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In • 1, St. for Lou Kaye Jewelers i 5 2 •Is your watch hooping perfect time? Have it checked now u t 4SOH WABASHA ST. t I t SOCIAL & PERSONAL * ST. PAUL * Thursday night, April 13, ter of Mrs. Melvin Carter, 717 L. McGee, son of Mr. and Mn Rev. .B N. Moore, pastor, St marriage vows. The ceremony Mr. McGee. The Ernest Workers Club of Pilgrim Baptist church met Fri day, at 2:30 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Ida Smith. 868 St. Anthony Ave. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Cason, Sr., 1235 Thomas Ave., will observe their 39th wedding anniversary Monday, May 1. Como Temple No. 128. IBPOE of W. will meet Thursday, April 27 at the Elks Rest, 588 Rondo Ave. Jonathan Gordon is the name chosen by Mr. and Mrs. Jean Pierre Guilmant, 524 Carroll Ave., for their baby born Tuesday, April 11 at Miller hopsital. The baby weighed six pounds and three ounces. The Women’s Auxiliary of the Sterling club will meet Wednes day. April 26 at the club. Mrs. Mabel Harris is president of the organization. ♦ Wednesday, April 26. Mr. and Mrs. Byron Brown, 878 St. An thony Ave., will observe their fourth wedding anniversary. The DYWYK club will meet Thursday. April 27 at the home of Mrs. William A Hanna. 520 Wes tern Ave. All members are urged to be present. The Friendship Sewing and Social club will meet Saturday, April 22 at the home of Mrs. Gladys Williams, 935 Iglehart Ave. Faye Schuck, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Schuck, 599 Ron do Ave., is at home recuperating from an appendectomy she under went recently in St. Joseph's hos pital. Faye is a student at St. Benedict's college. The Social and Literary Society of Pilgrim Baptist church met Tuesday, April 18 at 9 p. m at the home of Mrs. Eunice Glass Jones, 962 Carroll Ave. The Duke ’n Duchess’ club met recently at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Harris, 684 Carroll Ave. The I-atnbda Zeta Chi sorority will meet Wednesday, May 3 at the home of Mrs. Nickie Richard son. 646 Rondo Ave. Members of the organization are making plans for a theater party to be given ST. PAUL HOUSE Furnishing Co. Homa Furnishers and Jswslsrs OUR MOTTO "Widows and Orphans Protected" 6th 4 Minn. Sts. CE. 4776 CAHPEVS... CARPETS TILE LINOLEUM 61 East sth CA. 5474 ROSEN PLUMBING & HEATING SUPPLY New and Used Plumbing We Buy A Sell Mew A Peed Pipe SMS SKI.BI AVE. Rea. Da. 155« Bua. Da. 00»7 Open SI MDAYS » a. m. to 1 p. B. TEDBIES LIQUOR STORE IS RECOMMENDED tl 3401 Dal» 8832 University at St. Albans We Deliver Come in today and select Jewelry to wear with Your new Spring Outfit from LOU KAYE’S The Jewelry Center of St. Paul Values in . . . • WATCHES For Men and Women DIAMONDS - RING SETS (Insured and Guaranteed) BILLFOLDS, SILVERWARE, PINS, NECKLACES BROOCHES USE OUR LAY-BY PLAN It's O. K. to Owe (Strand Thaatra Bldg.) Miss Birdie J. Washington, sis- Rondo Ave., was married to M. . G. (i. McGee, 671 Rondo Ave. James AME church, read the was performed at the home of for the new members of the club. Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs Eugene Lewis, 944 Iglehart Ave., were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mit chell and Mr. Fred Glover of Chi- cago. The three visitors came here Thursday. April 13 and left Mon day. April 17. Mrs. Ida Hanna, 520 Western Ave., who has been home ill with the virus influenza since March 18. is much improved now. Miss Ernion Owens, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. S. Vincent Owens, 627 Selby Ave., left Monday. April 17. by air for Washington, D. C. where she will be the guest of Mrs. Gussie Anderson, a former St. Paulite. Miss Owens will re turn around the first of May. BIRTHDAY GREETINGS ST. PAI L BIRTHDAYS April 26 Mattie A Bonner. 