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TTian’s •n the ves to am of go, so irch is ke it. from t Rev. Jbject. ■ipture jrsday l are these study in get i are prayer ussion orship e sen ig the "Holy, uraton X the >n led en for "The tor his if the World In the >r bet istian. oes it sn see soon, harter . Mrs. home nprov- KCH Floyd ic “To ong?" 25 1- n. 28, Y. F. ervice. joined licago. unday. speak Life” ill fol- It J •y INA SOCIAL & PERSONAL * ST. PAUL * Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence celebrate their 13th wedding ai Mr. and Mrs. 0. C. Hall, ' brate their 36th wedding anniv Little Miss Leora Myers, 8 her 9th birthday Thursday, Jai Little Lymen Myers Jr., 868 Iglehart Ave., was 111 with an asthmetic condition at his home last week. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lymen Myers. Miss Beverly CarroU of 612 W. Centra] Ave. was ill last week with the flu. Miss Carroll has re covered and is back to work. She returned to work Wednesday, Jan. 24. Miss Joan Howell, 971 St. An thony Ave., is on the Carnival Social Committee at Central high school in St. Paul. Mrs. O. C. Drizzle of 898 Rondo Ave. it ill at her home. The Mid-Century Sewing club met Tuesday, Jan. 30 at the home of Mrs. Wilbur Henderson of 470 Fuller Ave. The St. Phillip’s Youth Group met Sunday, Jan. 28 at the church. Plan were made for a for mal and a dress rehearsal was held ofr the Mardi Gras Feb. 2. Mrs. Eunice Jones, formerly of 454 Iglehart in St. Paul and daughter of Mrs. Gladys Williams of the same address, left recently Will qsr^jjijoispii HOME OF FAMOUS QUALITY APPAREL for the family Quality that’s higher than ever to give you value that saves. The largest and finest se lections of men’s, women’s, boys’ and girls’ clothing in the Northwest For guurunteed satisfaction shop al Rothschild’s MAURICE L ROTHSCHILD & CO Robert at 7th BERDES FOOD CENTER "BETTER MEATS AT LOWER PRICES" FRESH MEATS. POULTRY. FISH and DAIRY PRODUCTS Fruits. Groceries and Vegetables 388 WABASHA We Invite Your Account CLEARANCE SALE ON ODD LOT WATCHES ALL RONSON LIGHTERS REPAIRED ONE DAY SERVICE It's O. K. to Owe .... use our lay-by elan Lou Kaye Jewelers Is your watch hooping porfoct timo? Havo It chockod now 450V* WABASHA ST. (Strand THaotra Bldg.) swart, 570 \V. Central Ave. Will nniversary, Thursday, Feb. 4. 727 St. Anthony Ave. will cele ■ersary Friday, Feb. 5. 168 Iglehart Ave., will celebrate :i. 4. to make her home in Akron, O. and to join her husband. Mr. Wil bur Jones. Mrs. Kemuel Ellis, 283 W. Cen tral Ave. was the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Al len, 3904 Fifth Ave. So., Wednes day, Jan. 24. The 25 Limited Birthday club met Tuesday, Jan. 23 at the home of Mrs. Roberta Tyler, 694 W. Central. The Wednesday Afternoon Sewing Club met Wednesday, Jan. 31 at the home of Mrs. Joseph Vassar, 748 W. Central Ave. Mrs. Ollle Grantham, 876 Igle hart Ave., returned home F’riday, Jan. 26 after spending four weeks in Chicago with her sister, Mrs. Willard, who was ill. The Guild of Our Lady of St. Phillips church met Friday. Jan. 26 at the home of Mrs. Arthur Hedge of 615 Carroll. New offi cers were elected. They are as follows: president, Mrs. Arthur Hedges; vice-pres., Mrs. William Godette; secy., Mrs. Wonema Payne, assistant secy.; Mrs. Sid ney Salters; treas., Mrs. Eunice Goins, and telephone chairman, Mrs. Robert Mitchell. The Minnesota Widows Club met Sunday. Jan. 28 ut the home of Mrs. Alberta Ragland, 500 Rondo Ave. Mr. and Mrs. John Robertson, 787 Rondo Ave., have a new blue Ford convertible. Miss Dorothy Hampton. 