Chicago Defender

Saturday, October 29, 1910

Chicago, Illinois

6 pages

Page 1
Page 1
Page 2
Page 2
Page 3
Page 3
Page 4
Page 4
Page 5
Page 5
Page 6
Page 6
Page text (machine-generated)
OPLE HAVE READ CHICAGO'S ONLY WEEKLY PAPER --- The real existence of the Mr. Glennwood Cemetery began in the early summer of 1908, when Mr. Patton became acquainted with Dr. E. S. Miller, J. L. Parks, R. M. Leach, Jackson Gordon and L. W. Dickerson, who were promoting the Parkwood Cemetery Association. These gentlemen had developed a large following in the business business, had sold a considerable amount of stock and had even gone so far as to secure a site for their cemetery, having made two payments thereon. At this time Mr. Patton was peeled on the scene, and after earnest conferences with the Parkwood nec- Suit was entered yesterday afternoon in the United States Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Virginia by James E. Mills, trustee, against J. Frank Wheaton, on behalf of the complainant as trustee for the Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks of the World, a corporation incorporated under the laws of Ohio, and Benjamin Franklin Howard of Cincinnati, for the recovery of 15,000 damages. Mills and Wheaton are Negroes, the one residing in Norfolk and the other in New York City, and the order involved is the Colored organization of that name. The Unrest, and Heavy Heartedness of a Washerwoman Telling How She Had To Pay $50.00 for a Grave and White People $25.00. Decided To Eliberate the Colored People From Such Conditions and Give Them A Chance the Same At Any Other Class of Citizens. (Continued from last week.) The real existence of the Mr. Glewwood Cemetery began in the early summer of 1908, when Mr. Patton became acquainted with Dr. E. S. Millar, J. L. Parks, R. M. Leach, Jackson Gordon and L. W. Dickerson, who were promoting the Parkwood Cemetery Association. These gentlemen had developed a large following in the community business, had sold a considerable amount of stock and had even gone so far as to secure a site for their cemetery, having made two payments thereon. At this time Mr. Patton beeped on the scene, and after earliest conferences with the Parkwood peer it was decided that it was not be O. E. S. Millox sirable to have two benevoles promoted by the Colored people as that would weaken their forces and detract from the success of both the Mt. Glenwood people had the right plant already to own business, they offered to the Glenwood people a position that was all the latter could desire and expect; therefore the Reik The Chicago Defender. CLAIM RITUAL WAS PIRATED. Elks Seek Adjustment of Differences in Federal Court. Special to the Chicago Defender New York, Oct. 28.—When will we ever be united? Anything that looks good seems to attract big Big-I-Am, and if he cannot rule he will ruin. There are today about forty men trying to be Grand Exalted Rulers of the Elks. Now they find that they cannot they have begun to smash things right and left. Suit was entered yesterday afternoon in the United States Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Virginia by James E. Mills, trustee, against J. Frank Wheaton, on behalf of the complainant as trustee for the Improved Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks of the World, a corporation incorporated under the laws of Ohio, and Benjamin Franklin Howard of Cincinnati, for the recovery of 15,000 damages. Mills and Wheaton are Negroes, the one residing in Norfolk and the other in New York City, and the order involved is the Colored organization of that name. In the papers filed it is stated that Howard organized a grand lodge in 1889, with himself as Grand Exalted Ruler for the time beginning until August, 1909, continuously. In that month the grand lodge met in Detroit and James E. Mills was elected to succeed Howard, who then agreed to turn over to the grand lodge the ritual of the order, with all rights, titles and interest Howard could have by virtue of his copyright, for the sum of $5,000, the copyright having been issued to him June 12, 1902. Against Wheaton, by his agents, servants and followers, it is charged that he had the ritual reprinted and vended, which, it is alleged, constituted an infringement on the copyright. It is further charged that Wheaton, by his agents, servants and followers, has grossly misled the public, and is still doing so, and that the grand lodge has been rendered wholly unable to keen its contract with Howard, to whom the $5,000 might have been paid had it not been for the alleged interference. The complaint prays for $15,000 damages, and on failure to prove the alleged damage through concealment of fact by the defendant, he prays special damages for the benefit of his beneficiaries in the sum of $5,000. The complainant prays for a subpoena to be issued for Wheaton and the John T. Taylor, of 72s North Second street, and asks further that the defendant agents, servants and follows be preliminarily enjoined and strained from the further use of the alleged pirated ritual, or any words phrases or sentences thereof. THEAMERICAN CAR WHEEL AND AXE COMPANY WILL OPERATE THE IMP.OVED THIRD RAIL. The shares are Ten Dollars each, five in a block, non-assessable. We believe it will pay a dividend inside of two years. This is a chance of your lie, don't fail to invest in your company. Stock will be so high in a few years that you cannot reach them. Get your money on before the public begin to rush. You will find the door open. In 2014 State St. Come in and see our bookkeeper, Dr R. R. Robinson will explain and exhibit every Thursday night and Sunday afternoon. Come and see for yourself. FIRE IN SANDWICH FACTORY On Tuesday morning about 5 o'clock Mr. George Foreman, the Sandwich King on 28th street, west of State, was startled and hollowed "Murder!" and "Save me!" when he awoke from a sleep on a chair in the corner of his workshop and saw the place ablaze. In some way a pot of grease took fire and the young lady in charge tried to put it out by throwing water into it. At it splashed out and spread all over the stove and then to the roof, w. It took fire. Mr. Foreman ran out and called up the fire department, which came in haste. The fire had a good headway, but before the place depleted water was thrown even which allowed the cobbler, pork chops, buffalo and white fish lying around the street. School boys came by and filled their pockets, while Mr. Foreman dug his way into the shop to get his cash register. His place was insured for $1,500, and it is safe to say that George will rebuild a pool room instead of opening another sandwich factory. THEY SAW REAL HATS. Several young ladies who had just returned from a down town department store were startled when they entered Mme Seay's store, 3531 State street, on Friday and saw real hats in all shapes and styles and from $5 to $15 cheaper than those they bought down town; one lady who was standing in front of a Defender reporter was heard to say, "those hats are not hand made, I'll bet the chewing gum that they are machine made"—our reporter spoke up and said, "You are on," but she hedged and said my next hat will be bought here. One of the ladies then said, "why I was waiting for the opening, Madam." but the madam told her that her regular customers had kept her so busy it was impossible to have the usual opening, but told them to tell their friends to come and make selections of the latest creations, prices reasonable and get above all the 1911 shapes which she manufactures. CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1910 OKLAHOMA A LITTLE HELL Respectable People Should Find Other Fields to Cast Their Lot White Southern Gentlemen Insult Colored Women at Will. EVERYTHING IS JIM CROW. Southern White Trash Unbeatable- Educated Colored Men and Women Cannot Stand Their Methods- Many Have Brought Their Black Wenches and Live in Open Adult ery as They Do in the South. Muskogee, Oct. 28.—Oklahoma needs men, real men, and especially Muskogee, when once read of the many things done the Colored people hear in Muskogee some people would say they do not believe it, but when I tell you that last summer a Colored lady was thrown bodily out of a moving street car window you would say that this, too, is untrue, but it is not, and the street was full of big burly white and black men. Negro men stood on the sidewalk and laughed as the poor unfortunate woman lay unconscious on the ground. This was done by white gentlemen. Seeing that the Negroes would not stand for that here comes another hot one which happened on Wednesday 19 at high noon, which speaks for itself, taken from the Muskogee Cimilar of Oct. 21, a paper of the race. The article is headed "Street Car Conductors' Outrages to Colored Women": "Last Wednesday as two Colored ladies were returning home after a visit to the home of Hon. W. A. Rentle, who lives on the East Side, they boarded a street car, and as the implement weather compelled all passengers to go into the closed part of the car, these ladies also went there. Immediately the conductor, in the most brutal manner, drove them out into the open part. This was a damnable outrage, and one that would have been resented had any MAN been present. No black MAN would have permitted any white woman to be treated in that way, and no real MAN would stand for such treatment to any woman. For that reason we have asked that our people stay off these cars unless in cases of emergency, because just such devilish outrages perpetrated by irresponsible cusses breed trouble. It is this same class of conductors and their brutal actions that have caused so many gun plays on the West Side and resulted in one instance in the brutal manner of a white citizen by a conductor a few months ago. We hope a repetition will not occur this winter." —The Cimeter, Oct. 21, 1910. Boley, Okla. Oct. 28. —Notwithstanding the Jim Crow grandfather clause, the Haskell democracy beg for the Negro vote, and yet there are a few infamous Negroes who are a part of the Haskell-Cruce machine cheap and low enough to try to mislead the honest and respectable Negroes to vote to perpetuate corrupt government in Oklahoma. The following is taken from The State Capital: Chickasha, Okla., Oct. 15.—The Rev. J. A. Johnson and Rev. J. F. Kersh, prominent leaders of the Negro race of this city, both owners of property and one the pastor of the Methodist church, the other pastor of the Baptist church, made a sworn statement that Hogan, of Nus city, received 150 Friar night of this week from a representative of the Democratic state committee. The representative of the Democratic committee, a white man, came in on the Frisco train Friday night from Oklahoma City. He telephoned Ho- [Name] Col. John R. Marshall. GREAT 15th ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION And Ball of the 8th Infantry. Illinois National Guard. The 8th Infantry, Illinois National Guard will celebrate their fifteenth anniversary with a grand reception and ball on Thursday, November 3, at the 7th Regiment armory. Gold medals appropriately inscribed will be A TRUE STORY. gan to meet him one door west of the Palace drug store in this city. He paid Hogan $150 and gave him a copy of the resolutions he wished passed at the Negro convention. Hogan came back and telephoned Kersh and Johnson to come over; that he had the money. He showed them the money and offered them $40 if they would keep still on the day of the convention. Kersh and Johnson refused to take the money and exposed the Hogan deal in the convention—From the Boley Progress, Thursday, Oct. 20. MR. F. C. TAYLOR PAYS VISIT TO CHIGAGO Mr. Taylor, 5715 Coliseum street New Orleans, a Grand Army man passed through the city en route to his home. While north he took in New York, Baltimore, Boston, Philadelphia, Detroit, Canada and many points in Illinois. He says the Colored people in this state surpass all others and the advantages for the young man are great. He is thinking of matrimony of late. He says he is just gone on the northern girls. A CALL TO HAMPTON STUDENTS All Hampton graduates and exstudents living in and about Chicago are asked to send in their names to Mr. C. P. Johnson, 4134 Halsted, or 'phone 1650 Yards. The Hampton Gleeb Club is expected in the city and he is planning to entertain them. Ask your friend if he has been to John R. Marshall will be asked to address the first meeting, as he is a former student. MRS. WINBORN TO MARRY AND LIVE IN SOUTH. Detroit. Mich. Oct. 28.—Rumor is afloat here that Mrs. Winborn, who is here on a visit to her daughter, is to marry a rich southern baron. The activity about Mrs. Winborn's home and the many times she has been seen in a taxi alighting in front of our dry goods stores leads us to believe the story is true. Mr. Elmer Winborn, her son, when seen refused to say pro or con about the affair. Mrs. Winborn is well known in Chicago's smart set, she having spent two winters there recently. MRS. J. HOPKINS ENTERTAINS. There was a very brilliant repast at the residence of Mrs. J. Hopkins No. 540 East 35th street, on Wednesday day evening, Oct. 19, on which occasion this estimable lady havished upon a few of her friends a most hospitable feast in seven courses, which consisted of butiflour, acet succel grabchicken served with fruit salad, as puragus, toast, coffee, ice cream, cake and "White Seal." The luncheon was announced from 8 to 10 p. m. H. A. SHAW ISSUES HIS NEW CATALOGUE. The Defender has just received the first copy of Mr. H. A. Shaw's new catalogue, the first one issued in Chicago. The new steel engravings are taken from pictures reproduced from photographs taken by Peter P. Jones, which makes the tone of the engravings unexcelled. Mr. Shaw, who is conceded to be one of the very best hair manufacturers in America, has returned from the New York convention to issue his new catalogue. Mr. Shaw, whose business is located at 3411 State street, has his card displayed in our advertising columns. M. T. Bailey, chief of the True Reformers, who made a flying trip to Champaign, Danville, and Springfield Ill. in interest of the Grand Fountain. United Order of True Reformers, is in the city again. R. Marshall. CEREMONY CELEBRATION presented to those who have been in continuous service since the organization was first recruited. An important and spectacular part of the program will be a full dress regimental parade. From now on the friends of the regiment will work to make this anniversary ball the biggest entertainment ever given in Chicago by Colored people. Admission will be fifty cents. COLORED UNDERTAKERS ARE UPHELD Trust Trade Not Advisable. The august appearance of a white corporate undertaking company which has been opened on State street has lately been the center of discussion among the different individual independent Colored undertakers. The whole discussion, as viewed from a recent article published in another newspaper by a representative of the corporate body does not seem to reach the point for conclusion at all. The public is not interested in where or from whom undertakers hire their carriage service, but it is, of course, reasonable to surmise that they all have according to demand and efficiency the same combatbing against Colored undertakers by a white corporate undertaking company, which has as its agent, a Colored undertaker of scheming qualifications is not idealistic or in any degree beneficial to the people of his own race. There is no objection whatever if ignorant people choose to hand all their money right over to a linked concern of white men, who would not even trust them in return for a penny. As the Negro race becomes enlightened there is every reason to bring to bear that Colored people should try to have an ounce of common sense. It is at present a very slick thing to prattle about the high rates of independent undertakers by a gang sponsor. But the truth of the matter is that if ever a white corporate undertaking company should succeed in running all the Colored undertakers of the South Side out of business the prices of burial would go up so high that not one Negro out of a thousand would be able to be put away decently. And what Colored people do love is a pompous funeral. The greatest reason why Colored people should continue to present Colored undertakers has been proved by the superior service they have given and the progressive spirit of thrift by which they have the advancing conditions of modern times. Their establishments are excellently appointed with every convenience, including chapels and all other equipments. Those who have ever seen Daniel Jackson or R. W. Green, J. L. Parks or Mrs. S. Johnson conduct a funeral need never fear any alarm of competition; they are the goods in a satire of gracefulness. To rebuke them or the other Colored undertakers for their past good service would be to heighten the cost of both the dead and the living; to rebuke them for common choice of fickleness would be a deadly dagger to one branch of commercial enterprise among the few we have and one the Colored race cannot afford to cut off. There is there no need of sympathy,pleasures or undue sentiment at all in the matters that will be needed is for the city of this particular city to keep their eyes open. It is understood that both Rev. Dr. Fisher of Olivet Baptist church and Rev. Dr. Cook of Quinn Chapel have taken a fair view and expressed