Chicago Defender
Saturday, September 6, 1919
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
Royal Circle of Friends Hold Quadrennial Session
FLAY HOYNE AS RIOT PROSECUTOR
Citizens Ask Removal of the State's Attorney in Punishing Race Rioters
Ten thousand citizens met Monday night at the Eighth Regiment armory and voiced their sentiments in severe condemnation of the vicious methods used by Machay Hoyne in his alleged investigation of those who participated in the recent race riot. The meeting was presided over by Dr. Daniel Payne Jones and was addressed by a number of prominent professional and business men. It was urged by the speakers that a position be drawn up, signed by the citizens of this county, and presented to Attorney General Edward Brundage, urging that he take over the present investigation, so far as it affects the race riots.
Contempt Expressed
Contempt was expressed for the biased and prejudicial manner in which the present investigation is being conducted by Hoyne. It was said by various speakers that the conduct of the chief law officer of the county, especially in the conduct of these cases, was reprohensible, to say the least. The speakers branded Hoyne as "prejudging" and "unfair" by reason of that fact was unqualified to give justice to the offenders of our group who were indicted. They pointed a suspicious finger to the fact that through the juggery of the state's attorney's office 52 Colored men have been indicted and only 17 whites. The speakers described it as being a strange aspect of justice that Hoyne was not aware of and would search the homes and personal effects of a large number of our people, but did not find it necessary to invade the homes of white rofters.
Ask for Brundage
The general tons of the meeting clearly indicated that the vast number of cases in his investigation were made by Hayne, assisted with his "grandstand" newspaper interviews, as the ravages of violence as having neither confidence nor respect for a public official who would attempt to start his political campaign by besmirching the character of innocent people. The speakers declared their confidence in the fact that if Attorney General Brundage would take over the investigation of the rioters that a fair and impartial investigation would be made and that all of the evidence would be given to the criminal jury regardless of whom it affected
Praise Others
The entire audience went on record as highly approving the activities of the present grand jury and commended them for refusing to offer any apology for their action to the scar of the state's attorney's office. Coroner Peter Hoffman and Sherif Charles W. Petere were also given note of confidence for the open minded manner in which they were making their investigations of the causes which led up to the recent outbreak. Among those who took part were Dr. A. J. Caroy, Dr. L. K. Williams, pastor of Olivet Baptist church; Dr. Glouster, South Park M. E. church; Attorney Edward H. Wright, Attorney James G. Cotter and others.
FAKER IS NABBED
WHEN VICTIMS HOWL
Police End Career of Fleecer
Who Operated in
Ohio City
Cleveland, Ohio, Sopt. 5—With a line of talk that would startle an audience of hearers bent on scientific research, a card representing a connection with a reputable business enterprise in Washington, and a roll of greenbacks large enough to be used in "H. H. Dumas, 'assistant chief chemist of the International Chemical Co. of Chicago, Ill," presented himself to Cleveland citizens. He stopped upon arriving here at the Geraldine, on East Fortifth street, but later was kindly advised by Chief of Police Frank Smith that a more suitable room had been provided for him at the county jail, where the assistant were tecipated, simply for the purpose of ascertaining the real work and purpose of the International Chemical Co., which he purported to
Editor Halta Fraud
Harry Smith, editor of the Cleveland Gazette, saw some of the evil effects of the "chief chemists" work in the "Gib laboratory," and forthwith telegraphed the international Chemie Co. to send information. He received a wire that Dumas was not known to them and had no authority to use his name in connection with that of the concern. Smith handed this telegram to the police authorities and the chemie Co. was haled into court and fined $25 and costs, and instructed by the judge to enter the chemical laboratories in the county workhouse. The only two instruments used in said laboratory are picks and a needle, and he is required to do some "research work" with one. He promises to report his finding in thirty days.
Victima Tell Story
Lieut. Rowe of East Twenty-ninth street tells an interesting story of Dumas's representations. The story of a fortune gained within a few months.
Races Clash
at Knoxville
Civil and Military Guards
Patrol the City; Many
Are Injured
Knoxville, Tenn., Sept. 5.—Following the storming of the Knox county jail last Saturday night by a mob of white men bent on reaching Maurice Hayes, arrested early in the day in connection with the murder of Mrs. Bertie Lindsey, a white woman, who was slain in portions of the city on portions started shortly after midnight Sunday. Hardware stores were broken into by members of both races and firearms secured when the general alarm of a riot swept the city. Soldiers of the Fourth Tennessee National Portions stationed themselves in the vicinity of Vine and Central avenues, a district thickly populated by our people. When the soldiers approached a volley of shots greeted them. A machine gun was stationed in the middle of the Park and Private Henderson, both of the machine gun company, were killed by the rioters.
Fire on Policeman
Knots of men occupied street corners and planned to repulse the attacks of the whites, who had sent warning that they intended to invade the Vine street district and riddle it with bullets. Policeman James Benson, Deputy Sheriff James Cannon, and Red Shannon, both officers, fell into the bullets from rioters' runs. It is known that a number of men of both races were killed and wounded severely, but the rioting continued with such heat it was impossible to get names or make an accurate estimate. An unofficial report made shows that more white than Colored men were killed. Two white men and eight Colored are reported to be in the city hospitals suffering from wounds sustained in the riots.
Injured and Dead Unknown
Impulse and Dead Unknown
The two and seven Colored men have been placed in armored charges with rioting. Although things are quiet here, hundreds of our people are leaving the city in a steady exodus. It is said that upward of 1,500 have already left as the result of the mob lighting, some going to Indiana, Wisconsin, and others accused of attacking Mrs. Lindsey, was removed to Chattanooga for safe keeping. He issued a signed statement emphatically denying any connection with the riot and attempted to prove that stalking where he was during the time and number of people with whom he conversed.
Mayes formerly resided in Chicago at 3018 LaSalle street. He was employed as waiter at the saloon of Dago and Russell, which once did business with State streets. He is also said to have ing and pressing establishment in that city.
Gen, Sherman's Blacksmith
Still Works at Forge
Little Rock, Ark. Sept. 5—Probably the oldest active blacksmith in the city, he worked for Thomas Moran, who was born in 1511, and is heale, hearty and well preserved. He lives at Brushy Island, about 10 miles from here. He works daily at the forge, he forges for 29 years at his work, and he works. With it he shod "Old Rienzi," the favorite horse of General Sherman, and fitted the strong steel plates to the feet of "Ben Bolt," the celebrated Virgilian horse. He carews the spectacles he drew away during the administration of General Grant, and from that good day to this has gotten along very nicely without them.
First Riot Case on
Trial Before Judge Crowe
The first case of the riot is on trial before Chief Justice Robert E. Crowe, Criminal court building, North Side. The case is that of Spencer Jones, 4828 Federal street, charged with assault with attempt to commit murder upon Policeman John Sweney, 10th precinct (white) and F. L. Barnett are representing Jones, and the state's end is handled by Assistant State's Attorney S. A. Bristow and Dwight McKay.
Flying Stones Crush
Skull of Quarry Worker
Baltimore, Md., Sept. 5.—His skull crushed by flying stone, following a blasting at Bolton Bros' quarry at Franklin road and Rognel Heights, Charles Rosa, whose address is given in the interior street铺, rushed of the Franklin square hospital in a private ambulance. Physicians of the hospital pronounced him dead shortly after his arrival. Ross was the second man to be killed at this quarry within a week's period.
without severe application to work was painted in such an attractive manner that the illusion, together with C. Walker, a letter carrier, and M. A. Demmy were ready to plunge into the project without person investigation, start, and when his "students" learned the business he would reverse the figures, making it $73 a week.
HERE TO VISIT PRESIDENT WILSON
His excellency C. D. B. King, President-elect of Liberia, arriving in New York harbor on the steamship Carmania on his first visit to the United States. After a short stay in New York he will go to Washington to pay his respects to President Wilson. While in this country Mr. King will address the world Christian Citizenship conference in Pittsburgh in November. President Wilson and Queen Marie of Roumania also will be speakers. (Insert) Mrs. King, who accompanied her husband on his voyage to this country. Other national characters who were a part of the Liberian executive's party were Prince Rognald de Croy of Belgium and Lord Richard Wellesley, great-great-grandson of the Iron Duke.
Verdict Against Pastor Annulled
Suit for $1,000 Against Prelate Held Improper by Rochester Judge
Rochester, N. Y., Sept. 5.—Supreme Court Justice Rodenbeck last Thursday morning handed down a decision vacating the judgment secured by Rev. James E. Mason against the Rev. Edward D. W. Jones, pastor of the Zion A. M. E. Church on Favor street.
Papers Improperly Served
Papers Impairment Served
On Aug. 6 judgment was secured before a sheriff's jury against Rev. Jones for $1,600, he failing to appear. Later Rev. Jones, by his body execution, but was admitted to body members of his congregation going on his bond. Through McNerney & Bechtold, as attorneys, a motion was made before Judge Rodenbeck to vacate the Jones case. Rev. Jones had never been served in the case. The motion to set aside the verdict was argued on Monday and decision rendered last Thursday morning which not only sets aside the Judge's $1,600 costs upon Rev. Mason, Attorney C. D. Kleihler appeared for Rev. Mason.
Letter in Suit
One of the letters brought into the case by Rev. Mason, in which he claims his character was attacked, is as follows: "Jimmie: Come back, you and your husband assassins, and give some insult to me." For the first time I knocked your plans sky high last night. The people gave me $30 to put the whole business in fail. They voted unanimously for my return. Come back, my Rev. Mason was at one minute a pastor of Zion, and his charge to serve as a member of the Livingston College faculty.
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TO VISIT PRESIDENT W
(Courtesy New York Illustrated Daily News)
President-elect of Liberia, arriving in New York
States. After a short stay in New York he
in this country Mr. King will address the wor-
ent Wilson and Queen Marie of Roumania also
on his voyage to this country. Other nati-
Prince Rognald de Croy of Belgium and Lo
DEMAND FOR PRAYER
LEADS TO MURDER
Man Is Slain by Wife as He
Makes Her Kneel in
Prayer
Meridian, Miss, Sept. 5—Demanding his wife to kneel and ask her prayers before he took her life, Richard Walker fell victim to his own plot when he entered the window. While Mrs. Fennec Walker was praying in obedience to her husband's wishes, who stood over her with a shotgun patiently awaiting the finish, she gained possession of a revolver which she had placed on the chair her her and his six bullets in body. Walker fell to the floor and died within a few minutes.
Quarrel Started Trouble
The couple had been quarrelling all during the day last Thursday, and Mrs. Walker declared that by nightfall she would leave the place. Breeding over her threat, Walker decided to end the matter by the use of his shotgun. He drove the woman into the house and ordered her to say her prayers before he administered the shot. The trager took Jackson's few miles from this place. Mrs. Walker was exonerated by the coroner's jury.
Marked Money Used
Jacksonville, Fla., 'Sept. 5.—Marked money placed in an envelope proved the downfall of George Hall, formerly employed as a janitor at postoffice station. He helped on a charge of robbing the bank. So, containing money have been missing of late and suspicion was directed to Hall. The marked money was placed where he could have an opportunity to obtain the money. Hall had the money in his possession.
Drug Addicts Flee From Physician's Room as Police Approach
Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 5.—A dope den inhabited by drug addicts of both races was uncovered when a squad of policemen headed by Sergt. J. S. Julian (white) raised the office of Dr. R. B. Jackson, 1899 Harrison street, here recently. Four women and two men were taken into custody by the police, while ten others escaped through a rear door. According to the officers, Dr. Jackson is said to have sounded an alarm, which was the signal for the addicts to run from the office. All the persons arrested are known by the police to be users of morphine and cocaine.
Jackson Is Fined
When questioned by Judge Fleming in the Municipal Court, Dr. Jackson declared that the drug addicts captured in his office were patients who were taking his "reduction cure" for morphine and cocaine habits. He also declared that the officers had failed to find that he was violating the law in investigations recently made. "I know you are violating the law, and I am going to fine you the limit every time you are brought into this court," Judge Fleming said. "I am going to find that several prominent Kansas City physicians rush to your attention when you are arraigned in this court on a charge of dope peddling, and just for that reason I am going to fine you $500 and costs," the judge continued.
Reduction Cure Flayed
Dr. Jackson's defense was encouraged in the statement that Dr. E. H. Bullock (white) was the office last week and told him to
You Lose Money Every Issue Your Ad. Stays Out of the Defender
OSECU
URCI
Whites Apply T
Halls and Temp
Celebrate W
CUTOR CHES apply Torches to Lodge Temples of Worship; ate With Lynching
Whites Apply Torches to Lodge
Halls and Temples of Worship;
Celebrate With Lynching
ROYAL CIRCLE OF
FRIENDS MEET
Second Supreme Quadrennial
Session Held at Olivet
Baptist Church
Charred Body of Eli Cooper
Is Found Buried in
Ashes
(By Continental Press.)
Eastman, Ga., Sept. 5.—The charred
body of Eli Cooper, an aged farmer,
who resided two miles from Caldwell,
was found in the ashes at Petway's
Gift church, which was burned by a
crowd of whites.
The Supreme Royal Circle quadriennial convention convened Tuesday at 9:30 a.m. at Olivet Baptist church, 31st and South Park avenue. The convention was called to order by Dr. R. A. Williams, supreme founder and supreme emperor. The roll was called by Prof. W. D. Dainville, the supreme secretary. The supreme officers were all present and answered to their names, with the exception of Prof. Hardy, whose station was filled by Mrs. G. I. Ames, Hot Springs, Ark. The eleventh session was conducted by Dr. O. L. Moody, supreme chairman of the circle. Dr. J. H. Clayborn, presiding officer of the Fordyce district, A. M. E. church, Arkansas, was elected chairman of the publicity department. Confer Degrees. Dr. R. A. Williams, supreme president, conferred the higher degrees on several hundred members during the Tuesday session. Eugene Bridge was given the order to the delivery of welcome addresses by various prominent local citizens and responses thereto were delivered by members of the order. Long before the program began the large auditorium, and gallery, was filled with most capacity. Hundreds were turned away. Music was furnished by the Memphis brass band, who acquitted themselves with credit. Mayor William Hale Thompson was to welcome Royal Circle, but was unavoidably detained by the mayor requested Alderman Louis B. Anderson to welcome the members of the Royal Circle to the city of Chicago on behalf of his "honor." Alderman Anderson as usual acquitted himself in a most creditable manner.
The Supreme Royal Circle operates in nearly every state in the Union and has a bona fide membership of over 100,000. This organization has demonstrated its usefulness in a concrete way by the development of an insur-
WIFE VISIT HANSUMS
Indianapolis, Ind. Sept. 5- Dr. Wilby Wilson, accompanied by his wife, the only daughter and heir of the late Mme. C. J. Walker, stopped over the Indianapolis, Ind. city, where guests at the house of B. J. Walker general manager of the Mme. C. J. Walker Manufacturing Co., which is the largest business operated by our people in the world, giving employment to thousands of men and women in the United States, Canada, South America and West Africa. We have just returned from an extended trip through the West, where they have been quietly but royally entertained by their many friends.
Known as Lela Walker
Mrs. Wilson, better known to the business world as Mrs. Lella Walker Robinson, founder of the Lella college in New York, has now taken active role in the Mme. C. J. Walker Manufacturing Co., having agent to co-operate to the fullest extent with the company in giving the public the very highest degree of satisfaction and the very best quality of service. Mrs. Lella Walker Robinson is a very skilled business woman, having mother, the late Mme. C. J. Walker for the last 14 years, during the complete and rapid development of the Mme. C. J. Walker Manufacturing Co.
Prosecute Soap Stealer
Savannah, Ga., Sept. 5.—I haven't the heart to be a party to sending a man to the chain gang for stealing one little cake of soap with which to wash his face and hands," said Sollicitor General Walter Hartridge (white) in the city court last week when he had convicted Samuel Robinson of taking one small cake of soap from a shipment.
"If your honor will permit," he added, "I move the case be placed on the 'dead docket.'" The judge consented
proceed with his "reduction cure" until instructions were given him by the health board. He had to say, however, why he had sampled at once each time the police approached his office, and why his patients always led Dr. Bullock in a statement to a DENVER police officer that he had instructed Dr. Jackson to administer his "cure" to drug addicts. The patients were fined $200 and sent to the municipal farm to take the drug cure.
SATURDAY
Membership Large
(Continued on page three)
DR, WILEY WILSON AND
Known as Lelia Walker
Didn't Have Heart to
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Charred Body of Eli Cooper Is Found Buried in Ashes
(By Continental Press.)
Eastman, Ga., Sept. 5.—The charred body of Ell Cooper, an aged farmer, who resided two miles from Caldwell, was found in the ashes at Petway's Gift church, which was burned by a crowd of white men at an early hour on the morning of Aug. 23. Three other churches and several lodge halls were burned by the same band of outlaws during the war. The men who visited the community near Caldwell and dragged Cooper from his home are known to officials here. No arrest has been made. The reason for this negligence on the part of the officers has not been explained.
Wife Scaa Murderers
Cooper is alleged to have said that the "Negro has been run over for fifty years, but it must stop now, and that pistols and shotguns were the only weapons to stop a mob." When the whites learned of this they formed a pose and made for Cooper's home. A crowd of twenty men battered the door of Cooper's home and poured upon him the knives and axes. He was killed in his mite, locked up. The body was killed. Terry and dearest near the church. Terry and dearest applied to the house of worship, when the names were liking high into the air Cooper's nude form was thrown into the blaze.
Body Fed to Flames
The Petway Gift church has discovered in flames about 1000 in morning. When neighboring farmers endeavored to extinguish the flames a crowd of about fifty white men held them at bay with revolvers. Cooper's body could be seen leaning against a tree, and the man were taking shots it. It is estimated that over 500 shot pierced the dead man's body. A foot from the dead man's form was found a few yards away in church. Cooper, it is said, worked on the stationation of A. P. Petway, and sought to organize the farm laborers into a union for the purpose of demanding better wages. He has been unpopular with the whites ever since this became known, and some warned him that he discontinued his efforts to organize the farm laborers he would be found dead on the streets "some bright morning" as the communication to him stated.
Aged Man Lynched
It is near the scene of the burning that Berry Washington, aged 85, was lynched by a mob in May. Washington, bowed by the weight of his age, in defense of his daughter's honor, who was wounded by a white man. The girl's insanity ensured Washington's home, drove the old man into the kitchen of the dwelling at the point of a revolver, and ordered the daughter, a maiden of 16, to accept affections in the parlor of the home. He secured a revolver, crept around the other room to house the front window and fired on the door. The man fell mortally wounded. Washington summoned the sheriff and surrendered. It was shortly after the shooting that he was taken from the fall, carried to a lonely spot and strung on a rope. The lynching was kept a secret for three years, a name to light when a minister wrote a letter to organizations in New York and Chicago telling of the brutal crime.
Other Churches Burned
A reward of $1,000 has been offered by Governor Dorsey for the apprehension of the parties guilty of burning buildings near Cordelle, Ga. The buildings were burned on different nights, and followed in the path of the lynching of James Grant, a returned soldier. The buildings were worth approximately $800,000 each, but less. After the churches were fired hundreds of citizens left the vicinity and plantations were literally deserted. At a mass meeting held by white peo- nies courthouse law appeals were sent out to the public to main on the theory that the guilty parties would be punished. Little, if any, attention was paid to the appeal.
MEN BATTLE TO
Pocatello, Idaho, Sept. 5. With six bullets in his body and literally bathed in his own blood, George Davis, alias Kid Davis, beat his assailant, Alfred Douglas, almost beyond recognition with the butt end of his revolver. The man had some trouble a few days ago and then was shot by another second but fired at each other simultaneously Davis died later in the city hospital Douglas will recover. The dead man is said to be survived by a brother who lives in Chicago.
Anniston Refuses to
Amplison, Ala., Sept. 5—Hobson City, N.J., is accused of a town cannot secure an agreement to Amplison. A police officer was appointed to investigate the advisability of taking in the town has reported against such a move. The town and the Hobson City would prove a heavy cost, fire police protection, water and fire.
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i He a end >
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Fonte Stay @. 1000, by
, ROBERT 8, ABBOTT, LL.B.
VOU, XIV. No. fh Neptewber 6, 1010,
—e ee
Published by
THE ROBERT 8, ABBOTT PUBLISH: &
COMPANY tIneiranrated)
Futered a, second-ciny walter February 1
1906. at ne Dustortice to Cbleago, Ill, wader act
we Sinrews 8, 4849,
CUCACO—atE State | Fel, Donaine
‘Rad OF NUNECUPTION (Payable te Ag
* yaneol One won. $2.00; va ment, 8:25; for
ee eg
Houston, Tex., Sept, 5—-Whilo the
altuction in Texts is well in hund, cud
Ro verlous trouble x looked for,” still
leading ‘Texans are Joining to improve
rolations everywhere. To tix end i
Reneral domutid hes been made on Col,
Roweoe Simmons for another tour of
the state. In this destre leaders among
‘white people have folned.
‘The white people of Texas aro anx-
fous to Imow from the Raco what com-
Mun ground can by rewehed, so that all
cunt stapd on it. Col, Sinmens cluinns
all uf“exus 23 his’ followers, white
and Raco people alike, and his own
Turce feels that he ix the ono man In
Public fe who can stato the case in
Tanguage that will tinpress the white
people, without elther grfoving his own
or offcnding his white hearers. When-
ever ho hay spoken in ‘Texas it hus
heen hard to provide listening’ space
for both races. ,
Will Visit in November *
Almost overy ity in Texas tas In-
vited him to speak, and he will de his
best to gratify all in November, on lis
return from California, Among those
interested in his visit are President
Dogan of Marshiull, James B. Grigsby
and C.F. Rlehardson, Willam MeDon-
ald of Fort Worth,’ and George M.
Guest of Paris.
When ho visited Houston last, year
more than 10.000 people heard hhn in
tho Houston Auditorium.
gests
Daytona, Flt, Sept. 5—3it. Zion A.
XM. E. church {s’prepuring to give thelr
Pastor, Rev. C. C, Shmmons, a vaca-
tlon. * We are proud to have our pre-
siding elder, Rev. S.A. Hurris, pur-
ghase a unice hume on ‘the corner of
Cedar and Center streets. * Those who
ave built recently arg Mr. and a1
fenty Turner and Mr, anit Mra. Pride.
Mr. and Mry, C. J. Jones have pur-
shaved a jot on South and White Hall
streets, * Mrs. W. H. ‘Thomas and
Uttlo daughter, Carressinia, accomp-
nied by thelr aunt, Mrs. Annie E. Les-
ter, have been visiting relatives on the
west coast for the past four weeks,
having bean the suesty o¢ Mr. and Mrs.
‘Walter Thomay and family at Eaton-
vile, Fa, After the expiration of four
Weeks Mrs. ‘Thomas ame back to
spend a few days with her mother and
father-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. S. W.
‘Thomas, and ‘other relatives. She
leaves Saturday morning for her home
in Apalachicola, Fa, to spend some
time with her mother, and relatives. °
Mrs, Lula Mosley of Eatonville has
Been in the city a few days visiting
‘Mrs, Mabel Roberts. She will return
home Saturday morning.
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(INDIANA
Gary, Ind.. Sept. 5.—Misy Mountain
of Calimbus, “Ohlo, “has come ty do
Red Crows work among ‘uur yeople
‘here, and 1s instituting a very valuable
service. * Mr. and. Mrs. James E. Prye
of Kvanston, Ti, und C. B, Donéhy’ of
Danvitie, Ky. Ol schoolmates and
[trends of Mrs. Duncan, were. guests
of Mr, and Mrs. Samuel Jay Duncan
last weels. “they were highly impressed
with Gary und. expect to visit in. the
Magie City again In-the near future. *
Mr and Mrs. Davis of the Evansviilo,
Ind. schools have come to work in the
Gary schools this year. * Mra, Annie
Jenkiny of Tero” Haute, Ind. tas
daughter, Mrs. Jt, A. Simpson. + Clem-
ent D. Russell of 27th and. Massachu-
Sets streets, who Was seriously hurt
about the hend and suffered n -broken
collar hone returning” trom his” work
aut the Un mil while riding his wheel,
is vor mysh iniproved. * Mrs, Bru-
puettn itussell has gone to Kentuek¥ on
busiuess. * “Miss Grace Nichols and
| Wiliam Owsley will enter school. at
Whberfotte, Ohio, this full. * Miss
[Rubs Mactin will attend Hampton In-
suite, * Oliver Murtin Jr. will-return
to ‘Tuskegee, as will Alphonsa Histon.
i* Samuel Street will enter ‘Tuskegee
Instlute ‘this fall, and left ‘Thursday,
Sept, 4. # Mins Stinmns returns to Roser
Williams. * Prof. W. L, Jackson will be
.in Gary soon to play his long-exnected
engagement, Prof. Jackson is one of
‘the greatest virtuosos of the Race,
‘Mrvand Mrs, 14. Robinson of kansas
City, Mo, avo come to vielt Mr, and
Mrs’ aVebb. Mra, Robinson, Ike her
nephew, i a printer, and in addition 1s
u professional proofreader, * Schools
opened this week with a big uttend-
ance, * Dr. Ve M. Marshall, dentist
Who has been visiting InAthintle City
fina Philadelphia, has returned to the
city to resume his work. Dr. Marshall
pane & most dolighteul time.
Marion, Ind, Sept, 5.—Mrs. Blancho
| Akers of ‘Clevejand, Ohio, arrived here
Saturday and“ is spending the week
With gelatives und frlends, She. will
eave ‘Saturday for Dayton, Olio, te
spend the week with her Urothet ‘and
lis family, en route to her home. *
JMr. and Ms, Henry Gullitord jnve re-
turned from a ten days” visit in Gary,
[Hammond and Peru. They report. «
pleasant visit. © Arthur Walker, who
has been in Chicago (4 several months,
bas returned to, hie nome hero for an
indefinite stay. * Mrs. Hannah Cloy of
Chicago is the guest of her sister, Mrs.
Jamey Overman. for a few days’ visit.
* Mrg, A. T. Nickels lett Sunday morn-
ing for Toledo, Ohlo, for a stay of sev-
eral weeks with her daughter, Mrs.
Jgek Hodge, + Penn Winelow of Cleve-
jana, Ohio, was the guest of relatives
fand ‘telends here and left teat, Friday
for Dayton, Ohio, to spend a few days
with bis son Harry, pn route to_ his
home. * J. W. Burden and D. A. Gra-
ham have returned from Gary, where
they attended the grata lodge of
Maxona the week of Aug. 19. * Sunday
at Bethel Church was Bethel Brother-
hood anniversary. At the _ morning
service Prince A. Glanton, president
of the National Reconstruction League
of Chicago, gave a very excellent ad-
dress, In ‘the‘afterndon Major A. H.
Wilson of Indianapolis gave a very ex-
cellent address of bis experience in the
late war. * Mrs, Hazel Kinney and Mrs,
Roger of Toy, Ohio, who have been
here visiting for the past week, ro-
turned to their home Saturday. * Mr.
and Mrs, Walter Brags’ of Wountain
City and’ Mr. and Mrs. Albert Lamp-
king and daughter and Mrs. Ophella
dames of Muncie were the Sunday
Guests of Mrs. H. A, Young and family.
ee ee
‘Washington, lowa, Sept. 6.—A. Ls Hall
and son Raymond ‘attended the state
fale at Dew Moines last week. * Wal-
ter Williams attended the state alr
at Des Moines a few days. * Mrs. Fan-
nie Howell and two children departed
for their home in Kansas City after
visiting at the Henry Green home, *
Mrs. Sidney Jano Davis of Keokuk
Pushed througi the city Saturday on
her speaking tour to Vairtleld. * Sfre,
Roberts of Chlecgo, Ul. te visiting. a
the home of ler nother, Mre, Mary
Campbell. * Airs, Belt Hall, Davenport,
was guest at the A. L. Hull homo a
few days last week. * Henry Rhodes
has been ill, * Mtr. ‘Watts, Spring-
fleld, 11}. is staying at the H. Rhodes
home, as he hax secured labor here..*
Mrs. ‘William Jeffers and two daugh-
ters, Faye and Grace, of Oskaloosa,
visited at the home of her sister, Mre
Emma Black, a few days. * The-Sup-
day school board met at ‘the hiome/ot
Superintendent Emme Black "Tuesday.
ey, de Paterson, visited nt the
home ‘of higgbrdther in Towa Clty ¢
Genie’ date are cameie
a
- \ x 7
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- + [ecweaertreent 2 a
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Clears the complex es Le as a ‘~ ;
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- Be Srna gn :
pole Pe bee eae Oint™ oa me aS] remedy. The only thing
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skin, Also a sallow ee RIGHTENS Darn evga and mildly bleach a
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rH "3 a eS era te ndorsed and
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Used all over the country and highly recommended by all druggists.
EDW. LEHMAN, Ph. CG.
(GRADUATE OF PHILADELPHIA COLLEGE OF PHARMACY) .
Originator and Sole Manufacturer df the famous LEHMAN REMEDIES, sold by drag ,
stores in Chicago, New York, Pittsburg, Cincinnati, St. Louis and all Southern Cities
Dept. Cc. D. 181 UNION AVENUE, Memphis, Tennessee
. ef. an
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‘TELLS YOU HOW TO MAKE vOUR OWN BEAUTY
‘PREPARATIONS
fgg M,ggeteeg donne of tombe formal, aay one of nile may
te Torts tote thom yoo pay for the eolise work. ‘Slop paying
Sipe, grote tol gout duegtt "Stop paytes | be at
HGotor Rocarcicte Gat may toot cote slateee Pmt op
Jour on sie’ preparations, "You ‘ean een atart manutactoring
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P
GONTRNTS: How to Rexultty the Hate; Cleaning the Sean:
eontuient of Eexaton ang Dhodruf: low wo Make Yap turn, Balt
TAtlee hale Grower, ete: Toe Face Neastiats thos to insors
Perfect Sain tod Complesion: Tested Formulas for Beauly” ase Cals
GfeatSs. Beauty Bags! Batisblag” Plples aod "Blackwondas ‘reeas
Sitio tor Reworing Wwrinuten, Wintby Chine Getting hla of Se:
ferdvone tale Freche, Susbiras"Bow 9 "atabe tifold aa Ory
Powders: ence Palate Notge, Frebrom Teale Ons. Nest
[Stn Tools’ Wasb, "Toots Powde> snd "Foot Paste, Rennty
Areativest tor tho Teaprorement a06 Reanteation ef the. Neck
Hesutiying the, Aram tag Roraley, Stina te ante Sn aod
Relvetrt Forostty for" Chappel Weoase Wa Folia eter Care
Gf tie Feat; How fo Mato van Exquisite Pawger for Permpigg
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VERNON BOOK SHOP
‘$633 Vernon Byoaue, Chicago,
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
/@LFS RATTLE SNAj
WoTNIMENT ARE
Sé=uxB
Heer dest tasatares Neortiginy Seitiog enue
Se ae
For Sale by All Druggists
a a
By Parcel Post 100 extra
Chas 2 tole le
€00 80. 15th Sts, Philacteiphia, Ping
meneame
J.C, Lewis’ Hair Refiner and
- Straightener
Panett of ater Haat. a ea
PREP Uitie ie Sebdelon, “nk Hod Witt
" 91.00 per box. Half rico to agents.
J. Cc. LEWIS
Box 53, Ballentine Station Norfolk. Va.
LEARN MME. V, 54. GLOVER'S
SYSTEM OF HAIR CULTURE
(uages aoeht aly, 9 aw, 93pm Phooe
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"En Veirareston count for £13.00 for tm-
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St Ott Wetienee ane, Heorformations oe ige-
fengeueee sa syeparnttons insite By Minas
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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1819
TAKE..QUT THE KINKS
|} Have Soft, Stralght Hele Like Photograpti Below
a T°
ony on = ek
7 aa or
ma ed ees a ae
ia ae oO
Co ieee ei a ee bos
a a fe
{By Using PLOUGH’S Hair Dressing
Race men and worea may ously havo straight, soft long
hair by simply applying Plough’s Hair Dressing and in al
short Umo all your kinky, anarly, ugly, curly Hat, becomes
oft, sky smgoth, straight long ‘and easily handled, brushed
jor combed. Plough’s-Haic Dressing, elegantly perfumed,
comes in large green can (more for your money than any
other hair dressing). 25c by Mail, Agents ‘Wanted. p
PLOUGH CHEMICAL CO., Memphis, Tenn,|
Fi
Should Know the Difference
Have you thought of how extravagant you have been in buying Hair
Growers that would grow hair only on certain parts of the Scalp? A
Hair Grower for the Temple, a Halr Grower for the nape of the neck,
Hair Gr@wer for the Crown and the Special Growers for the relief of
‘Tetter and Dandruff.
Did you know that LLYRA HAIR BEAUTIFIER is eo compounded that
it will grow hair on any part of the Scalp, and is a relief for any Scalp |
Disease? Since this is an age of economy, why not economize on your —
ir Grower?
Uvax HAIR BEAUTIFIER 50c a Box, 6c feelers: and War Tax. (For
quick results have your hair treated by the Slaughter System with
LLYRA Hair Beautifier, which is guaranteed to grow Hair in 6 Treat-
ments or your money refunded)
| AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE
$001 LAWTON AVENUE
| Sentral 8698-1 Bt Lovin Mo. Bomont 1958
A World's Wonder Used and Recommended by the Best Barber Shops
Gentiemen do you want nice hair? Do you want your hair straight, soft
and glossy? Mr. Barber, do you want a safe, sure hair straightener that will
increase your business 100% and satisfy your customers? Then use CLIMAX,
King ot Instant Hair Straighteners, it will etraighten the most stubborn, coarse
or kinky, bair In S minutes. Makes straight to stay straight. Makes smooth
and glossy hair look Uke nature did it Water does not affect it,; Wash the
hair any time * Price $1.00 a Inrgo box. enough to straighten 4 or 6 tmes,
X-Ray Hair Shine, the-finishing gloss, price 36e. The two together sent any-
where postpaid for $1.35. Special prices for barbers and hairdressers buying:
iu quantities, Agents wanted everywhere. Made only by f
é T.YSUNG) iN, 1606 SOUTH ST, PHILADEMMMIA, PA,
5 ities ! tes 5 Ae
‘alee Basalt ted Pat galt RIA ea Pm ea
Campbell, Friends H. E. Carolina, M. H. Morris.
Committee on temperance—Dr. E. J. Lunon, Edmonson, Ark.; Friends Lee Marshall and M. A. Tyson.
Committee on salaries and per item—Dr. D. J. Williams, supreme supervisor, Forrest City, Ark.; Friends Lizzie Glaser, Lizzie Davis and Ruth Turner Williams.
Committee on military officers—Friends C. L. Best, Charles L. Bryant, Charles Rivers, J. C. McNeal and Mark Williams.
Committee on fraternal greetings—Friends Lula S. Blount of Arkansas, R. B. Benson and H. B. Hill.
Committee on enrollment—Friends M. W. Willingham of Arkansas, Katherine Smith, Maggie L. Johnson.
Committee on obituary—Dr. C. J. Boyd, Rev. John Dudley, Rev. L. S. Charles and Friend Hays of Memphis, General publicity agent—Dr. J. H. Clayborn.
A parade was celebrated Wendesday afternoon, comprising two bands and a line of automobiles numbering over 100. Prominent men and women high in the various executive capacities of the lodge led the procession.
Tickets for Oct. 7th at Orchestra hall are at Taylor & Elgar's studio, No. 5 E 36th place.
CALL TO ANSWERED!!
TO UNITE
ERED!!!
The International Men
UNION of BRAIN, a UN
of MONEY, a UNI
of COLORED MEN
Clear of head. Cool of action. A desire to
accumulate. A desire to educate our chil-
produce a better type of the 100 per cen-
American citizen.
Insisting in the right to meet the employ-
face and ARBITRATE all differences. Sho-
nomic reasons for wage demands and citing
Right and Reason for the application of se-
the job, based on ability rather than color.
An Organization Founde
Common Sense
And compelled to live and grow. Stretc
coast to coast and giving DISTINCT craft r
tion to all Colored railway workers. ALL,
FILIATED for economy and STRENGTH.
Get 15 Colored railway workers together
town and form a local. Get the organiz
started. It will grow. Some locals started
men now number over 500 members.
Get together, Colored men. ALL TO
Write or wire for particulars to
THE CALL TO UNITY ANSWERED!!!
ary are answering the Interna- and UNITE. sed at Knoxville, Tenn.; Bir- ill.; Nashville, Tenn., and the past few weeks signified desire to co-ordinate their ef- single standard in pressing the milway employes of the various Clear of head. Accumulate. A produce a better
Clear of head. Cool of action. A desire to work and accumulate. A desire to educate our children and produce a better type of the 100 per cent Colored American citizen. Insisting in the right to meet the employer face to face and ARBITRATE all differences. Showing economic reasons for wage demands and citing the rule of Right and Reason for the application of seniority on the job, based on ability rather than color.
get together and work together,
of organization now being
United States by International or-
ber) has brought wonderful
The 7th-8th-9th at
8th Regiment
Bay, Chicago
Avention of the Railroad Men's
Industrial Association will
best body of Colored laboring
or one roof. The password and
15 coming together. The 100
on-wide organization bear wit-
or achievement.
An Organiz
And compelled to
coast to coast and
tion to all Colored
FILIATED for ee
Get 15 Colore
town and form
started. It will g
men now number
Get together
Write or wire for
INT
And compelled to live and grow. Stretching from coast to coast and giving DISTINCT craft representation to all Colored railway workers. ALL crafts AF FILIATED for economy and STRENGTH. Get 15 Colored railway workers together in your town and form a local. Get the organization idea started. It will grow. Some locals started with a few men now number over 500 members.
Promise
an organization, unselfishly got-
Colored man in the value of
him sanity in its use, and by
and intelligence to serve him
in the thought and progress of
has so nobly served and from
and seeks only JUSTICE.
and every square inch of shop
covered by ORGANIZED and
by workers.
Railroad
tional
Industri
SEND A D
VENTION. HE
FULL VOICE IN
ABOUT YOU
In our present drilling campaign we ought to
share in the next twelve months. We expect
pushers in this country. We are now drilling
day. I expect the next word you will hear
our big well. You had better buy your stock
per share.
of our stock. A person never accomplishes
drew Carnegie's mother borrowed on their
and he was worth $500,000,000.00 when he
life. We are doing bigger things than we
opportunity is ours if we will only grasp it.
opportunity of your life. Will you grasp it?
WHO CAN
WHO
These, in my
I do that the oil
world. I know po-
confidence in us t
that you would m
shares in our comp
You can posi
is one of the most
amblion is success
ized and promoted
which was the MIl-
Mid-Vale Oil Co. i
company. The fu
money, and we are
Mr. Allen ours
of our Race. The
think you can tru
mind and order so
Railroad Men's International Benevolent Industrial Association
SEND A DELEGATE TO THE GREATVENTION. HE WILL BE SEATED AND FULL VOICE IN THE PROCEEDINGS.
WHO CAN YOU TRUST?
WHO SHOULD YOU TRUST?
WHO HAVE YOU BEEN?
These, in my mind, are very serious questions. I do that the oil business is the greatest and biggest world. I know positively well that if you could confidence in us to believe that your money would that you would make money from your investment, shares in our company at the low price we are selling. You can positively trust us. We are absolute is one of the most ambitious and capable young men ambition is success for his people and not primarilyized and promoted the first Negro oil company that which was the Mid-Vale Oil & Gas Co. Plans are Mid-Vale Oil Co. into the World Wonder Oil Co. and company. The future looks awfully bright for us money, and we are proud to say that we are getting Mr. Allen our president, is one of the best poster of our Race. The successful white oil men give him think you can trust your money with a company like mind and order some of our stock today.
The World W Oil & Gas
1518 East 18th St
J. J. ALLEN, Pres. KANSAS
SEND A DELEGATE TO THE GREAT CONVENTION. HE WILL BE SEATED AND GIVEN FULL VOICE IN THE PROCEEDINGS.
DON'T WAIT
Buy some of our stock now while you can get the reach. You can pay for your shares on monthly pay with your remittance at once! We do not sell less tha
Buy some of our stock now while you can get it. Buy now before the price advances far beyond your reach. You can pay for your shares on monthly payments if you wish. Use coupon No. 1 below and mail it with your remittance at once! We do not sell less than ten shares.
USE THE COURT LOW—DO IT NOW
COUPON NO. 1.
WORLD WONDER OIL & GAS CO.,
1518 E. 18th St., Kansas City, Mo.
Inclosed find my remittance for $.....
in part payment for....shares of
in full payment for....agree to pay the balance
(stock in your company. I agree to pay the balance
(if any) in 3 monthly payments. Shares $1.00 each.
Name .....
Address .....
We take Liberty Bonds as
Name
Address
We take Liberty Bonds as cash. We want good agents.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1919
ROYAL CIRCLE
OF FRIENDS MEET
Race would cease to accept disfranchisements, humiliation and segregation without a protest with their face to the enemy. Hon. B. M. Rody'd delivered the speech in the South at the Race in the South. Little Miss Dobbing rendered a beautiful solo.
(Continued from page one)
ance department which is paying a profitable ack benefit to its members. Wednesday's sessions were largely given over to the hearing of the reports of the supreme officers. Mrs. Lula S. Blunt, Forrest City, Ark., submitted a brief report reviewing the accomplishments of the circle for the past ten years of its existence. She told a pleasing manner of its struggles through poverty and stated that today the order is worth $200,000 in total assets, and that it had paid out more than a million dollars since its organization. Mrs. Blunt is general endowment secretary. Dr. J. Ribona, Memphis, delivered an excellent address in response to the address, welcome by Alderman Anderson. Several vocal selections were rendered by Prof. George Arthur Garner Jr., a master artist in the musical world. Mrs. R. Williams of Chicago delivered an interesting address in behalf of the ladlee. Miss Annie Gillum of Little Rock responded. The trend of all the speakers led to the thought that the
Committee on state of the country—Hon. W. E. King, Chicago; Dr. J. H. Clayborn of Arkansas; Robbie Lee, P. H. Hamon, Dr. Redmph.
Committee on racial condition—Prof. P. L. Vanpelt, Arkansas; B. L. Blassingame, Estella Wade of Jonesboro Anderson, S. G. Jones.
Committee on resolutions—Dr. O. L. Moody, Mrs. L. E. Dismuke, Friend J. E. Murphy.
.
Committee on supreme president's address—Dr. S. S. Odom, Prof. F. D. Morris, Friend Elizabeth Jordan, all of Arkansas. Committee on time and place—Dr. J. W. Ribbons, Tennessee, Friend Emma Gray, Friend Geneva Moody, Helena, Ark.
Committee on ways and means—Rev. S. L. Short, Friends Sallie Kendrick, Alice Cowley, Arkansas.
Committee on grievances—Hon. W. R. Copperman, Friends Friend W. J. Davis, Friend Elizabeth Jordan.
Committee on education—Dr. J. L.
THE
THE CALL ANSWER
Colored Railway Men
In all parts of the country a tional's call to ORGANIZE a Organizations located in mingham, Ala.; Chicago, I Richmond, Va., have in the through their officers a desi forts and fight under a single just claims of Colored railw crafts.
In all parts of the country are answering the International's call to ORGANIZE and UNITE. Organizations located at Knoxville, Tenn.; Birmingham, Ala.; Chicago, Ill.; Nashville, Tenn., and Richmond, Va., have in the past few weeks signified through their officers a desire to co-ordinate their efforts and fight under a single standard in pressing the just claims of Colored railway employees of the various crafts.
In all parts of the country are answering the International's call to ORGANIZE and UNITE. Organizations located at Knoxville, Tenn.; Birmingham, Ala.; Chicago, Ill.; Nashville, Tenn., and Richmond, Va., have in the past few weeks signified through their officers a desire to co-ordinate their efforts and fight under a single standard in pressing the just claims of Colored railway employees of the various crafts.
The International Idea
Of Boost, don't knock; Get to is at last bearing fruit.
The great campaign of waged all over the United ganizers (4,000 in number results.
On October the the Eighth Armory,
The sixth annual conver International Benevolent In bring together the greatest men ever assembled under on slogan is UNITY!!
The Colored Man IS c locals of this strong, nation-wness to that long hoped for a
Of Boost, don't knock; Get together and work together, is at last bearing fruit.
The great campaign of organization now being waged all over the United States by International organizers (4,000 in number) has brought wonderful results.
On October the 7th-8th-9th at the Eighth Regiment Armory, Chicago
The sixth annual convention of the Railroad Men's International Benevolent Industrial Association will bring together the greatest body of Colored laboring men ever assembled under one roof. The password and logan is UNITY!!
The Colored Man IS coming together. The 100 locals of this strong, nation-wide organization bear witness to that long hoped for achievement.
Of Boost, don't knock; Get together and work together, is at last bearing fruit. The great campaign of organization now being waged all over the United States by International organizers (4,000 in number) has brought wonderful results.
On October the 7th-8th-9th at the Eighth Regiment Armory, Chicago
The sixth annual convention of the Railroad Men's International Benevolent Industrial Association will bring together the greatest body of Colored laboring men ever assembled under one roof. The password and slogan is UNITY!! The Colored Man IS coming together. The 100 locals of this strong, nation-wide organization bear witness to that long hoped for achievement.
Again Performance Outstrips
This is a DOING organization; to teach him fearlessness based on right and keep him space with this country, which he has which he fully deserves and Every foot of rail and or warehouse should be covered. UNITED Colored railway w
HOW
$10,000
If we will be able to carry out our make millions and millions of dollars to drill among some of the biggest gush and looking for a big well most any day from us we will be telling you of our b now while you can get it at $1.00 per.
Make a sacrifice and buy some of anything without a sacrifice. Andrew home the first $500.00 he invested, and died. This is a new era of Negro life ever done before in our lives. The opp This is, in my mind, the greatest oppo Think and not now.
Promise
This is a DOING organization, unselfishly gotten together to train the Colored man in the value of organization; to teach him sanity in its use, and by fearlessness based on right and intelligence to serve him and keep him space with the thought and progress of this country, which he has so nobly served and from which he fully deserves and seeks only JUSTICE.
Every foot of rail and every square inch of shop or warehouse should be covered by ORGANIZED and UNITED Colored railway workers.
HOW ABOUT
$10,000,000.00
If we will be able to carry out our present drilling campaign we our millions and millions of dollars in the next twelve months. We will among some of the biggest gushers in this country. We are now looking for a big well most any day. I expect the next word you will us we will be telling you of our big well. You had better buy your while you can get it at $1.00 per share.
Make a sacrifice and buy some of our stock. A person never accomplishing without a sacrifice. Andrew Carnegie's mother borrowed one on the first $500.00 he invested, and he was worth $500,000,000.00 when this is a new era of Negro life. We are doing bigger things than done before in our lives. The opportunity is ours if we will only grak is in my mind, the greatest opportunity of your life. Will you grak and act now.