701 Carioll who has been ill in An cker hospital returned home Mon day, Jan 22. Her condition is im proving. Mrs. Edna Willard of Chicago, Illinois, is the guest of her sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Grantham, 876 Iglehart Ave. Mrs. Willaui is convalescing from a recent illness at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Grantham. Mrs. Harrison Davis Sr., 441 St. Anthony Ave., celebrated her birthday Sunday, Jan. 28. Pfc. Herbert Douglas, stationed at Fort Knox, Kentucky, arrived Friday, Jan. 26 on a thirteen-day furlough which he will spend with his mother, Mrs. Pearl Douglas, 426 Carroll Ave., and other relatives. After his stay in St. Paul, Pfc. Douglas will go to Seattle, Wash. The Credjafawn Club met Wed nesday, Jan. 31, at the home of Mrs. John Thomas, 594 St. An thony Ave. Plans were made for a closed Smorgasbord party to be held Feb. 9. ST. PAUL'S FAVORITE STORE COMPLETE FURNISHINGS MEN'S AND WOMENS APPAREL JEWELRY 3 CONVENIENT CHARGE PLANS 1 RATING THE 2 l RECORDS 2 } By J. Henry Rend all J Another Plano Oiant . . . The list of keyboard artists who have and still are leading the pack for their distinctive inter pretations of tune via the 88 would not be complete without mention of one whose way with the blacks and whites is ever captivating to listeners. We speak of Eddie ’’Begin the Be guine" Heywood, whose piano version of that time equalled Artie Shaw's treasured orchestral version. Heywood (his career as a leader in the piano world was interrup ted by a brief illness) is aligned with other greats on the blacks and whites —Teddy Wilson, Jess Stacy Erroll Gamer, Joe Bushkin, Stan Freeman, etc.—ln Colum bia’s "Piano Mood" series. Heywood's contribution are two medlies of pop items which are tastefully performed, with the rhythm support of Terry Snyder on drums and Frank Carroll, bass. Selections for this album are his variated jump ideas on A Pretty Girl Is Like a Melody, Mighty I.ak' A Rose, The Birth of the Blues; the mood atmospheres of Without a Song, All the Things You Are, Try a Little Tenderness, When Your Lover Has Gone, and a rhapsodic St. Louis Blues (Col umbia). Pop, Rhythm Singles . . . Columbia's first batch of re leases in its projected reissue of some 50 discs of the hot Jazz and rhythm and blues category, num bers such favorites as Billie Holi day, Count Basie, the late Jim mie Lunceford and Cab Calloway. The Lunceford pairing, both of which are back t« back in an al bum. "Lunceford Special,” are Uptown Blues, and Well, All Right Then, with the ensemble taking the chorus. The latter warf one of the favorites in the days of the "viper's drag." Cab's twosome are his bluesy Willow Weap For Me, with Alto saxist Hilton Jefferson featured throughout and Jonah Joins the Cab, featuring trumpeter Jonah Jones. An early Basie, with his trip hammer fingering and the heavy reed and muted brass are on Clap Hands, Here Comes Charlie and Pound Cake. The take is a bit noisey, but enough of the glorious sounds come through to remind listener of some of the good stuff which the Basie aggregation turned out. The "Lady Day" pairings are Georgia on My Mind and Let’s Do It, the latter from her album, “Billie Holiday Sings.” (Colum bia). A pair of bright novelties are done by the Honeydreamers in their cool and smooth way. "A” side is Potato Bug Boogie, with the Potato Bugs joining in the vocal. Flip is The Beanhag Song (Victor). Tiny Bradshaw and crew also have a pair of novelties, both in the jump blues vein. Sides are One Two Three Kirk Blues, with Dorena Deene on vocal; and Walk That Mess, Tiny on lyrics (King). Balladeering is Phil Regan on Sweetheart Dartin’ and Pretty Kitty Kelly . Jimmie Mitchelle, and Erskine Hawkins alumnus, lyrically romps through When Summer is Gone and Tonight You Belong to Me (King! . . . The Dominoes, in a style akin to that of the Orioles, wring out the tears with their versions of Harbor I.ights and No Says My Heart (Federal). Gene Krupa and his Chicago Jazz come up with quite good in strumental sersion of Blue*"My Naughty Sweetie Give* To Me. It's "ragtime" swing and shows up better than previous efforts (Victor). . A blues cry and a jump fest are Scat Man Bailey's contributions in Raindrop Blues and My Oh My (Federal t. Master WHITE BREAD Well Baked by Zintmasht GARDNER'S D-X STATION Wttlßnß and Centra! DAI* tM4 lottery liititi M Go— Hmo amd Diem— d Q——teg Waebteg «d D-X Motet Otte xvxarrr gabdndl p**». BIAMOXM UNCS Ittl maui n«* nun* *«.