323 Kent St.; Gene Perteet, 817 W. Central Ave.; Father Francis J. Gilligan. St. Paul Seminary; Mr. Walter Suthem. 716 Rondo Ave. April 27 Bryant Rogers. 691 Rondo Ave.; Raleigh House. 995 Rondo Ave. April 28 Robert Wil son, 556 St. Anthony Ave. April 29 Herman Whitmore, 800 Ron do Ave.; Herbert Whitmore. Jr., 800 Rondo Ave.; Boyd Collins. 698 W Central Ave.; Mr A Ferguson. 1028 Rondo Ave. May 1 Mar garet Moore. 960 Iglehart Ave.; Alvin John Hannon. 633 W. Cen tral Ave.; Constance Smith, 312 Carroll Ave. Out of-Town Birthdavs April 26—Clinton Blakey. Chi cago. 111. April 28 Terry McGee Berkeley. Calif. MINNEAPOLIS BIRTHDAYS May 1— Robert Chatham Jr., 989 Aldrich Ave. No.; Mrs. C. L. Anderson. 523 Bryant Ave. No.; Evelyn Escue. 3552 Fifth Ave. So.; Mrs. Alice B. Fort, 3533 Fourth Ave. So. May 2 Hardy White, 3615 Fourth Ave. So.; Mrs. A. Buress, 2810 10th Ave. So. May 3 H. Carter. 2318 Fourth Ave. So.; Edward Carr. 1001 Olson Blvd. May 4. B L. Greer. 309 Dupont Ave. No.; Mrs. Delia Outley, 1400 Third St. So.; Edgar Jackson, Jr.. 910 Bryant Ave. No.; Mrs. Eula Richardson. 2905 Fifth Ave. So. May 5 Edward Barker. Serville Hotel; Margie Campbell. 134 High land Ave. No. May 6 Baby El mer Childress, 987 Aldrich Ave. No.; Miss Carolyn Smith. 3915 Clinton Ave. So. Out-of Town Birthdays May 1 Dorothy Brown, Mil waukee, Wis.; Mrs. Geneva Jor dan, Kansas City. Mo. May 2 Herman H Long. Nashville, Tenn; Nancy Tate, Fergus Falls, Minn.; Mrs. Bertha J. Diggs. 80 Center St., New York City; Robert L. Hearns. Rockford, Ill.; Kenneth Mclver, Youngstown. Ohio; May 3 Mrs. Carl Roach, Topeka. Kans. May I Robert W. Hainsworth. Houston, Texas. Pipe for Plumbing One-half inch pipe, either copper or galvanized, is generally used for plumbing within the house. CLEANERS of Distinction SWEENEY'S CLOTHES CLEANERS >»JS W. 7th St CEdarMU Day and Night School all year 63 E. sth Street Columnist Westbrook Pegler continues to attack the Roosevelt family, particularly Eleanor Roosevelt, with seathing venom. As far as I know, the Roosevelts have never dignified Pegler’s attacks by answering them. One of the most vitriolic columns Peg ler wrote was the thing he did some weeks ago about the death of Franklin Delano Roosevelt. He more than hinted, in fact he left no doubt in the minds of his readers, that there was another woman in the late Presi dent's life, and that she was with Roosevelt when he died. He wrote that the President had died in this woman's arms. Now that is pretty strung stuff to be tos sing about, especially if there's no basis of fact to it. Pegler defied the Roosevelt family to deny what he had printed. He has accused Eleanor Roosevelt of being a false liberal and of actually favoring (in private) NELL RUSSELL the • sc F r cgation she fights so militantly in public. As a ease in point, he wrote in a recent column that Mrs. Roosevelt had replaced the interracial staff in the White House kitchen with an all-Negro staff because she felt people of the same ilk worked more harmoniously together. He quoted Mrs. FDR on this latter, and ended the column by stating that the reason the President's wife gave for using an all-Negro staff was the very same alibi used by other employers to