This is a DOING organization, unselfishly gotten together to train the Colored man in the value of organization; to teach him sanity in its use, and by fearlessness based on right and intelligence to serve him and keep him apace with the thought and progress of this country, which he has so nobly served and from which he fully deserves and seeks only JUSTICE.
)
Every foot of rail and every square inch of shop or warehouse should be covered by ORGANIZED and UNITED Colored railway workers.
```markdown
```
If we will be able to carry out our present drilling campaign we ought to make millions and millions of dollars in the next twelve months. We expect to drill among some of the biggest gushers in this country. We are now drilling and looking for a big well most any day. I expect the next word you will hear from us we will be telling you of our big well. You had better buy your stock now while you can get it at $1.00 per share.
Make a sacrifice and buy some of our stock. A person never accomplishes anything without a sacrifice. Andrew Carnegie's mother borrowed on their home the first $500.00 he invested, and he was worth $500,000,000.00 when he died. This is a new era of Negro life. We are doing bigger things than we ever done before in our lives. The opportunity is ours if we will only grasp it. This is, in my mind, the greatest opportunity of your life. Will you grasp it? Think and not now.
WATCH! WATCH! WATCH! BUT DON'T WAIT
After you have read our add carefully order your stock at once. Then cut out this ad and file it away. Show it to your friends as they come in. Set them know of this wonderful facility for buying your stock of our company carefully. Watch our marvelous growth. Watch the price of our stock go up and continue to go up. Watch us bring in big well after well. Watch the money begin to roll in by the thousands from the sale of our oil. Watch our dividend checks go out to our big automobiles and having every luxury or life that the white race has. Watch the change in
move as the money comes rolling in.
Watch them begin to send their boys and girls to high schools and colleges, preparing them to help students in our offices and future officers and directors, Watch us, if you please. Watch us grow. Because they have done the very thing that you have done to do you have watched the white companies take over their stockholders grow rich. Now watch a Negro company do the same. I know God is no impartial God. He is fair and just to us all. We are not faith in him. Please keep all our Defender ads and watch. Watch us grow.
```markdown
```
OUR OFFICERS AND ADVISORY BOARD MEMBERS
OFFICERS
I. J. Allen, President,
Dr. J. W. McClellan, Vice President,
Dr. Geo. Hedgepeth, Secretary and Treasurer.
ADVISORY BOARD
Dr. Digga Warabachie, Tex.
Dr. J. D. Ball, Lexington, Mo.
Henry Hurton, Omnigene, Oklaw.
M. A. Wheeld, M. D. Bristow, Okla.
Jack Browndell, Omaha, Neb.
Phil A. Jones, Chirico, Ill.
J. A. Johnston, W. Ala, Kan.
Dr. A. W. Nichols, M. D. Bristow, Okla.
D. S. Wade, Atlantic City, N. J.
Chas. Burt, Atlantic City, N. J.
Dr. Howard M. Smith, Kansas City, Mo.
Fred W. Huntington, Atlantic City, Mo.
Rev. Wm. H. Thiamus, Kansas City, Mo.
C. H. Walker, Browns, Ala.
C. H. Warden, Warden Hotel, Omaha,
R. M. Warden, Warden Hotel, Tex.
Dr. Busch & Morgan, Dallas, Tex.
John Hurst, Baltimore, Neb.
Bob Robinson, Omaha, Neb.
Rev. A. L. Boone, Fort Worth, Tex.
---
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
UNITY
International Means a
of BRAIN, a UNION
NEY, a UNION
COLORED MEN!
School of action. A desire to work and
desire to educate our children and
type of the 100 per cent Colored
We right to meet the employer face to
CREATE all differences. Showing eco-
wage demands and citing the rule of
for the application of seniority on
ability rather than color.
Organization Founded on
Common Sense
To live and grow. Stretching from
giving DISTINCT craft representa-
tion railway workers. ALL crafts AF-
nomy and STRENGTH.
And railway workers together in your
local. Get the organization idea
now. Some locals started with a few
over 500 members.
Colored men. ALL TOGETHER.
particulars to
All Men's Interna-
tional Benevolent
Special Association
RELEASE TO THE GREAT CON-
WILL BE SEATED AND GIVEN
THE PROCEEDINGS.
YOU TRUST?
SHOULD YOU TRUST?
WHO HAVE YOU BEEN TRUSTING?
ind, are very serious questions. You know just as well as
business is the greatest and biggest paying business in the
actively well that if you could place the proper amount of
believe that your money would be properly protected, and
are money from your investment, that you would buy some
any at the low price we are selling them; now, wouldn't you?
only trust us. We are absolutely reliable. Our president
untilious and capable young men we have. His greatest
for his people and not primarily personal gain. He organ-
the first Nargo oil company that has ever paid a dividend,
Vale Oil & Gas Co. Plans are now on foot to absorb the
to the World Wonder Oil Co. and make one large and strong
are looks awfully bright for us and all we need is more
proud to say that we are getting that each day.
President, is one of the best posted and most capable oil men
successful white oil men give him that credit. Don't you
your money with a company like this? Follow your own
of our stock today.
World Wonder
油 & Gas Co.
18 East 18th Street
Pres. KANSAS CITY, MO.
Name ..... Address ..... Cash. We want good agents.
Sues Railroad When
Conductor Ignores Pass
Memphis, Tennessee, Sept. 6. — Joseph
Van, entered suit in the circuit court
against the Illinois Central railroad
for $1,000 damages, claiming that he
was wrongfully ordered to leave a pass-
enger train of the defendant as he
was returning home from the funeral
of a relative. Van declared that he
was traveling on a pass good for a
round trip from Memphis to St. Louis.
On his last lap of the journey he says
that the conductor refused to honor his
pass and made him leave the train at
East St. Louis. In order to get back
home he claims to have been forced to
pawn his watch and some of his
clothes.
Visit Roosevelt's Grave
Last Sunday more than 5,000 persons journeyed to Young's Memorial Cemetery, Oyster Bay, L. L. to visit the grave of the late Theodore Roosevelt. Among them were noted 200 persons of our Race, some of whom had detoured their trips back home from the Atlantic City conventions, purposely to pay their respects to the immortal Roosevelt. A visit to the grave of several New Yorkers is being planned by a few prominent Harlemites.
The International Means a UNION of BRAIN,a UNION of MONEY,a UNION of COLORED MEN!
Get together, Colored men. ALL TOGETHER. Write or wire for particulars to
INTERNATIONAL SE'CY.,
3902 S. STATE ST.
INTERNATIONAL PRESIDENT,
59 EAST 35TH ST., CHICAGO.
WHO CAN YOU TRUST?
WHO SHOULD YOU TRUST?
WHO HAVE YOU BEEN TRUSTING?
These, in my mind, are very serious questions. You know just as well as I do that the oil business is the greatest and biggest paying business in the world. I know positively well that if you could place the proper amount of confidence in us to believe that your money would be properly protected, and that you would make money from your investment, that you would buy some shares in our company at the low price we are selling them; now, wouldn't you? You can positively trust us. We are absolutely reliable. Our president is one of the most ambitious and capable young men we have. His greatest ambition is success for his people and not primarily personal gain. He organized and promoted the first Negro oil company that has over paid a dividend, which was the Mid-Vale Oil & Gas Co. Plans are now on foot to absorb the Mid-Vale Oil Co. into the World Wonder Oil Co. and make one large and strong company. The future looks awfully bright for us and all we need is more money, and we are proud to say that we are getting that each day.
Mr. Allen our president, is one of the best posted and most capable oil men of our Race. The successful white oil men give him that credit. Don't you think you can trust your money with a company like this? Follow your own mind and order some of our stock today.
The World Wonder Oil & Gas Co. 1518 East 18th Street
DON'T WAIT----DON'T DELAY
Please send me one of your large folders containing maps of the Oil Fields, numerous pictures and complete information concerning your remarkable company—ALL FREE.
NILE QUEEN
"FOR HAIR AND SKIN"
BETTER THAN THE BEST
Nile Queen Whitener and Cleanser
Nile Queen Hair Beautifier
Nile Queen Cream Powder—5 Shades
Nile Queen Cold Cream
Nile Queen Vanishing Cream
Nile Queen Rouge
Nile Queen Cream Balm
Nile Queen Dandruff Remedy
Nile Queen Liquid Powder
Nile Queen Shampoo
50c Each
FREE Write for New De Luxe Beauty Book FREE
Manufactured by the KASHMIR CHEMICAL CO.
312 South Clark Dept. D CHICAGO, ILL.
For sale at all drug stores and first-class Beauty Shops. If your druggist does not have it, write us, and send 8c extra for postage, or write for agency.
$2,000,000.00
The small lease of the Burk-Waggoner Oil Company in the Northwest Burkburnett Pool recently sold for $2,000,000.00. This lease had only one producing well thereon. It has been only a few months since the Burk-Waggoner Company was organized—the company had only one lease—they drilled only one well—then they sold out for $2,000,000.00 and every stockholder received the enormous sum of $3,333.33 for each $100 he had invested.
Not long ago the Fowler Farm Oil Company of Texas was organized. The future of this company was most uncertain—its properties were small and unproven—yet it was able to raise, enough money to drill a well. Soon after its first well was completed the company sold out and every stockholder received $15,000.00 in return for each $100 invested.
These new oil fields of Texas have already made more than fifty new millionaires—no one knows how many more will be made. Neither is it known how many thousands have already made quick, independent fortunes in these fields. Never before has such great wealth been so quickly accumulated nor by so many people. It may be truly said that here money flows like water.
$25,000 PER ACRE FOR LEASE NEAR OUR PROPERTY
The Burk-Waggoner well (mentioned above) was quickly followed by many other gushers drilled in that pool. Nearly all of these big gushers are within a mile of our properties. Many of these gushers are only a few hundred yards distant from our tremendously valuable lease. Twenty-five thousand dollars was paid recently for a lease on a single acre near us.
On every side of our property derricks are going up over night. Actual drilling is starting just as fast as machinery can be moved in. Our first well will be drilled very soon not far from the 7,000-barrel Texas Chief gusher and the Golden Cycle gusher, which is reported making 5,000 barrels of high-grade oil daily. A 2,500-barrel well just came in a few hundred yards from us. The Gray Gander well came in good for 3,000 barrels a few hundred yards from us. We have room for more than four wells on our properties in this field alone.
We are going to drill among the big gushers—among the greatest—the largest—the most famous oil wells in America. Our properties in the Burkburnett Pool could hardly be better or more favorably located. We feel certain of bringing in several enormous wells in the next few months.
BIG WELLS MEAN ENORMOUS PROFITS
When the wells we are now drilling in Kansas come in big producers, then the earnings and profits of our company will be enormous—then our company will pay large dividends. Then, too, our stock will advance tremendously in value.
You can buy our stock now for $1.00 per share. We are offering only a limited number of shares for sale. This money will be used to develop our great gusher properties. This stock will be offered for a short time only. We reserve the right to withdraw it from the market at any time.
Birmingham, Ala., Sept. 5. — A crooked pin fixed to a wire was the device used by Joseph H. Brown to remove letters from the city mail boxes. He was selling stamps in the lobby of the postoffice when federal officers placed him under arrest. Brown had a large number of special delivery, registered and ordinary 1 and 2 cent denomination of stamps in his possession when taken into custody. A charge of burglarizing government property has been lodged against him.
ERECTING A $45,000 THEATER
Columbus, Ohio, Sept. 5. — J. E. Williams, 1453 Clifton avenue, and J. A. Jackson, both Columbus business men, are erecting a $45,000 theater building near Garfield avenue. The theater will
seat 500 people and there will be six office rooms and two store rooms. It is being constructed of wire cut brick and term cotta and is expected to be the finest building of the kind west of Chicago. Messes, Williams and Jackson expect to have the theater open by Thanksgiving day.
His Business Came First
Texarkana, Tex., Sept. 5—"Private business" was given by Roosevelt Dillard, sailor in the United States navy, as the reason for his overstaying his furthough from the naval training school at Norfolk, Va., when federal officers arrested him.
LIVER OUT OF ORDER?
For your liver, kidneys and stomach at once. Use Salem's Green Tablets. For constipation, biliousness and coated tongue. All drug stores, or direct, 25c, from
For your liver, kidneys and stomach sake, don't neglect it. Use Salem's Green Tablets. For backache, headache, biliousness and coated tongue. Try it and be efficient drug stores, or direct, 25c, from
stomach sake, don't neglect; act tablets. For backache, headache, ed tongue. Try it and be efficient. from
For your liver, kidneys and stomach sake, don't neglect; act at once. Use Salem's Green Tablets. For backache, headache, constipation, biliousness and coated tongue. Try it and be efficient. All drug stores, or direct, 25c, from SALEM LABORATORIES 4656 WENTWORTH AVE., CHICAGO, ILL.
NILE QUEEN
FOR HAIR AND SKIN
BETTER THAN THE BEAUTY
Queen Whitener and Cleanser
Queen Hair Beautifier
Nile Queen Cream Powder—5 Shades
Nile Queen Cold Cream
Nile Queen Vanishing Cream
Nile Queen Rouge
Nile Queen Cream Balm
Nile Queen Dandruff Remedy
Nile Queen Liquid Powder
Nile Queen Shampoo
50c Each
FREE Write for New De Luxe Beauty Book
Manufactured by the CASHMIR CHEMICAL CO.
Sh Clark Dept. D CHICAGO
sale at all drug stores and first-class Beauty Shops. Applicant does not have it, write us, and send 8c ex-cheque or write for agency.
And how about the future of our young boys and much of? God is warning us by race rioting and should come together. Let's boost and stop kneel stop talking. Let's have confidence in one and money together and build up large Negro enterprises in a good oil company will make you more earn in all your life on a salary.
$2,000,000.0
RE QUEEN
HAIR AND SKIN"
BETTER THAN THE BEST
Hair and Cleanser
Beautifier
Cream Powder—5 Shades
Cold Cream
Queen Vanishing Cream
Queen Rouge
Nile Queen Cream Balm
Nile Queen Dandruff Remedy
Nile Queen Liquid Powder
Nile Queen Shampoo
50c Each
Write for New De Luxe Beauty Book FREE
Manufactured by the R CHEMICAL CO.
Dept. D CHICAGO, ILL.
ug stores and first-class Beauty Shops. If not have it, write us, and send 8c extra for agency.
about the future of our young boys and girls that we think that God is warning us by race rioting and suffering that we come together. Let's boost and stop knocking. Let's do a thing. Let's have confidence in one another. Let's put together and build up large Negro enterprises. $100.00 in a good oil company will make you more money than you can all your life on a salary.
00,000.00
And how about the future of our young boys and girls that we think so much of? God is warning us by race rioting and suffering that we should come together. Let's boost and stop knocking. Let's do and stop talking. Let's have confidence in one another. Let's put our money together and build up large Negro enterprises. $100.00 invested in a good oil company will make you more money than you can earn in all your life on a salary.
MONEY FLOWS LIKE WATER
the Burk-Wargoner Oil Company in the Northwest But this lease had only one producing well thereon. It has had the Company was organized—the company had only one old out for $2,000,000.00 and every stockholder received the had invested.
moner Oil Company in the Northwest Burkburnett Pool recently only one producing well there. It has been only a few months organized—the company had only one lease—they drilled out 100,000.00 and every stockholder received the enormous sum
$15,000.00 FOR EVERY $100 INVESTED
Fowler Farm Oil Company of Texas was organized. The properties were small and unproven—yet it was able to over its first well was comploted the company sold out and farm for each $100 invested.
10 Company of Texas was organized. The future of this company is small and unproven—yet it was able to raise enough money it was completed the company sold out and every stockholder no invested.
FIFTY NEW OIL MILLIONAIRES
bids of Texas have already made more than fifty new mil-
lees made. Neither is it known how many thousands have
these same fields. Never before has such great wealth be
people. It may be truly said that here money flows like a
1000 PER ACRE FOR LEASE NEAR OUR PROVINCE
over well (mentioned above) was quickly followed by many
of these big gushers are within a mile of our properties.
10 yards distant from our tremendously valuable lease,
only for a lease on a single acre near us.
WELL NEAR US—
3,000-BARREL WELL CLOSE TO US—
5,000 TO 7,000-BARREL GUSHERS CR
our property derricks are going up over night. Actual drie
be moved in. Our first well will be drilled very soon
other and the Golden Cycle gusher, which is reported making
3,000-barrel well just came in a few hundred yards from us. We have re-
in this field alone.
we already made more than fifty new millionaires—no one knows ever is it known how many thousands have already made quick rands. Never before has such great wealth been so quickly accumulated truly said that here money flows like water.
WE FOR LEASE NEAR OUR PROPERTY
(needs above) was quickly followed by many other gushers drill gushers are within a mile of our properties. Many of these gushers from our tremendously valuable lease. Twenty-five thousand on a single acre near us.
US—
BARREL WELL CLOSE TO US—
TO 7,000-BARREL GUSHERS CROWD AROUND US
Bricks are going up over night. Actual drilling is starting just now. Our first well will be drilled very soon not far from the 7,000-den Cycle gusher, which is reported making 5,000 barrels of high dust came in a few hundred yards from us. The Gray Gandrine a few hundred yards from us. We have room for more than four alone.
DRILLING AMONG BIG GUSHERS
BIG WELLS MEAN ENORMOUS PROFITS
STOCK $1.00 PER SHARE
stock now for $1.00 per share. We are offering only a line will be used to develop our great gusher properties. The We reserve the right to withdraw it from the market a
000 per share. We are offering only a limited number of shares to develop our great gusher properties. This stock will be offered right to withdraw it from the market at any time.
PAGE THREE
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER NEW YORK AND BROOKLYN NEWS PAGE FIVE SATURDAY, SEPT. 4, 1919
Brooklyn Y. W. C.A. Gives Mrs. Laura Williamson Rousing Welcome Home
COTTMAN AND COMPANY, Inc.
NEW YORK OFFICE, 203 BROADWAY, NEW YORK CITY
BRANCHES: 158 FLEET ST., LONDON, ENGLAND; ROSEAU,
DOMINICA, B. W. I., AND PORT OF SPAIN, TRINIDAD, B. W. I.
This company conducts a general import and export business, shipping American merchandise abroad and importing raw products of the United States. Their operations cover a large field, and they are especially prepared to export cotton grown by the Colored planters of the South; also lumber from its own mills and timber lands situated at Locate, Virginia. In addition, they have mentioned above, a general line of merchandise is exported by them.
Their imports consist mainly of cocoa, cocoanuts, lime juice and oil. Also West Indian vegetables, for which there is an increasing demand. Their exports are supplemented above, a general line of merchandise is exported by them.
Their imports consist mainly of cocoa, cocoanuts, lime juice and oil. Also West Indian vegetables, for which there is an increasing demand. Their exports are supplemented above, a general line of merchandise is exported by them.
Their imports consist mainly of cocoa, cocoanuts, lime juice and oil. Also West Indian vegetables, for which there is an increasing demand. Their exports are supplemented above, a general line of merchandise is exported by them.
By CHARLES T. MAGILL
Major Chisholm Voices Objections
16th Infantry, who did battle in France
with the 387th Infantry, was next called
on to speak. The major began his
time when a soldier had been caught
unawares, as he had not thought of
Chisholm. "I welcome this opportunity.
He then took decided objection
NEW JERSEY
Newark, N. J., Sept. 5. **The American Woodman Camp No. 5** celebrated their second anniversary last Sunday and took a break at the Pennington Street, A. M. E. Zobriski Corothers, pastor of the Pennington Street church, delivered the anniversary ceremony. A splendid program was rendered by the clerk of the American Woodman, from the home office in Denver, Col. was present and delivered a one address on the supper, evening the local camp gave a swell reception at the Thirteenth Avenue Presbyterian church, of which Dr. L. H. Hersman pastor, honor the supper, J. J. Jaffe, applications were received for membership in the American Woodman. *** Last Sunday was a great day at St. John's M. E. Church, pastor of the Newark, Rev. W. A. Hubbard is pastor. An islandly was held under the auspices of the Ludies' Aid Society of the church and the supper, afternoon at 4 o'clock there was a platform meeting of the business men of the city. Several good lectures were given by the speakers were the Rev. W. H. Hubbard, director of the church, and William Ashby, secretary of the Urban League, and John Odom, John Slater, representative of the Newark, and the New York Age, was master of ceremonies. * Emanuel White and Dr. Shurley and Carter have opened a fresh branch of the American Woodman, N. J. They opened their doors to the public last Saturday.
New Brunswick, N.J. Sept. 5. Howard Vandevere of Bardstreet street is spending a few days at Asbury Park and Ocean Grove as the guest of his wife, Carman and children have returned after visiting relatives in New York city. * Misu Mazie Schenek of Comstock street has returned after spending a few days at Misses Florence and Mildred Woolsey are at Atlantic City. * Mrs. Heyward Jeffreys of Delafield street attended the doctors convention at Newark rooftop garden are visiting their aunts in Newark. * The Elks' convention is in session at Atlantic City and John Adams and William Stirres are the delegates from Bardstreet. A number of local Elks will journey down to the shore by auto.
Bridgeton, N. J., Sept. 8.—Maiser & Ewell, the South Laurel street clothers, furnished fifty Elks of Fride of Forms for the parade in which they participated at Atlantic City during the week of the 24th of August, which Grand Lodge session, and they were applauded by their admirers for their great display. Anthony Pierce of Forms on his way to Atlantic City, by falling out of a big truck and it ran over his foot, fracturing it. He is now in his home, where he lives. Herman Davis, one of the delegates, was taken sick and was brought home before the convention came to a close. Of Academy street, Mr. Arthur R.
GOTTMAN AND
IMPORTERS AND
CAPITAL ST.
AUTHORIZED PAID IN
OFFERING 2,000 SHARES
$10 PER
Incorporated Under the Law
NEW YORK OFFICE, 203 BIRCHCHEE: 158 FLEET ST., L
DOMINICA, B. W. I., AND PORT
This company conducts a general
plung American merchandise abroad
various countries, especially the West.
These operations cover a large field.
export cotton grown by the Colored
from its own mills and timber land
addition to the special items ment
cellulars is imported by them.
Its imports consist mainly of
Algo West Indian vegetables, for wi
Judging by the amount of new erd
management to open new branches
that will increased capital they con-
sumably from their current earning
gaged is a highly profitable one and
master it.
COUPON
A. A. JACKSON, Mgr., Finance Dept.
Stri. Michael S. ........ (Maryn Order)
(Liberty Roads) for No. ........ shares
of Cotton & Co. Inc.
Name ........
Address ........
4
City ..... State
Circular letter free on request
to Moore's remarks, speaking from an expert knowledge and not from a theoretical one, as the previous speaker noted. He was not alone, none of our women had been sent over during the early struggles to undergo the misery and agony on the firing line. He was empathic in his praise of the young man, of the most stealing characters had labored hard and long in that capacity for our boys. Speaking of Moton, Mal, Shilsholm said, "And as for Moton, it never came to France. The never gone to France. The less said of him the better." From the loud applause that greated the speaker as he took his seat it was evident that the speaker heartily agreed with Mal, Shilsholm.
Mrs. Williamson Speaks
The last speaker was the guest of honor, Mrs. Williamson. She was in heart-to-heart way of life doing for our men in France. She told how the boys longed for a woman's face of their own color, how she would humor them, make them laugh, and tell them the speaker, and she always referred to the soldiers as boys, 'left a name of honor for themselves over there. The French love them and they love the girls, and they send away their best girls and women in fear of our boys. Not one charge of improper conduct was lodged against them during the whole five months in France. She told of the onerous work girls did, and they refused to continue unless given better treatment. She concluded by saying she would always have a warm smile, and she told Mrs. Williamson had the distinction to be the only worker sent over from a Red Cross auxiliary. Before and after the speaking dancing was enjoyed in the large gymnasium of the school, and the prominent people were among the very large audience present.
Williams, and Mrs. Carrie Jowett of Bergen street motorized to Atlantic City to witness the parade of the I. B. P. O. E. of W. Those representing Star of the City, NJ, at the Yorktown, NJ, at the Atlantic Ledge session at Atlantic City during the week of the 16th to the 23d of August, were Sir Mathew Mitchell, D. D. Sir M. Urrard, Lord Ford, David Collingham, Thomas J. Johnson, Jesse M. Johnson and Alfred D. Spencer. *Mr. and Mrs. Frank I. Miller of Forest avenue are spending a week at the shore, stopping at Harry Scott's.* *Mr. and Mrs. Spencer are spending to Atlantic City for the parade of the I. B. P. O. E. of W.* *Miss Myrtle Harmon of Vineland was a weekend visitor on Sunday of Mrs. Sidney D. Spruce street.* *William W. Spruce is barber shop at 61 South Pearl street for the past twenty-two years, has moved to 63 South Pearl street.* *John Wesley, M. E. church Sunday school, has moved to Thursday, Aug. 28.* *Truck left the church at 8:30 sharp. Tickets 50 cents. Members wish to thank all who helped to make their picnic a success. Laws, pastor, Mr. and Mrs. Abram Caws, West Vine street, are spending their vacation at West Chester, Pa., visiting relatives and friends of that vicinity.
ELKS HOLD CONVENTION
Atlantic City, N. J., Sept. 5.—For the past week all roads led to the city by bus, and every train brought in new visitors from other countries the country. Their presence meant that two great national orders were holding their annual conclave. The grand oratory was held in the 20th annual convention, which meant wherever the Ellis meet good fellowship knows no bounds. The annual sermon was preached by Rev. William H. H. H. said, in fact, all participants on the program, including the city officials as well, made the occasion one round of pleasure and contentment. Numerous members and an equal number of bachquets and smokers engaged the attention of the man. The Chicago delegation, under the banner of the Great Council, attended the conference, sparing neither pain nor money to make themselves seen and felt.
ROCKEFELLER TO AID RURAL
EDUCATION IN THE SCI
EDUCATION IN THE SOUTH
New York City 5. Commission of its field of education in rural and rural education in the South to include Texas and South Carolina was announced by the general education board, ordered by the Rockefeller, will appoint a commission of rural schools of Texas and a rural school inspector for South Carolina.
Innocent Man Shot: May Die
Cleveland, Ohio, Sept. 5—Euther
Addie, 24, 225 East 14th street, was
dying in Charity hospital Saturday
morning from gunshot wounds in the
abdomen, sustained while an innocent
bystander in a family quarrel Friday
Frank Owens, 26, 1421 Central,
was arrested on a shooting-to-kill
charge.
COMPANY, Inc.
AND EXPORTERS
STOCK $30,000
$10,000—PAR VALUE $18
S OF COMMON STOCK AT
SHARE
of the State of New Jersey
BROADWAY, NEW YORK CITY
LONDON, ENGLAND; ROSEAU,
OF SPAIN, TRINIDAD, B. W. I.
al import and export business, ship-
lish these is an increasing, and importing raw products of the
West Indies, South America and Africa.
and they are especially prepared to
plantage of the South America lumber
is situated at Locato, Vitoria in
inced above, a general line of mer-
cocos, cocoa nuts, lime juice and oil,
cocoa, cocoa nuts, lime juice and oil.
ers on hand, and the desire of the
in other countries, it would seem
could easily pay 10 per cent dividends
the field in which they are en-
d has demonstrated their ability to
If you are seeking an investment of unusual merit, we adhere immediate purchases of this book to the conditions this stock will be way above par value in a short time. Write for circular letter format and submit plan. Library Bonds accepted. Send subscriptions to
2296 SEVENTH AVE. NEW YORK CITY
Police and Soldiers Arouse Sheepers
The peaceful slumers of the citizens of the downtown section of the city were arrested on April 20, when Polishman Whitman and James Cobb, a soldier of Camp Mills, were trying to make targets of one who was hit when Cobb was locked up in his 100-bed apartment on two charges of felonious assault, one for shooting at the officer and one for shooting at James Colgan (white), the policeman. The police, the trouble start when he ordered Cobb to move on at Bridge street and Jarbie avenue, where he was shot by a woman. Cobb answered by hitting him and running. He followed Cobb who began shooting. He vowed to law enforcement to house at No. 26, where he was captured. When arrested he had no gun.
Doctor Tella of Chicago Troubles
The meeting rooms of the Sons of North Carolina were filled to capacity on Sunday, Aug. 24, when Dr. Roosevelt and his guest, a gymnast and a resident Hospital, Chicago, came to talk "fons." He laid stress on two points as leading to the Race disturbances: they were the employment of men from the city, and they were not only the getting of homes by our people in the so-called restricted section of whites in the city. Bishop W. H. Gilson was master of ceremonies who, in terms, told of Dr. Gilso's efforts to complete his profession in his native state and city said was barred, not because he was a member of the community was also remembered the firm stand taken by the S. of N. C. in this matter.
Boy Injured by Auto
Earl Merrick was injured by an automobile last week. The boy, who is 6 years old and lives at 37 Ashland place, was playing in front of his home when he was knocked down by the white car while he was driving. Herbert Quest (white) of 600 Warren street. The car is owned by the W. G. Case Company of Gravesend. He suffered a fracture of the skull and conduction of the brain, he was taken to the Brooklyn hospital, and cured prompt medical attention and though yet in a critical condition his improvement bids well to recovery. The Merrick family, of which he is a memorial donor, lives in town, having for years been in the boarding-house and restaurant business.
Reception to Dr. William
Dr. and Mrs. E. A. Williams of Chincinnati, Ohio. Were guests of honor at a reception given in their honor by Dr. and Mrs. E. A. Williams at home on Duffield street Tuesday evening, Aug. 25. Dr. Williams, who is the father of Mrs. Brown, is one of Chincinnati's most prominent citizens, and here on route to the doctor's office which is being held in Philadelphia. Music and dancing were the theme of the repost was served; covers being had for forty persons, among whom were some of our most prominent citizens.
St. John's Church Greets Pastor
St. John's A. M. E. Church was crowded on Thursday evening, Aug. 28, when the members and friends adored the repost and his wife. The reception was given by the Tuesday Night Club of the church. There was a program rendered and the pastor the recipient of gifts and a purse. Miss Angelena J. W. Robinson, president; Mrs. Jevons, tressurer, and Miss P. Michael, secretary of the club, were in charge.
Dungan Returns from Virginia
George Duncan, the popular sorgeant-at-arms of the Universal Club, was a long-time "woks" trip to Petersburg, Va. Mr. Duncan for years has had a responsiblity to the Shoep Company. He so much improved on the trip, "George," an he is famously called by all who know him, is a friend, mentor, and buddah and has done much in his behalf.
Bank Employe's Wife Dies
Funeral services were held at the parishes of Udderstake George H. Harris. $23 Herkimer street, Monday, Aug. 19. $25 Henkel street, Monday, Jan. 6th. John Curry, who for years has been used employee of the State Bank, Varkle street and Graham avenue. She was a native of Georgia. Her death occurred on Aug. 33 after a short illness.
Fulcher on the Job
Oscar W. Fulcher, the live real estate dealer and head of the Enterprise Realty Group in the high street, is still on the job as seen by his last deal which was the selling of the house at 21 Chauney street. He seems to have bought his new car, which our our friend lifted very much after the trip down town.
Sergent Lockett Leaves the Service
Sergent F. H. Lockett, who was oversea with the $60th Fionce Regi-lical office, was given a discharge and when goodwill to the Sunpet street, seemed glad to be back in civil life. Lockett, who was active social life of Upper Brooklyn, was given a big reception by his many friends.
Bridal Couple Home Again
James B. Harris, who journeyed to Fort Valley, Ga., for his bride, Mrs Dorothy C. Hunt, daughter of Prof. H. A. Hunt, head of the Fort Valley H. A. Hunt, arrived in the city this week. While he was done for the comfort and pleasure of the happy pair, they will make their home at 510 Hancock street.
LeSanes in Atlantic City
Mr. and Mrs. LoSano of Fulton street, near Rochester avenue, left the city Wednesday, Aug. 27, for Atlantic City, where they will spend several weeks. Mr. LoSano, who has a private residence, the navy yard, is also known as one of the aggressive young men of the district in which he lives.
Rev. McCloud Here
Rev. J. F. McCloud, a well-known clergyman of Charleston, S. C., was the guest of his son and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. William W. 13 Schenectady avenue. While he lived many of his former friends and acquaintances from the old Palmetto state.
Brooklynites Visit Convention
invention
Brooklyn is becoming
after the big exodus to Atlantic City,
for the citizens are returning home
again. Among a few who have been
received by convention were
William Miller, "Doc" Cornell,
Johnson and Tom Morton.
Mrs. Miller Out of Town
Mr. William Miller, one of the popu-
sionists of Upper Brooklyn, who resided at 1776 Atlantic City for a few
journing in Atlantic City for a few years, and of Vfm. Miller, a prominent clinker.
Quintin Vaughan in Town
Quinlan Vaughan, one of the best known and most popular young men of the city, came to town from camp sev-
ence in the 1950s to undertake a high honorable discharge after the year of
The members of the Universal Club of the 5th A. D. held a smoker and pow-wow at the clubrooms, 689 Herkimer street, on Tuesday evening, Aug. 28, 1983. The club, presided. The prime object of the meeting was to let the various candidates of the party meet the voters at the clubrooms. Among those to appear were Elmer G. Sammia, candidate for justice of the Municipal Court; Assemblyman J. H. Cauldwell, Jr. Judge J. S. Crawford, Jr. Judge C. D. Candida, and Elmer Bake, the "boy orator." Ben Cohq (white) spoke for Judge Dike, relling his side of the case. Mrs. Crawford, largely attested, and President Jones was all to select the man who was willing to see that we receive not special favors but common justice. After the meeting a big smoker was had for the members and visitors.
EAS
contest of district tortious in the club.
defeated said Reeve receives 423 votes.
BROOK
Mrs. T. Hairdreden, M.
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overseas duty. Vaughan may be remembered as one of the most active young men in the sporting world, parachutist, baseball player, baseball, and was known as Brooklyn's best ball manager. He also was a leader in Y. M. C. A. work.
Universal Club Holds Pow-Wow
Auto Falls In Subway Ditch
An automobile of the Burns Bros. Coal Company, containing ten tons of coal, proved too heavy when the driver attempted to go across the plains on a bush avenue, near Prospect Park, last Friday, and several persons were hurt, including three of our men. The men in the plains, in critical condition, where they were treated for minor injuries and contusions. The injured were Wm. Jones, 42, of 139 Atlantic avenue, and Baird, of 1797 Atlantic avenue, and Beury Blair, 52, 1077 Atlantic avenue. It was said that from the crowd everybody identified, which happened at 8 a.m., except the police, who are said to have received no account of the accident by Dr. Driscoll of the hospital staff the men went to their respective home.
Hertomites Held for Burglary
Lawrence Golden, $2. who gave his address as $5½ West 133d street, and James West, who said he lived at 40 N. 133d Street, Bridge, who claims Manhattan Transfer, N. J., as his home, were arrested Monday, Aug. 25, by Detective Efiz Zubair, who charged charges of burglary. The detective claims that while in the subway station at 38th street and Fourth avenue, Devilin (white), who was sleep on a bench. He went over and "stalled" Devilin (white), who walked over to Devilin and relaunched on of a watch and chain valued at $30. He followed them to 45th street, where they were held without ball for examination later on in the week.
Elmer Baker Supports Democrat
Political circles were stirred last week when Elmer Baker announced that he seventeen years of camaraderie with the Democrats, saying, in effect, that the time is past when the Race man should be tied to one political party and get no more than a few days. The Democrat will land a job from the Democrat and get some for others, if successful.
Prominent Virginiaans Visit City
Mr. and Mrs. Stevens of 1656 Bergen street have an guests Mrs. Roberts and Mrs. Dally of Virginia. Both of the ladies have been active in church and in that state and Mr. Roberts in one of the leading business men there.
Pleads Guilty
Brooklyn, N.T., Sept. 5—It is claimed William Dickson pleaded guilty to robbing the room of Arthur H. Muller on Thursday evening, when arraigned in the Coney Island court on a charge of burglary last Friday. He was held in custody by jury by Magdalene O'Nell. He gave his address at 650 Third avenue.
Sojourning in Canada
Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept. 5—Mr. and Mrs. James Henry Helps, 329-A Cliffton place, left the city last Wednesdays, spend their annual summer vacation, visiting Buffalo and Niagara Falls on route home in the fall.
Spend Labor Day in Nutley Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept. 5—Mrs. Theos. L. Jackson and Miss Marilyn Saunders of Brooklyn spent Labor day in Nutley, N. Y., Sept. 5—Mrs. Ward Cornell on their bungalow. Both these ladies, who reside in the Bedford section, are popular workers in Y. W. C. A. and other civic organizations.
Universal Club, Brooklyn's Elite Dining and Reception Rooms. Music on Thursday, Saturday and Sunday evenings. 689 Herkimer street, near Utica avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. T. 7278 Bedford.
ENCLOSES
Harris Wins in New
New York Sept. 5.—George W. Harris, editor of *The New York Times*, the winner in the Republican primary for alderman of the Twenty-sixth addermanic district over three other contestants. In the Twenty-seventh addermanic district over fourteenorious over two others in the field. In the Nineteenth Assembly district Miss Margaret Rev. a school teacher, defeated Rev. Richard Bolden. It is in Boston that contest. Harris received a total of 221 votes and Roberts 427.
EAST NEW YORK DOTS
Brooklyn, N. T., Sept. 5—Mr. and Mrs. T. D. Vaughn, who formerly lived on Eton street, have moved to Harlem owing to the selling of their residence. Mrs. Daughnan conducted a high-class interview with the residents. Many residents have found themselves in a like predicament. *M. E. B. Ell. 3533 Pitkin avenue, has returned home after spending a pleasant day at the beach. J. looking the picture of healtl Sh. guest of Mr. Bell's relatives. *A number of people from this section journeyed to Nassau Beach via the Old Mill, Labor day, and enjoyed a pleasant day at the beach. A. D. Colored Republican League was held last Friday night at Dexter Park. While not the usual large crowd that attended these affairs in bogyone days proceeded, who did come out enjoy the delightful Brooks Jr. Ester street, who has been spending the summer up in the state of Maine, has returned home again.
UTICA
Southerners Lynch Man
In Country Churchyard
in Country Churchyard
Louisburg, N. C., Sept. 5. —Prayer
and adoration around the lynching of Walter Elliot, who was cut down from a tree in a country
churchyard here Aug. 21. —A crowd of
white men numbering over 200, took
to the churchyard, rope around
his neck and dragged him
the churchyard. He was sworn from
a limb and his body riddled with
bullets. The victim became involved in a
battle with the police, after the
spilling of some milk. The wounds
it is said, endowed to strike him
over the head with a container when
he was shot at the ground. Men
who witnessed the attack said they
thought Elliot was trying to criminally
assault her.
LADS PLAY WITH
GUN: ONE SHOT
I acclaim the Buffalo Toilet Preparation is for the apocrine to appearance. There is no reason to penalize Mrs W. K. SUTTON.
Yonkers Girls Visiting
Yonkera N. Y., Sept. 5. The Misses Lena B. Jackson and Sarah and Elinabeth Norleste were enjoying the breezes that flattered the past two weeks. The weather might have been more formal well known people of that place during their stay.
Week-End In Jersey
Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept. 5.—Mensor P. Saunders, who is convalescing from a recent illness, enjoyed the breezes of a day during the past week and where he was welcome visitor in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Connell.
The social event of the season. Fourth Annual Picnic and Autumn Frolic of the UNIVERSAL CLUB, Colored Republican Ass'n of the 5th Assembly District, at Dexter Park, Jamaica and Drew avenues, Thursday evening, Sept. 11. Music by Prof. Fisher's Jazz Band. Admission 35 cents. Directions From N. Y. take Cypress Hills "L" at Brooklyn Bridge; get off at Eldert Lane Station.
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Representatives Wanted on Salary and Commission Base
JAMAICA JOTTINGS
The stewardess board No. 1 of Allied church gave a corn feast Monday night in the lecture room of the church which the church president is present on the board. The 9 o'clock Sunday morning prayer meetings, led by Robert Thomas, are being attended by the prayer meetings in the church. Woman's Mite Missionary Society gave a successful lawn party Thursday night at the home of Mrs. Mary Hutton, 101 St. Paul's Church, president. Walter Brooks, former Pacific street, recently moved to 218 Washington street. William Marshall Washington street was called to Brodby, death of fals notice. Mrs. Soymour and Mrs. Earnest Banks of Roanoke, Va. are visiting Mrs. Hayward of 169 Pacific street, spending two months in Boston with his uncle, Joseph Braithwaite. *Little Odessa. Pile is spending two months in Odessa. Mrs. Hayward of New York, Mrs. Anna Barries, who recently real estate office from 138 Washington street to 155 Pacific street, is doing very good business. Among the sales being made on Norris avenue to Miss Pearl Jenkins. She will take up her abode there after renovations are completed. The song recited given by Mme. Barrière, reported by Prof. L. F. Dyer and other local talent, was superb. Miss Branchard gave a splendid account of her vane's Ride. *T. A. Hebbons pleased his hearers in his barytone sole. Mrs. Emma McKenny captivated her and refreshed her piano selection. Mrs. Alma McKenny cared for the honors. In song Mme. Hebbons surpassed all expectations and all that heard her are anxious that she should be seated Sept. 18. The pastor, Rev. Mr. Clyde spoke in the highest terms of the program and said it should be an inspiration to the young members of Roche.
Maternal From South Carolina
MOTORS FROM SOUTH CAROLINA
New Rochelle, N. Y., Sept. 8, Brennan E. Stephenson, 1 Assembly street, Chesterfield, Va., and Stephenson with Mrs. Eliza Hammond and Huguenot street. Dr. Stephenson told a Defender reporter that he was comprised at the conditions in New York where there are so many Race plains and no hospital to practice on. He said the hospitals controlled by Race bans and that our people are sticking together in every walk of life.
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By Hon. W. Allison Gunney
A book of great historical value, well
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for free canvassing outfit.
$ for $1.00—Negro Pictures, about
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6 for $1.00 - Negro Pictures, about 25
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CALENDARS FOR 1920
Beautiful Negro Picture Calendar
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THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
PAGE SEVEN
Great Melo-Dramatic Comedy at Avenue; Real Vaudeville Bill at the Grand
JAMES L. LASKY
WOMAN THOU
GAVEST ME"
By Hall Caine Scenario by Beulah Marie Dix
Directed by HUGH FORD
A Paramount Artcraft Special
TWO DAYS—WED. AND THURS., SEPT. 10 AND 11
HAMMOND & SONS
PICKFORD THEATER
35TH ST., AT MICHIGAN AVE.
PAGE EIGHT
"The Girl He Couldn't Buy" is the title of the present week's offering of the Lafayette Players at the Avenue Theater. It is one of the best plays that has been presented by the clever group now holding forth at this popular house and is so full of interesting situations that it would require a world of space to tell of them all. The fact that it is billed as a melodramatic comedy should suffice to give those interested an insight of what might be expected, and the story, in brief follows: Tony Langston
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Hope Nelson, the heroine, who has been brought up in luxury and refinement, is suddenly thrown upon her own resources through the death of her father, who has apparently been ruined through the efforts of an unscrupulous partner, who tries to get the girl into trouble by opposing him in order to accomplish his purpose. You don't unexpected protector in the person of Joe Maynard, who has adopted a career of burglary after having spent a term in prison for a crime he did not commit. She prevails upon his better nature, and together they plan a hold stroke to thwart the plans of her enemy and to make him make restitution of property he has stolen from her family. She is not the only person, however, and they are thrown to his. The plot develops through a series of thrilling situations until the powerful enemy, who is preparing to deprive the one of his liberty and the other of her innocence, is caught most dramatically in his own toils. Interest is tensely held from beginning to end in a series of climaxes, interspersed with scenes in which the comedians of the company will be involved. The characters are unique types and between the story and the fun there isn't a dull moment from curtain to curtain.
The characters of Hope Nelson and Joe Maynard are handled with the usual skill of Clao Desmond and Andrew Bishop. Miss Deamond has the sympathies of the audience from the front, and she is forming the hero are accorded almost as much applause as is the scene in which the discomfiture of the "villain" is featured. Mr. Bishop is so much at home in the characters of the kind which he is called upon to portray in his work that he is a guaranteed idea of advance. L. Criner as David Burnham, a vile crook, is right up to the minute; he is a convincing worker and gets much out of the part. Arthur Simmons as Flip and Evelyn Ellis as Kitty Burns is convincing the offering in a way that gets them applause, and it is doubtful if either has ever been seen to better advantage. Simmons is gaining a fine reputation for his character work. Arthur Ray portrays a peculiar type of the character, Lorenzo Strong, and Lionel Monzaz and Detective John "straight" officer, is attracting attention by his forceful work. H. L. Pryor is "The Crab," an underworld type, does the part full justice. Miss Clough as Mrs. Edwards, the rooming-house keeper, sustains her reputation for the kind of Charles Olden as a police officer has a well handled small part.
THE GRAND
There was a real bill here for the first half of the week, and two of the acts are remaining for the full session, their engagements closing on Sunday night. There are the Princess Mysteria & Co. and Maybelle Whitman and her Dixie Boys. The latter is coming from season of trishawing the "big time" in the East and leaving headed for a trip over the time of the same sept in the West. Miss Whitman has one of the best acts of its kind in the business, and the splendid work of the handsome young lady and her "Boys" started stopping shows at the Labor day matinee and has continued do so at every performance ever so long as he is still performing, even at high speed, and there are claps dancing and singing done in the allotted fifteen minutes than is ordinarily seen in an evening's entertainment of musical comedy. The act is dressed right up to the minute, and there isn't a loophole for a fault-finder to squeeze through. Some act. Princess Mysteria & Co. is now act. Princess Mysteria of the mental telepathy acts, and of the mental telepathy acts, preceded them here were justified. It is a rapid-fire proposition, and the work is done with remarkable skill and
For when the One Great Scorer comes
Te write against your name,
He writes, not that you won or er lost-
But—How you played the game.
precision. It is one of the best novelties in the vaudeville business. Other acts were Charles Ledger, a tight-rope performer; Marie Alon & Co. in a domestic sketch; Moran Sisters, elever juveniles, and Rice Brothers, character comedians.
Next week, Dora Dean & Sunbeams.
THE MONOGRAM
The bill here this week is a the one, and there are nothing but headliners doing their stuff. Mime, Fairfax & Son are featured, and they are repeating the success gained by them on their former visits. Baby Mack, singing and performing for the mime community on Monday night. The clever young lady is in a class by herself in her particular line, and the manner in which she puts her work over is a revelation. Gross & Fleming, one of the best sister teams ever seen here, are going great; they have a fine novelty and many things worth going a new way with. Ross, the resembles but does not attempt to imitate Bert Williams, has a splendid monologue, and completes a bill that it will take a long time to beat.
