The Appeal
Saturday, July 21, 1923
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
WESTERN BAPTISTS CONVENE IN CITY
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VOL. 39 NO. 29
WEST
APPOINTMENTS TO
VET HOSPITAL AT
TUSKEGEE HELD UP
Director of Veterans' Bureau
Marks Time After Trip
to Tuskegee
HINES BOWS TO KALN
Situation Is Test of Administration's Attitude Toward Race, Says Johnson
Washington, July 19.—The first round in the battle raging over the question as to whether disabled colored veterans should have the sympathetic care and attention of doctors and nurses of their own race or should be left to the tender mercies of colored-hating Southern white doctors and nurses of Ku Klux Klan affiliation or sympathy was won by the Ku Klux Klan crowd, who so filled Director Hines of the Veterans' Bureau with lies upon his recent visit to Tuskegee that upon his return here he announced that he would not appoint any more colored doctors or nurses to the Veterans' Bureau new hospital for colored veterans at Tuskegee.
Test of Administration.
James Weldon Johnson, Secretary of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, has issued a statement calling the contest over the Tuskegee hospital for colored war veterans a test of the Harding administration's attitude toward colored people. The statement is as follows:
"Despite the government's promise made by President Harding to staff the Tuskegee hospital for colored war veterans, with colored doctors and nurses, the Ku Klux Klan, with the apparent connivance of Col. Stanley, have already driven away Dr. Kenney, a colored physician of high standing, who has had to flee with his family from Tuskegee. This whole situation is one which again tests the administration's attitude towards colored people, as well as the government's integrity in the face of the Ku Klux Klan mob. The government could settle this whole matter in an hour by taking a firm stand. The Ku Kluxers around Tuskegee are bluffing, and will carry that bluff as far as they can. If President Harding has a backbone the size of a toothpick, he will call that bluff, and that will be the end of the present disgraceful situation.
Contentions Are Pretense.
"The contentions of the Alabama white people are untrue and absurd. They pretend to fear the menace of a colored personnel in charge of the hospital, whereas, the Tuskegee Institute, entirely manned and attended by colored people with several hundred teachers and fifteen hundred students, has never given them, although in their midst, grounds for the slightest apprehension.
"Colored people throughout the United States are awaiting to see how the United States government will meet the challenge of the Ku Klux mobbists."
URGES COLORED PEOPLE
TO YIELD TO WHITES
Boston, July 18.—According to an Associated Press story, Wallace A. Battle, colored president of the Okolona Industrial school of Okolona, Miss., has issued a statement here suggesting that colored people show a spirit of maganimity and yield to the white people of Alabama in the controversy over the hospital for colored veterans at Tuskegee.
Battle would have the hospital put in charge of a white superintendent, a Southerner, recommended by colored physicians and appointed by the Federal government, the other physicians and nurses to be all colored people.
Battle's statement points out that the controversy is of national concern and that the three elements involved, the Federal government, the white people of the country and colored people of the United States, have apparently all set out to yield nothing.
Its wise solution, he believes, means incalculable good to all concerned.
SHOT BY GARAGE OWNER;
DIES IN HOSPITAL
New York, July 18—John Robinson 30, 33 West 29th street, died in Bellevue hospital of bullet wounds received when he was shot by Albert Gordon, manager of the Greely garage, at 351 West 40th street. Gordon told the police that Robinson, with four other colored men entered the garage and believing they were robbers, fired at Robinson who was leading the quintet. Gordon is charged with homicide.
Klan Threatens N. Y. Landlord Who Offers Colored Tenants Apartments
Agent Offers to Rent Apartment in White District to Colored Tenants; Receives Letter From Klan, But Says He'll Rent to Colored Anyway
JOHN WHITFIELD ASKS CHURCH LEADERS RISE CHANGE OF VENUE TO DEFEND TUSKEGEE
(K. N. F. Service.)
New York, July 19.—Because of the Rex Realty Co., 345 Lenox Ave., a white firm, offered to rent an apartment to colorize people, it has received threats signed by the Ku Klux Klan. The following is a copy of the letter received by the firm:
Dear Sir: We have been informed of your intention to rent your house at 46 West 117th street to colored tenants. This is wholly un-American and is totally against our principles. We urge you in a gentlemanly way to rescind your order or unpleasant things may happen.
May your decision be the right one.
K. K. K.
The head of the firm when interviewed by a newspaperman said he did not intend to be bluffed by the Klan or anyone else. "We're going
Attorneys Seek New Seat for Trial Because of Prejudice in Cleveland
Cleveland, Ohio, July 18.—Judge George P. Baer today ruled out a demurrer piled last week by attorneys for John L. Whitfield, charged with the slaying of Patrolman Dennis Griffin, attacking the constitutionality of the statute under which Whitfield was indicted. Judge Baer also dismissed their attacks on the wording of the indictment itself.
A motion for a change of venue, filed by Whitfield's attorneys Tuesday, on the ground that Whitfield could not be given an impartial trial here because of prejudice, will be heard Tuesday, the court decided. The hearing, originally set for today, was postponed at the request of defense's attorneys.
GARDENER IS WANTED
ON SERIOUS CHARGES
(K. N. F. Service.)
Narragansett Pier, R. I., July 18—Thomas Johnson, a gardener employed by Mrs. Persifer Frazer at her summer home here, is wanted by the police for an attack on a nurse employed in the Frazer home. It is charged that he tied, gagged and assaulted her.
HUSBAND HELD FOR
SLAYING OF WOMAN
(K. N. F. Service.)
New York, July 19.—The body of Mrs. Henry Mumford, 24, of Jersey City, was found floating in the Morris canal, last Wednesday. Her head had been crushed by an iron pipe found near her. Police arrested her husband and Herbert McDuffy, a friend.
$100
ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.. SATURDAY. JULY 21, 1923
right ahead renting the house to colored people." he said.
There is at present a determined and concerted effort on the part of a large number of white people to keep the valuable 129th street district.
Other Klan Activities.
Employees of Stanton Grants cabaret, Jerome avenue and 213th street, were upset last week when a flaming cross was seen on the golf links, less than 300 feet from the cabaret, which is owned by colored people.
A huge blazing cross was seen on a mountain top near Chester, N. Y., last week and Klansmen were seen riding through the colored vicinity.
Stirling, N. J., near this city, has also witnessed the flaming "cross of hell."
Interference With Institution Would Be Disgrace, Say Southern Methodists
Lake Junaluska, N. C., July 19 (Special).—The Social Service Commission of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, in annual session here last week, gave out a statement expressing appreciation of Tuskegee Institute and declaring that any interference with the institution would be a "lasting disgrace to Southern civilization." The statement which was given wide publicity by the Associated Press, was as follows:
"Inasmuch as there has come to us through reliable newspaper reports and private sources of undoubted reliability information that the interests of the great institution for colored people at Tuskegee, Ala., are seriously menaced by threats of organized interference;
"Resolved, that this commission put on record our appreciation of the incalculable value of that institution for the training of our colored fellow citizens, and declare our unalterable conviction that any invasion of its rights or interference with the orderly pursuit of its lawful and benevolent labors would be a calamity to the institution and a lasting disgrace to our Southern civilization."
The action of the commission of which Bishop James Cannon, Jr., is chairman, was called forth by the recent parade of the Ku Klux Klan at Tuskegee and by other efforts to intimidate the Institute, because of its supposed attitude in the controversy relative of the new government hospital for colored veterans. The statement underserved very significant as representing the leadership of one of the greatest Southern denominations, with a membership of 2,500,000. It indicates the prevailing attitude of the best people of the South toward Tuskegee and other colored institutions.
UNION PICNIC JULY 25 AT MINNEHAHA FALLS
Largest Crowd in History Expected at Annual Sunday School Outing
Preparations for the Union Sunday school picnic, the largest outdoor event of the season in the Twin Cities, are going forward rapidly, Paul Caldwell, general chairman of the committee on arrangements said Thursday. The picnic will be held at Minneaha Falls on Wednesday, July 25. In addition to the usual athletic program and giving away of ice cream the committee announces an hour's program of community singing led by a band and two popular speakers in 15 minute talks.
The membership of 16 Sunday schools and churches as well as friends and out of town visitors are the Mimehaha park facilities to the utmost.
Committee Cancels Speeches At Picnic
Because of a ruling of the Minneapolis park board prohibiting speaking of any kind in the parks of the city, no speeches will be delivered at the Union picnic July 25, the committee of arrangements announced yesterday.
Preliminary reports from the various Sunday schools and churches indicate that the picnic this year will be larger than ever. The committee has made special arrangements to care for the thousands who will make the outing.
MIGRATION WAVE BRINGING SKILLED COLORED WORKERS Department of Labor Making Detailed Study of Colored Migrants
IN MANY INDUSTRIES
Roll Call of 273 Employers Reveals Increasing Percentage of Skilled
Washington, July 19.—An unexpected phase in the placement of colored labor passing from the South to Northern industries is the inclusion of skilled workers of this class. The department of labor made this announcement today from a survey conducted by Phil H. Brown, commissioner of conciliation, who has been detailed as an observer of the migration now in progress. The results accrue from a careful analysis of payroll statistics of 273 employers of colored labor in California, Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma and Wisconsin. Returns from these firms indicate a heavy intake of colored labor, but evidence were countered in discriminating as to whether those employed were recent migrants or from the class that were already located in the North. However, sufficient specific classification is given to suggest that the South is not only yielding up a great mass of unskilled workers, but a remarkable number of skilled hands are finding employment.
In Many Industries.
Comparisons were made between 42,742 colored workers and distributable into groups of 10,794 skilled and 31,577 unskilled workers, as of April 30, 1922, and 60,421 colored workers, distributable into groups of 14,951 skilled and 45,470 unskilled employees as of April 30, 1923, as reported by 273 firms engaged in such typical pursuits as are necessary to produce iron and steel, foodstuffs, leather, machinery, tobacco, automobiles, paper bags, copper goods, boilers, billiard tables, brass articles, chain, bricks, oil, saws, wire, railroad equipment, rubber, glass, textiles, chinaware, cement, paper, and varied other articles of necessity and comfort, together with numerous occupations in construction work, railroad work, and transportation.
18,050 Added to Payrolls.
During the year for which observations were made among the 273 firms listed with the department, colored workers were increased on payrolls by 18,050 men, of whom 4,157 and 13,893 were skilled and unskilled workers, respectively. The total per cent of increase was 42.60 and the per cent of increase of skilled and unskilled workers, respectively, was 38.51 and 44.1.