themselves in favor of Colored undertakers, whose services, as aforesaid, have been amply satisfactory and fully up to requirements of the present—bordering on the next generation. Now there will be no use for the Colored people of Chicago to listen any further to the chatter or delightful rhetoric of a Colored agent that may be written to sway them into the banking white syndicate fraternity of a lot of wholesale body grabbers, to be swallowed up, perhaps alive, money and all, or even buried in a comatose state, not dead, but sleeping, while carried to the grave by a casket company, to rest in fear of being exhausted and excavated by common demand into the experimental hands of green practicing students. Miss Etta Connor spent last Wednesday evening with Miss Sonoma Hopkins. Miss Ethel Johnson was the guest of Miss Sonoma Hopkins Wednesday. Mr. John Hopkins, Samuel Hopkins and Archie Hopkins went to Odessa Sunday afternoon. Rev. Brooke, our presiding elder, was with us Sunday morning and preached a most wonderful sermon. Mr. Forest Baker, Mr. Porter Bradford and Mr. Harrison Morgan were in Salt Pond last Sunday. There was an entertainment at the A. M. E. church on last Saturday night. They raised $6.45 and a very small crowd. Mr. Roy Divers was in Salt Pond last Sunday. Mrs. Mollie Bates was called to Higginsville Saturday by the death of her niece. Mrs. Bertha Williams, Mr. Verne Monday and wife and Mr. Joe Franklin, Miss Vilalee Franklin and Mr. Frank Bates. Miss Mary Jones is at home visiting her mother and father. ing her mother and father. Mr. Rogers, who received an accident not so very long ago, is improving nicely. Miss Wendolyn Davis was in Odessa sa Friday on business. Mr. Charles Holmes was in Mayview last Sunday evening, on a pleasure trip. Mrs. Belle Bates went to Higgins- Milkey REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR RE-ELECTION FOR STATE SENATOR FROM THE THIRD SENATORIAL DISTRICT, COMPRISING THE THIRD WARD, THAT PART OF THE FOURTH WARD EAST OF HALSED SREET, THE FIRST PRECINCT OF THE FIFTH WARD AND THAT PART OF THE SIXTH WARD NORTH OF FORTY THIRD STREET. ELECTION NOVEMBER 8, 1910. ville last Thursday night; also her granddaughter. O, you kid! Mr. Workcuff has left us, and we sure did hate to see him go. But, oh, you girls! Mr. Harry Bradford went down to Salt Pond last Sunday. He said he was going over to take a look at the goodlooking Miss. Salt Pond and he reports it to be very salty indeed. Miss Lille Steward was in Mayview a few days ago. Mrs. Lulu Divers and her daughter, Beatrice, were in Odessa Saturday. Mrs. Mary Baker and her two sons, Ellsworth and Rutherford, were out driving Sunday. They had a balky horse. Miss Ethel Divers, Mrs. Katie Hopkins, Mrs. Lizzie Lytton and Mrs. Fannie Hopkins spent last Sunday evening with Mrs. Mamie Connor. Mrs. Lizzie Davis entertained the Missionary Society last Thursday evening. Everyone spent a delightful evening. Mr. Alex. Diver went to Kansas City Sunday morning. Mr. Robert Vaughn went to Odessa Sunday morning. Miss. Walker, the teacher, was called home on last Monday by the death of her sister, Miss Hannah Walker. PHYLLIS WHEATLEY NOTES. The annual reception given at the Appatina Club was a social as well as a financial success. The beautiful parliars were crowded all afternoon and evening and everyone seemed to thoroughly enjoy the occasion. We heartily thank all who attended and remembered us so generously in their donations; also those who so kindly gave us their services on the program. Our quartette was a great attraction; too much cannot be said in praise of the Junior club who assisted so willingly in serving the guests, giving the members of the mother club a chance to enjoy the affair. They are a nice club of little misses and we feel justly proud of them. We desire to express our sincere thanks to the members of the Appomattox Club for the use of their beautiful home on this occasion. It proves to us that they have a neighborly interest in us and our work, to help us in this way. We shall not forget their generosity and shall be glad to return the favor in some way when called upon. For the steward also we have nothing out words of praise for his valuable assistance in many ways. The regular meeting will be at the home, 3530 Forest avenue, Nov. 2nd, Mrs. R. J. Collins, chairman of the Domestic Science section, has a splendid program prepared. All are welcome to visit our meetings. Beautiful invitations for the 15th anniversary with the American flag in real colors, with an eagle in the act of flying, are out. We, the Defender staff, expect all its readers to attend, to help the 8th Regiment build its new armory. Samuel REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR RE- FROM THE THIRD SENAT THE THIRD WARD, THAT PA- OF HALSED SREET, THE FIR AND THAT PART OF THE SI- THIRD STREET. ELECTION Senator Samuel A. Ettelson, representing the Third Senatorial District of Illinois, is a candidate for re-election on the Republican ticket at the election to be held Tuesday, November 8, 1910. Senator Ettelson was one of the first members of the State Senate to become a member of the new insurgent Senate organization against the old Senate combine, and assisted Senator Walter Clyde Jones in organizing the Senate. Senator Ettelson was chosen as one of the to Chicago Senators to be a member of the Committee on Committees, the other member being Senator Jones. Senator Ettelson advocated direct primaries and referendum on all bond issues. He drafted and was instru- If You See It in the DEFENDBR, it's so! PRICE 5 CENTS YOUNG COLORED MEN IN ATHLETICS In High Schools and Universities in and Around Chicago. At Northwestern University This Year. ROY YOUNG, A STAR AT NORTH WESTERN. By Julius N. Avendorph. The Douglass Center Sunday afternoon meeting will be addressed Oct. 30th at 4 p. m., by Mr. Louis F. Post, editor of The Public, from the subject, "Manage Your Own Noting." All are welcome. A. Ettelson. ELECTION FOR STATE SENATOR ORIAL DISTRICT. COMPRISING RT OF THE FOURTH WARD EAST ST PRECINCT OF THE FIFTH WARD XTH WARD NORTH OF FORTY NOVEMBER 8, 1910. mental in passing the State Interest law, which saves the voters of the state of Illinois over $100,000 a year in interest on public money. He drafted and was instrumental in passing the School Text Book law, which has already materially reduced the prices of grammar school text-books for thousands and thousands of poor children in this state. He worked and voted for direct primaries that work in behalf of good measures. Senator Etitelson has been endorsed by the Legislative Voters' League and by numerous other organizations. He has been a faithful public servant and has at all times been ready and will serve the interests of the state of Illinois, and we believe the voters of this district will re-elect him by large majority. PERSONALS. One year. $1.50 Six months. 1.00 Three months. .75 DISPLAY ADVERTISMENTS. One inch, one time. $0.75 Special rates given on large or long standing ads. R. P. Springs, Associate Editor. Louis Hoggatt, Cartoonist. Julius N. Avendorph, Society Editor. OFFICE 3159 State Street CHICAGO, ILL. Telephone, Douglas 3330 Entered as second-class matter February 18th at the Postoffice in Chicago, IL, under act of March 3, 1879. Larger Circulation than All the Other Weeklies Combined. --- No successful individual fails to keep in the good graces of the press. And so now the New York Age has another editorial writer, Col. Roscoe Conklin Simmons. Any time a man succeeds, he succeeds; he don't fall, and it's pretty late then for others to be handing him lemons. Now that Madam Hackley is in town it will be up to the actors to call on her if they desire to successfully hand The Defender critic a melted watermelon. Our message to the Nashville Globe is not to put crape on the door for a few mentally wounded soldiers, but to help open it to rightful patronage and let a few deserving office holders in, as only Col. Roosevelt will do. Let the Negro race beware and take no chances on President Taff's promissory pleas of alleged patronage in view of a second term. Theodore Roosevelt will be the only true and safe assurance. PERSONAL They Will C SECOND GRA The Umbrians (20 Male Voices) E. Assisted by CLARENCE CAME The Eminent Afro- Wednesday, Nov. 9, 1910, 8:20 P.M. Remember: The Umbrians will Begin R. C. KELLY, Prisident Now is your last chance to get yourself a lot for $100 in North Muskogee Town site addition, by paying $10 down and $5 per month on a $100 lot. Phone or write to Mr. John R. Winston, 737 East 40th street, Douglas 5222. If you purchase two lots at $100 each and pay cash, a discount of 5 per cent will be allowed, and the company will build you a 5 room cottage for $600, and let you pay for it by paying $15 per month. Don't this heat paying rent? Yes, you tell it. Tape worms taken from some of our citizens can be seen in Cherokee Remedy Company's office, 2825 State street. Have you one? You may have two! Extortion going on in the 30th Ward by some of our Colored ministers and the law is laid out here be for you as follows: If any judge, justice of the peace, sheriff, coroner, constable, police officer, clerk or other officer, state, county, town, or municipal executive ministerial or judicial, shall willfully or corruptly receive or take any fee or reward to execute or do his duty as such officer, except such as is or shall be allowed by law, or if any such officer shall willfully or corruptly receive or take any fee or reward to the performance of his duty as such officer, any fee or rew, d except such as shall be allowed by law, every such officer so offending, shall be fined not exceeding $200 and may be removed from office. Now it looks as if some of the Colored pastors in the 30th ward has this stain on their robes, from all evidence that the reporters gathering up in the 30th Ward remember. The Chicago Defender will print facts and all they want is evidence in a case and seek your name, and children, and all they will be exposed. Chicago cannot afford to have a disgrace of this sort standing in the pulpit, with devil in one hand and the Bible in the other. Stop that catfish! See the Cherokee Remedy Company, 2325 State Street. That's all. Mr. want your ledge meeting girls also placed in the Defender, be the Foresters and Daughter In, under Secret Societies. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Napler of noouver, B. C., passed through the y on Monday en route to their home after spending four weeks in the south. Mr. Napler is a personal blend of J. S. Parks, they having bought each other off, Mr. Napler's wife, on his hand when him is one of their encounters with their wives, enjoyed --- All people who own bull dogs will please contribute to the blind and crippled. This applies to men and women who carry revolvers and sports who dine in swell cafes. Hon. J. C. Napier, of Nashville, Tenn., sent a telegram of regret to the Booker T. Washington banquet in New York. It seemed to be a little too much car fare for something nice to eat. The committee might well have sent a few invitations to Chicago, which is a little neater and more convenient, to help along the Booker T. end of the next Presidential campaign. Men of the world who contend that women give all their earnings to support the churches is no logic at all. These same men have nothing to say about the low class of women who are taking care of them as common pimps, a proof of which is the best logic we know. The defeat of Jack Arthur Johnson by Oldfield in an auto race shows that the latter was old in the field and that Arthur was a very good amateur and may yet defeat the victorious hope of the better quality white man, even if he bins his brains out at a time when we can't afford to lose him. Dr. Claud Bell: in discussing the race problem not long since, made this final climax: The Irish assis his race is the best, the Greek says his race is the best, but ah! the Negro race is the best, the Italian says his race is the best, but oh! the says to says to them, all, yes, every race is best, even the Indian's. I can I will try to claim kin to some one of them. When we get to the point that we can say and feel that we (the Negro), are the best, then and not until then will we get recognition from them. The division movement at Atlanta, Ga., or the dividing of the races by compulsory methods of organized boycott or embracery would not be a thoughtful effort on the part of the white people of that city, but if the agreement between the two races can be made mutual and without any agitating methods or friction, a trial might prove generally satisfactory. The effort, though, should not be agreed upon by the Colored race unless it can be absolutely mutual; that is to say, free from restrictions of any kind individually as to situation of a home or frequency of any neighborhood. If separation can separate the undesirable white man from the black woman and place him in the same danger as a black man who is lured to his death by the cry of the Southern white woman, following her exposure, the change would do much good. Come Back!! AND CONCERT! In Glee Club T. CLISSOLD, Director RON WHITE, Washington, D. C. American Violinist QUINN CHAPEL, Wabash Ave. and 24th St. in on Time. Secure Your Seats Now. CORNELIUS W. PIERCE, Sec.-Treas. the story of the fight on Monday at dinner. Good blood means good health and, Cherokee Indian Herbs creates the blood. Herbs are nature's cure, 2825 State street. The Green-Lille Millinery Shop, at 128-30 E. 30th street, is making grent headway with Miss Elizabeth Slaughter, milliner. Don't forget to attend the Hallowe'en Party at the Chateau Rink tonight. Today is Provident Hospital Donation Day, Send a Paper of Pins if Nothing More. Mr. George Johnson of Newport, Ky., will arrive in the city next week and will be a guest at 3406 Vernon avenue. Mrs. James Turner (nee Blanche Hill), of Logansport, Ind., is visiting her cousin, Mr. Chas. Shoecraft, 3318 Vernon avenue. The Eighth Regiment, under Sergt. W. E. Berry drew a large crowd to the Rink last Saturday and Sunday nights and a much larger crowd is expected tonight and tomorrow night. Won't you join them. Mrs. Jennie Watt Brown of 7228 Wentworth avenue is visiting her mother at Kansas City, Mo. How is your rheumatism? Herb medicines cure it. See Cherokee Remedy Co. 2825 State street. Mme. Seay, 3531 State street, will leave the city tonight, to go to the bedside of her sick sister, in St. Louis, Mo. From there she will go down the state to Settle up an estate set by an uncle. She will return on Wednesday to her business. Madam Taylor of the Cafe Tyler and Carey B. Lewis of the Fashion were callers at the Cauatee last Saturday night and had lunch in the cafe. Mr. Lewis, who is a newspaper man, announced the place one of the best equipped for recreation, exercises and enjoyment in the city. Asthma! You can drive it away. See Cheorkee Remedy Co. 2825 State street. Indian herbs do the rest. Mrs. M. Muse and family, of Aurora, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Muse of Chicago, preparatory to a business trip in the South. Try Vegetables and Hemlock Oil for catarrh, colds, asthma, rheumatism and neuralgia. W. H. Fields, 3610 Deerborn street, phone Douglas 3671. Mr. E. Young, of W. 35th street, restaurateur, fell from a chair while turning out the gas in his restaurant, and sprained his leg painfully. It is thought he will have to lay up a few days. Big Race programme tonight and Tuesday night. Sunday night ladies and gents genteel skate contest. Mr. R. L. Browne is Secretary of the afternoon Club, whose latest announcement appears on the front page of this paper. Dr. Thunder-Cloud's famous herb remedy for coughs, colds, fevers, and all similar diseases is again on the market. See Cherokee Remedy Co., 2825 State street. Browne, Dr. McKemey, steward of the St. Maraubia, age 64, afternoon with his mother, Mrs. McKemey on Loomis Blvd, one day last week. Boorman's method teaches the old or young how to play piano, violin, cell and tuba. Also orchestra furnished for all occasions. 3563 Forest avenue. Phone 15 Aldine. The Tuskegee Alumni Association held its regular meeting last Sunday at the home of Messrs Twity, 6028 Aberdeen street. Mr. Eugene Cooper and Miss Naomi Thomas delivered papers. Miss Anne Lowry recited, Mrs. C. W. Harrison and the Misses Margarette Richey Mae Boyd and Roberts rendered musical selections. The program was enjoyed by the thirty members and friends present. One of our agents sold 2 gross of "The vigor of Life" to old customers in Cincinnati this week. It took him one day. Cherokee Remedy Co., 2825 State street. We are in receipt of word to the effect that Mrs. Percy Washington will soon be with us again after a pleasant visit to her parents and seeing the auto and air ship races at Lone Island, N. Y. Read the want ad. columns; there are some good bargains. An estimable lady, Mrs. Gouchee was relieved from a painful illness by the Cherokee Remedy Co. The lady lives at 2336 Dearborn street. Did you send Provident Hospital a donation, if not why not? Do it now, today. Mrs. Geo. Garner, Sr., entertained at luncheon for Mrs. A. L. Bell, and daughter, Miss Pauline, who are visit ing here. Mrs. Bell is en route to Evanston, where Miss Pauline has entered the North Western University this being her second year. Mrs. Daniel Parker of Fulton street, expects to spend the winter with relatives at Illinois. It will be a loness time for Mr. Parker, the drummer. "Where will you meet me on the afternoon of November 24th? At the Afternoon Club's dance of course, You'll, see all your friends there." "That's what I told him." Mrs. A. Carfield Wilson, who has been on the sick list for three weeks, and very seriously ill since last Saturday, is reported as improving at this writing. The Afternoon Club welcomes all the young folks who like to dance, but who may not be able to attend the evening dances owing to work or other reasons.