"THE WOMAN THOU GAVEST ME"
Virtually all all-star cast presents the Paramount-Artcraft's special picture, "The Woman Thou Gavest Me," Hall Caine's masterpiece, directed by Hugh Ford, which will be shown at the Pickford Theater Wednesday and Thursday Sept. 10 and 11. The play by Katherine MacDonald, one of the most beautiful actresses, who will be remembered for her excellent work as Lady Diane in "The Squaw Man" and for her work in support of Douglas Fairbanks and William S. Hart, both of other notable pictures. Miss MacDonald is in every way for the tremendous powerful emotional part in the Caine picture, for she is not only beautiful but accomplished in the blithe art and gifted with a splendid sense of proportion. Her condition is declared to be a real wow. Milton Sills, seen on several occasions as leading man for Clara Kimball Young, a well-known actor of the screen, is cast as Martin Conrad, the intrepid young explorer, whose love interest is one of the inspiring features of the play. Kimball is extremely excellent, in the emotional moments with which the picture abounds.
Theodore Roberts, the veteran actor, is Daniel MacNeill, the stern and unyielding father of Mary. He is hard-knight, proud as Luccifer and he sacrifices his chisel on the altar of his selfless one. The and is portrayed with infinite artistry. The rest of the cast is of the same caliber and the patrons of the Pickford will be more than pleased with this great picture. Don't miss it.
SALOME
On Friday night of the present week
A Night With Salome, one of the big
hits of the season at the Royal Gardens,
will be repeated. There is a wonderful
cast rehearsing for the occasion,
and Virgil Williams claims that it will
be done stronger than ever, which is
whispering a mouthful. There should
be a record crowd at the Gardons on
Friday night. Let's go.
DOESN'T CARE FOR JAZZ
Chambersburg, Pa. Sept. 5.—Alleging that despite his protests and requests a neighbor persists in playing her phonograph at all hours of the night, Walter Schuchman has brought a prosecution against the woman for maintaining a nuisance. Schuchman charges that she frequently plays the phonograph and has dancing in her apartment until 3 in the morning, thereby causing himself and family much annoyance and loss of sleep.
SHOW OPENS SOON
A letter arrived a few days ago from Salem Tutt Whitney, whose show, "Children of the Sun," is being rehearsed in Philadelphia. He states that the season will open at the Standard Theater on Sept. 15 and that the following week will find them at the Lafayette Theater, New York City.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Dustin Farnum
IN
A MAN'S
FIGHT ~
THE WINNING OF
I WOMAN'S LOVE AGAINST
TREMENDOUS ODDS.
THE GREATEST
PICTURE
EVER ACTED
BY THE
GREATEST STAR
TWO DAYS—TUES. AND WED., SEPT. 9 AND 10
THIRTY-FIRST
BLOCK
HAMMOND & SONS
VENDOME
ON STATE
ST.
"BIGGEST AND BEST"
Grand Opening
OF
PALAIS DE DANSE
AT
UNITY CLUB HOUSE
3140 INDIANA AVE.
Friday Night, Sept. 5th
ELGAR'S ORCHESTRA
NOW PLAYING MUNICIPAL PIER
A. C. ELGAR, MANAGER AND DIRECTOR
"MARY REGAN"
How "big business" relaxes and spends its swollen profits on the midnight pleasures of Broadway is vividly shown in "Mary Regan," the First National feature which is to be seen at the States Theater, Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 6 and 7.
When the capitalist and his son, and their friends so relax and so begin to squander the money which has come without exertion there creep in from the underworld creatures hideous of soul, but with brains of diplomats who begin cunningly to plot the reaping of a dishonest harvest.
Such is the stage upon which is set "Mary Regan," Anita Stewart's newest picture. Miss Stewart has the part of a girl whose mother was a society woman and whose father is serving in the penitentiary a sentence for theft. She has determined that she shall live a lawful life to repay her father's debt. Unwilling to force a husband she has the stigma of her father's name, she has refused to marry a young detective.
Peter Loveman, an attorney, is the head of one of the gangs which, dressed in evening clothes and surrounded by splendor, prey upon the wealthy. He is young, beautiful and an ideal tool. She is young, beautiful and an ideal tool. He decides to use her in throwing his not over Jack Morton, the son of a rich man. Young Morton is inclined to be wild.
Loveman induces young Morton's friend to send him away to the mountains, where he will take the day, takes care that the resort to which young Morton is sent is that at which Mary Regan is spending a holiday. They are thrown together and Mary, while knowing Loveman is plotting against both him and Mary, forms an attachment for him, seeking the reckless pace at which he has been going. When he becomes infatuated with her she agrees to wed him, and they contract a secret marriage. At a scashore hotel the elder Morton comes upon them within a few hours after the marriage, and Mary Mary has agreed, not to tell of their relations, the father forces them apart.
From this time forth the story resolves itself into Mary's attempts to keep her young husband out of the hands of Loveman and his crowd, who try to get his money, and still to keep sequestration, the Loveman constantly threatens her, but her good friend, Chifford, the detective, always has an eye to her safety. At last, however, the Loveman crew get Mary and Jack together in a private room at a big Broadway cabaret with the detective, who with the girl and clean up the last of the young man's money when the detective plays his master card.
LULU COATES & CO.
Philadelphia '14, Pa., Sept. 5—One of the best bids ever seen at the Standard Theater is being offered this week by Manager John Gibson. The headlined attraction presents the famous vaudeville act, Lulu Costes and Cracker-jacks, which has been added attraction to several big time road shows. Miss Costes is introducing several brand-new features on the present tour and the patrons are according her a world of well merited applause at every performance, the work of the famous star and her three clever fools, stopping the show at applance. The show is cool that the Costes act has a world of booking lined up on the big time.
Main floor seats and first five rows in balcony for October 7 at Orchestra hall are 90c until September 21.
"A MAN'S FIGHT"
"A MAN'S FIGHT"
Dustin Farnum, one of the greatest of all Vendome Theater favorites, will be seen at that pop concert on Wednesday, Sept. 9 and 10, in one of the most thrilling plays of his career, "A Man's Fight." A brief synopsis follows:
Roger Carr of an aristocratic New York family, and man about town, detects Norman Evans, his only sister's suitor. Norman Evans, half intoxicated, presses overzealous attentions on Ethel in the drawing-room of the Carr mansion. In the semi-darkness Evans is shot dead, the reviver is slid along the floor between the two men, and the律师 believes the other fired the Carr. though innocent, to save his sister makes no initial of the shooting. Clever lawyers get the sentence reduced to a short term of years in the penitentiary, comes to Sing Sing. Ethel becomes Sister Carmon, a nun in a Western convent.
Emerging from the penitentiary on the expiration of his term Carr is spurned by his patriarch old father for the disgrace he has brought on the aristocratic family. With a many determinations to yet make good and secure his sums, Carr, under the alias of John Rand, goes to Colorado and makes a success as the industrial and political leader of the independents among the mine owners. He is openly courted by the daughter of the richest of the Independents and is secretly loved, too. The young man, the vern girl of the worth-while type, Straining every effort to wreck Rand's impending triumph, his political foes stumble upon his Sing Sing, past. Pate grins in his face as for the second time it is on the point of making him an astonish when to startling fashion the truth women he adores. Sister Carrn and the little secretary, as its medium, and faces a striking enmotion to this Tom J. Geraghty fascinating story.
"BIRTH OF A RACE"
"BIRTH OF A RACE"
"The Birth of a Race," the new picture which the States Theater is soon to show, pictures dramatically the great events of history, but it is not primarily a war story. Its theme is of peace, of brotherhood. It traces the history of world advancement from the Gutenberg of the Middle Ages in the present year of our Lord. "The Birth of a Race" is shown in its progress down through the ages in scenes of peace, of war, of diplomacy and domestic happiness. It is one of the most graphic histories of the world ever preserved, the enlightenment and entertainment. In addition to this, the picture contains one of the finest modern stories ever pictured. It is the story of a truly American boy who married the girl of his choice, even though she was poor and he was rich. He went to work in the factory and eventually ordered to prove his ability to make his own way. And when the war came he and his young wife faced their problems as brave young Americans. The big test for the young man came when he learned that his own father had worked for the German cause, in fact, and won a decoration from the kaiser.
Some of the best acting ever seen on the screen is done by George Le Guere as the hero. Jane Grev as his young wife and Ben Hendricks as the American of German birth who was tricked into the kaiser's not.
THE BIRTH OF A RACE
4 DAYS, WED., THURS., FRI., AND SAT. SEPT. 10, 11, 12 & 13 2 P. M. TO MIDNIGHT STATES THEATER
Blue Monday Matinees Weekly
RESPONDING to thousands of requests from our patrons and from Prep fessional people, we have decided to hold BUNDLE MONDAY MATINEES," and they will be a weekly feature, starting on Monday, May 19, with JOHN H. WICKLIFE'S FAMOUS GINGER BAND, offering a diversified Program of Selected, Syncopated DANCE MUSIC.
EVERYBODY WELCOME.
BRING YOUR FRIENDS.
STATES THEATRE 3507 STATE STREET
THE HOME OF GREAT FEATURES
Fineest Picture House Outside Loop. Continuous 2 P. M. to Midnight
E. M. WYER'S STATES ORCHESTRA
OWL THEATRE
STATE NEAR 47TH ST.
Fineest Equipped Theatre Outside the Loop
1200 ROOMY SEATS
CLARENCE M. JONES AND HIS SELECT ORCHESTRA
DAILY, 2 P. M. TO MIDNIGHT
FIRST POPULAR THEATRE ON THE SOUTH SIDE
PICKFORD THEATRE 35th Street and Michigan Avenue Clarence H. Black's Symphony Orchestra SELECTED PHOTO-PLAYS of CLASS
THE VAUDETTE E.B. DUDLEY PROPRIETOR
ALWAYS THE BEST
Vaudeville and Pictures
GRATIOT AVENUE
DETROIT, MICH
100
4 DAYS, WED., THURS., FRI.
SEPT. 10, 11, 12 & 13
STATES TH
3507 STATE ST.
Blue Monday M
AND THE BAND START
RESPONDING to thousands of regu
fessional people, we have deci
MATINEES," and they will be a week
19, with JOHN H. WICKLIFFE'S R
diverraffed Program of Selected, Syn
EVERYBODY WELCOME.
NEW ENTER
UNDER MANAGEM
35th Street, at Indiana Avenue,
STATES
3507 STATE
THE HOME OF G
Finest Picture House Outside Loo
E. M. WYER'S ST
HAMMOND
VENDOME
3143-49 S
1500 COMFORTABLE SEATS
ERSKINE TATE'S SY
Continuous, 2 to Midnight
REAL REEL FEATURES
OWL T
STATE NE
Finest Equipped The
1200 ROOM
CLARENCE M. JONES AND
DAILY, 2 P. M.
HOST DODULAR THEATRE
PICKFORD
35th Street and N
Clarence H. Black's S
SELECTED PHOTO
O. C. HAMMOND Owner PIC
of PHOTO
THE VAUDI
ALWAYS T
Vaudeville a
GRATIOT AVENUE
LINCOLN THEATRE
3132 STATE STREET
FIRST CLASS PICTURES
CHANGED DAILY
PERFECT VENTILATION
COMFORTABLE HEATING
Continuous-2 O'Clock to Midnight.
THE GREATEST AND MOST DARING OF PHOTOPLAYS
THE STORY OF SIN
A MASTER PICTURE
CONCEIVED IN THE
SPIRIT OF TRUTH
AND DEDICATED TO ALL OF
THE RACES OF THE WORLD
WONDERFUL-POWERFUL-IMPRESSIVE COST $1,000,000 TO MAKE. OVER 2 YEARS IN MAKING Throughout the Ages, from the Days When Eve Brought Sins of the Flesh Into the World. Down to the Culmination of WICKEDNESS IN LIFE TODAY BEAUTIFUL SCENES IN THE GARDEN OF EDEN
DIRECT FROM LOOP RUN—DON'T MISS IT
3 DAYS, THURS., FRI. AND SAT. SEPT.18,19 AND 20 6 P.M. TO MIDNIGHT OWL THEATER
THE ATLAS THEATER
4711-17 S.State St., East Side Street
THE PLACE TO SEE
"REAL" PICTURES
All the time
Hear the Famous Atlas Orchestra
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER & 1919
A RACE
DARING OF PHOTOPLAYS
Y OF SIN
PICTURE
D IN THE
OF TRUTH
D TO ALL OF
THE WORLD
FURFUL—IMPRESSIVE
OVER 2 YEARS IN MAKING
The Days When Eve Brought
the World. Down to
formation of
LIFE TODAY
GENES IN
EDEN OF EDEN
UN—DON'T MISS IT
THURS., FRI. AND SAT.
19 AND 20 6 P.M. TO
MIDNIGHT
THEATER
4653 STATE ST.
ASK TO HEAR THESE
SONG HITS
ASK FOR THEM AT YOUR DEALER'S
OR CALL ON DE.
BIG SONG SALE
One Week Only! $29.99, 8 Song
Hits for a Dollar
"Don't Tell Your Monkey Man"
Who Made You Cry!" "Tittle Ball"
"You Can Give Nobody Nana of The
Jelly Roll"
America. They Are Both for You.
Them. They Just Like a Mother to Me."
"Uncle Sam Ain't No Woman."
Money Orders Only, No Stamp.
WILLIAMS & PIRON
$199 STATE ST., CHICAGO, IL.
FREE Illustrated Catalog of WOND-REFUL SONGS SEND TODAY WE HAVE ONE FOR YOU We are the publisher of "A GOOD MAN IS HARD TO FIND" and the Best "BLUES" and Novelty Songs ever written Pace & Handy Music Co., Inc. (The Home of Blues) 1547 Broadway, New York, N. Y.
DANCE NIGHTLY AT
BEAUTIFUL
ROYAL GARDENS
459 East 31st St.
Dine in Elegant Gold Room
Kitchen in Charge of
MRS. ARNETT
FAMOUS N. O. JAZZ BAND
Virgil Williams, Prop.
James Griffin, Mgr.
Exclusive Showing
STATES AND OWL
THEATER8
EVERY FRIDAY
CHICAGO DEFENDER
SCREEN TELEGRAM
Greatest Weekly Pictorial Review
in the World
SEE IT!
PHOENIX THEATRE
8104 STATE STREET
SELECTED PHOTO-PLAYS
CHANGED DAILY
Continuous 2:45 p. m. to Midnight
Perfect Projection. Full Orchestra
Washed Air Ventilation
PERFORMERS
Send in for Our New
ROUTE CARDS
to
TONY LANGSTON,
8129 State Street, Chicago, Ill.
WARNING
People are hereby warned not to pay their subscriptions to newsboys. If they do so it is at their own risk.
AVENUE THEATRE
31st Street and Indiana Avenue
PANAMA AMUSEMENT CO.
LOUIS WEINBERG, President and Gen. Manager
WEEK STARTING MONDAY, SEPT. 8th
THE QUALITY AMUSEMENT CO., EDWARD C. BROWN, Pres. & Gen. Mgr.
THE ALL STAR FAVORITE LAFAYETTE PLAYERS, in
THE BIG LOOP SUCCESS
"THE DUMMY"
OR, "THE BOY DETECTUF"
A DRAMATIZATION OF HARVEY J. O'HIGGINS'
SATURDAY EVENING POST STORIES
This is One of the Most Expensive Royalty Plays Ever Offered
by a Stock Company
FASCINATING STORY HILARIOUS COMEDY
SITUATIONS WITH RAPID ACTION
Matinees: Sat. & Sun. 2118
SHARP
Every Night (One Show Only), 8115 Sharp
Bargain Matinee Saturday, Prices 15, 15 and 25c
Nights and Sunday Matinee Prices, 15, 25, and 35c
One Week Only All Seats Reserved
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1919
"THE DUMMY"
The big loop success, "The Dummy," be the offering of the Lafayette Playhouse at the Avery theater next week and in it it thrills and fun galore, for the hero in the offering nothing more nor less than a boy 'detector!'
It seems too good to be true! All last, after all these years, we follow who have been spanked and sent to bed suppleless by unfelling parents for enameling the barn to revel in the deeds of "Stick Sim, the Stealth," have our revenge.
Not sneak there, mind you, like you go to trail down the lane with your latest stuffed stuffed under your jumper, but walk around the open, pay your money and revel in heart's content in the thrilling deeds of Barney the Boy Detectuf, who, of course, the only person in the play of importance has ever longed to flash a badge and snap the nippers on a slippery crook. You will probably be able to go as far as you want, too, as "The Dummy" has fun and thrills so difficult for writers of melodrama to hit and so necessary for that indoifiable adjunct popular play called staying quality. The authors, Harvey J. O'Higgins and Harriet Ford, have most certainly profited by their experience in collaborating on "The Angry Case," for the book—only the parents call her the child—only the parents call her the dialogue is bright enough to keep the whole four acts lively. Like all good kidnapping stories, there is child—only the parents call her the child—only the parents call her the melodrama, there are the papers, only in this case they are a dictionary. We meet these necessary elements at once, with them, dominating over them, with them, dominating over them, comes our hero Barney, Warner Bros.
Right here, at the very time when Barney should be on the job, he brought a groan from every inchoate laugh. He was in his sleep while the crooks are listening, and the damping words are, "I am a detectif!" "Could anything be worse? Well, wait. Watch Barney. Watch Barney. Watch Barney. But into possession of the scrape, but into possession of the cheas-id. Isn't that like him? Just sheer bluff. Think of that! That's Barney all over. The rest, after that he ocuver, his swaling, and Barney is found found countenance and eggs in the best A. D. T. mannen, surrounded by a pair of happy par-
GREAT BILL!
WEEK OF MON., SEPT. 8
DORA DEAN
AND HER
SUNBEAMS
ONE OF THE BIGGEST AND
BEST ACTS IN THE
VARIETIES
Fresh From a Great Transconti-
nental Tour
5 OTHER REAL
BIG TIME ACTS 5
NOW PLAYING
MAYBELLE WHITMAN
AND HER DIXIE BOYS
"THE BEST IN VAUDEVILLE"
THE
GRAND
STATE AT 31ST
AVENUE
31st Street and
PANAMA AMUSEMENT
LOUIS WEINBERG, Pre
WEEK STARTING M
THE QUALITY AMUSEMENT CO
THE ALL STAR FAVORITE
THE BIG LO
"THE DO
OR, "THE BO
A DRAMATIZATION OF
SATURDAY EVENING
This is One of the Most Experienced
by a Stock
FASCINATING STORY
SITUATIONS WITH
BOX OFF!
OPEN FROM
12 W.
11 X. M.
Seats on Sale
Monday
EAGH WEEK
BIG HIT AT THE GRAND
A
ents, the chee-llid and $10,000 reward.
The amount of the reward proves that
authors know a detectut play when
they know "Ten thousand dollars!"
Just right!
SOME LETTERS
Here are few letters that tell all about what is doing in different sections of the country. Besides a whole lot of the things, I describe a whole lot of the things. *Toppea, Kan—Dear Ton-nay: I suppose that the smoke has cleared up the big doings that happened in Chicago. I am mighty glad that you are safe and sound: that thing must have happened for ten days and will return there in a day or two, and from there to dear old you. Do any old mail that you might have received was a pliker who made you a present of a fountain pen. Well. I am sending a piano, and it suits me. I may send you a mobile phone. And another. This instrument is said to be a dandy hardwood finish. Don't let it get too old. I am liberal—You're my friend. *Black Carl* "Carl inclosed a picture of a piano that he had evidently cut from a news paper. Can you be it?—Poor Tony."
"London, Eng.-Friend Tony: Just two letters to you let you hear from me. We will meet you, kicked them, as you can see by the bill which we are topping. This is a great country and I like it very much. Will you come here; they played before the king and queen a short time ago. I have not told you about him. We will try and see him this week. We will week for six weeks in the provinces, then back to London for five and then at the Alhambra our four week engagement at the Alhambra. We will best regards to all friends. Will you hear from me a little later.-Your friend, Katherine Grundy, 5-6, Coventry Sh. W.
"Vancouver, B.C.-Dear Tony_Just a few lines to let you know that we have been in Montreal, most recently been in Montreal, business and am glad to report that my mission was a success, as 92 per cent of the team was in the job, and I curved a fine line in salary and insurance that brings $200 in case of death. Well, Will Bowman has opened a cab-bus, and I have opened a 3-piece jazz band with Oscar Holden. Leo Baule, Jelly Toll, Ada Brick-ton Smith and others, with Mrs. E. T. Regg, have opened a little café. Roc Dotson still has the Lincoln club. Jean Burt and Perkins have opened a nice club and cafe, so some parts of the Stroll, Well, he good as ever. Lloyd, Bongos, $40 main st."
"Tikkien, Dear Tony! I dropped it to give you the once over, but found that where, but I can guess. Oh, oh, since then red ink has a dark brown taste. It looks like complete prohibition will work, but you put under bridges may yet be used for drinking purposes. A man here in Chi who has invented a process home says there is one sure way to test the product. Pour a little of it in
LEMONIER'S LETTER
LEMONIER'S LETTER
Hello, Pallie: I am sorry you couldn't linger a little longer in se grand city of New York; everybody seemed to take to you right off the reel. Oh, boy, atta boy. You sure know your stuff jam up! Atta boy. I mean you know just how to make things live for every human. Pud Nelson wore out a fine pair of shoes trying to find you I may tell you. I know that you must have been a knock out in Atlantic City along the board walk and on Atlantic, Kentucky and Tom Lymonier
T. H.
438 Lemox avenue, New York, N. Y.
the sink and if it eats the perennial off it is ready to be bottled and served to your friends. The booze served in the saloons nowadays does not invoke the law, as it is non-inflictive of booze as long as the faucet from the water works continues in commission. To get the tan color, drop a few coffees into the water, and the booze containing 15 per cent alcohol doesn't count at all. I am writing this at home and wish that you were here with me. I am rolling around the sideboard, sprinkling some sawdust on the floor, hung a few actors' pictures on the wall, and loaded bottles filled with sarsaparilla stand there with my foot on the railing looking at myself in the looking glass until she yells out that it is time to leave. I open on the United Time Monday and I will send in our route. Tabor is in on the time after his chicken business and he is fine at it. *Your pal, Fred Green.*
NEW YORK NEWS
By Billy E. Jones
Austin & Delaney are at the Pantages Theater, Spokane, Wash.
Buffalo & Delaney are at the Pantages Theater, Oakland, Cal.
Miller & Lyles are at the Majestic Theater, Springfield, Ohio.
Mississippi State are at the Royal Theater, Bronx, N.Y.
Old Time Dwarfs are at the Davis Theater, Pittsburgh, P.
W. Harmony Kings are at Paterson, N.
Brooks & George are at the Temple Theater, Syracuse, N. Y.
Eight Black Dots are at the Warwick Theater, Brooklyn, N. Y.
P. G. Lowery's Band, with Ringling Bros' shows, are in Kansas, playing the last half between Junction City, Concordia and Salina. Miss Beatrice DaPalma, one of Bradford's (Pa) popular young ladies and B. E. Jones, died in Bradford recently and was buried in Syracuse, N. Y.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
A NOTE OR TWO
Fiddler & Stovena, the new Chink act, are making a great hit at the Malestatic theater, Johnstown, Pa. He's also making a fine and are-splitting the week between the Empress theater, Clinton, and the Empress, Dea Moines, Iowa. He's nine letters from Biddle Brown, in Miskogee, Okla., and he says that he will soon be seen in mauvidence doing his single. He would like to hear from his friends all over the country, and mail will reach him as requested to Dreamland theater, of which he is manager. George Weaver and his famous orchestra are still a great sensation in Milwaukee, where he has been doing what he was meant to Dreamland theater, of which he will be in Chicago in the new future. Rozena Alexander entertained Herb Byron at dinner while the wife was at Milan, where he says that he will be in Chicago in the new future. Rozena says that after Herb they aren't no more. She is a clever kid. H. Gray, doing his single, is in Philly, after having played a fine week between Pittsburgh and Johnstown, Pa.
Joe Simms & Ollie Powers, now working as a team, are dividing the City, the Moline, and will be in Chicago next week at the Lincoln Hipp and the American theater.
Dora Dean and her Sunbeam are at Chicago and the Moline, and doing line. The act will at the Grand theater, Chicago, next week.
Rucker & Winfred are in Chicago and the Moline, and around the town. Mrs. Penal Rucker is ill and the act may rest until she is able to travel.
Protty Hillaria, Friend of the Dora Dean, is in Chicago and the Old Top Desk on Tuesday. Miss Friend is looking like ready, money and says that the act had a fine trip to the coast and is driving C Miller's Broadway Astus Co. is in Jacksonville, Fla. He has the best bunch of his career and is getting the dough so fast he won't be in the crowd. He has several novelty acts in his life.
Alexander & Earle in A Happy Night in Dixie will start from Charles City, Iowa, soon. They will carry their own act in the city if addressed to 215 Jackson street.
Single Billy Nichols, the mimic strutting his stuff up around Bean-town Mass., writes apologizing for some time ago. Bill says that he surely is getting all set for the setting of Jocko Frost and that if the coming of Mall will reach him if he dressed to 43 Falmouth street, care of Mrs. Wittherspoon, Boston, Mass.
The Russels and Wiggins & Coleman wrote that a white bell will show how the performance at the Palace theater in New Orleans, La. It was the first time that Race performers ever played that house, and one of the Ofay acts kicked the two teams went that they refused to go on.
Charles H. Lewis, with the A Rabbit, writes from Dodsonville, La., that all that he is bandmaster with that aggregation.
Roy & Elise White are playing the Strand theater, Jacksonville, Fla., and that from friends in and out of the profession.
Felix B. Harris is featured with the Tom Allen Shows and playing through the middle West. He was robbed of the middle West, but says that he is again sitting pretty.
Julian-Costello, the famous impersonator, has retired from the stage and is now based in his home town, Minneapolis, Minnesota, stopping with his mother, Mrs. L. V. Seymore, 512 12th Ave, S. He would like to hear from his friends. He would like to hear from W. Allen shows are playing the brewery at Greenville, Texas, and going great. Lella B. Mitchell and her Lady Jazz-Jugglers are doing their stuff at the Roschen Cafe, 147 S. Erie Street, Toledo, Ohio, that all the world looks rosy to her. The other jugglers are Bessie Whitman, Mary Mesles and Theo Phillips. Jusper Taylor, trap drummer and xylophone expert, Owl Theater, in New York, W. C. Handy's Memphis Blues Band. The Three Spades, Eddie Grace, Rich cooper and Arthur Porter are entertaining at the Hotel Biltmore, Detroit, for an already popular house, and the boys are bound to do well there. The management of the Quality Amusement Co. have their eyes upon the stage, and it may be one of the chain of theaters to play the Lafitte Stock.
Harvey's Greater Minstrels are playing Idaho Falls Rexburg, St. Anthony, Oroville, Potatoe, Idaho, and Brigham, Utah. This week. All is with the bunch.
Wm. McCabe's Georgia Trounslours are still in the dear old state of Kansas, and the Ransom, Utica, Healey, Scotts, Bigho and Ness City. The show is drawing splendidly.
Carter featured with the Furry Tail aggregation, on the big time, is at the Orphanium Theater, Duluth, Minn. the present week.
Will Masten's Holiday in Dixieland Co. is splitting the week between Rachel Johnny Hudgins, featured with the Monte Carlo Girls, is doing his stuff at the Standard Theater, St. Louis, Mo. the present week, is going great guns, are playing the present half in Roy City, Mich., on the Butterfield time.
Al G. Barnes' Circus is playing G. Point, Logansport, Elwood and Richmond, Ind., and Hamilton, Ohio, this week.
Sugar Ross, one-time bass singer with the Iron City Quartette, is ill at Kirk Hammett Hospital. Address Ward 24, Bed 28.
Maud Castor is at the Egg Harbor Cafe, Atlantic City, N. J., getting the look she surely looks like ready money. Frankle Jaxon and Grace Jackson are at the New World Cafe, Atlantic City, N. J., entertained the Old Roll Top Desk man while he was in the seat. September arrived at the Old Roll Top Desk, sent all the way from Pittsburgh, by David P. Dorsey, 2223 Forville street, who is the owner of the kitchen, knows how strenuous the times. Katie good work up, old boy, and remember that there are 12 months to the year. Shirley Sagart, Hartgrave, the Dearborn Cafe, going great in and around St. Louis, Mo. Mail will reach him if addressed Cordina Letcher, the well known entertainer, is doing her stuff in Detroit, Mich., and would like to hear from Bertha Ricks as soon as this reaches Tayeeyo Address 369. St. Antoine street. Tribble and Thomas in "I Wish You were playing the present half at Madison, Wils., with Green Bay to follow.
Leon the Magician is at the Colonial theater Newport News Va.
The Sons of Ham are playing fun dates in Ohio and would like to hear from Hoss Crawford, Andy Bryant, general delivery. Wayne, Ohio
NOW READY OFFICIAL HISTORIES OF THE NEGRO IN THE WORLD WAR
"WOMAN"
"WOMAN"
"Woman," Maurice Tourner's feminine epic which comes to the Owl Theater on Sunday, Sept. 28, stands in at attention. The second most remarkable film of the year, "Woman" is different, indeed, so different that it completely defies classification. No single descriptive name can be given to tourner production does beautifully into one class. It is not a melodrama. Rather it is a study in womanhood of remarkable psychological depth. While tourner's keynote is mental. Neither is "Woman" a spectacle. It is intimate and personal, the five episodes, with the prologue and epilogue, telling the direct narrator how times hundreds of supernumeraries appear, as in the ancient Roman Interlude, but their appearances serve only a background. Director Tourner has combined his interest upon one single woman.
"Woman" is not allegorical. There is nothing symbolic about Mr. Tournour's development through the age of Eden. He chosen to be presented by Mr. Tournour is direct, vigorous, straight from the age of Eden, with stances of the Adam and Eve episodes and the Brittany seacoast fairy tale. The latter is fantasy of the showcast, the garden of Eden, the garden of Eden, with the universe's first woman, is marked by spiritual reverence, imagination and good taste. The visual phenomenon episodes, conventional photoy形 form. It is a new idea in script development. The critic of the New York Times enthusiastically describes the episode graphic ballads. Mr. Tournour has given audioscience for intelligence and imagination. Through legend, his upstairs "Woman"—Mr. Tournour has never forgotten the human note, yet he has attained by avoiding the conveniences of the modern Charles Whittaker turned out a scenario of remarkable form. Critics have pronounced "Woman" a distinct step beyond the age of Eden and long sought scenario of the future.
Since "Woman" absolutely baffles
the audience, she will be
granted. Undoubtedly this is the
reason for the remarkable interest
in the film, which stars
filmators and film fans all over the country.
MOVIE BILLS
JOHN H. HARRIS
WHAT DO YOU TEACH YOUR BOY OR GIRL?
Do you only hold up examples of the deeds of the great white people—or do you tell of the wonderful accomplishments of your own race? Do you tell of the courage of YOUR RACE-MEN AND WOMEN ON YOUR WALLS? They will serve as an everlasting inspiration to your children and yourself.
EIGHT NEGRIO MEN OF MARK. A superb 18x23 picture featuring Frederick Douglas, Booker T. Washington, Dumas, Dubar, Coleridge Taylor, Crispus Attucks, Dubois and Henry O. Tanner. PRICE $1.00. Unforgotten Heroes, a war picture, 18x23. 50c.
BIG TIME
The Old Roll Top Desk Man Dota His
Jones in Harlem
History was made when the dramatic editor, Tony Langston, and his pal, Al Gaines of the Vendome theater, Chicago, visited New York two weeks ago to quiet Brooklyn, where he visited friends and relatives, while the Old Roll Topp Desk Man hied to Harlem, where he met the Phillips sisters, in pairs, and made mobs and mobs, fact that he made the Cake, the Cake, and the 7th avenue, his headquarters makes all things plain, for that's where the Ancient Order of Elbow Croakers and St. Mary's Hysteres congregate early and stay there all the doings, if there are any, take place.
The Gang
There are no weeps over the fact that the visit was short, for while it lasted it was fast, and the heavy jumps in the air put over the jumps in a manner that did not have done credit to a quarter horse or a better cause. That he met a million men and slipped with every one of them, and that cannot be overlooked and which imagines a stranger in town being enthralled by such a crew as the following, and then, if you can stretch the imagination far enough, put yourself in the shoes of the robbs in which the whole thong did their parts as accessories before, during and after the fact. Get this classic line-up; lamp it from all angles; scrubs from the bottom and the top, endways from the bottom and the top, for these are the natives that did it:
On the Job
The above are all minute men; they can hear the whispers chorus far more than the drummer, and when the rush is on you would·think that there was a bonanza to play the game progress in a mob to join with the sort that makes the Old Roll Top Desk Man happy and brings him to a realization that life is well worth while after.all.
Philly Oasis
We ran into a real oasis in Philly when we bumped into Cliff Green. Cliff always has something, and he and his wife had a car to take away from the wall in a way that made us hate to leave. They were visiting the home of Mr. and Mra. Spaulding, the former being a memoirist, told us the story a day and a half to press the bagging out of the elbow of the writer's right sleeve. This surely was some trip. The stuff he had to put up was fearful—fearful just like gasoline, for all the world. It made Oscar Benson and Billy Benbow mugg, so Al Gaines, who has been a wagon for years, had the joke on us at the seashore town, all right, all right; but believe me, it was upon him that the journey with that one exception. Some more trip, I'll say. Yea, bo.
PAGE NINE
HATTIE·AKERS DIES
HATTIE·AKERS DIES
Miss Eutte Emily Akers, who ultimately death has brought grief to her host of friends in and out of the theater, profession, is a native of Washington, Wash., and was a member of the public schools of that city. She was always a fluent talker and made quite a reputation as a public speaker and elocutionist, being frequently called at the Metropolitan Baptist church, of which she was a useful member, and in which she retained her membership up to the day of her death. She had been a teacher and made her stage debut in 1911 and opened of the late J. Leuble Hill's "My Friend From Dixie" at the Howard theater in that city. Two years later, she became Smartor School company headed by Salmon W. Heyn and J. Homer Tutt, and handled leading juvenile roles with this high-class combination for four seasons. The summer periods she was connected with were vaudeville acts. During the past two years she was featured with Frank Jackson in a neat vaudeville sketch, being known as "Akers and Jackson" and was admitted a box office attraction.
She was stricken with her fatal illness in September, 1918, at the Foraker house suffering which she bore with Christian fortitude, she passed away on September 19, 1918. Her mother, mother 389 U Street North. The family, kind friends and former church workers made her last days as it was possible for them to be made.
Impressive, funeral services were held over the remains of "Little Hattie Akers," at the Metropolitan Baptist Church, officiating, and the exercises under the direction of the Ideal Working club, of which Miss Akers had been a charter member. Dr. Norman with "T am and I" delivered a beautiful and eloquent tribute to the Christian virtues of the deceased, commended her talents and the good use she made of them, and came when the church would see the wisdom of taking over for its own benefit and service, in a practical way, the many gifted men and women who were offered by the field of public involvement in the secular world. The altar was banked with an immense array of beautiful floral tributes from admirers and distributed to please be placed in the Barnett and the local professionals of the S. H. Dudley syndicate and "The Smarter Set" company, playing in Philadelphia. The family asks that your correspondent convey to the many friends everywhere their sincere thanks for the multitude of kindnesses and deep affection throughout their season of sorrow.
BLACK CABL CALLS
Black Carl, the magician, owner of
mines, opponent of prohibition, scholar
and musician, was on Wednesday
Ol' Roll Top Desk on the wild and
woolly West and invited us to creek
and knobble in a club, fused,
whilst was a hard for us to do
as it must be for you to believe Carl
left for the East on Friday.
Dancing Dotson is playing the present
half of Yonkers, N. Y. Prescott
Theater.
The Theater Set Co. owns the
Standard Theater, Philadelphia, Pa.
in September.
Have 10 coins on each ticket for
Cherchestra hall if you buy before September
21.
---
THE BUCKEYE STATE
By Alexander O. Taylor
Charles McAfee, Veteran Harpist, Dead
1
MRS. E. G. FULTON
PAGE TEN
New York and Orange County, Va. *Walter Terry has returned from overseas duty looking the picture of health. St. Louis barber shop and hunting agent of the Defender, 3957 Central avenue, has returned from St. Loulua, Mo., where he was called by the illness of Rev. Jules Douglas, wife of Rev. Douglass, and Pearl Adkina. *Mrs. Rachel Richardson, East 103rd street, left the past week for a ten days' visit at Atlantic City. *Mrs. Elvira Dupree and daughter of Rev. Douglass, with her mother at LaGrange, Ga. They will visit South Carolina before returning. *Contracts approximating $30,000 for marble, plastering, heating, etc., to the beautiful new Central-Ma. manatee T. W. Fleming, were let by the city board of control Friday of last week. Great progress is being made through the Eleventh ward with the street car line. *Miss Pussie Grant, Whale W. Va.; Mrs. Berry, Latqina, Pa., and Mrs. Hill, New York, spent the weekend with Mrs. Marie Viney, Arthur avenue. *Mrs. Clifford Marshall, East 103rd street, to be the guest of Mr. Darford's mother a month.
Ben Gordon Found Dead.
Many Entertained Last Week.
Many Entertained Last Week.
The Independent Banking club, company of Cleveland's most thrifty and precocious, has maintained for out-of-town guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Mcfintree, S. Sixth street, Wednesday of last week at the Monmouth and Berry, Philadelphia, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. H. Washington, D. C.; Mr. and Mrs. Denmark, Sidney, O. and Y. Denmark, Sidney, O. and Y. Mrs. George Jones and Mrs. Brent Stewart arranged a few laughable stunts which were thoroughly enjoyed, and which were given to the street, gave a sumptuous breakfast at the day for Dr. and Mrs. Paul Mallekbu
In the great battle for supremacy in life one's success lies in arriving at a conclusion as to the course you will pursue, and then with a grim determination stick to that course and you always win. It is but natural, as we go through life, to desire the best. When in need you want the best doctor, the best therapist, the best dressmaker, the best milliner, etc. Then why need you fickle, hesitate, experiment, lose time, patience when you wish to grow your hair, with a living example such as "Fulto" before you? There is no hearsay, no may be so, you can believe what your eyes behold, and you can go and see in person no images are being daily, "Fulto" is just as sure to grow hair as the sun is to shine. STOPI THINKI THEN BUY.
(RETAIL PRICE)
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Fulto Hair Food (plain) .....620
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Fulto Pressing Oil .....620
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Write for particulars. $1.25 outfit will start y in business. Send Money Order. Sand stam for reply.
ASTONISHING COMMISSION!!
Send money order for $5.00 (five dollars) a receive "Fulto" printed instructions how to correctly care for your hair.
natives of British Central Africa; Mr. and Mrs. Denmark, Sidney, O. and Mrs. T. J. Hicks. One evening last September, the captain of a delightful surprise Thompson game, expected in the city this week, in honor of her birthday. The color scheme was yellow and white. The evening was spent in games and music, and the game was played in Springfield, many pretty carles we got to honor. Her many friends will welcome her to Cleveland on her next visit (This and other notices received too late last week are included in the book). Two of the best jolleyers at Idaho resort last week were Mr. and Ora J. Harry, Mrs. Walchace Bolden, Mrs. Stella Rogers, Hooker Page and Alexander Taylor and wife, Wife of Miss Edith Beaver, and Miss Edith Beaver, Columbus, O., who had the distinct pleasure of dining at the pretty "Roseland Cottage" of Mrs. Ellis of Detroit, beautifully located on the Lake Ideildw and the auto and camping of Dr. and Mrs. O. A. Taylor and daughter, Miss Tholma, Miss Blanche Johnson, school teacher, and Miss Edith Beaver, the other. It is said that at least two hundred "springers" "made their appearance" at the Author camp. Anyway, Cleveland friends claim each one of the pounds from the ideal home cooking of Chefs Mesdames Taylor and Author. The same may be said of some of the party who dined at the Ellis cottage, the misfortune of losing her pursuit, taking $20 in bills during her visit. * The many friends of Mrs. James Moredell are pleased to see her here and the invalid mother in Columbus. * Many Clevelanders on route to or from Idaho had the pleasure of visiting the new Hotel Milmore in Detroit. O. H. Moredell, well known here, has charge of the elegant, up-to-date cafe.
Samuel V. Perry a Benedict.
American Legion Post Set Up
A post of the American Legion in hamburg, massachusetts, joyston institute "organized here last" evening at the Cleveland Community Center, which then applied for, the temporary吉尔森学院.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Clevelandora Capture K. P. Prize.
Pyrhlians attending the conclave at Atlantic City are surreptitely capt. Samuel Richardson and his crack Forest Warriors. In it of 100 congratulations for their splendid showing made in the conclave city. The company captured one of the first prizes in the competitive parade. The extended congruence in the swimmer's effort. How about the indies of the Calathea Drill corps? We would like a report from them. * Mrs. Kate Dodge and Edith Harris are visiting the former's sister, Mrs. A. I. Smith, in Akron, O.
ARE YOU INSURED?
If not, why not? For $10 per year we will pay you $25 per week for loss of health. For $25 extra hospital fee. No joining fees to face; $5,000 for accidental death. Can you beat it? Good, live agents can make money. H. L. Huntman can make money. 2628 East 40th street, Cloverfield, Ohio. Phone Rosedale 8833 J.
Scott's Official History of the Negro
in the World War
BY EMENE J. SCOTT, SPECIAL ASSEST-
ANT TO THE SECRETARY OF WAR
Price: Cloth blinding, $1.90; Morocco blinding.
Mall order promptly attached to: Address:
J. E. BRANKAM & CO., 4210 Central Ave.
Rosedale, New York, 10010.
An excellent opportunity for live agents
to make his money. 10 cents extra for
each dressable shirt. Roedeale
5447-J. Cuzchoca, Central S241-W.
HAIR FOOD WANTED EVEN
HELP!!
is at once to share equal puffs as my par-
ty BY THE DOZENS DAILY—W
BECAUSE IT GROWS HAIR
supremacy in life one's success lies in
when with a grim determination stick
to through life, to desire the best. What
dreamless life can achieve and patience when you wish to grow
There is no hearsay, no may be so. Ye
oe in person, an hundreds are doing da-
minte. STOPI THINKI THEN BUY.
Write for particulars. $1.25 outfit will start you
in business. Send Money Order. Send stamps
for reply.
ASTON
Send money or
receive "Fuito"
rectly care for y
dry and your hair thin? IF SO,
S. E. G. FULT
ve., Apt. 8 CH
PHONE DOUGLAS 4528
ASTONISHING COMMISSION!!
Send money order for $5.00 (five dollars) and
receive "Fulto" printed instructions how to
correctly care for your hair.
ARE YOU INSURED?
NOW READY
Angeles. He expects to make Los Angeles his future home.
Columbus, Ohio, Sept. 5—Mrs. Maude Anderson Carr of Mobile, Ala., is visiting her mother, Mrs. Mattie Anderson B. J. Woodard of St. Charles, Rev. B. J. Woodard of St. Charles, Mrs. visiting his daughter, Mrs. Ciarla Banton of 697 Edward street. *Mr. and Mrs. Matthew Florence left Sat. June 10, Mrs. Alice Monarch of 701 St. Charles street obtained a number of friends with a daly lunchon at her home Friday June 10, Mrs. George Howard, who left Sat. June 10, Mrs. Eva Buckner, present were Mrs. Eva Buckner, Ada Christian, Mary Pullen, Bertha Flda, Ada Yates, Julia Trotter Melen, Helen Jaffe Anderson Jones, Maude Anderson Mary Cobba, Cora B. Price and Miss Margaret Wright; Messra, George Evans, Charles Jones and C. H. Moss. *697 Shoop street is improving slowly. 697 Shoop street is improving slowly. 697 Shoop street is better at the writing. *Mrs. Hattie Watkins of 697 Shoop street is recuperating from pneumonia also. *Mrs. Lizzie Hamilton Hill and daughter enter St. Charles dinner, honoring Rev. and Mrs. Dallas Clay of Pittsburgh. Fa. Coveres were laid for the following: Rev. and Mrs. Ella Jackson, Miss Victoria Hill the host and hostess. A very enjoyable evening was spent by all.
Newark, Ohio, Sept. 5.—R. I. Simpson of Battie Creek, Mich., is visiting the family who are at the home of Hugh Giggs, Mr. Giggs, and Ridggs of Dayton, Ohio, is spending B.
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few days as guest of his mother and brother, Mrs. Martha and Clyde Riggs, in Buckingham街. * Fred William attended the Ohio State Fair at Columbus, in Columbus this week on business. * Mrs. Wm. H. Green of Detroit and children are the guests of Mrs. Wm. Cunningham. * Mrs. F. B. Norman at Columbus in Columbus last week. * Mrs. Martha Dorney, Mrs. D. M. Guy, Mrs. R. L Simpson and children have returned home from Mt. Vernon, where they stayed in Columbus last week. * returned home after visiting his old home. * Miss Jessie Gates of Middletown is the guest of Mrs. C. P. Henry. * Several entertainments have been given this week honoring Mr. and Mrs. Martha Dorney, Mrs. M. Guy, Mrs. R. L Simpson, Mich. and Rev. and Mrs. T. L Hickman, who leave Sunday for Rochester, N. Y. * Mrs. Lucy Schackeford entertained at dinner Wednesday noon. * Mrs. Lucy Schackeford, 6 o'clock dinner Thursday. * Mrs. Carlisle gave a dinner at noon in Granville, Ohio, Friday. * Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gill, 6 o'clock dinner Friday visiting her parents in Granville street. * Miss Georgia Brown and Cecil Steel were married last Wednesday.
Portsmouth, Ohio, Sept. 5.—Col. Roscoe Conkling Simmons will appear in Portsmouth Friday p. m. Sept. 13. at the University of Ohio under the auspices of the Good Movement club No. 8 of Allon chapel A. M. E. church, of which club John W. Evans is captain. Miss Vivian McCormick is visiting here for a few days. *Mr. and Mrs. John Dill, 1158 10th street, entertained a number of friends at Rose cottage Saturday evening. The outing is for guests of this city. *Rev B. R. Reed, pastor of Pleasant Green Baptist Green Baptist church, is home from a visit in Columbus and Cleveland. In Merrimack White this street, is in Columbus attending the grand session O. E. S. R. J. Johnson is also attending the grand session. Ohio, is here on a visit. *Mrs. Resie Nolin of Columbus, O. has returned home.
Glendale, Ohio. Sept. 5.—The attendance at Quinn Chapel was good on Sunday. *Alona Singleton has returned from Danville, K. *Miss Irene Picklek has returned from Kentucky and is expected home soon. *Mrs Ethel Warfield and children and Miss Alberta Coward have returned home from visit to Clarksville and Woodwain, K. *Miss Florence returned home from Louisville, K. *Rev. John Williams is on the sick list.
Aged Minister Dead, Cambridge, O. Sept. 5.—Rev. W. H. Howery, age 72, pastor of one of the oldest churches here, died recently. Funeral services were in charge of the service. Funeral services were conducted by the Rev. Isaac Archer, pastor of the Shiftoh Baptist church.