High marks were reached in the increase of colored skilled workers, who advanced by 186.86 per cent in Maryland; 90.48 per cent in Connecticut; 70.73 per cent in Michigan; 68.97 per cent in Kansas; 68.04 per cent in Ohio; 60 per cent in California; 43.68 per cent in Pennsylvania; 39.94 per cent in Illinois; 33.33 per cent in Wisconsin; 30 per cent in Indiana in York, Illinois; 19.64 per cent and 13.93 per cent in Kentucky. New Jersey and Oklahoma showed respective increases of 12.96 per cent and 3.85 per cent in the number of colored workers taken on in the skilled occupations during the year, while West Virginia showed a loss of 1.82 per cent.
William Hardy's Niece Recovers His Insurance
The suit started by Lawyer W. T. Francis, on behalf of Lois C. Simmons of Chicago, niece of William R. Hardy, against the N. W. Mutual Life Ins. Co. to recover one thousand dollars on the life of Mr. Hardy, was disposed of and the money paid to Lawyer Francis for Miss Simmons last Friday. Legal proceedings was made necessary by reason of the objection made by Mrs. Clara Hardy widow, upon the ground that Miss Simmons had secured a change in the beneficiary through undue influence and that Mr. Hardy was not competent to make the change at the time it was made. No showing of undue influence or incompetence was evidenced by Mrs. Hardy in court and the court ordered that she be barred from any claim and that judgment be entered in favor of Miss Simmons.
HON. THADEUS TOOTE
ON WAY TO ENGLAND
New York, July 19—En route to England to spend his vacation, the Hon. Thaddeus Toote, a member of the house of assembly, Bahamas, WI, is now in this city. He will take passage in a few days on the Laconia.
Mr. Toote is a graduate of Ellesmere college, Shropshire, England and studied law at Lincoln Inn, England. He is a brother of Rev. F. A Toote of this city.
---
Dr. Du Bois Says Press Garbled His Speech In Philadelphia
Editor Says Root of Pennsylvania Evil Is in Separate Public Schools Which Residents of Philadelphia Have Allowed to Become Established
New York, July 20.—Dr. W. E. B. DuBois, editor of the Crisis, has issued the exact text of his recent Philadelphia speech in order to show that press reports that he advocated separate schools were false. The statement follows:
"All my life I have fought segregation and separation by race and color. And of all the sorts of segregation facing us, segregation in the public schools is the most dangerous and far-reaching because it inculcates race prejudice in the young. It is for this reason that the N. A. A. C. P. has always fought separate public schools wherever they appear.
WELCOME HALL WILL SUPPORT URBAN LEAGUE
Rev. G. W. Camp Assures Board of Co-operation in Welfare Work
Additional support for the St. Paul Urban league was enlisted Monday when the new board of directors, meeting at the St. Paul Association, was assured of the support and cooperation of Welcome Hall and its workers by Rev. G. W. Camp, pastor of Zion Presbyterian church.
"Since the work of the Urban league has been outlined more fully to me, I can see no conflict with our work at Welcome Hall, and I will gladly co-operate in the work that
"On the other hand, we colored people are all living more and more in a separate world; almost hourly, from the moment we rise until we sleep. We live in separate homes and neighborhoods; we patronize separate stores; we send our children often to separate schools; we attend separate churches, we work in larger and larger numbers, for our own people and in separate industries; we bank in our own banks, subscribe to colored papers, keep cars in our own garages, are attended by colored physicians, and buried by colored undertakers in colored graveyards.
"We boast of this internal racial development and we have a right to boast of it; we have been forced into it by race prejudice and without these institutions we could not exist today; but wither is all this leading? Logically it is leading straight to complete racial segregation, to bitter group hatred and world-wide race war on a scale such as we have not yet witnessed.
"We must therefore face firmly this paradox of race separation and race organization and fight with care and thought. I am, for instance, myself a product of a 'Jim Crow' school; my daughter is a student in one. Without 'Jim Crow' schools we could not today educate our children in the United States. Does this mean that 'Jim Crow' schools are right and should be spread? No, they are wrong, dangerous, menacing and they should be fought; but the way to fight them is not to fight Hill. Do not fight Hill. Hill is not responsible for Cheyney Cheyney was established fifty years before Hill was born. Hill is doing at Cheyney just what I would do there—making it the best school possible.
"The real enemy is not Hill—it is not the excellent and efficient teachers in thousands of separate colored schools throughout the land—it is the white men and women who foster race prejudice and compel the establishment of separate schools. Fight them and fight them with the ballot. New York colored people fought them. They put White, Scottron and McCants Stewart on the school board and today there is not a 'Jim Crow' school in the city and there are 200 colored teachers in the public schools; Philadelphia did not keep up the fight. They accepted petty political jobs and janitorships and positions in 'Jim Crow' schools for their daughters. Today, Philadelphia has 13 colored schools and is threatened with a colored high school. What does Philadelphia do? Instead of fighting the school board, they attack the principal and teachers of a colored school established in 1834 (and now outside the bounds of Philadelphia) because two years ago, this school was given a state appropriation and made a state normal school. Do they mean thus to acknowledge that no school with colored teachers is fit to be a state normal school?
"This is wrong tactics. Cheyney is a good school. It has done and is doing splendid work. The colored race, with its curtailed educational facilities cannot spare it. Either Cheynev must have state aid or gradually die. But, say the opponents of Hill and Cheyney, this school was made a normal school in order to furnish teachers for 'Jim Crow' public schools; very well then, fight the 'Jim Crow' public schools—make it impossible to establish more Pennsylvania has at least 100,000 colored voters. They can if they will make the 'Jim Crow' public school system impossible in that state. But the way to do it is not to fight the school teachers who are giving their best to colored children in schools established before these teachers were born."
Large Audience Hears Chorus Of 55 Voices
A packed house greeted the largest chorus of colored voices ever assembled in St. Paul Monday night at Pilgrim Baptist church when Twin City talent was presented in solo and chorus numbers under the direction of A. V. Hall. The music was presented of spiritual and sacred music were rendered by a chorus of 55 voices. Solo numbers were sung by Mrs. Gladys James, Mrs. Ione Poore, Ben. H. Miller, and George W. Hamilton, Jr.
The Finest---For You Quality Merchandise from the leading downtown merchants and neighborhood tradesmen may be obtained quickly and easily if you Shop In The Appeal
MINNESOTA
HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
MINNESOTA
HISTORICAL
SOCIETY
The Finest-
Quality
leading de
neighborh
obtained
ENE IN
Press Garbled
h In Philadelphia
WELCOME HALL WILL SUPPORTURBANLEAGUE
Rev. G. W. Camp Assures Board of Co-operation in Welfare Work
Additional support for the St. Paul Urban league was enlisted Monday when the new board of directors, meeting at the St. Paul Association, was assured of the support and cooperation of Welcome Hall and its workers by Rev. G. W. Camp, pastor of Zion Presbyterian church.
"Since the work of the Urban league has been outlined more fully to me, I can see no conflict with our work at Welcome Hall, and I will gladly co-operate in the work that is to be done," Rev. Camp declared. Rev. Camp nominated C. E. Jones from his church to serve as a member of the board of directors. Acceptance of the executive secretaryship of the St. Paul Urban league by Elmer A. Carter, now secretary of the Louisville Urban league was received by W. T. Francis, vice chairman of the board of directors late Thursday.
Mr. Carter will arrive in the city to begin work on August 16.
BEAUTY FIRM AGENTS TO MEET IN DETROIT
Seventh Annual Convention of Business Women Promises to Surpass Others
Indianapolis, July 19.—This year the 7th annual national convention of Madam C. J. Walker Agents will be held at Detroit, Mich., August 8, 9 and 10, and the plans call for a far more interesting and helpful convention than has thus far been held. Discussion of important business matters, demonstrations in advanced methods and research lectures on beauty culture are on the program. Several characters of national repute are invited. A picturesque boatride through the harbor, sight-seeing trips, receptions and a coiffure contest, are among the entertainment features now planned and of course, the annual award of cash prizes to Madam C. J. Walker Agents will be made. This year $1,650 will be distributed to the most successful agents. Detroit is an ideal and historically important city and will afford those who attend the convention an opportunity to combine business and pleasure and all Walker Agents should attend. Inquiries regarding the convention and reservations for homes will be answered if addressed to the Convention Headquarters, c-o Mrs. Alice C. Burnett, 2509 St. Antoine street, Detroit, Mich.
Retrained Veteran
A. J. Caldwell served in the army as a private, Headquarters Troop, 1st Depot Brigade, and was discharged about five months after the signing of the armistice with a disability that prevented his going back to his old occupation of farming. Therefore, the U. S. Veterans' Bureau awarded him a course in vocational training which was taken partly in a business college and partly with the board of underwriters with the employment objective of fire insurance agent. Mr. Caldwell applied himself so well to his training and showed such aptitude for the work that when his training was completed on December 31, 1922, he was immediately given the position of state agent for the Twin City Fire Insurance Company of the middle West fire underwriters agency of Minneapolis, with his headquarters at Great Falls, Mont. Upon assuming his new duties, Mr. Caldwell took occasion to write the Helena office of the Veterans' Bureau a letter of appreciation, saying, "I wish to express my sincere thanks for good treatment accorded me through our office. My work as vocational student has been a pleasure from the beginning, and the position I now hold is the result of the efforts of yourself and staff of able associates." It is evident that a man who profits by his training and shows the cooperative attitude that Mr. Caldwell does, will succeed in his chosen line of work.
HAYTIAN NAVIGATION
COMPANY HAS BOAT
New York, July 19.—The Haytian Navigation Overseas Co., with offices at 39 East 131st street, and whose president is Napoleon J. Francis, took a party of citizens over to Brooklyn Friday morning to see its vessel. The boat is said to be worth $20,000. The Haytian company was organized for purely commercial purposes.
' $2.00 PER YEAR
CITY
PILGRIM CHURCH
ENTERTAINS 20TH
ANNUAL SESSION
Playlet and Pageant on Program
of Women's Convention
for Missions
SERMOMS ARE FEATURES
Large Audience Hears Excellent Addresses; Dr. L. K. Williams Talks
For the first time since its organization 20 years ago, the Western Baptist convention embracing 11 states, enjoyed the hospitality of a St. Paul church and St. Paul citizens at its 20th annual session which closes tomorrow night.
More than 100 delegates and visitors were in the city Tuesday when the women's convention officially opened the work of the week. Mrs. Ida Frazier Bates, president of women's convention, opened the session Tuesday morning with an address on religious education which is declared by critics to be a religious classic.
Missions Playlet Given.
Tuesday evening was featured by the addresses of welcome and by a playlet, "Vision of Missions," presented by Ernest Workers' club under the direction of Mrs. Cornelia Smith. Delegates were welcomed by Mrs. Emma Bush, on behalf of the state; by Mrs. H. C. Parsons, on behalf of the Tri-State association; by Mrs. W. T. Francis, on behalf of the Pilgrim Missionary society, and by Mrs. J. A. Myers on behalf of Memorial Missionary society. The leading part in the playlet was taken by Mrs. Gladys James.
Present Mission Pageant.