*»• | f^^OLLnODSOnRUSSa^^ There is already and will be controversy over "The Steel Helmet", the first motion picture about the Korean war. This film did not come out of one of the major Hollywood studios. It was written, directed and produced by a Mr. Samuel Fuller, and released through Lippert Productions. James Edwards, who first won fame In “Home of the Brave” Is one of an all-male cast. (There’s not an upholstered bosum, a cute chick or a plunging neckline In the whole dem unreeling of the film.) As far as plot goes, and it doesn't go too far, the story deals with a small group of American O. I.'s on a mission. A hard-bitten, combat-rugged sergeant, the sole survivor of a detail ambushed and massacared by the Korean Reds, makes friends Nell finssrll wlth a llttle 801101 Korean orphan. The two meet Edwards, a young medic, also the sole survivor of his platoon. The three meet up with (an awful lot of meetin' up) the group on the mission. From there on in, the sergeant takes over from the lieutenant in charge. For some reason or other, lieutenants In war films are the butt of jokes about "90-Day-Wonders," etc. In this case, the "loot" seems to wander around In a state of amnesia when it comes to recalling who gives the orders. What happens from there on in is told with no more or no less suspense than in most pictures of this type. Army Signal Corps are inserted to make up for the lack of "A-Epic" budget on the part of Messrs. Fuller and company. There is even a brief glimpse of a Signal Corps still photo intruding. Kate Cameron, top reviewer for the New York Dally New*, who commands a reading audience of approximately t,000,000 people, wrote: " In some respects “The Steel Helmet’’ Is a very peculiar picture. In others, It follows the usual Hne of war-ls-hell but Is something that must be done to maintain Independence. The pecularltles that strike this reviewer begin with the fact that the picture would undoubtedly go over big In Russia or Commu nist China. The American soldier Is not, by a long shot, presented In an admirable light. There Is no holding him up to his fellows at home as a hero.” Certainly “The Steel Helmet" does not follow the usual Holly wood tradition for war films which invariably present American G.l.’s as dirty-faced but heroic, wisecracking, dying briefly, gallantly and usually with a minimum of pain. Maybe we have had so much of this “hero'' stuff on the screen, that the nasty, realistic facts of soldiering in a nasty, realistic war are not palatable fare for Americana sitting in the warm, comfortable darkness of motion picture theatres. There was a news dispatch from Korea in one of the New fork papers recently about a young American G. 1., just a kid, Unnerved and sobbing because he had to shoot down an eight year-old girl of the North Korean Reds, who passing as a refu gee of war, wan recruited by the commies to “liquidate" the G. I.