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THE MONTHLY MAIL
Aged Minister Dard
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1819
CONCERNING YOUR HAIR
Invention of an Expert Chandler
You probably have tried all sorts of remedies on your scalp without getting the desired results, until you have become discouraged and lost confidence in all hair remedies. Thousands of others, like yourself, finally turned to using Sebey's Quinade, and have been so pleased with the result they would never again waste their time or money using anything else.
Quinade is not an ordinary permeate; it is highly medicated and is a real scalp food. Quinade stimulates and nourishes the roots of the hair, causing a natural growth of long, straight hair, with silky, smooth, sunece hair soft and silky, and to put it in style desired. Quinade will positively allay itching of the scalp, and dandruff, which is the real cause of most hair and scalp troubles.
To get host results from the use of Quinada, one should shampoo the scalp every two weeks with Seeby's Quinada oil, and wash it with pure vegetable oil. Quinada soap lather freely and is a thorough cleanser. It leaves the hair soft and fuzzy and imparts a refreshing feeling to the scalp unequaled by any other shampoo. It is issued by Jody's Quinada and Quinada soap, neking their full name. Price is $50 each. If your druggist or dealer does not stock these two articles, ask him to obtain them from his wholesaler, for $10. If you want them and we will mail them to you direct, Seeby's Drug Co. 14 Wooster St., New York City.—Advertisement.
AR-ES-EL-BE
THE PEERLESS EMIDY
no disguise, scrotum. Stomach Treble,
Blood
A LIVING SIMONY
To All Resistant Sufferers:
bottle of J. L. Jameson for six years
years have had to use
chocolate to烦 every
chocolate beard of.
Dorcas and
Sarah are
screwable.
In four weeks
dressed three bottles of
chocolate already
already dispensed with
my creations. Also I
would have
dressed that time,
if I could
infinitely make that
who wish to see me
who wish to see me
at 215th street.
I will adorn
all my
street. I will adorn
all my
street to give Amy-Bri-
a a trial. It is a woo-
dren's street.
BARRETT
JONNSON, 2010, W. Stist
years have had to use
chemical resuscity. I
came to the hospital with
my case very soon and
my case now we have
in our new weeks. I have
Ae-Re-H-E-E and have
been compounded with
my creatine and
dna galton two pounds
intriguingly make this
who whom and to be
personally. I can be
found on my street. I adhere all
the to give Ae-Re-H-E-E a trial. It is a sworn
URS BABBET
URS BABBET
street Cleveland Ohio.
I don't suffer any longer. Send at once for
Give Dollar a bottle. Give bottles Fire Pillars.
Give Dollar a bottle. Give bottles Fire Pillars.
Cleveland Ohio. Phone Prospect 2000 X
AMERICAN GIANTS DROP ONE GAME; WIN ONE
AMERICA 15,000 Fans Greet of Chicago's Dia Favorites
15,000 Fans Greet Return of Chicago's Diamond Favorites
bans play. It seems that, as a rule, the Cubans get a start on the American Glants. They keep the lead in the game. It is interesting that the Islanders got in the lead, making two scores on Grants' errors. Then, too, there was Toloson's error. They were the work. Brown and Brown were the batteries. They went along for the greater part of the game, when "Rube" thought they were the best. Brown and Crawford. Presumably he waited too long, for the Glants were unable to overtake the lead. In the third inning, the Alaskan, stole and went on a ball threaten on an error of Rios. In the seventh the Glants rallied and brought in an innings, one year later for the ninth, thinking the ball cross the bag and go to the tenth, but the Islanders played the game for all by the ninth and trimmed the Glants by four. They got 3 to 2. A good game and all pleased.
"Rube" Foster left this week for Detroit, Mich., to confer with "Tennon" Blunt of the Detroit Stars. He will return by Sunday to give welcome to the A. B. C.s.
man; Joe Wagner, former shortstop of the Glants, and Catcher Paul Kritchall, formerly of the St. Louis Browns. Tesera and Clinton will be on the firing list for the Tampa Bay Bacharachs, American Giants, Penn. Red Caps, and last Sunday the Hildale team of Darby, Pa., have been some of the attractions at Dyckman oval season, and many more will be seen on the 1319 season. Harlem jazz bass will be there with their up-to-the-minute jazz music and Race Harlem will turn out to root for Empey and its best player. Roquette against the Mosquito state boy, the one of the best third basemen in the business, will occupy his old station.
Triangular Track Meet This Month
Fringular Track Meet This Month
Fringular Track Meet This Month
Fringular track meet will be held at:
Dam park between St. Christopher,
Sphina and Salem Crescent clubs on
Sphina and Salem Crescent clubs has a
number of well known athletes as
members, and keen competition will
feature the meet. The events will be
included in the next issue of this
paper.
Grays Win in Close Game
Columbus, Ohio, Sept. 5.—The Columbus Grays capped another fast game from the Irbancast Glants by a score of 4 to 3. The Grays' rally in the eighth inning caused them to win. In the second game, the most players formerly with the W. team, which the Grays won two games. The Grays are about to close their season with 25 games played and 6 lost. The score by innings:
Grays. ..... 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 0 - 4 1 5 3
Irbancrest. ..... 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 0 - 1 5 3
Grays, Morrison and
Williams; for Irbancrest, Holmes and
Courtright.
Struck out-By Morrison, 11; b5
Holmes, 3. Three-base hits; b5
Holmes, 4. Three-base hits; Holmes for
Irbancrest. Double backstroke for
Paterson, Brown, Murray for the Grays;
Ferguson and Holmes for Irbancrest.
SWIMMING MEET SEPT. 12
Industrial Basalball League promoted by the Y. M. C. A. is nearing the close of its season. The All Stars, under
Manager Dan Stewart, are in the lead and will most likely carry away the close of its season. Swimming meet will be held Friday, Sept 12, at the
Wabash Y. M. C. A.
Open Events-No. 1, 100-yard swim; No. 2, Novelty race; No. 3, 200-yard swim; No. 4, 60-yard stroke; No. 5, 100-yard breast stroke.
Junior Events-No. 1, 100-yard swim; No. 2, beginner test; No. 3, 200-yard swim; No. 4, 60-yard back stroke; No. 6, Junior swimming, breaststroke test for
Y. M. C. A. members only.
A full program of the physical section begins Sept. 13 and 14 with a big opening, gym stunts and swimming.
MILLS' GIANTS TAKES FINAL
FROM SOUTHEAST
St. Louis, Mo. Sept. 5—Chuck Mills' St. Louis Giants captured the second and final game of the series with the Southern Illinois White Sox at St. Louis. The Giants also score was 10 to 1. The Giants also won the contest, which was played Sunday. Finner hurled a commendable game for the Giants. He was touched for the second inning. After that the team were entirely at his mercy. The score: St. Louis Giants. 0 3 0 0 4 2 1 0 1 0 — III. White Sox. 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 — HAVANA STARS PLAY SEPT. 14 The Havana Stars, under the management, Beans, will play the Chicago Heights Baseball Park. Beans says he has secured six of the All Americans' best players, and the team has been named the team and that they are now looked upon as among the best semi-pros in the city.
TO CORBRESPONDENTS
Correspondents must mail all letters and news mail their main postoffice on Saturday or Sunday of each will reach this office by Monday or no later than Tues and the city from which it is mailed at the top of the one side of the paper. Lists of names, wedding announcements, obituary and envelopments of all kinds, write cents per line. Announcements of meetings and enter for in advance at the rate of 20 cents per line. Our ratings will be sent on application. Orders for papers from news matter.
Correspondents must mail all letters and news matter for publication at their main postoffice on Saturday or Sunday of each week so that the same will reach this office by Monday or no later than Tuesday. Write your name and the city from which it is mailed at the top of the page; always write on one side of the paper. Lists of names, wedding announcements, wedding presents, obituary notices, advertisements of all kinds, written and not display, 20 cents per line. Announcements of meetings and entertainments must be paid for in advance at the rate of 20 cents per line. Our rates on display advertisements will be sent on application. Orders for papers should be sent separate from news matter.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6. 1919
By Cary B. Lewis
The American Giants, fresh from the East, where they have been for the past five or six weeks, returned to the
sunday and
with the Cuban
Stars. They succeed
in winning one and dropping
the great crowd of
fans gave Mr. Foster
and the Glants
rousing like
looked like the days
of the early season.
Every seat in the
field and field was
occupied. Mr. Schorling's face was
saw the return.
had two games with the Cuban Stars. They succeeded in winning and dropping one. Sunday a great crowd of fans gave Mr. Foster and the Giants rousing welcome. It looked like the days of the early season. Every seat in the boxes, grandstand and field was occupied. Mr. Schorling's face was happy when he he saw the return of the Giants to their home field. Rubby's hands were sore from shaking the hands of so many, bidding him welcome home.
Game Sunday
There were no particular thrills in the Sunday game. The Giants were just determined to win their first game and to win the American Giants. Williams of the American Giants twirled a fine game, holding the Islanders to five hits. He struck out two of the Islanders and off in the first inning by bringing in two scores, one in the third and one in the eighth inning. At no time was Williams anger, for he was given grand support.
Sunday Score
Glants, R H P A Cohan, R H P A
DoeMoe, .0 .0 .0 0 Roe, .0 .0 .1 2
Christ, c. .0 .0 .0 0 Baro, c. .0 .1 2
Burn, c. .0 .0 .0 0 Baro, c. .1 2
Burn, c. .0 .0 .0 0 Baro, c. .1 2
Pranda, c. .0 .0 .0 0 Campos, c. .1 0
D.Willin, sa.0 .0 2 Abreas, c. .0 .4 4
B.Willin, sa.0 .0 2 Abreas, c. .0 .4 4
Totals .4 11 27 11 Totals .2 5 24 17
Glants .0 .0 .0 0 Baro, Perdeo, Two base
Cohan .0 .0 .0 0 Baro, Perdeo, Two base
Eron-Porturodo, Baro, Perdeo, Two base
Struck out-By Williams, 8; by LaBlae.
Game Labor Day
Labor Day brought out another large crowd to see the Glants and the Cu-
EASTERN SPORTING WORLD
Rowdyijim Not Wanted at Dyokman Oval
The baseball fans in Harlem, in fact, all parts of Greater New York, Jersey City, Newark and other cities or towns of New York, have been attending the game at Dyckman oval. The Bacharach Giants started the ball rolling, followed by Rube Fostor's American Giants, and last Sunday the Hildalees. Through ax-Serget, Guy Empty, who, with Rube Roughs, the home team, and Harry Daniels, one of the best known baseball men in the East, the fans have witnessed the best games seen around these parts this season. For instance, Rube Fostor, the East since 1914, gut nevertheless they were here this season. The sea-
son is nearly over, but what about 1920? In order to insure first class training, you must be stopped—rowdyism. During one of the games two Sundays ago, when the American Giants were playing, a fan of the Giants used profane language, etc. Other fans would not stand for same in the presence of ladies and called a special officer. When this happened others, perplexed by the man is wrong let the law take its course. But there is no good reason why any fan attending the games can't be a good sport and a gentleman at the table. You should occur and start trouble it is the fans' place, if possible, to assist in an orderly way to prevent same. Baseball is the most pastime, and in the mid-2000s 25,000 York men attend semi-pro games the sporting writer requests that no fan in any way lean toward rowdyism or anything else. To these fans pleasure Sunday, and work for a better feeling between the two races and better use ball attractions for 1920. Dyckman oval is yours, Harlemites, and it is up to you to take
A Review of St. Christopher's Track Team
In the last six meets on A. A. U. athletes the St. Christopher track team has made a wonderful showing, winning 10 of 12. The marry of the events is: Jauz 28, Metropolitan junior championship games, Joe Carter finished fourth; July 1 Orange field meet; July 10 Dullfield field meet in the 600; D. Hart finished third in the 600 for a total of 10 points. On Aug. 9, Cathleen "TU" Dioean cagae games: E. E. Dioean field meet; July 10 Jackid Jackson was the runner-up in the two-mile and the 1,000-yard run, the pair scoring 16 points; Aug. 9, Nework K. A. games; Tom Anderson points field meet; July 10 Jackson throw and finishing second in the hammer throw; Aug. 16, Knights of Columbus games, C. Sherman and A. Mathis were first and third, respectfully; July 10 Jackson finished second in the two-mile; 10 points were scored at these games. Aug. 17, at the Eccentric Firemen games, hold at Coltine Park, Goo. Mathis finished second in the 220, while their relay team of four men finished second in the 1,200-yard relay. Cliff Henderson on Aug. 17 at the South Ambulance field meet finished sixth in the five-mile race run and was awarded a handsome prize.
Fletchers to Play Treat 'Em Roughs Sunday
New York, Sept. 5.—The Fletcher Baseball club from Jersey will be the attraction at Dyckman oval this Sunday, Sept. 7, to play ex-Sergt Guy Empay's Treat 'Em Rough team in a game against the Em Rough in their line-up the Kelleher brothers, Sill and Frank; Jack Warhop, former New York Yankee mounds-
SWIMMING MEET SEPT 12
HILLDALE'S BIG THIRD SENDS YORKSHIP HOME
Darby Tossers Chase Four Runs Across, Enough to Win Fast Game
Darby, Pe., Sept. 25, "Wild" Conroy, the ox-big league, with his New York shipbuilding team of ball tossers, gave Darby a chance to play. The erronado at Hildale Park, Darby, and was sent away with the short end of a 5-to-2 score. Darby through consistent hitting in the third frame. Yank started the inning with a single through short, Stock forcing him at second for the first out. Tesse doubled to center, and Stock scored three singles, and 'Allen came through with a double that sent his teammates on the paths ahead of him home, but was not able to reach the two club-swifters went out in order.
Gilt-Edge Support
After this the home team experienced difficulty in getting on the paths, making their fifth and last run in the game. Briggs and he scored with the assistance of a sacrifice fly by Allen and Meade's single. Both twirler们 were able to edge support, all three of Hilldale's gardeners featuring with hard catches. Downs and Roberts worked like Slamese twins around the keystone station, and anything that hit in that station was scored. The other did, and performed the task in big league style, receiving round after round of applause from the stands in every running. Reece and Briggs gave a hard run of base running that satisfied the fans.
French Leada
Both of the visitors' runs were earned, and the bright spot in the visi-
ness in the field was the work of the infirmier of the Infirmier of the
Si Stimlindinger. French led his teammates at the bat with a triple and
angle.
M. X. SHIP
N H I A E
Franch. rf. 0 1 0 1
Brigez. b.0 1 0 1
Brigez. b.0 1 0 1
Lenox. b.0 1 0 1
Achron. b.0 1 0 1
Achron. b.0 1 0 1
Storee. rf. 0 1 0 1
Roberta. b.0 1 0 1
Singer. p.0 1 0 1
Dowas. b.0 1 0 1
Higgins. p.0 1 0 1
Sunk. c.0 1 0 1
Totals. . . . . 2 6 6 0
HILDALD H
N H I A E
Franch. rf. 0 1 0 1
Brigez. b.0 1 0 1
Brigez. b.0 1 0 1
Lenox. b.0 1 0 1
Achron. b.0 1 0 1
Achron. b.0 1 0 1
Storee. rf. 0 1 0 1
Roberta. b.0 1 0 1
Singer. p.0 1 0 1
Dowas. b.0 1 0 1
Higgins. p.0 1 0 1
Sunk. c.0 1 0 1
Totals. . . . . 2 6 6 0
N. X. Ship
N H I A E
Franch. rf. 0 1 0 1
Brigez. b.0 1 0 1
Brigez. b.0 1 0 1
Lenox. b.0 1 0 1
Achron. b.0 1 0 1
Achron. b.0 1 0 1
Storee. rf. 0 1 0 1
Roberta. b.0 1 0 1
Singer. p.0 1 0 1
Dowas. b.0 1 0 1
Higgins. p.0 1 0 1
Sunk. c.0 1 0 1
Totals. . . . . 2 6 6 0
TRIM CLEVELAND STARS
Dunkirk, Sept. 5.—The Brocton-Portland-Alco club beat the Stars of Cleveland at Gratton Aug. 31. All four of the local Stars were due to errors Shaw, pitching for the Stars, allowed but 3 hits, one of those pitched out of the sacrifice and two hits pitched outball ball. Miller, throwing for the Alcos, held the visitors helpless until the ninth inning, when a sacrifice and two hits scored two runs. The same teams played at Brocton, the Brocton-Portland-Alco outfit notched a win, the Alcos are to play the All Stars of Erie, Pa., at Point Gradet tomorrow afternoon. Score:
Alcos ..... 0 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 * -4 3 2
Stars ..... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 -2 5 6
Batteries—Miller and Greeneau;
Shaw and Closco.
Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept. 5. —Alpha athletes carried off the honors at their own meet held in conjunction with a park on Thursday, Aug. 28. St. Charles and Salem Crescent athletes also showed well in the game. The summaries: dash, notice. —Won by P. Martin, on naseband; B. Padmore, Alpha Physical Culture second, 8:35 second; Pastline A. C., third, 8:35 second. —100 yard dash, hand-bend. —Won by B. Christopher club (6 yards); H. Mannings, Christopher club (6 yards); Van T. Levy, St. Christopher club (6 yards). —1,000 yard dash, hand-bend. —Won by Robert Crawford, Miltonse A. C. (18 yards); W. Morrison, Miltonse A. C. (18 yards); Goodle, Alpha Physical Club (42 yards); third. Time, 3:20-1.5. —1,000 yard dash, hand-bend. —Won by Perry Vayman, Salem Crescent A. C. (7 yards); E. Madison, New York A. C. (12 yards); second, G. Lyceum (9 yards); third, Time, 34-45 seconds. —Two mile run, hand-bend. —Won by A. Hutcheson, Punctile A. C. (115 yards); second, W. Jackson, St. Christopher club (120 yards), third, Time. Running high jump, hand-bend. —Won by A. Hutcheson, Montclair A. C. (8 inches), with 6 feet, second; J. Chubb, St. Christopher club (5 inches), with 6 feet, second; J. Mohawk, A. C. (7 inches), with 6 feet,
17% mile medley relay race, bandtrap—Won by Alpha Physical Culture club (W Goode, A. Pendleton, L. Inacac and W. Pow) (101 yards); Paulist A. C. (J. Losero, J. Foley, E. Haupt and A. Hulachosch (123 yards), second; St. Christopher club (W. Stokey, B. Welsege, A. Brown and S. Jackson) (122 yards), third. Time, 7:53 4:5.
300 yard run, novice (closed)—Won by R. Paulmore; C. Mende, second. Time, 31 4:5 seconds.
440 yard run (closed)—Won by C. Norman; G. Norman, second; R. Wilkins, third. Time, 1:05.
300 yard run, handicap (closed)—Won by W. Cummings (5 yards); R. Bailey (7 yards), second; C. Jackson (3½ yards), third. Time, 31 3:5 seconds.
Point score—Alpine Physical Culture club, 17
St Christopher club, 13; Paulist A. O., 11.
YORKVILLE YARNS
Walter R. Standford was on the slick list last week. Mrs. Mamie Wakfield of Third avenue left for Wilmington, Del., to visit friends and relatives, expecting to remain away for several weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Bivens, who were former residents of this section, have recently removed to Harlem. At present Mrs. Bivens is visiting friends in Columbia, S. C. Walter R. Standford Jr., a member of the Red French Hand Division, 372d Machine Gun Corps, is now at Hotel Garde, New Haven, Conn., for the season, where he is employed as second cook. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Greene and Mme. Elinor Devere, the haldrresser, left Saturday for home in Detroit, Mich., after spending a very pleasant stay in the East. While here Atlantic City and Cape Maynard were visited, Mr. and Mrs. Charles White, the latter a slater of the ladies, entertained in their honor. Mr. and Mrs. John K. Smith of 73d street, are home again after spending several months in Yorkers, N. Y.
CATHOLIC ALL STARS LOSE
St. Joe, Mich., Sept. 5—The St. Joe Giants defeated the Catholic All Stars in a 5 to 1 contest at League Park last year. The Kansas City are new additions to the team. Managers Noble Wilson and Geo. Johnson, with Hermann Goodall or "Tennessee Rat" fame as team manager, will compete in city championship tournament Sept. 15.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
DUSTIN' EM OFF
DULI WESTSTER.
By Juli Jones Jr.
From Detroit it came. The inside dope that Tenney Blunt, owner of the Stars, has been a busy man. This sounds good, Mr. Blunt's team has made such a good bowling and has been such a good drawing card that owners of clubs in the international football club are often in the international football club towards this great semi-pro club and it is rumored that next year it arrangements can be made for the Detroit American League grounds on Sundays when the regular club is out on the road the Stars and a club in the International League will play on the North End. After the coming baby, this man Blunt, we all will have to pay him little mind. Has as many financial lives as a cat.
One brother from down home and another brother from up here inet at the White Sox ball park. The northern brother of the International League, the Blue Bath, would knock a b激. The down home brother had the old 1976 rule idea to his head "over the fence was out." Along came Baby Ruth and knocked the ball clean out of the lot. Mr. Wise Guy erded "over the fence m out." The judge of the police court at 85th and Halsted decided that they both were disburdely and fined them Gre and costs.
The writer loited in on Cobb's ball play-er of the In their active language and asked them what they thought of the game. After a general gibibs again an on the whole flock the spokesman of the crowd said, "Robe is a fine fellow. Who is he understaker?" Next to be heard from is L. C. Taylor, formerly of Indiaapolis, Ind.
There will be a lot of interest taken out of baseball if there is no team from the east to play this year. There is a general rivalry between Chicago and New York and there will always be. The public always flocks to see these contests. This has been a banner financial year for semi-pros and professionals, why not give us the best teams that can be bad.
This Baby Ruth boy has banged out from one to three home runs on every team in the American League except the Boston Red Sox. Reason given why he has not murdered them, that he is a member of the Red Sox. If a baby can knock this number of home runs what will he do when he becomes a minu?
I bear some underground dope that we will have to set up and pay attention to. A. O. Taylor, Cleveland newspaper man, gives it out without hesitation that Cleveland will have a real ball team next season. With the proper financial backing it is expected to secure the best players in the country. When the Indians are out of the city their grounds will be used for all our games. Laying all jokes aside, the high interest the people are taking in baseball today the brothers may break in the spot after all.
HILLDALE STOPS GERMS
Darby Boys Put Grimp in Bennis
Team's Streak
Darby, Pa. Sept. 5- Hildale put a crimp in the winning streak of Dave Dennis team in a twilight game at the home team in the second half to be called in the second half of the eight inning on account of darkness with the score standing 5 to 3 against the home team. The team mound for the visitors and the only Germantown players able to do anything with his delivery up to the seventh were Trautman up to Coady, the former scoring Germantown man. Coady on a solid single, steal of second and Coady's rap for two bases into the center field crowd. The evening after "Bill" Morgan from start and had a commanding lead of four runs in the first two frames and increased it to five in the seventh, when Meade drove one of the team's head for two bases and scored on Roberts' drive, through short field.
BIG FOOTBALL TEAM FOR TUSKEGEE
Tuskegee Institute, Ala., Sept. 5. It already appears that the football team to represent Tuskegee Institute on the gridiron this year will be a winning aggregation. However, due to our country's participation in the war, many of the leading institutions did not enter actively into athletics, and Tuskegee, like other institutions, turned attention for one being to the successful ending of the college football season there was only one game of football played and that was between the student army training corps of Tuskegee and Atlanta University, which in a score of 21 to 6 in favor of Tuskegee.
James Gayle in Charge
James Gayle, in charge of athletics, has called his first practice for Tuesday afternoon, Sept. 9, the day school on whipping into shape the material out of which he is to build his old gold and crimson eleven. Several of the old men are already in school, having remained during the vacation period, strong on the stalwart left tackle, whose work on the gridiron was a factor in giving to Tuskegee a championship eleven in Conway Myers, with 170 pounds of drive and 100 pounds of strength to tender for a varsity birth this year. Myers was a substitute on the under-fated team of 1917 and showed chase. He played last year with the S. A. T. C. Myers, who are old members of the squad who have remained at the school during the vacation season. Charles Farmer, an aspirant for the back field; Henry Tucker, Roosevelt Smith, Mason Hawkwitt, and Bluxon are prospects with promise.
It is Arthur Simm's return.
He is assistant coach last year, who was not in school last year, due to his participation in the engagement across the seas, has been released from military service and is expected to re-enter the game after his last and short forward passes Simm will be long remembered. Amos Williams, left guard, will return and will probably be seen in his old position. Williams will extend himself to the limit. Gardner L. Dixon writes that he has been separated from the service and that he will return to school. The varsity players of last year who will be in the reason of graduation, are Jacob Simmons and Thomas Smith.
The schedule for the season is not yet complete, but the athletic committee be in position to announce it shortly.
With the return of the school to normal conditions and the athletic activities to a pre-war basis, there is every chance to believe that this season be a boamer season in football for Tuskegee. R.S.D.
ALL STARS IN LEAD
On Monday, Sept. 1, the Chicago All
Stars defeated the Young American
Giants 15 to 8 in the last game of a
five-game series. The All Stars suc-
cess in winning the game. The features
of the game were the
pitching and catching of Shelby and
Morehead and the batting of the All
Stars.
Y. Am. G.'s.2 0 0 0 0 4 2 0 x--8 10 6
G. Star.-T 2 1 2 2 0 x--8 10 6
Batter.-Am. Giants, Beechy and
Townill. All Stars, J. Pierce and P.
Hamilton.
CLINTON AND TESREAU SWAMP HILLDALE TEAM
Slowtown Boys' Invasion Results in Double Defeat
---
By Wm. White
Dyckman Oval, Sunday Afternoon—Before a crowd of 8,000 fans last Sunday, the team defeated last night Em Rough, team captain Hildailles of Darby, Pa., in a doubleheader at Dyckman Oval, scores 4 to 1 and 11 to 1. The team, who were scheduled to meet Rubie Gaenslain, at the oval three weeks ago, came with a great reputation, but seemingly all of their playing ability was subpar. The diamond was slow, as it had rained the day previous, and if any excuse is offered for their poor playing condition, the team Williams went to the mound for Hilldale, while Empey switched from his usual choice and sent Jimmie Clinton to the little Jiff for the preliminary battle.
Williams Weakened in Fourth
As the umbrella called "Play ball" the
out of out a big yelp, "Let her go,
and the ball goes out," went along on even terms until the fourth inning. After Brown and Meara were easy cuts to Allen unassisted, he bounced through short for two bases. Cooney hit Tee hit to center field for two bases, scoring Curran and Cooney. He was out a moment later, Downa to Meade, he attempted to steal third. The Hilliard hit to left for eighth. Reese hit to left for two bases, and scored when Johnson singled through short. Clinton pitched a spen-
d game for the Treat 'Em Roughs and the Indian sign on the Race boys.
Flournoy Throws Second Game
Flourroy, a southpaw, who heat Dick
Riley at Atlantic City two weeks ago, started
the sunset tilt for Hildaale. He did
not last the full innning, being relieved
by Brooks. Toscaan worked for the
Riley. Haffey hit two for two bases, Deltz got an infield hit,
Kavanaugh singled, scoring Haffie;
Brown and Neare walked, forcing
Curran, Curran singled, scoring Kavanaugh and Brown. After the smoke
cleared away four runs had been tallied,
but it was too late. The Hildales'
two tallies came in the seventh frame.
Lundy singled and stole second as Al-
struck out. Johnson doubled as Al-
struck out. Johnson scored a moment later when Mendez's
wallop was good for two bases. With
men on second and third, when a shin-
ting the score, Yank ended the rally
by striking out. Next Sunday the at-
traction at Dyckman oval will be
the double-header with the Treat Em
Roughs. The line-up:
TREAT "EM ROUGHES
Heese, 1f....1 0 0 0 Haffele, rf...0 2 0 0
Briggs, rf....0 0 0 0 Dietz, sm...0 1 6 0
Johnson, cf...0 2 0 0 Kavanth, 1b...3 0 0
Allen, 1b...0 2 1 0 Brown, 3b...0 0 1 0
Lundy, as...0 1 1 Meare, cf...0 1 0
Meado, 3b...0 0 2 0 Cnrran, 1f...1 0 0
Downo, 2b...0 0 5 Cooney, 2b...1 2 2
York, cf...0 1 0 1 Tree, c....1 2 0
Williams, p...0 0 3 Clinton, p...0 0 5
Corkrell...0 0 0 0
Totals....4 11 13 0
Totals....1 7 12 2
*Batted for Williams in the ninth inning.
Hilldale....0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0—1
Treat "Em Roughs. 0 0 2 0 1 1 0 0 x—4
First base on errors—Treat "Em Roughs. 1.
Two-base hits—Haffele, Kavanthug, Curran, Tree,
Heese, Yank. Sacrifice hit—Clinton. Sacrifice
By—Brown. Stolen basis—Meara. Corkrell. Left
on bases—Treat "Em Roughs. 6; Hilldale, 9.
Double plays—Diels and Kavanagh. Bases on
ball—Oil Clinton, 5; off Williams, 1. Struck
out—lly Clinton, 7; by Williams, 4. Ritta—Off
Clinton, 7; off Williams, 11. Umpires—Tone
and Adler. Time of game—1 hour and 30
SECOND GAME
H. H. H.
Hildale.....0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Treat 'Em Houghs. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Batteries—Plowpour, Cockrell and Yank; Tre-
reau and Fiddlebble.
Lincolns Win Double Victory
Cuban Stars Win and Lose
Dexter Park, Sept. 5.—The Cuban Stars divided a double header with the Bushwicks last Sunday. The first game went 10 innings, the Bushwicks coming out on the long end, 6 to 5. The second game went to the Cubs, 5 to 2. The score:
CUBAN STAR5 BUSHWICKS
11 J A E R IF A S
Drek, r...1 1 0 0 Forgner, cf...1 0 0
Ramirez, cf...1 1 0 0 Burch, 3b...1 2 0
Chabon, cf...1 2 0 0 Elves, 1f...1 2 0
Ferguson, cf...0 2 0 0 Irving, es...0 1 3 2
Tleran, 3b...1 0 1 Arleson, 1f...0 0 0
Crespo, 2b...1 1 6 Ennis, rf...0 1 0 1
Lucas, 1b...0 0 0 Ifohman, c...1 0 1 0
Calderin, p...0 2 0 Splers, p...1 1 7 0
Total: 5 11 16 9
*None out when winning run was scored.
Cuban Stars...0 0 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 1 0—5
Pushwicks...0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1—6
Left on bases—Cubans, 0; Bushwicks, 10.
Three-base btt—Charon, Sacrifice hits—Rojo,
Famines, Arlsohn, Stofen base—Charon, Irrle
play—Charon, Crespo and Lucas; Irling
and Melvoy; Charon and Lucas; Splers, McVoy
and Irving. First base—ball—Off Calderin,
5: cf Splers, 4. Br-2 out—By Calderin; 2:
by Arlsohn, 2. 2: cf Zeland and Leiter, 3:
At Dexter Park, second game.
R. H. E.
Cuban Stars...0 2 0 1 0 2 0 0 5 10 1
Bushwicks...1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0
Ratterles—Toho and Pernandez; Lewers and
Hohman.
Recommends Army Food Distribution
A new suggestion for the distribution of the army food in Harlem has been made by the officers of the North Harlem Community Club 200 West 139th street. Owing to the fact that many of our people refuse to eat the food, we are not taking advantage of the food sale in P. S. 80. To overcome this it is suggested that the various clubs, so-called "food clubs," ask what their members want and use the clubhouse as a distributing center. M. A. McNicholls, 126 West 139th street, in this section, will gladly take the matter up with any of the organizations.
On to Dyckman Oval and
ROOT FOR TREAT 'EM ROUGHS
This Sunday, Sept. 7
BIG DOUBLE HEADER—OPPONENTS:
FL TCKER B. B. C. OF NEW JERSEY
WARHOP WILL OPPOSE JIMMIE CLINTON
FIRST GAME AT 2 P. M. ADMISSION 50 CENTS
LOOK FOR THE HARLEM JAZZ BAND
**New York M. M. S. DESK**
pected that when the world's greatest 100-yard man too the mark in the century dash at the national championship games next Saturday, Pete White was of New York City, as well as Metropolitan Association champion, and consistent ten-one man, will be among number one. The eight sprinters referred are: Charles W. Paddock, Los Angeles A. C., interalled champion, 9 4-5 seconds at Southern Pacific Association championship, Spring 1993; M. Kirksey, Olympic Club, Francisco, 9 4-5 seconds at Padre Association championships last year; Henry W. Williams, Spokane A. C. A. winner of coast coast 100-yard championships this year, 9 4-5 seconds, and also defeated Howard Drew, the world's record holder, at Los Angeles in 1915 in the same time; former national champion, with a record of 9 4-5 seconds made at Chicago on July 3, 1915; W. D. Hayes, Boston A. C. New England, and champion and winner of championship last June in 9 4-5 seconds; Loren Murchison, national record or 10 seconds flat for 100 yards; Pete White, 220-yard champion, whose best time for 100 yards is 10 1-5 seconds. It will be remembered the last named sprinter. R. Patterson, split in the 220-yard championship, F. A. D. Senior championship, hold in Jersey City, Saturday, Aug. 23. White won the 100-yard dash, defeating Patterson, while Patterson copied 220-yard dash, with White runner-up.
QUAKER CITY WINS
QUAKER CITY WINS
Philadelphia, Sept. 5—The Quaker Giants traveled to B. and Clearfield Green and crossed bats with Barney Grey and scored two runs with the game, giving them one of the greatest games that has been played on that ground this season, against such stars as Bobby Brown, Harlowe, Nativity and Kensington Cong. Pitcher Ingram of the Quakers came back to form and held 5 hits and 1 run, with 5 hits and 1 run against the pitcher for All Stars held the Quaker hitters in check, only allowing 5 hits and 2 runs. Seminational holding by both teams was a big victory for Quakers. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 - 5 0
Quakers ..... 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 - 2 5 0
All Stars ..... 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 - 1 5 0
Union Giants Out West
Griswold, Iowa, Sept. 5.—During the
homecoming hero the locals lost all
Gilkeron's Union GI-
nts. Scores: ..... 0 1 0 8 2 0 2 1 6 8 2 2
Gliants ..... 0 1 0 8 2 0 2 1 6 8 2 2
Giants ..... 0 0 1 0 2 0 2 0 1-6 8 2
Griswold ..... 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2-4 3
Batteries-Marshell and Coleman;
Smith and Schard.
And Scharf.
Giants ..... 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 3 - 7 2
Giarswold ..... 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 - 2 5 2
Batteries-Curry and Coleman; Zon-
derman and Clarke.
Giants ..... 0 1 2 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 - 1 0 2
Giarswold ..... 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 - 6 1 1
Batteries-Harney and Coleman;
Clarke and Scharf.
Jefferson, Aug. 16. - The Giants beat
Jefferson, Score:
Giants ..... 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 1 - 6 1 2
Giarswold ..... 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 1 - 6 1 2
Batteries-Marshall and Coleman;
Frost and Haig.
Lake View, Iowa, Aug. 17. —The Giants
beat Odebelt. Score:
... 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 8 12 3
Odebelt.... 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 1 4 3
Batteries: —Curry and Coleman; Williams
and Snyder.
... 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 — 3 7 1
Odebelt.... 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 — 0 3 2
Batteries: —Harney and Coleman;
Smith and Diaz.
... 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 Aug. 18. —The Giants
beat Pomeroy. Score:
Giants.... 0 3 0 2 3 2 10 5 — 25 31
Pomeroy.... 0 2 3 2 2 3 0 — 12 14
Martin, Brown, and Hickey.
Bode, Iowa, Aug. 19.—The Giants won from Bode, Score:
Giants ..... 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 1 - 9 1 3 2
Bode ..... 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 - 5 8 4
Batteries—Harney and Coleman;
Sorlien and Sorlien.
Giants ..... 3 0 1 0 2 0 1 0 1-8 11 3
Bode ..... 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-5 3
Batteries: Marshall and Coleman;
Kingman: Sarah
Gowrie, litle, Aug. 21.—The Giants
beat Gowrie. Score:
Giants ..... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1-4 8 2
Gowrie ..... 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0-0 9 1
Batteries: Curry and Coleman; Proft
and Halg.
Sloan, Iowa, Aug. 22—The Giants
won from Sate Score.
Giants ..... 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 5 3
Salix ..... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 4
Eatteries—Marshall and Coleman;
Ramunseen and Growl and Coleman.
Neb. New ..... 23—The Giants
won from the Armours, Score:
Giants .. .0110302000001-11414
Armorns .. .0111020000001-8120
Shall and Coleman; Fitch and Lacy;
Jefferson, Iowa, Aug. 24.—The Giants
won from Jefferson. Score:
Giants .. .0200204000-8123
Jefferson .. .020020600-614
Batteries—Curry and Coleman;
Frost and Hulg.
Whitten, Iowa, Aug. 25. -The Giants
won from Whitten. Score:
Giants ..... 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 5 0 - 7 10
Whitten ..... 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 5 0 - 2 5 2
Peele and Charlott
Beaum, Iain, Aug. 26. The Giants
beat Beaman. Score:
Giants ..... 4 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 3 - 7 10
Giants ..... 4 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 - 6 2
Batteries—Marshell and Coleman;
Martinia and Johnson.
Famous Indian Runner Dead
Oxford, Me. Sept. 5.—Andrew Sockelexis, famous Indian runner, died at the age of 38. He was a victim of tubercular meningitis. He had competed in many of the important long distance events of the country, including the 1924 Olympic games at Stockholm in 1912, but failed to place. Sockelexis was 32 years old. Old Town, Me., and was 32 years old.
AGE ELEVEN
DETROIT STARS
TAKE THRILLING
OVERTIME GAME
Defeat Maxwells in 11-Inning Battle After Overcoming Five-Run Lead
Detroit, Mich., Sept. 5.—In what was perhaps the most exciting battle staged at Mack park this season, the Detroit Titans beat champion Maxwells Saturday afternoon, 6 to 5. The auto concern assumed an early lead, but the opening frame and two more in the fifth. The Stars rallied gamely, however, making a great uphill fight, and the sixth in eighth by showing four markers across the final station. Three hits in a row drove the winning run over, with no out. The same teams meet again Sunday afternoon, with Gough on the mound for the Maxwells and either Donaldell or the doing the bulking for the Stars, Scores.
BACHARACH GIANTS
DEFEAT PITTSBURG
Atlantic City, N. J. Sept. 5. The Bacharach Giants hung up another victory against the Pittsburgh Stars' of Buffalo Aug. 28, score 6 to 2. The visitors borrowed "Cyclone" Joe Winkler from the Lincoln Giants of New York to terrorize the home batters, who walloped out 11 hits for a total of 17 bases. Handy had a homer. Roberts switched on the mound year end, and both held the Bison City boys in hand. The score: Ettle-Stars..... 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 -2
Bacharach..... 0 0 1 0 2 1 0 0 -6
JIMMIE DUNN. BLIND.
AIDED AT DYCKMAN OVAL
New York, N. Y., Sept. 5—Jimmie
Dunne, M. N., Sept. 5—Jimmie
fighter, said to have been engaged
over 225 battles during his fighting
career, and who recently went blind,
was introduced to the large crowd at
known sporting writer of one of the
big dallies, who told of Dunn's plight.
A large collection was taken up for
a sale, can be said that Race people
present did the same. Dunn was one of the few fighters who never drew the color line, and this was the
particular reason that all the regular
fighters did not cause. It was a worthy cause, as Dunn has a wife and two children depending upon him for support.
ROCHEPORT BLUES TRIM TIGERS
ROCHEPORT, Mo. Sept. 5—The fast
Boonville Tigers forced the famous
Rockport Bites to use every resource
Sunday, Henry "Steel Arm" Turner, H.
furnished two long home runs. The
score:
Boonville: 6 000 1 010 302 —
Rockport: 2 000 0 410 302 —
Batteries: H. Turner, Goesberry and
Stapleton: Cowden and N. Turner.
ROUGH HOUSE WARE DEFEATED
Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 5—Lee An-
drew of Postston, eight, acce-
varyweight champion England, and
Jack Dampey, defeated rough-House
Ware of New Orleans, champion of
Louisiana, in a 10-round bout Monday
at the U.S. Open. 14th and
Michigan, under auctions of the
Boosters' Athletic Club of K. C.
PENN RED CAPS SWAMPED
East New York, Sept. 5.—The Penn Red Caps were defeated here last Sunday by the local East New York A. C. team, score of 10 to 5. Langford, the Red Caps pitcher, yielded 12 hits. The score:
At East New York, 10. R. H. E. Score: 00 00 01 11 10
B. N. Y. A. Score: 01 14 00 13 11 -10 12 32
Gilardo and Hilten; Langford and Greece.
DESTROIT STARS AT DAYTON
Dayton, Ohio, 6. — Dayton Narcissus will meet the Detroit Stars at Dayton Saturday, Sunday and Monday, Sept. 6, 7 and 8. At present Dayton is playing great ball and the series Dayton will be watched with interest.
Close War Camp Service
Fort Wayne, Indiana — The branch of the war camp community service established here for our soldiers has been discontinued. An order closing the camp was received by the headquarters from the headquarters in New York.
Society
SOPHIA'S CREAM BROWN POMADE
"A Hair Dressing With a Blessing"
Sophia's Preparations have worked hard for Hair and Beauty Culture and Skin. Thousands can testify to their merits.
Sophia's Cream Pomade.....25c and 50c box
Sophia's X-Ray Hair Shine, a wonderful glossine.....35c box
Sophia's Glycerine Shampoo, a beautiful hair cleaner.....50c jar
Sophia's Whitening Cream, a beautiful skin brightener.....50c jar
Sophia's Cream Hair Tonic, a rich scalp invigorator.....50c and $1.00 bot.
A full two months' treatment of Sophia's Hair and Scalp Remedies and Preparations sent postpaid to any address for $1.35.
For sale by Druggists and Hairdressers everywhere.
Live, energetic agents wanted. Write for terms.
All Sophia's Preparations manufactured under Sophia's personal supervision and sold by
G. T. YOUNG, INC., 1606 SOUTH STREET PHILADELPHIA, PA.
On Sale in Chicago at William H. Huff, Drungstt, 4118 S. Stato St.
Memphis, Tenn.—A. P. Martin, 673 Walker Ave.
Memphis, Tenn.—L. Leonard, 1000 N. 44th St.
Omaha, Neb.—Killingsworth & Prithi, 4189 S. 54th St.
General Agent—GEQ, S. BYNUM, 302 S. State, Chicago
Miss Winnette Grady, one of the public school teachers of St. Louis, who spent the summer at the University of Missouri, taught while at the university. Miss Verna Clemons, of St. Louis, who for the past two weeks were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Wilson, 506 and 383 place, returned home on last Sunday after being royally entertained.
Mrs. Martha Collins, 74 Plummer street, Hammond, Ind., has returned to the city after a pleasant stay with relatives. Mrs. Verna Clemons, 61 Cleveland, En route home Mrs. Collins stopped in the city Sunday and was the guest of Mrs. Ida H. Kebele, 454 Connobach street.
Mrs. Connobach of Galveston, Tex., after spending the summer with her friend, Mrs. Clarlee Holt Marks, 241 Seventh avenue, New York City, has returned to Texas.
Mrs. Gore Brasfield, 4318 Derborn street, is visiting Mrs. Clarva Williams in Detroit.
Mrs. James D. Smith of Plainfield, Mrs. James D. James of Lawson, 3631 Forest Avenue, was entertained last week by Mrs. Lawson.
Miss Margaret Ward Thomas, 3148 Wabash avenue, is at Memphis, Tenn., to be in the South for several months.
Mrs. George B. Bradshaw of Levistown, Mont. is stopping with Mrs. Jasmin Higgins, 4456 Calcutt avenue.
Mrs. Helen Springs, Ark. is the guest of Henrietta Terrell Verkins, 3348 South Park avenue.
Miss Melinoite Wado of Hot Spring, is stopping at 5361 Wabash avenue, second apartment.
Miss Alberta Hunter, 4423 Perrilave avenue, detrituated a few friends at her home Fremont Avenue, Miss Hunter is planning a vacation soon.
Miss Willa Musa Wright, who has been the guest of Mme. W. J. Mollette, 3345 Vernon avenue, left Monday for her home in Tennessee after which she will be visiting her school work at Shorter College.
Mrs. Ruth McKenney-Browne and daughter, 5554 Wabash avenue, this week for St. Patrick Minn., to be the guests of Mrs. Hortletta Pettis Page for Mrs. Charles Hensley, 514 East 27th street, left for Indianapolis and Chincatlain for a vacation.
Miss Carrie Frazier of Tacoma, Wash. is visiting friends.
Miss Hazel Thompson of Nashville, Tennessee, who was visiting Miss Grace Johnson. John, 3338 Forest avenue, and her aunt, Mrs. Crump, and Mrs. Prierson, 3354 Arnerven avenue, has returned home, who has spent the summer in Michigan, is now the guest of Mrs. E. H. Heslup, 532 East 37th street.
ALL STYLES NOW
READY FOR YOUR
INSPECTION
MILLINERY
SILK UNDERWEAR AND
HANDBAGS
35th Street at Michigan Avenue
SOPH
CREAM
POM
"A Hair Dressing
Sophia's Preparations have won
Skin. Thousands can testify to the
Sophia's Cream Pomade.....
Sophia's X-Ray Hair Shine, a wom
Sophia's Glycerine Shampoo, a bea
Sophia's Whitening Cream, a beaut
Sophia's Cream Hair Tonic, a rich
A full two months' treata
Remedies and Preparations se
$1.35.
For sale by Druggists an
Live, energetic agents w
All Sophia's Preparations in
sonal supervision and sold by
G. T. YOUNG, INC.,
PHILADEM
On Sale in Chicago at William
Memphis. Tennessee - A. P. Martin.
New York - Arkansas Pharmacy.
Mrs. Mary Harris of Oakwood, Tex., is visiting her son W. Harris and family, of Dallas. They are enjoying a few nice summer days together.
Mrs. William Ross and little son Wittel of Winghamham, aa, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Hal Fletcher at 3157 Forest avenue.
Mrs. W. H. Eaves, 533 Eight 44th street, and her daughter Olive and son Eugene are spending the end of the season at Benton Harbor, Mich., the guests of Mrs. S. H. Carter.
Mrs. J. A. Warren, 3421 Dearborn street, is visiting friends at Cape May and Shade City. She will be gone several months.
Miss Maggaret Brown, Louisville, Ky., is visiting her sister, Mrs. G. W. Blackwell, 7239 Vincentnes avenue.
Louisville, avenue, left the city last week to visit her parents in Tulsa, Okla., where she has considerable oil property.
Mrs. Alston will sojourn to Montreal and Wellington, Q. A. St..
Mrs. Minnie Mitchett, 5000 State street, who left the city two weeks ago, was taken suddenly ill at Henderson, Ky., but is improving slowly.
Montreal, 3607 Forest avenue, will leave this week for a two weeks' visit in New York, Atlantic City and Philadelphia.