maintain and perpetuate segregation. In his column of Wednesday. April 12. Pegler wrote: “The trial and conviction of Harry Bridges produced further evi dence that Eleanor Roosevelt is a bad "security risk" and should be denied further access to confidential information. If it's to be pleaded that she is too stupid to be dangerous, it follows that she is too stupid to be trusted. Unquestionably she got her hands on confidential FBI repot ts on Bridges and wrote on White House stationery a letter to friends of the defendant. The public does not know what the letter said. "J. Joseph Donohue, the special prosecutor, a Democrat, and Judge George B. Harris, also a Democrat, excluded the text from the record. Donohue said he wanted to save Eleanor Roosevelt em barrassment. "Nevertheless, the letter is know to have existed. It proves that she did have access to confidential FBI reports which are supposed to be withheld from all unauthorized and unofficial persons." Pegler’s columns are read by millions of Americans. If he is spreading fantastic poison, it seems to me there is a limit which even the much vaunted “freedom of tile press ' must respect. Maybe the Roosevelts feel that to answer Pegler would be to headline something which until recently has been confined to the readership of the syndicated Pegler columns. However, this writer would feel a great deal more comfortable if Pegler's charges could be disproved once and for all. It seems that the silence of the Roosevelts in the face of Pegler's increasingly fre quent attacks is being taken by far too many people as an indication that where there's smoke, there's some Kind of blaze, insignificant though it may be. Also, when Eleanor Roosevelt s book was reviewed on “The Author Meets the Critics" program not so long ago, and the usual program format was dispensed with so that Elliot Roosevelt and two former cronies of FDR appeared with Mrs. Roosevelt, in stead of the usual critics, there was a slight stirring of disapproval going the rounds. It didn't make sense that every other author who has appear ed on the program has had to face critics, some openly hostile while Mrs. l-'DR was protected by what several politically un sympathetic souls insisted were stooges of the Roosevelt royalty. The very fact that one is hearing more discussion about the Peg ler attacks, as well as increasing speculation as to why some of th< most venomous charges are not refuted or cleared up, seems to in- dicate that even some of the most stalwart Roosevelt supporters are becoming a mite restiv MOVIE REVI'E: If you were in your prime yearn during the 1920'h or if you were old enough to enjoy life in that decade, you won't want to misn "The Golden Twenties,” the film produced by Richard Deßoehemont for March of Time. This is 68 minutes packed full of nostalgic reminders of the era of the Charleston and Black Bottom, of Rutdolph Valentino and Dr. Coue’s "Every day in every way, I get better and better," of prohibi tion and petting, of Coolidge, Harding and Teapot Dome. You’ll be taken back to the days after World War I when the new peace was planned fol - so hopefully. You'll see old newsreel shots of the immortal Enrico Caruso and Isadore Duncan. You'll see the outlandish fashions of the twenties and wonder how on earth ANY BODY could have looked beautiful in those awful get-ups. And believe me, when Rudolph Valentino kissed Vilma Banky in a scene from "The Sheik" wow! That's ONE thing which Hollywood has failed to improve upon