— and two of his buddies. He saw his two buddies die, and saved his own life only by killing the small girl. There's nothing heroic about that. Kate Cameron continued in her review: “Of the group under observation, the lieutenant in charge of the detail Is a green officer who doesn't know how to protect his men and is constantly being insulted by a stray sergeant, who falls In with the group after his own detail had been wiped out. The other soldiers are either weak or moronic kids, who, it is intimated, are fighting because they are paid for the Job. In other words, they are presented as mercenaries." Miss Cameron seems to be touchy about this business of Ameri con G. I.'s being portrayed as “weaklings.” I did not get that Impres sion from the film. To me the group appear as O. I.’s, tired, confused, in a strange land, and trying to do the best of their ability, whatever it was they are supposed to do. There are several references to "that's what you're paid to do” and making fighting “a business" as long as one has to fight, but as for presenting the whole group as paid mercenaries, the statement is misleading, I think. More from the Cameron review: “The medical corps corporal, a Negro, and Sgt. Tanaka, a Nisei soldier, are the only decent soldiers In the outfit, and they are sneered at by the Chinese major for fighting for a country that treats them as second-class citizens. Also, a Buddhist temple Is destroyed because the Ameri cans take shelter there.” James Edwards, as Corporal Thompson, and Richard Loo, as Sgt. Tanaka, certainly don't appear to me to be the only decent soldiers in the outfit. Edward's role calls for a minimum of dialogue and he certainly doesn't overact like he did in "Home of the Brave." I think Loo, as Tanaka, yack-yacka too much and la presented as just a little bit too cute. The plot calls for the Buddhist temple to be destroyed because the American detail is sheltered there. I haven't the slightest idea of whether or not Koreans spare temples when the enemy is lurking within, so Cameron has me on that point. Now let's take a look for concealed propaganda. If "Steel Helmet" is the propaganda film it is charged with being by some of the critics. One of the most unfortunate aspects of this film Is the scene showing the cold-blooded shooting of a captured Korean communist major by Sgt. Zack. played by Gene Evans. Zack shoots the officer after a sniper has killed the little South Korean orphan befriended by Zack. Incidentally, "Short Round." the little orphan, is the most likeable and sympathetic character in the picture. When the cap tured officer sneers at the loyalty of the little boy for his Q. I. friend, the i ergeant blows his top and blasts the prisoner whom he has been ordered to bring back unharmed. The Inference that American soldier* so easily blow their top* and slaughter prisoners of war will be deplored by motion picture audience* in this country, but could be taken as standard procedures by audiences attending the film If It Is shown In pro- Soviet countries—and it probably will be. Another scene. The captured major, an obnoxious creature, In quires of Edwards if it's true that he, Edwards, can’t sit in the front seat of a bus? Edwards says it is true, not qualifying that such is the case in certain sections of the country. He replies that in "150 years" he’ll be able to sit in the middle of the bus. and in another hundred-or-ao odd years he'll probably be able to sit in the front of the bus. "You can't rush these things." Edwards concludes, or some lines to that effect. When the major eases up to Loo and asks him if it isn't true Japanese Americans were put in prison camps in America during World War 11, Loo admits such was the case. He also brings up the fine combat record of the 42nd Nisei fighters In the last war and concludes that although Americans may be divided within some times, when they are attacked from without, they stick together. In an early scene in the picture, Edwards tells the sergeant he has studied surgery under the G. I. Bill, and the sergeant quips; "Where, in a butcher shop?" The possible inference could be that Negroes