Mrs. E. M. Wilson, 3600 Forest avenue, will from a pleasant visit in Georgetown, Ky.
Mrs. Laura Harris, 54 E. 500 street left the city Saturday to visit her mother and other relatives, including Alexander, Reno, Nov, and sister-in-law.
Mrs. Cora White, 5709 Grove avenue, left for Los Angeles, Cal., to join her daughter, Miss Sinclair White, violinist, Miss Alma Clarke, teacher in the Columbia, Ga., schools, returned to her home city after a pleasant visit with Mrs. Roberta Hirge, 4033 Calumet avenue.
Mrs. and Mrs. Ralph Davenport and children, 3409' Forest avenue, spent their vacations with Mrs. George Popp in St. Joe, Mich. Mrs. Leta Parker, a street avenue, is the guest of Mrs. Popp, recuperating after an operation.
Mrs. and Mrs. Earl Lewis and daughter, Bloomington, Ill., were the house guests of Mrs. Gertrude Moore and Mrs. Zenobya, 51 W. 34th street.
Frank Moss, Santa Fa baggagain in the Ang�cant, Kan. depot, passed through the city recently and spent a Hamilton, 2100 Avenue. His gate was on route to New York, Atlantic City, Boston and Eastern points on his annual vacation.
Mrs. and H. H. Hoger and Chas. T. Taylor spent the week in Milwaukee with Dr. and Mrs. T. A. Boger and son.
Mrs. Lillian Gilkerson, Spring Valley, has been visiting her husband in Omaha. His gate was Topolsk, Kan., the guest of her uncle, Lawyer Scott, is expected in the city the latter part of the week to visit friend.
Master James H. Drummer, Winchester, Ky., who spent the summer with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Speedy, 53 W. 22nd street, has returned home to school.
Mrs. and Mrs. Lewis, 246 E. 32d street, will leave Monday for Springfield, Ill.
CHIA'S BROWN MADE
ing With a Blessing"
A Pomade of merit. A remedy for Scalp Troubles. Makes harsh hair soft and silky. Its use gradually makes the hair straighter, stops falling hair, makes hair grow, and it at the same time a Beautiful Hair Dressing.
Are you troubled with Dandruff? Does your scalp itch? Does your hair feel harsh and dry? Does your hair split at the ends? Does it seem to stay one length all the time?
If you are having any of these trouble, try Sophia's Preparations, Sophia's
Fair and Beauty Culture and
Ked wonders for the Hair, Scalp and
their merits.
25c and 50c box
wonderful glossine. 35c box
beautiful hair cleanser. 50c jar
suffult skin brightener. 50c jar
hair scalp invigorator. 50c and $1.00 bot.
attention of Sophia's Hair and Scalp
sent postpaid to any address for
and Hairdressers everywhere.
wanted. Write for terms.
manufactured under Sophia's per-
ly
1606 SOUTH STREET
ELPHIA, PA.
am H. Huff, Drungist, 4118 S. Stato St.
in, 673 Walker Ave.
cay, 336 Lonox Ave.
honor of her father, James King, and Miss Volter.
Miss Beatrice K. Miller, Columbus, Ohio, has left for her home after a career in the arts, sister, Mrs. Martin, 5824 Grove avenue.
Mrs. Sailie Thompson, Nashville, Tennessee, is the guest of Dr. and Mrs. Penn, is the guest of the avenue. Prof. J. H. Hines, Waco, TX, is also the guest of M. A. Majors.
Mrs. J. M. Davis, 4250 Champaign avenue, entertained in honor of Miss Penn in her city. She will accept a position as instructor of one of the public high schools.
C. N. Harrison, 3240 Indiana avenue, entertained Thursday afternoon in honour of Mrs. Eggleston and Mrs. Mildre Stratford and Mrs. J. H. Warren, recent guests of Mrs. Jennie Lowe, 4282 L. Salle street, have returned to her home. Mrs. Pinkie Osborne, wife of Rev. Dr. W. T. Osborne of Kansas City, Mo., the guest of Mrs. Nettle Crews, Woman of Miss Idia Crews, 4283 Champaign avenue.
Prof. Caswell W. Crews, head of the department of English, Western university, is attending the University of Chicago for a two weeks stay, after which she will visit her office in Seattle. Wash.
Dr. F. L. Jackson, Athens, GA, after spending several weeks in this city, returned to his home to resume his practice.
Miss Patrison G. Cowan, Cleveland, Ohio, was the guest last week of Miss Anne M. Mollison, 3333 South Park Avenue, in the public schools of Cleveland. Sergt. Oscar B. Morgan and wife, formerly Lloyd Loady, Hampton, Honolulu, left the city after ten days' visit with Mrs. Thomas Haynes, 6042 South May street, will spend the winter in Omaha, Neb., as the guest of her brother, Charles Garrett, 2754 Harnsey Street. Mrs. Thomas Haynes, 6042 South May street, will spend the winter in Omaha, Neb., as the guest of her brother, Charles Garrett, 2754 Harnsey Street. Mrs. Mabel P. Newman, 7572 La-salle street, president of Rose of Sharon 1504, B. C. F. of W., and financial secretary of Neuleuc Council. No. 10, Neuleuc Council, on a Tuesday morning for St. Paul, Minn., on account of the illness of her brother, E. W. Fields, 550 Wabasha street. Mrs. Katherine Loraine Jeter, Little Rock School, on a Tuesday morning for 457 Thirty-second street. Miss Memory B. Austin, Memphis, Tenn., who has been visiting her mother, Mrs. J. M. Letcher, 5240 Wabasha school, most spent the day at Mrs. William Harris, Pelot, Wis. S. T. Nucker, Little Rock, Ark., is stopping with Fred Johnson, 3515 Wabasha school, most spent the day at Mrs. William Harris, Pelot, Wis. S. T. Nucker, Little Rock, Ark., is visiting friends in the city. Miss Anne McClaskey, 4908 Indiana avenue, in Indianapolis, has her mother and friends in Indianapolis, Muncie, Ind. and Louisville, KY. Mrs. H. M. Hughes' and daughter, Helen H. Hughes, have returned from the United States, where they have been visiting two months. Mrs. A. C. Lucas, 511 East Thirty-third street, is enjoying a six-week trip, visiting friends and relatives in Indianapolis, City, Baltimore and Washington, D. C.
Mrs. Nordua Birk, Biggers, Ark. is spending a few days with her sister, Mrs. C. C. Spurlock, 4826 Evans avenue.
Mrs. Jennie Simpson, Memphis, Tennessee en route to New York and Newark, N. J. is stopping with her son, Henri L. Simpson, 552 East Thirty-seventh street.
Miss Hazlein Sinne, St. Louis, Mo. who spent the summer on Lake Huron, Mich. is now the guest of Mrs. E. Heslup, 552 East Thirty-seventh street.
and Mrs. C. G. W. Hedge, 4423 Prairie avenue, entertained in honor of Miss Helen Inclain Saturday.
Mrs. Amnie Elliott left Wednesday for her home in Cravens La.
Miss Geneva Atkins, Louisville, Ky., gave soon for home, after a six weeks trip to Ruth B. Malore, 3428 Calumet avenue. B. Malore, Jasmine Lynce, Ark., is attending a meeting.
Mrs. Agnes Anderson and convention.
Julia Brown, New Orleans, La, left
Wednesday after a visit as the guest
of Mr. and Mrs. B. Williams, 309 East
Temple Street.
Mrs. Bell Abernathy, niece of Juel
Coleman, is ill in the St. Luke hospital.
R. Iry Vandale, Ark. is here attending
the Royal Circle conference.
Langston Owens has returned from
Milwaukee. Wis. after spending his
vacation visiting friends,
attending the Milwaukee avenue,
entertained at whistle and lunchunce
in honor of Miss Missie Graves, Memphis.
Tenn.; also Mrs. L. Miller, Yazoo City,
Miss.
Miss Beatrice Gibson and Mrs.
Amelia Yeates have returned from a
very pleasant trip to New York and
Atlantic City. Lour of Love club will flee
thursday. Oct. 2 to begin their fun
work. Mrs. M. Robinson, president.
S. S. Spiva, Sturgis, Miss, brother-
ship and Warde of our leading
business men will attend Sturgis, Miss, are visiting in the city.
They will spend a week sightseeing.
While in the city they are the guests
of Mrs. J. W. Ward, 65 East
36th street.
Miss Elizabeth Rayford, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Rayford, left
for Tuskegee Institute Tuesday. She
will many useful tokens of remembrance.
Miss Bertha Smith Jackson, 4054 Indiana avenue, returned from Cleveland, Ohio. Monday after a very pleasant
voye.
Mrs. L. S. Sawyer of Ghandler,
Okla. passed through the city en route
from Atlantic City. N. J. and other points east.
Mrs. A. L'Avrène Lucas and son
Ira and Mrs. Lucas have rescu-
home after spending a month at her
home in Louisiana and the doctors
HEART LEAF
STARF AMAH
Hair Tone
If you have short, nappy and harsh hair, or if you are troubled with dandruff, falliness, hair itch, hair itching, DO NOT BE TAKEN at once, HEART LEAF HAIR TONE, then watch the good results. It darkens gray hair and puts new life into it.
Price See, sent by mail on receipt of payment. Send to: SUPO-SULPHO MEDICINE CO. ATLANTA, GA.
Defender's Fashions
E. M. Saxon of 4652 Prairie avenue
B. M. Saxon of Dallas, Tex.,
and other southern palms.
Mmes. Lucille Lovejoy and Madline
Pondexter of 28 East 44th street
pound a few weeks in Cassopolis,
Mich. Miss Mrs. Eoveley's mother
and father.
Miss Toy Johnson expressed herself
with her love for her sister,
her stay in Chicago, which has
been a huge volume of pleasure since
she motored from Louisville, Ky. She
was a resident of the city between
Mrs. Gertrude Lowis, Mrs.
Pondexter and other friends.
NEWS OF THE CHURCHES
Pastors must mail their church news on Monday to reach the office by Tuesday. Hereafter matter reaching here later will be omitted.
Quinn Chapel A. M. E. church, 24th street and Wabash avenue. Next Sunday, Sept. 7, will be known as Memorandum and Sermon by the pastor on the morning of September. Following the sermon and just before the close of the service a short address will be delivered on the subject. A Tribute to the Men and Women of Quinn Chapel A. M. E. church Triumphant." A big platform service in the afternoon, at which time all old members and any who may desire will take part in the platform service. A special feature sermon by which wide-awake evangelists, testimonies that burn and inspire.
St. Mark's M. E. Church, 50th street and Wabash avenue. On last Sunday St. Mark's was blessed with its usual blessings. The Buddah of Philadelphia, Pu., delivered an excellent sermon, which was highly enjoyed by all. Dr. Butler used for his text, "Ennoch walked with God, and Jesus walked with Him." On the day, Sept. 7, is our quarterly meeting. Our district superintendent, Rev. Dr. G. R. Bryant, will preach at the morning service. At 3 p. m. the sacrament is administered. Everybody is requested to present. Our Epworth League meet at 7 p. m. Evening service at 8 o'clock. Come to our homelike church and help enjoy the blessings of God. J. W. Robbins, D., pastor; W. H. Wallace, assistant.
St. Paul's Presbyterian church, northwest corner of Robey street and Washington boulevard, Kev. James Cross is not greater than the crown, was the text for last Sunday morning's discourse. In the evening the three were to go a sojourn, so beetle at 7 o'clock, the meeting was conducted in a very pleasing manner by Mrs. Walker and it is to be hoped that a large audience will take such delightful hour on next Subbath aik: 7 o'clock. The Men's club, which not been active during the past two months, hopes to surprise Sunday program which we will give to you very soon.
Lincoln Memorial Congregational church, 65th street and Champaign avenue, 7 o'clock. Regular morning service, 11 o'clock. Sunday school, 12:50 p. m. On next Sunday evening, Sept. 7, at 8 o'clock by the chair under the direction of H. Hagan, with Mrs. Martha B. Mitchell at the piano. This will be supplemented by a soprano solo by the women in a violin solo by Mrs. Marie Hedge and
2957—Girl's dress.
Cut in 4 sizes: 8, 10, 12 and 1
years. Size 12 will require 4 yards of
40-inch material. Price, 10 cents.
2729 - Lady's costume.
Cut in 4 sizes: 8, 10, 12 and 14
and 46 inches bust measure. Size 32
requires 6 yards of 44-inch material.
Is about 1½ yard. Price 10 cents.
2815 - Child's short clothes set.
Cut in 5 sizes: 2, 3, 4 and 5 years.
Size 4 requires for the dress 2½ yards.
For the petitcoat 1½ yards. For the
combination 1½ yards of 36-inch material.
Price 10 cents.
2750 - Lady's cover-all apron.
Cut in 4 sizes: Small, 32-34; medium,
44-46 inches bust measure. Size medium
will require 4½ yards of 36-inch
material. Price 10 cents.
2808 - Girl's dress.
Cut in 4 sizes: 6, 8, 10 and 12 years.
Size 8 requires 3½ yards of 27-inch material for the dress and ¼ yard for the bolero. Price 10 cents.
2954-2874 - A smart coat suit.
Coat 2874 cut in 7 sizes: 34, 26, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust measure.
Size 42-inch material of 44-inch material. Skirt 2874 cut in 7 sizes: 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 32 and 34 inches waist measure. Size 24 requires 3 yards of 36-inch material. The width of skirt edge is about ½ yards. Two separator patterns, 10 cents for each pattern.
2953 - Girls dress.
Cut in 4 sizes: 6, 8, and 10 years.
Size 6 requires 2½ yards of 42-inch material. Price 10 cents.
2943 - Lady's service dress.
Cut in 7 sizes: 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, and 46 inches bust measure. Size 33 requires 6½ yards of 36-inch material. Width of skirt at lowed edge is 2½ yards. Price 10 cents.
Use Coupon Below When Ordering CHICAGO DEFENDER,
3159 State Street, Chicago, IL.
CATALOGUE NOTICE
* Send 10c in silver for our up-to-date fall and winter 1919-1920 catalog designs, 555 designs, misses, and comprehensive icorns, a concise and comprehensive article on dressmaking, also some points for the home dressmaker, and various hints to the home dressmaker.
a tenor solo by R. Williams, a recently returned soldier. All friends and well wishers of the church are most correlated to attend all services of the church.
South Park Ave, M. E. church, 323 street and South Park avenue. Rev. G. R. Bryant, D.Y. minister. The pastor Sunday morning. During his absence Rev. W. Baber, the eminent assistant pastor, delivered a very able and powerless sermon to an overcrowded house. Ms. Bryant evening services were largely attended. There was an all day prayer meeting in the church Monday (Labor day). Ms. Bryant its monthly program on the second Sunday in September at 3:30 p. m. Mrs. E. A. Grey is president of the bacum. Sunday school immediately services every Sunday. All are welcome.
Original Providence Baptist church, corner Leavitt and Walnut streets. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; preaching. Sunday school, 11:30 a.m.; Carroll will preach at the church in the afternoon at 3:30. Big chorus choir will sing. Rev. Boston J. Prince, pastor.
Baptist Baptist church, Ada, near West Lake street. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; preaching, 11 a.m. and m. Rev. Lucilus-Drane, pastor.
Union Baptist church, 1742 Fulton street. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; preaching, 11 a.m. Rev. J. A. Royal pastor.
St. Paul's C. M. E. church, 4644 Dearborn street, Rev. J. A. Winters, pastor. Sunday was our fourth and last quarterly meeting for this conference year, with the Association Index, Jackson, Tenn., acted as presiding elder. He preached a splendid sermon at 11 o'clock to an overflowing, audience. Upon invitation of the congregation, the slimners came forward for prayer. The communion sermon at 3 p. m. was delivered by the Rev. Dr. Daniels, Rev. W. H. Parker, Chicago Heights, Rev. W. H. Parker, Chicago Heights, pregrations worshiped with us. In the evening the Rev. Dr. Jones prescheduled. Four more members were added to the church. Last Friday night was one of our best chass meetings. More than 100 people attended the money was reported. Class No. 12, led by Bro. R. B. Hawkins, with $0.20. Dr. W. S. Braddon spoke at the big community meeting here last Monday and sang to the delight of all. We are planning for a big day here on the fourth Sunday, when our Centenary rally will close. The mammoth choir, under the direction of J. Wesley Jones, of Providence Baptist church will preach. You are always welcome here. The People's Tent, Wabash avenue and 42d street. Mrs. A. B. Iarac of Providence Baptist church charge. Preaching at 8 o'clock each evening by a national evangelist.
Olivet Baptist church. The pastor, De L. K. Villanis, addressed the congregation on Sunday, day evening, Aug. 30, Rev. 'Billy' Sunday and Hon. Wm. Jennings Bryan were on the same program. At both new-church-home-auditorium services, the pastor preached the sermons and helpful sermons. Assistant Pastor G. R. Wilson preached eloquently in the overflow meeting. The pastor preached the sermons in the day school and church auxiliaries are doing commendable work. At the old church home Rev. J. H. Branham, assistant pastor, preached in the morning. The pastor spoke at night. Assistant Pastors Branham, Wilson and McClure, with the Gospel Bus Band, conducted a street meeting Sunday afternoon in the old church. The Olivet Baptist church kindergarten at 31st street and South Park avenue, with Miss Carrie McNorton as general will open for business Sept. 10, at the same address will open Oct. 8.
St. Phillip's A. M. E. church, 51st and Federal streets. Ours is a new mission, but under the wise leadership of Dr. H. E. Stewart, we have made most favorable progress. Sunday will be our quarterly meeting day. Dr. H. E. Stewart, the popular pastor of Quinla chapel, will will be at 6 o'clock and administrate daily communal worship, our beloved presiding elder, will be with us at 8 o'clock in the evening and we are expecting great times at St. Phillip's all day. Dr. H. E. Stewart, Ill. Sunday, Sept. 7, will be our last quarterly meeting occasion for this conference year and all Harvey is looking forward to it with highest anticipations. Our presiding elder, will be with us at 11 and preach the morning sermon. The
2808
X799
2956
X729
2974
2513
2955
2750
2953
ATED·NEGRO·PRESS
ment of its Chicago office. The Associated Negro
ers everywhere with the important news of the
to receive news items of interest affecting the
civic and political interests of the Race.
CLARK STREET, CHICAGO, ILL.
LEPHONE WABASH 3497
ASSOCIATED
Announces the establishment of its O
Press will serve Race papers every
day. We will be glad to receive m
business, social, civic and po
310 SOUTH CLARK ST
TELEPHONE
ASSOCIATED NEGRO PRESS
Announces the establishment of its Chicago office. The Associated Negro Press will serve Rape papers everywhere with the important news of the day. We will be glad to receive news items of interest affecting the business, social, civic and political interests of the Race.
310 SOUTH CLARK STREET, CHICAGO, ILL.
TELEPHONE WABASH 3497
Institutional Church. All members are requested to report the dollar money next Sunday. Dr. Henderson's son last Sunday morning was sick. Nifathema Leone, son of Sierra Leone, Africa, spoke in the evening. A new interest is awakened in our prayer meetings. The tencentary meeting has been postponed from Thursday to next Tuesday evening. The tencentary missionary meeting was held Wednesday evening. A drive is on for conference claims. Every member is expected to do his full duty. The annual conference will meet in Quinn on Sept. 11. Bishop L. J. Coppin, D. of Philadelphia, Pa., will preside.
The Harmony club will meet at the residence of Mrs. Emmia Reed, 4406 Sample avenue, Friday, Sept. 12, at 11 a.m. A big community meeting was held at St. Paul C. M. E. church last Monday night, at which time the Rev. Dr. S. Braddon, pastor of Becan Baptist Church, spoke on "Negro and Labor Unions." The Progressive Choral Society had a splendid rehearsal Sunday afternoon at Institutional church, 38th and Dean's Chapel, where a large part of the big celebration at Milwaukee, Wis., on the third Sunday. Prof. J. Wesley Jones, the director and manager, says that will be filled this fall and will continue. Mrs. Marjorie Joyner, chapron of the Chateau Thierry Demoiselle club, gave a farewell party in honor of Miss Katherine, who will be Wednesday, Aug. 27, 1919. The club largely attended, including the boys of the Royal Swell Social club. All who attended had a very nice time. Miss Katherine would night after night, six weeks in Chicago. The Ways and Means Society of Grace Presbyterian church will meet at the home of Mrs. C. Carey, 1720 Emmia Avenue, Evanston, IL, Sept. 8, at 2 o'clock.
What is a Marimba? When you hear Elgar's orchestra October 7-you will know.
10,000
MME
JECH
This C
a regular
Manual fo
Diplomats giv
or personal in
treatment of
Sina. Newly
One box or be
Hitchch-a-Jean
We teach Ft
Messaging. C
We teach
Jecter Scalb C
AUGUST GUENTHER & SON
WOMAN'S PAGE
CLUBS AND FRATERNAL
The American Beauty Charity club met last Tuesday evening, Aug. 26, at the home of Mrs. Carrie Boll, 2957 Federal street.
Entertain for Mrs. Pankey
Mr. and Mrs. M. Harrison, 2344 Indiana avenue, entertained twenty friends at whilst in honor of Mrs. J. Elmer Pankey, Oakland, Cal. First prize was won by Mrs. Pankey, second prize was Harry Harris, booby by Mrs. French.
Bake 'Em Hot
The Vendome bakery, 3148 State street, bakes 'em every day. Hugh Dyer, the owner of the Dyer is clerk. Pound cake, white cake and chocolate cake Saturday.
.SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1919
EVANSTON, ILL.
Dr. E. P. Jones and his delegates will leave in a few days for Norfolk, Va. to attend the National Baptists of S.A. convention, *F. B. Freckenridge and M. Gaby* Norfolk, Va. to P. Qua, Ohio, are the guests of C. C. Breckenridge, 1904 Colafax street. *Mr. and Mrs. Russel of 1502 Elmwood avenue entertained last Saturday evening honors of Mr. and Mrs. DeKroche of Mrs. and Mr. Ruby. Norfolk turned . . . her vacation and is expecting her son to visit her soon from Acre Gold Coast, Africa. *R. R. Lee of 1615 Sherman avenue is able to be here to see the guests of Mrs. and Mr. Gow Wilson. *Herbert Lyons will soon leave for Atlanta, Ga., where he will fill a position in the Morita-Brown college. Return From College. *R. Jessica Mathews of R. W. Hunter & Co., bankers, spent a delightful week of her vaction at her old home in Fox Lake, Wis.
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Soft Bright Arms AND Hands
Lovely Bright Complexion Soft and Beautiful
Try This Preparation
You are entitled to have a soft, bright, smooth complexion. You will find the use of Black and White Ointment, applied as directed, pleasingly delightful, soothing and healing. It stimulates a healthy action of your skin—making it soft, smooth and delightful to the touch. Try it yourself.
only heals all eruptions, but keeps your skin clean and free from any impurities.
You simply rub Black and White Ointment, as directed on package, on your face, neck, arms, hands. This is very pleasant and has the wonderful effect of lightening, bleaching or brightening up your dark brown or sallow skin, making it soft, velvety, bright, smooth, with attractive complexion. Black and White Ointment also heals all sores, bumps, rising, pimples, sunburn and blackheads. Removes tan, freckles and wrinkles. It is mighty nice to have a soft, bright skin, and you get it by using Black and White Ointment.
There is no use of having a rough, pimply skin when you can so easily and pleasantly apply Black and White Ointment, which heals all skin eruptions and brightens your dark or sallow complexion. When you think of how the face, neck, arms and hands are daily exposed to dust and dirt you readily see the desirability, if not the necessity of applying freely to your skin Black and White Ointment, which not
Rush in Your Order-Two Sizes, 25c and 50c (Large Size Contains Three Times the Quantity of the Smaller Size)—Sent You at Once
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THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Directions!
PRAIRIE STATE NEWS THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Hopeston, Ill., Sept. 5—Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Artist and mother, Mrs. R. C. Artist and mother, Mrs. Mary Brown's funeral in Georgetown Sunday. * Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Artist and mother, Mrs. Reeves and Marguerite Smith were among those who attended the Barnum day. * Mr. and Mrs. J. C. clock live guests were present at a 7 o'clock dinner Wednesday in honour of the university at his home, $18 West Wash street. After dinner the guests were
enttained with dancing at Burton's hall. Music for the occasion was furious. The band was composed of Danville. * Roy Artist was a Visitor in Danville Sunday. * Miss Susan Rhodes, Fowler, Ind. attended the dance here. Wednesday evening and Thursday evening Miss Marguerite Smith has returned. Miss Marguerite Smith has returned. May, Johnsen, Bypass, Lelin
Hillsboro, IL. Sept. 5. *Miss Roberta Dukes returns home Saturday evening after a long stay in Springfield and Decatur. *Roberta Murrell left Sunday morning for Neptune. *Miss Indelhilyne Mise Balche Hayes is in Metropolitan for Metropolis, IL, where she will
attend the institute this week. She
was born in Metropolis this year. *R. W. A. Martin, pastor of the St. James church,* move his family to Hibiscus this year.
Elgin, Il. Sept. 5—A JolI bunch motored to Jollet to a picnic. * Mrs. Jim Downs is entertaining Mrs. Rev. Levine Levine is entertaining Mrs. Levine Tenant returned from Chicago. bringing Mildred Gardens with Mrs. Levine Judge of Saginaw, Mish, dropped in. * Mrs. Arcy Carter and Mrs. Willie Bosley of Oak Park are the guests of Mrs. Arcy Judge of Saginaw. They are entertained at hunch by Mrs. Mildred Tenant. * Mrs. Duncan of
---
Richmond, Ky., was the guest of her mother, Ada Adams of Aurora visited relatives. *Laverne Newsome escorted her mother, Lydia Holmes and daughter Phyllis of Springfield, IL, spent a few days at Davenport, Iowa, and Ballue of Davenport, Iowa, are here.
Woman Treated at Hospital After Visii to Hairdresser
Woman Treated at Hospital After Visii to Hairdresser
HEROLIN BRITE SKIN FACE POWDER, an elegant, fancy, highly scented, brown tint face powder gives your face, neck, arms and hands that soft, smooth, lovely delicate tint so much added. Beautify your completion. You will like "brite skin" better than any other Face Powder. Brightens up your dark or shallow skin. Try it. By mail 25 cents. Agents wanted. HEROLIN MEMORIAL CO. ATLANTA, GEORGIA
We sent the man to Washington who
wrote before the Government Wage
Commission of your WRITE FOR
PARTICULARS.
Railroad Men's International
Benevolent Industrial Assn.
Room 3. 3902 State St.
CHICAGO, ILL.
Beauty Cream for cleansing
and beauty
Jogging, Massage and
Sleep. The Womens
Scalp and Hair Treat-
ment. Nail Salons
Lessons taught by cor-
respondent. Diplomas given.
Write for terms.
F. May 25, 2012
Washington, D.C.
Beauty Cream for cleans
(with the skin). 325 ml
and 150 ml. Scapel
and Hair Treatm
Lessons taught by cory
Lessons taught by cory
Diphenyl and in person
J. M. HUMMER
14 M. M. HUMMER
Quincy, I., Sept. 5.—Miss Carrie Turpin was a pleasant caller in Quincy at Monticello, Mrs. Miss Frances Robinson lat Saturday for school. * Miss Robert spending a few days at the home of her mother. Miss Jennie Davis, of 1619 N. house weddings Quincy at the residence witnessed was solemnized at the residence 8th street, when Henry Carr, 1519 N. daughter, Hilda, away to Feral Pursuit. Corso Mo. Mrs. Rosetta Thoron home in Indianaapolis after having spent a pleasant visit with her brother, Mrs. Nora Kennedy of Wilmington, Del. formerly of Quincy, is visiting her home The Household Hugh gave a special
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She taught many others this trace. Send a
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The most wonderful hair preparation of its-kind in the world today. As a hair straightener, beautifier and grower, it has no equal standing completely in a class by itself. After many years of research and continuation this scientific wonder has been so improved that a baby can use it. Every objectionable feature has been removed—will not turn the hair red, irritate the scalp, damage the hair, cause an abnormal appearance, so as to make it look as though nature did the work itself.
Garanteed to eradicate dandruff, remove ringworms, tetters and other scalp conditions—NO the hair can be made dead straight, straight just, just as the hair can be made dead straight, all we claim for it or else refrain your money. We have hundreds of testimonials on file from some of the most leading physicians, lawyers, clergymen and businessmen. We have the martial minds of O-ZO-NO, who can do any of the roles of $1.400 or O-ZO-NO. enough to straighten three heads of hair. Will stay straight from 6 to 8 months. everywhere. Special indulgence offered to acclams and barbers. Harbors trade is urgently solicited. When ordering remit by pacifica or express money order or registered letter. Enclose two-cent stamp for reply.
Letter letters to Major Jones. 1019 Springwood Ave. Anbury Park, N. J. Write today for full particular.
at the home of Mrs. Charles Anderson last evening. * Miss Boutice A. devine evening. * Miss Rue Butler is Vaudeville and friends offer belong away for several months. * A party consist of Wallace Hurlson, Bernice Turley and Mrs. Charles Clair, all of Corso, Mo, came Wednesday to attend her. * The former wife, Hilda Carr, back in the car. * Miss Lina McPike gave miscellaneous shower to Hilda Carr of Glenelg lunchroom for the bridal party of Miss Carr Wednesday. * Miss Gwendolyn Dyson and Hilda Carr of Glenelg taught teacher's training course. * Mr. Frank B. Hyde spent Saturday and Hilda Carr's family. * Mr. Gale in Glenelg taught teacher's training course. * Mr. Mire Thener of Rock island, formerly of Quincy, were summoned to Quincy by Walter. * Miss Alice Harris gave a handkerchief shower for Miss Hilda Carr last week. * Miss Carolte Dattar and Cedar parted for Cedar Saturdays
MME. LOLA E. GRAYSON
Scalp Specialist
Straighten-Your Hair
The most wonderful hair prep. As a hair stylist, you must completely in a class, by itself, and punctual experiment this that that. Every baby can do it.
The smzrtting sensation has in red; the smzrtting sensation has in O-ZO-NO is a vegetable combo but with a bit of iron, and absolutely waterproof), it such an elegant exquisite and nu as though nature did the work its scalp disorders. With O-ZO-NO is straight or curly, just as the user as though nature did the work its scalp disorders on file from some of the symmen and business men attesting. We will send to any one on the O-ZO-NO is straight to straighten to 6 to 9 months.
Agents wanted everywhere, and barber. Barbers' trade is up postion or press money order stamp for reply.
Address all letters to Major Park, N. J. Write today for full
$25.00 Course for $5.00
A
Be a Hair Dresser, Scalp & Skin Specialist
We teach you how either by mail or
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W. T. MKISICK & CO.
P.O. BOX 102, WILMINGTON, DEL
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You simply early to your hair the wizard-
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HEROLIN HAIR DRESSING
If plausibly warranted, it is an up-to-date
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for short hair crown icon and magnificent area
Sent for 25 CENTS by Mail
HEROLIN MED, CO., ATLANTA, GA.
FREE SAMPLE
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A
He made calling our new book "Progres-
sion," a new book he booked at Pref.
Kelly Stell, a staff member the wonderful
doings and new opportunities of our race
and the world. He lightning seller,
ask for terms, write quick.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
night. * Miss Theima Harry spent a week at the home of her sister-in-law, Mrs. Alice Harr of Riverside township, returning home Sunday. Rev. Bates and his friend Quincy from Clinton, Iowa. * To the paper customers of William Carr: That he has discontinued the sale of the Chicago Defender and that orders for subscription will be taken.
Unity, Ill. Sept. 5.—Miss. Matilda Smith, who has been visiting relatives in the city, visited Misses Cora William and Ida Mal Parmattened the county institute at Cairo, Miss. William will teach at Cacha, Miss. William will teach at a number of members of St. James A. M. e. Church and friends attended the meeting at Sanduky, St. Thursday, Rev. Rev. presiding elder of Cairo district, delivered a good sermon. *Mrs. Lunlee Smith, pastor of Sanduky, father, Obe Lenox. *Mrs. E. Sucker in the guest of Mrs. Janetne Saunders. *Mrs. this week, Wm. Hardiman's family moved back to his farm on Richwood
HAIR GROWN
IN THREE MONTHS
Gloss-O—A Marvelous Discovery
Which Grows Hair in 3 Months
Gloss-O will positively promote the growth of the hair in three months, provide it in use according to directions, and make it more resistant to norir hair troubles* such as dandruff falling hair. Itching scalp etc. must succeed, with two exceptions. It is as a hair dressing Gloss-O is undoubtedly unexcelled. It makes the hair look beautiful, but on the hair it has no equal. Give Gloss-O a three months' trial; it will surprise and delight you. Mrs. Lola Grower will deliver it to the manufacturer of this wonderful Hair Grower. Send 836 P. O. order and a jar will be delivered to your address. Send 836 P. O. order to GRAYSON. 3444 South Park Ave. CHAGASON. Ill. Send se extra postage.
Hair With O-ZO-NO
operation of its kind in the world today,
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After many years of scientific research
scientific wonder. has been so improved
has been removed—will not turn the hair
been reduced to the smallest minimum.
compound perfectly harmless suitable for
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making it nice, long and volvety, giving
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the hair can be made dead straight, half
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receipt of $1.60 s. regular size box of
three heads of hair. Will stay straight
Special inducements offered to agents
gently solicited. When ordering remit by
or registered letter. Enclose two-cent
Jones, 1019 Springwood Ave. Anbury
all particula.
WOMAN'S GLORY IS HER
HAIR
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WALTER LEMAN
GIVES HEALTH, TO THE SCALP
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GROWING OIL
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MADAME JESSIE CARTER
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2761 Glenarm St., Dumyne Dale
REPRESENTATIVES WANTED
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hare more rhetorical
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**HAVE YOU:**
**LETTERS of**
**FRIENDSHIP**
**LOVE**
**BUSINESS**
**ESSAYS**
**PAPERS**
**ADDRESSES**
**SPEECHES**
**SERMONS**
**EDITIONALS**
**TOASTS**
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ANYTHING you wish to REVIEWED,
SORRECTED, WRITTEN or RE-
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ADVICE or SUGGESTIONS GIVEN?
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SEE OR WHITE HIM.
Prices Reasonable—All Business
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
health, You Must Have Pure Blood
should therefore be taken to keep the wholesome food, drink pure water and outdoor exercise.
believe that there are impurities in your blood—simple, Boils, Sores, Ulcers, Eczema, Tetter and you should take a reliable blood purifier.
Three great purifiers
Plough's Prescription
C-2223
RHEUMATISM
BLOOD DISORDERS
Compiled
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Price $1.50
THE C-2223
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To Have Good Health, You Must Have Pure Blood
Every precaution should therefore be taken to keep the blood pure. Eat wholesome food, drink pure water and take plenty of outdoor exercise.
If you have reason to believe that there are impurities in your blood you are troubled with Pimples, Boils, Sores, Ulcers, Eczema, Tetter and similar skin diseases, you should take a reliable blood purifier.
---
Prescription C-22223
When the blood becomes foul from the presence of poisonous substances, which the body is unable to throw off, the nerves, brain, muscles and other vital organs do not get the nourishment and strength needed to keep the body healthy. The result is that you are miserable, half sick and feel tired all the time.
Another condition due to bad blood manifests itself by skin eruptions such as pimples, boils, sores, ulcers, tetter and itching diseases.
All of these troubles caused by impoverished, impure or bad blood can be relieved by Prescription C-2223. This liquid internal treatment, composed of medicinal ingredients well known to the medical profession, are so proportioned and combined as to be readily absorbed by and act directly on the blood.
Prescription C-2223 is equally effective in the treatment of uric and lactic acid conditions, such as rheumatism, gout, lumbago and lame back. This liquid prescription acts upon these acids in the blood which cause the rheumatic and gouty conditions, dissolving and promptly eliminating them.
So great is the faith of the manufacturers in the merit of Prescription C-2223 that they make this guarantee: If, after taking two $1.50
A Blood Purifier That Has Stood the Test of Time
bottles of this preparation according to directions, the patient does not feel satisfied with the relief obtained, take the empty bottles back to the dealer from whom Prescription C-2223 was bought, explain the conditions, and he will refund the price paid for the two large bottles. 2223 LIVER PILLS—These pills are especially prepared and recommended for use in connection with liquid Prescription C-2223, because they act gently on and keep the liver and bowels in a healthy condition.
2223 Liver Pills do not nauseate, and have given such good results that they are recommended also as a general household remedy for constipation, biliousness, sick headache and other ills caused by disordered or sluggish liver.
C-2223 LABORATORIES,
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Gentlemen:
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Name.....
Address....
Cut out and mail the enclosed blank for literature on Prescription C-2223 and free samples of Liver Pills.
PAGE SIXTEER 5 i rc ae OY Sm Tyr J hee
wu. Oa Se a a a ee oe ea une
SePTeme@ck 6, 1919 fay i /| Bee foro —i of ro. a CAT iE fi | /. . ov * THE MORNING. DEW?
NATIONAL EQUAL RIGHTS
LEAGUE ANNUAL MEETING
WILLIAM MONROE TROTTER WILL
REPORT HIS TRIP TO PEACE
GONFERENCE IN PARIS, .
By Mee. ide 8. Welle Barnett.
‘William Mf. George, Washington, D.
©. aod hig daughter. Mra. Prauces E.
Raymond, were in the city last week
Malting Hr. George's son. Albert 5.
‘George, i331 Vernon avenue, and Mre
Raymond's son, AJbart L. Raymond,
BIL Uberhare ‘avenue. | itr. George,
Jeaving ton grandchildren in Washing-
ton, made the acquaintance here of his
newest grandchild, Albert Roberts
George, und is. greut-grandehlldren,
Albert “Marshall Ruymond and Fran-
cea Jane Raymond, who are the.grand-
childten.ct Mfrs. Raymond. ‘The four
Eenerations had @ splendid. time to-
gether. The “Your Alberts” were i
feature,
Struck by Aute
John Ferguson, 43jh cand . Mederal
aucerta, wan wirucie Sy an automobile
Belonging to the, Kenwood ‘Truck and
‘Teaming company, 314 Kast 45th sireet,
Tuesduy ut 5:46 p. m, at 33d end
State streets, Soveral tibs wero bro-
Ken “on both sides. A Defender ce-
porter was passing .and ealled Dr. Kk.
Roeedand:tha injured man was takes
te Provident” hospital. Dr. WW.
Gibby, intern at Provident hewpltai,as-
Ainted tn giving the tgJured man med
ical ald.
Detander Representative In City
‘Mrs, Katherine Kent-Lambert. Birra
Anghaum, Als., the Defender representa:
five there. ty the guest of Mr. and
Mrs. umes Monroo, 4555 Prairie ave:
rue, “She was the.guest of Afiss Talla
Burkadale at the American Giants
‘Paseball gameu Sunday and Labor Day.
Sho will ’be. entertained by a number
of frends during her stay in “the
“windy City.” Mrs, Lambert will ro.
train hore for several weeks Aire,
Walter Speedy (8 planning « luseheon
for her.
‘Steme free Prance.
Kdeut, R. H. MGAllister, chapialn tn
the. United States urmy, ‘nas Fecenuly
returned from France..” Before going
fe France Lieut, Rchllisine, fangbe, at
Centra Afgbama inotitute at Birmirig-
huts, He wus ony ofthe last’ of our
oftcers, to leave Vrance., THs hemo
4: a Vicksburg, Btivs, but bo And bis
Piotlier.and sister are in (oe city Visit-
ing Telatives aud friends,
Enters Eighth Grade This Year
Little, Bfarvel ron. Clinkseale. 6400
fuuth Paricavenue, has returned tron
her, vacation in Bichigun and Tuevdey
gitered the elath, Grade” Tast.ea~
fun she waa-one.ot ihe brightest nu-
Pils of bor, Sask Sue is ‘the only
Gaughter” Of Mr. and Aru. Forest
Chitkseate,
A. 9. Tayler on the Job Agein
\".0. Taylor, Cleveland correspond
ent 4nd one of the best xeportera an
the Dotonder staff, tiws returned to Us
duties. ufter a wo wees’ vacation at
Iulewitd resort, Baldwin, Bich. Mr
‘Tasior and hie wite clan they uever
enjoved 4 vacatton:better than the one
Go the lake ta Michigan. He returged
<0 work Tueuday, brunfut of weno,
Paster and Flock Fall-Qut
Auomays W. E. King and, Rlchara
Westbrroks gol out un Infunetion tor
fino congregation of the Internationa
‘Baptist chnren, 449 Wart sith. etreet,
againvt tho pastor, BL. Roue,” The
Ghureh wants fo cl another. pastor
tut Me Rev. Rose loves hig. feb. tn
Addition’ to belng a cook by rade. The
Caee will be thrashed out next week.
Mire Viele K.\MeNalil Pesese Away,
Mrs. Viola K. McNeill, wife of Ed*
Yard ic. Menielil?2534 State vtzoots who
ad neon, sels for alone tine, ‘parmes
away lest week of Tuberculosie. Ter
Dunband and son wacompanied (he ro:
Toning. to Marebal, ‘Tex, where Uhe
wll Be interred.
Delightful “Hoosier” Visitors
Aus. Elanor Smith and Mr, Beesle
Asher ‘of Indianapolis ere guests of
Brg: Bas C. Welker, 4654 Indians ave-
nur, ‘The visltote ‘are lwo of Tnds-
ua‘s moot doligbiful youne people.
Rakes ke ok Bite
Home from Vacatien
Mre OR. J. Gass, 4207 Prairie ave-
nus." has returned fram an enjoyable
Xacatlon IN Baraboo, Wie.
Ne ens
Gradalated Byelids,
OUR se: instances by aie,
e cure toSae, Bastand Wiad
uiekly relieved by Narise
YES fees. Ne Smarting,
jut Eye Comfort. At
Soup Drugyins of br mail oc gee Boule
For Book at ihe Eye free write be
Merino Eye Remedy Ce, Chicege,
“DOWT DREAM ABOUT A GOOD
COMPLEXION! BUT HAVE ONE!” ;
Good tockw {8 6 sacial requirement. You, a
too, cap give Your taen neck and acme ths ff Mee
tsame charm with Celestial Bleaching creatm, off ge:
JOhiene tho skin at onen Tomoves liter, e
Grote, treciins, ‘xrinites, Mmplee, sunburt: i
slo tearing the syin soft and velvals. Guar: sa
Entena to be pureund harmless. Unilie many uae
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Sour drussiel, or by mall, 60¢ "Atg. by a,
+ =) GELESTIAL CHEMICAL Co. =
3523 Calumet Ave. Chicago, Ili ——
Agtats wanted. Write for terms.
MIME. Mi. HART'S ELECTRIC HAIR GROWER
Sumntstss and nourishes the reots of the hair, glying Ita new stomth, |
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bs PHONE DOUGLAS 3848 3512 INDIANA AVENUE |
Elect. Gul, Benison to
Constitutional’ Convention
Wednesday, Seh?. 39, tys-entie cit-
laenryrof tie bate ge linols wit be
Gelegntod tho power through tho exer:
Glee ot thete. ute
frase (0. walect
RPM ror ciel cena
RE OMEMEE cotta’: Sictvict tro
RAGE members to sit In
Rrteeem “the constitutions!
| EMM convintion whiten
iia ceaM convenes Jan. 1
HS 19t0, The: purposa
ft tits eativention
: fh bhort will bo to
Pn Fevise the constl-
RENCE (24100106 10 atato
PSM oc iiss, mics
| SURE Sovision has been
He eee
; br the. growth a
ee Oo commencien
a
rs
Pecan!
EN
ee 1
ae
ars
. Gab Bentacn
President ‘Hope Entartained.
Dr.John Hope. president of Mtore-
house College. was ia tho city lest
week! On Striaay ho wan the Guest. of
Revs W, M, Bonnet! and wife av S35
Bast ith eireet, who gave a dinner in
honor of the president. RDev. Bennett
Is an alumnus of Morehouse College.
from. which Institution ho. graduated
with. honore and tool hia degree, Dr.
Hope tao pleated to see the great work
Rev. “Bennett has “accomplished in
founding» the . International - Baptist
chureh also in founding the Chicago
Ideal ‘Baptist ‘church, 451 East 27th
street, of which he fo the present pas-
tar.
on “iii Hee tas Wha,
Seieee Bary ©. Branch and Harriet
Hi. Johnson, teachera tt: tho V. N. &
1.'L, Petersburg, Va.. who spent the
summer, at the’ Chicago: Culvernity,
and who whiJe here were the auests of
Mr..and, Mr, Claybrook,. i:0. Ingle=
side avenue, have left for the west
Mics Branch will visit relatives in St
[Louls, Piiledelphia and Camden, Ni. J.
while Misa Jounson will visit her. Dar:
Jente at Chatiestan, -W. Va, before they
fenter upon their’ fait duties at. the
schoo,
Attempts Suicide
Mrs. ‘Nera EU Murrar, uge 42, 3531
Grand boulevard, ig allcget {6 have
talien, earbollc acid: while desnondent
lever separation trom hor husband. Sh
was removed to the Provident Jospita!,
whereaphystciane “considered her case
as. nok. being especially - dungorous.
Mangysfrionds of Bes, Murray hope for
her gpeedy recovery,
Editer-Brascher Returns
Naham Brascher, editor-in-chief of
the chsogplated "Preéa, 313 Sout Clark
street. Tihs rolurned ‘to the city trom
Atlantle City: Washington. D.C. and
other folnts, eaul. While at” Atiaatie
City dir, Brascher and Cluide Barnett
Alasomia valuable nowene per work for
the press sssoclation with which hey
are: Connected. :
Cut at Tews.
M. 'T. Bailey. president Garey Realty
Company, and.menager Milton Mor~
cantilo-Agency: tw touring the stite of
Indiane, “He also goes aaa. aalegaty
to tha National Grund: Counell of AU.
