The Appeal
Saturday, September 1, 1923
St. Paul, Minnesota
Page text (machine-generated)
ONE KILLED IN KLAN PARADE RIOT
Sell Your Goods by telling the buying public all about them in the most popular column in the paper--the classified ad section In The Appeal
VOL. 39 NO. 35
ONE
REPORT LYNCHING
OF 60 YEAR OLD
MAN IN ALABAMA
Children Became Frightened at
Meeting Old Man; Mob
Kills Him
ONE THOUSAND IN MOB
Colored People in Vicinity Ordered to Leave Town by Whites
A letter has reached the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People reporting the unpublished lynching of a 60-year-old colored man named Will McBride, in the town of Adamsville, Ala., on Thursday night, July 12, 1923. The report charges that the man was taken from his home by 1,000 members of a masked organization and was found dead, his body terribly mangled, near a road.
It is charged that a crowd of school children had become frightened at meeting the old man on a country road, had told their teacher of their fright, and the old man was arrested charged with assault. In court the children are reported to have said they had been frightened merely by the sight of the old man and he was discharged. Feeling against him ran high and the lynching followed. Colored people who witnessed the affair have been told to leave town and terrorized into silence the report states.
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has forwarded the substance of the report to the governor of Alabama with a request for investigation and punishment of the lynchers if the facts are as stated.
Lincoln's House At NewSalem To BeRestoredSoon
Lincoln's House At NewSalem To BeRestoredSoon
Logs of Original Dwelling to be Moved From Petersburg, Ill.
Petersburg, Ill., Aug. 27.—(By the Associated Press).—The old log house in which Abraham Lincoln is thought to have read Blackstone and Shakespeare by the light of the open fire is to find its way back to the restored village of New Salem.
Many years ago, R. J. Anstott, owner of the co-operate shop at New Salem, moved the logs to Petersburg and converted them into a dwelling. After numerous changes of ownership it passed into the hands of the department of public works, and the Old Salem Lincoln league, who entered into an agreement to buy it and restore it on its old site.
Harry Schirding, Petersburg, banker, was appointed to supervise the restoration. Several days ago he completed the foundation at New Salem, and this week the logs, each one carefully numbered, will be hauled to the park.
Mr. Schirding intends to have a house-raising soon, and the old cabin will go up in one day in its original surroundings. A dedication service will be held sometime in September.
The logs will all be in place in a few days, but the chimney and fireplace cannot be completely restored until late in September.
N. Y. GOVERNOR BLOCKS
DEMPSEY-WILLS FIGHT
Like a bolt from the clear sky came the news Monday night of the real reason why the Dempsey-Wills fight has been hanging in the balance for the past few months, and that reason is that the Honorable Al Smith, governor the state, is making a bold play to the cracker Democrats of the South in preventing Harry Wills from meeting Jack Dempsey in the roped arena. This is the same Al that gazed smiling upon the colored Democratic Marching club for months ago, which meant the trip to Albany to let you know that he had the colored vote in the palm of his hand, but unless the governor suffers a change of mind, there will be no Dempsey-Wills fight until after the Democratic convention of 1924.
WHITE PEOPLE PROTEST
ERECTION OF SEMINARY
The Baptists proposed to erect a theological seminary for colored people at Nashville, Tenn., but the white people successfully protested against
Charge That Georgia Flogging Gang Was Paid To Whip By Macon Society
"U" GRADUATE LEAVES TO TAKE UP "Y" WORK
Miss Bella Taylor Accepts Position With Branch of Chicago "Y"
Miss Bella T. Taylor, until this spring, girls' work secretary of the Y. W. C. A. club center, 598 W. Central avenue, left Wednesday, August 29, for Chicago where she will begin her duties September 1 as girls' work secretary of the Chicago Y. W. C. A.
Miss Taylor is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. C. Taylor, 925 E. Magnolia street. She is a graduate of the University of Minnesota in the June class of 1923. While at the university Miss Taylor pursued her major work in the department of sociology, specializing in family welfare work. For more than two years she was connected with the "Y" center, first as part time secretary and then as girls' work secretary. Her work there has drawn commendation from Mrs. Cordella Winn, national "Y" officer and from the executives of the downtown association. Mrs. Taylor, who is president of the local chapter of the Alpha Kapna Alpha sorority and is prominent in the younger social set of the Twin Cities, leaves a host of friends who wish her success in her larger field.
TULSA INDIGNANT OVER MARTIAL LAW
Governor Walton Sends Troops After Flogging is Reported
Tulsa, Okla., Aug. 28. — Tulsa awoke today under martial law and very angry. Indignation at the proclamation of Governor J. C. Walton putting the city under military rule increased as Tulsa citizens looked out of their windows as they arose and saw the soldiers in olive drab parading in the streets.
Following the issuance of the order by the Governor as a result of the whipping of Nathan Hantman by a masked band, troops from Oklahoma City and Okmulgue were rushed to the city and encamped during the night.
Under the provisions of the martial law order, all civilians must be off the streets without special permits by 11 o'clock at night and must not stir out again until 6 o'clock in the morning.
Tulsa's officials and citizens were highly indignant when the first news of the proclamation, in which the Governor asserted that the law must be obeyed and that Tulsa officials had fallen short of their duty and that it was necessary to send in troops to restore order reached here.
Hantman after his flogging appealed to Aldrich Blake, the Governor's counselor. His injuries are so severe that it is doubtful, according to reports here, if he will completely recover. His statement to Blake was not divulged. Blake, in turn, communicated with the Governor, who is in Sulphur for a vacation.
The governor announced through Mr. Blake that the courts and city departments could still, do business, price were out of work or the present.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAAS
RERUSED CAMP PERMIT
The Supreme Lodge of Colored Pythians, which met last week in New York, was insulted by the refusal of Tammany Hall to permit the thousands attending to pitch a camp in the suburbs. The local committee lost $4,000 in preparing the camp. The Pythians, in their reports, showed a membership of 300,000 and realty holdings throughout the country valued at $2,017,000.
SLAYER UNDER BOND
FOR DOUBLE SHOOTING
W. B. Butler, prominent in Democratic circles, who killed William Freeman and fatally injured Mary Lou Gamble, both colored, at Fayetteville, Ala., was held under bond for carrying concealed weapons.
"I'm Taking a Bath" Didn't Halt Police
Marion, O.—Cries of "Tm taking a bath," failed to keep police from breaking through a bathroom door at the home of Mrs. Julia Sneckenberger and seizing her on a charge of bootlegging. They are said to have secured considerable "evidence." C. F. Dombaugh was caught as he was making an exit through a window and will also face a bootlegging charge.
MINNESOTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY
THE A
ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS
ED IN
gia Flogging Gang
p By Macon Society
ARTHU
CITY
APP
EAPOLIS, MINN.. SATUR
KLA
THE APPEAL.
ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS, MINN., SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 1, 1923
ARTHUR BOTTS, CITY FIREMAN, DIES SUDDENLY
ARTHUR BOTTS, CITY FIREMAN, DIES SUDDENLY
Served Nearly Five Years With Engine Company Number One
FUNERAL HELD THURSDAY
Large Crowd of Relatives and Friends Pay Last Respects to City Employee
Arthur Botts, city fireman, a member Engine Company No. 9, died at the Ancker hospital Sunday, August 26, the result of a hemorrhage.
The deceased was born in Fall City, Neb., and came to St. Paul in 1910.
Joins Fire Department.
In the fall of 1918 he took the civil service examination and passed it with a high mark. He was then placed with Engine Co. No. 9 where he remained until he was taken sick. October 1 he would have been in the service five years.
The funeral was held Thursday from the home of his mother, 770 St. Anthony avenue, Rev. H. L. P. Jones officiating.
He leaves to mourn his loss a mother, sister and a host of relatives and friends.
Simpson and Wills had charge of the funeral arrangements and the interment was at Oakland cemetery.
VISITORS ENTERTAINED BY TWIN CITY FOLK
Luncheons, Dinners, Dancing and Card Parties are Among the Courtesies Tendered
Mrs. Ruth Boger Taylor and daughter Aimy, with Mrs. Thomas Boger, Jr., and son were the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Hall at the cottage Hallcrest, Round lake, and at the town house on Iglehart avenue. They were guests of honor with Mrs. Agnes Sweeney at a reception given by Mrs. G. W. Wood, Monday, a luncheon by Mrs. O. C. Hall, Tuesday, a breakfast by Mrs. W. R. Donovan, Wednesday and entertained by Mrs. S. E. Hall Wednesday evening with a card and dancing party. Mrs. Hall delightfully surprised her guests during the evening with the introduction of Miss Beatrice Van Allen in esthetic dancing-followed with numbers by Mrs Mattie Rhodes, Atty. G. W. Hamilton, Jr. Mrs. Hattie Oliver, Mark Gibbs, a clever reading by Katherine Tandy and a solo by Mrs. S. E. Hall The evening concluded with dancing and card playing.
The remainder of the week was enjoyed with a dancing party given by Mrs. G. W. Wills, Thursday, guests of Mr. Sidney Cuthbert at the ball game and luncheon Friday, an elegant party given by A. V. Hall at Round lake, and their visit was pleasantly ended with a breakfast given by Mrs. Jake Giles, Mrs. G. Shull and Mrs. Morris Gibbs of Minneapolis, followed by a sightseeing tour through the Twin Cities piloted by Morris Gibbs, terminating with a dinner given by Mrs. W. B. Tandy in the evening.
Dr. J. R. French being a life-long friend of both families, graciously offered his car at their disposal during their entire sojourn.
The visitors left the city delighted with the courtesies tendered them by the Twin City folk.
Police Say Hudson Brothers Were Hired by Others to Whip Colored Men; Federal Men at Work with City Police
Macon, Ga., Aug. 27.—Following the assertion by police and county officials yesterday that the three Hudson brothers who were arrested Sunday night while in the act of flogging a colored man were being paid by an organization to do the flogging, officials today turned their efforts to learning the identity of those alleged to have financed the Hudson's and expressed confidence they soon would be able to solve the mystery surrounding the numerous floggings which, for the last several months have terrorized Macon.
County officials last night would not divulge information which they were reported to have secured during the examination of the Hudson's, but indicated they had learned enough to proceed on the theory that the Hudson's were a part of a gang which has been conducting wholesale whippings in Macon, and that the gang was financed by a organization.
The federal government is also working with the city and county authorities in an effort to apprehend the gangsters who Saturday night held up a government mail truck near the terminal station and attempted to remove the colored driver for the supposed purpose of whipping him.