with the years I guess Valentino’s laurels as the Screen's Greatest Lover are as safe today as they ever were You'll sit fascinated through the parade of the past as superbly produced and edited by Deßochemont and March of Time. We’ve Just had another one of those stories in a Harlem weekly about conditions in the schools uptown. Reports of kids being so hard to handle they scare substitute teachers out of the room in tears. Reports of \ile language being used by girl stu dents, of stray men drifting into schools and molesting girls in the lavatory*. One report of a mother unevpeetedly visiting her son's music class and finding the kids with their belts off, cracking the belts as they sang “Mule Train". The same paper carried a story about the rounding up by police f a teen-age gang of fiv< boys and three girls who had robbed a store after priming themselves on dope. It seems as if far from being a corrective measure, the serving a school, is considered as a badge teen-age hoodlums. of time in an in Youthful off with a past history of sexual delinquency are r kill. Even worst, they le authorities r-worked One can’t expect th** young people to have too much re xp<‘ct for law hen* when th<* flmt thing they learn after they learn to read and write is that grasping cops can he paid off. What with overcrowded school, overcrowded living conditions. •rrupt police and a general tone of moral laxity, ther icourage our future citizens of New York. Your Neighborhood HARDWARE & PAINT Capitol Hardware 577 University Ave. We Deliver EL. 3884 BOYD APPLIANCE Sales & Service 631 W. Central DA 9834 SPORTING GOODS Radio Tubes Tested and Sold Light Hardware PACKAGED FUEL ICE WOOD WE MAKE KEYS HOURS I a.m.—6 p in.—Closed Sundays and Holidays NEW VOKK CITY ut to roam the Buy Your GILT EDGE PAINT and HARDWARE from SEVEN CORNERS HARDWARE 185 W. 7th St. GA 2147 UeadtßS < andlda Hater ( aadlda laeral Shota BUZZ BROWN S Photographic Studios Commercial . Portraits 1 Reproduction of Old Photo* ISO No. Victoria KU TlW| KOL-R CO. Cigarette Vending Automatic Phonograph RK 7021 AL 5443 Editor's Niece Weds In Colorado Kansas City, Mo. — Miss Shirley Jean Ashby of Kansas City. Mo. and La Junta. Colorado, recently b'-came the bride of Mr. Sylvester Farris of Colorado Springs. Colo. n -< W; MRS. SYLVESTER EARRIS Mrs. Farris is the niece of Cecil Newman, editor of the Spokesman and Recorder newspapers of Min nesota, and the grandaughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Newman of Kansas City. Her mother is Mrs. Margaret Brown of La Junta. Kansas City friends of the bride recently were entertained at a re ception in her honor by Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Newman. Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Newman of the Twin Cities attended. t RATING THE t I RECORDS I 7 By J. Henry Randall | Ballads and Bills Billy Eckstine and his fellow traveler. Bill Farrell, make with the heart throbs again under Leo's banner. Though a similarity in their styles exists, there is how- ever a difference which seta them apart. Eckstine’s vocal technique is smooth and richly velvety; com panion bari-tone Farrell displays a big-voiced robustness which equally pleases. Eckstine’s pair are Baby Won’t You Say You Love Me. with Quartones ac centing and ork led by Russ Case; and Free, with the Buddy Baker crew dreaming up a lush tropical beat (MGM > . . For Far rell, it’s It Isn't Fair and Batnlioo, both with Russ Case and crew assisting IMGM) . . . Not a "Bill," but