EK. D. of A... which convenes ag In-
Jdianapolia during the week
Visits ¥. W. 6. A. Camp
Mry. Margaret Morgan-Jamison, 4331
Langley avenue. of the University of
Chicago,dolegution.was in attendance
jat the College Camp VY. W. (A. Tashe
Geneva, Wis. Aug.'19-29. ‘There wors
760 gitls in attendance.
hneik: Cabin Meee Re
ac Anérew Jackenn, aged veteran of the
aint war, dled Seph t at the home nf
biagaugbter, Ars, Lazarus Hoary. 4248
Rhodes avenue. -Ho-leaves to mourn
Tie’ fene ‘two sont, hum daughters and
4 host of wrandehiloren
PEOPLE'S MOVEMENT CLUB
Sundas, Spt: the regulon meetings
wlll Dope att oidlocke The prearamn
coutmitten haw been foriunate tw secure
the Hon, Edward Morvie, Patric He
Oenndi and To A. 2. Carey us
apoakers. Good music. “Comme early vo
that vou will havea woat,
“DON'T DREAM ABOUT A
COMPLEXION! BUT HAVE |
Good tookw 18 a social requireme:
too, eap give Your fuen. mock und
tsame charm with Celestial Blenchin
JO iitoan tho akin at ones, tamo
‘pots, freckles. ‘wrinkles. pimplee.
fe. ieaving tho skin soft and velval
Sniena ta be pura und harness. Uni
Others, It eoniaine ne mercury oF
Sour druggiel, or bY mall, Soe ME
+ * ) CELESTIAL CHEMICAL CC
3523 Calumet Ave. Chieago, |
Agents wanted. Write for ter
! ¥
MME. Wi. HART'S ELE
i] Suamtstae and nourishes the roots
IB and is & sure cure for Dandruff Te
i “sure cure for Dandrul Te
HEALTH EDITOR IS
* BACK ON THE JOR
ES lpctotto Biome Mbgatidie become dds
fender returned to-chicago from Franc
Monday, Sept. 1. “having tintehed hi
great ralsslon in und around. Parl
That the value und: yeope-of ils, wor
aug bo more fully Fealiyed, wo ar
pleased to reprint letters of.commensa
tow from white and. Race ofiicers «
the ¥. Mf. C. A. in recegaition of hi
goed worlt abroad: .
‘Ameriean Js. VY. Bt. C. a. Paria
Region, 12 Tuo w'Aguesseau, July
,-1028., :
Dr W. A: Evans, Chicago, Trib-
une, Chicago, ill,
My Dear Mr. vans: Thta letter
$s to bear testimony to tho eilictent
and most helpful servico of Dr. «A.
W. Williams inthe Yo Moc. 3.
work for the ten of his race in
France. ¢
T mei De. Willams a day or two
after he reached Paris, und.imme-
diately’ put him on our. lecture
wervice work for the Colored rexi-
Mente who were working. in {ho
Hravos registration service: In iis
Work thes were laking caro of oy
American Usad, esluming. them
from burial places on. the battle-
fields and rebueying them in eur
large American cemeterien through =
+ out the triangular hattte urea, Cha
teau ihlerry. Rheims. und” Sols-
eons, .Dr. Willams lectured again
und again and browse to these
men i helpfn. josteuculve messace
and much tnapivation and informa-
Yen. } apr sure these inen will Zo
back to the States better sttistied
und better Americans because of
what Dr. Williams bax done among:
them. .
With overy good wish to Dr, il
ams und to sou on the tino work
you are doing through the pages of
tho Tribune, 1 am,
Very vordiaily yours,
(Signed) M. MI. BICKIAM.
iegionai Director.
Felleau Wood, France, June 22,
ani.
My Dear Dr. Willams: ‘The lee
tures you inade (o the hors on "The
Vision” and the conditions the bore
bre to mee? when they return home
will long be remembered.
J have noticed with partieular
Interest how the bors nave dis-
cussed, the ge and the manner
which “yon Sut tt up. to. them.
‘They, av woll a5 the oMcers, wern
very much pleased, and expressed
a desiro for-your return. It if 100
Wad that wo didn’t have more men
of your type over hore—men who
ure vo far removed from the young
man and-bls tdeas,
Tam delighted that you came to
‘Belleau and that J had the pleasare
of meeting vou and knowing you
otter." Hoping that you wilt con-
tinue Sour good work In the States,
phere wo will need you very much,
am,
Nery sincerely yours.
(Signed) WILL E. PARKS,
Yee. T.-M. C. Aw Bolleau Wood,
Prance.
5450 Gllpin street, Denver, Colo.
‘ Great Future Out West
Willlam’ B, Moore, Lead, 8. D., was
th the city iact Week and stopped at
te Tlewitd Hotel. Tio eald to a De-
fender reporter that forcigners are
leaving the West.and returning to their
native lands and that there 1s 4 great
opportunity: for our men to work in
the -gold mines: that the wast tw the
place for real men. that they are given
employment at all the gold mines, that
are constantly vieldivig: millions of dol-
larg worth of gold, if¢ ways that In
guch “cities ay Tiuron, “Watertown,
Aitehell and Sioux Falls our people are
dolng well. He urged that the west
4g the place for men who want work
not loafers o hoodlume.
Nien: Micali Babee Mebane tcce
Mrz, Gesule Kyle ‘Price, Houston,
Tesaz, cousin of Hon, Emmett J. Scott
accompanied by her two daughterr,
Emma und “Jimmie,” have deen the
uests of Mrs. Joe Booker, 4458 Prairio
avenue. Lavt Friday, Mrs, Booker had
them for u delightful trip to Milwau-
Kee, Wis, on, the-Doat. Tuesday night
they uttendod the opening of the Roxal
Circle of Friends, Clivet Buptist
Church. 2
Third Ward Good Government Club
Tuesday sight,. Aus. 26, ihe ‘Third
Ward Good” Governmont Club met at
4403. S. Stato sireol. and Mrs, Lucy
Price preaided. C. . Robinson gave
@ brief outline of the workings of tho
club. F. P. Speake, John Riley, Mrs.
EB. P. Randolph and Mrs, Ida ‘Wells
Barnett ulso xpoke. The next meeting
win vo Sunday xtteraoon, 4311 Evang
avenue." °
Dr. C. M, Wade and Daughter in City
Dr. C. Mf. Wado and daughter, Miss
Meinote Wade Wot Springs, Ark,. are
in the city attending the Royal Circles
of Friends, which {s in session at the
Olivet: Baptist Church. Dr. Wade ut-
tonded ‘the Supremo Lodge. Knights of
Pythias, Atlanily City, Nod.
Porter Found Dead \
jTamea Benjamin Gordon. 4v ‘years
old, 8717 Langley avenue, 4 Pullman
Porter, wag found doud of acute In-
digestion on a parlor car at Clovelent,
Qihle, on Aug. 22. Ue leavon a wife und
babw, uloo father and brother of Ios
Anacies. Cal. Funcrat, services wern
held Wednesday at Chas. Jackson's
chapel. Rev. Thomas officiuted.
Mru. J.B, Taylor of. Houston, Tex.
Haft the city’ for Detroit, Buttaln,’ Ning=
ara Valle and Canada, where she wie
Mim guest of “Mul. dnd Mrs. Stuart
Fette.. Capt. and Mra, Robert urd.
‘Siva Pawhar tet Gatnensle acimanen tench
Mes. Coober Gives Dinner
re. Wiliam A. Cooper. 3402 Yorest
avenua, entertained at dinner Wednes-
aay ot last woek in honor of Mrs, Hat~
tye Prescot and niece, Catherine Thaie,
Portland, tre. airs, Dro A.W. Parker,
New York, an? Miss Juba Latty, Dur?
bam, N.C
Are You From Georgia?
Lam from Georgia: ura you Please
meet with the Circto of Georgians at
Children's, Advertising Ausaciation, each
Tuesday nigh!. S123 Langley uvenuc.
WiC. Stafford, prevident.
Mira: Whiltacis Qeic Wan
| ay tits. Phoehs Whitnex, 4216 Tndlena
avenue, fofe for New Tork Cty Gan:
day" to’ talte % couree in” dreoslaasing
[aay te, tale a cokire
.
30,000 Credit Accounts!
AND EVERY ONE OF THEM CARRIED OUT TO A
CONCLUSION WHICH WAS :
SATISFACTORY TO ALL CONSERNED
18 OUR RECORD AND RECOMMENDATION ”
FURNITURE OF EVERY DESCRIPTION
AT TERMS TO SUIT YOU
STATE ST. FURNITURE CO.
(8133-35-37 STATE STREET, CHICAGO, ILL.
es eraser
ee
| 25 Years’ Experience BAM. to 9 P, M. Dally Except Sunday
Original Indian Hair Grower
te an ideal tonie,. destroys. microbes and completely eradi-
cates, dandruff... It restores the: decaying hair roots, stops
Son tte
‘Two Sizes; 250.and 50c. Mail Orders; Postage 10c Extra
MANUFACTUREO ONLY BY
MRS.-MARY J, F. PARKE De tts 4718 State St., CHICAGO, ILL,
i . , Apollo: Beauty, Shop 4
volo Reauty shop, 317 state ?
street, upstairs, Phone Douglas #15
Am. catering “only. (9. those: whe
know and can gpprétiate the best
th Beauty, Cuhade
1am vow. offering to 103: Race
he Glass of worke which hitherts
thus been ensovea-only by, mess of
opulence. ae
‘Only limited: numibersshom
can perconally-attend are solicited,
a5" T-ahall einploy"no. aesievants
or student aber. ©
Personal attention and the bens-
ut of my sears of experience’ sia
be'Kiven edch individual case.
Fick massage, eyebrow arch-
ing. veaip -masesce,, shampooins:
mantcoring, hair culture.
‘Sroams, lotions. tonics, :tollet
articles una pertums manutictured
‘by me for my exclusive trade,
MADAM 1 Re CRANE.
DAM O pdvertivement.
Local Elks Planning Banquet
Be Bee ee ane: are penning fot
‘a big banquet, whieh is to. be followed
with oratory ind muslo, on: Thuredas
evening, Sept. 4, at the BIks’ Rest
Forly-fourth and Stato streets. "1 I
expected: to be the most elaborate af-
fair ever given in this city by the
Ek. "The honor guests will be H: A
Watkins, real estate dealer of this city
who wag lected Grand Bstecmed Tee-
turing Kuehne at the Grand Lodge
Atlantic Clty. “Min elrettion was: dit
im and ho wad put In nomination bs
Hobert V. Rigioy, 2972. South State
strcet. ‘This was’ the frst timo. Mr
Watkins attended ap Eke Grand Lodge
‘The banquet will bo given under. the
auspices of the Creat Lakes Lodce.
B. F. 0. B. Hon, George W. McMechen
Baitimore, Ma, Grand Bxalted Ruler:
W. W. Green, Birmingham. Grand Es-
tcomed foyal Knight: George Is, Eates,
Grand. Secretrex, Newari, 'N. J.. and
Bred Caster, chairman of the creden-
Uals committee. Evers” BIK in- Chi-
[ego io expected to be present. ober
Ridley was appointed Grand Traveling
Deputy of the World for the 1. 5. I
1. "E,W. by Grand Bxalted’ Ruler
George NoMechen.
Smart Dancing Party
Mr. and Mre. Arnold Gavin, S#4¢
‘Vincennes avenue tendered one of the
sraurteat ‘of the season to Mrs.
Follx 1. Payne of Kansas City; Mow at
the Phyllis Wheatley parlors Wednes-
day evening, Sopt. 3. Over « hundred
Srlends met to pay homage to,the guest
of honor. Mrs. Payne was charmingly
gowned in a combination of pale blue
and pink georgette crepe, whllo~ the
hostess. ware a frock of champagne
georgetio heavily beaded over tan rat:
fh. A very enjoyable evening was bad
by all present.
Beuthern Nures Visite City
Miss Julie Latty, city health nurse;
Durham, N.C, Is in the city. as the
guest of My: ata Mrs. Frank C. Long,
3400 Forest avenuc. Miss Latty;, who
ig en route from Boston, Masy., where
sho attended the annual meet’ of the
National Nurves' Association, was a
schoolmate of Mr, Long. In thelr carly
childhood day, ‘Sho-also visited New
York and Washington..and leaves the
city for ber home on the 12th.
Bishops Enjoy Farm Life
Mr. and Mrs. 3. C. Bishop, 4859
South Wabash avenue, aro enjoving
to weoke" vacation on the fart of
i fhe fata of
‘the lattor’s ‘parents, ‘Mr, and Mrs. W:
J. gones, near Buxton, Iowa. Ste,
Susie Jones Livingston, wate of Dr.
Phil Livingsion, St Andrews, South
America: ‘who ie. in this country on
several montha’ visit, is also a gaest
ou her parents’ farm,
Mra, Gaiavie Stops Over:
Mrs, Molle Galavis, after « pleasant
ylalt with her daughter, Mrs.,Saille B,
Scott Toulevitie, Ky. aad brsthers, B.
T, and Georgia Hayden, Lawrenceburg,
KY. passed through the city Just. Wed~
needy, en route to Hantord, Cal., and
was the geust of her mlece, Miss: So-
Dhronia Naydon, 4437 Langley avenue,
Dental Club'to.Give Steg
_'The Douglas Prosthetic Dantal Co.
will give a stag Thursday evening,
Sept. 4, at their offices, 3445 South
State cifeet, “Those connected with
the ‘company aro Dr. Richard Murphy,
Whllan’ S. Haswood and Terrevous
Dovglas, ‘Pho Defender staff has been
honored’ with an‘ invitution.
Miss Taylor Gives Box Party
Miss Zenobira ‘Taylor, St Weet Thir-
ty-fourth ‘street, gave 2 pretty box
pary at the Avenue theater Friday last
in honor of afiss Velotts Lewis, Bloom
ingtoa, TIL
sc es
His, exceliency, the wtork, paid a via
to the home of Prof, and Mrs, J. E.
Livingston, 3720 Elmwood avenue, and
lott a fino haby boy on Aug. 19. Mother
and son doing fine.
Prof. Reed Returns From Vacation
(Prof. D, W. Rad, blind singer and
pianlsG returned Monday from a de-
lightfui vacation wexson spent in Tv
anston, Beloit, Racine and Madizen,
George Stowart Entertains
George ‘Stewart of Wilkon's Piazza
onteriained with @ delightful dance and
luncheon last ‘Thursday evening in
honor of Mises Katherine Loraine
Jeter, Myrtie Jordan and Ruth Ailen,
Little Tock, Ari.
Return Home ‘
‘The Misacs Haythella and Adina Ad
ams of St Paul, Minn, daughters of
Valter J. Q. Adams of the St. Paul
Appeal, teturied (0 thelr home” after
Spending u delightful visit in this olty.
Defender Staff First
To Hear Dr. Williams
| Dr. A. Wilberforce Williams, health
editor of the Defender. who hus been
in Parts, Prange, for ihe ‘past tout
Toontby, arrived. in thls clty Monsay,
Sept. 1} and will resume bia medtea
Deacilee an? hie Felations sith various
Institutions and fusinoss” enterprises
‘with which he is connected. Tho doc-
{or looked) the picture. of health -and
expressed: himecl{ ay being leased to
again return to his family and friends,
‘Tre wil be tendered w luncheon by the
Detender stsit Saturday ‘misnt. at. 3
Stelock at the Royal Gardens: 482 East
[Siet streets Among, there woo. will be
‘present aro Balto‘. S, Abbott, Al.
fred Anderson, Garey &, Lewis, Lucius
Harper. a. Ny Holds, Fons” Lanigeton,
EMC. ‘Ragors, ‘overt “Butler, Phil
& Sones, suliusAvendorph,Heney
Simpuon, Clarenco ice, 0. a. Taylor
Glevelend “‘represeniative, ‘Euest of
Honor! Dr. #F Braxton aad Alderman
Loute B. Anderson, Dr, ‘Willeme wl
Give a brlet talk of his work done
Among the soldiers in ihe Feench cans
tonments. 7
‘Opens a Business [nctitute.
An Institute: that is greatly needed
Jamong us has been opened by Attorney
ugene Marshall at 4110 Indiana aves
nue. It'ls true that some of alir people
have Jost hundreds and perhaps thou-
sands of dollars because dishonest
‘business men have taken udvaniage of
the ignorance of people in business af-
fairy. Many of our people lave warked
hard toby property of cu Inte busl-
hesy and somo of them have lost thelr
homes. thelr places of business, house:
Hold furniture, waxes, savings anit In-
vestments: simply Because they did not
Know the exéntial points about slecds,
morigar@s, leases and contracts.” In
somo instances Utes havo erected
beautiful chucchen*ani other instity-
‘tong and then, after ware of labor aiid
sacrifice, they have heen compelled. to
olther pax of heavy mortgaes at high
rates of interest or losw them through
foreclosure proceedings. In view’ of
these facts the Lincoln Basiness Insti
tute has been established to. Instruct
‘our pecple in business, Its chief alm
fs to encourage and assist people to co
into business, to teach them how to
save thelr money and property and to
urge them to patronize and support
their own race. :
Buys Property Here
One of the largest purchases mado
at the Rudolph Wurlitzer Plano com-
Pany, Wabash avenue, was that” of
George Stovens of Jacksonville, Fa.
who has negotiated for twelve electric
Planes to be used in the umusement
Dusiness throughout the South, Mr.
Stevens, in addition to bis holdiogs tn
the South, has considerable property
intorest in’ Washington, D.C. Through
“Mat” Mason of the firma of Faulkner
& Cook he purchased a valuable pleve
of property in this city. Mir. Stovons
intends to make Chicago bly bome,
(lee Matemssre Kilertained
Mru. Richard Casi, 4053 Indiana ave~
nue: her sister, Mrv. Geo. Wortington,
6432 Eberhart avenue, ane AMlvs Allo
E. McLemore of Columbia, ‘Yenin. re-
turned Thursday from an sight wacks!
trip to Birchwood, Mich. Miss MuLe-
More, who 1s tho sister of Samuel 1,
MeLemore, after spending the weeks end
ae the guest of Mrs. Cash, left for
der home Sunday vight.
Visitors in City
Dr. and Mrs. U. W. Hatheoel:, Day-
ton, Ono. and Mise Grav’s White, pep-
jular school teacher. Kansas City. Mo.
Jare In tho city during the weeks uc
guests of Dr, Fannie imanyel and MPs,
BMieKinley manuel. sa route from
Télewila. Mich. De. “Wathvock Is a
prominent dentist ii his bome clty.
a Count bbs Returns
‘Count Charles. TI. Ebbs. 2944: Indl.
jana avenue, arrived tiome Tuesday
from Atlantic Cl. X. J. where he
attended the Ells’ convention, ‘The
“Count.” in company with. sts, Tale
Uan J. Wright of Philidelphia, Pa:, won
the Prize aw: the best dressed coupls
at the Ulks' bail,
Kansas City Nurse Here
Mrs. Sandusky Watkins, Kansas City,
Mo. Is spending un indefinite period
in the city. ‘She expects t0 follow her
profession ay trained nurse. At pres-
Jent che fx.stopping at the home of Mrs,
White, 438 Bast Forty-clghth Wace.
Misa Revolls Gives Breakfast
Miss Nellie Revelts, 3406 Indisna_av-
qnue, guve a high noon breakfast Sun-
day "In honor of Mrs, war! Lewis;
Bloomington, Tl, Among thove present
worn Mrs. Vred P. Green, Mrs, er=
tude Moore, Miss Zenobva ‘Taylor.
Miso Hazel Dexter of Detroit, and Mrs,
Earl Lewis of Detroit,
whi a mes es ee
|_ fir and Mrs, HH. Bogar entertained
Jat dinner Friday evening. Aug. 29, Mire,
Foltx Payne, Kansas City, ito. and
‘Mrs, Henry ‘Jones.
David Manson Visits Wife
David Manson, 4406 Grand boule-
vard, went the week-end isl Idlewild,
Mich. ay the guest of hix wife. Uo
wired his wifo tho “croly de guerre”
medal for her patient onduranen, of 18
years’ marita) hards!ip lust week,
i Real Eatate Dealer Here
SF Woods, real cutate dealer of
Cleveland, Ohio, epont Tabor day with
hie brother, Hi. . Woods. isi Wer!
60th “street! "The two lid ‘Net seen
euch other. for a period covering =
Yeare.
Tieketa far Geinher 7M Archoetea
hall are at Urban Lewzus. 9932 Wabash
Sve 3Seaerh, Utaith and Evans,
“THE RIGHT PLACE TO TRADE”
ea sea laa Ma (=|
em 98¢ 1 | FOL Te cree
a 1,000SiIk
se Tn i
_$X_ «Dresses Ht)
Wy Teffetas, Satine, vi | J
Vee Crepe de: Chine, - Bag
I . Georgette, ‘ 9
A Foulard, Figured’ ade
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Now having a rpectal tale on all Tines.of the hewt tir ee
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Phone Douglas 8308 3253 So; State Sty Chicege pA He,
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‘unae ero fonts worth rating tend al aces ners to
"\ HAYES" BOCK STORE, 3640 STATE ST. CHCKae. ILL.
MUTUAL INSURANCE CO.
HOLDS BIG MEETING
‘The Underwriters’ Mutual Insurance
corapany invited its promoters, ugents
‘and, others Interested In: the ‘weltare
of the company to thelr home office,
2 wast Stat streot, last Friday night
iwhere they went over ‘what the. Un:
Gerwriters have uccomplished in thele
Mirst six months ‘ot organization. — Ite
Progress "bas been remarkable’ and
places it_ among. the most promising
forward movement business énterprises
‘owned and operated by our people.
“Among those ‘present: were. Wm.
Pickett, Joseph B. Winston, Joseph
‘Azaile, John Dixon of Tennessee, Squire
Lambert and Prof, Huggins." These
Gentlemen agreed that. the organiza-
Hon of the Underwriters. is a stop in
the! right airgction, commented “upon
the epirit of democracy. which seemed
{o'mark the meeting, and their opinion
that its sromth how been remarkable
‘when compared with the growth of
other insurance companies.
Prominent Los Angeles Gueste
Entertained z
pits. Samuel Thompson, secretary of
the Los Angoles branch of the N., A.
A.C. P. and prominont. in, the’ sodial
lrole there, is. visiting Chleago wth
her daughter, Miss Anfte, Thompson,
and xon, Sumner Thompson. During
the last! week Mrs. Poter D; French
of 2366 Calumet “avenue. entertained
at dinner, and tire, Harry 8, Brown.
3262 Calumet avenue, gave @ dinner
arty last Wednesdey’ In honor of the
Euest. Mra. William T. Hall of 3404
Vernon uvenue entertained the Thomp-
sons as dinner guests... Fenton A;
Haren’ Jr. gave Miss Anita and ner
friend, Miss Regina Anderson, a de-
Ughttdi auto drive through the park
and bnuievard system of Chicago and
Meinity.
+; ‘Sieaaiibtia Gm tnssemeniad
ce neee, oe tee SONOe. cate
People's Mercantile. Company of Chi-
cago is Incorporated. Tt board of di-
rectors was elected Aug. 19, 1029, 20-
cording to law. it was chartored, the
35a day of August and recorded. The
‘company ts operating scaaia of stores
and plane to put on 2 number ptothers
In and out of tho city. ‘The company
has placed ten © thoveand. dollary
($10,000) ‘worth ‘of additional ‘stock:on
the ‘market for’ sale at ten dollars
(io) per share, For farther informs-
ton see. or telephone the president
M.A Kemp, secretary: J. Te. Curtis
President. Main offlce, lore No. 1,
Yor"Eaat’ sist strest, telepbone Doug:
law 6583.
Recent Arrivals at the “Y"
Ed Nogest Benton Harbor, Sitet:3
Jallan: Coleman, Sayleaville, ft Lz, E:
1, Means, New’ York City:” Richmond
Johnson, Denver,,Colo.; Wma, Lowery,
Rocktord, T.: Alion, Z. White, Cinein-
natl, Ohio; Wm, Jackson, Dallas, Tex:
Briscoo-L. Lewis, Minnedpolis, Minn;
Setrs Pichon Butea se ee
Women’s Amateur Minstrels
» WEDNESDAY, Sept. 10—8:15 p.m.
ARYAN GROTTO TEMPLE
(Ghicago Theater)
g Cor 8th and Wabash Av,
Buy a ticket and enjoy the best amma
tour show before the public: tovey.
Help Up to repeat our wonderful aue-
jcoas ofJast year when wo'rnised Sia
for Brovident, Hospital." “Gome an
fone ofan audience which for bes
brilliancy and exquisite gowning
never been equaled in any city. You'll
laugh with the funny end-men—all our
eld. favorites and’ some new ose:
{Foumt adore the pretty epeclalty elvis.
Fou'll-want to Join in'wits the chorus
singing thelr catchy mew songs:
Seats on vale at M08 South Park Av.
land at Aryan Grotto Temple on te
aay. of the minstrel, Sept 10.
_
Keep Them In School.
With. the reopening of the schools
Irueaday: test, hundreds. of” Caicage
ehlldres. and ‘thelr parents, eepeeially
of our group, faced & serious proviers,
with plenty! of work’ at hard. ‘cood
wages being patd and’ the “cconomie
pressure of high cont of rine at home
[stzonsty appenilng to the parents trace
fedimeult for thom to return -thele
boya and iris toveckool. “They iavat
fRowover.: reflect Spon the importanes
‘of the training of their children, espe-
elally for the sake of their tature, nope
piuese “and prosperity. ‘The Age Ta
ish so are ine picon therabtea
ion upon every. father and nother ef
$0, callghtening the raids of eirshite
Jaren as to fortify them against the tas
Dending dangers which they. must ‘of
Recessity thos tn thelr struegie.ts mess
tbe-requirements bf thelr dagrand geass
peters ue
Entere Postofica.
Mr. Charles Delaware, 1950 West
sa tare Dorothy Deagranetnee ek
cepted aiporiion as cen ts the Chl.
|eaEo postoffice,
ac re
4-POINTS—4
TO REMEMBER
AR’
Ist vistas Oona Ist
iicago Umbri
and “ete ree
3rd —Orchestra Hall— 37if
Ath — october 7h — Ath
Boxcs Beitig Enga. 2d. Now
5 Madam E. eee
Hair Food jg ee
|. d00: Pressing, Me i ee. MEO
caittas) Ce
store, 21th & Dear. BEAR gee
SEND STAMPS =e DA
WHERE, et x
108. of the eat Bair es
igh oeitenes, 45 Rm)
five Electric: Scalp [eae
the Hair, T emacs Bay |
c0,.
ra oe 8ty Chiceege ole
ere ee
DAY AND WIGHT
SERVICE ,
:
. JACKSON
DIRECTOR
) UNDERTAKING
T IN AMERICA w
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
somnenniinnennniniasiina aes ee
ote,
WE COVER CHICAGO LIKE THE MORNING DEW
PROBATION OFFICER
EXAMINATION CALLED
Test for Cook County Court Works Set for September—File Applications Immediately
A civil service examination for proba-tion officers and clerks of the adult proba-tion department has been called by order of Cook County. By order of Cook County, under the direction of a committee appointed by courts.
The examination for officers will be held at 9:30 a.m. and the examination for clerks at 2 p.m. on Sept 15, in the county civil service rooms, on the floor of the courthouse, in the city of Chicago.
Set Age Limit
Any person of good character of the age of 25 years or upwards is eligible for probation officers and any person of a character of the age of 18 or over is eligible for probation officers. The duties of a probation officer are: To investigate the case of any person to be placed on probation and make a written report of the name. To supervise and assist those admitted to probation and keep a correct history of each case. To attend court sessions when asked to do so and interview possible probationers and prepare necessary legal papers. To attend arrests, when necessary, of probationers violating their probation and perform such other duties as may be required by the chief or may be necessary in the proper supervision of
Clorks' Duties Given
To keep the records and statistics of all persons admitted to probation
To make out monthly, semi-yearly
and yearly reports and to do such filing
or other work as may be required by the
the minimum salary of a probation
officer is $123.76 and the maximum
$151.63 per month. The minimum sal-
tage is $138.33 and the maximum
$135 a month.
Applications . ust be filed with the
secretary. Mrs. M L. Purvin, 6512 Ken-
tencent Avenue, Chicago, no later than
Sept. 8.
Old Folks' Home
Mrs. Laura Reynolds, who had for ten years been an inmate of the Old Folks' Home, died Monday, Aug. 25. Simmons services were held at the院 on Monday, Aug. 25 at 8 p.m. after the remains were taken to Louisville, Ky., for in-mentation. Resolutions were adopted by inmates of the home. *The Ladies' Aid Club met at the Old Folks' Home Tuesday with an abundance of refreshments, with an abundance of refreshments. The inmates are very appreciate Ive of such remembrances and take pleasure in thinking the ladies for their liberalism. Woods and other members of the Prairie School were Wednesday, Aug. 27. Mrs. Roberts of St. John's Church held her regular prayer service Thursday, Aug. 28. Rev. Mitchell is improving.
Nickelson Savelye Wounded.
Charles Nickelson, age 32, 3660 Wash avenue, was cut and severely wounded at 33th and Dearborn street by John Debose. The exact cause of death could not be learned, though it could be estimated the neighborhood that the name of a woman was involved.
Bcv. Robinson and Wife in City
Rev. L. L. Robinson and wife, Memphis, Tenn., but recently of Kansas City, Mo., were in the city last week. The location of Mrs. Franklin, 308 Grand boulevard, Rv. Robinson is stationed at Gary, Ind. and seems pleased with his new field.
LOOK! its FREE
This style is only one of many that we are offering. We make this sacrifice just to prove our "Wonder-Values" genuine made-to-measure caligraphy.
Everything Free
the style best keeps and all extra for anything.
$50 to $100 a Week
in your expense and your clothes are FREE and FREE. A postal-will and you the "Big Day" samples to choose from. Everything Spencer Head Company, wholesale future Dept. 301 Chicago, Illinois
CREOLE HAIR FOR MEN
Men's hair can be straightened by simply wiping a little liquid Creoline Hair Trainer upon it. It can be washed without kinking. By mail 63c.
Address
AMERICAN BEAUTIFIER WORKS
209 W. 39TH ST., CHICAGO, ILL.
CHICAGO SAFE AND MERCHANDISE CO.
Safes, Desks, Chairs, Typewriters,
Adding Machines, Multigraphs
and Files
We supply everything in Office Equipment
73-75 West Lake 8t.
South Side Manager
PETER J. GALLAGHER
3355 Prairie Av.
Phone Douglas 768
THE WILLIAMS
PROPHETIC PICTURES
Marvels of Beauty and Revelations
Best art quickest sellers, size 18x22
commission to church clubs, ministers
and recommended Christian akents
Order now. Akents outfit $1,000 Rev
Shelley, Minn. 138. Ref. 148 Avt. St.
Paul, Minn.
WANTED
Prima donna, leading man, sluggers,
girlfriend of two, 20 beautiful
girl for Big Musical Show.
Inaugurating now, opening Sept. 15. Booked for
the theater, class theater through the
Ballroom.
FRED E. WALTERS. 165 West 131st
St., Lafayette Hall. Room No. 1.
A Dance and Concert Orchestra
Open for engagements. Arthur Robin,
Leader, 3920 Prairie Ave. Florence M.
Jackson, Manager, 3602 Indiana Av.
Jackson, 9798 and Douglas 3749.
Provident Nurse Honored
Miss Jesse Fife, Provident Hospital nurse, who is having her milk laboratory training at Northwestern University, which is run in connection with Miss Fife, is in the institution of being asked to take charge of the laboratory while the head nurse is taking her vacation. In view of the fact that there are other nurses also with Miss Fife, we feel very proud of the place our Provident Hospital nurse has won. Miss Fife is an excellent type of a young woman and has gone to the Northwestern in just the same manner she has taken at the Northwestern. Miss Hasle Towler, another Provident Hospital nurse, who is a recent graduate and state board examiner, passed is successful at a position on the staff of city nurses in Oklahoma City. Reports from that city tell us that the position is one to Miss Towler has many friends to wish her success in her new surroundings.
Y. M. C. A. NEWS
The membership campaign begins with a conference of team workers to be held at the Sand Dunes Sept. 13 and 14, in out of 2,500 members, but the indianapolis, which holds its campaign at the same time, is always our close rival, and Wabash plans to maintain her old motto, "Chicago leads others follow" in the many hundreds of men who are here to serve the service of the association a line or two is often received showing how they feel about it. These few lines from Dr. George E. Haynes, director of N.Georgia economics, are significant; "I came to the office with a great满怀 as a result of the cordial courtesy shown me on every hand by those in the office. In the dormitory and in the dining-room. It was really a delight to see you. Mrs. McAdoo, one of the most prominent women in Boston, visited the association building and was very much pleased with it. She was shown through the building by Secretary Hilli who went into full 'details' of the work.
Dr. I. Garland Penn, secretary of the Fredressman's Aid Fund, is in the city on business and is stepping at the Y. Dr. Grant and family of Rockford, Ill. I must hear you. Y. M. C. a last week. They were loud in their praise of the cafeteria service
Fired Upon While Stealing.
Joe Martin, a dandy young sport, 19
years old, residing at 3801 Cottage
Grove avenue, was sold by his friend,
Bernard Cottage, a dressman in his neck of the woods.
result of this desire he is alleged to
have broken in a window at 3856 Cottage
Grove avenue and extracted therefore
leaving in some later make. While
leaving in some later make, Joe was
called upon by Officer Irwin to
halt. Joe, not wanting to wrap up the
clothing, kept going. The officer fired
Joe is in the Bridwell hospital 1 oudor
arrest, suit is back in the window.
Major Jackson and Party Return.
Major R. R. ("Fighting Bob") Jacke-
rson, R. R. Jackson, son, Chester E.
Bolden, son, City of Atlanta,
returned to the city Sunday night from
a 4,000-mile trip through the east. The
major had a successful trip, not an
accident until he reached about thirty
City, United
Atlantic City, N. J., where he
form Rank, Knights of Pythias was in
session, he was unanimously elected
Major General of the Uniform Park
and King of the party said,
was one of the largest in the history
of the order.
Tony Langston and Al Gailen, representing the Chicago Defender, have returned from the East after a week's absence. Mr. Gailen of the Defender, turned over to the editor of the Defender a number of cutouts taken while at Atlantic City and other locations of the Vendome theater, brought in a number of subscriptions as well making host of friends for the purpose of attending the Chicago City, Philadelphia and other polls.
Provident Graduate Visit City
Miss. Cora Wilkinson, a teacher of Provident hospital and who worked for three years in Chicago doing unibaculous work and was for a year at Illinois, and for the past five years has done school work in the public schools in the city. Mo. spent several days in the city on Eddie Street. Henderson, 300 East 33d street.
Miss Graca Johnson Entertainment
Miss Grace Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Johnson, 3335 Forest avenue, entertained last Thursday in honor of the Misses Rusty Burgert, L. Nichols and Miss Powell, visitors in KY, and Miss Nurse of Louisville, Ky., and Miss Lafayette Jacksonville, were among the visitors. Dancing was the feature of the evening.
Dics of Hemorrhage.
Louis Flint, age 15, 5518 Grand boulevard, was found in a dazed condition sitting on the sidewalk in front of his apartment. He and he was removed to the President Hospital, where he died of hemorrhage or the lungs before medical aid could be applied.
St. Louis Argus Man in City
Walter Goodman of St. Louis, Mo.
composer and pressman on the St. Louis Argus, paid the Defender office a visit Tuesday. He stopped with Mrs. Wabash avenue. He says his paper requests to get a new press in the near future.
Dr. Miller Han Guest
Dr. E.I. Miller, 4415 Champlin
ount had as his guest the past
week at the Erie Railroad in
ville. Pa. who is connected with the
Erie railroad. Mr Penman says that
his Race are connected with the Erie
class positions than any other read.
8truck by an Auto
Miss Minnie Mills age in 760 South State street, was struck by an auto at 23th and State streets, owned by Mrs. Indiana avenue. Miss Mills sustained a broken arm and other serious injuries. She was removed to the Provident Hospital
P. O. Clerk Passed for Teacher
Miss Dulcinea Pierce Penny 2312
Walnut street, a clerk in the postoffice for
the public schools of Chicago, successful in
posing the examination for a teacher in
the public schools of Chicago, making a splendid average.
Minimum Salary $100 Per Month.
The minimum salary for school
teachers of the "Windy City" for this
year will be $100 per month. This is
a special local news
writer will take the examination.
Those passing can gel as $150
per month within a few years.
May Enter Real Estate Business Here
Dr. U. G. Munn, Birmingham. Also
has been in the city several days. He
promises some day that he will return
to Chicago and enter real estate business.
Patriotic League Entertained
The recreation committee of the
Girl's Patriotic League gave a brilliant
lady-fit for your holiday at the home
of Mrs. Prices at Maywood, Ill.
Umbrians & Eligera present you the
10 cents tax if you buy
your Orchestra hall tickets for October
7 before September 21.
Holds Twelfth Annual Meet
The twelfth annual convention of the Christian Endeavor League was held on Sunday, March 12, Church Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Aug. 26, 27 and 28, with Bishop L. J. Chopin presiding and the following other officers in charge of the department: H. Carey, D. Carey, elder Rev. H. Stewart, D. D., conference superintendent; Frank C. Lowry, district president, Mrs. W. H. Thomasson, district treasurer, Miss Viola E. Hill treasurer, Address Miss S. D. Nonz, S. Z. C. Westfield, P. J. Faulkner, Robert McCouner, Rev. E. A. W. Johnson, Mrs Oliva Ward treasurer, B. W. Walker, Mina Mishna Gles, C. W. Walker, Rev. G. N. Goddard, Charles Pierce, Rev. G. W. Baber and J. C. Caldwell. Addresses on foreign missions were delivered by representatives from the Army, Syria and Africa, Dr. A. J. Carey installed the newly elected officers.
Mrs. Miller Robbed.
Mrs. Betty Miller, $3740 Rhodes avenue, relative of Col. James A. Miller, of federal street, whose home was robbed last year, lost jewelry and valuable wearing apparel. S singularly about the same time Mrs. Miller's home was robbed thieves entered the home of Col. James Miller. He was robbed him of several suits of clothes, a watch worth $75 and several hats. The colonel offers a reward of $25 for the return of his goods and for the return of Mrs. Miller's goods and for the questions that he will ask no questions.
Keep Them In School
Keep your children in schools regardless of the cost; keep them at home at night after school unless you know that they are surrounded by children now are being permitted to raise themselves. Are you aware of the fact that the conduct of your child in public places reflects his home training? Teach them courtey and respect, since they are breeding human parasites in the gullows. Think of these things now and correct them or else you will soon find the responsibility of their conduct waiting you on your doorstep.
Young Foster Joins Navy
Mrs. William Morris of Columbia, Mo. is in the city visiting her daughter, Mrs. Gale Foster-Withers of 265 East Third-fifth street, and is making a visit to the naval aviation stationed at Hampton Roads, Va. Young Foster recently successfully passed the physical and mental tests, one of the 18 gift of 103 aspirants. The force of the navy is one of the dangerous branches of the service in peace or war.
Dr. Floyd Willis Returns
Dr. Floyd Willis, 3100 South State Street, Boston, turned from the east after a visit of several weeks. After lingering at New York City, Washington, Philadelphia and Boston he went to Atlantic City, where the Elks were in session. Then the doctor took a prominent part in the deportation returns with the news that Dr. Willis led a section in the parade.
Party Vitala Wisconsin
Among those who visited Milwaukee on the walker at Christopher Columbus College, Ms. Willis Mae Wright, teacher of Shorter college, and Mrs. Katherine Brown, teacher of Nashville, Tenn. Mrs. Scott of Omnaha, Neb. Mrs. Ritt and Mrs. Galen of Chicago. The party has been an ideal one.
Young Musicing to Leave
Miss Edna D. Winters, one of Chicago's young musical artists and a student of Lane college, Jacksonville, womens' high school her school. There it was. We had a chat that this young musician gave a recital in the early part of the season that caused some of the best musicians in Chicago to predict a great future for the duo of Rev. and Mrs. Joseph A. Winters, 4744 Wabash avenue
Progressive Choral Society Big Sen- tation
The Progressive Choral Society of Chicago of which Prof. J. Wesley Jones is conductor, made a big hit in Evans at their concert. Arrangements are being made to have them appear again on the stage on Saturday, day evening, Sept. 9, at 3 o'clock at original Providence Baptist church corner Walnut and Leavitt streets.
Shot by Husband
Mrs. Addie McChee, age 33, 3255 Forrest avenue, bushmeet, was shot and dangerously wounded four inches above her left knee by Clarence McGee, said to be her husband. Pritzman 3256 Forrest avenue, Edmond, WI, 2317 Street street, and Mr. James 3255 Forest avenue
Bill McDonald In City
Hon William M. McDonald of Fort Worth, Texas, spent a few days in the Bronx to visit the Blitjt, 3162 Lake Park avenue. McDonald is cashier of the External Bank & Trust Co.; also grand secretary of the Bank. A. M. He left for his home Friday.
Back from Virginia
Mrs. John C. Davis, 1940 Walnut street, has returned from Virginia where she spent several days with relatives and friends at Blackstone park and at Blackstone Park. Mrs. Dark had to hurry back on account of the illness of her husband.
Dean Pottus in City
J. Wilson of Langston, Okla., dean of the C. A. and N. U., passed through the city from Detroit, Mich., en route home last week
Ladies' Ready
E. V.
MILLINERY NECKWEAR, WAIT
HOSIERY LATI
MILLINERY NECKWEAR, WAISTS, LINGERIE, GLOVES AND HOSIERY LATEST NOVELTIES
220 EAST FORTY-THIRD STREET, CHICAGO
We are now located in our New Store where we are showing a large assortment of the season's most beautiful
GLOUSES IN GEORGETTE CREPE, CREPE DE CHINE AND VOILLE
in the very latest styles and colors
LADIES' READY TO WEAR SHOP
OPPOSITE INDIANA THEATER
Open Evenings Until 9 O'Clock
We are now located in our New Store where we are showing a large assortment of the season's most beautiful SLOUSES IN GEORGETTE CREPE, CREPE DE CHINE AND VOILLE in the very latest styles and colors
W
J. D. BELL & CO., R. 407,
J. D. BELL & CO., R. 407, 145 N. CLARK ST., CHICAGO
COMMUNITY CLUB OPENS
The Entire Neighborhood Moved by the Wonderful Success of the Meeting; President Praised
Tuesday evening, Sept. 2, was the date of one of the finest community club meetings ever held in the city by our group, Grant Memorial church, Porty-sixth street and Evans avenue, opened its doors for the club, and the people took advantage of the opportunity, for there were over 150 families represented. Mrs. E. Stoddard, president, in a torse introductory speech, explained how it is necessary that in every section of the city the Race should hold these meetings to help the newcomers to get the habit of their now mode of dress. Mrs. C. A. Taylor spoke at length on the relation of teacher and parent, which was received with hearty aplause. Mrs. A. H. Ritchie, trained nurse, was introduced to children which also brought loud praise. Rev. Scott, Mr. Pierce and Editor S. Abbott gave timely talks to the mothers of the school children, urging them to see that they attend school as a other children in the neighborhood.
The keynote of the evening was the behavior of children on the streets to Sixth ward was asked to speak to them when they were seen in a belatedous mood. Mrs. Reeves, Miss Marion Harrington, Hamilton's musical and vocal teacher, met the meeting beautiful color. After the program Mrs. H. B. French, secretary, made notices of the doings of the next day. The children, their benefit of having been present
WEST SIDE NEWS
By J. Wesley Jones
BY TO Wear Shop
M. V. EGAN
WAISTS, LINGERIE, GLOVES AND
LATEST NOVELTIES
THIRD STREET, CHICAGO
New Store where we are showing a large
the season's most beautiful
HEPE, CREPE DE CHINE AND VOILLE
latest styles and colors
BY TO WEAR SHOP
INDIANA THEATER
ings Until 9 O'Clock
ANTED
AMBITIOUS MEN
To Open a Cleaning, Dyeing and Pressing Shop in Every Neighborhood. We Teach You How. No Capital or Experience Necessary.
All-American Exposition
At the Coliseum Sept. 8
The All-American Exposition, comprising 10 different race groups of Chicago citizens, is now in session at the Coliseum, 19th and Wabash avenue. The exhibit aims to make a better understanding and a closer relationship between all elements of American citizenship. The successful termination of which will large measure the education of class and promote identity and race riots. The present All-American Exposition is under the guidance and direction of Max Loeb, Illinois state chairman Americanization, Department of Education, assisted by a number of courageous patriotic citizens whose motto is "a greater cohesion" between foreign born and native born Americans.
Monday evening, Sept. 8, the entire program of the All-American Expedition will be handled by our group, A. A. McDaniel, A. A. McDaniel, voices will render music. The principal address will be delivered by Rev. G. A. McDaniel. Pageant royale will be presented in honor of our honor, depicting every phase of our life in America, showing our contribution to the civilization and culture of this country, and numbers 103 and Mamdam Aulta Patti Brown.
In the selection of the 25 committees who have to do with the making of the exposition a success, our group has been working every committee. Mrs. Irene M. Gaines, a very capable young woman, is a member of the program committee; T. Arnold Hill, speakers; James A. M. Humphrey, publicity; T. Arnold Hill, Bank, handkerchief; Binga Dismond, sports; Mrs. A. M. Smith, children; Linton, publicity; Milo Lawl, tickets; Other committees, beauties; A. Patton, art craft; Helen Sayre, business; George Porter, banking; Jesse Binga; chery, Rev. Gloster Bryant; commerce, Clarence Mines education; P. Richard T. Greener; engineering, Charles S. Duko; fine arts, Charles Dawson; sitting, Mr. Scott; sculpture, Mr. Hollins; music, Mr. Clair; labor, Wm. Evans;江江, Walter M. Farmer; literature, Mrs. Adah M. Waters; medicine, Dr. Roscoe Giles; musia, Mrs. Geo Holt; press, A. M. Humphrey; art, Wm. Evans; dior, wolfere worker, Mrs. Elizabeth L. Davis; speakers, T. Arnold Hill.
NORTH SIDE NEWS
Mrs. L. H. Pope of Watson, Walton place gave a birthday party in honor of Miss Eva Mitchell. She also has with her a visitor in the person of Mrs. A. Schacken of Louisville, Ky. She is visiting Mrs. Lillian Curthaway of 260 North Campbell avenue. *Miss Eugene Brown of 4636 Winthrop is lil. *Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Miller of 5030 Wilson avenue report that they have been spending their vacation at Richard Earl Curry, who has been spending his vacation in Atlantic City, has returned to take his place as drummer in Prof. Elger's band. *Miss Louis Saturday. The congregation given by the Robinson Club last Thursday at Herron Baptist Church was a grand success. *Mrs. Davis of Alabama is visiting her nephew Robert Kelly of 1120 Cambridge avenue presented his wife with a beautiful grand piano on her birthday last Friday. *Miss Mabel Carter of 2581 Lincoln friends at dinner last Sunday. *Remo Cannon, who has been lil. is able to be out again. *Master Warren Bruce of 4725 Langley avenue, entertained twenty-Sove little ones on his birthday very good time. *Mr. and Mrs. Chandler, Mrs. Bruce and Miss Grace Cunningham spent the week-end in Milwaukee. *Percy Dance was in the city last Tuesday visiting friends. *Mrs. Moe Miller at dinner given by Mrs. Henry Love of 2633 Pine Grove avenue. *Mrs. Henry Love of 3633 Pine Grove avenue is leaving for Munchel, Ind., to join her at dinner given by Mrs. Henry Love of 2633 Pine Grove avenue. *Mrs. Henry Love of 3633 Pine Grove avenue is expected home the first of next week.
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mail orders used on
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JIM EUROPE'S JAZZ
WILL LIVE FOREVER
DOUBLE DISC RECORDS
500,000 SOLD
To play these records on Victor or Columbia machines, it requires special attachment—combined $1.