Loosen Grip of Military in Tulsa
Tulsa, Okla., Aug. 27.—The grip of martial law, imposed on Tulsa and a portion of Tulsa county, by Gov. Walton because of mob activities, relaxed somewhat today, but there was no lessening of the intensive inquiry being carried on by state authorities into flogging cases. Presaging the eventual withdrawal of the troops, twenty of the 150 national guardsmen sent here departed early today for their home station at Okmulgee. Indications also were given that the regulations imposed on the city by the military authorities might be lightened, in case there are no untoward incidents. Last night, for the first time since the occupation of the city, no guard patrols were maintained on downtown streets to enforce the order against traffic between the hours of 11:30 P. M. and 6 A.M. The military authorities took into custody five citizens of Broken Arrow. The seizure of the men came after the filing of charges against Marshall Moore, a special deputy sheriff, living near Broken Arrow, in connection with the flogging in 1920 of Leonard Bagby.
Armarillo Klan Orders Members Not to Flog
Amarillo, Tex., Aug. 27. — Sheriff Les Whitaker, arrested here last week in connection with the flogging of E. T. McDonald, railroad laborer, must await action of the grand jury, an examining trial having been denied him yesterday by District Attorney Lloyd Fletch.
Sheriff Whitaker was the fifth man arrested in the McDonald case. The grand jury will meet next Monday.
Whitaker is under bonds of $2,500 each on charges of conspiracy and alleged complicity in the abducting and flogging of McDonald. Texas rangers are still working on the whipping case.
Threatening any member who participates in a flogging affair with expulsion from membership, Amarillo Klan No. 141, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, after a meeting last night issued a statement denying any participation in the McDonald whipping
BOY WINS PRIZE
IN WANT AD QUERY
Bertram Hodges, 15-year-old boy, who recently arrived with his parents, migrating from Georgia, received a prize from a Philadelphia daily for the brightest answer to a want-ad query.
GIRL AND SCALP REUNITED
Was Left Behind on Farm After Accident When Young Woman Was Rushed to Hospital.
Covington, Ky.—Thelma Baker, sixteen years old, of Newport, and her skull and scalp are reunited. They were parted for a period of several hours and by a distance of many miles.
Thelma was interested in the working of a corn grinder. She was peeping into the machine when her curts got entangled in the grinder. The machine tore the girl's scalp from her head. She was rushed 20 miles to the Boothe Memorial hospital here, but in the excitement her scalp was left behind. There was a dash at breakneck speed back to the farm and back here again. Surgeons by a skillful operation, replaced the scalp on Miss Baker's head, using adhesive plaster to bind the wounds.
Joins Fire Department.
Cat Summons Policeman to Aid in Kitten's Rescue
London.—A cat, helped by a policeman, succeeded 'n rescuing her kitten that had fallen down a well at Alton, in Hampshire.
The distressed cat attracted the attention of a policeman, and the faint cries of the drowning kitten explained the mother's agitated antics and cries.
Two efforts made to save the kitten by lowering a bucket failed.
Then the constable lowered the mother cat by a rope. Her natural aversion to water vanished in her desire to save her kitten, which was raised exhausted to the surface, firmly but gently held in its mother's teeth.
Aubrey Lyles' $18,000 Pierce Draws Eyes of All Washington
Washington, D. C., Aug. 22. (By Isaac Bannister.) A vote taken to day could be the only means of determining which is the more popular, Miller and Lyles' new show, "Running Wild," which opened at the Howard theater to capacity crowd Monday night, or Lyle's new $18,000 Arrow auto which stands in the narrow alleyway beside the showhouse.
Miler and Lyles used to be the big cheese in "Shuffle Along." That is history. All this week they appeared here in a new musical comedy for which they wrote the book, James W. Johnson the music, lyrics by Cecil Mack, and directed by Will Marion Cook, "the old master" himself.
Revella Hughes, who once came near marrying a parson, and George Stephens sang "Open Your Heart," in a way that was a knockout. Adelaide Hall, Ina Duncan, and Arthur Porter took the crowd off its feet, with "Old Fashioned Love." Thomas Woods, George Stamper, Ralph Bryson and Robert Lee were just about as good dancers as ever stepped before the footlights and the big audience called the new show a success. This was inside.
Outside, a crowd of several hundred gazed at the Pierce Arrow in wonder. They admired its double seat of windshields and speedometers. Lovingly they passed through halls over its khaki cover and the woodwork of the interior inlaid with French ivory, and the massive nickel bumpers. Some were attracted by the ice chest on the actor to recline and sleep en route.
The disc wheels have double brakes, front and rear. The body is Rolls-Royce, with a Pierce Arrow engine. And there is an altimeter to tell how high the car is above sea level.
"Jes' like a Pullman," said one admirer.
"Beter," says Chick Richard, chauffeur, settling himself firmly to keep the $18,500 far from being taken away piece by piece.
Alley Dwellings, Working Mothers, Causes of High Infant Death Rate
Study Completed by Children's Bureau Also Discloses Poverty as Cause; Colored Mothers Use Baby Clinics More.
Reasons for the higher death rate among colored babies than among white babies are suggested in a study made by the U. S. Department of Labor through the Children's Bureau in Baltimore, Md.
Facts were secured from more than 1,000 colored families in which babies were born during the year of the study. Thirteen per cent of the entire number of births for the year were in these families.
Highest Rate.
The infant mortality rate among these colored families was higher than that among any other group, either native white or foreign born, except among the babies of Polish mothers, which had a slightly higher rate than the colored people. The colored rate was 158.6 per 1,000 compared with 95.9 for native white mothers and compared with 51.0 for babies of Jewish mothers, who had the lowest mortality rate of any nationality group in the city. Such factors as the babies' surroundings, the fathers' earnings, employment, the interval between births in families, the size of family, and the type of feeding were analyzed for each of the nationality groups.
Alley Dwellings Factor.
As to the surroundings of the colored babies, the report points out that Baltimore is built on the alley plan and in these narrow back streets lived a good percentage of the colored population. Space was less congested in these alleys than in the Jewish and Polish districts but a higher percentage of dwellings were seriously out of repair. There was a great lack of decent toilet facilities and the alleys were damp and filth. In discussing the question of fathers' earnings in its effect on the infant death rate, the report points out that there was an excessively high percentage of colored fathers earning the lowest wage and there were almost no "prosperous" colored families. The report draws the conclusion that, A larger part of the difference in "prosperity," but not all, is evident due to the greater poverty of the colored families."
Another difference found between the colored group and the native white group was the fact that the colored families were larger and the intervals between the births of the babies shorter than in the white families. After weighing all the evidence, however, the report concludes that this difference was a comparatively small factor in accounting for the difference in the death rates.
More Mothers Employed.
The third factor studied was the employment of mothers. Seventy-three per cent of the white mothers studied were not employed during the year preceding or immediately after the birth. On the other hand only 24 per cent of the colored mothers studied were not employed. More colored babies than white babies, it was found, were nursed by their mothers. Therefore, the higher mortality in colored babies could not be attributed to an excess of artificial feeding in the colored group. Another favorable factor among the colored babies was the large number of babies who had been reached through the infant welfare agencies in Baltimore. It was found that a higher percentage of colored mothers than of white mothers received good prenatal and natal care and a large percentage of colored babies than of white babies received supervision from infant welfare agencies.
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
18,000 Pierce of All Washington
(By Isaac Bannister).—A vote means of determining which is the styles' new show, "Running Wild," greater to capacity crowd Monday. Pierce Arrow auto which stands in showhouse.
the big cheese in "Shuffle Along." they appeared here in a new musical book, James W. Johnson the music, led by Will Marion Cook, "the old name near marrying a parson, and our Heart," in a way that was a cancan, and Arthur Porter took the "fashioned Love." Thomas Woods, and Robert Lee were just about before the footlights and the big success. This was inside. Hundred gazed at the Pierce Arrow table set of windshelf and speed-their hands over its khaki cover inlaid with French ivory, and the were attracted by the ice chest on its admired the bed which enables route.
brakes, front and rear. The body row engine. And there is an alti-above sea level.
the admirer. Chauffeur, settling himself firmly taken away piece by piece.
Working Mothers, Infant Death Rate
PROTEST EXCLUSION FROM CITIZEN'S CAMP
Colored Applicant Refused, but Told Not to Forget His "Americanism."
A letter protesting against the exclusion of colored people from the C. M. T. training camps established by the war department, has been sent to Secretary of War John W. Weeks, the specific case complained of being that of Anhtony R. Mayo Jr., of Bloomfield, N. J., who was rejected because of his color.
The letter rejecting Mr. Mayo which was enclosed with the protest to Secretary Weeks follows:
To Mr. Anthony R. Mayo, Jr.,
3 Lawrence Place,
Bloomfield, N. J.:
1. It has been the established policy of the war department to hold C. M. camps for colored people if a warrant is required to warrant the holding of such camps. In view of the fact that only a few colored people in the second corps area have applied to attend such a camp, it is not deemed practicable to hold a camp for them.
2. This headquarters regrets that it will not be possible to send you to camp this year, and hopes that you will not lose any of your interest in true Americanism through the disappointment of this year.
For the C. M. C. Officer,
R. P. Ovenshire,
2nd Lieut. Inf.
No reply has as yet been received from the secretary of war.
BIG FASHION REVUE OPENS AT STATE FAIR
Parade of Milady's Wardrobe to Be Feature at Woman's Building
An educational fashion review will be one of the outstanding features this year in the Woman's building annex at the Minnesota State Fair and Northwest Dairy Exposition, Sept. 1-8. These style dramas will be conducted each afternoon from 2:30 to 4:30 under direction of George Lamb, of St. Paul, who has been prominently identified with dramatic affairs at the University of Minnesota.
The dramas will be put on by Montgomery, Ward and & Co., to show how charmingly one may dress on a small income. The models wearing the clothes in the exhibition will all be employees of Montgomery-Ward. There will be a seven-piece orchestra accompanying the style shows and 18 persons will appear in the cast.
One drama, which is called "School Days," will show a young girl going away to school. She has a dream before her departure about what she would like in her wardrobes. The models who appear on the stage in this drama tell the story of the dream and show what are the appropriate things for a young girl to wear to school, featuring also some of the things she should not wear.
"Dame Fashion's Decree" is another of the style dramas. The curtain rises on a mammoth Montgomery-Ward catalogue. The covers of the book are opened by dusky pages and Dame Fashion steps out and mounts her throne. In this drama models will appear wearing Milady's wardrobe as she herself wears it from morning until night, including everything from the house dress in which she does her housework to the evening gown in which she appears at formal parties.