nonetheless a topper, Art Lund gets away on a pair with orchestral accompaniment led by Leßoy Holmes. Art hasn't had such good material of late, but his relaxed excursion on the Dixie land oldie, Sugarfoot Rag, is quite nicely put over in a "strict ly-from-jazz-ine-down" style. Mate is Wilhelmina, a tune from the Fox flick "Wabash Avenue" (MG M I. In This Corner Ivory Joe Hunter, who started a stampede with his "I Almost Lost My Mind,” is back again with that tricky vocal and melodic line de livery His new pair are I Need You So, a slow-paced, richly blued ballad; and Leave Iler Aloni*. The guy's no slouch on the 88. as is evident on the "Leave” side. The vocal here is incidental, since Ivory’s piano-riffins are the chief attraction. < MGM) . . .A saying oft-heard among the older, older sit, "heap sees but a few knows” is given the blues shout treatment by "Peach Tree” Ixigan and his Riverboat Four. Title is Heap Sees and Few Knows. Mate, with the Four grinding out some excellent levee blues rhythm, is That's All Brother, That's All I MGM i . . . The George Shear- ing crew of five wax exotic on an unusual two-part item called In a Chinese Garden. Piece, written by Guitarist Chuck Wayne, is a tone poem (MGM). Erskine Hawkins and men an dance craze with their foxy instni mental of fishtail. Flip is Browi Baby Blue*, a Bobby Smith opui handl ally by Jimtny Mit >r» . . . Leave it t< helie »Vict -W Or»f 19 rem t>p«ri»«iM *** MEN’S SUITS or DRESSES QfL 1 Fl»>* ||C >rp <u»n-d A freaaeU W< MEM'S FELT M i u free riexur and ouiviry EL. 1081 -a fl : howa?£ 681 Selby. Cor. St. Albin* <oe W lake Nr Henn b 1S«O Ni. ELECTRIC & HAND HAIR CLIPPERS CE. 6743 479 s♦. Fotar BIFOCALS 4ttS TRIFOCALS ■teT” < OXS. I I L ' Or> Mabt. A --T* F*> Oe nwlriM—<>•<>» A si ObvWt’b W T4a i l im. oi. tut Mr* James Heater, 2535 Fourth Ave. So., returned to the city re cently from San Diego, Calif., where she attended the funeral of her father, Rev. Lewis J. Liggins. Mr*. George Duncan, 3945 Clin ton Ave., So., was hostess at the regular meeting of the Crusaders Club Wednesday, April 12. A group of mothers front St. Peters Church met with Mrs. Wreaths Maxwell. 3020 20th Ave. So., Wednesday. April 12. Plans are being formulated for a Mothers club. A surprise birthday dinner was held at the home of Mr and Mrs. R. L. Burns, 3313 Fourth Ave. So., Friday evening, April 14. in honor of Norman Carter. The host and hostess for the evening were Mr. Glen Pullens and Miss Jean Scho field. The dinner was prepared and served by Mmes. R. L. Burns and Arthur Pullens. Those present were Misses Jacky Ray of Chi cago, Bobby Cartwright, Lucille Dunlap; Messrs. Fred Ingram, Earl Bowman, Norman Carter, Glen Pullens; Messrs, and Mmes. Bob Wormley and Lloyd Smith. The New York Club met Wed nesday. April 12. at the home of Mrs. Cleo Hampton, 531 Lyndale Ave. No. Next regular meeting will be held at the home ot Mr. Arthur Lyons. 409 Bryant Ave. No. Mr. Herbert Whiting, 1015 Fifth St. No., who suffered a stroke stroke Thursday, April 6. is para lysed in the left leg. He is still confined to his bed and in serious condition. Spike Jones and the City Slickers to rib the current hit tunes. Spike leads the boys (I. W. Harper, Sir Further down, they shift pace to Sons of the Backwoodsmen that is the way it reads) in a semi-legit version, as near as they possibly can under the circumstances, on Stan Jones' Riders In the Sky. their usual hijinks. Mate is the end of all "mule trains. Chinese Mule Train, done vocally