aren't allowed to study surgery in medical schools In the U. S. Or it could be Just one of those cracks so-called "race-relations" films are lightly dusted with. See "The Htoel Helmet" and Judge for yourself. "The Steel Helmet" is a film that can be evaluated only after one leaves the theatre, goes home and does some profound mental flip-ups. Think over each scene, each line, each situation. Then make up your mind. Think of how you see the picture here in an Ameri can theatre and then think of seeing the same picture, with language subtitles, in a theatre behind the Iron Curtain or in a pro- Commun is country. Is It propaganda or la someone deliberately trying to make It propaganda? STOP N* SHOP EISINMENGER BLOG. 455 WABASHA Fresh Fish Daily! Msoti Poultry Dairy Products ELLISON POPCORN PRODUCTS. INC. * Car mol Crisp • Chooso Corn • Popcorn Balls 'Kettle Fresh" 420 Wabasha St. Cl. 9764 NEW YORK CITY FASHION-OF-WEEK d r IS M |T fr WOOL JERSEY AND SATIN ars Si blsndsd In an eye-appealing dross. y Tha Jsrssy top. In vibrant fuachla ’ or royal blua, beasts a jawalad *1 collar In tha same black satin aa tha skirt. Available In tha homo •J from housewife representatives of * Fashion Freek*,Clne!fMiatl.(ANF) BIRTHDAY GREETINGS ST. PAUL BIRTHDAYS Feb. 2 -Clarence Anderson Jr., 707 Iglehart Ave.; Alfred Wil liams. 710 Rondo Ave.; Mrs. Mary Nichols, 430 Carroll Ave. Feb. 3—Mr. Richard A. Lark, 578 Rondo Ave. Feb. 4—Mrs. Alexander Wise man. 057 Rondo Ave.; Mrs. Don ald James, 660 Fuller; Wm P. Warricks, 741 St. Anthony Ave.; Rita Mtddlecoff, 557 W. Central Ave.; Felix Turner, 756 Rondo Ave. Feb. 5 Elisabeth Ainsworth, 271 E. 15th 8L; Francis Belleaon, 387 Carroll Ave. Feb. 6—O. C. Hall. 727 St. An thony Ave.; Mrs. Q. Twiggs, 050 St. Anthony Ave. Feb. 7—Mrs. Esther Brown. 405 St. Anthony Ava.; Bernard Hur on. 453 Kent St.; Mr. William White, 773 Rondo Ave.; Mrs. D. Grissam, 521 Aurora Ava.; Mrs. Claude Brown Sr.. 441 St. An thony Ave.; Rochelle Mitchell, 685 Carroll Ave.; Shirley Ann James, 660 Culler Ave. Feb. B—William White, 773 Rondo Ave.; Mrs Elisabeth Hall, 358 N. Dale St. MINNEAPOLIS BIRTHDAYS Fab. 4—H. L. Adams, 2114 E. 35th St.; Mrs. Clydle Oates, 1107 I.yndale Ave. No.; Genevle Wil burn, 1201 Humboldt No.; Mrs. F. G Powell, 2510 Lake Place. Feb. s—<Jenevleve Cooper Jack son. 1107 Lyndale Ave. No.; Mary A Smith, 2929 Fifth Ave. 80. Feb. 6 Mrs J. R. Freeman, 119 Royalston Ave. No.; Mrs. Elsie Hall. 2430 Fifth Ave. So. Feb. 7—Earl W. Bowman, Sr., 3612 Fourth Ave. So.; Melvin L. Hammond, 2741 Clinton Ave. 8o.; Rev. A. F. Martin, 3821 Fifth Ave. So.; Hezzle Allen, 2201 So. sth Ave.; Mrs. Allene Neal, 100 Hy land Ave. No.; Mrs. Faye Ormes, 3605 12th Ave. So.; H. T. Ormes. 3605 12th Ave. So. Feb. 8— Eugene E. Schuck. 728 Bassett Place; Albert Allen Jr., 3904 Fifth Ave. So.; Mrs. Mable Harris, 3561 Snelling. Feb. 9 Rose Ttllotson, 15 N. Ninth St. Feb. 10—George Lewis, 1108 Aldrich Ave. No.; Dorothy Mae Kincannon, 704 Oak Lake Ave. No.; Leslie Green, 307 Dupont Ave. No. 0 0# Out-of-Town Birthdays Feb. 4- Clifford E. Enger, Aus tin, Minn. Feb. B—David Tate, Fergus Falls, Minn. Feb. 8 Pvt. Clifton Browm, Cleveland, Ohio; Herman Sweets. Paola, Kansas. Feb. 10—Janet Winfield, Duluth, Minn. M. J. Caulfield Orthopedic Shoemaker Hhoen Made to Order for Deformed Keet GENERAL REPAIR WORK 1177 Nplbf I cmp. < hatev*orth> DAI# 1074 -*-S («>*!