$2.00 PER YEAR
RIOT
ROBED KLANSMAN
FALLS AS CROWD
FIRES ON PARADE
Citizens of Carnegie, Pa., Block
Hooded Paraders and Fire
on Kluxers
KLAN OFFERS REWARD
Klan and State of Pennsylvania Offers Rewards for Capture of Slayer
Pittsburgh, Aug. 25. — A force of deputy sheriffs was rushed to Carnegie, a suburb, late tonight when a crowd of about 500 persons blocked a sreet and stopped a parade of Ku Klux Klansmen.
The parade was led by an automobile, but the Klansmen on foot were reported to extend back for more than a mile.
After a momentary pause, the paraders broke through the crowd and continued through the town singing "Onward, Christian Soldiers."
A number of shots were fired and one man, dressed in white robes, is known to have been killed. He died in a physician's office, shot through the head.
Deputies Are Reinforced
Many persons were injured in the fighting which was still in progress more than an hour after the first outbreak. The force of deputy sheriffs was reinforced by all available uniformed Pittsburgh policemen and the cries to lower the American flag were given the right of way on city streets as they sped in automobiles to Carnegie, six miles away. The streets of Carnegie are jammed with people shouting and yelling. Every few moments the sharp crack of a pistol sounds above the uproar. Car after car filled with heavily armed officers passed newspaper correspondents speeding to the scene of battle.
Autos Block Bridge
The Klansmen had been gathering all afternoon and evening for what is understood to have been a state meeting on a hillside overlooking Carnegie. Early in the evening, their leaders were told, police said, that a parade through Carnegie would not be permitted. About 11 P. M., however, the parade was seen to appear over the hill and start toward the town. To enter it, the Klansmen had to cross the Glendale bridge, which spanned a small creek. A crowd gathered at once at the bridge and automobiles were run on it and stopped, executively, by the structure. When the automobile leading the parade reached the bridge it stopped. The Klansmen made no attempt to proceed immediately and paid no attention to the cries to lower the American flag which headed the parade. Neither did they make any move to turn back.
Bedlam Breaks Loose.
After the impasse had existed for perhaps a half hour, the leaders of the marchers seized an opportune moment and made a wild dash for the bridge. The crowd climbed the bridge and the crowd stationed at the one end swept backwards.
Q. R. S. Company Employs Seven More. Colored Artists
In another part of this edition will be found an advertisement of the Q. R. S. Music company. To those readers owning player pianos the Q. R. S. company needs no introduction as its product is to be found wherever musical merchandise is sold. It therefore becomes a matter of real interest to our music loving readers to learn that in keeping with the company's policy of efficiency given to each nationality in promoting the musical genius of that particular race, seven more of our colored composer-pianists have just been added to the Q. R. S. staff of artists. The Q. R. S. company markets its products exclusively through the music dealers. It maintains four complete factories, three in the United States and one in Taiwan. In addition to company distributing stations, all of which form a network of distribution that covers the world at large. This company has by its rapid and substantial growth, become one of the largest manufacturers of player piano rolls in the world.
GEORGIA RENEWS
LYNCH ACTIVITIES
The lull in lynching activities for the state of Georgia became spirited last week when three colored men were hanged and two were flogged. One of the three hanged was accused of "assassing" a white man.
THE APPEAL
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Entered at the Postoffice in St. Paul, Minnesota, as second-class mail
matter, June 6, 1885, under Act of Congress, March 3, 1879.
THE ‘SNOW: PINCHES \be any feeling in the tooth after
In November of last year The Ap-
peal said editorially “In his fight
against mob violence and lynching
the colored man is but trying to save
‘the white man from himself.”
As long as it was the black mar
being lynched, whipped and burned
the practice was all right. South.
erners proclaimed it as the only pro-
tection for the pure white woman-
hood of the South. Northerners felt
vaguely that it was too bad, but per-
haps the Southerners knew what they
were doing.
Now the shoe is on another foot
and it is beginning to pinch. White
men and women are being beaten,
driven out of town and lynched
Mobs terrorize white communities,
causing white men to tremble and
wonder if they or their women folk
will be the next to be flogged and
robbed. Governors are calling out
militia, proclaiming martial law.
Editors are pointing out the conse-
quences of the lash as the law. Po-
liticians are scratching their heads
and wondering whether a federal law
such as the Dyer bill ought not be
enacted. The President of the na-
tion, according to reports, is not a lit-
tle concerned over the reign of the
mob. It makes a difference whose
ox is being gored,
Let the shoe pinch, The harder
it pinches the quicker some remedy
—whether it be the Dyer bill or some
other bill—will be found, And
meanwhile, some of the pale face
friends are experiencing the hellish
fear of the knowledge that they are
without the protection of the law—a
fear that the Southern black man
lives under all his life.
THE LASH AS LAW
(Chicago Tribune.)
A half dozen states are upset by
the persistent attempts of citizen:
to correct social conditions by flog-
ging other citizens, tarring them, and
even shooting and hanging them. Ii
is not confined to southern states
although some of the worst cases
have been in the south, and there is
no reason to believe that it all comes
cout of the Ku Klux, although it’s
probably not unfair to say that the
masked riders started it.
The idea persists that on certain
occasions methods outside the law
must be employed by citizens to pre-
vent crime and offenses against
morality. There also is the idea that
groups of citizens are competent te
decide what is a proper mode of life
for others and to force others to com-
ply. We do that by law, and if it’s
inconvenient to wait for a law or to
enforce a law, we try a lash or a elub.
It’s making the mob the king of
the country.
| Health Talks |
By E. S. WEBER, D. D. Ss.
Any_ questions regarding sub-
jects in these articles or other
dental work should be addressed
to the Health Editor of the Ap-
peal. Dr. Weber will publish the
answers each week in this column.
OUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Q._ I have a son who has lost all
of his permanent six year molars
and his teeth are very irregular, es
pecially in the front. He is fifteer
Years of age. What would. you advise
for him.
F, D. K.
A. I would advise that ‘you consult
an orthodontic specialist.
Q. I have a bridge that was put
in some time ago. One of the crowns
has a big hole in it. Do I have to
have the bridge removed to repair
the crown? Y. W. S.
‘A. That all depends; if the crown
is strong otherwise the tooth’ can be
filled, if not you will have to have
a new crown, Your dentist will de-
termine which is best.
QI had a tooth: extracted and
the dentist broke it off and left the
roots in. Do you think that I should
have the roots taken out?
0. H. Vv.
A. Safety First—better out than
in; ‘might cause you some trouble
later.
Q. I let my plate fall on the floor
the other day and it broke in several
pieces, What'can be done; do I have
to have a new one made?
MRS. D. C. C.
A. You will not have to have a
new one made. Your plate can be
repaired. Go see your dentist about
the matter.
Q. Is Lavoris a good mouth wash?
A. Yes.
Q. When the nerve of a tooth has
been taken, out and the tooth filled
Wihy does the tooth ache afterwards
Ir think that if the nerve. is
‘entirely dead that there would not
be any feeling in the tooth after-
wards. MRS. D. He Y.
A.” No, my dear reader, there is
not any feeling in the tooth struct:
ure after the nerve has been ‘killed,
but there is feeling in the bone, the
membranes and all surrounding’ tis-
sues, due to infection, which was the
primary\ cause of extirpating — the
nerve. In other words, killing a
nerve does not render the tooth or
teeth free from pain, but in reality
renders it more susceptible to infec-
tion which brings about swelling, red-
ness, pain, etc. I suppose you want
to know why killing a nerve makes
a tooth more susceptible. It is a
known fact that bacteria penetrate
tissue far beyond just the area of de-
cay. So if you have a tooth that has
a cavity that extends to the nerve it
is almost certain that the nerve is
infected because decay is none other
than rotton, putrescent matter, liter-
ally loaded with bacteria. ' These
kind of teeth have been treated and
filled but neatly 90 out of every hun-
dred develop some subsequent. infec-
tion such as an abscess, necrosis, ete,
Take my advice and do not permit
your teeth to decay that far.
Q. What are the causes of en-
larged joints about the body of a
woman ——years of age?
TD.O.
A. You are probably _ suffering
from what is known as Arthritis De-
formans, a chronic rheumatic disor-
ded, which develops secondarily to
deseased teeth, tonsits, infected gall
bladder or appendix, or some pelvis
infection.
Q. Miss D. J. writes: I am: 24
years of age, height 5 feet 6 inches,
weight 90 pounds. I feel very weak,
I have no energy and I am also ex-
tremely nervous. Kindly tell me what
you think is wrong.
A. Have your physician give you
a thorough examination. You have
symptoms of tuberculosis; then go
to see a dentist and have your mouth
put in good sanitary condition,- free
from: ail denestte: dacay, ote.
UGIT 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 gus in this country is not
Inexhaustible, and that the supply s
dwindling rapidly, persons interested
in conservation of Loulsiana’s natural
resources are launching a campaign
with the object of either putting an
end to the existence of carbon black
plants in this state or at least curbing
thelr operations.
The north Louisiana gas field 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 cubic
feet of gas daily for the manufacture
of carbon black.
Ninety per cent of this gas {s
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
in search of cheap fuel hesitate to lo
cate in or near the field for feur the
gas will be exhausted in the near fu-
ture, .
The Texas legislature recently re
fused to enact a law whieh would have
permitted of the establishment of car-
bon black plants in the gas fields now
being developed in that state, and it
1s expected the Loutsiana legislature
at its next session will be called upon
to take steps to remedy the situation
here.
‘Carbon black is used for many pur
poses, the best known of which is in
the manufacture of printer's ink. It
1s nothing more than what ts com-
monly known as soot, and its produc-
tion is a simple process. The natural
gas flame is permitted to burn against
‘a metal plate, across which a mechanl-
eal scraper moves. The carbon, oF
soot, Is scraped off, falls into a con-
veyor and 1s carried to the packing
room. 5
Profits from the business are enor
mous and-any attempt to break {t up
4s certain to meet with stiff opposi-
tlon, as was the case when the ques.
tion was considered at the state con-
stitutional 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 daily
is placed at $20,000. Construction of
‘& carbon plant capable of producing
8,600 pounds of carbun 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 dally is
$50,000. ‘The total investment repre
sents $170,000.
WE GET
We get out of anything just about
what we put into it.