Mrs. Frances Watson of Monrovia, Liberia, who was to have spoken Wednesday night wired that she would be delayed. On that evening a pageant of missions, "The Awakening," was presented under the direction of Mrs. W. T. Francis. Important parts in this pageant were taken by Mrs. G. W. James, Mrs. Emma Golden, Mrs. M. Diggs, Mrs. William Bolden, Mrs. J. Gustin, Mrs. M. Harris, Mrs. Downey, Mrs. Twitty, Mrs. M. Adams and Mrs. Francis, Mrs. B. C. Archer rendered the incidental music at the organ.
President's Annual Address.
The men's convention was opened Thursday morning with the annual address of Dr. S. A. Mosely, president, of St. Louis, Mo. Dr. Mosely touched on the migration from the South and placed the responsibility for caring for the migrants up to the colored people of the North. In speaking of race relations in general, Dr. Mosely said that ministers should make it their duty to foster a better spirit between the races. "Prejudice and hatred among us toward the white man is more detrimental to us than the prejudice of the white man against us," said the speaker.
Dr. Williams Makes Address
The program of welcome to the men's convention was augmented by an address by Dr. L. K. Williams, pastor of Olivet Baptist church, Chicago, which, with its 10,000 members and seven-day program is believed to be the largest Protestant church in the world. Dr. Williams is president of the National Baptist convention. In his address he proposed the presence of the Christ and His doctrine as a remedy for the ills of the world. A packed church greeted the Baptist leader, who was enthusiastically received. Addresses of welcome were given by W. T. Francis, M. A. Bolling, Rev. H. C. Parsons, Rev. H. L. P. Jones, Rev J S Myers, Rev J D Jackson and Owen Howell
During the sessions music was furnished by the Baptist choirs of the city. Wednesday Prof. Young rendered a musical novelty in syncopated time which was well received. Mrs. S. A. Moseley, wife of the president of the convention, was in demand all through the sessions as a soloist.
It is estimated that more than 200 delegates and visitors will attend the sessions which will close tomorrow night
HOWARD UNIVERSITY
RAISES $250,000
(A. N. F. Service.)
Washington, July 17—The campaign of Howard university to raise $250,000 to make up a $500,000 endowment for the medical school, half of which was pledged by the general education board, has been a success,
J. Stanley Durkee, president of the university, announced, and an additional $15,000 has been contributed.
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matter, June 6, 1885, under Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
2
NO COMROMISE
One William Battle has voiced the
old doctrine of the “Uncle Tom”
type of colored man of the South for
application to the Tuskegee tangle.
Colored people should “show a mag-
namimous spirit” and “yield to the
whites of Alabama,” according to his
theory.
Mr. Battle overlooks @ great many
points that shold be considered, not
the least of which is that the colored
people have for years accepted in-
sult and injury with magnanimity.
Now that they have an opportunity
to ask for that which is but just,
there should be no thought or talk
of yielding. More than this, Mr.
Battle tacitly asks the United States
government to bow to the wishes of
the Alabama Ku Klux Klan, for the
government has already promised
and ordered a completely colored
personnel.
There can be no compromise. The
‘Tuskegee institution is a black hos-
pital for black veterans, located in
the black belt on the grounds of a
black school. ‘The least that the gov-
ernment can do in an effort to save
its face for this insulting program of
eare for colored veterans is to man
the hospital with the hundreds of
competent colored professional men
‘available. If the government yields
now, it will not only be repudiating
its word to the colored people of the
country, but it will be obeying the
orders of the Hooded Kluxers. The
situation is not the colored man’s to
yield. It has become a question of
the government of the United States
or the Ku Klux Klan of Alabama.
WHY THEY MIGRATE
(Rochester (N. Y.) Post-Express.)
Representative colored people of
Mississippi tell the country why s0
many of their race are leaving the
South. They feel that their life is
insecure there and may be taken with
impunity at any time upon the slight-
est pretext. They despair of obtain-
ing their civie rights. They believe
that the defeat of the Dyer anti-
lynching bill shows that the South is
committed to the perpetuation of
‘yneh law and mob violence. Less
than one dollar out of every twenty
raised by taxation for school and
other purposes benetits the colored
man. The tenancy laws. are unjust
to them. One white man's ‘word is
held to outweigh that of several
dozen colored men of probity. They
are excluded from jury service and
all participation in the governments
under which they live. The state of
Mississippi sent more colored soldiers
acroes the sea than whites, but the
Teturning colored people find them:
eclves utterly without voice in. pub-
Tie affairs. These conditions are
measurably true throughout the
South and must be changed if the col-
ored pecple are to be kept in the
states of their birth.
| Health Talks {
By E. S. WEBER, D. D. S.
Any, questions regarding sub-
jects in these articlus or other
dental work should be addressed
xo the Health Editor of the A\
eal, Dr. Weber will publish the
answers each week in this column,
“SLEEP.”
Sleep is a very important phase
of health. Some people do not make
the proper use of it, while others
overdo and abuse it. Sleep should
be regulated just the same as any
other health-promoting factor, such
as diet, exercise, rest, recreation and
the like.
The highest medical authorities
now agree that the best thing for a
man to do when he feels too weak
to carmy anything through, is to go
to bed and sleep as long as he can.
‘This is the only actual recuperation
of brain force; use, during sleep,
the brain is in a state of rest, in a
Sondlion” fo recrve any anpropries
particles of nutriment from the blood,
which take the place of those which
have been consumed by previous la-
bor, since the very act of thinking
burns up solid particles, as every
turn of the wheel or screw of the
steamer is the result of consump-
‘tion of fire of the fuel in the fur-
nace. The supply of brain _sub-
stance which has been consumed can
‘only be restored from the nutritive
particles in the blood, which are ob-
tained from the food eaten ets
ously, and the brain is so constituted
that it can best receive and appro-
priate to itself there nutritive par-
ticles during the state “of rest or
Sic piping
and force
stance until it is so exhausted that
there is not enough power left t
take up a fresh supply.
With regard to the “amount of
‘sleep people should have, there is
sie The infant habe sleep
almost ail of the time, while a chit
must have 12 or more hours daily.
Adults ‘whose work is, for the mos
part, manual labor need. more sleey
fhan’ their brothers engaged in men:
tal work. ‘The ‘mental worker need:
only six oF seven hours, While the la
Gorer or muscle worker should have
eight or nine hours’ sleep. Elderl
people need only six or seven hours
Sleep provided he or she does not get
much or do much muscular work.
ROHAN MAIDENS HAVE
1 F
Ov COMIG-OUT PARTY
Ready to Receive Proposal After
All-Night Dance,
Washington.—The modern “soclety”
fapper, with her coming-out party, has
nothing on the American Indian mafd-
en, whose murriaye-announcement
purty has been among the tribal cus
tons from time Linmemorial.
Among the Washoe Indians of Ne
vada there Is @ dunce or ceremony
known as “the gitl’s dance,” in honor
of the young girl who becomes eligible
for marriage, Her white cousin, how-
ever, would hardly care to be the star
of such u feust, for the guest of honor
is ellowed to eat nothing at all for
four days previous.
‘On the fourth night the dance starts
‘at about eight o'clock, and sometimes
lusts until sunrise the followinz morn-
ing. The Indiuns form a circle, Joining
hands, and move by short side steps
in a ring, hummfug a sort of chant
without words or meaning.
‘The girl, accompanied by an elder
woman as a sort of chaperon, and
carrylug a long staf to support tar
because of the weukness induced by
her long fast, weaves In and out of
the dance, joining In the step.
As the dunce proceads lute into the
night, the girl's family give money and
other posmessions to the dancers to
keep them moving and to Induce oth-
ers to Join in, The greater the num
ber of dancers the greater the popu:
larity of the family. Shortly ufter
midnight a feast Is given by the girl's
relatives, and all participate.
‘The ceremony closes at sunrise when
the girl Is taken to her tepee and ut-
tired in bunches of sagebrush In
which money Is concealed. She ap-
pears before the assembled dancers
outside and throws the money to them
amid a wild scramble, A can of water
ts then dashed over her head us the
concluding ceremony, after which she
Is ready to recelve a proposal of mar
riage.
Is First Baby to Be
Christened by Radio
me Pee
ee Mae
if a Sk
It | ie
| \ : Dy
Little Winifred Coker und her moth
er, Mrs. J. B. Coker of Atlanta, Ga.
Winitred is the first baby to be chris.
tened by radio and the ceremonies
took place over WSB, an Atlanta
broadcasting station.
War on London’s Fog
Stirs Old-Timer’s Ire
London.—Horrors! They're going to
ubollsh the London fog.
Old citizens are up in arms. “If the
fog’s been good enough for me, I don't
nee why the rising generation can't
stand It," they moan. But despite this
Gefense of one of London's oldest jp
stitutions parliament is “going into it
thoroughly." Someone has suggested
that Londoners have been “going into
ft thoroughly for generations, and
coming out of it and golng into it
again, but nothing ever ts done about
it”
‘There finally seems to be a serious
attempt to end “the London particu
lar" and a committee of technteal ex
perts of all British industry are to
deal with the problem on national
Mines.
Many persons who are not experts
say there will always be fog {n London
until the obvious thing is done, pro
hibit the burning of soft coal.
LIMIT SEEN IN SUPPLY
OF GAS FROM NATURE
U. S. Mine Bureau Says Output
Is Not Inexhaustible.
Monroe, La—The United States
bureau of mines, having declared that
the natural gas in this country 1s not
inexhaustible, and that the supply is
dwindling rapidly, persons interested
in conservation of Loulsiana’s natural
resources are launching a campaign
with the object of elther putting an
fend to the existence of carbon black
Plants Inf this state or at least curbing
‘thelr operations.
‘The north Louisiana gas feld is the
largest producing field in the world,
and the wells in the Ouachita-More
house district now are giving up the
enormous total of 1,880,000,000 cuble
feet of gas dally for the manufacture
of carbon black.
Ninety per cent of this gas is
wasted, It Is claimed, and the con-
servationists have determined to do
something to put a stop to It, If for
no other reason than that industries
im search of cheap fuel hesitate to lo-
cate In or near the fleld for fear the
ne will be exhausted in the near fu-
ture.
The Texas legislature recently re
fused to enact a law which would have
permitted of the establishment of car-
bon black plants in the gas felds now
being developed in that state, and it
1s expected the Louisiana legislature
at its next session will be called upon
to take steps to remedy the situation
here,
Carbon black is used for many pup
poses, the best known of which 1s In
the manufacture of printer's ipk. It
fs nothing more than what 1s com
monly known as soot, and its produc
tion is a simple process. The natural
gas flame {s permitted to burn against
‘2 metal plate, across which a mechanl-
eal scraper moves. The carbon, of
‘soot, Is scraped off, falls Into a con-
veyor and Is carried to the packing
room.