—Brown. Call on us first and examine our line of hair goods, and if our prices do not appeal to you as fair and reasonable as others, look no further, for no where in Chicago can you do as well. Mme. Wallace, your sister, street. Mr. Andrew H. Stith, son of Mrs. K. I. Bills, 3608 Wahash avenue, was the recipient of a watch presented to him by his mother. The watch was the property of his father for a number of years. Mrs. Bills promised her son that he should have it when he should have completed his college course, which he succeeded in doing with honor before attaining his 21st birthday. The watch is a beautiful solid gold case richly carved and set with a large diamond. Mr. Stith is very proud of his new possession, especially since it is an heirloom, and delights in showing it to his many friends. Mrs. Valdo Turner of St. Paul, Minnesota, who will be remembered as one of our most charming visitors last month, wasoperated upon on Thursday for appendices. Mrs. H. P. Claven, Mrs. Julius N. Avendorph's mother, left for her home in Marquette, Michigan. Wednesday evening. The lot she purchased in Glen Ellen, Ill. is for sale. Miss Mamie Pettis, public stenographer, 171 Washington street, Room 708. Office phone, Main 4153; residence phone, Dourls 4673. Margarette Cobbs, 6083 Ada street, died October 22d at 5:45 p. m. her remains were shipped to Corinth. Miss, for burial, her former home; a brother and sister accompanying the remains. T. M. J. Adams, 3111 State street, a former post office man is her brother. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Leach, postman at Superior. Wis, en route to their former home. Lenlo, O., who is suffering from blood poisoning in the right hand will spend a week ten days with his brother. T. M. Leach, 3083 Avenue given at the Soldiers' Widows Rest, cor. Forest avenue, and 33rd street, was a grand success. A beautiful pillow given by Mrs. Cora Jordan was raffled off and was won by Mrs. Wood Campbell. Mrs. Cora Pres, and Loring Coleman. Sec., the members of the board will long remember Tuesday, Oct. 18, as a red letter day. Stop! Listen! The Wallace Homemade Rolls and Bread are the goods that's good. Ask your grocer for them. Mrs. J. N. Washington, 3252 Wabash avenue, who had gone to Ellsworth, Kans., to the funeral of her sister, returned home on Saturday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Woodard, 3534 Wabash avenue, who went to Aberdeen, Miss., to spend a few weeks, are expected to be in the city by Sunday morning he sent a post card friend where he was asleep on a bale of cotton he told was his own," we guess with bale and boy. Many friends of Dr. Anna Cooper know that she is still in the birthday now on the 21st. She celebrated her 'th year of her birth, the doctor will establish a sanitarium in the city in the near future. The Juvenile Protective League No. 4, with district from 31st to 39th streets, will hold its regular monthly meeting at the Douglass Center, 3032 Wabash avenue, at 8 p. m., Tuesday evening, Nov. 1st. Come out and assist in the protection of our youth. Mrs. Lou Ella Young, who has been to Metropolis, Carbondale and Contrailia, Ill. in interest of the True Reformers has returned to the city. Mrs. Consulcho Johnson our beautiful contralto singer, who lives on the south side has just returned to the long, active career, through the act, with Damons Musical Comedy oCompany. She is here through sickness, but expects to be able to return to them after Christmas. MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC Foremost Dramatic Critic. OPENING OF THESE CLASSICAL CONCERT SEASON. Marcella Sembrich and Schumann-Heikl opened the chastel concert season under the guidance of the late Max Sembran. I mention this fact here because more than six colored persons present at either recital, which took place on Oct. 16, 2014, and both at Orchestra Hall. In noting the program of the two recitals I observed that they support and that each singer confined their program to composers, music and the language and Philadelphia, the coloured attendance numbers sometimes from one to two. I should like to see Madam Nina Patti Brown give recitals on the one star plan. There should be people enough in the great cities to attend the recitals, but the lower South and Texas, Staslester Jones (Black Patti) was especially fortunate to have managers who were to take her up, but the other great singers who followed, the managers who were to take her up, by appearing in colored musical compositions or not at all, as none except Black Patti Sembrich and Schumann-Heikl were colored. Schumann-Heikl was for the best and her art matches. Schumann-Heikl, the marvellous contralto with a violinist for her instrument in a final number and his art was superb. Pauline Dempsey's Good Advice. Mrs. Joseph H. Pinn, 7240 Wentworth avenue, left on Monday to the bedside of her mother, who took suddenly ill on Sunday last. She will spend the winter there returning the first of the spring. Her many friends may write her at 2617 Locust street, St. Joseph. REV. W. L. ANDERSON TO SPEAK. The newly elected Vice President of the Grand Fountain United Order of True Reformers and Deputy Gen. W. G. D. G. F. U. O. T. R., is coming to Chicago to spend 7 days and will speak as follows: Sunday evening, Nov. 6, we will have a meeting at the Institutional Church in the Corn street Chicago. The life of the late Rev. W. Browne, the founder and organizer of the Grand Ft. U. O. T. R., will be eulogized. MOUNT GLENWOOD CEM PRICE Single Adult Grave " Child's " (5 to 12 years) " " " (under 5 years) Beautiful family burial lot, consisting of art The usual easy ten $2.00 CASH-----$ Select a lot NOW before MOUNT GLENWOOD Phone Douglas 5574 MOUNT GLENWOOD CEMETERY ASSOCIATION PRICE LIST MOUNT GLENWOOD CEMETERY ASSN. Phone Douglas 5574 3125 State Street A. C. FRED D. JONES C. SUCCESSORS TO JONES & DREYER PETER S. --- from the publishers. And one other thing friends: Stop knocking the ones who are making good. Make good yourself and you will make good. We don't need to dress it. If it is a ragtime act, give them the character, find out what the people are doing, and then And then Miss Dempsey conclude with this: "We an performers agree that the managers would do a better business if they were to dress it. People see these papers, hence it is simply a business move to advertise in them. The papers can help you much; They can inform you that they should be thought more of." There were two new acts which opened at the Grand last Monday evening. Haden & Vaughn and the Brussels and both acts gave place to the new form of the address. They merited as new comers in a big city, where the audiences consist of people who average from mortal ignorance to foremost of intelligence and no actors can be considered a box office success worthy of a high salary unless they are able to present an act which appeals to everybody. The act of putting new together by upon smut or dialogue is not to be considered unusual and I do not know why. It is not to convey any refreshing ideas or any intelligent impression of a story is not worthy of hire, and the people don't want them. While this loge does not apply to any particular net mentioned, it applies to all cheap claptrap netters who have nerve, but never a sketch writer, and to people fit them out with the goss and to reach them how to dress them, and to search them into the way they are, eardingly. The Henderson were fair and holdovers and James R. Douglass, the eminent baritone, we regret to say, was hampered by a cold, although he is a worthy and excellent singer. There were no new novelties, but prime favorites, held forth at the Monogram. Shelton Brooks was the trump card and his direc-tion was to play a fine duet. The Charks. Webb & Webb and Clark Heiks and Clark, were all popular cards. The chimpanzee which is playing a return date at the Pekin Theatre, drew well. The Harper-Smith trio, which consists of Billy Harper, Chris Smith, Smith and Altheen Jones who throw up their engagement towing to the fact that they were moved from sixth to third place on the bill, after making the fact that they were warranted. It is said that white performers had linked themselves together in order to effortlessly be put on a very low order of American principal. But it would have efforts can be put on a bolder, but submitted to the inevitable rather than throw up his job which pleased the performers and defeated the management. The billing of the trio according to ability and reputation was not so prominent as by the tail end of the management was to the effect that they did not desire to draw attention to the management regarding colored patronage as the Mr. Smith, in regards to being featured there. There is nothing in the reply of the management regarding colored patronage as the Mr. Smith, in regards to being featured there is only one problem in vaudeville. It is entirely up to the management to manage the company to be billed as headliners except they have been comedy stars of such magnitude as the Williams and Walker, and white vaudeville managers in New York proved that branch billing Bert A. Williams in New York, Chris Smith is the popular song writer and at present board of the company and his latest success "Rubberbear Moon" But because Mr. Smith is a successful song writer and at present board of the company and his latest success will be to stick to the job on merit of ability regardless of being featured or the place allocated on the bill or to what success will be assigned, and the reward will surely follow. Brown and Hudges are contemplating a trip to New York. Lawrence Deas and Harry Reed are strollers of leisure for a few days. Mr. Deas not only accustomed to offer a rates, so the trip is resetting for holl days. The Framplings are back in town but were compelled to lay off this week, their trunk instruments having went astray. Mr. Kemper Harrod the young violinist contemplates giving a recital some time this winter in conjunction with a well known Dauger opera company. it is understood, will open a vocal studio at the Institutional Church producing a grand opera. Frank Clemento of Clemontio and Miger has received word that his sister at New Orleans, La., is very ill and that he may survive to arrive at the Start of the US, Pittsburgh, Pa., this week. There was much discussion among actors regarding Jones & Grant who played at the Monogram last week. The third and fourth plays were a team to a team of big time actors of nation-at-reputation. They shewed their good act after Monday night and did one of ordinary jobs. The actors maintained the past record during the remainder of the week. The management bought the show at half price and Irving Jones is working in Cheffinah alone this week. The rarest and most popular concert of the season will be the part song concert of the Choral Study Club of Chicago, and recital by Mr. Geo. I. Holt, Iowa's talented tenor singer, at institutional church Monday evening, Nov. 21, 1910. Mr. Pedro T. Tinsley conductor. Reserved seats may include a farewell from the martyrs. Mice Cecelia Johnson, 5380 Wabash avenue, phone Wentworth 3053. Tickets 35 cents. Reserved seats, 60 cents. THE DEFENDER'S GIFT. Beginning on the 6th of November, the Chicago Defender will give to all new subscribers a beautifully bound book with all of Paul Dunbar's Poems. Look for our big ad. next week. EMETERY ASSOCIATION E LIST $7.00 (s) 6.00 (s) 5.00 any number of graves, $30.00 and upward. terms still prevail: $2.00 A MONTH re prices have advanced. CEMETERY ASSN. 3125 State Street In recognition of the large patronage enjoy with the boat people, we have opened a restaurant. at 3536 State Street Telephone Douglas 4784. Mr. J. E. Webb will have charge, and it will be his pleasure to show you what a dollar or two will do in buying a Diamond, Watch, or other Jewelry. If you don't know Webb you ought to and we invite you to drop in and make his acquaintance. It's a good time right now to be looking around for Christmas. Let Webb show you what he can do for you. Five dollars can do the work of Fifty dollars in buying for Christmas. Let Webb show you how. Fine goods, low prices and easy terms. Main Stores at 274 Wabash Avenue Diamonds—Watches—Jewelry --- The Nandville Show JONES' DIAMOND SHOP Its great amity for all scapes and its power for taking up and neutralising the all harmful elements that exist in all scapes a e unsurpassed by anything known to the chemical world. The alkali is taken up by some of the properties of the cream, forming a new compound called cream sopoleate. This newly formed compound electrifies and purifies the skin; removing every trace of grease, paint, varnish, or any foreign elements, leaving the skin in perfect condition, and white. The makes-possible urticaction which brings deferred nutrition to the very oer of the skin. Rejuvenating the ocular elements and thereby brighting up youthful appearance. Full directness on your bottle. Ask your drugstores for THE BLITE FACE CREAM to take no omer. Manufactured by E. J. BOWLES & CO. 219 Armour Ave. Phone Douglas 3081. Watch the Defender for our big ad. THE GERMAN SCRAPPLE CO. 3433 STATE ST. port a phenomenal business, having ben open only a short time which is the best proof that Philadelphia Scrapple is going to be an important factor in necessities of catables on account of its reasonable price and it bring a substantial food product, it is more wholesome than meats or oceal alone for the morning meal, as it is a full meal in itself. They make scrapple every day, a meal many stores and markets are carrying a stock where you can purchase from your local store; if not you can get it at their place of business. A pure, wholesome food made until strictly sanitary conditions. THE CORNELL CHARITY CLUB. Tid Cornell Charity Club will give an entertainment Tuesday evening, November 1st, 1910, at Union, Mason mill, 3356 State st. Garfield's will have a dinner with all will be 6:00. More! Chicken and dumplins platee Salad, Spagati Steak, Gran Corn, Apple Dumplins, Tea Biscuit Ice Cream, Cake, Coffee, Welcome everybody. DORSEY'S IMPERIAL ORCHARD F. L. GALE, Dealer in all Kinds of Music Inserts 3159 State Street Phone Douglas 400-665-6655 LEACH'S STORAGE LEACH'S STORAGE WAREHOUSE PRIVATE ROOMS FOR FURNITURE, HE MONEY LOANED ON FURNITURE Mr. Robert S. Gillespie and J. Leon, Jones, has the distinction having the largest billiard and pool hall on State street. Both these gentlemen are well known in the city, and it goes without saying that they will make good; the former was in the same business for 3 years at 130, while the latter is a private carman for 7 years in the Pullman service. The site is the old Armour post office station at 3217-19 State street. The decorations and finishes are the finest of any on the South Side with 10 tables, 2 furnaces to keep the house hot. These gentlemen says the Warwick will guarantee 80 degrees of heat on a zero night. The public is invited to inspect the palace of rest and recreation. A large and enthusiastic audience enjoyed the program at the above named institution last Tuesday night. The opening address was made by the President, Rev. G. H. McDaniel. Splendid speeches were made by Hon. John H. Jones, Dr. Drila and Mr. T. J. H. Woods also made some very pointed remarks. The music was furnished by Miss Madison of Kansas City, Lutshia Sanders and Lee. The various departments made fine displays and it is plain that the institute has been the progressor Dr. McDaniel is demonstrating that it is possible to build a first class industrial school in this city. We understand that the new departments and their teachers will increase the operating expenses of the institution about $400 per month. --- enning, 50 cents and up. Main Spring, 50 cents and up. Jallance Staff, 75 cents and up. Jewels, 50 cents and up. Crystals, 10 cents. XXInspector for C. & E. I. R. R. Wise and Open Your Eyes! I BELIEVE in giving ALL a "square deal" and am willing to share my profits with the trade. My aim is to reduce prices on WATCH REPAIRING and still maintain the same standard of good workmanship, thereby winning the trade and good will of the public. How's this for a cut in prices? Stationery, Confectionery, Tobacco, Cigars, Newspapers, Bread, Cakes and Pies, Before Buying C Me. We give Fish and Weber Stamps w A First-Class LAUNDRY EDWARD FELIX, We give Fish and Weber Stamps with Groceries, Ice Cream and Sodas. A First-Class LAUNDRY Agency in Connection. GUESS WHO? (Copyright applied for.) Novz—The Guess Who columns were never inaugurated to viltify or to decry the fair name of any person, be they what they may. The motto of The Defender is to protect and lift up all mankind and to be a source of pleasure, for our women, especially. When we have unpleasant things said about little jokes that appear in this column we can only ask you to think of the column and its meaning. Don't become serious over things meant for jokes, and you will be happy all your days. So cheer up, smile, and we will smile with you and feel kindly to all people. The P. O. D. is so very glad to be dear old Chi. I love my home in Springfield. The Canadian Mutt is handed to another Mutt $5.00 to be changed and the young gentleman is who says that if he of the town in which he lives was to help him hand it back and say, "No place like Chi." The second hand; hand me down man's hand. The Douglas Club school queen is. The Forest Avenue doll is who sat all evening writing for the Cannabal to take her to the Pollies of 1910, but he did not show up. gentleman is who wears such beautiful sox. The P. O. Dude is who packs a suit case around with him, trying to make people laugh. The P. O.