George Blank complained that he
had attended “a bum school” for twa
years and got nothing out of it. It
was the opinion of those who. knew
him that he put nothing into it.
Mr. A. complained that he got noth-
ing. out ot the. sings bank. As a
matter ‘was putting noth-
ine into it. ¥
wild mule
Monty m
_
= ‘ Ra Toh ees oe
woes eee err es =
a os rs Sy aes
ieee ee pee ee ee sae
oa a S.A 8 Sop ae
eo eo eee ae ge A eo ee
Sa ae Pa gs ous Ni Poem a
pee cae ae Res ee ae
2 oi gree, Se ae -
eee ar eS RE as eee
SMe eae as “We BES eae és
ee ca = Pe i ae
eae ee SES ied - Shee > ae
5 Rarer eae eae ee apes. -G Spee)
be ye] ay ty i Sees
nie ease.” oF ae eee os) oe eee aes
=r aes oe ‘ a a aie See
ae cB et ea 3 PRM BE SE a aes
hg alee sree ra \ : BS ee oa Fee
Paes Behe se
SReppeig ener a ee ee PRS cee te Sarees
eee area Ri, a ee
eae = ee toad Be cee nears
pee ert a Bas Wi ph us ha eed eae
‘ara tel ES 5 usta ee
Se ee a ae
eee ae o a
SS aay. ee
iene So ae Fojs oa ris Rees
rege eee Er pe eh cosets ae: pes
Pee ees a Sears 5S SaSeeraees
JOHN Q. ADAMS
Late Editor of The Appeal Who Died September 3, 1922
1 ye. ty
el x (ms \ a
SS UNG
Hedy Lari Nirah OU
A } A) yt
; A A ;
\ RAIN TA MACAU SBI aL
\ <oZamrt a eo
BETTY’S DREAM Voice near Betty's ear, and she fel
i a tug and heard a rustling sound
HY OU are going to sleep in the| Which tured her completely over, sh
four-poster I had when 1 was | Was 80 astonished.
married,” said Aunt Polly, opening the The silk quilt seemed to have liftec
door to her guest room and holding the | from the bed, and all the bits of gayl;
candle so Betty could see, “and this | flowered silks and the plain ones a
silk quilt is made from pieces of my | well were old-fashioned gowns—th
resses and those of many of my | styles were In the days of hoopskirts
friends when we were all young and| One flowered silk gown that seemet
danced as gayly as you do, my dear, | to be more aristocratic than the oth
though I dare say you think Uncle | ers was rustling with indignation
Peter and I are too old-fashioned to | “To think I am called old-fashionec
ever have danced.” when I was brought over from Franc
“Oh, no, indeed!” answered Betty, | for my lady to wear at the big ball:
as she looked at the pretty bits of |I am the latest style from abroad.”
silk in the quilt. “I can almost see “Was, my dear—was,” said a shim
i
Bin Nene
ie De,
= NM ho
rr) Ae anes
eee Sg
i ss
i Semcon
“You Are Gotna ‘eo; oieen: in the Four-
you in this flowered gown dancing the
minuet. Did Uncle Peter wear a
satin vest?”
“He did, my dear, and the very vest
4s in that drawer—the bottom one.
Look at it, if you like.”
Betty was looking at the big bed.
“How ever am I to get up there?” she
asked. Her nose was on a level with
the billowy height,
For answer Aunt Polly drew a
small, two-stepped ladder from under
the frilly ruffles of the bed.
“Good-night, dear,” sald Aunt Polly.
“Be sure you pull that silk quilt over
you. I hope you sleep well.”
“How can I help sleeping in this
wonderful roomful of old-fashioned
things?” replied Betty.
First, she peeked at the wonderful
satin vest, then she opened the folded
quilt and looked Iong at the bits of
silks. “Oh, you wonderful old-fash-
foned things!” she said aloud. “How
beautiful you are!”
“Old-fashioned, indeed!” said a
“THESE LITTLE ONES”
I am thinking of benevolent institu-
tions in general and of institutions
for crippled children in particular.
To what better purpose could one
put his money?
Institutions in which the unfortu-
nate would receive medical and sur-
gical treatment, institutions in which
they would receive education and vo-
cational training, institutions in
which they would receive moral, and
spiritual culture. What more doulé
be desired as an opportunity to. de
good?
‘The need, is the call. If you have
toy nea pio caland toe sek
everywhere.”
TR MEMORIAM
voice near Betty's ear, and she felt
a tug and heard a rustling sound
which turned her completely over, she
was s0 astonished.
‘The silk quilt seemed to have lifted
from the bed, and all the bits of gayly
flowered silks and the plain ones as
well were old-fashioned gowns—the
styles were in the days of hoopskirts
‘One flowered silk gown that seemed
to be more aristocratic than the oth-
ers was rustling with indignation.
“To think I am called old-fashioned
when I was brought over from France
for my lady to wear at the big ball!
Tam the latest style from abroad.”
“Was, my dear—was,” said a shim-
mering gown of silver and blue that
changed as it moved and the candle
light fell upon it. Betty thought she
blew out the light, but as she turned
her eyes from the beautiful dresses
she saw it lighted, standing on the old
dressing-table.
‘The soft, slivery blue dress tried
to smooth matters over. “Why should
we get angry because we are called
old-fashioned?” it said.
“You were very beautiful that night
of the big ball, and your flowers are
as bright as the night you danced the
minuet.”
‘This seemed to calm the flowered
dress, and It sighed as It sald:
“Oh, that was a wonderful dance!
I wonder what became of the spinet
that made such wonderful muste that
ight 2” + ;
“Here,” was the reply which seemed
to come from the foot of the bed. “I'm
here, friends, but sadly changed. I
am ‘really ‘new-fashioned—not the
beautiful spinet of the old days, but
made Into a new and shining desk.
‘Ah, that I, too, might be called old-
fashioned with the rest of you!”
Betty saw all the gowns hurry to
the footboard and look over.
“What is the matter with you?”
they asked. “You have lost—”
“Yes,” Interrupted the spinet desk,
“I have lost my soul—the things that
made me beautiful—and no longer can
I make sweet music. I must be for-
ever silent.” :
Betty laughed right out loud, tt
looked so funny, and then to her sur-
prise she saw the sun pecking In
through the shutters. She sat up and
rubbed her eyes. The black border
of the beautiful silk quilt was on the
floor at one side of the bed. She
pulled it up and laughed at her.dream
and just then a tap sounded on the
door and Aunt Polly's smiling face
appeared to Betty's “Come in.”
(© by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
“Inasmuch as ye have done it unto
one of the least of these ye have done
it unto me.”
IN THE GARDEN
By E. W. Gilles
The problem of the ages began in
the garden of Eden. Do not think
‘there is anything new about them
now exc in their incidpental and
supericial features,
The humanit ‘iblem began in the
garden of Bdea nd ‘has continued to
this day.
The theol roblem began in
the nee oF Bde od haw continved
| The Light |
: af |
| Western |
| Stas |
:| ARomance |
s] By :
: Zane Grey
Mtustations by Irwin Myers
CHAPTER 1.—Arriving at the lonely
Usile Tallrona station of El Cayon, Nex
Moston, Stadeline ‘Slammond, New York
fin figs no one to mec: her, Wade 1B
Ste’ waiting ron, © drunken ‘cow bay em
tere sake It Sho'la married. and: dears,
isaving ‘her’ cerrided fle returns. wit
prisets who goer through woine sort of
Ecrenony. ant the. cowsey forces ner, {0
say "SL" Kaking’ner naive ‘nd learsing
St idenuty the Sowboy. noon daseds it
a"ahooting scrage” cuade the room
Stetican ie killed, ‘The cowboy tetas
sist “Bonita take nis horse ad escape,
fish ‘conducts Madeline “to Florence
Ringaley, friend of her brother.
CHAPTER 11—Ftorence welcomes her,
carne her story, and dipmiases the, cow:
Boy, Gene “Stewart. ‘Next day “Altred
Hatamend, ‘Biadeline’'s. ‘brother, takes
Stewart tasks "Madeline exonctates
Bim’ of any wrong intent
CHAPTER I1—altred,, econ of
wealthy fans, had bess distifened rors
Bist home “because, of bis" dissipation.
Madeline’ acco that the West nes fe:
deemed ‘tim she ‘mests Salwelly Ais
giplovers typical "western ranchniane
Madeline’ tearha Stewart has gone over
the border"
APTER IV.—Danny Maine, one of
Skills cowboys Waa 'disippeared,
itn some ‘of Stliwel's, moneys His
Tienda link hls name with ‘the girl Bo:
Bite.
CHAPTER. V.—Madeline gets a glimpse
of ite on a wentern func
CHAPTER ViStewart's horse comes
to the ranch with # note on ihe. saddle
Shaing Sigaeting to, accept the beautiful
Enimal, “With her brothers: consent ane
oes 26, naming him “Majesty” her own
bet" tina,” Madelng Tndependenty
rranges to. buy “Suulwell's rand
fhe wink of Bon Gartod, « Mesfead seigh-
CHAPTER Vii Madeline, /teia she
baa found er right place, unade'the ght
of ule westsrn stare
CHAPTER VIL—Learning Stewart haa
boon hurt in & Draw) of Chtnteatan, and
Enowing her, brother a fondness for’ him,
Sadalite vata him and peraiades m5
comet the ranch as the boss’ of het
Sowboye.
CHAPTER, X—Jim Nele, Nek, Steet
and “Monty” Price are Madeline's chiet
Hisra hey haves, feud. with Don Car
ios vaquerge, who are replly” guerrilias,
Maauiine pleages” Stewart Yo "ose" that
peace is Kept
CHAPTER X.—Madeline and Florence,
returning Home from Alfred's ranch roe
into an ambush’ of -vaqueron. Worence,
Knowing ‘the Mexicana ate after ‘Made:
Te Stcoye hem aways "and Meadelice
gets home safely but alone.
CHAPTER XIL.— Madeline's _ slater
Helen, with a party of castors. friend
Strives me the ranch, craving srcltronee
ONE HEAD
By. E. W. Giles.
A two-headed anything in nature
is a monstrosity.
A two-headed anything otherwise
is a calamity.
How many institutions I have seen
fail possibly because of having two
or more a. ‘with no one ac-
tually ‘the
‘Olle head {60 bend; tw> -heode
wild mule an’ a Greaser..Now listen !”
Monty made a long pause, in which
his breathing was plainly audible.