Profits from the business are enor
‘mous and any attempt to break it up
Is certain to meet with stiff oppost
tion, as was the case when the ques
tion’ was considered at the state con-
atitutional convention two years ago.
‘The cost of drilling and piping s
gas well which will produce from 10,
(000,000 to 20,000,000 feet of gas dally
Is placed at $20,000. Construction of
a carbon plant capable of producing
8,000 pounds of carbon daily requires
$100,000, ‘The cost of a gasoline ab
sorption plant, which will produce from
the gas, as a by-product, from 1,500
to 2,000 gallons of gasoline daily i
$50,000. ‘The total Investment repre
‘sents $170,000.
| The Light
of .
|. Western
| Stars
| A Romance
By
Zane Grey
CHAPTER L—Arriving at the lonely
ues “alirona ‘station ott Bi Cajon. eg
Mexico, Madeline ‘Hasimona, New Tork
Sirk teas no ons to joost her,, While
Soe waite rem « drunkas sompay exe
tera, "aats fr sho ta married, and’ Goparia
eviow or tecciteg Ha recurn gith 2
erotiny aa the, cow. Torco boro
sey "Sc" Aaxing ber name and leering
Ect identey tho comboy. spony dazed
Ret, “Bonita tas hls boron and escape:
fon “Conducta Stadause "to. Fioreass
ReSSgeley, friend of her brother.
CHAPTER 11—Florence welcomes her,
Jeprao her sigry, and digelaaes: the, cow
Baomont, “Madeline's, “brother, “takes
Bioware fo turk” Madeline. ezonoratss
Bi of any wrong intent
CHAPTER i—Altred,, acion of a
eslthy family, had been dtumigoed from
TisM'home because, of hig dlanpation,
Madeline’ seca that the ‘West has re:
dsorted hit” she mecia Silwelh Avs
mplayer, Tanchijaa,
Madating’ wearhe ‘Stowart has gone ovet
fhe border
APTER IV.—Danny Maina, one
aSielia. conbayee Naw “dicinpaare,
in" some “of Buliwell's_ money His
Fienas link hia name with ‘the girl Boe
Bite
CHAPTER V.—Madelino gets a stim:
of lite on & western ‘ranches SUmPN®
CHAPTER Vi—stewart’s norse comes
ta tho ranch with © note on te aaaate
Shaing, Madeute. to accept the Beata
Suimal: “With her brothere. consent abe
oes #0, naming him “Majesty” her own
Picb, "arranges to. buy “Suntwells: ranch
fee wile? Bon Garon, Matfoan tet
CHAPTER VIL—Madeline, focis | she
1nge found her rignt place, under the Light
Othe weetsrn slate
CHAPTER VITI—Learning Stewart had
boon hurt in & Draw) at Chiesa. and
‘Badal visits hiny and’ pereader i %
Gome to the ranch ‘as the ous’ of her
CHAPTER, TX.—Jim Nola, Nick Stee
and “Monty” Price are Madeline's. chiet
Fiera ier mare's feud ith Bon Gar
Mhactise “ploagea’ Stewart to "ose" that
peace is Rept
CHAPTER X-—Mateling and Florence,
feturning home from Alfred's ranch, tu
Tito" an ‘ambush of vaqueros ‘Flores,
line dscove, therm away. and ‘Mendsline
‘E0ts ome safely but alode,
CHAPTER X1—4 versa
pand ‘carries off ‘Madeting. Stewart fot
Tawa Slone., The leader ip a man with
Whom Bterart emt i ved in"uexico. "He
Hatarsing home’ with aiadeiine
‘Snds hereolf strangely stirred.
RAPIER | Zit —Macainw's cate
inves Ke the ranch, Sraving excitsment
CHAPTER " XXI~The authorities
agree, to release Steware.” but on’ thett
Swe terma, “He. le fe" be ‘oct trea, to
‘Walk ‘where be will, Knowing’ he ts’ cor"
Ered ahd’ may” be ahot at any ‘moment
peace te oe uae
ty Madcline— "Majesty. Your wits”
De ee a
was an impressive gesture, and Made
line, never having climbed a6 high as
this, anticipated much,
Majesty surmounted the Inst fev
steps and, snorting, halted best
Stewart's black. To Madeline the
scene was as if the world had changed
‘The ridge was a mountain-top. I
dropped before her Into a black, stone
ridged, shrub-patched, many-canyoues
gulf, Massed inky clouds were piling
across the peaks, obscuring the high
est ones. A fork of white lightning
flashed, and, Uke the booming of ax
avalanche, thunder followed.
Madeline glanced at Stewart He
hhad forgotten her presence. Immov
able a9 stone, he sat his horse, dark
faced,-dark-eyed, and, Uke an Indiar
unconscious of thought, he watched
and watched. ‘To see him thus, tc
divine the strange affinity between the
soul of this man, become primitive
and the savage environment that had
developed him, were powerful helps tc
Madeline Hammond tn her strange de
sire to understand his nature.
A cracking of tron-shod hoofs behind
her broke the spell, Monty nd
reached the summit.
“Gene, what it won't all be dota" tn
‘& minnut Moses hisselt couldn't tell.”
‘observed Monty. *
Then Dorothy climbed to his side
| and looked.
“Oh, isn't It Just perfectly, lovely!”
she exclaimed. “But T wish tt wouldn't
storm, We'll all get wet.”
‘Once more Stewart faced the ascent,
Keeping to the slow heave of the ridge
fs It rose southward toward the loom-
Ing spires of rock. Soon he was off
smooth ground and Madeline, some
ros behind him, looked back with
concern at her friends. Here the real
toll, the real elim began, and a moun-
tain storm was about to burst tn all tts
tury,
‘The sky grew blacker; the slow-
gathering clouds appeared to be sud-
denly agitated; they piled and rolled
and mushroomed and obscured the
crags. ‘The alr moved heavily and
seemed to be laden with sulphurous
smoke, and sharp lightning flashes be-
gan to play. A distant roar of wind
could be heard between the peals of
thunder.
Stewart waited for Madeline under
the lee of a shelving cliff, where the
cowboys had halted the’ pack-train,
Majesty was sensitive to the flashes of
lightning. Madeline patted his neck
and softly called to him. ‘The weary
Durros nodded; the Mexican women
covered their heads with thelr mantles.
Stewart uhtled the slicker at the back
of Madeline's saddle and helped her
on with It, Then he put on his own.
‘The other cowboys followed sult. Pres-
ently Madeline saw Monty and Dor-
othy rounding the ‘elif, and hoped the
others would come soon.
A blue-white, knotted rope of light:
xing burned down out of the clouds,
and instantly a thunder-clap crashed,
seeming to shrke the foundations of
the earth. ‘This moment of the break-
Ing of the ‘storm, with the strange
growing roar of wind, Ilke a moaning
monster, was pregnant with a heart-
disturbing emotion for Madeline Ham-
mond. Glorious it was to be free,
healthy, out in the open, under the
shadow of the mountain and cloud, tn
the teeth of the wind and rain and
storm,
Suddenly, as the ground quaked un-
der her horse's feet, and all the sky
srew black and erisscrossed by flaming
streaks, and between thunderous re-
ports there was a strange hollow roar
sweeping down upon her, she realized
hhow small was her knowledge and ex-
Perience of the mighty forces of na-
ture,
With blacker gloom and deafening
roar came the torrent of rain. Tt was
a cloud-burst. It was like solid water
tumbling down. For long Madeline
sat her horse, head bent to the pelting
rain. When fts force lessened and she
heard Stewart call for all to follow,
‘she looked up to see that he was start-
Ing once more. She tuned her horse
{nto his tral,
Rain fell steadily. ‘The fary of the
storm, however, had passed, and the
roll of thunder diminished in volume.
‘The alr had wonderfully cleared and
was growing cool. Madeline began to
eel uncomfortably cold and wet. Stew-
art was climbing faster than formerly,
‘and she noted that Monty kept at her
heels, pressing her on. ‘Time had been
lost, and the camp-site was a long way
off, "The stag-hounds begen to lag and
Ket footsore. ‘The sharp rocks of the
trall_were cruel to thelr feet. ‘Then,
‘a5 Madeline began to tire, she noticed
Jess and less around her. Her horse
climbed and climbed, and brash and
sharp corners of stone everlastingly
pulled and tore at her wet garments.
A gray gloom settled down around her.
‘Night was approaching,
__ Stewart's, horse was on a Jog-trot
‘now, and Madeline left the trall more
to Majesty than to her own ehoosing.
As black night began to envelop her
surroundings, she marked that the r
trees had given place to pine forest.
Suddenly a pin-point of ight plereed
the ebony blackness, It grew larger.
Black treetrunks crossed her line of
vision. ‘The Hght was a fire. She
oe ae eee See Se eee
World War Veteran
Now Mechanical Dentist
There i yed_ in the
often ot the New Yor Bental Com
any at Grand Forks, N. D. young
man who was recently _rehabilita
by the U.'S. Veterans’ Bureau as a
Poche Gita had
‘When the war was
farm inborer earning the ose
for such work, which were about $35
CHAPTER XV
ee
to ‘see steaming pots upon red-hot
coals. Except about her” shoulders,
which hed been protected by the slick
ef, she was wringing wet. ‘The Mexi-
can women came quickly to help her
change. in a tent nearby; but. Made-
line preferred for the moment to warm
her numb feet and hands and to wateh
the spectacle of her arriving friends
“Warm clothes—hot drinks and grub
<warm blankets” rang out Stewart's
sharp order.
‘Thea, with Florence helping the
Mexican women, it was not long until
Madeline and the feminine side of the
party were comfortable, except for the
‘weariness and aches that oaly rest and
‘sleep could alleviate. .
Nelther fatigue nor pains, however,
nor the strangeness of ‘being packed
sardinelike ‘under canvas, nor. the
howls of coyotes, “kept "Madeline's
guests from stretching out with long,
grateful sighs, and one by one drop-
ping Into” deep slumber. Madeline
Whispered a ittle to. Florence, and
Inughed with her once or twice, and
then the light flekering on the canvas
faded and her eyelids closed. Dark:
‘ness and roar of-eump life, low volees
of men, thump of horses’ hoots, coyote
serenade, the sense of warmth and
sweet rest—all drifted away.
When ahe awakened shadows of
swaying branches moved on the sunlit
canvas above her, Slow, regular breath:
Ing attested to the deep slumbers of
het tent comrades. She observed prem
ently that Florence was missing from
the number, Madeline rose and peeped
out between the flaps.
‘An exquisitely Deauttful scene sur
prised and enthralled her gaze, Eager
to get out where she could enjoy an
unrestricted’ view, ahe searched for
her pack, found it tna corner, and
then hurriedly and quletly dressed,
Heer favorite stag-hounds, Russ and
‘Tartar, were asleep before the door,
where they had been chained. She
awakened them and loosened. them,
{inking the while that It must heve
heen Stewart who had chained them
ear her. Close at hand also was &
cowboy's bed rolled up in a tarpaulin.