by "Fled die (Freddie) Morgan (Victor)... Peppermint Harris does a pair of quiet blues vocals on This Is Good bye and Mabel, Mabel (Bittin' In With). A real oldie, The World la Walting For the Sunrise, is given a face-lifting by that master craftsman. Duke Ellington, and his equally distinguished and able sidemen. The Johnny Hodges alto opener keys the mood for the lyri cal vocal Al Hibbler, while the men in the rear set a langourous pace and drift lazily in and out to punctuate. Mate is a novelty bounce Joog, Joog, in which every body, instrumentally and vocally, gets into the act. Pearl, currently having the time of her life in the Broadway pro duction of "Arma and the Girl” makes her bld for posterity in a collection entitled "Pearl Bailey Entertains" and boy, how she does entertain. Her matter-of-fact "hep kitty" approach to a tune literally brings it down front where all can enjoy it. Four-starred items in this aer ies.. all former releases on shellac, are Tired and That's flood Enough For Me. There's also Get It Off Your Mind: the side on which she uses her famous " housing short age" line. legalize My Name; I Need Ya Like I Need A Hole In the Head, It’s a Woman’s Peroga the and Fifteen Years. The Mit chell Ayres crew handles the rhythmic background. With rhythm accompaniment only, she does the oldie, Ma! He's Making Eyes At Me (Columbia) . . . She also has a pair from "Arms" on another platter, both of which are groovey. JVith Tadd Dameron leading the pack, she sings Nothin' for Nothin' and flips, in jivey tem po, to There Must Be Somethin' Better Than Love (Columbia). The Store For Young Men JftetMAiU ST. PAUL'S LARGEST EXCLUSIVE MEN’S STORE Wabaaha at 7th We Give S A H Green Stamps B. E. SCOTT ACCIDENT and HEALTH INSURANCE heap*. Courlsous Im'.lsi IBM Ftonsss Baßdte* Fhsnso GA. 1437 - IBM RAM MOTOR REPAIR MOTOR REPAIR TRANSMISSION A BRA.KMS dau mr •71 Roblb Aw. ; STEVE ANDERT, Jtwtltr. S S Now With ELLIOTT'S! S 1 I J Diimondt ! Wilehts • Jewelry S Silvtrwtrt ■ Our jewelry fl end watch a repair lervica J M fop* I STIVI AMDUT ■ All work done in ou’ own »hop £lLu>tL jewcuw co. ■ 422 MIDLAND BLOC. ; Ceme ern »e w.b»n. c* 5115 ■ ■■■■■ Oeee MeeAn tree ■■■■• Friday, AprU 21, 1960, St. Paul RECORDER, Page 3 SOCIAL & PERSONAL • MINNEAPOLIS * Mrs. Almayd* Winston, of Washington, D. C., arrived in the city recently to spend some time with her sister and family, Rev, M. L. Simmons, 3756 Fifth Ave. So. She expects to be here throughout the month of April. St. Agnes Guild of St. Thomas Church held their regular meeting at the home of Mrs. Glayne Mayes, 3617 Chicago Ave., Tuesday, April 18. Mr. Theodore Koontz, 3511 Snelling Ave. So., has been con fined to General Hospital. His condition is still serious. His father. Mr. Alex Koontx, from Beaumont, Kansas, arrived in the city Thursday, April 13, to be at the bedside of his son. Mr. Koontz is the son of Mrs. Mayme Whiting of 3511 Snelling Ave. So. Miss Mary Alice Matthews of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania was en tertained Sunday. April 16, by Mr. and Mrs. Jack Brown, 1406 Seventh Ave. No. She resides with her aunt. Mrs Naomi Mosley and husband at 539 Bryant Ave. No. The regular meeting of the Hat tie Dwyer Guild WSCS of Border Church met with Mrs. James Clardy. 