Madeline's eyes were riveted upon
Monty. Her mind, swift as lightning,
hag gathered the subtleties in action
and word succeeding his domination
of the men, Violence, terrible violence,
the thing she had felt, the thing she
had feared, the thingaphe had sought
to eliminate from among her cow-
boys, was, after many months, about
to be enacted before her eyes. It had
come at last. She had softened Still-
well, she had influenced Nels, she had
changed Stewart; but this little black-
faced, terrible Monty Price now rose,
as it were, out of his past wild years,
and no power on edrth or in heaven
could stay his hand. With eyes slow-
ly hazing red, she watched him; she
Ustened with thrumming ears; she
waited, slowly sagging against Still-
well,
“Hawe, {f you an’ your dirty pard
hey loved the sound of human voice,
then Usten an’ listen hard,” sald
Monty. “Fer I've been goin’ contrary
to my ole style Jest to hey a talk
with you, You all but got away on
your nerve, didn't you? ‘Cause why?
You roll in here lke a mad steer an’
flash yer badge an’ talk mean, then
almost bluff away with it. You herd
all about Miss Hammond's cowboy
outfit stoppin’ drinkin’ an’ cussin’ an’
Packin’ guns. ‘They've took on re
Ugion an’ decent livin’, an’ sure they'll
be easy to hobble an’ drive to jail.
Hawe, listen. There was a good an’
noble an’ be-cotiful woman’ come out
of the East somewheres, an’ she
brought a lot of sunshine an’ happl-
ness an’ new dees into the tough lives
of cowboys. I reckon it's beyond you
to know what she come to mean to
them. Wal, I'll tell you. ‘They-all went
clean out of their heads. ‘They-all got
soft an’ easy an’ sweet-tempered.
‘They got so they couldn't kill a coy-
ote, a crippled calf in a mud-hole.
Even me—an ole, worn-out, hobble
legged, burned-up cowman like me!
Do you git thet? An’ you, Mister
Hawe, you come along, not satisfied
with ropin’ an’ beatin’, an’ Gaw knows
what else, of thet friendless ttle
Bonita; you come along an’ face the
lady we fellers honor an’ love an’ rev-
erence, an’ you—you— H—I's fire!”
‘With whistling breath, foaming at
the mouth, Monty Price crouched
lower, hands at his hips, and he edged
inch by inch farther out from the
porch, closer to Hawe and Sneed.
Madeline saw them only in the
blurred fringe of her sight. They re-
sembled specters. She heard the
shrill whistle of a horse and recog-
nized Majesty calling her from the
corral.
“Thet’s all!” roared Monty, in a
voice now strangling. Lower and low-
er he bent, a terrible figure of ferocity.
Hi]
inh
AT
A
ATH
Vn Na L
a As
Hh Fee), i
j ‘ Ls
tae Xk
I 4
are:
Gea?
ssi Lae ae woe
i Laie He Sars:
“Now, both you armed officers of the
law, come on! Flash your guns!
Throw ‘em, an’ be quick! Monty Price
is done! There'll be daylight through
you both before you fan a hammer!
But I'm givin’ you a chanst to sting
me. You holler law, an’ my way Is
‘the ole law.”
"His breath came quicker, his voice
grew hoarser, and he crouched lower.
All his body except his rigid arms
quivered with a wonderful muscular
convulsion,
“Dogs! Skunks! Buzzards! Flash
them guns, er I'll flash mine! Aha!”
To Madeline {t seemed the three
stiff, crouching men leaped into in-
stant and united action. She saw
streaks of fire—streaks of smoke,
‘Then a crashing volley deafened her.
It ceased as quickly. Smoke vetled
the scene. Slowly it drifted away. to
disclose three fallen men, one of
whom, Monty, leaned on’ his left
hand, a smoking gun in his right. He
watched for a movement from the
other two. It did not come. ‘Then,
with a terrible smile, he slid back and
stretched out.
CHAPTER XIX
} Unbridled.
In waking and sleeping hours, Made-
line Hammond could not release her-
self from the thralling memory of that
tragedy. She was haunted by Monty
Price's terrible smile. Only in action
of some kind could she escape; and
to that end she worked, she walked
and rode. She even overcame a strong
feeling, which she feared was unrea-
sonable disgust, for the Mexican girl
Bonita, who lay ill at the ranch,
bruised and feverish, in need of skill-
sale
RT en ada att
(To be continuued next week)
equal half a head and three heads
equal no head at all.
If you wish your institution to suc-
ceed, give it one head.
If you wish your institution to at
least partly fail, give it two heads.
If you wish your institution to ut-
terly fail, give it three heads.
Howevere many people there
ce gngeden shu e
distinctly its head. .
CC
alfalfa fields, round them, and back
up to the spillway of the lower lake,
where a group of mesquite-trees, ow-
ing to the water that seeped through
the sand to thelr roots, had taken on
bloom and beauty of renewed life, Un-
der these trees there was shade
enough to make a pleasant place to
Unger. Madeline dismounted, desiring
to rest a little.
‘Her horse, Majesty, tossed his head
‘and flung his mane and switched his
tall at the files, He would rather
have been cutting the wind down the
valley slope. Madeline sat with her
back against a tree, and took off her
sombrero, Suddenly Majesty picked
up his long ears and snorted. ‘Then
Madeline heard a slow pad of hoofs,
‘A horse was approaching from the di-
rection of the lake, Madeline had
learned to be wary, and, mounting
Majesty, she turned him toward the
open. A moment later she felt glad
of her caution, for, looking back be-
tween the trees, she saw Stewart lead-
ing a horse into the grove. She would
as lef have met a guerrilla as this
cowboy.
Majesty had broken Into a trot
when a shrill whistle rent the alr. The
horse leaped and, wheeling so swiftly
that he nearly unseated Madeline, he
charged back straight for the mes
quites. Madeline spoke to him, ctled
angrily at him, pulled with all her
strength upon the bridle, but was
helplessly unable to stop him. He
whistled a piercing blast. Madeline
realized then that Stewart, his old
master, had called him and that noth-
ing could turn him. She gave up try-
ing, and the horse thumped Into an
aisle between the trees and, stopping
before Stewart, whinnied eagerly.
“I want to talk to you,” sald Stew-
art.
Mafleline started, turned to him,
and now she saw the earlier Stewart,
the man who reminded her of thelr
first meeting at El Cajon, of that
memorable meeting at Chiricahua,
“I want to ask you something,” he
went on. “I've been wanting to know
something, That's why I've hung on
here. But now I'm going over—over
the border. And I want to know.
Why did you refuse to listen to me?”
At his last words that hot shame,
tenfold more stifling than when it had
before humiliated Madeline, rushed
over her, sending the scarlet In a wave
to her temples. Biting her lps to
hold back speech, she jerked on Maj-
esty’s bridle, struck him with her
whip, spurred him, Stewart’s iron arm
held the horse. Then Madeline, in a
flash of passion, struck at Stewart's
face, missed it, struck again, and hit.
With one pull, almost drawing her
from the saddle, he tore the whip from
her hands. It was not that action on
his part, or the sudden strong master-
fulness ‘of his look, so much as the
livid mark on his face where the whip
had lashed that quieted, if ft did not
check, her fury.
“That's nothng,” he sald, with some-
thing of his old audacity. “That's
nothing to how you've hurt me.”
Madeline battled with herself for
control. ‘This man would not be de
nied. About him now there was only
the ghost of that finer, gentler man
she had helped to bring into belng.
‘The plercing dark eyes he bent upon
her burned her, went through her as
if he were looking into her soul. ‘Then
Madeline's quick sight caught a fleet-
ing doubt, a wistfulness, a surprised
and saddened certainty in his eyes,
saw It shade and pass away. Her
woman's intuition, as keen as her
sight, told her Stewart in that moment
had sustained a shock of bitter, final
truth.
For the third time he repeated his
question to her. Madeline did not an-
swer; she could not speak.
“You don't know I love you, do
you?" he continued, passionately.
“That ever since you stood before me
in that hole at Chiricahua I've loved
you? You can’t see I've been another
man, loving you, working for you, liv-
ing for you? You won't believe I've
turned my back on the old wild life,
that I've been decent and honorable
and happy and useful—your kind of
a cowboy? You couldn't tell, though
I loved you, that I never wanted you
to know It, that I never dared to
think of you except as my angel, my
holy Virgin? What do you know of
a man’s heart and soul? How could
you tell of the love, the salvation of
& man who's lived his life in the si-
Tence and loneliness? Who could teach
you the actual truth—that a wild cow-
boy, faithless to mother and sister, ex-
cept in memory, riding a hard, drunk.
en tral straight to hell, had looked
into the face, the eyes of a beautiful
woman infinitely beyond him, above
him, and had so loved her that he was
saved—that he became faithful again
—that he saw her face in every flow-
er and her eyes in the blue heaven?”
‘Madeline was mute. She heard her
heart thundering in her ears.
Stewart leaped at ner. His power-
ful hand closed on her arm, She
LEISURE HOURS
By E. W. Gilles
Whether one’s leisure hours are a
blessing or otherwise depends upon
the man.
The leisure hours might be more
killing to the man than his working
hours,
The question is are) the leisure
hours depoted to self improvement
BRANCHES IN
PRINCIPAL CITIES
PAUL Of co
miss th
ST. PAUL
Mrs. Florence Drake of Anandale, visited her mother, Mrs. Lizzie Allen this week.
Atty. and Mrs. W. T. Francis are returning from a motor tour of ten days in the northern part of the state.
Mrs. C. E. James entertained at breakfast in honor of Miss Camille Friason and Miss Laura Belle Roberson.
Carlos Alexander and his sister, Miss Muriel Alexander of 667 West Central avenue, motored to Duluth Tuesday.
Mrs. E. S. Weber entertained at breakfast Friday in honor of Miss Camille Friason and Miss Laura Belle Roberson.
Mr. and Mrs. John Monroe and Mr. Harry Monroe of Minneapolis, were the guests of Mrs. Lizzie Allen, Tuesday evening.
Mr.' and Mrs. G. C. Sleet, daughter and nephew, Mr. J. C. Sleet, have returned home from a motoring trip to Davenport, Iowa.
Mrs. W. B. Elliott entertained Miss Camille Friason and Miss Laura Belle Roberson early Tuesday morning at a breakfast dance.
PRINCE HALL LODGE NO. 105 meets first and third Monday in each month at Union Temple II in good standing. All visiting bathers in good standing are welcome.