‘The cool alr, fragrant with pine and
spruce and some mubtle nameless tang,
sweet and tone, made Madeline stand
erect and breathe slowly and deeply,
Te was like drinking of a magic
draught. She felt t in her blood, that
Ie qulekened its flow. ‘Turning to look
in the other direction, beyond the tent,
she saw the remnants of last night's
temporary camp, and farther on a
grove of beautiful pines trom which
fame the sharp ring of the ax. Wider
gaze took ina wonderful park, not
only surrounded by lofty crags, but
full of crags of lesser helght, many ft
Ing thelr hends from dark green groves
ot trees. ‘The ‘morning. sum, not yet
above the eastern elevations, sent its
rosy and golden shafts in between the
towering rocks to tip the pines.
Madeline, with the hounds beside
her, walked throwgh the nearest grove.
‘The ground was soft and springy and
brown with pineneedies,
Florence espled her under the trees
and came running, She was ike a
young girl, with life and color and joy.
She wore’ a flannel blouse, conluroy
skirt, and tmoccasins. And her halt
twas fastened under @ band like an In-
Gian's
“Castleton’s gone with a gun, for
hours, it seems." sald Florence. "Gene
Just went to hunt him up. ‘The other
gentlemen are still asleep. I imagine
they sure will sleep up heeh In this
ain”
‘Then, businesslike, Florence fell to
questioning Madeline about details of
camp arrangement which Stewart,
fand Florence herself, could hardly see
to without suggestion.
‘As the day advanced the charm of
the place grew upon Madeline, Bren
at noon, with the sun beating down,
there was comfortable warmth, rather
than heat, Te was the kind of warmth
that Madeline liked to” feel ‘In. the
spring.
Presently a chorus of merry calle
attracted her attention, and she turned
\to see Helen limping along with Doro-
‘hy, and. Mra Beck and. Rath sup.
porting ‘each other. ‘They were all
Tested, but lame, and delighted with
the place, and as hungry as bears
awakened from a winter's sleep.
"Then they had dinner, sitting on the.
ground after the manner of Indians;
find ft was a dinder that lacked merrl-
ment only because everybody was t00
Dually appeasing appetite.
or afew days the prevailing fen-
tures of camp life for Madeline's:
guests were sleep and rest. ‘The men
Were more visibly affected by the
tmountain air than the women.
‘This. languorous spell disappeared
presently, and then the days were full
of Ife and action. Necessarily, ot
course, Madeline and her guests were
how thrown much in ‘company with
the cowboys. "And the party grew to
beriike one big family.
‘Madeline found the situation one of
‘keen and double interest for her. Tf
before she had cared to study her
comboys, particularly Stewart, now,
with the contrasts afforded by her
uests, she felt by turns she was
mused and mystiGed and perplexed
and saddened, and then again subtly
pleased.
Sproon: the: thought) or: Btewarty'and
He served in the’ re a private,
first class, in Co. M, Infantry,
Ist Division. He was gassed and re-
ceived a gunshot wound in his right
shoulder, which disabilities unfitted
him to go back .to the heavy work
he had previously done,
The U. S. Veterans’ Bureau ap-
Pining and Zogetber they "agreed
rainin
spon, a course Sa mechanleal "der
iia pncuairy Siiediieas. “aul oh
‘and was always looking away Into dis
tance. Madeline had a strange sense
of his guardianship over her; and, re
membering Don Carlos, she ‘imagined
he worried a good deal over his
charge, and, indeed, over the safety
of all ‘the party.
‘A favorite lounging spot of Made
Une's was a shaded niche under the
lee of crags facing the east. Here in
the shade of afternoon, she and Edith
would often lounge under. a low-
branched tree. Seldom they talked
much, for It was afternoon and dreamy
with ‘the strange spell of this moun-
tain fastness. There was smoky haze
in the valleys, a fleecy cloud resting
over the peaks, a sailing eagle in the
blue sky, silence that was" the un-
broken silence of the wild heights,
and a soft wind laden with incense of
pine,
‘One afternoon, however, Edith ap;
peared prone to talk seriously.
“See here, Majesty Hammond, do you
Ea nS
ee Se
i ara s\n
Et Ra
— ¥
a (( WAN
i ae Pi nN
anv $
MENS ce So
' Ye ay
YY, x
Yn
Ss
“S00 Here, Majesty Hammond, Do You
intand to" Spend. the. Reet of You
{heen Se Spend. te. Rew
[Intend to spend the rest of your Ife
in this wilderness?” she asked, bluntly.
Madeline was silent.
“Oh, it 1s glorious! Don't misunder-
stand me, dear," went on Edith, earn.
estly, as she laid her hand on Made
Mne's. “This trip has been a revela
tlon tome. I did not tell you, Majesty,
that I was fll when I arrived. Now
T'm well. So well! Look at Helen,
too. Why, she was a ghost when we
got here. Now she is brown and strong
and beautiful, If it were for nothing
else than this wonderful gift of health
I would love the West. But I have
come to love it for other things—even
spiritual things, Majesty, I have been
studying you. I see and feel what thls
Mfe has made of you. When I came 1
wondered at your strength, your virll
ity, your serenity, your happiness. And
I was stunned. "I wondered nt the
causes of your change. Now I know.
You were sick of idleness, sick of use
lessness, If not of soclety—sick of the
horrible nolses and smells and contacts
fone can no longer escape in the cities,
Tam sick of all that, too, and I could
tell you many women of our kind who
suffer in a like manner. You have
done what many of us want to do, but
have not the courage. You have left
it. Iam not blind to the splendid dif.
ference you have made in your life. 1
think I would have discovered, even
your brother had not told me, what
good you have done to the Mexicans
and cattlemen of your range. ‘Then
you have work to do. That is much the
secret of your happiness, is it not?
Tell me. ‘Tell me something of what It
means to you?”
“Work, of course, has much to do
with any one’s happiness," replied
Madeline, “No one can be happy who
has no work. As regards myself—for
the rest I can hardly tell you. I have
never tried to put it in words, Frank-
ly, T belleve, if I had not had money
‘that I could not haye found such con-
tentment here. That 1s not In any
sense a judgment against the West.
But if I had been poor I could not
have bought and maintained my ranch,
Stillwell tells me there are many
larger ranches than mine, but none
Just like it. ‘Then I am almost pay-
ing my expenses out of my business.
‘Think of that! My income, instead of
being wasted, Is mostly saved. I think
I hope I am useful. Of course my
ranch and range are real, my cowboys
are typleal. If I were to tell you how
I feel about them it would simply be a
story of how Madeline Hammond sees
the West. ‘They are true to the West.
Ic ls T who am strange, and what I
feel for them may be strange, too.
Eaith, hold to your own impressions.”
“But, Majesty, my Impressions have
changed. At first I did not like the
wind, the dust, the sun, the endiess
‘open’ stretches. But now I do lke
them. Where once I saw only terrible
wastes of barren ground now I see
deauty and something noble, ‘Then, at
first, your cowboys struck me as dirty,
rough, loud, crude, savage—all that
was primitive. But I was wrong. I
have changed. The dirt was only dust,
and this desert dust 1s clean. They
are still rough, loud, erude, and savage
tn my eyes, but with a difference. They
fare natural men. They are little chil-
‘Gren. Monty Price is one of nature's
noblemen. ‘The hard thing Is to dis-
cover it. All his hideous person, all
his actions and speech, are masks of
his real nature. Nels 1s a Joy, a stm-
ple, sweet, kindly, quiet_ man whom
some woman should have loved. What
would love have meant to him! He
told me that no woman ever loved him
except his mother, and he Jost her
when be was ten. Every man ought to
‘tained in the George T. Ells Dental
Laboratory, Fargo, N. D., where he
studied for two and one-half years.
‘His beginning salary in his new
profession is $25 per week, or nearly
three times what he earned before
the war,/He also has a very much
better chance for promotion as. he
Pris in, whet “poreticoal
‘This. is. what training,
plas, his “own efforts, has done for
vid C. Roessl.
Saturday, July 21, 1923
PY Cp NOPE GI RPT PN LIEN
not impress me. I never could believe
he killed a man, ‘Then take your fore-
man, Stewart. “He 1s a cowboy, his
work and life the same as the others.
But he has education and most of the
‘graces we ate in the habit of saying
make a gentleman. Stewart is a
‘strange fellow, Just lke this strange
country. He's a man, Majesty, and T
admire him. So, you see, my impres-
‘stons are developing with my stay out
“here. I like the country, I like the men.
One reason 1 want to go home soon
‘is because 1 am discositented enough
at home now, without falling in love
with the West, for, of course, Majesty,
would, I could not tive out here.
-And that brings me to my point. Ad-
‘mitting all the beauty and eharm and
wholesomeness and good of this. won-
derful country, still It Is no plice for
you, Madeline Hammond. You have
your position, your wealth, your name,
your family. You must marry. You
must have children, You must not
sive up all that for a quixotic life in a
wilderness.”
“1 am convineed, Edith, that I shall
live here all the rest of my life.”
“Oh, Majesty! T hate to preach this
way. “But I promised your mother I
would talk to you. end the truth Is T
hate—I hate what I'm saying. T envy
you your courage and-wisdom. I know
you have refused to marry Boyd Har-
vey. I Gould see that in his face. 1
belleve you will fefuse Castleton,
Whom will you marry? What chance
Is there for a woman of your position
to mary out here? What In the world
will become of you?”
“Quien sabe?" replied Madeline,
.with @ smile that was almost sad.
Not so many hours after this con-
versation with Edith Madeline sat with
Boyd Harvey upon the grassy promon-
tory overlooking the west, and she
Ustened once again to his suave court-
ship.
Suddenly she turned to him and
sold, “Boyd, if T married you would
you be willing—giad to spend the rest
‘of your life here in the West?”
“Majesty!” he exclaimed, There
‘was amaze In the voice usually s0 even
and well modulated—amaze in the
handsome face usually so indifferent.
Her question had startled him. She
‘saw him look down the {ron-gray cllfts,
over the barren slopes and cedared
ridges, beyond the cactus-covered foot-
hills to the grim and ghastly desert.
Just then, with its red vells of sunllt
Gust-clouds, Its lilmitable waste of
ruined and upheaved earth, it was a
sinister spectacle.
“No,” he replied, with a tingle of
shame tn his cheek.
Madeline sald no more, nor did he
speak. She was spared the pain of re-
fusing him, and she Imagined he would
never ask her again. ‘There was both
Teliet and regret in the conviction.
It was Impossible not to like Boyd
Harvey. He was handsome, young,
rich, well born, pleasant, cultivated—
he was all that made a gentleman of
his class. He was considered a very
desirable and eligible young man.