-gretter is who pretends to take pictures and cools the people. Some of us are on to you. Mr. T. O. Dude who was seen with three young ladies, Wednesday night entering. The "Kentucky Club." We know they only had beans. O. Dude is who sent cards anying he would behave on the 4th. When he was seen in the "Soil" on the 4th we won't worry. He lives, doll is who believes in sporting around town in a Taxi. Oh! you bill by the month. the houses of Avenue photo is who had betrayed him. M. or else he will have no chance. The Indian is who said that the King is no longer alive, and it is a long alloy without an ask can. The Tanglewood dolls are who want to be the king. Saya she is just wild about her Henry. She as the orders the big enta after the show. So now we know why King lost out. Poor Kingy. The cute doll of Englewood is who said you I am a bonneter night. Mist F. T. F. you I am a nancy. Nancy. The Indian is who said she gave up the King to with H. J., as he is better joker [Picture of a man in a suit with a white shirt and a black tie]. RAILROAD MEN'S HEAD THE BUDW 5050 STATE STREET, Fine Wines, Liqu GOOD MUSIC Special Attention To Beginne with Groceries, Ice Cream and Sodas. Agency in Connection. 52 W. 30th Street ing than any one of the beanieaters. M. Y. M. is the doll. The Englewood dolls are who gave the The Englewood boys Littie Jeff and King The good King The "Mutt" is who is afraid of thousand leeches that jump up and down on a boat. Come of it, k. or you will be caught by one same day. Aeroplane Regulation. In the very infancy of navigation it was found essential that every ship that sailed the sea should have a home and possess its papers to prove its identity and ownership. Those vessels that could produce no sea letters or ship's papers were treated as pirates or presumed to be engaged upon no lawful business. That was the first stage in the law of the sea. It stands to reason and it will involve no hardship to insist, even in the infancy of aerial navigation, that there must be some similar registration to that in use as to vessels. Each aeroplane must have a domicile or home port; its captain must when he comes to ground be able if required to produce his papers. The roving, homeless aeronaut who has no credentials must be viewed as a sort of pirate of the skies—London Times. Japanese Method of Cold Storage. On a recent visit to the city of Takata, on the northwest coast of Japan, I had occasion to observe what at first thought I imagined was a haystack, but on investigation sound to be an immense mound of snow covered with straw matting. The purpose of this mound was to keep in cold storage for consumption in summer fish caught in the winter time. This is the only method of cold storage employed in the rural districts in the northwest of Japan, where the snowfall is very deep in winter, and these stacks are to be seen in considerable numbers distributed in different parts of the country. —Strand Magazine. Calls promptly answered R. W. GREEN Funeral Director 3832 STATE STREET CHICAGO Phone Douglas 5766 Phone, Oakland 1014 ADQUARTERS EISER CAFE LOVER DUNN & HIGHT Auctions and Cigars Aeroplane Regulation: THE RAILROADS BY JOHN R. WINSTON. Mr. John Hammond is running to Los Angeles, California over the C. R. L. P. Ry. Lines. Youn. Young, of 6526 Armour avenue is W. Ry. Co., a buaft Porter. W. Ry. W. Ry. Co., a buaft Porter. As a staffer, Porter Get busy and subscribe for the Chicago Defender. Mr. Paul Allison is running to Burlington, in the service of the 6. B I. Q. Ry. Cc. M. Blue Chef on the Penn, Ry., is clean, smart, and blue. The third city, Mr. Blue is one of the South Shore singers and a Chicago product. He is good at what he does and man who cannot see as far as their nose, it is time that some of them were awakening up and come to business. The Janitors are making sure that the office is clean of cards. They make as much money as you do and they are at home every night to do their business. Up on more real estate. Our books show that the janitors are the men for business and Mr. John W. Hightower of 37 W. 45th place is still on the Fort Dodge, In., run Central Ry. Co., it was thought that Chas Blake would get the Western run, porter all porters who have run. Given Mr. Winston their subservience according to promise please do so and please do not ask for a ride or run the paper on such, so please pay as you go and there will not be any trouble. The avenue is a strong advocate of the Chicago Defender and a yearly subscriber of The Defender for his sister in Lewiston Montana. Well I guess he is not alright. Mr. Scott Collins of 455 Armour avenue is still running to the coast in Pullman service over the Rock Island lines. Now is your chance to purchase a good lot in North Muskegon Township site addition for $250. Call Mr. Winston or his business partner L. N. Cameron. Don't I don't understand why it is that my old friend Mr. C. G. Reed does not have his subscription for the Chengke Defender to Evanville, Ind., in Pulman service over the C. E. I. and B. and T. H. Ry. Co. will have to get behind the porters who carry the banner in car El Capitan, to allow us to slow subscribing for the Colored papers, on line. I am G. Tyler the old champion Rock Island R. By. Chef is now manager of the Budweiser Hotel, known as the Railroad Men's Headquarters at 5550 State street in Evanville. You think that Tyler is not going some for an old timer and to finish business up nicely, which is only $150 a year. Buy a lot today from Mr. John R. Winston. B 40th Street the general agent site Company and the Johnson Investment Co. of Muskegon, Oklahoma. Lots from $200 and only $10 down. Phone Dougings $222. Mr. Ollie Dillard is now running to the coast over the Rock Island in the Pullman service. Ollie has been off a week I am looking after business for The Chelsea Defender. Send in your subscriptions. Only $150 a year. 6 months $1.00 (cash). Mr. A. Boyd, of 3331 Artigan avenue is running from Chicago to New York and is the host of the annual fundraiser in the service of the Pullman Co. over the Penn. Ry. Co. out of Chicago. Mr. Boyd states that The Chicago Defender is running from Chicago along the R. r. men, good news. If it is true. I can not state for facts as to Mr. W. C. Blake cutting the mustard on influence Anderson in running the pervers in a pool at R. R. I have been too heavy to look after R. THE CHICAGO GIANTS End the Season By Rushing the Gunners, Our Local White Team Of Its Fewest Boys Looked Sick. Many Sensational Plays Abound in the Game. 5000 Fans Saw Game All Declared Gunthers Were Jack Johnsoned To Death. Giante Will Leave for the Coast To Play For a White Syndicate In Frisco. Maj. R. R. Jackson and Hon. Frank Leland, owners of the Chicago Giants were seen on Monday night at their headquarters at 26th street singing the song "and we are jolly good fellows, etc." by a reporter of the Defender, who also joined the boys and helped to celebrate the greatest victory they had achieved this season, naturally the Leland Giants name had to be called by our reporter who asked the question, "what do think you could have done with the Lelands, well, this or that one began to take out the dope book and began to compore and for the life of me we had them going too, or it seemed to our reporter that Rube had to get another smetter to catch these bobbles. Through the Defender it is likely that these clubs will meet on Kmas day in Angeles, Cal, and decide for ever the game that the Chicago Fans wanted to see played here. The book makers say if these teams would clash they would back them for 50,000 bones and the fans to a man would back them. The beauty of the played on Sunday was the clock like pitching Cyclone. "Cyclone Joe" Williams, pitching for the Chicago Giants against the Gunthers yesterday, equaled the local semi-pro record for strikeouts by fanning seventeen men at Gunther Park. The Giants won the game, 3 to 0. Williams' record was a clean cut one, as he did not pass or hit a batter in the game, while he allowed only four hits. The game itself was an exhibition of sensational fielding. Wright's catch of Butcher's liner and his subsequent doubling of Schall at first by Dolan SPECIAL HAT SALE NOW ON for the LATEST FALL and WINTER STYLES. Watch thir-Card for Special Announcement. Complete Course, $35.00 for October only. Regular price $50.00. Evening Classes, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday night. Our representative will be glad to call and give you full particulars. Pon-Hace, Not like mother use, to make, his different, its delicous. Made fresh daily under strictly sanitary conditions. It reduces high cost of living. Give it a final, made exclusively by off Winston, were the brightest features. The Giants picked up a run in the second inning on two scratch hits, Dolan losing Seldon's hot liner and Butcher injuring himself by colliding with the back fence in going after Washington's high fly that went for two bases and scored Seldon. The Giants' others brace of runs came in the third. Winston doubled and Harris bunted, Bradshaw trying for Winston at third and losing both men. Moore scored the two runs with a fly over the fence. Score: Chicago Giants 3 and Gunthers 0, with Fitzpatrick, umpire. The game was played in 1:40 scheduled time. THE AMERICAN CAR WHEEL AND AXLE COMPANY WILL OPERATE THE IMPOVED THIRD RAIL. The shares are Ten Dollars each, five in a block, non-assessable. We be lieve it will pay a dividend inside of two years. This is a chance of your lie, don't fall to invest in the company. Stock will be so high in a few years that you cannot reach them. Get your money on before the public notice much. You will find the office at No. 2944 State St. Chicago, III come in and see our老板, Dr. E. R. Robinson will, explain and hibit every Thursday night and Sunday afternoon. Come and see for yourself, RARE OPPORTUNITY. The Enterprise Institute has secured the very efficient Mrs. Outland to take charge of its cooking school. Mrs. Outland was trained by and was eleven years with the celebrated Madam Rhoer of Philadelphia. Those not desiring a full course may take special lessons in any branch of cooking or culinary work. Call at the Institute annex and dairy lunch rooms, 3705 State street, Open daily from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. A Jinrikisha With One Wheel. According to Consul General James T. DuBois of Singapore, a one wheeled jirikisha, on the monocycle principle, is being introduced among the Chinese of the Malay states. It is said to be safe and to have many advantages over the old fashioned vehicle. There is no jarring drug in rounding corners, the wear and tear is reduced to a minimum, the work on the pulleys greatly reduced and a 20 per cent increased speed obtained. CLASSIFIED COLUMN. FURNISHED ROOMS. For Rent. NICELY FURNISHED ROOMS TO RENT— Steam heat, stationary hot and cold water in each room. $430 Wabash avenue, 2nd flat. FOR RENT—Neatly furnished rooms for gentlemen, well lighted, large, slimy, hot water year round. 3811 Vernon ave. Phones 1633 Aldine. NEATLY FURNISHED ROOM—For two gentlemen or man and wife, $407 Dearborn street. NEATLY FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED—Front room and alcove with modern convenience at 3562 Vernon Ave. ONE BEAUTIFUL STEAM HEATED ROOM—With modern improvements, with kitchen privileges shared, 3525 Calumet avenue. NEATLY FURNISHED ROOM—Steam heat with 12 clock on day, Brinense Bldg. Flat 22-K, $417 Pl. and Wabash avenue. Flat 22-K. NEATLY FURNISHED ROOMS—For gentleman with nice improvements, 3525 State Street. 22-29. FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED ROOMS—with all modern convenience, 3542 Vincennes avenue. 22-29. A NEATLY FURNISHED ROOM - For man and wife, or two wents. Hent and modern rooms, or two wents. Hent and modernizing, keeping. 3754 Vincennes avenue. 22-29. NEATLY FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED ROOM - With modern improvements, nr. 31st street and Cottage Grove avenue car lines. 461 E. 32nd street. 22-29. ROOM TO BENT - to single gentleman or woman. Hent and modernizing, grove cool and 31st street car lines. Douglass avenue year water round. Phone. Douglas 2123. 465 E. 32nd street. 22-29. FOR RENT - Neatly furnished rooms; furnace heat; large, airy and well lighted; heated cold water year round. 5436 Drexel avenue. NEATLY FURNISHED ROOM - Steam heat for two gentlemen or man and wife, room reasonable. No other roomers, only first floor. 3556 Rhodes avenue, 2nd floor, flat 4. FLATS FOR RENT-NORTH SIDE. EXCLUSIVE NEIGHBORHOOD—4, 5 and 6 rooms, newly decorated, cheap rent.KG at 2628 Sheffield Ave, near Lincoln.AVE. THERE IS A SMALL FLAT OF 5 ROOMS —Very neat and coily furnished and would like a nice girl company, one who is a little bit of a party. Party may have privileges of wasting, ironing and cooking, and etc. Mrs. W. H. Party is located at State Street, cor. State and Division. 22—23 DRESSMAKING FASHIONABLE DKEESNAKING and CHIL- MIC H. Croker, 3751 Vincennes avenue. WANTED - A hustling young man or woman with $25.00, accustomed to handling stairs, good propulsion. Write Jas. Gold Coastman, Columbia Chemical Co., Newport News, Vn. FOR SALE. BEAUTIFUL 14 BURHILL NICHE PLATENED PARLOR STOVE FOR SALE—Self feed at $312 Prairie avenue, 3rd st. FUR SET FOR SALE. Lady will sell beautiful new black Lynx fur set, large shawl and barrel muff, $15. 4153 Ellis avenue, apartment 5. For Sale. Rare Bargains at Bargain Prices. Nr. 41st and Armour Av., 2 sty. frame on stone base, flats of 5 rms each, open plumbing, gasket, above heal, rental $800. Price $6,000. Nr. 38th and Armour Av., 1 sty. brick cot- tage on stone base, containing 5 rms, open plumbing. Price $1,850. This is an ideal little home. P. F. McCARTHY & CO. Real Estate, office, insurance State 39th Street FOR SALE. A BEAUTIFUL COTTAGE - On 60 ft. lot, 16 rooms, bath and gas, barn in rear, paved road, and 67th St. Boulevard and 67th car line or Rock Island R. R. 20 minutes to line, Price $2,700. $100.00 to $500.00 & CO., Office, 6142 Adn St. Office Phone Douglas 4790 Residence Pho. Douglas 3418 RESIDENCE, 3746 RHODES AVENUE, FLAT 1 Night Cells Promptly Answered (CUT THIS OUT) Wholesale and Retail Ostrich Feames Mrs. Herbert Dean 3552 RHODES AVENUE Phone Aldine 220 Ostrich Feathers Repaired, Altered, Dyed and Curled. The best work at reasonable prices and shortest notice. SA MORGAN'S SHOP State Street SALE NOW ON STYLES. Watch this Card for Special uncement. for the name of any firm in Chicago selling a better grade of COFFEE than we do at 30c per lb. Over 900 Satisfied Customers. One Price One Blend Our Motto: Not better than the rest but good as the best. CAVE BROS. Sample Free 6432 Vincennes Ave. Phone West 5280 INSURE YOUR SALARY against loss of time through Sickness, Accident, Death in the FEDERAL CASUALTY COMPANY, Detroit, Mich. 2,500 Diseases! Covers every known illness and every known accident. H. David Murray, District Manager 3517 State Street, Chicago Aldine 2532 Our newly equipped dining room and quick service is unexcelled by any Cafe in the city. Theatre parties are solicited. Good music by the highest paid artists. Any neglect by any of our help will be immediately looked into. A. J CODOZOE, Prop. CASS HAINS, Mgr. Only One East of State St. The Freshest Vegetables Obtainable Oysters and Game of all kinds Fresh Eggs and Country Butter. Armour In Our Meat Mar 452 E. 35th Street, Chicago. STUDIO OF MUSIC MRS. MARTHA BROADUS-ANDERSON TEACHER OF VOCAL AND PIANO FALL TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 1ST RESIDENCE, 6450 CHAMPLAIN AVE., CHICAGO, ILL PHONE NORMAL 3316 Real Estate, Loans, Renting and Insur 5111 So. State Street Property Carefully Managed Notary Get our prices, they are free; Confer with us before you invest your savings in Chicago Real Estate, all business trusted with us will receive an honest and confidential treatment. TRY US. Order a policy to-day, to-night you may have a fire VALENTINE'S The only up-to-date School of Cutting, Designing, Dressmaking and Ladies' Tailoring. Day and evening classes; evening school only $1 per week. We also teach by mail. Patte measure and guardteed or write VALENTINE'S TAILORING CO. and best in the street. 