Diamond 24th and Lake Sts. SUNDAY— A Five Reel Special j “WOLVES OF KULTUR” Every Tuesday “HANDS UP” ; ALHAMBRA 24th and Parker. THE " house of Courtesy 24th and Packet Sts.___ FRANKLIN 24th and Franklin Streets SATURDAY— A Big Five Reel Release SUNDAY— A Feature That Is a Whirl wind. « The Moon CAFE GOOD HOME COOKING MEALS AT ANY HOUR 2605 N St. Tel. South 2962 \ The CHAPMAN Drug Store 1 934 P St, Lincoln Opposite Main Door Post Offles Camaras and Films, Magazines, Cigars, Candies and a full line of Druggist Smdriea WE HAVE COAL TO BURN Neb. Fuel Lump, . $8.90 For Heaters or Furnace NEBRASKA FUEL CO. Tel. Doug. 430. 409 S. 16th St. North Yard at 33d and Evans Streets. Colfax 2289. MADAME HENDERSON HAiRLfiand MANICURI8T *Agent or the Celebrated Ma dam Walker Preparations. The Wilker iliml fail it. 0 ol > n o Vt \ti I Phone Webstar 14M 2866 Maple Stijeet, Omaha, Neb. The Lincoln Lunch Room Quick Service for Working Men C. C. GALLOWAY, Prop 103 South 14th St Tel. Douglas 3651. — | Liberty Drug Co. jj EVERYBODY’S DRUG STORE ;j •j* We Deliver Anywhere. •] •{• Webster 386. Omaha, Neb. *i Arbor Garage Fire proof block with steam heat. Repairing and storing. Will accommodate 50 cars day and night. Connection taxi service. Business at 2506-08 South 32d Avenue. Tel. Harney 3371, Omaha. C. R. Boyd Colored Prop. ....1 Petersen <& Michelsen Hardware Co. GOOD HARDWARE 2408 N St. Tel. South 1«1 fl Harry Norman PROMPT Taxi Service AT ALL HOURS Pool Hall and Hilliard Parlor in Connection. I Phone South 2962 2603 N St. South Omaha. ; OPEN FOR BUSINESS -THE ! Booker T. Washington HOTEL Nicely Furnished Steam | Heated Rooms, With or Without Board. 523 North 15th St. Omaha, Neb. ! Phone Tyler 897 A t K. & M. | Grocery Co. | 14 Successor to X ? | $ H. E. YOUNG X ? k f We solicit your patronage. .*. 4 2114-16 North 24th St. % f •>X"X"X;"X"X"X"X“X“X"M“X"X“> NOTICE 4 If you have a house to sell or 4 4 rent list it with us. We will get 4 X results for you. Also call us for x i X insurance. y | W. M. Franklin | ' jj- Dealer in Real Estate and In- ••• ,*I surance. Notary Public. ',t‘. X 2413 North 24th. Web. 4206. X 4 4 <“X~X~XXX“X^K”:~X~X~X“X~X-: Established 1890 C. 1. CARLSON Dealer in Shoes and Gents' Furnishings 1514 No. 24th St. Omaha, Neb. i s • • I ■ I I • • • • I I t t •••••••* (Modern Furnished Rooms t 811 W. 14th Street I CENTER CAFE Phone Red 1457 1 922 Center Street Mrs. Louise Cooper, Prop, lies Moines, Iowa Classified Advertising i RATES—1V4 cents a word for single in | sertions; 1 cent a word for two or more Insertions. No advertisement taken for less than 15 cents. Cash should accom pany advertisement. Colored woman wanted who knows how to clean hog chiterings. Joseph . Vomacka, 27th and M streets. Phone | S 2469. DRUG STORES THE PEOPLE’S DRUG STORE ; Douglas 1446. 109 South 14th St. ADAMS HAIGHT DRUG CO., 24th and Lake; 24th and Fort, Omaha, Neb. I ■ COLORED NEWSPAPERS AND MAGAZINES FRANK DOUGLASS Shining Parlor. | Webster 1388. 2414 North 24th St. * 11 Letters from Boys Overseas FROM THE PROVINCE OF BURGANDY Chaplain Collins, Who Has Many Friends Among Monitor Readers Throughout the Country, Writes Interesting Fetter to His Class mate, Raymond J. Knox. 4317 Pennsylvania Avenue, Kansas City, Mo., December 20, 1918. j My Dear Father Williams: Enclosed find letter from my friend, ! Rev. Henry M. Collins, who is a lieutenant-ChapIain with the colors. You will note that he has received the ! Omaha Monitor I sent and calls it ‘‘the most interesting newspaper,” so I you see that your newsy paper is read with a great deal of interest by those I who are abroad as well as the home ' folks. Your paper has done a great I deal to enlighten and comfort the boys ‘‘over there” and I know it must have been a great pleasure to receive your , paper. If you desire you are at lib ! erty to publish Chaplain Collins’ let 1 ter, for there are many things in it I think would interest your readers. With best wishes to you and your fam ily, I beg to remain your friend, RAYMOND JEAN KNOX. Chaplains’ Office, Harry M. Collins, Lieut. Chaplain, American P. O. No. 712,American Expeditionary Forses, France, November 24, 1918. Mr. Raymond J. Knox, 4317 Pennsyl vania Ave., Kansas City, Mo. My Dear Old Classmate: Your letter came to me a few days ago. It brought along with it the * usual good cheer that generally comes from such a great soul as yours. I was just as glad to have it as I was to have you visit while in the west, for it was typical Ray, in every