‘Madeline admitted all this,
‘Then she thought of things that
were perhaps exclusively her own
strange ideas. Boyd Harvey's white
skin did not tan even in this south-
western sun and wind. His hands
were whiter than her own, and as soft.
They were a proof that he never
worked. His frame was tall, gracefal,
elegant. It did not bear evidence of
ruggedness. He had never indulged in
fa sport more strenuous than yachting,
He hated effort and activity. “He rode
horseback very little, disliked any but
moderate motoring, spent much time
1n Newport and Europe, never walked
when he could help it, and had no am-
bition unless it were to pass the days
pleasantly. If he ever had any sons
they would be like him, only a genera-
ton more toward the inevifable extine-
tion of his race.
Madeline returned to camp In just
‘the mood to make a sharp, deciding
contrast. It happened—tatefully, per-
haps—that the first man she saw was
Stewart. Stewart was a combination
of fre, strength, and action, These at-
tributes seemed to cling about him.
‘There was Something vital and com.
pelling in his presence. In him Made-
line saw the strength 6f his foreta-
thers unimpalred. ‘The life tn him was
marvelously significant.
Madeline Hammond comparedsithe
man of the East with the man of the
West; and that comparison was the
last parting regret for her old stand-
ante:
CHAPTER XVI
Bonita.
Having exhausted all the resources
of the mountain, such that had interest
for them, Madeline's guests settled
quletly down for a rest, which Mude-
Ine knew would son end in @ desire
for clvillzed comforts. ‘They were al-
most tired of roughing It. Helen's dis-
content manifested {tself in her re?
mark, “T guess nothing is going to hap-
en, after all”
Madeline awaited thelr pleasure in
regard to the breaking of camp; and
meanwhile, as none of them cared for
more exertion, she took her walks
‘without them, sometimes accompanied
by one of the cowboys, always by the
stag-hounds. One day, while walking
alone, before she realized it she had
gone 'a long way down a dim trail
winding among the rocks, It was the
middle of a summer afternoon, and all
about her were shadows of the crags
“crossing the sunlit patches. The quiet
was undisturbed. She went on and on,
hot blind to the fact that she was pe
haps going too far from camp, but
risking It because she was sure of her
way back, and enjoying the wild,
ckagsy recesses that were new to her,
Finally she came out upon a bank that
Sroke abruptly into a beautiful ltt
(To be continued next week)
Fob continued next week)
COLORED MAN INVENTS
NEW ELECTRIC BULB
Washington.— George Washington
Turner, age 62, living at 1411 I
street NW, this city, has invented
aa incandescent electric lamp which
in time may revolutionize that entire
industry, in that when it is burned
out a new filament may be inserted
and the same my ged again,” The
new invention ‘has, been, pater
the United States patent office,
Sn
38
’ ST. PAUL
WEEK'S RECORD OF HAPPENINGS
IN MINNESOTA'S CAPITAL.
The “Saintly City” and Saintly City
Folke—Newsy Items of Social, Re-
ligious, Political and General: Mat-
ters Among the People.
Pea
‘HE APPEAL ASKS AS A SPE-
“IAL FAVOR THAT ITS READERS
IVE PREFERENCE TO THE AD-
VERTISERS WHO SEEK THEIR
PATRONAGL BY ADVERTISING
IN IT. SHOP IN THE APPEAL
BEFORE SHOPPING ELSEWHERE.
Miss Helen Johnson, 1099 Kilburn
street, has returned from her vaca-
tion.
Mr, W. B, Tandy, 593 Iglehart ave-
nue, has purchased a new Dodge
touring car.
Dr. Clarence Smith left the city
last week for Washington, D. C., for
an indefinite stay.
Mr. J. E. Johnson, 526 St. An-
thony avenue, has purchased a new
Oldsmobile touring car.
The Charity Sewing Circle will
meet Monday, July 23, at the home
of Mrs, Roland, 531 Aurora avenue.
Mr. and Mrs, James Woods of Des
Moines, Iowa, motored to the city and
are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. C.
H. Miller, 428 Edmund street.
Mrs. George Mundell has organized
a kittenball team to meet the Minne-
apolis team of women at the Union
picnic July 25 at Minnehaha Falls.
PRINCE HALL LODGE NO. 105 meets
fret ands turd Monday in each month at
Gilon' Temple Hall, 400) Franklin street. All
Visiting, brothers ih ‘wood standing are wel-
Somers We Willams, W. Mts Daniel Rose,
Ser
HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH NO. 553, G. U.
o.vet 6. Fe meets the third Monday’ in each
Gonth at Cnion Hall: corner of Aurora ‘and
Remus streets at 8:00 BM. Mrs, Jessie
Brown, M. N. G. :Mrs. Carrie E. Lindsay,
Wo"! 426 Rondo street.
Quite a large crowd attended the
boat excursion Monday evening given
by Ames’ Marching club of Minne-
apolis, and apparently everyone had
a good time.
O. C. Hall and family left | this
morning on a motor trip through the
towns of Northern Illinois, the scene
of Mr. Hall's boyhood. They will be
gone about two weeks.
The Kings Daughters Charity Cir-
cle is out to raise $500 for the new
church building fund. Of this amount
$50 has already been deposited in the
Central Metropolitan bank,
Mrs. T. E. Franklin of St. An-
thony avenue, left Saturday to spend
her vacation visiting friends and rel-
atives in Chicago, Ill, Indianapolis
and also in about’ seven other cities
in Indiana.
Oficd: Cedar 0508 Res.: Dale 2847
Res.: 678 St. Anthony Ave.
MRS. T. H. LYLES
Successor to
7, H. LYLE UNDERTAKING CO.
180 W. Fourth St. ST. PAUL
515 St.Anthony Avenue
Five-room bungalow, new, hardwood throughout, gas,
bath and electricity. Hot water heat, built-in buffet, glass
locker, cedar chest, medicine chest, linen locker, Jaundry
chute, kitchen cabinet, beautiful fireplace with built-in
bookease on each side, full cement basement, laundry, cozy
attic, excellent yard and location. Convenient to univer-
sity, Rondo and Dale car lines. Must be seen to be appre-
ciated. $5,000. Terms.
SCHUCK &SCHUCK REALTY CO.
665 University Ave. Saint Paul
Mrs. Edgar Llewellyn of Omaha,
Neb., enroute to Duluth, Mnn., to, vis-
it her husband who is in business
there, was a stop-over, guest Sunday
at the home of Mrs. James A. Rob-
erts, 978 St. Anthony Ave.
You and your friends are cordially
invited to attend the third annual
moonlight boat excursion to be given
by Pride of the West Company No.
1, Uniform Rank, Knights of Pythias
‘on Monday evening, July 30. A. good
time is assured everyone. Good mu-
sic as usual. Tickets 83 cents.
If you are looking for a good time
don't fail to join the Acme Club
Boys in their all-day picnic down the
river on the steamer Red Wing and
barge Manitou, Thursday, July 26.
‘The boat will leave the foot of Jack-
son street at 1 P. M. sharp, and will
land down the river at Grey Cloud
Island. Music by Stevens — Special
Six. ‘Tickets: Adults $1, childrer
50 cents.
Mrs, Amelia Turner, wife of A. J
Turner, who for many years was
resident of St. Paul, passed away
Wednesday afternoon’ at her_ home
396 N. St. Albans street, Funeral
services were held Friday, 2:30 P. M
at St. James A. M. E. church, unde
the supervision of Household of Ruth
No. 553, and Past Most Noble Gov
ernors, Chamber No. 37, G. U. 0. 0
0. F.' Interment at Oakland ceme
toa
!
: I, ey, Save Money
| IP ano
se Make Sure of
| ne (3 Satisfaction
| My n/c 8 2urina your
| ay i PIANO
= ee! 2 FROM
: DYER BROS. |:
=| High Quality Pianos on EASY TERMS |:
= Whether you wish an upright, grand piano =
| or player piano, you can save money and :
: make sure of satisfaction by writing to E
this old established house before buying. :
‘We'll send a piano on FREE TRIAL anywhere and guarantee |-
satisfaction if you buy it. Lowest price whether you buy for J
cash or on terms. Complete descriptive catalog and sample {f
of wood free on request. :
Write for Catalog and Free Trial Offer Today |:
W. J. DYER & BRO. sree mas F
St. Paul Baptist Church.
Visiting ministers will preach at
both services next Sunday.
Mrs. Fuller and Mrs, Evans will
be baptized in the evening.
Plumbing and other work on the
church is steadily progressing.
Preaching at 11 A. M. and 8 P. M.
Sunday school at 10 A.M. B. Y. P.
U. at 6 P. M.
To Be Ready
when adversity knocks
needs advanceprepara-
tion and daily sacrifice
PLAY SAFE BY HAV-
ING A SAVINGS AC-
COUNT AT
THE
STATE SAVINGS BANK
93 E. FOURTH ST.
4% Interest. 4%
Compounded Quarterly
THE STANDARD FROM OCEAN 10 OCEAN
= 3 eae .
eo eS
; Vi Fe x tebe
MAKES HOME SWEET HOME.
_ THE LOG.CABIN PRODUCTS CO, \
bi air PAUL: MINNRSOTA Ss
Dale 0427 Dale 3454
RONDALE PHARMACY
Henry Aldes, Proprietor
“FILMS—SODAS—CANDIES
Prescriptions Properly Prepaired
Registered Pharmacist
‘Always in Charge
We Do Printing and Developing
618 Rondo, Cor. Dale St) Paul
OH BOY!
ACME CLUB BOYS
in their All Day
Red Wing and Barge Manitou
Thursday July 26°
MUSIC BY PROF. STEVENS’ FULL-JAZZ BAND
Boat Leaves FootofvacksonSt.at?P.M, Returningat9 P.M.
Refreshments, Barbecued Meats and Regular Dinners
Served By The Acme Cafe Caterer, W. H. Reams
eee ee eee ogee
SIRES as S.a0 GOERS
FVERVBANY INVITEN
Exide
BATTERIES
BARRETT BATTERY 00,
The ZA
Ormand
0. £. ZANDELL
PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST
Kodaks, Films and Supplies
879 Rice St., Corner Milford
Walter W, Siggelkow
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
EMBALMER
498 W. University Ave., Cor;
Mackubin.
Residence: 424 W. Central
. on Cy - Yellowstone
oe
Pad et Ca \
oS
2
o &,
NIC IES.
vom STONE PIR
To Yellowstone Park
On ly $ 46:20
Round Trip from Saint Paul
M. R. Johnson, C. P. & T.A., N. P. Bldg., Phone Cedar 2340, St. Paul
.
I personally guarantee every DIAMOND Tire, sold during this sale,
to be first grade and fully guaranteed to give the purchaser satis-
factory service. MILTON ROSEN.