S. W. Williams, W. M.; Daniel Rose, Sec.
HOUSEHOLD OF RUTH NO. 553, G. U. O. of O. F., meets the third Monday in each month at Union Hall corner of A. Mrs. Joanne Kelly, M. N. G.; Mrs. Carrie E. Lindsay, W. R., 426 Rondo Street.
Mrs. Ella Losa died at her home, 1102 Minneaha street, Tuesday. The funeral was held Friday from the home. Mrs. T. H. Lyles, funeral director.
MONEY AT INTEREST GROWS
TEREST GROWS
Of course you are not going to miss the Labor Day dance September 3, given at Union Hall by the Ways and Means committee of St. Paul Chapter No. 29, O. E. S.—Adv.
Mrs. Francis Davenport gave a very delightful dinner Tuesday evening in honor of Miss Camille Friason and Miss Laura Belle Roberson. Covers were laid for ten.
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Arnold of Anoka were at home August 23 to their friends in St. Paul on the occasion of their wedding anniversary. About 35 people made the trip out in six cars.
The funeral services of Mrs. Margaret Miller who died at her home, 600 Robert street, was held at Lyles chapel Thursday. Rev. G. W. Camp officiated. Mrs. T. H. Lyles, funeral director.
A party of forty-five persons in seven cars drove to Northfield, Minn., last Sunday afternoon and had dinner at Alexander's Cafe in honor of Miss Camille Friason and Miss Laura Belle Roberson.
Mr. W. A. Williams, 548 Wabasha, will leave next week for Los Angeles, Cal., to attend the National Baptist convention which convenes in that city. He will visit relatives and friends in the East before returning home.
Miss Camille Friason, Cincinnati, Ohio, who left St. Paul Thursday evening for her home, was the guest of Mrs. Jasper Gibbs, Jr. Miss Laura Belle Roberson, St. Louis, Mo., who left with her, was the guest of Mrs. W. B. Elliott.
Mrs. Louis P. Moore and family have returned from a two weeks' camping trip to Lake Pokegama and have left for Chicago where they will be the guests of her mother-in-law, Mrs. Hattie Moore and sister Mrs. Willa Jones. They expect to be gone about five weeks.
The Charity Sewing Circle will meet at the home of Mrs. R. D. Wiley. 875 St. Anthony avenue, Monday, September 3, at 3 o'clock. The feature of the meeting will be an address by Atty. G. W. Hamilton, Jr., who will talk on "Community Social Work." Visitors are invited.
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Johnson, 863 Woodbridge street, entertained at a family dinner Sunday for the families of their son and daughter, Henry Johnson and Ida Mae Murphy, respectively. Additional guests were Mr. Johnson's brother and his grandson, Mrs. D. E. Beasley, Mrs. Clarence Allen and son.
The funeral of Max Bradley who died at his residence Monday was held at St. James church Wednesday. Rev. H. L. P. Jones officiated. The deceased was a member of Gopher Lodge No. 105 and the funeral was conducted by the lodge. He is survived by a wife and many near relatives. Mrs. T. H. Lyles, funeral director.
Announcement
2315—BUGLE BLUES
Played by "Sid" Laney.
2303—GULF COAST BLUES
Played by Clarence Johnson.
2293—HE USED TO BE YOUR MAN
(But He's My Man Now)
Played by J. Lawrence Cook.
2296—LET ME MISS YOU, SWEET PAPA
Played by "Sid" Laney.
2305—MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE
Played by "Sid" Laney.
These selections and many others may be of BLUES and to place your name on his mailing li
W. J. DYE
Prompt a
These selections and many others may be purchased from all leading music houses. Ask your dealer for a complete list of BLUES and to place your name on his mailing list for new Q. R. S. Bulletins which are issued monthly.
Some time since, the Q. R. B. S. Music Company announced the addition of a special department through which the characteristic music of the Negro race would be made available for the Player Piano and recorded by artists of their own people, thus insuring authoritative interpretations. A still greater success of this department is now assured by special arrangements recently made with additional Negro artists and the Company is pleased to make the following:—
These seven well known Negro composer-pianists have been added to the Q. R. S. corps of recording artists thereby insuring for its patrons a still larger variety of unquestioned interpretations of Negro music.
A special list of BLUES is here noted in which will be found a varied selection of this characteristic and tuneful music played by these recognized authorities.
Prompt attention given to Mail Orders
Represents St. Paul At Grand Lodge
[Picture of a man in a suit and tie].
Mr. S. W. Williams, one of our business men of the city, Worshipful Master of Prince Hall Lodge No. 105, F. A. A. Y. M., last left week for Kansas City, Mo., and Denver, Colo., to attend the Masonic Grand Lodge at Denver, Colo. Mr. Williams is also potentate of Cairo Temple Shriners, which is connected with this lodge in St. Paul. It will s. a. S. W. Williams and young son will s. a. S. W. Williams as fasas Kansas City. Mrs. Williams will continue her trip to various points in Texas and visit her mother and father, Rev. and Mrs. P. W. Wesley, in Texarcane, Tex.
One of the most beautiful affairs of the season was witnessed last Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Harry Esters. 396 Rondo street, who entertained 16 ladies at cards. The colors were red and white, the decorations were her own garden flowers and roses. The favors were miniature novel cologne bottles. The following ladies received prizes: Mrs. Walter Bennett of Pittsburgh, first prize, a cut glass jam jar; Mrs. John Follings, second prize, a cut glass napkins ring; Mrs. Ceaser Harris, consolation, an oriental incense burner. After an enjoyable evening was spent a dainty lunch was served. The guests departed at a wee hour declaring Mrs. Esters a charming hostess.
CORINTHIAN CARD PARTY.
Corinthian Triangle club will give its first card party of the season Monday evening, September 3, at Pioneer hall, 588 Rondo street. A pleasant time is assured everyone. Playing starts at 8:30. Suitable prizes and luncheon.
2311—MY LOVIN' MAMIE
Played by J. Lawrence Cook.
2233—YOU GOT EV'RYTHING A SWEET
MAMA NEEDS BUT ME
Played by Lemuel Fowler.
2308—EVIL BLUES
Played by "Sld" Laney.
2304—HAITIAN BLUES
Played by Thomas Waller.
(Latest Blues Sensation)
2292—I DON'T LET NO ONE MAN WORRY ME
Played by J. Lawrence Cook.
2322—MAMA'S GOT THE BLUES
Played by Thomas Waller.
2306—MO'LASSES
(From "Go-Go")
Played by Luckeyth Roberts.
2302—RAILROAD MAN
Played by James P. Johnson.
2323—THE SAINT LOUIS BLUES
Played by J. Lawrence Cook.
Ask your dealer for a complete list
reduced monthly.
O. 21-27 W. 5th
ST. PAUL,
Mail Orders
Great PORO Achievement
PORO Toilet Creations are now ready—
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PORO COLLEGE
Ferdinand Avenue; ST. LOUIS; MO.; U. S. A.
DEPT. F
St.
MINN.
SATURDAY, SEPT. 1, 1923
t!
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usic Compa
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SAN FRANCISCO
BRANCHES IN PRINCIPAL CITIES
---
CARD OF THANKS.
We wish to thank the neighbors and friends for their kindness and sympathy during the illness and death of our son and brother, Arthur Botts, and for the many beautiful floral offerings. We also thank Rev. H. L. P. Jones of St. James A. M. E. church, Chief Niles of city fire department, Capt. W. R. Godett and members of Gems and Firemen's Relief Association No. 21 for the many courtesies shown. Mrs. Hattie Ball, Mrs. George W. Brooks, Geo. W. Brooks.
CLASSIFIED
FOR RENT—Furnished room for man and wife. Call Elkhurst 6447.
FOR RENT — Three rooms for light housekeeping, 276 Kent street, upstairs.
BARBER WANTED—No moonshine drinkers need apply. A. C. Llys, 319 Rondo street.
FOR SALE —Furniture for six rooms and house for rent on St. Anthony. Call after 7 P. M. Cedar 9603, W. H. Reams.
FOR QUICK SALE—Modern eight room house, garage, chicken house, located near 8th and Bryant A N., Minneapolis. Cheap, easy terms. Call Hyland 0253 for appointment.
WANTED—Colored men to qualify for sleeping car and train porters. Experience unnecessary. Transportation furnished. Write T. McCaffrey, Supt., St. Louis, Mo.
757 St. Anthony Ave. All modern, seven-room house.
767 St. Anthony Ave. All modern eight-room house.
Beautiful bungalow and garage. Terms.
R. F. WILSON
Tel. Elkhurst 1896
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. T. H. LYLES
Successor to
T. H. LYLE UNDERTAKING CO.
150 W. Fourth St. ST. PAUL
4
MINNEAPOLIS
D. N. Crosthwaite motored back
to Marshalltown, Iowa, Friday, Au-
gust 24. <
Miss Ann Crosthwaite left, Monday,
August 27, for Chicago and thence tc
St. Louis where she will take up her
duties as teacher in Sumner high
school. She was the guest of Miss
L. O, Smith.
‘The Mary B. Talbert Study club
met at the home of Mrs. Clark, 3553
Eliott avenue, Monday, August 27,
A very interesting talk’ on the Min-
nesota Federation was given by Mrs
Donovan.
Mrs. Jasper Gibbs and Mrs, Hiram
Gibbs gave a mandarin supper in
honor of Miss Camille Friason and
Miss Laura Belle Roberson, Monday
evening at their home on’ Nicollet
avenue. Covers were laid for eight.
Mrs. Harold Combs and Mrs. Helen
Curry entertained at a whist party
Wednesday evening for Mrs. Kath-
leen Hilyer Bingham, Washington, D.
C., Miss Camille Friason, Cincinnati,
Ohio, and Miss Laura Belle Rober-
son, St. Louis, Mo., at the home of
Mrs. Combs. Four tables were
played. Mr. Donald Brown won the
first prize, Mr. Raymond Cannon, the
booby and Mrs, Bingham won’ the
guest prize.
Opportunities offered to mothers of
the state as a result of passage of
the Sheppard-Towner act and the ef-
forts of the Child Hygiene division
of the State Board of Health will be
outlined by workers at the State
Board of Health booth at the Minne-
sota State Fair and Northwest Dairy
Exposition, Sept. 1-8. The idea of
the exhibit is better babies and better
citizens.
‘The exhibition will be held in the
Public Health building... Tt will show
what has been accomplished to date
in the promotion of the welfare and
hygiene of maternity and infancy
and what opportunities mothers may
avail themselves of under the Shep-
pard-Towner act. Also, in the same
booth there will be exhibits featuring
the need of birth registration, the
need to have wells properly ’ con-
structed in order to prevent. spread
of disease through germs in water,
the need for home instruction of chil.
dren in sex hygiene. There will be
a special exhibit of living germs un-
der microscopes which the — public
may look into and learn the facts
about the spread of venereal diseases
and the danger of typhoid carriers
of which there are many in the state
according to officials of the State
Board of Health.