*• BaW CmmOMml BUZZBROWN'S J Photographic Studios Commercial • Portraits 1 Reproduction of OM Photos taa so. victoria it at. not, St. Pual A a taa- 1 i ST. PAIL HOUSE Furnishing Co. Homo Furnishers and lewelere on MOTTO -Widows end Orphan* Protected tth 4 Mima. Ms. CL 4771 err. Paul’s lajloeot EXCLUSIVE MEN’S STORE We Oive BAH Green Stamps Wabasha at 7th B. E. SCOTT ACdDEMT aad WAITE DWUBAMCZ Mama*. Ciartnas lartii a -- "* wm - MM Friday, February 3, 1901 St Paul RECORDER, Page 3 SOCIAL & PERSON. i The Jr. NA.ACP Youth Council will meet Sunday, Feb. 4, at the Phyllis Wheatley Settlement House at 3 p. m. It is re quested that all members please be present and bring a friend who you think may be interested. Miss Delores Nesbitt, daughter of Mr. and Mm. George Nesbitt Jr., 5057 Humboldt Are. No., marched with the Patrick Henry hlge school band Saturday. Jan. 27 In the St Paul Winter Carnival. The band was sponsored by the Northern Pacific Railway Co. Delores was the only Negro member in the group. Linton Jacquet, brother and manager of Illinois Jacquet, Ad rinn Area, piano player and ar ranger, and Joe Newman, trum pet player were the house guests of Mr. and Mrs. Willie Burrell. 8S Hoag Ave. Mr. Alfred Pullen., 5110 James Ave. No., fell from a railroad en gine while on the job Sunday morning. Jan. 38., and fractured three ribs Mr. Pullens was re leased from the Northwest hos pital Monday evening, Jan. 39. Mr. Jesse Reed. Milwaukee, Win spent the weekend in Minneapolis visiting his mother-in-law, Mrs. Isabelle Stone and other relatives and friends. Mr. Reed left the city for his home Bunday night. Jan. 38. The Booker T. Washington Study Club met at the home of Mr. Emmanuel Qrimes, 3815 Fifth Ave. So., Tuesday, Jan. 16 for a business meeting. Mr. Mattie Owens, secretary, gave a dealing on "Negro Freedom In 1801” by TRIFOCALS fIONWLT Br. ReM. Lssdea Leeaiei as QsHSWs S L Ith, U. MM UNOLEUM ASPHALT TILE RUBBER TILE PHAM LINOLEUM free •sflmotns 370 Robert St. Cl OS2I Regista^Q^ Secretarial Accounting Courses Business Codecs 23 I. 6th STRUT ROBIN PtUMMNO A HEATING SUPPLY New and Uaed Plumbing We Ear A Sell Mow A Deed Pipe' am iauf ate Roe. Da IIH Bee. Da. Mtt Open PIJNDATa p a. m. So 1 a* m. aaoooaaeppopaeopapaaaa >*B*W4««4eMr*AHA<*AM4rilrMt*ArfAl*AriAt*AeM LESLIE H. JOHNSON Hot Water and Steam Heat Call Us For Estimates oa OAS 871 GRAND AVINUI Be*. ELkhuret 7848 Bus. I)Ale 84 SO "THE WORKING MAN'S MEAT MARKET" Mffh "Compare and Save" SPRING CHICKENS. 4-6 Lb. Avg., Lb. .. .29c Yewop Tom or Mon • Imell Km I Teodor hacked - keel Nam Plover Turkeys, Lb 39c I Picnics, Lb 35c BONELESS ROUND STIAK OR ROAST, Lb 59c PURE PORK SMOKED COUNTRY SAUSAOI, Lb 43* Froth Ground Boot, Lb. . 49c | Pock Cirtbti, Lb. 55c FRED L. EISNMENGER 516 RICI STRUT OA. 5731 Pros Pork lap la Boer Prlcos good triday through tho following Thursday . HERBERT S. BERNSTEIN JEWELERS ouurr eii t cm mm II BAST SEVENTH SI BEAT OORR tel ROBERT STREET MARKET Trash Pewits • VogotaMos - Grocartoa Quality Moat* aad Poultry Wa foaturo your favorHo brand of Win as A Uguarp 450 Robort St. CSdmr 4SRI Walter White. The next meeting will be held February 30 at tbs home of Mrs. Mae Jones, 3900 Portland Ave. So. Mia. a. L Alexander, 3953 Fifth Ave. 80., ares taken to Fair view Hospital Tuesday, Jan. S 3 with pneumonia. Mrs. Alexander la vary much Improved. It la un certain when ahe will be released from the hospital. Mr. and Mrs. WIUUm Caspar, 706 Seventh Ave. No., were forced to leave their home In aero weather Sunday morning, Jan. 38 because of fire. The house eras not badly damaged. Rev. F. C. Cummings, 948 Bry ant Ave. No., pastor of Hoatay Memorial church returned to thd city from the Mid-Winter Confer ence in Chicago, HL, with bis right hand injured Is a slight ac cident. In his absence, Rev. J. J. Clayburn and Rev. Mrs Lillian Parkinson were the guest preach ers at Hoalsy Memorial church. 0m SeeAuextt'd, CARNTS Till UNOUUM SI last stb CA. 5474 M out COMMIT! DMMAT OS LAWN AMO OUMN TOOU NO SSMIMOm AT WWM NNO, WHEELER Hordworo 101 L 9th St. OA. 3307 Drink Pasteurized Milk for Health CAPITOL MEAT CO. 515 Wabasha Street "Batter Moats lor Loop” Ms erts Mead ta FU Urn Avarago Puma.