THESE ARE REAL TIRE BARGAINS
Size Fabric Cord =—Tubes
BOXS oeeeeceeeeeeeee eee e eens SC 5O $1.35
BOKSY, oc. eceecceee eee e eens ee eeceees 925 $12.25 155
BAKA eee e cece eee eeeeeeeeeeee cence 17,50 25.05 2.35
‘33x4 see eeeeeeeeeesesseeseeesessees 18.90 26.05 255,
BBKAY, oo. ccce ce cccceeeenreeceseeeens, 33.60 3.40
BAKEY, oon ccce ee ceercoceceneerenseees, 34.75 355
35x5 Peereee etree teeter ere err ee es 42.00 4.30
Other sizes reduced proportionately as low. You can’t go wrong
buying DIAMOND Tires at these low prices.
MILTON ROSEN TIRE CO.
151 West Sixth Street. Saint Paul, Minn,
. Telephone GA rfield 4169
CLover Lear BUTTER
Best in the World
Faunuxss Branp Burrer
! aw close second
| Titpen PRODUCE co. j
Saturday, July 21, 1923
re you RUNDOWN, WEAK, | tonie bullds up the BLOOD, MUS.
aikitn,”WoRROURT AN Tan: | SUES, Wieav Bs Pheer: Bor
Ferra enbane: rode Bas | eink ToEm Tio RE SOM
Biden!" Ale jon tabine wits: | Plame, "2 oe Goa", ie
: PLEXION: lt ethat tnd ath
RROwaris” anewra | f208,thet 7ar, WORE sod athe
WEAKNESS: Smumazora | Settee, zee SAE snc DIGHeT th
RBMRow evens
Porrry §«—EetrePea |i you doubt me, mane me
pemrowere” | Bauewe | octet "tin esa
sooner ers Beare eae ota tuan eat ue
Boze: aw | ES ALENT Tse
BiZeitss SAEAEREs | eth nthe MPs
Is your Bone Marrow drying up *
ine 2 | Donte slckneas ene around:
so as to make you don't wait “unt you are “gone
or give you dail Eyes, Pale Lips. | Take a step away from the grave.
Seale Bake, “SMasea "faut 'at ase | Poke syeteaarey, rom, the eave
PLES? Cheer up! A New York | Prepare yourself. Fight it. off!
Feat, Gee SPs editie thet | BORE aT: of Sitrdhr ee!
Sees are os rate oes | REY sae, Ore OnTeE:
SEP TE Se anes | Raha aes see Pes
z Been SO EOWe ae
Sorzoxe mxp a1oop rome | Bia ni ec ee anor
Get this tonic and watch yourself | Mut'Gorga’” A&E aulck—before you
a ee Teeth "
ESPSE LEME, WeSeeg Gas | crlease write your drugrta’s address.)
4 sia aaa ‘Address
4 www
; bf 7A () ) DE.M-P.A.SAKSON
iad wet | P. 0. Box 47
| . | Hamitton Grange
KOA Red Tonic } Station
ww mm
New York City
Cowhide Bags
ef § 5,00
= + eo ee ae, Cobra grain cow- -
a: ~ hide Traveling
$52 Bags, a full cut 18-
See the New Wheary Ward- inch size—3-piece
robe Trunk—it is Ameri- style—a very good
cas:finest, bag at this price.
sat MYATT ANT) =
a Allg AND at
Cede LUGGAGE SHOP “
Leg Pia 1 SS
iy” 2 A 7 se 'g Le, \
= of) SE a Yeeros |
N Pd ae tas! q
IN matey q
IN mae ]
I Fite:
IN Oe ]
IN q
(N q
WW Sy? ‘ i
} “[?’mThroughWorking |}
AHN - q
i for Nothing”--
IN i
IN So he opened a savings account. 4
i “During the past five years,” he said, j
I) ‘I’ve earned about $10,000 and until now | if
i I haven’t saved a dollar. The next five j
iN years will be different. I’m coming in 1
IN often.” q
N i
He is keeping his word. . j
IR q
tN q
I} THE First NATIONALBANK |
j N° : of Saint Pout q
iN __ The Big Banh for the Small Depositor 4
WHEN YOU THINK
THINK OF
SCHUCK & SCHUCK REALTY CO,
665 University Ave. Tel. Elkhurst 2956
The Colored Man's Rock of Gibraltar.
THE AFRICAN BLOOD BROTHERHOOD.
Protective, Economic, Educational, Physical, Social Benefits.
+ Sick and Death Benefit Department, Co-operative Businesses,
Industrial Unite. Calisthenies Clubs (Sokols), ete, now organizing.
JOIN NOW! Help push the,A. B. Bs fight for « United Front
for better Economie Conditions, full Race ‘Equality and the right
the Colored Man to unmolested existence.
APPLICATION BLANK.
Supreme Executive Council,
"African Blood Brotherhood, :
2299 Seventh Ave, New York City.
Encloned please ind, ne dolar and ($1.25) twenty-five cents
for my initiation fee and first month’s dues’ in the Brotherhood.
Send my membership card, copy of constitution, ete.
Leviathan's New Captain Is Typical Son of the Sea and Won Promotion by Merit.
Doesn't the story of this man
amack of the tales of the old
sea dogs?
Washington.—Capt. Herbert Hart-
ley, the new skipper of the Leviathan,
is a typical son of the sea. He has
spent most of his life on ships, has
seen and served on the old sailing
beauties and remembers the skepti-
cism that greeted new fangled wireless ideas.
He is the sort of a sailorman who
truly pities the "people in the cities"
on wild, stormy nights. Ocean weather
to him is divided into two categ-
ories: It is either "a bit fresh" or
"calm as the palm of your hand." He
seems to have heard or read of hur-
ricanes or gales, but in his tongue
they are no more than "little squalls"
or "kickups."
His associates on the American line—he has been with that company ever since he began his nautical career—say he is lucky; not because he landed the prize post in the American merchant marine but because in all his career he has never had an accident to his ship or any ship on which he has sailed. It is partly because of his reputation that he has advanced through all grades in the American Line to the bridge of the largest ship in the American fleet.
Hunch Fails Him
His worst half hour on the high seas was when during the World war a giant German submarine came to the surface within gun range of his ship, the Loulsville, and opened fire. "It was just after daybreak," he said, "and we were about two days' sail from France when a lookout sighted this sinister black body about a mile away and slightly astern of us. "This object broke one of my real hunches, because I had a distinct feeling on starting the trip that we weren't going to have any trouble, and usually those hunches work out for me. "Hardly had the sailor given the alarm when a column of spray raised by a shell almost showered our port bow. I had four six-inch guns, two in the bow and two in the stern, and I made up my mind right there that the only ones to be used were the stern guns, because I intended to go away from there as fast as I could.
"The Louisville could outstream any submarine that I knew of, but whether she could get out of range before she was mortally hit was the question most vital to all of us just then. I gave every full-speed signal that could help us and turned tall in the direction that would take us away from the menace, which whistled its second shot just about where our how would have been if we hadn't changed our course.
"It took us more than thirty-five minutes to get out of range. During that time the submarine's other shots, which were plentiful, did not come as close as her first two. Ours, I am sorry to say, did her no damage and did not frighten her enough to make her submarine."
Wears Navy Cross.
The Louisville, under Captain Hartley's command, was the first armed ship to leave an American port after President Wilson decided that American vessels should carry their own protection. As the old St. Louis she had served with honor in the Spanish-American war, and, while Captain Hartley doesn't say, so, it is evident that the Leviathan will have a difficult time replacing her in his affections.
Captain Hartley wears the Navy cross for efficient command of his ship during the war, and it is the only honor which he does not seem to take lightly. The cross, he says, is his most treasured possession and he wouldn't trade it for the Leviathan or any other craft afloat.
He is forty-eight years old and is the first cadet of the American line to rise to the position of commander. He took the place of Capt, John C. Jamison as commander of the St. Louis in 1917 when that skipper was taken ill on board, and he brought the ship in and docked her so skillfully that his job as a skipper in his own right was secure. His most recent command has been the big liner Mongolia of the American line.
He began his career twenty-eight years ago as a cadet on the training ship Saratoga with Rea Admiral W. S. Sims, loaned by the navy, as one of his instructors.
Carmarthenshire, Wales.—News has reached here that a ringed swallow which was liberated from Langharne, a neighboring village, has been picked up dead on a farm near Johannesburg, South Africa, 6,000 miles away.
This is the first time actual proof has been obtained of a swallow's flight from Wales to South Africa.
Try Our Fresh Meats and Fish
Men Who Have Died, Legally and Scientifically, Now Alive.
Chicago.—Men who have died—legally and scientifically—several times are now alive and working, due to the use of adrenaline, an extract of the adrenal glands, in a new method of resuscitation, according to reports made at a joint meeting of the Chicago Medical society and the Chicago Society of Anaesthetists.
Dr. Dennis W. Crie of Chicago, who with his uncle, Dr. G. W. Crie of Cleveland, originated the method, read reports of cases in which persons were revived half an hour after they were pronounced dead, died again, and were revived again at intervals, ultimately recovering completely.
"Life can be restored by this method provided the cause of death can be quickly removed," Dr. Crie stated.
"With prompt and fearless treatment the patient may be made to live again."
"So far I have used the treatment only in cases of persons who were pronounced dead, not only by me but also by other surgeons. Hereafter I purpose to employ it upon persons who are dying."
The method as described by Dr. Crile calls for large injections of adrenalin directly into the heart, this organ being pierced with a hypodermic needle. Sometimes manipulation of the heart in the hands of the surgeon is employed as an aid, and respiration is assisted by mechanical reproduction of the processes of breathing.
It finds its greatest utility in operations during which patients die from the anesthetic, the discussion brought out, but can be used "in any situation where the cause of death can be removed quickly."
The first use of it upon the human heart was in Belgium, during the World war, when soldiers terribly mutilated by shells were restored by it and accompanying surgery, according to Dr. Crile. Previously Dr. G. W. Crile had experimented upon dogs, on which the reactions were not so satisfactory. Dr. Crile urged surgeons to make general use of adrenalin and advocated that hospitals be well supplied with it. Dr. Nelson M. Percy added to Dr. Crile's report details of a case of a patient dying under an anesthetic, who was revived, but who passed away six hours later, due, he believed, to her poor physical condition and the severity of the operation. The adrenal glands' secretions, according to medical authorities, control the emotions of courage and fear.
Inventor Is Rewarded by Postal Department
CO MON LIECH
A. E. Wilde of Riverdale, Md., an employee in the mall equipment shops of the Post Office department, Washington, who received one of the two first awards to be made by the department for meritorious suggestions and inventions. Mr. Wilde is shown with the guard for punch presses used for grooming mall bags, which he invented, and which has prevented all but two accidents on these presses since last July when it was adopted. In one year previous to the invention at least 20 operators lost portions of fingers. The award was $100.