LOYALTY
By E. W. Gilles.
Twyaltv to God is the thing, the
God of the Bible, the trinitarian God,
God the Father, God the Son, God
the Holv Ghost." It is the trinitarian
gospel that vitally reaches the hearts
and lives of men.
Loyalty to the Bible is the thing,
loyalty to the first few chapters of
the Bible as the average man would
understand and believe them. Lov-
alty to the first few chapters of the
gospels as the average man | would
understand and believe them, loyalty
to the last few chapters of the gos-
pels as the average man would un-
derstand them and believe them.
Loyalty to the entire Bible despite
one’s inability to explain it in all of
its parts as he might wish.
Loyalty to the church is the thing.
‘The church is God’s institution in the
world, and individuals and _ nations
have ‘gone up or down according to
their lovalty or disloyalty to it.
Loyalty to government is the thing.
One js either a citizen or a guest of
the nation in which he lives, and as
either a citizen or a guest loyalty is
required of him. When one is a
guest in another’s home he is loyal to
it or he soon wears out his welcome.
Whether alien or citizen the thing to
do is to accept the government under
which he lives, with all of its faults,
and improve it constructively as fast
and as far as possible.
Loyalty to one’s family is the
thing. When husband and wife as
far as possible go out together or
stay at home together there is hope.
When husband and wife join the
same church and are faithful to it
and live up to it there is hope. When
husband and wife erect the family
altar and are faithful to it and live
up to it there is hope. When husband
and wife talk less and pray more and
refrain from the discussion of differ-
ences there is hope. When husband
and wife are sympathetic and con-
siderate and courteous and co-oper-
ative and companionable there is
hone.
Loyalty to high ideals and to the
courtesies of life and to thoughtful-
ness for others is the thing. To
think, to say, to do the things that
will be for the comfort and good of
all is to really live.
SHERIF? 'S NO ee JUDGMENT.
‘SALE UNDER JUDGMENT.
STATE OF, MINNESOTA, | COUNTY OF
ammeyo” Diath Court! Second. Judicial
Bierce
eA terander, Plaintiff, ve, Mary E
elle, Defender.
Novi of Sale "Under Jodement of Attor
Mrs Liens Foreclosure:
Nauce is hereby ‘pveh, that, by virtue of
the jedement entered tn ihe aon, dove ge
ied heres Ne Se saiueed amon “othe
fhlogs, Tt there ie due ta he plain the
Rinker “three ‘Hundred’ and Uhircrve: and
Eelo0 ‘balay and’ interest thereon’ from the
Th day of Aura, 108, at te per center
Entuin’ and ‘ime the land thereln” desert
Eledla Eeataty “the sume, withthe cons
Soa"Ctpemey of such ale 'a ceed Se
See ehh, Tedament, has "been
tet ome" by abe evar I, the Undersigned
SEctur’ fine’ County of Ramecy and’ Stat
Si" ingesotas Sill eter and oxpoee for sai
St publle asctlon” the" ight bidder on
he Montieth (S00) day" of etaber, 198,
ten (io) clock Ay My at the. Cedar street
in “entsance tothe” Court Hose im. the
Siig of Se Pauly ta ead’ county and’ wate
the’ tana ‘acecribed and’ itesed to be tel i
sata Sedement Iying' and being tm the County
ct Raioeys State of Mintenota,"torits
‘The "east ssteen’ and.'tworthines feet of
the south forty fest Of Lot” twenty” (20) and
fewehYorey feet of Lat ‘nineteen (1) in
Bios fen, (20) Bill, Bernbetmer, and) Ar
Pols Adation ‘o
Pint ‘of’ sald sadition on Ale and of recor
nine ofce of the Rewister of Deeds of tai
aunty, which premises are ‘known an ‘No
Str ad Soe Bt? Anthony ‘evene im. the Ol
of St. Paul, subject to the life estate of
Stary" Walsh, ‘rag, mck thereot "an shal
feheemsery to said Jodement, the
terse erect, andthe costs’ an expenees
shifieh sey gable fo Tedemptin “ei
Sreive months Hom said date of sad sale:
‘Dated Auauet 22, 1008,
JOHN WAGER ie,
(8-25-23—6 times)
CLEARANCE SALE
USED CARS.--ALL, MODELS
$50 AND UP
HALL HERSCHBACK MOTOR COMPANY
WHEN YOU THINK
REAL ESTATE
THINK OF
SCHUCK & SCHUCK REALTY CO.
665 University Ave. : Tel. Elkhurst 2956
reo e Tersnnieure Ter
W. SQUIRE NEAL
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
‘ oO. A. LAWRENCE
25 CENTS A MONTH :
is all you pay for the advantages of membership in
THE AFRICAN BLOOD BROTHERHOOD
which includes Economic, Educational, Social, Athletic, Fraternal as
well as the benefits of Co-operative Enterprises fostered in A. B. B.
Posts in the nature of Co-operative Stores, Banking, ete. For full
information write the
SUPREME EXECUTIVE COUNCIL, A. B. B.
i 2299 Seventh Avenue, New York City,
‘or send one dollar ($1.25) and a quarter for initiation fee and first
month’s dues and at once become a part of this World-Sweeping
‘Movement. Set
‘SICK AND DEATH BENEFIT DEPARTMENT
.. Generous Sick Benefits and Liberal Death Grants
ORGANIZERS WANTED GOOD OPPORTUNITY
< Get im Touch at Once. .
SILKWORM HAS
BUSINESS RIVAL
Chemical Experts Have Found
Wer to Make Servioeabie (at:
New Haven.—A warning to the silk-
worm that certain chemical com-
pounds, which are his chief business
rivals, are inclined to combine against
him, and a hint for him to study their
modern efficient methods, was given
by W. O. Mitscherling of Baltimore, in
his address on “Cellulose Silk,” be-
fore the American Chemical society.
“While the silkworm turns out a
high quality product and 1s justified
in a certain pride of skill," Mr. Mit-
scherling said, “his stubborn refusal
to heed the entreaties of the sales de-
partment to speed up is playing havoc
with his market. The modern wom-
an cannot be bothered to wait for him,
and so the spruce tree and the cot-
ton plant are gobbling up the big or-
ders. These producers are willing to
stand for ‘the introduction of scien-
tific methods. For instance, cellulose
(which is the technical name for
spruce pulp and cotton linters) is very
reasonable.
Good Slik From Cellulose.
“The most recent discovery in artl-
ficial silk manufacture is that cellu-
lose and acetic acid combine under
the proper chemical circumstances to
make a very good silk. One of the
most favored efficiency devices of the
chemist is the use of what is known
as a ‘catalyst.’ The catalyst is the
efficiency man of chemistry. In the
case of the cellulose acetate silks, the
pulp oF cotton Unters and acetic acid
naturally combine very slowly. But
the presence of sulphuric acid or a
zine salt speeds up the reaction to a
great pace. The sulphuric acid or
zine salt, whichever is used, is the
catalyst. It does not become a part
of the product, but it stirs the cellu-
lose and acetic acid to great activity.”
Doctor Mitscherling said that the
cellulose acetate, formed after the
catalyst has introduced the neces-
sary “punch” into the process, is then
dissolved in acetic acid or some other
solvent, and discharged through a noz-
zle containing exceedingly fine holes
into water and immediately becomes a
fine thread,
‘Silk Worm Fails Behind.
‘There are three other processes of
making cellulose silk, and last year
they were made to produce 8 per cent
more taffetas, crepe de chine, stock-
ings, etc., than all the silkworms in
the world. The total was approxi-
mately 23,000,000 pounds.
‘While Doctor Mitscherling said that
cellulose silk will never entirely re-
place genuine silk, the textile mills
are showing less and less patience
with the laziness and indifference of
the silkworm, and he had better
watch his steps or he will soon be los-
ing a nice lot of his business to su-
perior American ingenuity and prog:
ress.
NOTICE OF EXPIRATION OF TIME OF
REDEMPTION
No. 18934
Office of County Auditor, County of Ram
sey, State of Minnesota, 9s.
‘To’ Anna. Christianson.
(2) "You are hereby notified that the fol
lowing piece or ‘parcel of land situated i
the County of Ramsey, State of “Minnesota
‘and known and described as follows, to-wit
Lot, Seven (7) Block Eleven’ (11). Hitchcock's
Aidition ‘to West St. Paul, Is now asseste
‘your name.
(2)""Thaton the 12th day of May, 1919
at a sale of land ‘pursuant to. the rea
state tax judgement duly given and made i
‘and by the Disetrict Court in sald County o
Ramsey ‘on the 2lst day of April, 1919, {r
proceedings to enforse the payment of taxes
Gelinquent upon” real estate, for’ the yea
1917, for said County of Ramsey, the above
described piece or parcel of land was. dul
bid'in for the ‘State for the sum” of On
Dallar anh Remains. Beste
(3) ‘That the said or parcel of land
andlan’ the ‘rights “of the ‘State of Minne
ota, ‘upon and against said land by virtue
of agid sale. was duly assigned, conveyeé
thd sold by the County Auditor to an actual
Durehaser “ander Section 2126, G. 8. 1918
fon the ldth day of August, 1928 for the
sum of ‘Thirteen Dollars and Fifty-nine
Gents.
(4). And that the amount required t
redeem taid piece or parcel of land from
eid tax sale exclusive of the costs to accru
tapon this motice is the sum of Thirteen Dol
lars’ and. Fifty-nine Cents.
"And interest at the rate of 12 per cent
per annum on $18.50 thereof from the 18th
Gay ‘of August, 1923 to the day such re
‘demption is’ made. :
1G), That the tax certificate of sale issued
to ‘said purchaser has been presented tom
by ‘the holder thereof and this notice re
‘quested 3
(6), That the time for the Fedemption of
said piece or parcel of land from aaid tas
‘tale will. expire sixty (60) days after th
Service of this notice, and the filing of proo
Of, such service in my office.
‘Witness my hand and official seal this
1th day. of August, 1923.
(Oficial Seal) GEO. J. RIES,
‘Auditor Ramsey County, Minnesota
"By Silas E. Foreman, Deputy
Cowhide Bags
Cobra grain cow-
hide Traveling
Bags, a full cut 18-
| See the New Wheary Ward- inch size—3-piece
robe ‘Trunk—It is Ameri- style—a very good
ca's finest, bag at this price.