88 St. 2622 N. C. --- BOWMAN'S HAIR POMADE. The Bowman Hair Pomade is unobstructed one of the best HAIR GROWERS only one jar will be thoroughly convinced that there never was a preparation put together and then make the hair grower and the hair grower are now becoming very much interested in this wonderful hair grower. The great we have found is necessary to place it in the following drug stores for the convenience of the ladies: THE BOWMAN HAIR POMADE. KINGSTON Pharmacy, 116½ 51st st.; Levinton Pharmacy, 108 W. 47th st.; John St.; W. E. Wallace, 38th and State; W. E. Wallace, 38th and State; Whale Bros. 37th and State; Holtheer, 32nd and State; W. K. Forsyth, 31st and State; Crown Pharmacy, 31st and State; E. H. Stack, 29th and State; W. E. Wallace, 38th and State; Nolfef Pharmacy, 2701 St.; J. H. Montgomery, 26th and State; C. J. Snyder, 26th and State; E. Von Herman, 297 31st; George Porter, 29th and Armour av.; C. F. LaBastide, 2701 Deerborn av.; S. Lesser, cor.; E. Von Herman, J. H. Thomas, cor.; 20th and Dearborn. CENTRAL DRUG CO. Washington and State sts.; THE PUBLIC DRUG CO. 160 State sts.; BUCK & RAYNEI, State and Madison sts.; CONSUMERS' DRUG CO. State and Randolph sts.; BUCK & RAYNEI, Madison and La Salle sts. J. A. TRIBUE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 171 Washington St. Room 706 CHICAGO Gowns and Suits Made and Remodeled First-Class Work. Prices Reasonable. 3744 RHODES AVENUE CHICAGO FORD'S HAIR POMADE THE OLD RELIABLE DRESSING FOR KINNY OR CURLY HAIR. IT'S USE MAKES STUBBORN, HARSH HAIR SOFTER, MORE PLIABLE AND GLOSSY, EASY TO CUMB AND PUT UP IN ANY STYLE THE LENGTH WILL PERMIT WRITE FOR TESTIMONIES, TELING HOW THIS REMARKABLE REMEDY MAKES SMORT, KINNY HAIR GROW LONG AND WAVY. BEST POMADE ON THE MARKET FOR DANDRUFF, TICHING OF THE SCALP AND FALLING OUT OF THE HAIR. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. GET THE GENUINE, PUT UP IN 25+ AND 30+ BOTTLES WITH CHARLES FORD'S SERVICE PACKAGE. BY DRUGGIST. RUGGIST CANNOT SUPPLY L SEND IT TO YOU DIRECT JWING PRICES, SMALL SIZED ARGE SIZED BOTTLE,50+ UNIZED OX MARROW CO. LAKE DE. DEPT. 29, CHICAGO, ILL. AGENTS WANTED. .. PARKS, UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER None 3231 Douglas; 3135 State Street. Parks, undertaker, makes new public. All funerals on South my depot, complete, with carcasses and hearse, $75.00. From any part of West Slide to depot, complete, for $70.00. Mr. Parks is able to sell just as cheap as the trusts. All he wants is a trial. PHONE DOUGLAS 2572 IDA M. DEMPCY Stenographer and Typist PROF. BOARMAN. he best music in the city for balls and concerts will be furnished you by Boarman's Select Orchestra; uniformed up to date for all occasions. 3563 forest avenue. LUBS AND SECRET SOCIETIES Unique Temple, Lady Elke, meets the and second Thursday of each thu and fourth Thursday of each bth av. Mrs. Maggie Kendrick, Fin. 5205 Grove av. rt general Robert Ellott, No. 7885, and fourth Porchora, mrs. each month each month Fellows D. B Hahn 012 porchora W. Tay rborn sb L OD A LEXINGTON, MO., NOTES And a Word From Neaby Towns. A GOOD LESSON To All Who Read This Column of a Sincere Man. One thing sure, if I catch any more of your young men with whiskey around about any of the three Colored churches in our city I am going to have your names published in this paper so even if you are not who you are, so take my advice and keep your whiskey away from the churches, as they are no saloons. You people that do so much kicking about the news of Lexington are the very ones the shoes are pinching. so if the shoes don't pinch your feet your mouth shut and take your meddling as as sure as we are going to give you a bitter just let it alone. That's all. All persons that haven't subscribed for this paper are requested to do before Nov. 15th, as I will carry extra papers after Nov. 15, 1910; 25 cents a month. If you wish to result in a customer see our dr. John H. Ar from Kansas City, Mo., last week, and reports having had a high time. She is one of the sweetest and most charming young ladies in Lexington, Mo., and everybody loves and respects her. No better young lady ever lived than Miss Walker. Mrs. Scott of Chicago, Ill., is in our city visiting her friend, Mrs. Hannah White and friends. She is very much interested in the news business. Her many friends are glad to see her and will make everything pleasant for her during her stay in our city. Miss Hannah Walker died Monday morning, Oct. 38th. Just when the funeral will be held is not known at present. HANDEL HALL NEW PROFESSOR. Wednesday evening at the Institutional Church, 38th and Dearborn sts. professor Johnson opened the eyes of Chicago Music lovers by showing them the work of his advance piano class pupils, they were surprised for they played with a touch that would make Kubilic take notice. Mr. Johnson is the only member of his race in the United States that holds a pro- Prof. B. Emmanuel Johnson, M. M. S. fosservship chair in a white College; has won for him this marked debt; has won for him this marked distinction. The 255 people who gathered to hear his class were all well pleased and many were heard to say my girl or my boy will go to him. When you are down town you may see him at Stahl school of music or at his home studio, 2747 Vincennes ave. FARM ENGINEERING. Heretofore Neglected Field Offers Rich Opportunities. In a farming community the county might utilize a hydro-electric development for supplying from a central station the power needed for farming on a modern and scientific basis, or a number of farmers may be interested in the promotion of such enterprises, utilizing the power in common for the purpose of carrying on their farming operations, including the lighting of farm buildings and dwellings. Electric power may be readily applied with the use of motors to all agricultural machinery, such as plows, reapers, mowing machines, pumps, tursuring machines, fodder cutters, feed grinders, washing machinery, creamy appliances, refrigerating installations, etc. By the use of electric light on the farms greater efficiency and cleanliness are secured all around, fire risk is diminished, insurance rates are reduced, and the working day is not shortened in the winter season. The great cry has for some time been made, that the livelihood cannot at present be made on the farm. The great problem is to produce more per acre and to make the laborer's position on the farm so attractive that he will be willing to remain there. It is my opinion that the real reason for the retrogression of the farming industry is that all modern engineering ability has almost exclusively been directed to the advancement of industrial enterprises and has almost entirely neglected farming and agricultural work. Financialers and promoters will no doubt find this a great field, particularly as with the use of electric power many hybrids of value may be produced commercially on farms, such as alcohol, starch, etc., from the surplus products.-Frank Koester in Engineering Magazine. Automatic Leak Sealer The French government claims to have secured an invention which will stop leakages in submarines automatically and has ordered all submarines fitted with the device. The Right Place for Fine Diamonds and Diamond Jewelry Prices Right, Quality Considered C. L. LANDE Reliable Jewel and Optician 5018 State St. Tel. Dutton 474 Artistic Enraving Free Eyes Tested Free Old Jewelry Made Like New Watch Repairing My Specialty. THE LITTLE STAR BARBER SHOP AND POOL ROOM John Kerrwether, Proprietor Cigura and Tolner 83M Street Hair Cut 25c, Shave 16c, Sea Foam 15c, Shampoo 25c, Massage 25c. THOMAS & HUDSON Cleaners and Dyers Ladies and Daughters 2912 State Street Clothes Call for and Delivered A Writer Guaranteed Phone Douglas 4021 THE RISING SEN SAMPLE ROOM Tins, McGreevy Choce Wines, Liquors, and Cigars 3614 State Street J. H. WRIGHT, Fashionable Ladies' and Geats' Tailor. Made by a Man Tailor $25.00 and Up. Cleaning, Drying and Repairing. 38 West State St. Phone Aidne 566. C. S. TWITTY The Shoe Man Repairing of All Kinds Hand Sewed Work a Specialty 38 West Stist Street Chicago PROF. WHITE. Psychic and Scientific Palmist. Have read and understood. Don't fall to call and see me. 250 and 56c. Chiropodist Work with Done Hire. Corn, Bunlons, Calluses and Inrowing Nails Treated. 18 West 30th Street Dearborn & State Street. Facial Massage Hair Goods Manicuring Made to Order Phone Calumet 4221 MRS. JAMES T. HENRY Electric Soil Massage, Specialty Aprons and fancy Goods made to order 15 West 27th St., Chicago CHAS. T. GLAZEBROOK TAILOR Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing Suits made to Order. Work Guaranteed. 2607 STATE ST. TROPHUS Masquerade and Theatrical Costumes and Fine Clothing Masks, Grease Paints and Make Up Materials, wigs Award Quarterly, Society Specialties, Inc., Theatreal Wardrobe of all kinds bought, sold and rented. 3447 South State Street Phone Calumet 634 MRS. SUSIE NEWTON Hairdressing, Shampooing and Manufacturing Manufacturer of Wigs, Pompadours, Switches and All Kinds of Hair Goods. 2021 State Street Phone Aldine 457 DR. GEO. W. PRINCE South Side Drug Store 2050 State Street THE WAWA Restaurant and Lunch Room A Place to Eat. The Only Place That Serves Coffee Out South 2022 State Street W. H. DORSEY Music Arranger. Original Composition Arranged for Publication Also Band and Orchestra Arrangements Music Furnished for All Occasions 3150 State Street Chicago, Ill. MRS. HATTIE JONES Dressmaking Ladies' and Children's Clothes Made to Order at Reasonable Prices 44 West 35th Street Phone Aldine 1774 CRESCENT MARKET H. Weinstein, Prop. Fancy Native Meets and Fine Groceries . 38 and 40 West 35th Street Phone Douglas 786 UNION MARKET Fresh and Salt Meets Poultry and Game All in Season 3902 Dearborn Street E. D. BURTS Dealer in Tobacco and Cigars. All Kinds of Magnazines, Books and Stationery. All the Leading Negro Papers and Magnazines. 2636 State St. Chicago, Ill. Telephone Douglas 1144 L. C. EWING Expressing, Coal, Wood and Ice Baggage Transferred and Checked to All Depots MARVEL Laile's' and Gents' Tailor Cleaning, Dyeing and Repairing 2S W. 39th St. Chicago, Ill. LET A. W. Coles Do Your Electric Repairing, Making a Speciality of Electric Bells, Wiring Your Residence, Furnishing Material and Power for Only $3.50, with Six Per Cent Discount. Please Drop Us a Card. 24 W. 39th St., Chicago, Ill. DR. P. J. SCOTT (Graduate Optor Artist) Ocular Specialist Eyes Unimited and Treated Electric Muscle Treatment for Sore Eyes and Nervous Headache, Specifications and Eye-Glasses made to order, and Guaranteed to give Perfect Satisfaction. Office 2036½ State St., Chicago, Ill. SCOTT & STANTON Pool Room and Billard Hall Cigars and Tobacco 3858 Dearborn Street W. T. STOBALL Expressing and Moving Coal and Ice 3812 State Street. Thane Douglas $289 M. GROVELL'S BEAUTY SHOP Half dressing, Shampooing and Manicuring Vibration Treatment a Specialty 11 West 23rd St., near State. HERMAN G. THEILE Groceries and Meats Fresh Vegetation Butter and Butter 2457 State Street Phone Calamet $222. SPOTT'S LADIES' BEAUTY TORNING COLLEGE 3637 Street Street, where sewing in any or all of its branches Fresh Vegetation thoroughly taught. Ten sewing days $5, in which time you can make anything you desire and as much as the permit; $5 sewing days $15; full course $25. THE MOTTLEY BEAUTY PARIOR Hair Dressing, Shampooing, Manicuring and Cosmetics Vibration Treatment a Specialty. The Mottley Hair Grower and Cold Cream for Sale. Manicuring of all kinds of Hair Goods. 23 West 35th Street Home Oakland and Dearborn. M. E. CLARK FANCY GROCERIES 4854 State Street Your Old Hat We are Ready to Throw Amy Bring It Around and We Will Make It New. THE GROCERIES 2508 State Street. Next Door to Theatre. Corns and Callouses positively removed by GOODWINS' GORN SALVE FOR BUNKONS It has no equal. Price 10c and 25c, at your druggist's request. Advise you about foot troubles call or write us. GOODWIN' FOOT REMEDY CO. 55 EAST 31st Street John H. Wallace, Manager Telephone Douglas 5099 COAL Boston, MA 02205. Expressing and Moving Van Furniture and Piano Moving Baggage Packing and Shipping Three Trips daily to and from all Depots, Boston, Freight and Warehouses 3144 State Street Phone, Yards 1219 CHAS. W. BURNS Dealer in Fresh, Salt and Smoked Meats Flah, Oysters, Foultry and Game in Season Green House, Boston 139 39th Street, car. La Salie. E. MURRAY Expressing, Van and Storage Co. Furniture and Plano Moving Baggage Facility Shipping in Specialty Three Trips Daily To and From all Depot and New Houses 313 STATE/STREET 313 Douglas 4031 Plumbers and Steam Gadgets' Supplies Gas and Electrical Goods Furniture, Carpets, Steves, Wooden- ware, Enamelware, Warehouse, Glass- ware, Chipping and Crockery 2635-32 STATE ST. L. CROSS, Ladies' Tailors and Furrier. Cleaning, Dyeing, Pressing and Repairing of Ladies' and Gentlemen's Garments. Fit and Workmanship, Guaranteed. 208 E. 323d Street, near Indiana Ave. Phone Douglas 888-2222 DONT FORGET ISAACSON'S CORNER and Meat Market Fresh and Sweet in Season. 2724 Dearborn St. ... Phone Calumet 1766. Phone Calumet 699 J. H. COLEMAN & CO. Vana for Moving. Three trips Daily to All Depots and Freight Houses. 2510 State Street. LA BASITIES PRESCRIPTION DRUG STORE, 2701 Dearborn St., Cor 27th. Bux your Prescriptions properly filled at prices to defy competition. Phone Calumet 2210. Phone Douglas 3518 J. H. COLEMAN CO. MEN AND WOMEN'S TAILORS 2323 State Street Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing Work Called For and Delivered. MRS. H. M. HICKS-LAMBKIN HALL DRESSING AND MILLINERY, 2527 Dearborn St. Phone Douglas 3518 T. Dalley ... M. H. Pleasant The Douglas Dyers and Glasses LADIES and GENTS' TAILORS Suits made to order $15.00 up. Fit guar- mented. Phone is sufficient. Work called for and delivered. Phone Douglas 4369 3003 Dearborn Street, Chicago, IL. Phone Calumet 2861 Established 1870 PAYNE'S HAND Laundry 2809 Walnash Avenue. Keep your clothes in repair. Wagons call everywhere. Phone Douglas 4327. J. A. WHITE Dealer in Coal and Wood All orders promptly attended to Furniture Moving and Expressing and General Training 47-49 Twenty-ninth Street Chicago H. BRENKE Grocery and Ment Market, 3138 Forest Ave. We give Fish's Stamps and Green Trading Stamps. S. MEEH Grocery and Market N. W. Cor. Armour Avenue and 32nd Street Fresh Vegetables in Season Phone, Yarils 2270 P. C. NURSEN-ESKELUND Denier in Coat, Wood, Gasoline and Oil 3142 La Salle Street Chicago WEIRVEKE BROTHERS Fancy Groceries and Meats Telephone Douglas 2273 33 West 31st Street GEO. CHAFFIN, Manager. WHITEY Lunch and Restaurant Newly Opened. Quick Service. Tableton for Ladlen. East Crypting Fire Service 3032 State Street (Near 31st Street.) MRS. MABEL MARTIN HISTRAURANT Phone Columet 2024 Home Cooking Regular Blend Water at 12 M. Menls At All Hours, Might or Duy 2803 State Street Mrs. T. J. Johnson, Prop. 181 W. Brewery (near La Salle) Cut Flowers, Climbing, Decorating Weddings and Funerals, our specialty. Special reduction to lodges, churches and parties. Design $1 and up. You will pay money giving you a final. All orders carefully and promptly attached to. Phone, Driver 898 M. WOLF Groceries and Bakery Goods 3502 La Salle Street Be Sure and Drop in THE SHOWING GALLERY M. 2582 State St. Also Make Your Photo a Post Card 3 for 25c All Work Guranteed to Be the Best THE QUEEN CITY RESTAURANT OPEN DURING One of the Greatest Chop Houses of the West Try Our New England Dinners Boston Coffee and Fish Balls 323 Dearborn Place, Noot A. L. BROWN, Prop. Office Phone 1332 Oakland Residence Phone 1316 Normal Museum Phone 416 AMC Alamo Physician and-Surgeon CHIROPONIC DISEASES Office Hours: 10:30 a.m. to 5 o. 710 to 8:30 P. M. In Office Sundays From 1 to 4 P. M. In Office Mon-Fri 10 a.m. to 10 10 West Forty-seventh St. Chicago. UNIQUE HAND LAUNDRY 2701 Wentworth Ave. Cleaners of Pine Lace Work. Curtina Cleaners of Pine Lace Work. Collisa 35 per doz. Shirts 8 and 10. Collisa 2... J. MeDONOUGH, Prop. Phone Douglas 3375 St. Elmore HATCH & HATCH Jessie Elmore HATCH & HATCH Office 3556 State Street Warehouse 3517 State Street FRANKS Kentuckian Square Stores Wine, Liquor and Coffee S. E. Cor, 335th St. and Armour Ave. Meals 15 & 25 Sandwiches of All Kinds Free Coffee Lunch Room and Luncheon Bakery 107 W. 32nd Street. WILLIAM WRIGHT, The Tailor Cleaning, Dreiling, Pressing and Repairing Gardens to order Special Attention Given to Laptops Worth. Work Called for and Delivered 3158 Dearborn Street E. M. GRIMM Hotel Bakery Light Groceries, Tea, Coffee and Splices 3407 State Street A DOLLAR HERE Will go twice as far as two elsewhere. We have a large variety of tresses, and pillows in the city. We also do renovating. Hotel work a speciality. Satellite communication is as a chance; one trial will convince us. FACTORY 3630 SOUTH STATE ST. Tel. Douglas 4230. Telephone Douglas 5118 Schiller Entertainer HOVA CLUB HUGH HOSKINS & SON Proprietors Fine Linen and Cigars 3161 State Street Res. Phone Calumet 16241 Office Phone Calumet 16481 Office Phone Calumet Inc. interests and patronize the man who can deliver according to promise. Claiming Done With Care. Checks Gives on All Baggage. Dealer in Coal, Wood and Ice. Quality Guaranteed. B. BROWN, Prop. 2639 State St., Op. Field Theatre, Phone Doughan 2180 DEVELOPMENTS P. COOPER, Physician & Surgeon Office Hours: 10 to 12 a.m.; 2 to 4 and 6 to 8:30 p.m.; Sundays to 4 p.m. 8102 State St. Chicago J. H. Lawson, Mgr THE M. Barnette, Asst. Mgr. Hello, Stop! THE LAWSON LUNCH ROOM World Trade Center 9-B West 368th Street Political Headquarters. Phone, Doug. 370. Something Doing All the Time. THE RENO BUFFET AND CAFE. Robt. V. Ridler, Proprietor, Guild Warehouse, Cafes Newly Furnished Cafe and Dance Hall Best Service. High Class Entertainers, Open Afternoon and Evenings. Jodie Eulog & Robert Johnson, Dispensers. 