices. Soft Drinks of All Kinds.
TOBACCO —CIGARS-—sC CIGARETTES
GLOVER SHULL, Pres. and Treas. EDDIE L. BOYD, Secy.
MUSIC & ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY
———— ar —____
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
Quality Shoe Rebuilding
Give us a trial and you will come
again
High Grade Line of Rubbers
‘Men's and Children’s Shoes
A purchase of 50 cents or more at
our shop entitles you to a chance
‘on an automobile which we
are giving away
233 Rondo Dale 8415
“Say It With Flowers”
HOLM & OLSON
The Home of Flowers
‘Omce Phone Res. Phone
‘Ga. 6398 Ga. 605
O.W. BARRETT
Plumbing and Heating
CONTRACTOR
REPAIRING REASONABLY.
397 Rice St. St. Paul
LOWER PRICES
ON FURNITURE
AT BOUTELL’S
MINNEAPOLIS
A Great Sale Now Going On
—All Departments
Besides "Wonderful opportinities to save—big price
reductions—up to 4% off—we offer you Liberal Credit
Terms. You can get the benefit of the sale prices—
and pay for your purchases by the month.
WHY HESITATE—This is the time
to come to BOUTELL’S and furnish
your home—AT A BIG SAVING
Rugs—Draperies—Furniture—Dishes
—Kitchen Ware—Cut Glass—Alumi-
num Ware—Stoves, Heaters, Ranges
—all at a saving to you.
__. MAKE A’TRIP To ee
BOUTELL BROS.
i MINNEAPOLIS.
» “MARQUETTE AT FIFTH.
“For
Peace
| of
! ! Mind”
Tires and- Tubes
A__TWIN CITY PRODUCT
CONSPICUOUS AMONG THE
BEST
‘Cords an Fabrics
COST YOU LESS
LAST YOU LONGER
Sones ieee
rTM AT YOUR SERVICE—
FLL. DELIVER TO YOUR
* DOOR
FRED BAKER
SALESMAN
426 St. Anthony Ave.
Phone
Dale 5386 =: Nestor 1815
—_—EE
Tel. Elkburst 4750
eating and Sheet Motal Work
Spend A-Quiet Evening At f
~~ Williams’ Recreation Parlor:
7
|
|
| |
SAFE MILK
Phone: Elkhurst 3163
= (Ep, ‘ :
Arch Pad i) Every Step
. o e
, NEW LIFE ARCH PADS
WHAT THEY BO
Hn seaieandlt <anstaloa etre feats “Thay wilt relieve thove tired snd ach:
Ing feet instantly. .
Now Li Aceh Pade wit remove causes fesm the ball of foot, may
neyo lta fact Wit eles arta’ Sone arn oetron te
saree and all metatarsal trouble. Think what it means—‘com-
[rer men, Women | NEW LIFE ARCH PAD CO. | gead For Free
[Pee [as an skew eae tues | oa |
Elkhurst 3037 < _ Humboldt 1758
JAS. CHRISTSEN & SON
WALL PAPER PAINTING DECORATING
553 W. University Ave. Saint Paul
ARE YOU AN EXPERT AT
POCKET BILLIARDS?
WILLIAMS RECREATION
The PARLOR Re .
weir WTA bo
TEL.SOUTH 7954. —~ ESTABLISHED 1008,
W. SQUIRE NEAL
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
SUCCESSOR TO
0. A. LAWRENCE
sos RAST sermon. — MINNEAPOLIS
PUBLIC SALES.
We_have purchased 122,000
pair U. S. Army Munson last
shoes, sizes 54% to 12 which
was the entire surplus stock of
one of the largest U. S. Gov-
ernment shoe contractors.
This shoe is guaranteed one
hundred per cent solid leather,
color dark tan, bellows tongue,
dirt and waterproof. The ac-
tual value of this shoe is $6.00.
Owing to this tremendous buy
we can offer same to the public
at $2.95.
Send correct size. Pay post-
man on delivery or send money
order. If shoes are not as rep-
resented we will cheerfully re-
fund your money promptly up-
on request.
NATIONAL BAY STATE
SHOE COMPANY,
296 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
U. S. ARMY SHOES.
We have just bought a tre-
mendous stock of Army Munson
last shoes to be sold to the pub-
lic direct. These shoes are 100
per cent solid leather with heavy
double soles sewed and nailed.
The uppers are of heavy tan
chrome leather with bellows
tongue, thereby making. them
waterproof. These shoes are
selling very fast and we advise
you to order at once to insure
your order being filled.
The sizes are 6 to 11 all
wirths. Price $2.75. Pay post-
man on receipt of goods or send
money order. Money refunded
if shoes are not satisfactory.
THE U. S. STORES CO.
1441 Broadway New York City
S. BRAND
RICE & UNIVERSITY
PHONE GARFIELD
7601 - 7502 - 7503
St. Anthony Hill Provision Go,
559 «ely mm ae
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ae
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ormes ret. nes. re.
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voumess a 104m
matisae
DR, JOHN R. FRENCH
SURGEON DENTIST
| ger eats muna wont
MRL aanSett St poerarne
tures emo mise, sar aun
Sor aewwiace ———ourorn
orrce ra. a
oan os one has
Nome a 709
moot ttn
DR. EARL S, WEBER
DENTAL SURGEON
rat cuass suananrano wont
wan taacees Seem
“uSeRe
Sse | ST. PAUL
Madame L, B. Gross
‘When in need of Face Cream, Hair
Grower or High Grade Toilet Article,
WORLD'S BEAUTY LABORATORIE
540 University Ave.
y TEL VAN BUREN 1131
* ICE CREAM
IS THE BEST
For Sale Everywhere
J.C. VANDER BIE
Partridge and Brunson Sts.
‘ST. PAUL, MINN.
Yel Dae 09 Wo Gall For and Daler |
DRuGoIST
| Drugs, Medicines, Soda Water
| Soft Drinks, Tollet Articles
Candies, Cigars, Tobacco,
| 166 Gream Brick or Bulk.
| Gas and Electric Fixtures
| Fishing Tackle -
Dale & W. Central — St. Paul