Wins $10,000 Bet by
Shooting Big Wolf
Brooklyn, N. Y.—Although he traveled 2,000 miles, 300 of them on snowshoes, lost fifty pounds in weight, froze two fingers, fell over a precipice into a snow bank, lived three days on one muskrat and got lost in a Canadian blizzard, Capt. Frank Doudera, big game hunter, is happy, for he won $10,000 by finally shooting a big timber wolf on a wager.
In a friendly chat Doudera said he thought he could shoot a wolf. City Marshal John Cole, who was read up on wolfing and knew that most of them are killed by traps or poison and seldom by a gun, bet $1,000 that Doudera could not shoot a wolf in five weeks of hunting. Others chipped in until the pot was $10,000.
Doudera trailed wolves for four weeks and saw hundreds of pelts turned in by trappers, but shot none. Just when he was ready to despair a wolf stopped to kill a rabbit and Doudera made his kill. After that it was easy and he shot five others and a bear. The bear's two cubs were sent to the Brooklyn zoo.
192 St. Anthony Avenue..... $6,500.00
198 St. Anthony Avenue..... 4,250.00
198 St. Anthony Avenue..... 3,500.00
183 Carroll Avenue..... 4,800.00
183 Carroll Avenue..... 4,800.00
632 Kirk Street..... 2,500.00
CLASSIFIED
FOR SALE—Overland touring car,
B-83. Cheap. Telephone Dale 1183.
LOST—Forty dollars in a business
envelope addressed to Mrs. Reeler,
June 21, between Union Hall and 418
Charles St. Call Humboldt 1576 or
912 Gaultier street.
WANTED—Colored men to qualify
for sleeping car and train porters.
Experience unnecessary. Transportation furnished. Write T. McCaffrey,
Supt., St. Louis, Mo.
FOR SALE
3 seven-room houses, all in good locations, as low as five hundred dollars down and thirty-five dollars per month plus the interest.
R. F. WILSON
Tel. Elkhurst 1896
F. W. Gosewisch,
Clerk of Probate.
W. T. Francis, Attorney.
(7-7-23)
ORDER FOR CREDITORS TO PRESENT
CLAIMS.
State of Minnesota, County of Ramsey, ss.
Probate Court.
In the Matter of the Estate of James H.
Loomis, Deceased.
Letters of Administration on the Estate of James H. Loomis, Deceased, late of the date of his Order, of State, that Minnesota being granted Hattie Oliver. IT IS ORDERED. That six months be and the same is hereby allowed from and after the date of his Order, in which all persons having claims or objections to deceased, are required to file the same in the Probate Court of said County, for examination and warred. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED. That the first Monday in February, 1924, at 10 o'clock A. m., at a General Term of said Probate Court, to be held at the Court House, in the same place, where the same hereby is appointed as the time and place when and where the said Probate Court will examine and adjust claims and objections. AND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED. That notice of such hearing be given to all creditors and persons interested in said Estate, withhold publishing his Order once in each of the street addresses in The Appeal, a legal newspaper printed and published in said County. Dated at St. Paul this 2nd day of July, 1923. By the Court: HOWARD WHEELER. (Seal of Probate Court) Judge of Probate W: T. Francis, Attorney (7-23)
ORDER TO PRESENT CLAIMS WITHIN THREE MONTHS.
Dated at St. Paul this 2nd day of July.
Dated at St. Paul this 2nd day of July.
By the Court.
IN WARD WHEELER.
(Seal of Probate Court) Judge of Probate
W. T. Francis, Attorney.
ORDER FOR CRFDITORS TO PRESENT CLAIMS, ETC.
State of Minnesota, County of Ramsey, ss. Probate Court.
In the Order of the Estate of Sylvester J. Bellese, Deceased.
Letters timentary on the estate of Sylvester J. Bellese, deceased, late of the County of Ramsey and State of Minnesota, ss. Probate Court.
being granted to James Vaughn. being granted to James Vaughn. be and the same order hereby allowed from and after the date of this order, in which all persons having claims or demands against the said deceased, are required to file the same in the Court of the County for examination and allowance, or be forever barred. It. Further Ordered. That the first Monday in February, 1924, at 10 o'clock A. M., at a General Term of said Probate Court, to be held at the Court House, in the City of St. Paul, in said county, and the same in the County of St. Paul, in said county, when and where the said Probate Court will examine and adjut said claims and demands. It. It Is Further Ordered. That notice of such hearing be given to all creditors and persons interested in said estate, by forthwith publishing this order once in each Appeal, a legal newspaper printed and published in said county. Dated at St. Paul this 2nd day of July, 1923. By the Court; HOWARD WHEELER. (Seal of Probate Court) Judge of Probate W. T. Francis, Attorney. (283) 212-2222
M. W. Goins N. W. Goins
Tel. Dale 3341
UNIDALE TRANSFER CO.
GENERAL HAULING — FURNI-
TURE, TRUNKS AND PIANOS
A SPECIALTY
"SATISF ACTION GUARANTEED"
872 Lafond St. Saint Paul
TEL. SOUTH 7954
W. S.
FU
W. SQUIRE NEAL
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
SUCCESSOR TO
O. A. LAWRENCE
FACT B Sypho
FACTORY SALE OF
BOHN Syphon Refrigerators
Now in Progress at Greatly Reduced Prices
Term
Terms If Desire
Small Deposit Will Hold Any Refrigerator for Future Delivery
Take St. Paul-Minneapolis Car
Get Off at Hamline Avenue
JOHN REFRIGERATOR CO
PAUL M
WER PRICE
FURNITURE
BOUTELI
Terms If Desired
Small Deposit Will Hold Any Refrigerator for Future Delivery
Take St. Paul-Minneapolis Car. Get Off at Hamline Avenue
BOHN REFRIGERATOR CO.
ST. PAUL MINN.
LOWER PRICES ON FURNITURE AT BOUTELL'S
Great Sale Now Going
—All Departments
wonderful opportunities to save—
bills—up to 1/2 off—we offer you Liber
You can get the benefit of the sale
pay for your purchases by the more
HESITATE—This is the
me to BOUTELL'S and fun
home—AT A BIG SALE
—Draperies—Furniture—I
then Ware—Cut Glass—A
Ware—Stoves, Heaters, R
—all at a saving to you.
A Great Sale Now Going On All Departments Besides wonderful opportunities to save—big price reductions—up to 1/2 off—we offer you Liberal Credit Terms. You can get the benefit of the sale prices—and pay for your purchases by the month. WHY HESITATE—This is the time to come to BOUTELL'S and furnish your home—AT A BIG SAVING
Rugs—Draperies—Furniture—Dishes Kitchen Ware-Cut Glass-Aluminum Ware-Stoves, Heaters, Ranges all at a saving to you.
UTELL BRO
MINNEAPOLIS
MARQUETTE AT FIFTH
Polis and St. Paul Cars Stop at O
?
502 EAST 24TH ST
MINNEAPOLIS
MAKE A TRIP TO
PORTERS' & WAITERS' CLUB
Excellent Food at Minimum Prices. Soft Drinks of All Kinds.
TOBACCO CIGARS CIGARETTES
GLOVER SHULL, Pres. and Treas. EDDIE L. BOYD, Secy.
Busy Corner Kondo and Western
E OF
Cigars, Cigarettes, Tobacco and Candy
381 Rondo
We have purchased 122,000 pair U. S. Army Munson last shoes, sizes $1/2 to 12 which was the entire surplus stock of one of the largest U. S. Government shoe contractors.
This shoe is guaranteed one hundred per cent solid leather, color dark tan, bellows tongue, dirt and waterproof. The actual 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 postman on delivery or send money order. If shoes are not as represented we will cheerfully refund your money promptly upon request.
NATIONAL BAY STATE
SHOE COMPANY.
296 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
We have just bought a tremendous stock of Army Munson last shoes to be sold to the public 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 postman on receipt of goods or send money order. Money refunded if shoes are not satisfactory.
THE 1441 Bro
THE U. S. STORES CO.
1441 Broadway New York City
381 Fuller Ave. Elk 2364
J.P.Schroeder
MEATS AND PROVISIONS
323 University Dale 2262
big price
liberal Credit
sale prices
month.
the time
d furnish
SAVING
A Woman
SAFE Phone: Elk
SAFEMILK Phone: Elkhurst 3163
MINNEAPOLIS
A GIFT ELECTRICAL
We are sure would be appreciated Make it Reading Lamp, Vacuum Cleaner or anything Electrical WE HAVE IT
Staple and Fancy Groceries
Ice Cream and Soft Drinks
Dale 8807
PUBLIC SALES.
U. S. ARMY SHOES.
Saturday, July 21, 1923
W. A. FORD
Manager
Afro-American Club
MOTIONS FOR RAILROAD MEN
United Rooms
Cedar 7518
SAINT PAUL
WAITERS' CLUB
St., Minneapolis
Main 2592
Rices. Soft Drinks of All Kinds.
ARS CIGARETTES
as. EDDIE L. BOYD, Secy.
IT ELECTRICAL
are sure would be
appreciated
Using Lamp. Vacuum Cleaner
anything Electrical
WE HAVE IT
will make delivery any date
Minnesota Chandelier Co.
369 Jackson Street
OFFICE TEL.
CEDAR 4044
RES. TEL.
DALE 7816
RES. TEL
DALE 7816
OFFICE TEL.
CEDAR 4044
HOURS: 9 A, M, TO 1 P, M.
AND 2 TO 6 P, M.
SURGEON DENTIST
FIRST CLASS GUARANTEED WORK
IN ALL BRANCHES OF DENTISTRY
SUITE 2 DETROIT BLDG. SAINT
COR. 4TH & WABASHA MINNE
SAINT PAUL
MINNESOTA
RES. TEL.
DALE 1454
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
Tel. Elkhurst 4750
HERTZ
Heating and Sheet Metal Works
517 University St. Paul
TEL. VAN BUREN 1321
VANDER BIE'S
ICE CREAM
IS THE BEST
For Sale Everywhere
J. C. VANDER BIE
Partridge and Brunson Sta.
ST. PAUL, MINN.
Tel. Dale 8339 We Call For and Deliver
ELMER MORRIS
DRUGGIST
Drugs, Medicines, Soda Water
Soft Drinks, Toilet Articles
Candies, Cigars, Tobacco,
Ice Cream Brick or Bulk.
Gas and Electric Fixtures
Fishing Tackle
Dalis & W. Central St. Paul
New Ideas in Fixtures
are constantly appearing and they come here first. We want you to share in the pleasure of seeing their surroundings and their trivialness. Come when you can and see how the modern home is lighted and made beautiful by the latest ideas in fixtures.
Let Us Wire Your Home.
Seven Corners Electric Co.
208 W. 3d St.
Opposite Wilder Public Baths.
G. W. Swanson
MILK
khurst 3163
A MILK CO.