Q. R. S. WORD ROLLS
No. Price Postpaid
854—Alexander's Band In Back in Dixieland. Fox Trot 1.10
879—American Crusaders. March Fox Trot 1.00
893—At the High Brown Baby's Ballad 1.05
880—Daddy Long Locs. Waltz 1.05
883—Dreamy Alabama. Waltz 1.30
891—Glitter the Countdown. Glimnic That From 0 What a Girl! 1.05
799—Lamassia Lollipop. Waltz 1.05
888—Mandy From Follies of 1919. Fox Trot 1.30
879—My Royals' Arms. From The Follies of 1919. One-step 1.00
856—Oh, What a Pal Was Mary. Ballad 1.05
858—Barnes in Traight. Waltz 1.05
894—Some Beautiful Girl! (Will Find you in My Arms). Ballad 1.05
892—Sometimes From Someplace. Ballad 1.05
851—What the Preacher Makes You. Ballad 1.05
894—The Lanterns Glow. One-step 1.05
855—Write That Still Make Those Beautiful Girls. One-step 1.05
882—Woman Then Gave Me Th. Ballad 1.05
Standard Rolls
Price Postpaid
82352—Earl Feller's Collection of Jazz Glossion. Roll 2.1.00
82343—Earl Feller's Collection of Jack Glossion. Roll 2.1.00
82355—Earl Feller's Collection of Jazz Glossion. Roll 3.1.00
BIG SELLERS OF TODAY
Price Postpaid
Manage of Mine. Glossion 1.1.00
It's Never Too Late to Be Sorry. Alcohol Blues 1.1.00
I Am Going to Give None of My Jelly Roll 1.1.00
WM. FOSTLR, Record and Roll Supply, 3345 Indiana Ave., Chicago, Illinois
MAIL ORDERS ONLY
Eighth Regiment Sparks
The S. B. G. Convene
The Second Supreme Quadrennial Session of the Supreme Royal Circle of Olivet Baptist church, 51st street and Park avenue, Tuesday morning, September 2. The organization was represented by nearly a thousand delegates from the Union. The convention will be in session during the entire week, closing Friday evening with an address by John Walter M. Ehl, Hot Springs. A meeting of the supreme president and W. T. Daniels is the supreme secretary.
Q. R. S. WO
No. Price Postpaid
854—Alexander's Band Is Back in Dandale. Fox Trot. 11.95
879—American Crusader. March One-stop. 9.90
893—All My High Brown Baby's Ball. Fox Trot ... 1.05
880—Daddy Lonnie Legs. Walk. 1.05
883—Dreamy Alabama Roll Walk. 1.30
891—Gimme This—Gimme That—From O What's It? ... 1.30
793—Hawaiian Lalibaby. Walk. 1.05
798—Handy From Follies of 1919. Fox Trot ... 1.30
877—My Baby's Arms. From The Follier of 1919. One-stop. 1.80
Standard Rolls
Price Postpaid
32452—Earl Fuller's Collection of Jazz Classics Roll 1 ... 1.20
32453—Earl Fuller's Collection of Jazz Classics Roll 2 ... 1.20
32554—Earl Fuller's Collection of Jazz Classics Roll 3 ... 1.20
WM. FOST.R, Record and Roll Supplies MAIL ORD
AGENTS WANTED!
"History of the American Negro in the Great World War"
By Hon. W. Allison Sweenay
Large Book, 100 Illustrations, 8
Beautiful 3-Color Pictures
Cloth binding.....$2.75
Koratol leather binding.....3.75
Best terms and commissions
given. Send 24c for agent's outfit
and instructions. Complete
book sent postpaid on receipt of
retail price.
HOWARD CHANDLER & CO.,
6629 Eberhart Ave., Chicago
We are the largest Negro publishing company selling through agents
Save Money by Having Koyu Prev
tions Filled at the
Odd Fellows
Pharmacy
We absolutely
guarantee every
prescription to be
as ordered. Out
of town orders
promptly filled.
ODD FELLOWS PHARMACY
8337 80. STATE ST.
PHONES DOUG. 140. 7642
TRY MME. CARTER'S
WONDERFUL HAIR
GROWER NEXT TIME
Price, 50c
Stops Falling Hair
and Promotes Rapid
Growth.
Write
MME. EZELLA MATHIS CARTER
3600 Wabash Av. Suite 6,
Chicago, ill.
AGENTS WANTED
VICTORY PAGEANT
AT AUDITORIUM
Fleurance Cole Talbert Sings to Vast Audience
The Victory pageant at the Auditorium last Friday night was rendered supreme. The curtain rose to the strains of "Over There," played by Smith's augmented orchestra, which gave a splendid foundation to the affair. The first picture presented one grand array of all nations with the central figure. Each nation was represented majestically by its gorgeously robed queen, who marched to her throne to the strains of her appropriate national anthem.
Children were no small part of the pageant, those representing countries, together with Joan of Arc, Mme Gertrude Vertreux, made a decided hit. Much skill was displayed by the nymphs under Annette Turner and the children. The hits of the evening (children's performances) Charol Chilton, Baby Clark, 5 years old, Cletus Pettiford, child director, and Master Albert McGruder.
Great credit for the artistic success of the event is due to Miss Pauline James Lee, who assembled this great array of it.
The artistic diversion was the singing of Madam Florence Cole Talbart, whose wonderful soprano voice was the most captivating. The vast audience showed its appreciation of her art by spontaneous applause, insisting on two encores.
The Race can well be be proud of such a production as it has in Madam Talbart, and as judges for the awarding of prizes, it follows: 'First, diamond ring, Lillie Mac Hubbard; second, wrist watch, Queen of Africa, Mrs. Della Hunter; third, gold, was won by the country of China; fourth and last, little Freddie Brown as leader.
Mrs. Canada. Returns.
Mrs. L. W. Canada, 602 East 41st
Village, to bring back the remains of how
deceased husband, U. G. Canada, to
carry the body of Oakwood, has returned to the city.
CUTS CLOTHING PRICES
Chicago, Sept. 5.—The Bell Tailors, Adams at Green St., Chicago, Ill., said to be the largest tailoring concern in America, announces a big reduction in men's tailoring. Their most popular piece is the coolest at $20.00, a very attractive pattern, which is generally sold at $20.00 to $22.00. Even larger savings are offered on their higher priced numbers. Their largest catalogue, No. 219, containing large cloth fabrics of beautiful fabrics, will be sent free upon request to any reader of the Defender.
EUROPE'S JAZZ
WILL LIVE FOREVER
DUBLE DISC RECORDS
500,000 SOLD
To play these records on Victor or
tambia machines, it requires special
achment—combined $1.
ORD ROLLS
856—Oh, What a Pal Was Mary,
Ballad
858—Bosse at Twilight Waltz
854—Some Beautiful Morning (I'll
fling you in My Cheese)
Fox Trot
852—Bosse From Somewhere's
Ballad
851—When the Praacher Makes
We Miss You First
852—Where the Laotna Glow,
One-step
855—With Beautiful Make Those
Beautiful Girl Make Those
852—Woman Thou Gaveat Me, Thu.
Ballad
BIG SELLERS OF
TODAY
Price,
Portrait,
Manage of Mine
$1.00
It Never Thou Late to Be Sorry
$1.00
Alcohol Blues
$1.00
I Ain't Going to Give None of My
Jelly Boll
$1.00
9, 3345 Indiana Ave., Chicago, Illinois
ERS ONLY
HAYES Good
Dental
Work
Lasts years and years I insure
all work in writing,
Gold Inlay Fillings, $1 Up
Crown and Bridgework,
$3 to $5
SET OF TEETH, $3 UP
Written Positive Guarantee
Cost Estimate Free and no
olligation
DR. WOOLLENS
who succeeded Dental Player
18 years ago
Labella Building
21 E. VAN BUREN ST.
Between State and Webash
Open evenings till 8: Sunday 9 to 1 P.M.
JOIN THE
SUPREME
Royal Circle
of Friends
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A Modern and Progressive Secret Order with Insurance Benefits operating in all the States 1 District of Columbia. Full Compliance with the insurance laws of Illinois, Death Ponants from $100 to $1,000. Sick and Accident Benefits from $2.00 to $7.00 per week Old age and permanent Disability Benefits Amounts more than $100,000. Joining Benefits $30.00 Deputies, Organizers and Agents wanted Illinois Headquarters, 478 East Thirty-first Street, Chicago, Illinois. DR. R. A. WILLIAMS, Supreme President.
Gold Crowns $2.00 to $5.00 No better made Fillings 25c to 75c Cut this ad out as it will not appear regularly.
NATIONAL BOOK OF MECHANICAL DENTISTRY
506 South Wabash Avenue
PAGE EIGHTEEN
NORTHERN RACE MEN MAKE FALSE REPORTS ON SOUTH'S PROBLEM
The office of the Defender has been besieged by members of the Race for the past week or ten days, and hundreds of letters, telegrams and telephone calls have come in regarding the "interviews" published in several Southern papers (white), purporting to come from all of our people who were aerially sent to the short time ago. These men, both of whom are so light compelled that they can easily "pass," were given information and a small sum of money by a certain Southern association which is operating a propaganda with the object of enputing people who are not. No more of cotton blossom and lychee-billies.
Rosy Reports
The twain above mentioned represents a type that the loyal friends of the author were familiar with, a certain town they were wined and dined by an escort of "leading white men" from the city, a fine touring car, and shown the homestead of the few people who have been able
"Gets-It" Peels Your Corns Right Off
Two Drops Will Do It Without Fuss or Trouble. Never Fails
There's only one way to get rid of a corn, and that is to peel it off as you would a banana skin. There is only one corn remover in all the world that does it that way, and that is "Gets-it."
There's No Corn "Get-it" Will Not Get!
It is because of this fact that "Get-it" is today the biggest seller among corn removers on this planet. It means the corn is soft, very soft, very soft corns, young corns, corn between the toes and calluses, it means a quick, certain finish, "Get-it" is applied in 2 or 3 seconds. All corn is used 2 or 3 drops. As easy to do than corn, it is also the forever with tape, plasters, bandages, knives, corn-diggers, scissors, files and blood-bringing razors. Ease your cornpains, be corn-free at last. Corn is not sure, guaranteed money-back, cornerless, costs but a trifle at any dry store. M'd by E Lawrence & Co., Chicago, Ill.
YOUR Free Suit
Take this fine Made-to-
Measure suit and pay us one cent for it.
We can make it for you.
classy, abstinently free, so you will
be able to buy advertisement for us
you can easily make them
$35 to $50. EXTRA
and Seeded that be the best-dressed man in your town. It is so
easy to get to and to
overlook. Don't delay a minute.
Deepen a line thread on your name
as a postal card and we will send
a wonderful handwritten style book, containing dozens of sam-
plies. Write Now. Everything sent Free
THE PROGRESS TAILORING GO.
Dept. 375
CHICAGO
VALENTINE
Tailoring, Designing, Day and Evening Classes. Thousands of our graduates haw, women fame, fortune and indifference. We have people trust, honor and respect you, you need only say, "I am a graduate of Valentine's "Dressing College" Cal or write us your performance. Let us tell you what we can do for you.
SARA PATEK, Principal
6205 S. HALSTED ST.
2407 W. MADISON ST.
1850 N. WELLS ST.
CHICAGO, IL.
MADE WITH YOU HICE YOU SEND IN MORE
Greatest Pants Value over offered
Agents Wanted
Samplos FREE
Just send your name and address for $50 Fred Ackey's Small Fabric Store.
Larga Outfit of beautiful fabrics also makes us measure from $15 up. Delivery charges paid. Write to: Producer & Consumers Alliance Dept. 124 Wheeler Tailors, Chicago
BLUE'S
CORN
REMEDY
DUST
BURN
from corn. Price
25c per bottle.
Guaranteed to
cure.
Releives CATARRH of
the
BLADDER
and all
Discharges in
24 HOURS
Both expire before the
maximum
Because of
counterfeits.
Bold by all Graphics.
SANTAL CAPSULES
MIDY
DROPSY
TREATED One Week FREE
Short breathing relieved in a few hours—sweating, water and nitric acid required in a few
regulates liter, kidneys and heart. Write for
DROPSY
TREATED One Week FREE
MIDY CO. BOSTON, MA.
Churches, Schools, Clubs and Lodges ARE MEREBY OFFERED A Wonderful and Timely Money-Making Opportunity "A Patriotic Pageant"
TENS OF THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS HAVE BEEN MADE THROUGH MME. HACKLEY'S UNPARALLELED SYSTEM
Do Your Home Organizations Need Money? Then Send for this Book. Would You Create a Historical Event? Then Send for this Book. The Most Remarkable Offer We Have Ever Made.
BOOK, COMPLETE, MAILED ANYWHERE FOR $3.00
(Price 10 cents per book)
TONY LANGSTON, 3129 State Street, Chicago, ill.
to modernize their home surroundings. They were led to believe by their guides that these were the rule instead of the exception, and that the living conditions were so splendid that it was hard to believe that they had ever left at all. But they failed to point out the fact that 99 per cent of our people live in huts and shacks that must be considered poor shelter for a good dog, and where sanitary conditions for that dog must be that the health officers themselves fear to make their official visits.
Jim Crowed
While this team of hybrids were riding easily upon the plush covered seats of the Pullman and enjoying the commute the all-touring car, their brothers and sisters were using the "Jim Crow" cars on the railroads and the "niggy" end of the street cars in the towns where hundreds of them pay taxes. Just a few weeks ago, the number of the Race had been lynched for speaking abruptly to a white man on the telephone. This occurred in a town where there are a dozen "leading white men" living in open adultery and respectable females, respectable females has a hard row to hoe on account of the sensuous advances of the white liberties. And still this pair of dastardly scoundrels in an effort to mislead our people believing that conditions in the South are different today than they were in the dark past. They will discover, however, that their efforts are in vain. But the most ignorant that a section of the country in which they burn our people at the stake and debauch our women is better for them than the North, where every advantage of added civilization is within easy reach.
Charleston, S. C. Sept. 5—Charlie G Leggitt, 11-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. H. Leggitt, 231 coming street, was fatally injured when an autumnal blaze blew the driver of the auto continued on his journey after the accident, leaving the boy in the middle of the street with a broken leg. The boy was rushed to the hospital by persons who witnessed the accident, but died on the operating table. Over fifteen auto drivers are under arrest pending investigation by the police.
HEADACHE Caused by Acid-Stomach
You, indeed, more often than you think, experience acid-stomach. Digestion, heartburn, food-repelling, bloat and gas, if not checked, will eventually cause severe, blinding, splitting headaches are, therefore, of frequent occurrence as a result.
45
$2 PANTS
Made to Order
Send
No Cash
2 YEARS
GARAGE MATERIALS
NO EXTRA
CHEAPS
Just to provide low prices—worth $2.50
and is tailored to measure pants, for dress
wear or宽松背包.浇铸
wear or宽松背包.浇铸
All extra free, pick the style to卑你
pants and pocket bags. Large and stock sizes,
not one and only.
WE PAY POSTAGE — AND-
EXPRESS
Just to provide low prices—worth $2.50
and is tailored to measure pants, for dress
wear or宽松背包.浇铸
wear or宽松背包.浇铸
EARN $35 PER WEEK
Just to provide low prices—worth $2.50
and is tailored to measure pants, for dress
wear or宽松背包.浇铸
wear or宽松背包.浇铸
We pay you $10 for quation cloth sample.
We pay you $10 for quation cloth sample.
Outfit shows you how to earn big GASH Profits,
write for it now. Send no cash.
WASHINGTON TALKINCO Co. Dpt. 998, CHICAGO
BISHOP'S 3-IN-1
---
Promotes the growth,
caroten diseases of the
hair, and prevents hair
hair from falling. Price
in the box, by mail
with a THREE-IN-ONE method
of growing hair at a
reasonable price. LIVE
agents wanted.
THE J. H. BISHOP HAIR GROWING
COMPANY,
1895 Roscoe Park, Baltimore, MD
1425 Pennsylvania Avenue, Baltimore, Md.
Churches, S
Wonderful and T
"A Patr
A LIMITED
Race Oppressing Organization Uses Misleading Title in Hyde Park District
In the Defender, issue of Aug. 30,
there appeared a letter头衔 "Segregate the Race," in which a protest was made against the operations of an orphanage in Park. The following letters will clear up a mistaken idea that is carried by many. Read:
"Chicago, Sept. 1,
'To Editor of Defender—Dear Sir:
In the Defender of Aug. 30 is a letter from X. C. V., a reader, giving state information on a charge against the 'Hyde Park Protective Association.' I am sure that you did not intentionally publish what is unjust and untrue to friends of the Colored community in order to佑 Prof. Stewart that explains something of the misrepresentation.
Mr. Farwell, the secretary of the Hyde Park Protective Association, was a friend of the Race, and as you note the list of officers you find the name of Judge Robert McMurry, the Colored member of the Race, I am sure you will rect the misstatement. Very truly yours,
DUNCAN C. MILNER."
"Dear Prof. Stewart: The Hyde Park Protective Association was organized on the 27th of July, 1850. Our work will see by the by-laws, is as follows: "The object of this association shall be to maintain the laws and ordinances of Hyde Park intoxicating liquor within certain portions of the territory of the city of Chilcotin, and to enclose thelage of Hyde Park, known as the prohibition districts, and to uphold the local option ordinances now in force. Park outside the prohibition districts."
RTHUR BURRAGE FARWELL,
"Secretary."
PENNSYLVANIA
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Lawrence Hughes and Harry Webber. Ms Anderson hold the purchasable responsibility for the branch of the N. A. A. C. P. work on board Saturday through a committee selected from its board of directors as protester against the dangerous increase of mob violence to force an investigation through federal legislation by appealing to congressional representatives. And she instituted the attack on Mr. Shinada and Mary A. C. P. at Austin, Texas. The local committee was composed of C. W. Anderson, chairman; F. B. Brewington, senior member; J. W. Kirpka, treasurer, W. Allen, R. B. Hamilton, J. W. Kirpka, Jr. and Rev. P. F. King.
new at of Maiden here Fere other a surprise Defence See Ee. 1006 M
title
t
Boww
Dr. Bing
Bing Mrs. H is visit Kirkpa
Segre
org. 39,
MASSACHUSETTS
TEXAS
Luffin, Tex., Sept. 5—Protz J. E. Robinson, state deputy of the American, visited Lufkun camp No. 71 on Aug. 5. He spent only a few hours in the neighborhood and took real logs into the camp. *See S. W. Booker for the Chicago Defender. The Epworth league of C. M. E. church meets every Sunday evening at 4:30 P.M. Patten, president; Miss Adea Marka, pastor; Miss Adea pastor, pastor. *There was quite an assembly at the home of Father S. Long last Sunday. All kinds of home productions was enjoyed by all. *Rev. R. W. Died at konard. He and S. W. Booker, B. S. Patten, J. Patten and others left Wednesday morning to attend the funeral.
Brenham, Tex., Sept. 5—Rev. T. V. Moore, pastor of St. John's A. M. E. church, has just returned from an extended visit to Huntsville, Ala.; Birmingham, Ala.; Chattanooga, Tenn.; Indianapolis, Ind.; other cities, visiting relatives and friends and business interests. He is
now at home. * Mr. Harve Chisom of Marencil, Ariz. has been visiting here for the past week, the guest of Mrs. Mary House. She left to visit the points in Texas. While she she surpasses her husband by sending the Defender to his address for one year. * See B. J. Moor and got the Defender, 1006 Main.
KENTUCKY
Fallon, Ky. Sept. 5. - Mrs. Eliza Simpson and daughter, Clilda May, of Champaign, IL, are in the city visiting relatives. *Mrs. Zula West of Union City, Tenn., spent a few days in the city, and Mrs. Pauline Harris and daughter left Thursday for Chicago, where they will spend a few days with her children. Misses Ruth and Sellon Harris. *Lucus Mott arrived from France, to the delight of his parents, last week. He is now growing. *Benry Smith has been ill for a few days. *Mrs. Gustava Glenn and Miss Ela Covitt of Chicago are
Hobbs & Grubb
SPECIALS
HOUSES FOR SALE
2968 Prairie ave., 10 rooms; oak
floors; beautiful condition; occupied
by owner. Price $5,000.00;
$500.00 cash. Possession at once.
3249 Calumet ave., 10 rooms;
oak floors; A1 repair. Price
$3,500.00; $500.00 cash. Immediate
possession.
Dr. R. A. Williams
REAL ESTATE
Insurance and Loans
Only first class property handled.
Houses and apartments on Grass
boulevard and other prominent
streets for rent and for sale. Easy
terms. Small cash payment.
PHONE DOUGLAS 5237
478 E. THIRTY-FIRST ST.,
CHICAGO, ILL.
G. L. LASHLEY
Real Estate-Insurance-Loans Snappy bargains in houses and flat buildings in select neighborhoods. Prices can't be beaten.
3115 PRAIRIE AVE, CHICAGO, ILL.
DOUG. 4101
Grand Blvd., Near 39th Street
Three-apartment, 8-9-0 rooms. abo-
nish modern throughout; price
$13,600; price $2,000 cash, bal. $55
per month.
FAULKNER & COOK
3605 SO. STATE
IAN PRODUCTS COMPANY
ACTURERS
HAIAN HAI
RIGHTENER
R MEN
IMPORTERS
Hawaiian hair
Grower and Beauti-
tifier for Women
Must be used with Hawaiian Hair
Straightener. Produces a soft, vel-
tile hair. Price 50c; postage 50c.
Dark skin many shades lighter.
Hawaiian Beauty Face Powder. This
powder is originally prepared and
used by the Oriental Beauty Specialist.
Nothing else is in Just try one
application after using Hawaiian Cream and note the ambient effect.
Price 50c.
AGENTS WANTED
3147 CALUMET AVE., CHICAGO, IL
Phone Douglas 5294
"SUCH BEAUTIFUL HAIR"
NO. MORE KINKS
She told me that she
larly. You know it has
too much of the flawless
brittle and breaklike
"HARADE" removes
lives litching scalp and
tex. She spends 250 to
and we will mail box
We want several live
writings.
UNITED LABORATORY
220 Gould Building.
Use Harade
MADAM COTTON'S WONDER
GROWS HAIR ON
The inventor of this Hair Grower, who
and containing everything necessary to G
Tetter, prevent the Hair from falling out
all times; this Hair Grower will not make
and duster; it makes the hair look
but you may press it if you desire. I gue
Hair on an average of one inch a month.
Price by mail.
1 box, 50c. Pressing Oil, 500c.
Send to office at
Agents wanted—Finances 50 stamp for re-
express money order
E. J. COTTO
She told me that she applied "HARADE" regularly. You know it has made her hair soft, wavy and beautiful it lasts brittle and breaklike it used to be. "HARADE" removes dandruff, relieves itching scalp and cures tattoo. Send 250 to stamp or coin, and we will mail box prepaid.
We want several live-wire agents, write.
UNITED LABORATORIES CO.
220 Gould Building, Atlanta, Ga.
TRADE for the hairs sake
COTTON'S WONDERFUL HAIR GROWER
GROWS HAIR ON TEMPLES
This Hair Grower, which is made of sixteen ingredients, necessary to GROW Hair, prevent Dandruff and the Hair from falling out, and keeps it looking very nice at Hair Grower will not make the Hair sticky, but keeps it soft. Hair Grower will not make the Hair sticky, but keeps it soft. If you desire, I guarantee this Hair Grower to GROW average of one inch on month, also to darken gray Hair.
Price by mail, prepaid:
500 Preasing Oil, 500; Shampoo Parts, 500
Send four extra boxes to E. J. COTTON & CO.
Enclose so stamp for reply to letters. Send postoffice or express money order payable to
E. J. COTTON & CO.
The inventor of this Hair Grower, which is made of sixteen ingredients and containing everything necessary to GROW Hair, prevent Dandruff and contain everything out, and keep looking very nice at all times; this Hair Grower will not hurt you, and Hair attachs well and fittie; it makes the Hair awfully nice and straight without pressing, but you may press it if you desire. I guarantee this Hair Grower to GROW Hair on an average of one inch a month, also to darken gray Hair.
9 W. Calif. Ave., Crown Barber Shop
in the city visiting Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Covitt. * Mr. and Mrs. Nichols of
Carbondale, Ill. were guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Will Hopkins Sunday.
AWARDED $15,000 DAMAGES
Toledo, Ohio, Sept. 5.-Mrs. Grace Scott and daughter of this city were recently awarded $15,000 damages for the death of their husband and father, Oscar Scott, in a minton plant in Philadelphia, Pa. Mr. Scott was the son of Charles and Minnie Scott, formerly of Lima, Ohio, but now of Toledo.
FOR SALE
RHODES AVE.
NEAR 65TH ST.
2-flat frame; stove heat, gas,
hardwood floors, 5-6 rooms, all
light; lot 50x125; fruit trees
and shrubbery. This is a bargain.
8 flats, 8 rooms each; electric lights, hardwood floors, steam heat; each room off hall. Small cash payment. Easy terms.
JESSE BINGA, REAL ESTATE
3633 STATE STREET. BOULEVARD
Real Estate
PRAIRIE AVE. nr. 45th. beautiful 8 flat st. private halls the bath room, hardwood electric light. Will rent $1,920. Terms WABASH AVE & 42D. a dandy 2 flat brick
NGA, REAL ESTATE AND BANKING
STEET. BOULEVARD 1555 (Note the Change)
E Estate Bargains
45th, beautiful 8 flat stone front, 7 rooms each,
the bath room, hardwood throughout, steam heat,
Will rent $1,920. Terma Price.....$10,000.00
42D, a dandy 2 flat brick, 7-8 rooms hardwood
ma. Price.....6,500.00
& 46TH ST., cop 6 flat, 4-6 rooms, steam
Price.....12,000.00
OTTAGE GROVE AVE., 9 room brick house
JESSE BINGA, REAL ESTATE AND BANKING
3633 STATE STREET. BOULEVARD 1555 (Note the Change)
Real Estate Bargains
SPECIAL BARGAIN
Two-story frame on stone foundation, 5 and 5 rooms, newly painted; 4-room cottage in rear. Rent $420. Price $2,600; $300 cash, balance $35 monthly, including interest.
REAL ESTATE IS GOING UP. RENTS TO BE INCREASED. BE WISE
3623 INDIANA AV., 10 rma, furnace heat; terms..... $4,000.00
3670 WABASH AV., 10-rm brick residence; steam heat; rental
$55.00 per mo. Only $500 cash. Price..... $4,000.00
3664 WABASH AV., 3-store brick residence and barn.
R. W. Hunter & Co., Real Estate Dealers
Be wise and buy your home now. We have for sale six, three and two flat modern buildings. Cash payment—$300.00 to $1,000 down Rest in monthly payments. Don't buy before consulting us. We sell to clients in all parts of the United States. Write or see W. H. GANS, 3003 SOUTH STATE ST. TELEPHONE CALLUMET 9094
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SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1919
A
IMPORTERS
Hawaiian Jain
Grower and Bea-
tifier for Women
Positively grows hair;
prevents falling out or
breakening off; produces
and glossy effect
$1.99; postage extra
Hawaiian Face Cream and
Beauties the skin; remove
heda freckles; dark
dark skin many shades
Price $5e; postage $6 extra
Phone Douglas 5294
Dr. Thompson Calls on Defender Staff
Dr. P. H. Thompson, Grand Chancellor of the Knights of Pythias of the state of Kansas, who lives in Kansas and visited Wednesday morning. He is the guest of his cousin, Arthur Brown, 4723 St. Lawrence avenue. Dr. Thompson attends the Supreme Court, N. J. Attends the Supreme Lodge of the Knights of Pythias.
"In the Far East, has never and will not be heard till 'Umbrata' sing it October 7 at Orchestra hall.
3-flat frame, all 7 rooms;
stove heat, gas; barn in rear;
good location for rooming. Can
be bought on very small payment.
ST. LAWRENCE AVE.
NEAR 48TH ST.
6 flats, 1-5, 5-6 rooms;
strictly modern; tile baths;
front and rear porches; first
class condition. Small cash
payment. Terms.
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1919
FURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT
Positively no advertisements taken
over the telephone.
MODERN FAMILY HOTEL
Nestly furnished rooms. hot and cold water; gas and electric light. Sanitary kitchen and laundry. Price $3.00 to $5.50.
4524-26 Indiana Ave
PHONE DREXEL 6138
MRS. P. FRANTKLIN. Prop.
8077 VERNON AV. NEAR 40TH ST. ST., furnished rooms, $5.50 to $4.00. Hot and cold water, all conveniences. Oakland
23-20-6-13
FURNISHED BEDS—BLEACHED AND SATIN covered convenient; North Side; bath, telephone DIST. 8658; reasonable. 16-28-30-6
8128 INDIANA AV. LARGE FRONT ROOM, furnished rooms, 5.00 per week. Extra large room, light floor, light room, 5.00 per Small room, $8.00. Douglas 5057. 30-6
4011 CHAMPLAIN AV. 3D. KENNEDO furnished rooms for stairs, electric lights; 3 blocks of Cottage Grove av. 20-6
60 E. 42ND ST. 47TH APT.-NEATLY FURNISHED rooms for a nice couple or two gentlemen in a first-class home; everything modern and up to date, both car lines. 30-6
8758 COPPAGE GROVE—NEATLY FURN.
Cottage light housekeeping for or indi-
vidual rooms; steam heat and electric
Doug. 2008. 6/18
8210 CALMERT AV.—NICE, LARGE FRONT
room; steam heat and cold water;
conserved to "L" and once larger; lincs;
fenced; respectable family.
8013 PRAIRIE AV.—TWO LARGE ROOMS,
unfurnished, together with running water in
rooms; set tubs, gas cooker, Ohio Cuisine
4047.
8015 INDIANA AV.—PURIFIED ROOMS,
unfurnished, together with running water in
rooms; Dug. 2070. 6/18
8044 ST. LAWRENCE AV. 2D APT.—Fur-
ished front room; steam heat, electric lights
and furnishings; Dug. 2070.
8048 RENT FRONT FRONT ROOMS: MODERN
suitable for man and wife or two guildmen.
Bresel 4202.
8144 WARSH AV. DUG. 7620—TWO NEAT
room; furnished, near two car lanes.
L road.
8343 INDIANA AV.—FURNISHED ROOMS in front, first room, first floor, for use and for storage.
867 MICHIGAN BLVD. 3 FLOOR—FURNISHED rooms, steat heat and 3 unfurnished rooms, steat heat.
820 BOWEN AV., 4TH APT.—FURNISHED rooms, steam heat, electric lights, doug heat.
8456. 8-13
830 SOUTH PARK AV.—FURNISHED ROOM for rent; all modern conveniences, doug heat.
850 PRAIRIE AV.—NEATLY FURNISHED rooms for rent; steam heat, water at all times.
850 LIMWOOD AV. 3 DFLOOR—NEATLY FURNISHED rooms for steam heat, electric lights, kitchen privilege, Doug. 1031.
850 PRAIRIE AV.—FURNISHED BASEMENT room, very reasonable. Photo Doug. 0234.
830 INDIANA AV.—FURNISHED BEDROOM and kitchen; all modern conveniences, Doug. 1445.
830 ELLIES AV. 4PT. 71—PRETTY LIGHT room, very modern, all conveniences, reasonable.
830 WABASH AV. 3DPT.—NEATLY FURNISHED rooms for couple or single; steam heat.
867 4TH PL.—TWO LIGHT ROOMS, steat heat and bath, partly furnished. Krenwood 4558.
867 WABASH AV.—THREE LARGE ROOMS for couples; steam heat, basement room and kitchen. Doug. 4843.
8317 CALUMET AV- FURNISHED ROONS:
electric light, water in water
cars. 8380.
4458 INDIANA AV. 2D APT.-FURNISHED
electric lights; men preferred. Keeway 1747.
8129 INDIANA AV. 2E APT.-MODERN
steam heat; gentilmen only Doughes
8066.
8238 WABASH AV. HOTT VERNON-NRS.
most exclusive and best housekeeping
suite; with private porch, steam heat, beth.
8238 WABASH AV. HOTT VERNON-NRS.
all modern; enamouche; phone service;
vient to cara. 4452 Vincennes.
8012 WABASH AV. FURNISHED ROOMS.
steam heat. Modern apartment. Normal
7104.
8278 PRAIRIE AV. FURNISHED ROOMS; HOT
and cold water; $4.50升. Calipse 635. 814
8288 EDRN AV. BEST. RHODES AND
censas av. - front rooms for rent; W.
and surface rooms. 20-6
8730 INDIANA AV., APT. 3, LIGHT- AIKY
LIGHT- AIKY lights; rays; lights
only包容. R. H. H. Bruce.
4250 INDIANA AV. 3D FLAT-ELEGANT
beautiful heated rooms to rent. Dresden
5317.
4837 STAYE ST., APT. 24-CLEAN FRONT
room; no other rooms. 33. 30-6.
4733 LANGLEY AV. 3D APT. TWO UNDER-
4808 E. 2007 ST. NEAR COTTAGE GROVE
Neatly furnished rooms. 14.
FURNISHED ROOMS WITH PRIVATE FAM-
ly; kitchenette. Douglas 4680. 30-6.
FURNISHED ROOMS. APT. 4 LARGE, MODERN
room; convenient concourse. Douglas 4680.
2427 INDIANA AV. 3D FLAT-LARGE, AIRY
room; strictly modern. Oakridge 5416. 30-6.
FURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT. MODERN
improvements. Phone Wentworth 3870. 30-6.
FURNISHED ROOMS SUNNY ROOM FOR
rent. Phone Oakridge 6025. 30-6.
CALMET MET AV. FRONT ROOM, NEATly
furnished. Cell evening. Douglas 1675. 30-6.
PORSTREVILLE AV. FURNISHED
room; modern convenience. Ken, 2833. 30-
6.
PORSTREVILLE AV. 3D, APT. 3-TO BENCH, NICE
light rooms.
$950 GRAND BLVD, 3D APT—NEATLY FURNISHED ROOMS; all conventacles. Doug. 3044
FURNISHED ROOMS; AV—LARGE, AIRY ROOMS; neatly furnished.
$125 WABASH AV.—FURNISHED ROOMS; modern. Wentworth 4101. 6-13
GREAT KENNESY AV.—TWO ROOMS AND KITCHEN. Doug. 4101
$125 GRAND BLVD., 2D APT—FURNISHED ROOMS.
2623 COTTAGE GROVE, 3D FLAT—NEATLY
furnished rooms, reasonable. Douglas 6014.
4341 INDIANA AV., APT. 3—NICE, LIGHT
furnished rooms.
4356 MIDDLEAVEN AV., 2D APT.—NEATLY FUR-
nished rooms.
4369 VINCENES AV.—NICELY PERNISHED
front room for couple or women. Dresden 6011.
4420 CALMSTER AV.—UNFURNISHED FRONT
room for couple. Dresden 6013.
4701 CHAMBERS AV.—BEAUTIFUL FUR-
nished rooms, all modern.
4814 E. ATTN PH.—FURNISHED ROOMS for
rent. Phone Dong. 6023.
4825 WABASHI AV.—SHALL LIGHT HOUSE.
Phone Dong. 6024.
4298 PRAIRIE AV.—FURNISHED ROOMS;
striately modern. Oakland 6022. 6-13
4300 INDIA AV., 3D FLAT—HOUSE, MODERN,
working girls or graceless们. 6-13
4347 SOUTH PARK AV.—UNFURNISHED
room for couple. Hillettte.
4354 PRAIRIE AV.—LARGE FRONT ROOM
for couple.
FURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT
3015-17 PRAIRIE AV.
HOT WATER AND STEAM HEAT
PHONE DOUGLAS 7649
MR8 C. BROWN. PROP.
631 EAST 49TH ST., LARGE, WELL FURNISHED front room, steam beat and modern. Apt. 1. Kenwood 3141.
10. EAST 49TH ST.-FURNISHED ROOMS, steam beat, American preferred. Mrs. Peck, Boulevard 1047.
145. B. FIRST 8TH ST., 1ST APT., MODERN PLAT. Furnished rooms near 388th St. car and "1. Oakland 208. 6.13
153. WAIDASH AV.-NICELY FURNISHED room. Hot and cold water, for couple of rooms.
3138 PHARIAH AV, 2D APT, LARGE, LIGHT
rooms, modern, in nice place. Drexel 91610.
3231 10. PARK AV.—HIGH CLASS FURN.
housekeeping rooms, with or without private
tax, $100.00; $400.00 week. Prone bung. $350.00.
3234 PHARIAH AV. FURNISHED FURN.
rooms, heat, use water, also, light, private
family. $427.00 GILLIAMLAIN AV. 2D APT, TWO-
room, steam, hot water, express. Normal 3252.
3236 RIHODES AV. 2D APT, ROOMS FOR
single men, heat, hot water.
Douglas 3250. 3250.
3238 EDDEN AV. 1ST APT, ROOMS OR
unfurnished room for couple. Douglas 3253.
3240 NELTAY FURNISHED ROOM IN PRIVATE
home. All modern equivalents. No. 200
roomers. Englewood 6001.
G220 PRAIRIE AV. APT. 3, NESTAHT FUR-
BLED room for geats or seats, Electric
Lights
301 ALDINE SQUARE, FURNISHED ROOMS; furnace heat; all convenience. Douglas 6140
3035 INDIANA AV., FURNISHED LIQUID housekeeping suites. 4 per week up. Douglas 6148
448 E. 40TH ST., 18T APT., MODERN PLAT. housekeeping suites 39H ST. car and Oakland 2600. 30-6
4410 CALMETT AV., 2D APT., NEATLY FURNISHED front room for couple; electric and furnished room for couple; hot and cold water all times. Douglas 7302. 6-13-20-27
4540 INDIANA AV., 3D APT., SOUTH-TWO room in rooms modern apartment. Phone Dennis 6066
4550 CALMETT AV., APT. 19-FRONT ROOM, large closet; hot and cold water; men preferred. Douglas 6886. 6-13
3058 CALMETT AV., APT. 19-FRONT ROOM, large closet; hot and cold water; men preferred. Douglas 6886
3059 EAST 65TH ST., MODERN FURNISHED room in rooms men Kewnwood 4064.
449 E. 45TH ST., MODERN FURNISHED room in rooms men Dresden 8763.
3060 VINCENES AV.-LARGE STEAM HEATED front room.
4245 WADABA AV. FURNISHED ROOM, ALL
convenience. Kenwood 2272.
4732 EVANS AV. NEATLY FURNISHED
room, no conventions. Kenwood 7035.
4734 STATE AV. FURNISHED FOR
two men; responsible. Phone 7259.
4094 PRAIRIE AV. NEATLY FURNISHED
rooms.
808 STATE ST. APT. 24, CLEAN ROOM;
no other rooms. $8.
808 PRAIRIE AV. NEATLY FURNISHED
room, no conventions. 18-25-30-6
8409 SOUTH HARK AV. 4TH FLOOR;
unified rooms; modern. 4-13
8516 GRAND BLDG. FURNISHED ROOMS for
men only. Douglas 3774.
8518 WADABA AV. 2D APT. IHONT ROOM
for one or two men. Englewood 6241.
8510 MICHIGAN AV. FRONT BASEMENT
for one or two male men.
8718 INDIANA AV. TWO ROOMS,
bonnieke. Bouletard 1041.
819 E. 29TH ST. FURNISHED ROOMS; men
preferred. Douglas 4577. Near car line. 6-13
8601 PRAIRIE AV. DOUG. 1915-FURNISHED
rooms; all conventions; men only. 6-13
ONE LARGE ROOM, FURNISHED FOR SINGLE
convenience. 3568 Federal St.
471 E. 81ST ST. CLAT 18-FURNISHED RMS.
Steam heat.
4935 INDIANA AV. 3D FLAT. NEATLY
furnished rooms for steam heat.
TO RENT—COTTAGES
TO RENT - 5-BOOM HEAT COFFEE, FRANK,
store heat, newly decorated and in
dition; $12. 5524 Ingleide Ave., Central 271-
50-0
FLATS FOR RENT
BOOMS WANTED
PORO AGNIE WINDS PARTLY UNPURIFIED room with running water near door and telephone and ear line, between stair and 38th floor, 21st care of Chicago Defender or Houleard 1007.
CHILDREN TO BOARD
WILL, BOARD TWO CHILDREN IN A RISE
TOGETHER, each care will be given. Call Diesel 4772.
HAIRDRESSING
I CURE THE HAIR OF ALL SCALE DIRNESS
and guarantee it to grow in three months'
treatment. Nice class shampooing and Washing
Hair Specialist, 3142 Indiana Av. Dwelling, 3370.
I DO NOT WANT LONG HAIR. LET THE MATURE
GIRL FOR YOUR SAFE GIRL FOR YOUR GIRL.
Gifts for sale, Saturday, 502 E. 338 St. Av.
Louisiana 7630.
MARY C. J. FIELDERS BEAUTY TRAINER
3522 College Grove Av. Phone Dwelling 0075.
23-30-6-13
PORO TREATMENTS, RESIDENCE OR AT
Bita Road, 239 East 50th St.
Dwelling 3502.
PORO TREATMENTS, WORK, POND KENN
0755.
LOST AND FOUND
LOST-POCKETBOOK BETWEEN STATE AND
small change. Aug 7, Safety keep from
dead feller. Return to all East St. Av.
$1,000 CASH, BALANCE AS RENT, BUYS MY
210-room house on 42d St. Garage in rear
of 42d St. Garage, heat one, and one-half blocks from car line.
$1,000 CASH, BALANCE AS RENT, BUYS MY
modern 3-fat on 41st St. Garage in rear
of 41st St. Garage above for family. Apply 42d
St. Garage 4. 42d St. Garage 15. 15. 15.
15 MODERN FLAT AND STORIES 41st and
Cottage Gorge Inc. Income $4,500 per year.
Prices $28,000; $30,000 cash, balance as real.
Wm. J. Smith, F. 35th St.
$40,000 BUYS MY MODERN 3-fat on
42d St. Garage above for home condition. Call
owner, Dong. 1874. Player.
AGENTS WANTED
ALL, THIS MONKEY YOU WANT
* Accommodate all needs for offer, made to measure. Every man should offer for free samples, new styles and agents whole, for attire. Attractor Tailoring Co. Dept. 231, Chicago, IL.
AGENTS WANTED FOR BEST RACE HOOK WANTED for $1.55. Liberal commission. For particulars write Hamite Publishing Co. Dept. 231, Chicago, IL.
AGENTS WANTED - $1.00 PAYER OFFER. $3.00 offer. Made to measure. Every agent wants wholesale price. Kartiketoring Tailoring Co. Dept. 234, Chicago, IL.
LEAIN MUTCH, MITCHEL, PRISE SYSTEM HAIR. $5.00 offer for $5.00. Limited time. Diplomas given. Satisfaction guaranteed. 302 B. S. Spl. Apt. L1, Chicago.
AUTOS FOR SALE
DOL MASTER DISTRICT DISTRICT 911
wheels, new cord fires, in perfect use/useful
condition: can be seen rear 3332 Michigan Av.
Charles Adkins, Douglas 1405.
FOB SALE-7-PASSENGER 6-00 PHELSELL
wheels, new cord fires, in perfect use, cheap
Kiln 1357, M. Grassman.
BUSINESS CHANCES
Down in Oklahoma there are fertile lands that
pile up splendid incunes. They will change your
wealth, and give you the city of happiness. My clients in Oklahoma grow
city of happiness. My clients in Oklahoma grow
COUNTRY LIFE AND AN INDEPENDENT INCOME
make them so. I offer you the same
money as you do. I offer you the same
and happy. Land is as low as $6.00 an
army is the time to investigate. G. E.
FORT. Rm. 802. 79 W. Storm. Hand. St. 1783.
EARN $100.00 E. Z. N. NO EXPENSE NEEDED.
Write G. M. Reuben. Business Rituals.
Brokerage broker. 380. S. State St.
Chicago, IL.
If you want to study real estate, renting, leasing, or writing a business institute, write Linda Business Institute, 4110 Indiana Ave. Chicago, IL. Dreening Corp. correspondence classes.
FOR SALE—TAILOR BIRTH. ABRS. FOR SALE—MARRIED Belt. Safety looked good. book attached for men and women: presents pocket knife for ladies and pocket knife for men. Vincentes Ave. Chicago, IL. Kenwood 6902. B. G. Dollar, Attorney, Eranston, 6461.
PWD OLTERS—BIG PAY
MAN DID OLTERS—BIG PAY to measure time and be general agent in clockkeeper tailoring Co. Dept. 417, Chicago.
BOOKS BUILD AND SOLD
NEW AND OLD BOOKS. LIST TO J. P. DUGLIAS 671. 611 D. SLD. 16-33-30.
FOR SALE—TAILOR SHOP. CLOTHING. Established 16 years. Sickness. 3943 Indiana Ave. Dogs 3551. 615
FOR SALE—TAILOR HOUSES. 11 ROOMS, well furnished. water in most steam heat. 3328 Indiana Ave. Dogs 3387.
FOR SALE OR LEASE—GANIONS PORFarbor. 3511 State St. Phone Doug. 595.
BUSINESS PERSONALS
GROW YOUR OWN HAIR
If you wish to make your own hair grower,
use a shampoo powder, developing creme, etc.
stain, shampoo powder, developing creme, etc.
of kefir, L. Webster, B01 131, Montgomery,
or Kefir, L. Webster, B01 131, Montgomery,
CURTAINS CLEANED
PHONE ODUCLAS 7585. CURT CURTAINS
M. MARY MILLE. MAR. MARY JACKSON.
2522 S. Dearborn ST.
FURNITURE
I WILL ESTABLISH YOUR CARETING ON PURCHASE, rugs, stairs, plains, machines, or equipment. Payment is required while sleek or out of work. Quick deliveries. Drop me a postal and payment. Call for Mr. Ascher. Residence phone Garrielle 3012, 3043 Polk st. 23-30-0-13
UNCLAIMED STORAGE FOR SALE-TWENTY-FIVE-Year wads of furniture and household chargers. Call and be combined. Resell Company 107-303-State St. 44.
FURNITURE FOR SALE, REASONABLE 311 Cottage Grove Ave. 2d floor, rear.
GAS STOWES AND HOT WATER HEATERS to sell. Doug. 4327. 3151 Calumet Av.,
TURNITURE FOR SALE - BEAASONABLE. 3151
Tortoise Grove Av. 2nd floor, year.
HOUSEHOLD GOODS WANTED
LAWING FOR CAMP, WANTED, AND TO
100 pillow slippers and sheets, second basal.
Pay highest price. G. M. X. Box 23, Calumet defender.
HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE
FOR SALE - TURNISHINGS OF AN ROOM
FOR SALE - TURNISHINGS OF AN ROOM
keeping suite; quiet neighborhood, best of
transportation. Income over $100 per month,
until maturity. Must sell at our.
until maturity as an investment. Must sell at our.
until maturity as an investment. Needly decorated
and decoratively refitted. Call at one.
floor 4327. 3151 Calumet Av.,
ANTIQUE HAIR COUCH, ROCKER, LARGE
scales, etc. 3032 South Park Av. Apt. 47.