2404 State Street. JACKSON TRANSEER CO. Express Furniture and Plane Moving. Packing. Ship- ping and Plane Moving. Work. Baggage Transferred and Checked to all Depots. 3260 60. State Street. Phone Doughan 885. --- We Furnish You Mone To Protect YOUR PROPERTY OR BUSINES Mortgage Banking and General Brokerage ALL BUSINESS STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL Northern Assets Realization Company Office,3517 State Street Phone Aldine 2532 "THE QUEEN SOLACE" Formerly SOLTEROS CLUB POOL AND BILLIARD PARLOR CIGARS AND TOBACCOS : LAUNDRY OFFICE Cigars Wholesale and Retail :: Box Trade a Specialty 3205 STATE STREET --- CHICAGO PHONE ALDINE 568 TERREVOUS L. DOUGLAS, Proprietor WHY BE DARK AND SWARTHY? FRENCH'S CELEBRATED FACE BLEACH, will purify and bleach the skin as it penetrates the pores, being antiseptic cleanses them neutralizing all poisonous and disease bearing accumulations. It positively makes the skin texture soft and velvety. Preventing eruptions conditions and producing a clean and wholesome complexion. We are constantly receiving letters from all parts of the country commending our wonderful product. Sold at Rankin and White's Drug Store, 36th and State Sts. FACE BLEACH COMPANY 336 Main Street Racine, Wis. Phone us, we deliver to all parts of the City 19 W. 31st Street One Door East of Dearborn THE BRUNSWICK CAFE E. SPEED JEFFRIES, Proprietor EDWARD NORMAN, Chef of Fort Kent, KY., formerly of Atlantic City SOUTHERN HASH, SPAGHETTI AND CLUB HOUSE SANDWICHES OUR SPECIALTY ALL UP-TO-DATE DISHES AND SOFT DRINKS SERVED "Belf Advertised and Unexcelled" 126 PLYMOUTH PLACE, CHICAGO Everything New Throughout The Little Star Beauty Parlor Hair Culture a Specialty. Growing Hair on Bald Heads. Skin Diseases of a hair kindly positively cured. If I fail to cure, money will be refunded. full of Oils toilet Tailors promptly attended to. Information Free. MRS. C. S. BARRY. Phone Calumet 3554. 208 STATE SHOW, CHICAGO, ILL. We believe it will pay a dividend inside of two years. This is a chance of your life, don't fail to invest in this company. Stock will be so high in a few years that you won't have to borrow the public begin to rush. Dr. P. R. Robbinson will explain and exhibit every Thursday Night and Sunday Afternoon. Come and see for yourself. You Will Find the Office at No. 2944 State Street, Chicago Come in and See Our Book-Keeper. GREGOR'S SHOE STORE THE BROADWAY THE FINEST BUILDING EVER OPENED to COLORED TENANTS in CHICAGO—Steam Heat, Electric Light, Tile Baths, Marble Entrance J. W. CASEY, Agent 16 E. 35th Street, Near "L" Station THE CRANFORD APARTMENT BUILDING --- Tel. Harrison 6558 K CAFE District City of Atlantic City BANDWICHES OUR SPECIALTY DRINKS SERVED CHICAGO Everything New Through June Bauty Parlor Hair Goods L.L. Hard Heads. Skin Disposes money will be refunded. Uses. Malt Orders promptly. C. S. BARRY. STREET, CHICAGO, IL. el @ Axle Co. third Rail Non-Accessible. o years. This is a chance Stick will be go high in your money on before the explain and exhibit every pace for yourself. office at et, Chicago OK-Keeper. SHOES E STORE Hiring Chicago Chicago 3600 WABASH AVENUE & aS eo esa oe : ae geal HPLr Rrra Va lephone Botigiae 6308 : | Dr-Louie: Usselmann ean 3150 State Street Gisanine, 60 conte and up.” Main ‘Spring, 60 cents and up. *. Ballance Staff, 75 cents and up, Jewels, 60 cents and up. ‘Crystals, 10 cents.XXinepector for C. & E. I. R. Re Be Wise and Open Your Eyes! 1 BELIEVE in giving ALL a “square deal” and am willing to share my profits with the trrde. My aim is to reduce prices ‘on WATCH REPAIRING and still maintain the same standard of good workmanship, thereby winning the trade and good will of the public, -How’s this for a cut in prices? EDWARD FELIX Ice Cream Parlor Phone Douglas 2928 ee Stationery, Confectionery, Tobacco, Cigars, Newspapers, Bread, Cakes and Pies. Before Buying C Me. ——— We give Fish and Weber ‘Stamps with Groceries, Ice Cream and Sodas. A First-Class LAUNDRY Agency in Connection. EDWARD FELIX, 52 W. 30th Street Phone, Onkland 1014 RAILROAD MEN’S HEADQUARTERS ( / THE BUDWEISER CAFE 5050 STATE STREET, OVER DUNN & HIGHT Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars coop pfusic ; R.B. WILLIAMS, Manager ee oa oa Fo Beginners = CG. ELGAR sd a sens : Ts ee s i, {. a t [The Club giria wero that was called down rtdey Sntent fa saing tne tise tase Fe Mi ith tong ‘hots the notte te Eve's iiiowcen maettte e diary Uhre 2 Lebar matte teceane se Me at aA nd a ave, wostd be sesity a t neat cotld eng CN tee "Fe ictal ite te CR. ann gino dette Bake! neta Tae Heat THE IRS tole te who wondera why her gates WPRE dee ameseeuter 2 Na ee f,! "is Rianeé Gt te-who hae the thle ot Fe TShuty oho alta hae gta al ra Beant alten date’ Sta ae rune ay aaah A Hey oo gay SR RA ie ta ree Bal tht Nat ay x Beata Me attra ea, SC, HHS is ann a ten seritatreent pant Mea! ek BE Pe aa ad aa Baie teat ikke nc putin ogg acmias inti So ol ate re ie Ts site that woud have ex Sa flak Sia er eer LEXINGTON, MO., NOTES And a Word From Nearby Towns A GOOD LESSON To All Who Read This Column of a ‘sincere Man. x Syste. Lexington Mo., Oct. 28.—A certain young man in Lexington, Mo., says he has $200 and wants to go into some "kind of business In this city, and some of his friends want him to put up 8 pool hall, but we don’t need any such thing in our town, as we have enough now to ruin the race of young people. I say to the man who has this money, St would be ton times better if he would open up a good grocery and shoe store of a mage =arker {nstead. AY1s Best t 5 anto some kind of hon- est business that will be of some credit to the tace, The people will think more of you. Do not let your ‘foolish Young friends lead you into a gambling den, running a pool hall. We don’t need any at all, as we have enough dirty pit holes for the young people of our race to fall Into. Ba wise, my friend, and put your money to good use, Saturday night last a certain clase ot young men sald T was trying to pull down everything in town. ‘This {snot true. Tam not pulling the town down; I am trying to build it up by tearing down the gambling dens and saloons. I don’t uphold any of them, as they are only erushing the young race of people down to destruction and shame. T don’t uphold anything that is in favor of crushing the people down, The death of Miss Hannah Walker, who departed tis life Monday morn- ing, Oct. 16, 1910, was a great shock to her many young friends. She bad been in fil health for over a year and & half, sometimes up and sometimes down, ‘but after suffering so long as she did, the Holy Angel from above stepped in Monday morning and called her to rest, It is sald she dled a happy death and was recelved intc the Second Baptist church as a mem: ber before departing this lite. She \was the daughter of Mrs. Ed, Walker. ‘pnd a good Christian young lady and Ruch beloved by” all who knew her. “She is gone to the land of rest, where \pain’ and sorrow never come. The ‘uneral was held from the Second Pantist church Wednesday, Oct. 18, at j2:00, in charge of the S.A TVs. ‘The pastor, Rev, Chinn, conducted the ser vices, ‘assisted by. Rev. Gelger of St. John’s M, B. church, She leaves a mother, father,’ three sisters, one brother and a host of youne school- me ‘gq :to Mouri her loss. The mem- der of her class at school were pres- entat hey funeral to pay tho Inst re- ‘spects over the body of the one they loved yp well. Sleep on, thou faith- ful one. When our work on earth fs done we Will meet In the land of rest, where parting willbe no more, Rov. Allen“9f, Springfield, Mo., has deen appointed pastor of the Zion M. TB. church and wil wreach Sunday, Oct, 30. It is sald he ty.a Box) Chris- tian man, s0 let everybody come out ‘Sunday and hear our new pastor. Rey, M, C, ‘Collins, ex-pastor, was transferrea to the Northwestern Con- ference as presiding elder. He car- rled in $152 of money to the confer- ence, which wa sthe largest amount ever taken in from Lexington. Our Ssow why, bat att he ean bo heard yet, Semo clase to that Invisible noles, ‘Tho P.O. Dude te who had better qui working at nigot, 20 iat he and not other Guites ean’ take hia’ wite out: ‘Tho Defenster reporter is, ‘who since he married, never turma around’ when he Ie on the ‘African Speefal, mot-cven to apeak ity later, to bad. Te... Wnowe ieite, “Medelto, of 36th ana We- bath had ‘at ihe Grand fast week. "Tho Gand “street hot. ale, shooter fe The doll te who is to Kota ten. (410.00) dollar dinmend. A whole carrot, ‘The preity wox dude ie, Oh! you alc, ‘The doit te who had her nodule for. Hob: ‘ble night, ond it was go "much hobbled that ‘elie Could not hobble up to the dane: Ing’ cluss..” She missed. 1k. ‘Tne ‘P.O. Dudeie who te a past master in machine’ atttehing, ‘the P."Q."D. ie Who stands in fron o the ‘6. B.S S10 dnd’ out who ‘has dinner ‘andl ‘who’ hasnt? E The Hngiewood doll ts who was seen! on- tering the atra. Clarke Tuneh rose ‘on Wa- Var ave., “bet. Stadigen and Washington Samo Sinan to Sore § The “dde ta” Wwho Nas engaged all of gprtain ‘ola achy'dances nt the hobble ake ‘The hobbies are that Just mopped the (Moe) Tot niet ihe tobbte allie dotte arc, ‘The Manny. four are wid have organize: the. Hobbie Skirt, Chub, ‘Thu he ‘crasy mutt te who called up coviaia “asll and ake bikbha Ge en, ‘new pastor and family are expected to move to this clty before the end of the week, Miss Estella Taylor of Kansas City, Mo., was in the city last week on a Visit to friends, ‘The very next time Willie Anthony calls Mr. Arnold what ‘he called him Inst Stmday he is going to put. the Jaw after him. He won't stand to have a kid like hfm cursing him, and the people of Lexiggton are not go ing to stand i much longer, so if his parents don't stop ‘him, the law will. ‘The law should see to {t that he goes to school, insterd of letting him loaf around on the streets, He won’t work or do anywing, but one thing sure, he {fias got to stop “sassing" and cursing reople, Tf he don’t he is going to be vehind the fron bars. Father Henry Adams is very sick, and has been for nine years. His two daughters returned home last week. It fs said he is in a bad condition and not expected to live much longer. His many frlends are sorry to hear that he is so near death. Miss Ethel Henderson, one of our sweetest and most charming school teachers, of Independence, Mo., spent Sunday at home with ‘her parents, and her many friends in Lexington wish her success in her work. Mrs. Leroy Woolrich was in_town to visit her friends last week. Every- body was glad to see her. Tam sorry to Say that so many peo- ple seem to think that T carry papera to give away. but I do not. Some peo- ple always want me to give them pa- pers every week. They are too stin- gy to pay 5 cents for a newspaper, 80 you people Who cannot pay 5 cents Tor a paper, please do not ask me to give you a copy. If you want papers dig down into your pockets and rake up some silver money. Mr, Albert R. Gates, one of our home boys, was in Lexington, Mo. last week on business, He is a representa- tive of the National Mirror Co. of St. Louis. Mo; also a graduate of the Douglass school of Lexington, Mo., and Lincoln Institute, “He is a hustling young man and "his many friends of Lexington were glad to see him and welcome him to Lexington. Mrs. James H. Wislon, one of our best young men, has a petition before the governor for an appointment as superintendent of the home for Col- Jored girls, which will be located at Sedalia, Mo. Mr. Wilson stands very high in the community and is a true Republican, who hns worked for the party, and it is hoped that he wil THE HOBBLE SKIRT DANCE. Last night Prof, Garfield Wilson of the Douglas ‘Club Dancing School crowned himsolf with glory in his new creation the hobble skirt-dance. There has never been in Chicago a dancing master who has done so much to ele vate dancing among his patrons ns has “Garfield; in that he goes to the dancing Masters conventions and earns the real thing himself and then brings the bacon home. ‘The hall leat night was packed to its utmost and to see the yoimg and old ladies hobble about the hall was very amusing. Many of them had to be lifted off the cars, then carrled up the three filghts of stairs into the hall. One young man had the m{sfortune of slipping and the pair rolled down the steps; but what of that when they all had a good time. This is the finest school and our citizens should support this young man in his efforts. IN: THE RAILROAD. GENTER, Mose Hopking has resigned his position Sha "waa accepted” of a portion te private on acexpted. of a 2 private family" on the east side a 843 Bast. 40h Str ae a butler ‘epert reaches me that Mr. Fletcher Alll- aon the poilte uauer atthe ZC. By. Sta. tion eerlned ‘to make: hig (rtp. to Nashville ‘after. making application for pasnee and vee Ecived tnems ‘Pletcher anouid rubncrive for Ghe Defender, Old. Lucky Man, now. you (eit 1 alt night Ton. Row ie the time to subscribe, Bite Kadis Owens at fo3 ast 400 St, the, mont popular and. wealthtest Colored lady “inthe tth ward. has returned home stir a aix tour through Bouth looking after he intereat of her real estate, in that seer lon ot" the country. "ates Owens in look: ing the pleture of Kealth.” ‘The Chlcago ‘De- fonder’ congratsiates Sire Owena on her tate ‘arrival nome, The Chlengo Defender. te male at DE. undion, #86 East Win Sty chgar aa news Sie Perry, Dright_of 794 Lawndate ave- nue ie running 40 St. Loule. Sto. in Pull Iman mrviec on ‘Traine 21nd’ 22 over tho BT iy. Gon Mines air Bright owns dient of property 1n"the State of SileMigan fed han ten’ a! aervice of, Pullman So. for qver 22 years. AM. Bright sip Feigivind subscribe for "Pie Chienyo De Tenders, Bin Tt, C. Slaughter of 3664 Wabash -ave- nue ia running to St. Soule, 20, In" Putt Iran “morvice "ever, the Chicago. and Alton Tye Con tines "afr, Slauehtar “owns the shove banding: ‘Sie Wr. Marshall of 6626 Green Sta ts running to St Lule, Slo, aa ‘Bufo porter For the cE. t. ity. Go. Sue Jako Waddeiton Ia now running to 8 oul, Sion, Im thy norvice of the 1." Tey the Basliahe psetat ake tart the “Cnool the! Baglight Speciat Jake tim the (noo! Ste, Wiley" DSeatt oe 2020 “Arinour ave nuo is running on teaine 19 nnd. 20 Coxtea) Gn‘train' porter In the acrvice o¢ the. ogi hand ey Co. to Wet iberty Ta ‘John We Wiittama of 4752 Dearborn St. 1s running to Rock Island, Tllnola aa tain Dorter in the mervice of the Git. IP. Ry ‘Ste George "King of 33th ‘nnd the. Rock Ieinna ‘atifoad tricks, te running. to Rock Island, Til, in the service of the GA. he P Hy. Ga, ae" a train porter : “ine” chleagg” Defender te only” $1.80. year’ Phone Douglas 3320, Bont pay any Attention to any. ono. wh 1 enoeking onthe State of Oklahoma. ant Fegarding our Falr Sex. Whenever’ sou, bem et persone knocting on the. State of Okin Roma sand gure benutital "iadien. une ‘xo Sedement. Now Tam: the genera) dale agent for, the” Johnson “Investment. Com Dany, here tn Chiengor tam selling lots fhe” north bone Town site “Addit (or $100, #10 dawn cagh and #9 fer mont Phone Booriag 252, aake for air. Winston: ‘Thio Week, C.