sense. I also received a few days after the ' most interesting newspaper, Omaha Monitor, and in this letter I am send ing you my thanks. Well, at last we stand near the birth of peace and the world’s freedom, and I know you in the states are having great demon strations and rejoicing. But Ray, if you want to see real demonstrations of the highest carnival type, you should be in some of the large cities of France. I never saw such demon strations in my life. Stores were closed and all the people gave them selves over to hilarity of all sort. An immense crowd thronged every street and the entife town sang, although as one great chorus, the Marsailles. These demonstrations are sites that I can never forget, and why should not j poor bleeding France, who has been ! the victim of this great onslaught of ! humanity for more than four years, rejoice ? The decorations of festoons of the American, British, Italian and French flags make most beautiful sights. I wish you could be here with me to see some of them. I am at a city, Is-sur-Tille, in the Province of Burgandy where many historical events have been in action. This is a big base and the Advance Zone just behind the Toul Sector. This camp is the largest camp overseas. ] Here all the American Forces pass in and out. Located in a large city near here is a Big Base Hospital and here many terrible sights are seen, but the greatest heroism that the world has ever known is also seen here. At the city, Dijon, where the hospital is lo cated and where I go and spend two days each week, there are sights with great historical settings that I wish you could behold, for I know you are a lover of history. By the by, have you ever seen Sparkling Burgandy? This is its birthplace. The Province of Burgandy was located in what is now called Cote d’or, which means hills of gold. And upon these hills beautiful vintage has ever been known to cluster. The old early Dukes have made famous, therefore, Sparkling Burgandy, and until this day through a number of centuries she has never lost her grip with the people, and she could be seen flowing as living water, ha, ha! But of course the Chaplains stand and see the stream sparkle as it goes by them. At this place staifrl certain parts of the old Castle of Phil lip the Hardi. It has now been built into a great Museum, one of the best in France, and here I have seen some of the greatest sculpture and art. Oh! you should see some of these great paintings of the best European Paint ers. Here I sat in the chair of Louis XIII, XIV and XV and have seen many of their beautiful possessions of that age. I have beheld the handi work of the greatest craftsmen that Europe has possessed. . It has also been mine to see some of the finest sculpture and decorations imaginable and to see some of the ruins as far back as the third century. Just out I side the city, Dijon, stands the statue ■ of Garbaldi where he made his last i stand against the Germans in 1870 when France lost and sacrificed Al sace Lorraine that she has just won bark in this war. Have also beheld the ruins of some of the forts built by Caesar, and upon landing at Brest I slept in the barracks of the ever il lustrious Napoleon. It was here that I beheld his wonderful prison, cells and private quarters. Anti yet I am to see more of the wonders of this European Civilization. On tomorrow I leave for my vacation to cities of the Mediterranean, spending a few days in the Alps, and shall endeavor to go to Home; however, this might be impossible. On my return I shall visit Lyons, the most famous silk city in the world, and Paris, as the French sail it, "Gay Paris.” I know you envy me in a way for I know how much we enjoyed this bit of history as we went through it in our school days. Little did I then think I would so soon be here to see the wonders of this great continent. Before my return I hope to see much more and thus be come a student of the world. None of us know when we shall re turn home, but rest assured that our great government, the most potent factor in this great crisis for the cause of Democracy is well taking care of her sons who have been willing, in this great world’s crisis, to leave their homes and their dear ones be hind to follow after that great FLAG that has never known defeat nor trailed in the dust. Now life is enjoy able as no longer do we fear the flight of the bird-men, nor the hoarse voice of the great cannon that often brought terror to us in these parts, poubt less, however, some