1814 15th Ave. So., Thurs day. April 13. Plans were made for a mother and daughter dinner to be held in May. A Yardley demonstration party was held Saturday. April 15. at the home of Mrs. Judson Phillips, 4146 Third Ave. So. Those present were Mmes. Curtis Chivers, Elvln Anderson, Dayton Loud, McClin ton Webb. Ida Mae Webb, Imo gene rflvely and daughter, Eve lyn and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Little. After the demonstration a luncheon was served. Mrs. Phillips will receive two lovely quilted plastic bed spreads for her co operation In having the demon stration in her home. The starlit Hour 16 Club met at the home of Mrs. Ethel Kipper, 2431 Fourth Ave. 8o , Wednesday, April 12. Lunch was served by the hostess AU members were pres ent. Next meeting will be held at the home of Mr. John Armstrong, 3935 Fourth Ave. So., Wednesday April 19. The president of the club la Miss Patricia Johnson. The regular meeting of the Booker T. Washington Study club was held Tuesday, April 18, at the home of Mrs. J. E. Jones, 2900 Portland Ave. Complete reports on the annual tea were given by Mrs. Augustus Owens, general chair man. The Twin City Reel and Trigger Club held a smoker Sunday, April 15. at Cassius Bar and Grill. The Rectors Guild held their CURLEY'S SUPER SERVICE Solee A Servlet Dale and Central L l uSsiia rme- m sum ro cau - - - PAUL COLIMAN rh.Mi DAU 47M Offkai CM«r MIX for Your Television Sot CALHOUN MINT CO. lOtfc « SOBMT ST >Ajr iisr PEN REPAIR CHASE PEN SHOPS Btcm.r Ar<j<l< end 21 * ’»h FOR THAT GLORIOUS GOLDEN BROWN COMPLEXION Hit'll light the golden smoothneea your akin with euper-fine Peach Nut Brown Face Po There's none better at any DIM If PfACH HAIR POMAOf At yfur favarite 5 and 10 and dm( THt LAHDtR CO. • FIFTH AVfNUf • ‘STORE OF HAPPINESS' Herbert S. Bernstein JEWELERS QSAUTT WITS * CaEDfT WIVKX II BAST SEVENTH STREET CEDAR MSI JOE'S GROCERY 441 Rondo Avenve (Corner Arundel) Groceries, Froth Fruit* and Vegetable* Cold Meat* • Dairy Product* • Cotmetic* & Notion* Cigar* • Cigarette* • Tobacco ROBERT STREET MARKET . 1a ■ W ferrtraria* rTUW* u 8 *F wfUuliTy fvIBCBT* una rQUlir y Wl nATUM YOUR fAVOAITt UtAND Of WINtS a uouoas 450 Robert St. CEdor 6881 regular meeting at the home of Mrs. Hobart T. Mitchell, 3612 El liot Ave. So., Monday. April 17. They held their election of offi cers. The new president is Mrs. Virgie Hughes. Guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Bailey, 3549 Fourth Ave. So., were Robert Getes, of Texas. Ceril Fountain of the Ba hama Islands and Maurice Britts of Alton, 81. They were here dur ing the Easter holidays. Mr. William Ewing, 3020 20th Ave. So. entered Fairview Hospi tal Wednesday, April 12, for a minor operation. He was released Friday, April 14. Mr*. Ella Freeman, 2906 Port land Ave. So., who has been 111 in her home for the past week, is stlU confined to her bed. Her con dition is fair. The Youth Choral Club of St. Peters church is very busy pre paring for their annual Mothers Day Vesper and Silver Fellowship Tea which the president, Arthur Glen and general chairman. Bill Fraction promises will be an un usual and unique program. DANf ORTH'S Haircuts of Distinction KUSIe Withers C. A, Daatertb Barber Prop. MS No. Kent 29 'fUllllCHT mvidehd \ \ ASSOCIATION/ *OUHW A» WABASHA DO« ITS ALWAYS TIME TO CAPITOL MEAT CO. 515 Wabasha Street "Bettor Meats for Um" Moats Priced to Fit the Average Pune. •’■V SoamaoH o» FINI WOOLIHI LMns*. Ikraada. 0»d atkar raw'no w»- allat at *IC JAVINCi. 0. SCH9ENBERGER I SON CA. 60*7 4SS No. Robot* (Rottmor Rid';.) I Hour* Ito S Daily (Inc. Saturday) ! MON. NITIS TH iff Dorothy McDavid Brandford Model . 1 ot Dill* — -- X C<Mt*OU» SIH feggZj//)? t V LAROI tlXf NfW YORK I 1 __ - *