-G. Reeth, porter, Ce ET iy. running to By Ville-Eave m iaustenle re gitar at "home “aie4_ Armour" avenue "tas Suminy’ evening afterward foneh wa Served. tq De hus, Mea CG. Teeld, Mia Emma Wittema Stee thet Ret, “enter fainers, Tot. "A. “O" ‘Faylor, ced Bute Ste'Ctiy, inlao Tiros, John Atimuatings 281 Dearhorn, St" and. choristor of Tethol A SOE Suniingsachool, Sir, Augustus. t Boing to aubacribe tor "he. Betenice Bie “Ricks "avior In ‘erytee nf ‘Fallon Con naw running’ fromm’ Chicano. Angetea on “Colden “State. Limited. Reve Jatand NST continues to heactice ‘his ‘bro feanlon nad ranning porter” iw going to. Su Seribe' for The Defender and “American. Be Gian Micin trimer of St test 4a Miatting rien’ Inthe lig ants a fs Sayan wettened: tiie week test, Tle abaortec ter vee Deventer ones JANITOR'S COLUMN, Again I have discovered a few more Janitors, who are worthy of the print: er’s ink, and are men who are honest and upright, and strictly business ‘men, and -not bar room bums or do they’ belong to the rush the can ganz, or living of of the sweat of some poor bard working girl. Mr. Willlam Saunders, of 4801 Prairie avenue, has charge of the above building and many others located on the Bast side. Oklahoma is the place to cast your lot, «when you wish to purchase pro- petty in the southwest see Mr, Joan R, Winston, the general sales agent at 737 East 40th street; his phone fs Douglas 5222. Lots selling at $100 ten dollars down and $5 per month. Pay no attention to these sand bag- gers and knockers. Mr, 8. Saunders who has been a Janitor for the past 8 years on the East side, has charge of the following buildings on Michigan avenue: 4841- 44, 4896 and 4836, and is Well liked by his employers’ and no doubt but what Mr. Saunders will subscribe for the ‘Chicago Defender for his mother and later on purchase a tot in North Muskogee Town site addition for his mother from Mr. John R. Winston of 739 East 40th street. You can also buy. ‘Mr. Edward Roll of 4900 Indiana aventie, has charge of the Julian 18 flat building, No doubt but what Mr Roll will subscribe for the Defen- der soon, which is only $1.50 a year and buy’a $100 lot; $10 down and $5 a month. | Now wotild you be surprised or would you believe here comes the name of a janitor who ts able and can buy any day ten $100 lots or the same amount of lots at $200 each. Now this is mot bad for a poor col: ored janitor. This most progressive and energetic janitor is Mr, William WW. MeDonala of 4937 Ingjena avenue, who {s the head janitor of Wm, Brink: man’s 18 flat building and has charge jof tho above building for the past 2 years, and he advises all colored Jant tors to purchase real estate while the ‘thme is ripe. THE FIELDS ARE WHITE. BY MRS § J. LET. “Lift up your eyes—behold the task to which The Master calls. Earth's fields the reapers nvait, And low much golden grain is bend- ing now; So low that. fallen, soiled and stained it lies, Becauso no hand has gleaned! ‘Tho harvest rine. Invite thy love, thy prayers, thy toll Before thine eye and near ‘thy band the burdened plains Are spread. Thy zeal for souls, thy ‘earnest zeal, Ho asks, who loved and lived and Bled and died, Salvation to secure for thee and thine.” ‘The above lines conclsoly express the altitude of the ladies of the Phyl- lis Wheatley Home Club and explait why they are working so earnestly to meet the running expenses; and to fin- ish paying for their Home. ‘Thoughtful people recognize the fact that In e large city like Chicago much Work must be done to save our young people, ‘The gay and gilded saloon, with the clinking of glasses and the rattling of dice; its bright lights,-fts warmth and the cup that “at the’ last biteth like a serpent and stingeth lke an ad- der,” is luring our young men to de struction and death, ‘The follies and-gayeties of life are leading our young girls far on the downward road, : So this club of earnest, God-fearing, faithful women are women of royal blood. For they are children of the King of Kings, are ‘gleaning in the “whitened, fields.” * ‘They do not arg thelr skirts aside for fear of pollutign, but they take any girl by the hand, speak words of cn- couragement to Ver, treat her like a sieter...s:.feldlling the words. of ates oe | Got to Mrs. ROSA MORGAN'S | HAT SHOP 8709 State Street : SPECIAL HAT SALE NOW ON for the LATEST FALL and WINTER STYLES. SS Earn More Money attend The Greer School of Motoring Complete Course, $35.00 for October only, Regular price $50.00. : Evening Classes, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday night. Our representative will be glad to call and give you full particulars. Call or Write Department D. r School of Motoring . | Phone Calumet 325 1458 Wabash Ave. A New Food Product © Fischrupp’s, Real German Philadelphia EEE German.Scrapple Co. \ a <i Upher ale and Reta ioouch. Lee ee ea comfortable, plesgant, congenial place for all who seek shelter there, throw: ing, around them ‘the protection 80 necessiry for the stranger in our midst, aud the: friendless girl’ seeking @ livelihood in this vast city. ‘The reception given‘ by this club of women last woek demonstrates how much the best people of Chicago ap- preciate the effort these women are making for the uplift of the race. The Appomattox clubrooms were filled with callers, and on all sides were heard words of commendation for the work the Phyllis Wheatley Club 4s doing, as an earnest of their appreciation. The callers left fifty dollars.—Contributed. ‘THE GREER COLLEGE OF MO- TORING. Tuesday last the’ Greer College of motoring invited a representative of the Defender to inspect the school and seo tho classes in thelr studies. Mr. Adams a professor, 3111 State street, Inte of the post-office had charge of the Defender party and they went through the entire plant and college. The sights to see {s un- describable, Mr. E. Greer the prest- dent met the party and after a chat of how they did things there prompts ‘us to say that this school is one of the best Automobile schodls in the ‘State, We found the young men in the class-room drawing some testing engines, sparkers, cranks and a thou- sand and one different things: So far reaching is this school that in the past week it has taken in the Calu- met College of motoring and the La cy school. There Is no need of a young man going through the world now-adays without a trade when they can go to such a school and fit themselves’ for usefuiness the rest of their lives. Ladles, go and visit the School, then send your sons to learn ‘a useful trade, RARE OPPORTUNITY. ‘The Enterprise Institue has secured the very efficient Mrs. Outland to take charge of Its cooking. school. Mrs. Outland was trained by and was eleven years with.the celebrated Madam Rhoer of Philadelphia, ‘Those not desiring @ full course may take special, lessons in any branch of cooking or culinary work. Call at the Institute annex and dairy lunch rooms, 3705 State street, Open daily from $ a. m. to 5 p. m. G. H. McDANIBL, Pres. FURNISHED ROOMS. For Rent. NEATLY FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED SYiront room and-aleove. with modor convenience nt 3562, Vernon Ave. ONE BEAUTIFUL STEAM UBATED ROOM SWrith "modern Improvements, with kitehen privilces shared, 3626 Calumet avenue. NEATEY FURNISHED ROON—steam heat Sith modern fmprovemenia. Call” before a2Vorctoeke nay day. Braintace Bigg, Fiat KS Gor. sien Pi, and Wabash ave. 2229. NEATLY FURNISHED ROOMS—For gen- tloman with modern smprovements, 6202 state Street. H—-25. FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED ROOMS <with all. modern convenience, 382 Vine cenmen avenue, 32-25, A NEATEY FURNISHED ROOM—For man and wife, or two gems Heat and mod= crn" conveniences Tor. Hight housekeeping, $71 “Vineennes avenue, "2228. NEATLY FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED: ROOSIS—With. modern dmprovemente, ‘te gist atrect_ and. Gottaze Grove avenue’ car Hines,"451 Er d2nd street. 2229. ROOM TO RENT—to single gentleman or an and wife moar Cottage Grove Ave: nue and Slat street car tines hot and cold tater year" rund. “Phone, "Dovglan 2123, (os. “Band etreet 2725. NEATGY, FURNISHED ROOMS—For man ‘and wife ar gingle man. wih prtvllery of cooking, cio Vernon avenue, 1d. Took BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED MOOM — at Soee Calumet avenue, convenient for Urs entiemen, FOR RENT—A wlcoly furnished front_par- ior, ‘ani bed room, with monern conven fense, ‘married couple “ar” gents, preterter: Sine" vernan avonus. Phone sti" Dougiae, an. FOR RANT—Niecly Tarnished come, Ron Yocallty, Gents ols. 4025, Wabash ave= nue." Phone 2662 ‘Douglas —22, FOR RENToFIne (Wont and ede rooma in Drivate family. 4818 Vernon avenne29, FOR RENT—Larco front room inctuding Want. heat. 2980 Vernon avenuer29, tern, hear ene tine, reasonable. 1adlen oF genta” B14 Forreat” Avenues—20-19, Nich LARGE NOOM—Furnace hyat, Few Neonabic. "3839" "Vernon avenue 22. — Ere ee Per. eae. Bee PES CER 5, UT aa FOR. RENT—Large frpnt ..room.. reagona-. Gis GENT Hehe paste eine Rnoatttave: nue’ ‘Brone Hk Bougtan ia NBATIZ, WALL, MOHTRD, STEAM HEAT: Eb Funisiied noone eter hae ata we nea Slaton ged uate ie” et To aDCM 0 Wateoh Mente hea! MODERN WPROVED—aree, wal TANT, Sooty earalanca faraicer‘honiea ooss 261 Waa eee TpooN Fiat —Parnace heal fan Hope a Teel, on Eaueley” avelne. sh o8 Ans Tito ftneaen witde, Be FURNISRDD ROQMS—By any or plat (ragaice fol Wotaake avonde, "op hat ae wo TARGE Lowe, FRONT noo; Wentihed Be kafurmines fit 00a ats ane mde: Sat"Eatames etn’ coke seu pa TanGe FRONT NOON—For man and ange ene Mate set Manan acs ate pine Sibi Soe! ‘NEATLY FURNISHED ROOMS—With mod- ru ental pa ecn can wait reise Rin, Se" 8 TARGR FURNIGIIED ROOM—Fieam hens RBG cepg btceeh Sak Wasa wee ma nae NEATLY FURNISHED ROOMS—Modern im- SAN Ghee HOC aL eee eT IRE see Sees Wbuane Sed, MHA Ht, TARGE LrGHT Ate ROOMS with moar Apreremnth AUNT cue ha“ Gee aa FLATS FOR RENT-NORTIC GIDE. . HeLusive _NBioTONNOOD—, 6 an pL NanoNeanAGe ce Fane yey aE Eead Soemele ho nett ass HERE 1 A SMALE FIAT OF -1i00N TaD nando” oratias oe ool Tat teat ate Catiparlone ts ots eorks OtaSehiinatts conten Rist site Barty Cray: Taava" suites" f “oeasine amie Sad costing? aod et, here Se NOUNS ha h°Nerth sate ‘ivee Cr. Gat afttanett, 1168 Noeth i pet $500.00 Reward.’ forthe name of any firm in Chicago selling a better grade of. . COFFEE than we do at 300 per Ib. as Over 900 Satisfied Customers. ce | One Price One Biend | Gur Matto: Not better than the rest but good'as the,best. | CAVE BROS. |. ‘Sample Free 6432 Vincennes Ave. Phone Want 6280 eg ae INSURE YOUR SALARY. against loss of time through Sickness, Accident, Death in the FEDERAL CASUALTY COMPANY, Detroit, Mich, 2,500 Diseases! fovers every known illness and every known accident, H. David Murray, District Manager . 5517 State Street, Chicago Alditie 2532 - Phone, Douglas 8256 THE NEW ELITE - CAFE AND BUFFET : 3030 STATE STREET | Our newly equipped dining room and ‘quick : service is unexcelled by any Cafe in the city, ~ | ‘Theatre parties are solicited. Good music by the highest paid artists. Any neglect by any | of our help will be immediately looked into, Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars , Our Specialty : A. J. CODOZOE, Prop. CASS HAINS, Mgr., DRESSMAKING. FASHIONABLE DRESSMAXING ang CHIL- ‘DREN'S CLOTHES, A SPECIALTY. Mra, ©."Tt. Groker, 2761 Vincennes avenue, AGENTS WANTED. WANTED—A hustling young man or wo- man with $26.00, ‘accustomed to. handling agents, vA ‘good’ proposition. “Weite Jas. Harold Coleman, Columbia Chemical Co, Newaport News, ‘Va. c + FOR SALE, BEAUTIFUL 1% BUSHEL NICKLN PLAT. BD PARLOR STOVE "FOR SALE—Sclt feed at 3813 Prairie avenue, 3rd fat. Lyles & White Storage @ Van Company Fvmcwm| Expressing pad 2" | rate ee Se Oz= =: oe For Sale. Rare Bargains at Bargain Prices. Tee Pico eo Nf, 38h nnd Armour av, 1 aty, betel cot- SRE, Stamping, iets else sso, "Fh ein "ideal its home, * 8 FF, MecanTHY & 00. Real” BrinteCittetisgAmcaraee Reais soe Houses to Rent Filme and Money to Loan re mp acetate M. Winchester,. ere at Your Own Price. A BRAUTEFUL, COTFAGE—On 69 tt. ot, 4 Ponsa buch ana pee Ease tn ete peed soit Enc adden near McRae Ase ha Sith Sy oulatart and State aieet S28 thor non haland $e ne bo mas Site (Oey, Tice "70, Siow 0 to eh sd Astatoeliice tate aint ho. BALER Cb. Oni, GARE Ada SE Dr. W. H. Marshall 3102 State Street mes Prose Residence Phone Bae a Beata RESIDENCE, 3746 RHODES AVENUE, PLAT 1 Niete Cale Pronpuy Aswwered =“ KIpDYpDED i | JAKE TIPPER | Choice Family Grocer Only One East of State St. The Freshest Vegetables Obtainable.. Oysters and Game of all kinds ........ Fresh Eggs and Country Butter. Armour in Our Meat'Harket. 452 E. 35th Street, Chicago. Wholesale and Retail Ostrich Plumes Mrs. Henretta Dean 3552 RHODES AVENUE Phone Aldine 220 tS* Ostrich Feathers Repaired, Altered, Dyed and Curled. “The best work at reasonable prices and shorieet notice, STUDIO OF MUSIC : MRS. MARTHA BROADUS-ANDERSON _ ;) TEAGHER OF VOCAL. AND DiANO aA FALL TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 1ST\ PHONE NORMAL 3316 RESIDENCE, 6450 CHAMPLAIN AVE. CHICAGO, ILLS | BS RESTAURANT (x4 —_—— eee 3 =u RR. ROGHARS ~ 4 Me Draw Ne Line — Our Place and Service Are Seta >. ff Open From 7 A. M. To 1 P.M, ee Ralgnres ond Connsteseurs, 21 8. 33d STRAT} Hi. G, Conley Phone Oakland 1452 John.T. JEN a CONLEY & JENIFER@4 ae . | gees Real Estate, Loans, Renting and Insurahcw 5111 So. State Street | cst Property Carefully Managed rotary Pal i A ee as in itt Our prices, they are feces Confer with us Bille au ae trusted wth oe wil receive si honest and contdcan gh AO ment. TRY US. rg Order a_policy to-day, to-night you may: b~ a We .., BOWMAN'S HAIR POMADE. The Bowman Hair Pomade is undoubtedly one of the best HAIR GROWERS ever manufactured. Anyone who will use it will be able to be the best of them, that there never was a preparation put together that will make the hair grow faster. The hair pomade ladies are now becoming very much interested in this wonderful hair grower. The demand in Chicago has become so great that the company is placing it in the following drug stores for the convenience of the ladies; DRUG STORES THAT ARE HANDLING Kingston Pharmacy, 114th St., Levitton Pharmacy, 108 W. 47th st.; John Ditz, 4446 State st.; A. E. Hiss, 112 State; Whitley Bros., 37th and State; Rankin & White, 36th and State; H. J. Holthefer, 32d and State; W. I. Forsay, 32d and State; H. J. Forsay, 32d and State; E. H. Stack, 29th and State; Standard Pharmacy, 23th and State; Montgomery, 26th and State; C. J. Snyder, 2469 State; W. W. Klore, 2354 State; E. von Hermann, 207 31st; George Por- tidge, 2701 Dearborn st.; S. Loseff, cor. 22d and Dearborn; Henry F. Thora, cor. 20th and Dearborn. THE PUBLIC DRUG CO., Washington and State st.; HUCK and RAYNER State and Madison st.; CONSUMERS' DRUG CO. State and Randolph st.; BUCK & RAYNER Madison and La Salle st. J. A. TRIBUE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 171 Washington St. Room 706 CHICAGO Send me a card Phone, Douglas 2682 Mrs. L. H. Coleman Gowns and Suits Made and Remodeled First-Class Work. Prices Reasonable. 3744 ARRODS AVENUE CHICAGO FORD'S HAIR POMADE THE OLD RELIABLE DRESSING FOR KINNY OR CURM HAIL. USE MAKES STUBBORN, HARSH HAIR SOFTER, MORE PLIABLE AND GLOSSY, EASY TO COME AND UP PUT IN ANY STYLE THE LENGTH WILL PERMIT, WRITE FOR TESTIMONIES, TELLING HOW THIS REMARKABLE REMEDY MAKES SHORT, KINNY HAIR GROW LONG AND WAVY. BEST POMADE ON THE MARKET FOR DANDRUFF, ITCHING OF THE SCALP AND FALLING OUT OF THE HAIR. BREMARE OF IMITATIONS. GET THE GENUINE, UP UP ON A 25 AND 50 BOTTLES WITH CHARLES FORD'S NAME ON EVERY PACKAGE. SOLD BY DRUGGISTS. IF YOUR DRUGGIST CANNOT SUPPLY YOU, WE WILL SEND IT TO YOU DIRECT AT THE FOLLOWING PRICES, SMALL SIZED BOTTLE, 25¢ LARGE SIZED BOTTLE, 50¢ THE OZONIZED OX MARROW CO. 216 LAKE ST. DEPT. 29, CHICAGO, ILL. AGENTS WANTED. J. L. PARKS, UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER *Phone 323x Douglas; 3135 State Street. J. L. Parks, undertaker, makes new offer to public. All funerals on South Side, any depot, complete, with carriages and hearses, $75.00. From any part of West Side to depot, complete, for $70.00. Mr. Parks is able to sell just as cheap as the trusts. All he wants is a trial. IDA M. DEMPCY Stenographer and Typist ,16 Dearborn St. Chicago, Ill. 16 Deerborn St. Chicago, A. News of the Churches WAYMAN CHAPEL, A. M. E. CHURCH. At 912 North Franklin street, Sunday, October 30th, will be celebrated Harvest Home. The church will be decorated with vegetables and articles of value. This will be the first service of this kind ever held in Wayman Chapel. The pastor will preach an appropriate sermon at 11 a.m. The morning choir under the direction of Miss A. Jones is rendering excellent service. The pastor is preaching a series of sermons. Sunday night will be the third continuation of the subject, "The Modern Devil." Subjects to be discussed during November will be on Eschatology. This will include divisions as "Immortality of the Soul," "The Second Coming of Christ," "The Resurrection of the Dead," "The Judgment," "Heaven," and "Future Blessedness." All these subjects are important and the church will receive much strength from them. Preparations are being made for a great Thanksgiving service at the church at 11 a. m. Thanksgiving morning. The Sunday Club, under the direction of Mr. Nolan, is taking on new life. The entire organization of the church will meet every Wednesday night at the close of the prayer meeting. Some necessary improvements are being made at the church. Mr. J. Butler is directing the apperter work. The evening choir undergoing some changes. New voices and new conditions will add much to the evening services. The officers and members of the church adopted some financial plans Monday night. Oct. 24th, that will mean much to the future of the church. An agreement was made also to remodel or sell the property. If the property is sold, this will enable them to put up a new and modern building. FREDERICK DOUGLASS CETER 3032 WABASH AVE. "Manage Your Own Voting." Louis F. Post of The Public will speak Oct. 30th at 4 p. m., on the issues of the coming election, the Initiative, Referendum, etc., All voters should hear him speak. MR J. M. MALLETT, EXPERT AUTO MACHINIST AND DRIVER. In 1896-7 when you heard the name of John Mallett you would not have known that it meant the subject of this sketch, for at that time he was a "pug of good reputation in the prize ring. He was known as Peter Johnson, and to his credit he has put many a one to sleep, but he became tired of this grewesome job and took a trade as machinist, which he finished after three years, working as a journeyman for about four years. He gave up the trade to work for a millionaire doctor at $150 per month, which job he now holds, where he runs for the doctor two of the finest foreign machines made. P. B. On last Monday he went after his two children in school in his auto to bring them home. When his son John Mallett, Jr., tried to alight from the car he fell upon his head and sustained some internal injuries, but was seen by a bystander. The Defender, who was well and was anxious to return, to school. His sister, Cella Mae Mallett, who is 14 years old, is in her second year in high school and says she hopes to finish her college course at 20. Mrs. Elizabeth Mallett, mother of the children is proud of them and says she hopes to see to it that they go as far as they can. She says both of her children must be our races salvation. This alone will be our races