of the boys will be coming home very soon. I will be glad to get back home once more to the friends I love and to my dear family. Will endeavor to sejtd you some sort of souvenir in the near fu ture. With best wishes to yourself and family for the best there is in the way of health, enjoyment and pros perity, I am Very truly yours with the colors on French soil, H. M. COLLINS. Merry Xmas, Happy New Year. Yankee Negroes Great Fighters Harry Trimble, “Y” Worker, Pays Tribute to American Colored Boys. Relates Tales of Heroism Among Black Men in Argonne Offensive. No more heroic chapter of Amer ica’s part in the world war will ever bo written than that of the American Negro troops of the Ninety-second di vision, in the battle of the Argonne forest,” said Harry Trimble, returned Young Men’s Christian association worker, who spoke last night to a large audience at the First Christian church on “My Experiences Over There.” The Ninety-second division is made up of Negro troops and Colored and white officers. Several hundred Ne braska men, including many Omaha Negroes, are with this division. “The American Colored troops did not get their chance until late in the war, but when their time came they did themselves proud. “Negro troops were regarded with more or less skepticism by the French commander, because of the fact that French Colored troops had fled under shell fire,” Mr. Trimble said. “They were as brave as any as long as they could go over the top and fight with their trench knives in stead of bayonets, but they threw down their guns and ran under artil ; lery fire. Fought Like Demons. “No so with the American Ne groes. When ordered to charge they went at those Huns like demons, in the face of the deadliest machine gun fire, putting terror into the hearts of the enemy, many of whom threw down their guns and shouted ‘Ka I me rad.' “The Germans had been firmly in I trenched in the mountain fastnesses 1 of the Argonne forest for more than three years. They had evidently counted on spending another winter there, for they had fixed up their dugouts as comfortably as a city flat. Many of them had three or four rooms with tiled floors, bath tubs, electric lights and built-in stone seats. Barbed wire entanglements were ev erywhere, making their retreat almost impregnable. "When those Negro troops were ordered to take the forest at all costs they went into it, some of them sing ! ing, some cursing and other pray ing, but with a wash and courage that surprised their commanders. In spite of one of the most terrific bar rages of the war, which continued unabated for seventy-two hours, they fought their way foot by foot through the maze of barbed wire. Many of them when hit in the legs by ma chine gun bullets, dropped upon their stomachs and crawled toward the enemy, pumping their rifles with deadly effect. Hun Officer Compliments “One soldier who had been hit nine times and whom I was helping carry on a litter , was so anxious to get back into the fight that he jumped off the stretcher three times and started hack. When he realized that he couldn’t get back, he was one of the most disappointed men I ever saw. His courage was typical of all the rest of that division. , “ One of the most touching experi ences I had was when some of those boys, just before they wCnt into the fight, asked me to take their watch or trinkets and send it to the folks at home, “We’re going in, anti we never ex pect to come back,’ were the words of many of them. Of course I cheered them up the best I could, but many of those brave boys had guessed right, for they never came back. “A Geiman officer who had fought against all of the different allied troops told me that the Americans were the fiercest fighters of all.” Trimble spent several months at the front, where he was transporta tion director for the Ninety-second division. GEN. PERSHING DESIGNATES MORE I MTS TO RETl 'RN HOME Washington, D. C„ Dec. 31.—Addi tional organizations designated by General Pershing for early return home were announced by the war de partment as follows: Meterological section, signal corps. Batteries A, B, C, D, E and F, head quarters company, supply company and headquarters of the Fortieth regiment coast artillery corps; First battalion 814th pioneer infantry (Col ored) ; 172d and 174th aero squadrons; 116th, 301st and 316th trench mortar batteries. SEX DOES NOT SAVE THEM Mobile, Ala., Dec. 31.