Sixth A IH) Sixth
and LUGGAGE SHOP “*
NOTICE OF EXPIRATION OF TIME OF
REDEMPTION
No. 18983
Office of County Auditor, County of Ram
sey, State of Minnesota. ss.
To Moses C. Tuttle.
(a). You are hereby notified that the fol
lowing ‘piece or parcel of land situated i
the County of Ramsey, State of “Minnesota
fd known and descrited as follows, to-wit
Lot Five’ (6) Block Seven (7) “Hitchcock's
‘Kdaition to West St. Paul, is now assese
in your name.
(2y"ryat on the 12th day of May, 1919
at ‘a’ sale of land purvuant to the real’ estate
tax Jadement duly given and made in and bp
the District Court in sald County of Ram
sey on the 2let day of April, 1919, in pro
Ceedings' to enforce the payment of taxe
Gelinguent upon. real’ estate for the yea
17, for said County of Ramsey, the above
described piece or parcel of land was dul
bid in for the ‘State for the sum of On
Dollar and Seventy-two Cents.
13), ‘That the aald piece of parcel of, lan
and all the rights of the State of “Minne
Sota, ‘upon and against said land ‘by virtue
fof said sale was duly assigned, conveyed an
Sold" by. the ‘County, Auditer to an actual
purchaser under Section 2128, “G.S. "1018
on the 14th daysof August, "1923, for the
Sim of ‘Thirteen Dollars and Fifty-nin
‘Cents.
Ti)" And that the amount required to re
deem said. piece or parcel of land from sai
tax sale exclusive of the costa to accru
tupon this notice is the sum of Thirteen Dol
lars" and Fifty-nine Cents.
‘And interest at the rate of 12 per cent
per annum on $13.59 thereof from ‘the, 14th
Gay ‘of August, 1628, to the day such re
demption is. made,
(3). That the iax certificate of sale, is
sued’ to said purchaser ‘has been, presented
me by the holder thereof and this notics
Fequestd.
(6), "That the time for the redemption 0!
said’ piece or parcel of land from said tax
Sale will expire sixty. (60), days after th
Service of this notice, andthe filing of
Proof ‘of auch service in my office.
‘Witness my ‘hand and oMicial seal this
18th day. of August, 1928,
(Otdeiat Seat) GEO. J. RIES,
SIN ‘Auditor Ramsey County, Minnesota
By Silas B. Foreman, Deputy.
NOTICE OF EXPIRATION OF TIME OF
REDEMPTION
No. 18987
Office of County Auditor, County of Ram-
sey. State of. Minnesota, ss.
To" John Jacobson.
a) "You ‘ure hereby notified that the fol
lowing piece or parcel "of land situated in
the County of Ramsey, State of “Minnesota
fand known and described as. follows, to-wit
Lox Sixteen “(16) Block Eight (8). Eastvill
Heights is now assessed in’ your name,
(2). "That"on the sth day” of May, 1916,
at\a sale of Jand. pursuant to, the real’ estat
tax judwment duly given and made in anc
by! the “District Court. in said County of
Ramsey on the 20th day of April, 1918, in
proceedings to enforce the payment of taxes
Uelinquent upon real estate for the yeu
1914, for said’ County of Ramsey, the above
described plece or parcel of land was duly
offered for sale, and no one bidding upor
Sald offer, auld piece or. parcel was bi
in for the State of Minnesota for the sum
gf {8088) Nine “Dollars and Thirty-five
ents,
(3) ‘That, thereafter, and on the 13th day
of August, 1925, the said piece or parcel no
then having been "redeemed from ‘aid sale
was sold and conveyed at public sale by. the
County Auditor of said County, and pursuan
to the statute, to an actual purchaser for th
sum of Three Hundred and Sixty Five Dol
lars and Eighty Six Cents,
(i) "That the amount required to redeem
sald piece or pareel of land from said. sale
exclusive of the costs to accrue. upon this
hotice in the sum of (3866.86) ‘Three Hun:
red ‘Sixty-five Dollars and Eighty-six Cents
ind [nterct athe rate of 12 per cent pe
annum ‘on ($865.86) Three Hundred. Sixty
five Dollars and Eighty-Six Cents, {rom sai
18th day "ot “Auuat, 1928, tothe day such
redemption is made.
(5) That the tax certificate of sale issued
to anid purchaser has. been presented tom
dy “the holder thereof and this notice re
auested,
"(6) That the time for redemption of sai¢
piece or parcel of land. from said. tax sal
will expire sixty (60) days after the servic
of thls notice, and the filing of root of sue
Service in my office.
‘Witness my hand and official seal this Sis
‘day of August, 1829.
(Omciat “Sealy GEO. J. RIES,
‘Auditér Ramsey ‘County, Minnesota.
ig Silas E. Foreman, Deputy
CHARLES COLEMAN ‘W..A. FORD +
President ‘Manager
Ramsey County Afro-American Club
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Dale 9769 412 Rondo St.
M. W. Goins N. W. Goins
Tel. Dale 3341
UNIDALE TRANSFER CO,
GENERAL HAULING — FURNI-
TURE, TRUNKS AND PIANOS
‘A SPECIALTY
“SATISFACTION GUARANTEED”
872 Lafond St. Saint Paul
0, E, ZANDELL
PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST
Kodaks, Films and Supplies
879 Rice St., Corner Milford
Riv. 0744 Dale 7115
Dependable Used Cars
Case 1918, very good condition, good tires, bargain at $650.
Oldsmobile 8 Touring, in first class condition, good paint, tires,
will demonstrate at $650.
Mitchell Touring 1918, good condition throughout, good tires,
a snap at $275.
Mitchell Touring 1918, wonderful mechanical condition and extra
fine tires. 2
483 SO. WABASHA ST. ,
Act quickly if you want one of these cars.
For information call Scott Bibbs.
— EXBe
BATTERIES
BARRETT BATTERY 00,
a INSIST ON a
CLOVER LEAF
BUTTER
TILDEN PRODUCE CO.
CHURNERS
S | C K
Are you RUNDOWN, WEAK, | tonic botlds up the BLOOD, MUS.
TiREn,“woRkeourt uv cies | See, Scky Be Urges Soe
Shoop!” Ave you tuderme’ with: | PLEXION. "fe doce fou mo, much
RMEUWATION = ANEMIA, | S22r!"35u HAY and’ DIGEST the
eplarsrion — Fvena 1" | food better.
Ruuvousnmss © Dyarersa | i you doubt me, make me
Emongurms” © GoeGne™* | prove 7 "Nin "Wena ™ou, ihe
Ro scar Cores FEsse conto 't Reve “sase fo nnmee
Eoneua PERS | Bande SP eet he ‘atan to ee
SEED Tats | Sow abbot mahae ie Pouce’
. mAnrets | Bor weet ie rent tow.
2073" take yon tose welete acDRMt,iet flckmess hang around
St, give you dull ves, Fale Lips, | $25! "hep Seay fom the eens
Falling Hair, ® fece foil of PIM- | i: is ‘the sick ones that get it
Fumst “Ghose opt Anew York | Hi 000, sck ones, that get i,
Shores Koes of, medicine That | Don't mile “ih: oF fOwrUNrTY!
Same "GE Tie Wonastial meaicins | Ronee Mall, colar tn Paper
= Re wdenuate “yorzoKe Sei:
Jorzorm RED BL0oD Tox1c ant tor vourat once!
‘Do tae tone naa ath Foret | $ned bere Act eich” bere ou
pegoing “stronger, mare powerful, :
Bat ef Eile Bp, Eeeray, this | (Please write your druggies address.)
ees) Address
(on OA 0Y y Vai) 2 saxs0n
Pe na a P, 0. Box 47
| . | Hamilton Grange
| Red Tonic AVS" siiicn
ia New York City
St. Paul
Steam Laundry
“The Sanitary Laundry”
Works: 289-291 Rice Street
near Summit
Branch Office: 443 Broadway St.
W. B. Webster, Mgr. St. Paul
512 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, laundry
chute, kitchen cabinet, beautiful fireplace with built-in
bookcase 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
SATURDAY, SEPT. 1, 1923
ee ee
W. A. FORD *
‘Manager
fro-American Club
)NS FOR RAILROAD MEN
-d Rooms
lar 7518 SAINT PAUL
‘ATTERS’ CLUB
, Minneapolis
jain 2692
ices. Soft Drinks of All Kinds.
RS CIGARETTES
B. EDDIE L. BOYD, Secy.
ormee Te. nes. re.
camer toss ont vee
woune: 8A. 701798
motion %e
DR, JOHN R. FRENGR
SURGEON DENTIST
ma cLAss ouananreo worm
hi eeancnes Or Besse
eure 2 seme mine, sANTPAun
Sirlncwannens | Sowwsorn
ornce re. nes.
ceban nee one sea
HOUR 90.4.4 701
mot foore
sunDAvs ay APeane
DR, EARL S. WEBER
DENTAL SURGEON
rat cusss uARANTEED WoRK
We auc manenea or Bens?
84 W. SEVENTH ST.
| Sarat! ~ ST. PAUL
fen cae wee motto rit
DR. J. WALTON CRUMP
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
fe a oo —s
‘TRL VAN BUREN 1321
VANDER BIE'S
‘’ ICE CREAM
IS THE BEST
For Sale Everywhere
J. C. VANDER BIE
Partridge and Brunson Sts.
ST. PAUL, MINN.
Dale 3454 Dale 0427
WE DELIVER
Henry Aldes, Proprietor
618 Rondo Street
Successors to Brotchner’s
Pharmacy
Registered Pharmacist Always
‘at Your Service
We Solicit Your Patronage
| ‘Tel. Dale $339 ‘We Call Por and Deliver
DRUGGIST
Drugs, Medicines, Soda Water
Soft Drinks, Toilet Articles
Candies, Cigars, Tobacco,
Ice Cream Brick or Bulk.
Gas and Electric Fixtures
Fishing Tackle
| Dale & W. Central ‘St. Paul
New Ideas in
Fixtures
are constantly appearing and 4
come here first. We want 12
share in the pleasure of seeing
new beauty, their increased effec-
Hireneet, , Come, when ae ond
tha? omde vewutital bythe Lose
ata Sateren
Let Us Wire Your Home.
SevenCornersElectricCo.
W. 8d St. Phone
Pe ccs ‘Wilder fg roa