salvation. Mr. Mallett spent four weeks in the west during the past summer and had a ring side seat at Renof He is a personal friend of Jack Johnson and asked in July 21,890. He is a buddy of the sport, and he was Defender Cleaning, Pr made to 3420 Dearborn St. There is no question of politics or industry, important as these subjects are, which consumes so much of the thought and time of the men of the south as that relating to the Negro, and while the man of the north is able to relate it farther into the background and to get a better perspective upon it, he, too, is much concerned about it, and holds and voices good on it. He has moreover, often gone so far as to demand his desideries for facts, and he reserves a number of epithets to employ in these discussions and uses them with such zest that hypnotize him into the belief that they are justified. It cannot come amiss to review from time to time the situation in which the American Negro finds himself; compelled to keep in the back yard of civilization, punished even for such poor forms of success as winning a prize fight, he remains, in spite of the worst members of his race to discountenance him, a figure of increasing dignity. It is but forty years since the shackles were stricken from him and he struggled out with misplaced confidence in the good will of the superior race by which he was surrounded, to play his independent part in the great scheme of western civilization. Refused credit for his virtues, laughed at for his imitations, and tried to win wildered, lonely, seeking compensation for contumely in ways which naturally enough often were base and shameful, consigned to the worst parts of all communities, he has come up hatingly, yet surely, to a place where the summing up of his attainments is, in spite of all, a credit to him. Prof. Kelly Miller, of Howard University, says of his people: "Within forty years of only partial opportunity, the American Negro has cut down his illiteracy over 50 per cent; has produced a professional class some 50,000 strong, including ministers, teachers, doctors, authors, architects, engineers, and is found in all lines of listed pursuits in which white men are engaged; 3000 Negroes have taken collegiate degrees, over 300 being from the best institutions in the north and west established for the most favored white youth; there is scarcely a first class institution in America excepting three or four in the south that is not well educated; no studies generally with success and sometimes with distinction; Negro inventors have taken out 400 patents as a contribution to the mechanical genius of America; there are scores of Negroes who, for conceded ability and achievement, take respectable rank in the company of distinguished Americans. Here is the accent of justifiable self-respect, and this note is now to be heard in the utterances of many Negroes. No matter how depressing the circumstances in which they labor and in spite of the handicap which the reckless and headstrong class of Negroes place upon their fellows, still this virtue note of optimism is sounded. It is an indication of the essential wholesomeness and sturdiness of the race. It is, indeed, the voice of courage. To this enduring virtue there is being added a quality much more subtle, that of taste. This is teaching the Negro "not to lose himself and his racial individuality by bleaching into the white." "The Negro." Prof. Miller thinks, "is building up his own society, based on character, culture and the nice amenities of life, and he can find ample social satisfaction within the limits of his own race." Indeed, no one can attend one of the literary or social affairs of the Frederick Douglas center in this city without realizing that. Here there is no wistfulness, no desire for the companionship of the white people. These well educated men and women, leading busy and useful lives, accepting their limited opportunities with a proud patience, are sufficient to themselves. They make their own wit, their own music from their own views, and their own experiences, so do not constitute the frince of white society; they are the nucleus of another society, and one in which true and great enjoyment is to be had. Nor can Chicago afford to be ungrateful to the chief resident of that social settlement, the Rev. Colla Parker Wooley, who organized and who conducts it, providing for the aspiring Colored people a fitting place of meeting where they may indulge and foster their tastes for whatever is socially and intellectually fine and high.—Editorial in the Chicago Tribune, August 14, 1910. The Right Place for Fine Diamonds and Diamond Jewelry Prices Right, Quality Considered C. L. LANDE Rellable Jeweler and Optician 3518 State St. Tel. Douglass 4474 Artistic Engraving Free Eyes Tested Free Old Jewelry Made Like New Watch Repairing My Specialty. THE LITTLE STAR DARBER SHOP AT WOOL ROOL, ROAD John Narrweller, Proplorist Clerks and Tobacco Hair Cut 25c, Shave 18c, Sea Foam 150, Shampoo 25c, Massage 25c. THOMAS & HUDSON Cleaners and Dremn Ladies and Gentle Groomments 2942 State Street Clothes called for and Delivered HILT, GUARANTEED Phone Douglas 4521 THE RISING SUN SAMPLE ROOM Thos. McGregory Choice Willem and Cligars 8014 State Street J. H. WEIGT Fashionable Ladies' and Gents' Tailor, Ladies' Suite Made by a Maker 605 and Up. Cleaning, Drying and Repairing. 3161 State St. Phone Aldine 566. C. S. TWITTY The Shoe Man Repairing a Girl's Kinds Hand Sewed Work n Specialty 38 West 31st Street Chicago PROF. WHITE. Parchile and Scientific Palmist. Have read over 20,000 people.. Don't fall to call and amuse you. Readings 25c and 50c. Chiroplastist Work Also Here. Corns, Burlap, and Ingrowing Nails Treated. 18 West 30th Street, det. Houston & State Streets. Facial Massage Hair Goods Manicurist Made in Order Phone Calumet 4231 MRS. JAMES T. HENRY Electric Scalp Treatment a Specialty Aprons and fancy Goods made to order 15 West 21th Street Chicago CHAS. T. CHAS. T. HENRY TOMBAL Masquerade and Theatrical Costumes and Fine Clothing Maska, Grease Palts and Make-Up Materialis, Wig Armor, Jewelry, Scenery, Spectacles, Theatrical Wardrobe of all kinds bought, sold and rented. 3447 South State Street Phone Calumet 634 MRS. SUSIE NEWTON Hairdressing, Shampooing and Manicuring Manufacturer of Wigs, Pompadours, Switches and All Kinds of Hair Goods. 2621 State Street Phone Aldine 467 DR. GEO, W. PRINCE South Side Drug Store 2950 State Street THE WAWA Restaurant and Lunch Room A Place to Ent. The Only Place That Serves Coffee Out South 2922 State Street W. H. DORSEY Music Arranger, Original Composition Arranged for Publication Also Band and Orchestra Arrangements Music Furnished for All Occasions 3159 State Street Chicago, Ill. MRS. HATTIE JONES Dressmaking Ladies' and Children's Clothes Made to Order at Reasonable Prices 44 West 35th Street Phone Aldine 1774 CRESCENT MARKET H. Weinstein, Prop. Fancy Native Meats and Fine Groceries 88 and 40 West 35th Street Phone Douglas 786 UNION MARKET Fresh and Salt Meats Poultry and Game All in Season 3902 Dearborn Street Candles Notions E. D. BURTS Dealer in Tobacco and Cigars. All Kinds of Magazines, Books and Stationery. All the Leading Negro Papers and Magazines. 2636 State St. Chicago, Ill. Telephone Douglas 1144 L. C. EWING Expressing, Conl, Wood and Ice Baggage Transferred and Checked to All Depots 26 W. 30th St. Chicago, Ill. Phone Douglas 1144 L. MAXWELL Ladies' and Gents' Tailer Cleaning, Dyeing and Repairing 28 W. 30th St. Chicago, Ill. Let A. W. Coles Do Your Electric Repairing, Making a Specialty of Electric Bells, Wiring Your Residence, Furnishing Material and Power for Only $3.50, with Six Per Cent Discount. Please Drop Us a Curd. 24 W. 30th St., Chicago, IL. Eyes Examined and Treated Electric Muscle Treatment for Sore Eyes and Nervous Headache. Spectacles and Eye-Glasses made to order, and Guaranteed to give Perfect Satisfaction. Office 2636% State St., Chicago, Ill. SCOTT & STANTON Pool Room and Billiard Hall Cigars and Tobacco 3868 Dearborn Street W. T. STOBALL Expressing and Moving Coal and Ice 3812 State Street. Phone Doughase 5826 M. GROVELL'S BEAUTY SHOP Holiday shopping and Ministersing Vibration Stuhl Treatment a Specialty 11 West 32nd St., near State. HERMAN G. THEILE Groceries and Meats Fresh Vegetables, Exposures and Butter 2457 State Street Phone Calum 2622. SPOTT'S LADIES' TAILORING COLLEGE 3867 State Street. 3037 State Street, where sewing in any or all of its branches is scientifically and thoroughly taught. Ten sewing days, $5, in which time you sew clothes for a family. See sewing as the time will permit; $5 sewing days $15; full course $25. THE MOTTLEY BEAUTY PARLOR Hair Dressing, Shampooing, Manicuring and and Massage. Vibratory Spa Treatment a Specialty. The Mottley Hair Grower and Cold Cream for Sale. Manufacturer of all kinds of Hair Products. 25 West 35th Street Between State and Dearborn. Phone Oakland 2221 FANCY GROCERIES 4534 State Street Your Old Hat Which You Are Ready to Throw Away Bring It Around and We New York THE PEKIN HAT CLEANER, 2706 State Street. Next Door to Theatre. Corns and Callouses positively removed by usHP GOODWIN'S BURN SALVE FOR BUNIONS It has no equal. Prices 180 and 250, at your druggist or direct from us. For free advice on any issue, write us. GOODWIN FOOT REMEDY CO. 55 East 13th Street. John H. Wallace, Manager. Telephone Douglas 5899 COAL DORCH BROS. Expressing and Moving Van Furniture and Moving Baggage Packing and Shipping a Specialty. Three Trips daily to and from all Depots, Boat Harbor and Warehouses 2144 State Street Phone, Yards 1210 CHAS. W. BURNS Dealer in, Fresh, Salt and Smoked Meats Fish, Oysters and Seafood in Season Chance Creamery Butter 189 38th Street, car. La Salle. E. MURRAY Expressing, Van and Storage Co. Furniture and Plano Moving Baggage Packing and Shipping a Specialty. Three Trips Daily To And From all Depots, Freight and Warehouses 3135 STAFF STREET Douglas 4031 Painte, Oils and Varnishes E. A. BUCHANAN Hardware Plumbers and Steps & Attica' Supplies Gas and Glass, Steel, Glass Furniture, Carpets, Stoves, Wooden ware, Enamelledware, Tinware, Glass ware, Chinaware, Crockery FURNITURE STORE 199 DONT FORGET IAACONS Grocery and Meat Market Fresh and Sweet Meat in the Season. 2724 Dearborn St. ... Phane Calumet 1756. Phone Calumet 489 J. H. COLEMAN & CO. Vans for Moving. Three trips Daily to All Depots and Freight Houses. 2540 State Street. LA BASTIDE'S PRESCRIPTION DEUG STORE, Dearborn St., Cor 21th. Buy your Drugstore stock, etc., and have your prescriptions properly filled at prices to do competition State Calumet 2219. Phone Douglas 5318 J. L. ROCKER CO. MEN AND WOMEN'S TAILORS 3238 State Street Cleanse Formal and sparkling Work Called For and Delivered. MRS. H. M. HICKS-ALBKIN HIR DRESSING IN LINCOLN, 3237 State Street Phone Douglas 5318 T. Dalley ... M. H. Fleasant The Douglas Drums and Cleansers LADIES' and GENTS' TAILORS Suita Tailors. Guaranteed. A call on the phone is sufficient. Work called for and delivered. Phone Douglas 4360 363 Drummond Street PAYNE'S HAND LAUNDRY 2109 Wabash Avenue. Keeps your linen in repair. Wages call everywhere. Phone Douglas 4827. J. A. WHITE Dealer in Canada Wood All orders promptly attended to Furniture Moving, Storage, Expressing and General Teaming 47-49 Twenty-ninth Street Chicago H. BRENKE, Grocery and Meat Market, 3108 Forest Ave. We give Fish's Stamps and Green Trading Stamps. S. MEHL, Grocery and Market N. W. Cor. Armour Avenue and 32nd Street Fresh Vegetables in Season Phone, Yards 2270 P. C. NIENBEN-ESKELUND Dealer in Coal, Wood, Gasoline and Oil 3142 La Salle Street Chicago WERVEEK BROTHER'S Ruby's Groceries and Meats Telephone Douglas 8273 83 West Stint Street GEO. CHAFIN, Manager, WHIFE'S Lunch and Restaurant Newly Opened Mobile Service Tables for Ladies Everything First Class 3032 State Street (Near Stint Street). MRS. MABEL MARTIN MRS. DURANT Phone Calumet 2024 Home Cooking Regular Dinner Starts At 12 M. Meals At 12 M. Or Day 2803 State Street Mrs. T. J. Johnson, Prop. 131 West 51st Street (near La Salle) Cars, Furniture, Designs Weddings and Funerals, speciality. Special reduction to lodges, churches and parties, Designs, $1 and up. You will money by giving us a trial. All orders carefully and promptly attended to. Phone, Drover $96 WOLF Groceries and Bakery Goods S583 La Salle Street Be Sure and Drop in THE SHOOTTING GALLERY 4 200th St. Also Make Your Photo a Post Card 3 for 25c All Work Guaranteed to be the Best THE QUEEN CITY RESTAURANT HOME COOKING One of the Greatest Chop Houses of the West Try Our New England Dinners Boast Make Meals and Fish Balls 4123 Desert Road Knot A. L. BROWN, Prop. Office Phone 1372 Oakland Residence Phone 3105 Normal Dr. R. A. MAJOES Shipman and Shipman CHRONIC DREASES Office Hours: 10 to 12 A. M., 30 to 5 10 to 8:39 P. M. In Office Sunny 10 to 4 P. M. Call Promptly Made Day or Night 10 West Forty-seventh St. Chicago. UNIQUE HAND LAUNDRY, 7201 Wentworth Ave. Cleaners Fine Lace Work. Curtains Cleaned 326 per Day. Dress Up clothes, 35 per doz. Shirts 8 and 10c. Collars 2... J. McDONOUGH, Prop. Phone Dungles 3375 St. Elmere HATCH & HATCH Jessie Express and Van. Storage Office 3358 State Street Warehouse 3517 State Street "The Perfecto" GEORGE SGAEFER Protector 3201 State Street. Telephone Aldine 138 Phone Aldine 1146 FRANK'S Kentucky Linen Store Wines, Liquors and Cigars. S. E. Cor, 35th St. and Armour Ave. Meals 15 & 25 Sandwiches for All Kinds W. L. COHLAN Lunch Room and Home Bakery 107 W. 32nd Street. WILLIAM WRIGHT. The Tailor Cleaning, Dyeing, Pressing and Repairing Garments to Give to Ladies Worth Special Attention to Ladies Worth. Work Called for and Delivered 3158 Dearborn Street E. M. GRIMM Home Bakery Light Grocery Store and Spices 3467 State Street A DOLLAR HERE Will go twice as far as two elsewhere. We carry the finest line of beds, springs, mat- ter, and furnishings. We do renovating. Hotel work a special. Satisfaction guaranteed. Give us a chance; one trial will come to you. FACTORY 1298 SOUTH STATE ST. Tel. Douglas 4230. Telephone Douglas 5118 Schiller Emerson, Entertainer IOWU CLUB HUOU HOSPITAL, Proprietors Fine Wines, Liquors and Cigars 3161 State Street Ren. Phone Calumet 5242 Office Phone Calumet 1491 Get wise to your own interests and pat- nion men who can deliver according to appropriate. Moving Done With Care Claims on Wine Baggage. Dealer in Coal, Wood and Ice. Quality and Quantity Guaranteed. Quincy, MA. 2639 State St, Opp. Pelda Theatre. MRS. A. STEPHENS Restaurant and Lunch Room. 2918 State Street, Chicago. Phone Aldine K. Pelda Theatre. Phone Douglas 2199 Dr. HARLEL P. COOPER, Physician & Surgeon Office Hours 10 to 12 a.m.; 2 to 4 and 6 to 9:30 a.m.; 10 to 12 a.m. 3102 State St, Chicago. J. H. Lawson, Mgr. Mrs. M. Barnett, Asst. Mgr. Hello, Stop! LANDMARK! One Trial is All We Ask. 9-B West 36th Street Political Headquarters. Phone. Doug. 379. Something Doing All the Time. THE RENO BUFFET AND CAFE. Newbury, Wines, Liquors and Cigars. Newbury Furnished Cafe and Dance Hall Best Service. Open Orchards in the City. Open Afternoon and Evenings. Jodie Ewing & Robert Johnson, Dispensers. JACKSON TRANSFER CO. Expt. ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE FREE To All Outside of the City Send for Catalogue at Once We Furnish You Money To Protect YOUR PROPERTY OR BUSINESS Mortgage Banking and General Brokerage ALL BUSINESS STRICTLY CONFIDENTIAL Northern Assets Realization Company Office,3517 State Street Phone Aldine 2532 "THE QUEEN SOLACE" Formerly SOLTEROS CLUB POOL AND BILLIARD PARLOR CIGARS AND TOBACCOS : LAUNDRY OFFICE Cigars Wholesale and Retail Box Trade a Specialty 3205 STATE STREET --- CHICAGO PHONE ALDINE 568 TERREVOUS L. DOUGLAS, Proprietor WHY BE DARK AND SWARTHY? will purify and bleach the skin as it penetrates the pores, being antiseptic cleanses them neutrally all poisonous and decease bearing accumulations. It positively makes the skin-texture soft and velvety. Preventing eruptions conditions and producing a clean and wholesome complexion. We are constantly receiving letters from all parts of the country commending our wonderful product. We will cheerfully refund your money if it does not do the work. Price $1.00 Per Box Sold at Rankin and White's Drug Store, 36th and State Sts. FACE BLEACH COMPANY 336 Main Street Racine, Wis. Phone us, we deliver to all parts of the City 19 W. 81st Street One Door East of Dearborn E LEAPED SELFIES, Proprietor ENWARD NORMAN, Chef, of Frankfort, Ky., formerly of Atlantic City SOUTHERN HASH, SPAGHETTI AND CLUB HOUSE SANDWICHES OUR SPECIALTY ALL UP-TO-DATE DISHES AND SOFT DRINKS SERVED "Self Advertised and Unaccolled" 126 PLYMOUTH PLACE, CHICAGO Everything New Thoughts On The Improved Third Rail Shares, $10.00 Each. Five in a Block. Non-Accessible. We believe it will pay a dividend indefe of two years. This is a chance of your life, don't fall to invest in this company. Stock will be so high in a few years that you cannot reach them. Get your money on before the public begin to Dr. D. R. Bolloré. Captain and exhibit every Thursday Night and Sunday Afternoon. Come and see for yourself. You Will Find the Office at No. 2944 State Street, Chicago Come in and See Our Book-Keeper. 9 O'CLOCK SCHOOL SHOES High Grade Repairing 16 E. 35th Street, Near "L" Station THE CRANFORD APARTMENT BUILDING THE MUSEUM OF THE ARTS AND CULTURE N. B. Meeting this newspaper 3600 WABASH AVENUE