—Four Ne groes, two of them women, accused of the murder of Dr. E. L. Johnston here last week, were taken from the jail at Shubuta, Miss., tonight and lynched, according to information received in Mobile. All four were reported to have been hanged to the girders of a bridge spanning the Chickasawhay river. BROOKLYN HAS NEW COLORED THEATER Brooklyn, N. Y., Jan. 1.—The Put nam theater of Brooklyn opened Sat urday night with great success. The house was packed to the utmost. The orchestra was personally conducted by Miss Marie Lucas and the vaudeville was under the direction of Mrs. Mae Kemp. The president of the borough of Brooklyn, Hon. Edward Ridgclman, was present and made an opening speech. There were also motion pic tures. Brooklyn should be very proud of this enterprise and attend this play house instead of others in Brook lyn. LA GRANGE, TEXAS H. L. Vincent, Agent Rev. I. D. Coffey, P. C. of A. M. K. church here, returned from a visit to Bellville and held regular serv ices at St. John’s A. M. E. church Sunday. Rev. S. A. Tillman was on hand and held services at Ebenezer Baptist church Sunday morning and night. Rev. ami Mrs. William White, P. C. M. E. church, worshipped at the Ebenezer Baptist church last Sunday morning. Revs. William White, La Grange, and D. F. Vance, Oakland, left here last Monday night to attend the ses sion of the annual conference of the M. E. (hurch at Fort Worth. Mr. Willis Henderson and wife, old citizens of Fayette county, left here last Saturday to make their future home in Mexia, Texas. Mrs. Adeline Henry, daughter of Mr. Richard Logon, was married last Wednesday night to Mr. Alexander Alley, Columbus, Tex., at the bride’s home near here. They will reside in Columbus in the future. Miss Nettie Phearse arrived from Hillsboro last .Sunday morning to spend the holiday vacation with rela tives. Friday evening Mr. John Beaumont, the oldest citizen of Fayette county, being considerably over 100 years old, had lost his way and was found very near the river and was brought back by officers and after being pro nounced insane, was carried to live at the poor house. Sick: Mesdames Mollie Vaughn, Julia King, Cornelia Dobbin. Miss Josie Mitchell and father, Mr. Ben Mitchell left Sunday for Waco to spend the holidays with relatives. The Red Cross Christmas roll call pushed by Prof. G. . Randolph and his able assistants bide fair to round up a very creditable membership. PALESTINE, TEXAS A. G. Howard, Agent The National Trading company is a genuine Negro concern and has about It U K !! « !! >1 IS )! II It K !! K.K H II » H.’H.it « It It.lt.lQ: five stores in and around Palestine. It is doing good business and has stores in Oakwood, Fairfield and , Crockett. Mr. F. A. Scott is general manager. Heal cold weather has hit us at Christmas time and is generally wel comed by the kiddies. Spanish influenza is still raging and caused the deaths this week of Mrs. Lucy Phillips and Will McKin ney. Mrs. Ella Booker says she couldn’t get along without The Monitor. Mrs. Martha Garland has accepted the position as bookkeeper with I. H. Bland, the popular undertaker. J. S. Christian, the well-known evangelist, was a caller at our office today. He represents the Church of the Living God. A. S. Davis was a visitor here this week. Mt. Vernon church is preparing to give their pastor a pound supper to night. . - ' - : ~ * An.vone coming to Lincoln and wanting a nice place to stop, call Ma jor Moore, Phone L-5486; residence, 2226 O street. Mrs. Laura Johnson departed last Tuesday for Chicago, where she will spend the holidays with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Patterson and son Cecil left Friday evening for Great Bend, Kan., where they will spend Christmas with Mrs. Patterson’s mother. Mrs. Paul Moore left Tuesday for Weeping Water, where she will spend Christmas with relatives. Mrs. Desheares of St. Joseph ar rived in the city Saturday evening to sepdn the holidays with Miss Freda Cooley. Mrs. Perry Williams left Tuesday evening for Kansas City, where she will spend the holidays with friends. y Miss Freda Cooley entertained in formally Monday afternoon in honor of her guest, Mrs. Desheares. Mrs. George Maston is now in charge of the hairdressing parlor at Miller & Paine’s store. BBffiUttttiKx;w XBftU asiMSCtolMMigMis: 1 ARMSTRONG . § lie I Clothing Company | Lincoln, Nebraska The Home of the Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes | II I I -___ I M 9 Super-Value ! January j ■ Clearance 1 Which means a saving of from 20 to 30 I per cent to you on Men’s and Boys’ Clothes