HAIR STRAIGHTENER
HAIR STRAIGHTENER AND POMADE FORMAL
HAIR. 4327. 3151 Calumet Av.,
L48 Pacific Ave., Jersey City N. J. 808
JEWELRY
Call or write if you want diamonds or jewelry. I handle a complete list of the diamonds in the store. Call or write to Ark for me when calling at the store. S. M. Johnson, 100 West 100th Street, Los Angeles, CA 90025. 109 N. State Street, Central Park, New York, NY 10017.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
ALL THE CLOTHES YOU WANT
Man Want—To wear the latest style made-
up for you. 150. 150. 150.
big props. While quick to Enkaboerboots
TaHoring Co., Dept. 335, Chicago. 15
TAHORS WANTED. MEN OR WOMEN on vests and pants. 584 E. 435 St. Tabor.
HELP WANTED-FEMALE
WANTED - OPERATORS ON GOGETTEY
waste. We offer experienced workers steady
employment at highest prices and piece work.
Only 1200 Sq. ft. available. No minibatch.
1020 Sq. ft. Wabash av. 24 foot.
TWANTED - NEAT APPARING LADY TO
come in. Apparent in room come well recommended. Inquire at door, porch,
corner corner 300 and South Park Av., after 12
TWANTED - EXPERIENCED SILK SHAKE
makers. Highest salaries paid in city. Come
early for work. Can use 100. Apply third
year. Applicant must be a good instructor. 1250 N. Fountain St., 50
GIRLS EXPERIENCED ON POWER MACHINE to work on aprons and house dresses; to
Sopita Brothers, 300 W. Adams St. ts
WANTED - DRESSMAKER NONE BUT FIRST
MACHINE to work on aprons and house dresses.
Sopita Brothers, 300 W. Adams St. ts
WANTED—MEN AND WOMEN EVERYWHERE
to handle high class war book for the Colored
Railroad. Every day can be made. J. FAY,
Burke, N. G.
16-23-30-6
SITUATIONS WANTED—FEMALE
EXPERIENCED MANICURIST WANTS A FOITION in beauty shop. Call Doug. 3375.
FURNACES REPAIRED
FURNACES CLEANED AND REPAIRED BY
exportors. All parts furnished. New steel
furnaces. All parts furnished. Phone
2281. Furnaces. 5641 State St.
IN MEMORIAM
In loving memory of my darling sister,
she was born in September 1920, years ago, Sept. 1, 1933. Gone, not forgotten.
Her Loving Sister,
MRS. HENNELLA HARO,
Nine 12th stroll group.
CARDS OF THANKS
I wish to thank the many friends and Rev. J. M. Mason of Joliet, who were so kind in my bereavement of my sister in her late adulthood parted this life Aug. 27, at 3 a.m. God took her to himself, and we shall meet some day, when there will be no more parting. Loving husband, C. H. H. West Nineteenth Street, Lockport, IL. Thanking the many friends who were so kind in my bereavement in the death of my twin sister, Mrs. O. I. Reeves.. Mrs. A. L. Greene, 349 Indiana avenue.
Quindare, Kan.
The location is ideal-perfectly sanitary-on the hills overlooking the Missouri river, and just three blocks from the electric car line leading to Kansas
Departments
Elementary, 2 years; academic, 4 years; teachers' normal training, 1 year (approved by the board of education to teach in Kansas); junior college, 2 years; complete commercial course, including banking, 2 years; theological training, 2 years; medical training, 2 years; music, 4 years; nurse training, 3 years; industrial course, 2 to 4 years.
The 25 Trades Taught
For Boys - Carpenter, cabinetmaking, tailoring, blacksmithing, horseshoeing, electric engineering, mechanical drawing, architectural drawing, printing and bookbinding, stock raising, automobile repairing and driving
For Both Sexes - Commercial course, agriculture, steam underwriting, China, old farm land, landscape gardening, poultry raising
Special attention given to military training, athletics, gymnasium exercise
Greatest institution in the west for practical training. Will open Sept 8, 1918.
For catalog and other information write
WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENT
An August maud service of much interest and pleasure took place on Wednesday, Aug. 27, when Miss Anna Reid, sister of George Reid, became the bride of Marshall W. Hall, who has just been married to the 8034 Pioneer Infantry. The ceremony was performed at the home of the brother and sister, Mr. and Mrs. George Reid, 6034 Grand Boulevard, by the beautiful creation of white satin beaded georgette. Her flowers were a shower of white lilies. Many beautiful flowers were added to Mrs. Hall will be at home after Sept. 1 at 3600 Wabash avenue.
WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENT
On Tuesday morning, April 26, at 1:40, at the home of Rev. I, N. Daniels, 101 Emerson street, Evanston, Ill. Mrs. Elizabeth M. Archer of Chicago became the bride of Thomas Thomas of the same city. The bride was tastefully dressed and traveling suit. Those who witnessed the mony wore Rev. and Mrs. I. N. Daniels, Dr. and Mrs. R. E. Wilson of Evanston, Mrs. L. Reed, daughter of the bride; Mr. and Mrs. W. Thomas, Mrs. Raglan Mr. and Mrs. Payne from Chicago, Mrs. Mr. Thomas will as home after Monday, Sept. 1, at 6031 Throop street.
WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENT
Miss Evelyn L. M. Kenziek of New York city and Stamp Willis of Detroit, M.D., met with Mrs. H. McKenzie mony Tuesday evening, Aug. 26, at 7:30 o'clock, at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley H. McKenzie, who was the bride's memony was performed by the Rev. Dr. Cook of Bethel A. M. E. church, Friends and relatives present were Mr. and Mrs. Stanley McKenzie, Walter McKenzie, Mr. and Mrs. Tuffin, Mrs. Carpenter, Mr. and Mrs. Wright and daughter, Mrs. B. Carter, M.D., Collier, Mrs. J. Proston and Mr. Scott.
WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENT
Willie Lucas Smith of Chicago, Ill., and Miss Camilla Lee Jenkins of Columbus, Ga., were lapply married on Aug. 26, 1919. by Rev. L. B. Horton of St. Peter's at the house of Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Smith, 3613 Vincennes avenue.
KING-COSBY WEDDING
Miss Annie King, one of the charming girls of Chicago, was married to Sergt. Landive Cosby of Evanston, Ill. After the wedding Mr. and Mrs. Landive they gave a grand reception. Mr. and Mrs. Landive Cosby will live in Evanston.
NEW YORK CLASSIFIED
The book entitled "How to Make Thames' talks you how to manufacture 100 different products, the best of the best, only the best, home or for sale. Only the prefabels, Mansour Bureen, 132d St. and Madison Av., New York CALI, and SEE B. SALVATORE, NEW IMPROved barber shop; two good barbers in atlanta service. S. Salvatore, Propto Sith av. city. 22-50-6
HELP WANTED - FEMALE MAIDS WANTED AT 19 03D BROADWAY: West side agree; plenty of days work; no parking; no smoking; J. T. Smith, prop. New York city, 22-50-13
IN THE GRIP OF THE LAW
Lemon Root Man Discharged
Irish Dannis, Douglas hotel; Ralph and Darlington Herndon, brother, 3715 Indiana avenue, and Charles Canady, 3715 Indiana avenue. Detective Sorgeians Stark, Glenn and Smith and charged with a confidence game. Judge Hugh Stewart of the court ordered them discharged when no case was proven against them.
Arrested for Insulting Women
Officer Sidney A. Williams, 3rd police precinct, testified before Judge Hugh Murray that he had arrested James Kaiser, Joseph Jefcik, Walter Bonson, Charles Bohumil Bermesik and William Bumah, Bumah's stricts after he had followed them for two bullets and had heard them insult- women. The court discharged the prisoner.
Safe Haven for Winter
George Day, 156 W. 30th street, formerly of Wallace, Neb. was given 9 months in the house of correction by the judge of the street court after he had been arrested by Sergus. Lahart and Kilroy, 3rd police precinct, for flearing Carley Willis, 30th Street, and taking the horse and wagon by Ray Glens, 2807 Wentworth avenue of
Boys Found Guilty
James Johnson, 30 years old, 3557
Wentworth avenue, already under
sentence of from one year to life for man-
slaughter, pleaded guilty of robbery
of the police, and was sentenced to
the Criminal court, and a jury found
Lillard Levy, 17 years old, 5344
Pedal street, and Ralph Heurd, 17 years
old, 3512 Wabash avenue, guilty of
robbery of the police. Johnson and taking $380 from him. Sergent Albert C. Boscuchite testified that when he went to the home of the
Levys, Lillard and his brother Clar-
rion were taken into the jail. The sentence
will be imposed upon the boys as
several more cases of robbery
against the boys is disposed of in the
various branches of the Criminal court.
Hold to Grand Jury
Thomas Poole, 3135 Indiana avenue, was held to the grand jury under $5,000 and was charged with assault. Harrison street court, Sergent Gilop (white), 3rd police precinct, testified that Poole took $500 worth of material from the tailor shop at 3135 Indiana avenue and sent it to his home. Poole was represented by Attorney W. E. King.
Omaha Man Arrested Here
Leon Hill, Omaha, Neb. was arrested by Detective Sergeants Engle and Curtis to train at the Union station after they had received advice from Omaha to take action against them there for murder. Hill, armed with a gun and several rounds of ammunition, showed fight, and the failure of his weapon possibly prevented another murder.
Jazzed Way to Prison
Al Goodwin, 1557 Wentworth avenues loved music so well that May 23 last entered the home of Mager Keton the musician. Victoria valued at £933 and 440 worth of records, and the strains' of jazz music constantly floating upon the air attracted the attention of Detective Sergeants Stark, Smith and Glenn who fell into the trap of falling to hear the music one might they investigated and found that Goodwin had disposed of the stolen loot to Herman Gershishowk, 5042 State street. This thus Kuvanagh gave Goodwin 9 months to cure his hearing and to cure his craving for jazz music.
Jury Returns Open Verdict
The coroner's jury returned an open verdict in the case of Officer John Snyder, who shot to death July 28 on 31st street between State and Wabash avenue. Z. Shuger (white). 24 E. 31st street, testified that he peeled out of his window and shot the officer in the store and store and a Colored man about 5 feet 6 inches, weighing 185 pounds and wearing a cap, take a gun out from the street at the same time the officer wounded. Mrs. Mattie Hardy, 17 E. 31st street, and C. M. Cowan, 326 State street, testified to hearing shots. Sam Snyder, the wounded officer to Merry hospital, where he died on the operating table. Sergt. Sam W. Doran (white), 3rd posse, was unable to find an eyewitness to the crime.
ENLARGES FACTORY
The Berry & Ross Manufacturing Co.
848 West 138th street, have recently
received a new larger scope. By the Negro Improvement Association, in order to enter the manufacture,
in order to enter the manufacture,
the newly established larger scope. On the new
power machines are now being installed, after which there will be an
increase in the capacity of factory workers and sales
ladies. Besides making "Berry's Famous Brown Skin Dollar", the concern
dresses a complete line of children's dresses, bungalow aprons, boulde
caps, etc.
JOSEPH BAILEY WANTED
Any one knowing the whereabouts of Joseph Bailey, age 15, 5 feet tall, who has been gone since Sept. 9, 1918, will please notify his mother, Mrs. Joe Bailey, 452 East 40th street, Chicago, 30-9
WILLIAM ANDERSON WANTED
Any one knowing the whereabouts of William Anderson, age 72, dark complexion, who has been in the butt last heard of in Lancaster County, his daughter, Dorothy Coles, 946 North Jessup street, Philadelphia, Pa.
LESLIE STEPHENS WANTED
Anyone knowing the whereabouts of Leslie Lee Stephens, last heard of in 1911, will please notify his grandfather, Tom Walker, Ellwood City, Pa.
NOTICE
Information concerning my sons,
John Edgar and Charlie Alexander.
Important business. Mrs. Salle Alexander.
$331 Federal street, Chicago, IL.
DEATH LIST
LINCOLN LEAGUE POSTPONES MEETING
Memphis, Tenn., Sept. 5.—Postponement of the meeting of the Lincoln League of America is announced at the office of the chairman, Robert R. Church. The office of the league here has been swamped with letters from, all over the country, and already there are more organizations for local charters from as many cities. Many organizations established to gain economic freedom and political equality Negro have changed their name to the Lincoln League of Permission of the executive committee.
South Well Organized
Perhaps the Lincoln League has done more to organize the Negro in the South than in the agency and the academy with which Church brought out that one of the reasons for postponing the first big convention of the Lincoln League is the desire to hold it in the summer season. The Negro planter and business man but also the rank and file of the people indicated. Indications are that when the Lincoln League convenes it will be the biggest and most important meeting the Negro has held since the rebellion.
To Honor Lincoln
"After mature thought," announced Kate, "a new active member of the Lincoln League active members has decided postpone the first convention from Sept. 17 to Thursday, Feb. 11. The first convention on Lincoln's birthday will be a fitting celebration to the memory of the great Emancipation. The day and the day of the day, people as to what we are driving at."
"Since the Lincoln League will combine both the labor and political fight of the Colored labor leaders to listen to the meeting postponed so that they could marshal their forces from ocean to ocean and interest the American Federation of labor in the movement.
"Also the present convention to be ragged edge, and we thought it wise to allow a short season of rest before calling on the Lincoln League to attend the proposed meeting and between the final set will also give a wider perspective to the big questions to be considered at the Chicago meeting.
"I will call the mass day," a political emancipation day, a woman's day and an American day. On American day the Colored soldiers on American day the Colored soldiers that they feel like saying in their treatment they got, will be heard. On the evening of the opening day, in addition to the president's address, a discussion of the statesman will speak on Lincoln.
"This convention will be free-from the domination of office holders and office seekers, and the professional discussion of open discussions will mark each session."
Gov. Lowden is expected to welcome the convention for Illinois, and Mayor Thompson for Chicago. The chairman of the convention is Robert S. Abbott, editor of the Defender.
Correspondence Invited
All inquiries regarding the organization may be addressed to Roscoe C. Sawyer, President, Pythian Temple, Louisville, Kentucky, R. Retary, 200 Auburn avenue, Atlanta, Ga.; Walter L. Cohen, treasurer, 624 South Rampart street, New Orleans, R. Church, chairman, executive committee, 391 Beale avenue, Memphis, Tenn.
MICHIGAN
Benton Harbor, Mich. Sept. 5, 6-Mr. and Mrs. John Harland entertained day evening in honor of their friend, Grand Rapids, 64 Great Sherman street, Street, Lockland, Ohio; Mellie M. Griffin of Darke county, Ohio, invited guest; Mr. and Mrs. Verley Smith, Mrs. Blanch Rodger of Lake Forest, Michigan, Mrs. Cousins, Mrs. Tumma Harland, Mrs. Mead, Mrs. Alice Moose and Mrs. D. Lloyd. Two courses were served. Victrola and electric piano music was enjoyed. Miss Blanch Rodger of Lake Forest, Michigan, entertained in Benton Harbor with Mrs. Elizabeth, 1285 Broadway. Miss. Rodger claims she has been highly entertained by the boys and girls of Benton Harbor spent the week in South New England the chain Lake Baptist association. James H. Wins, youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wins, died Friday a shock to the shock. His death was a normal held at A. M. E. Saturday afternoon. Rev. Klyver White offered prayer and Rev. Wm. Baber reached the funeral sermon. Solo by Friend of the deceased and daughter of Vandalsia, are the guests of Mrs. Davie King at Galseph. * Mrs. Alice Moore entertained at 9 o'clock on Wednesday morning in honor of Mr. Rev. Wednesday employed at the cigar factory for a time. Mr. Rogers left for his home in Florida. Out of town guest was Mr. Holder of Chicago. Covers were laid on the floor. Holder of Dayton, Ohio, is visiting Mrs. John Harland. * Mrs. Hathcox of Chicago is visiting her daughters, Mrs. Verley Smith and Mrs. John Harland, is visiting friend Armandet of Chicago is visiting Dates of Indianapolis is spending a week with Mrs. Dee Lloyd.
Jackson, Mich., Sept. 5—Rev. Durk, pastor of the Second Baptist church, and wife attended the Baptist church, and they attended the church, and from there they went to spend vacation in Holly Springs, Miss. * Mrs. Ora Matthews and Mrs. Dorothy Slowen and little Miss Matthews were the guests of the past week. * Mrs. Taylor, who has been on the slick list, is much improved in health and we are glad to know that Mrs. Bernice Soloman is much improved in health. * Miss Helen Conway of Ypsilanti, Mich., was the guest of the past week. * The Jackson Pleasure Seekers, which consist of Chas, Harper, John Goodall, Hammond Greene, Wm. Jackson, report a grand time on their 21 days' vacation. * Mrs. Jackson was the friend will be on sale at the Murray & Gross Colored men's agency, 115% East Washington street. * One of the years-caring party given by the fender will be on sale at the Murray & Gross Home Circle Wednesday night, aug. 20, at the home of Mrs. Edmona Hudson, 305 Page Avenue. * The rooms are decorated with cut flowers and crepe paper of red, white and blue.
Detroit, Mich., Sept. 5.—Miss Sallie Allen of Danville, KY. Miss Pearl Richardson of Bay City, Mich., and Mrs. Ida, Ind., are the guests of Mf. and Mrs. L. S. Buster, 46 Shephard avenue. *John Anderson of 501 Catherine street has returned to the city after a s. pleas. Ind., are the guests of Mf. and Mrs. L. S. Buster, 46 Shephard avenue. *John Anderson of 501 Catherine street has returned to the city after a s. pleas. Ind., are the guests of Mf. and Mrs. L. S. Buster, 46 Shephard avenue. *John Anderson of 501 Catherine street has returned to the city after a very pleasant trip to Lexington, Ky. *Mrs. Henrietta Allen of Mrs. Sadie Ogleble, 613 St. Antiope street. *Mrs. Gertrude Turner of Cleveland is visiting Mrs. L. C. Long, 200 Brady street. *Mrs. J. Holland of Inwood is visiting Mrs. J. Holland and Mrs. B Holland 265 Hassleins and Mrs. Stella Farris, 255 Winders street.
PAGE NINETEEN
DEATH TO RHEUMATISM
Use the FAMOUS JAPANESE ANIMAL MATIC POWDER—when the powder goes in the Rheumatism goes out. It cleanses the extras of rubs and additives. A FIFTEN-DAY TREATMENT only $1.00 PREPAID. Worth $23 to any rheumatist surface of rubs and additives. Downscattements and indigestion. Address Dixie Sales Agency, 1800 W. 12th St., New York, NY 10016. BIG MONEY FOR ADDITIVE. Writer Twin.
Mrs. Fannie Webster, $60 Beaublen street, are on the stick list. *Mrs. R. D. Lynch of Youngstown, Ohio, and Miss Johnson of Newcastle, Ind., are vaislaus Mrs. E. A. Price, $180 Beaublen street.
Benton Harbor, Mich. Sept. 5—Several friends of F. Hyde gathered at his home last week to remind him of his last visit. Several other presents were given him, Mrs. Blanch Thomas, daughter of Mrs. Hyde, was visiting guest at the party. Fate Smith of Chicago is the author of several baths at Smith's bath house. *Willie Seabolt and wife, accompanied by Charles Harland, motorized to Chickasaw bays, for a trip. *Rev. William Hill, Sarah Taylor, Alice Moore, Mary Brown, Walter Brown, Ella Coursey, Grace Page, Azzie Lee Moore, Ella Newland and John McCarthy, Lake Baptist Association at South Bend last week. *Minnie Boone attended the grand lodge at Kalamazoo, Azzie Lee Moore, Ella Newland, Lake Creek, George Hackley, Scott, Maud Marra, Metta Woodruff and Mrs. George Chapman all returned from Kalamazoo, where they attended a session. *William Ryder was elected grand warden for the state of Michigan. *Sam Levy, 323 North Ashland Road, Lake Creek, George Hackley and wife Saturday and Sunday. *Royena Boone returned from Chicago, where she has visited Mrs. Ella Gurry the past week. *Mrs. C. R. Collier the latter, Mrs. Bell Bush and niece, Nollie Tyler.
WANTED FOR ADOPTION
Want to adopt a nice looking child, light brown skin girl or boy, age 1 to 3 years. Send picture and particular to C. A. W. Box 9, Chicago Defender, 1200 W. 12th St.
AGENTS WANTED
Agents wanted to sell life insurance for Lincoln Reserve Life Insurance Co. G. W. Chester, general agent, 714 Washington avenue, Greenville, Miss.
PARTNER WANTED
Active man of 30 wants a partner in undertaking business with capital. Address Box 18, Chicago Defender. 6-113 Big cut on seats! All back of first five rows in balcony at Orchestra hall for October 7 or 8c 35c until September 21.
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EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Founded May 6. 1905. by ROBERT S. ABBOTT, LL. B.
Published by
THE KOBERT S. AT
PUBLISHING COMPANY
(INCORPORATED)
Shirley, in close care matter, February 1. 1905. at the Portofice in Chicago, Ill. under act
Mary B. Duff.
LIL' RASCAL
Mammy see dat lil rracal, standin' straight as stalks o' corn;
He'll be walkin' walkin' we know we it, dat's as sure as yo' is bo'n.
Cum t' Daddy. My, my' hebby, wolgh erbout a ton I apse,
Mouf all perked up, begin' kloses, arms a stealin' roun' my neck;
Wish dem smiles would alays linger, but dell'y be gone I know,
Per de road am rough an' rocky dat yo' ill' feet must' go.
But you'll fin' it seems to soften all your worldly jots an' jars,
Jes' to know it takes do night time to bring out de brightest stars.
MR. HOYNE'S MISTAKEN VIEW
STATE'S ATTORNEY HOYNE it seems is of the impression that Colored gamblers started the race riots in Chicago. Mr. Hoyne is mistaken. He fails absolutely to grasp the underlying causes of the race clashes in this community. When he charges our people with having brought on the disgraceful happenings centering about the first week of August, he flies in the face of the real facts.
MR. HOYNE seems to have lost sight of a number of very disagreeable instances immediately preceding the actual outbreak of hostilities between whites and blacks. He has forgotten evidently the repeated bombing of the homes of our citizens, resulting in the destruction of much valuable property. Likewise he overlooks the wanton and inexcusable beatings of our men and women in Washington Park about the middle of June. His memory also proves false when he fails to call to mind that a Colored man was killed at Fifty-fourth and Union avenue, another at Fifty-first and Wentworth avenue, and still another at Fifty-seventh and Lafayette avenue. All of these things happened prior to the outbreaks of the latter part of July and the first of August.
HAS OUR STATE'S ATTORNEY FORGOTTEN that not a single miscreant responsible for these murders has been apprehended? Is it to be wondered at that in the face of such laxity on the part of those charged with law enforcement that Colored citizens, in their alarm, should have sought and applied drastic measures for their own protection? While it is true that the hoodlum element may have been guilty of many overt acts, it is also true that the respectable element among our citizens were impelled to go outside of the law to protect themselves and their property when they could see no help from constituted authority.
WE CAN EASILY UNDERSTAND the indictment of so many of our group. The conduct of the police force, in many instances, lends strong color to the suspicion that they were more or less in sympathy with the white rioters. It is only fair to deduce this from the fact that so many of our people were arrested in striking contrast to the arrest of the few white persons participating in the rioting. Even the grand jury, composed of some of Chicago's leaders in business and society, were forced to take note of this one-sided phase of the situation.
MUCH OF THE TROUBLE can be laid at the door of the so-called athletic clubs west of Wentworth avenue, from which, it appears, raiding parties were sent out into the territory occupied by our people. Bands of these gangsters had swept through Washington Park and adjoining neighborhoods, attacking old and young alike. Several months ago we had occasion to call attention to these clubs as breeding spots for crime. And we believe we are safe in saying that much of the trouble leading up to the riots might have been avoided had these gang rendezvouses been closed. If our fighting state's attorney would push his probe in the direction of these "clubs," he would go far toward striking at the real source of the race rioting in this community.
IN THIS CONNECTION too much cannot be said in praise of the splendid body of men who made up the August grand jury. They were fearless in searching out and publishing the real truths. They were evidently imbued with a high sense of justice and determined to see fair play at all hazards. They were absolutely justified in their "strike," and an honest and fair investigation will reveal facts absolutely sustaining their position.
WE ARE NOT CONDEMNING the state's attorney for his attitude towards gambling houses and other disreputable resorts in the Second Ward. We believe as he does, that rotten political conditions are responsible for these evils. We know that for the last four or five years the Second Ward has been the dumping ground of much of Chicago's moral and social garbage, both white and black. And more power to his hand in any effort which he may make at cleaning it up. We must insist, however, that in his public statements of the cause of the race riots he shows a woofful lack of information.
ANOTHER ANGLE OF THE TROUBLE
WHILE THE AIR is surcharged with different phases of the recent trouble in Chicago and Washington, few have hit upon the real causes that brought about the conflicts. There are two reasons for them, one an immediate and local cause, and the other a local and temporary surroundings, while the primary reason is the result of over forty years ago. So far as Chicago is concerned, the immediate cause was the failure of a policeman to arrest a white boy who was believed to have caused the drowning at one of the bathing beaches.
BUT THIS WAS NOT SUFFICIENT within itself to justify what subsequent action was required. The white boy would have been arrested and no doubt punished, and the policeman's duty would have been dealt with according to law. But it was the primary cause that produced the disastrous results that followed. This propaganda has its seat at the South, where a number of state governments—so-called—were brought into existence and are maintained by violence and force. This country is the most violent country in the world. If poison is injected into any part of the human system and the state arrests and eradicated, it will eventually infect the whole system and may result in death. This propaganda was inaugurated for the purpose of so shaping popular sentiment throughout the country as will justify the continuance in power of those who are responsible for the state governments.
TO DO THIS the color or race of mob violence is of frequent occurrence, upon the alleged ground that they are necessary to keep the Colored man in his place and to prevent Negro domination. The result is the inculturation of the mob and order in both races.
MEMBERS OF OUR ORDER have been impressed with the fact that the law means very little. If any, protection to him against mob violence is equivalent to turning him over into the hands of a mob. The impression is being made upon the minds of our group that the government under which we live, to support which we are taxed and to defend which we are protected, does not afford them the protection commensurate with that devotion and loyalty.
THE AMERICAN WHITE MAN cannot afford to have one-eighth of the entire population feel that they are outlaws and must live at the mercy of a mob. The American White Man cannot afford to have them feel wherever they live are there by sufficiency and not by law, by tolerance and not by right. The feeling that should prevail is that the American White Man is incapable and inseparable, and that the inculturation and cultivation of racial intimacy and co-operation and as far as possible prevented by the action and co-operation of both men.
MISSISSIPPI WELEARE LEAGUE
THE MEMPHIS COMMERCIAL APPEAL carries a front page story cainted "attacks on South Are Unjustifiable." As proof of this assertion they quote the findings of a commission of three. "These investigators, two of them possess of high citizenship in the North, brought down by the Mississippi Welfare Case to our request purpose of bringing in Mississippi in touch with the conditions as they actually exist, declare themselves entirely converted from their previous stand and believe the South offers a fitting place of residence for Negroes."
THE NAMES of these "investigators" are withheld "in order that outside pressure cannot be surpassed should. Let there be light. If there be one or two of our accredited group that can find in Mississippi, do whatever or ten years any condition that warrants our laboring class in returning, nor not shout it openly from the houseets. Men big and broad enough to speak for a group of people never fear publicity. There are those who would sell their bachelor's degree to a pottage, and it is because we have in our own midst such men our progress is lagged as fast. WE WOULD BE DELIVERED TO KNOW that Mississippi or any other southern state has turned over a new leaf. But it is all so sudden, so unexpected, and, unfortunately for the South, they have failed to bury the other end of the olive branch that holds the roots of continued oppression. It is the reason that the olive branch may come with a gift to see what his hand behind his back holds. We can see a lesson well of safety first, and while this particular welfare league may be home to an endeavor to make things better for the members of our group it will be necessary for the South to give for the next few years an ocular demonstration of their change of heart.
AND STILL lynchings go merrily on in the southland, where prominent citizens assure us our return would be welcomed. Can it be they are running out of lynching material?
WE CAN'T SEE through some of the restaurant prices, but we can see through most of the roast beef they serve.
THE THING for everybody to do is to go to work, and likewise everybody should work after they get there.
A LITTLE MORE
AND ILL HAVE IT
BLAZING RIGHT
AGITATING WHITE
NEWS GAPERS
WASHINGTON RIOTS
CHICAGO RIOTS
RACE HATRED
BRISBANE AND THE RACE PROBLEM
ARTHUR BRISANE who is in a class by himself as an editorial writer, has this to say in the issue of the Herald-Examiner of Aug. 30, relative to the race question: "One thing is certain, that the Negro has good cause for complaint against his white brothers, in the North especially. In war, when the Negro is in the North, the Negro is to come North and work. They supply trains, accommodations, food, and equipment upront the Negro from the southern home to which he has grown accustomed, as the slave dealers formerly uprooted him in Africa.
"THEN WHEN THEY ARE FINISHED WITH HIM, the emergency over, white men of another class form mobs, eager to murder the Negroes because they are not in the place to which white men brought them.
"TO BE TRANSPORTED TO a new country, it is anxious to get rich in a hurry or to break up strikes of white labor, and be dered by another class of men when they reach the North and begin work, is not a lot to be enwil." We agree with Mr. Brisane that ours is not an enviable situation, but it is from such outspoken and ubiquitous minds as his that much can be done, toward improving existing conditions. The attitude of the Negro in the Newspaper suggestion is a powerful factor in creating whatever sentiment the group in this country. The great need of the press of this country is more men of the Brisbane type. We should then have less of yellow journalism.
A WEAK SPOT
PERHAPS there are many people erroneous impression resulting from U.S. lawless community. Such is not the world into consideration, there is not Chicago. It is true that we have, as thugs and criminals, but fortunately they can be truly said of our juries, both grand and the conviction of a single person accuses shows that he was engaged in protest assaults of a mob. WORDS, we are satisfied every accused person will get that some persons have been indicted was the fault of the grand jury, upon such ex-particle evidence as may be seems to be with the police. With a trouble not only would have been proven that thousands of dollars worth of property. Most of our policemen seem to have only persons they were called upon to who attempted to defend their families rioters. They not only neglected to a certain extent what is the This is one reason why it is such a diff white rioters. Nearly all of the evidence through such agencies as have been in the disturbance. EVERY REASON to a far as the facts can be ascertained our courts of justice, and that Chicago of giving every man a square deal acco
Most of our politemen seem to have acted upon the assumption that the only persons they were called upon to arrest as rioters were Colored persons or white rioters. They not only neglected to arrest the whites who were assaulted or rioting, but failed to take the necessary steps, it seems, to have them identified. This is one reason why it is such a difficult matter to procure evidence against white rioters. Nearly all of the evidence that has since been procured has been handled with certainty as have been utilized for that purpose subsequent to the disturbance. WE HAVE EVERY REASON to assure the members of our group that as far as the facts can be ascertained they will get a fair and square trial from our police officers, and that we will maintain its reputation of giving every man a square deal according to his merit.
Newport, Ark., Sept. 5.—Mrs. E. J. Dunlap returned Tuesday from Little Rock. Prof. J. D. Medjock, Hatesville, Rev. and Mrs. H. K. King, Miss Lucey Wooley, Mildred McClain and J. A. Smith left Wednesday for Diaz to attend the B.S.U. school convention of the C. B. Brown, McFadden, Ark., spent Wednesday here. * Mrs. Lillie Davis, Omaha, Neb., arrived Sunday to visit Hogan, Kansas City, arrived Sunday to pave her parents a visit, Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Hogan. * Daniel Roggins, Augusta, Ark, and Miss Georgia Johnston, Kansas City, arrived evening at the brides' residence, Rev. H. H. King officiated. * Dan Willis, Little Rock, is visiting friends here, Mrs. Bell Roseborough, Mrs. Dora Roseborough, Sunday with friends. * Wilson Sons, Omaha, Neb., spent the midweek here with friends. * Rev. J. M. Woodin and J. M. Robbins, Sunday school for Scoutry to attend Sunday school convention of the C. M. E. church.
Camden, Ark, Sept. 6—Miss Ida Howard, who for the past month has been visiting in Chicago, is back home in Kansas, and Miss Kian, is here in the city visiting friends and relatives. *Mrs. Chopatra Anderson, one of Camden's most useful and progressive citizens, has been elected mayor of Camden and ment here in the high school. We feel that Mrs. Anderson is making a great sacrifice when we realize the fact that she has rejected a position as superintendent of the very commendable salary. *Mrs. B. Wilson and daughter Della are visiting friends and relatives this week in several places before returning home. Fordyce Sunday, where he expects to
ARKANSAS
outside of Chicago laboring under the late unpleasantness that this city isase. Taking the country or the civilized a more law-abiding community than in all cosmopolitan cities, our share of they constitute a very small minority and absolutely impartial. The same can and should be of being a rioter, where the evidence taking his family and home against the offed that so far as our courts are confined and square deal. It is no doubt that we should be convinced that this body is necessarily obliged to be brought before it. The one weak spot capable and efficient police force the butted but the fair name of Chicago would and many of the valuable lives lost and that should be康康ed that we arrest as rioters were Colored persons and homes against the assaults of white arrest the whites who were engaged in steps, it seems, to have them identified. that matter to procure evidence against the man who had been procured has been utilized for that purpose subsequent to assure the members of our group that as they will get a fair and square trial from will continue to maintain its reputation ending to his merits.
accompany his sister Lilian home, previous to going to Little Rock to take up their future residence. * N. E. Greer, representative of the Standard Life Insurance company, has been promoted to the county's office. * Miss Elsa Cottage of Arkadelphia passed through this week en route home. Miss Cottage, in company with her sister, made a short trip to the city where she was a guest at the home of Miss Rosa Christian. * Don't fall to get that Defender every week and keep up with the news. * Eddie Wilson invested in the Mercantile Co. of Gurden and has been secretary of this corporation. * Prof. C. J. Allen, a young business man of this town, has been elected teacher on Ounthita Industrial Academy. Prof. C. J. Allen, a young business man of this town, has just made an extensive tour of northern points the few days, making stops in Atlantic City, N. J., returning via Iron Mountain.
Pocatello, Idaho, Sept. 5.—A. W. Johnson, 1409 North Third Avenue, has purchased a new roadster car. *T E Moody is in Kansas City, Mo., attending the annual session of the Grand Lodge of Missouri, arriving and is stopping at the Alberta hotel. *Frank Howard, an ardent defender reader, has entirely recuperated its home, 222 South First avenue. *T E Moody is in the a. M. E. Church Sunday night. *Louisa Baskin, a former resident of Pocatello, but now living in idaho Falls, Idaho, motored down from the Sunday afternoon in his new Chandler home. *Lee Averyhythm of Black Foot was on the streets of Pocatello this week shaking hands with his many friends. *T E Mooney Butler is reported to be very alert. *Mr. Frank Allen and Mrs. Mabel Brown arrived from Kansas City, Mo.
IDAHO
UNDER THE CAPITOL DOME.
By A. A. Taylor
Washington, D. C., Sept. 5—A large number of citizens, working through the agency of the N. A. A. C. P., have organized a central co-operative guideline in the District of Columbia. The purpose is to study the principle and methods of co-operation. The guild meets once a month and is divided into small groups called home circle study clubs. These meet weekly for study and discussion. The leaders in the W. W. Holman are the leaders in the W. W. Holman which at present is purely educational. When a sufficient number of persons become interested the work will be broadened to meet the larger needs of the community. A co-operation will be established by a co-operative System of England. A chain of stores will be built and the principles of co-operative buying and selling will be put into practical application.
A delegation representing the Equal Rights League appeared before the senate committee on foreign relations 20 for the purpose of presenting the cause of human colonies in Africa. Of the 17 members constituting the committee on foreign relations only 5 were present, all Republicans. The proceedings of the conference of the league, have been printed by the government for distribution.
The Federation of Men's Church Clubs has a membership of 15 clubs and through a campaign now going on it hopes to increase this number to 50. The next meeting of the federation will be held at the Florida Avenue Baptist Church in which time a board of directors will be elected to help carry on the work.
Miss Lucie Gilbert of Howard University, class 17, left last week for Berkeley, where she will have charge of the department of art and science. Miss Gilbert taught last year at Brick Institute in North Carolina and the change comes as a substantial promotion which she mer-
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After an absence of three months the Quality Amusement Corporation returns to Howard theater and prepares for the New York Sept. 1st. Billy King in a musical comedy entitled "Over the Top." The amusement company is now under new management having been bought over the past year. The amusement company and a group of business men. R. W. Coleman's business directory of Washington ols came from the press last week and is having a larger circulation than any previous edition. The directory is well organized and contains the larger number of business places and professions advertising in the directory show that the Negro is waking up to the value of advertising his goods. President J. B. Dudley of the A. & T. college, Greenabore, N. C., made a flyer advertising the new material for his teaching force. After two days in this city he continued his trip as far north as New York, stopping at Baltimore and Philadelphia.
The Community Center Band, which played to a packed house at Howard University, that publishes critical, receiving much, more attention around the city. Washington has not had a band for several years and the coming of the Community Center Band has been in the musical world. Let us hope that the band is here to stay.
O. R. Sheffield, senior in the Howard Medical school, has returned from Africa.
PREVENTIVE MEASURES, FIRST, AID REMEDIES HYGIENICS AND SANITATION
No Cases Are Diagnosed and No Precriptions Given in These Weekly Activities
HYGIENE OF SCHOOL CHILDREN
The opening of school is at hand and vacation is over. This means that thousands of children will be thrown directly in contact with each other and the poor life of children partly exchanged to the indoor life. Along with this change of environment comes the developing of certain diseases, such as measles, diphtheria, chickenpox, tonsillitis, smallpox, tuberculosis and schizophrenia. The proper precautions are not observed. Moths the schools are the place to develop the mind of the children, but they should also aid the home in developing the body, for a sound mind needs a sound body. We cannot give a free public bath by over-wear. We should regard to school-going age. The decision in each case should be left to the judgment of the home and the school authorities and they should consider the physical and social status of the individual child. For the weak and anemic child with poor physical inheritance and with home possibilities of good nourishment and outdoor life of 6 years old, they can be the same child from a dirty, insanitary home is certainly better off in school.
Eye-Strain
Eyes of children should be regularly examined and cared for, avoiding all risk factors for light. Reading the light should always fall over the shoulder and never from the
P
children, in poor health, or those suffering from contagious diseases, to attend school and infect others. There should also be strict medical inspection and nursing care in all schools so us to prevent this.
Keeping the Children Well
Keeping the Children in Care
To守住孩子并保护他们的健康, children require sufficient and proper food, fresh air, cleanliness, sleep, rest, exercise, the formation of hygienic habits by education, and protection from the elements. Medical men and school nurses may do their part in isolating those with contagious diseases, but if mothers and caretakers continue to disregard the laws of safety, children may develop in cating sweets such as candies, cakes and soda water between meals, or allow the children to sleep in pooey ventilated rooms, or go without food. Children should not receive the proper eight to ten hours' sleep and the proper rest, then, mothers and caretakers are not doing their part in keeping children healthy and well-trained ward of diseases. To our minds the health of the children should be foremost, because the future of our race rests with the children of today. If we were to fail to protect the children, an education today, it will mean disaster for them and the future race.
School-Going Age
Most children spend a part of the period, from 6 or 8 to 17 or 18. at school. Many states have compulsory educational laws that determine this fact. In every intelligent community lantic City. The doctor's health has not been good this summer, which accords with the summer. He hopes, however, to be able to enter school this fall.
Two of Washington's leading cafes have been closed for several weeks undergoing extensive repairs which, when finished, will make them complete in every appointment. The old first class restaurant, Mr. Scott and Mr. Washington, owners respectively of Scott's at 7th and 1st streets and the industrial at 11th price. W. H. have considered too much too pay in making their places a 5t place to eat in.
The announcement that Alruthieus A. Taylor has been elected as professor of mathematics at the West Virginia College Institute will be welcomed by the university, though a very young man, Mr. Taylor is well known as a student and worker in welfare and educational activities. Mr. Taylor made a most spectacular career in the Washington high schools, a college scholarship, an organization and in public speaking remains unsurpassed. He was graduated as valedictorian from the Armstrong Technical High school, winning a college scholarship, with high distinction from the University at Ann Arbor. After serving one year on the faculty of the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, Mr. Taylor studied at Columbia university, social and civic organizations in Washington and New York city. He was formerly secretary of the Tuskegee Association of New York city and is a permanent member of the university. He route to Ann Arbor, Mich., where he will join Mrs. Taylor, who has been spending the summer with her parents. Mr. Taylor will make an extended trip, including stops at Prof. and Mrs. Taylor will he at home in their cottage at West Virginia College Institute after Sept. 16th.
MISSOURI
Jefferson City, Mo. Sept. 5.—Mrs. C. A. Curry and Daniel left for her in Pittsburgh, Pa. Tuesday evening by way of St. Louis. *The recital under the Monday night was a decided success.* Prof. E. L. Anthony, principal of the public school, has moved from his original home, corner Madison and Atchison streets, to 745 Locust street. He is also attending their mother, are expecting Dr. Carriage, brother and son, this week from Kentucky. *A. L. Thomas of Jefferson City, Mo. was elected to an office in the Royal Arch chapter in great relief, in his annual session in Sedalia last week.* *Mrs. Annie Holley, Mrs. Warren, Mrs. Thornton, Mrs. Emma Sexton are among those on the sick list.* *Mrs. Ida Griffin returned home in several weeks.*
Jefferson City, Mo. Sept. 5.—Proof. Clement Richardson, president of Lincoln Institute, and R. W. Stokes, proximate member of the National Nest Business League, attended the annual session in St. Louis last week and report that the session was one of marked success since he was St. Louis recently and was guest of Dr. Rev. A. R. Doblinga, the progressive pastor of Wayman A. M. E. church, corner 23d and Wash streets. The most conscientious and true trial relations—yes, it is expressed by the two as that which existed between David and Jonathan and claim friendship of the first magnate. Mrs. C. W. Curry is planning a trip home to the Smoky city, Pittsburgh, Pa. *Rev. E. J. Dodson of the A. M. E. Zion church had Mrs. Gertrude Perrin, Kansas minister, who has been overseas and the interest of the great cause of missions. Thursday night of last week she rendered a recital. *Martin Wooldridge, who has been overseas is now Louis and they are spending a pleasant stay with his mother, Mrs. L. H. Wooldridge. 331 East Miller street. *Mrs. Fiorenzana, Billy Brilee is expecting a reunion. Tenney Bryan. *Rev. E. L. Serugas of the Second Bantist church he back from his summer vacation after visiting many friends and acquaintances his time at Ann Arbor and Detroit; Mich.; Mommuth, and Jacksonville, Ill. He also has had with him the past week Rev. E. H. McDonald, president of the rotary of the National Baptist convention, who preached for him Wednesday
CHICAGO, SEPT. 6, 1919
the schools are the place to develop the mind of the children, but the schools are the home in developing the body, for the body is a sound body. We cannot give a fixed rule that will hold for every child in school-to-goal age. The decision in school is judgment of the home and the school authorities and they should consider the physical and mental status of the children, the anemic child with poor physical inheritance and with home possibilities of good nourishment and outdoor life; years may be too early; the same children in home is certainly better off in school.
Eye-Strain
Eyes of children should be regularly examined and cared for, avoiding at all times reading by poor light. In the event of an injury over the shoulder and never from the front. When the child complains of its eyes burning, running water or paining, the eyes should have a rest. If the child is not able to study when tired. Too much reading or close work by flickering gas light or brilliant electric light are never good for the eyes and promote headaches as well as young adults brings on nervousness, disorders in menstruation, headaches, insomnia and other disorders that develop in old age. The eyes should be bathed in clear cold water or a. saturated solution of boric acid. The use of various patent eye-washes on the market is not always advisable, but it should be tinted to irritate and imitate the eyes.
Nose and Throat
Many cases of poorly developed and unhealthy children have enlarged tonsils and adenoids. These tonsils and adenoids tend to undermine their ability to breathe in and expand the space for the children and hence they cannot get the proper amount of air in their lungs. Parents should re-examine the lungs of those where the germs of rheumatism, heart disease, running ear disease, inflammation of the mastoid, etc. enter. Both acute and chronic disorders of the lungs are full and prompt attention. Acute tonsils in children should never be looked upon as an unimportant disease, and following such attacks children will suffer and home until they have fully recovered.
Remember, you should protect the
that they have a clean bill of health.
South St. Joseph Mo. Sept. 5, M- and Mrs. Frank Early won the first prize and Willard Gray and Miss Batrice Slaughter won second prize in the Packing Co. at their annual plenice on Aug. 23. *Mrs. Alice H. Barnett of Atchison, Kan., graduate nurse, returned home after completing a professional stay with a case at Epworth hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ross baby Katherine Baby Katherine Osawatome, Kan. last week. *The U. B. of F, and S. M. T.'s closed its annual session here last Friday. There were many notable men and women at the Taylor of Indian Hill, Jenn. H. B. Allon, Taylor of Indian Hill, were recent visitors at the home of Mrs. I. B. Taylor, 307 F. Kansas avenue. *Here the defender will be on sale at Anderson's restaurant, 211 Fifth Avenue, Irving's confectionery, 311 Madison Avenue, South St. Joseph, by the Liberia agency. Get your copy early.
Louisburg, Mo., Sept. 5. Othet B. Pediford, the popular local representative of the Defender, has returned from the Army and is now in Richmond. *Mrs. Misty Mairborne, wife of H. H. Yarbore, continues quite ill. *Junius Littlejohn's residence was completely destroyed by the fire last Friday. He is now in green backs. *Miss Zena Hill has returned to the city after a visit to friends in Sanford. *The Davis-Gatling Drug Co. the first drug company in the country, men, opened its doors here last Tuesday. The proprietors are T. R. Gatling, Ph. G., formerly of Edenton, N. Secretary and manager, and Dr. J. R. Davis, a well known local physician.
St. Louis, Mo. Sept. 5.—Very prominent among the delegates to the Negro Business League were Mrs. Booker T. Washington of Tuskegee, Ala. Mrs. J. Browne of New York, Mrs. T. J. Ellott of Muskogee, Okla. Those indies are life members of the league. * The president, O. L. Lindley, and vice president, John Cochran, of the Twelve Nights club, together with Mrs. J. Browne and Mr. A. Kelly. Coal Co. had an auto autoin honor of Mrs. Banks of Mount Bayou, Mrs. Banks has been the recipient of many courtesies extended by friends in this city.
Canden, Mo. Sept. 5.—Miss Eroshine Williams of Kansas City, Mo., are in Canden visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ell Williams. * Mrs. Annie Williams, Mrs. Merrick Williams, Mrs. Morecile Crew in Fremont Sunday visiting Mr. and Mrs. Harris Foster. Also was a guest at dinner with Mr. and Mrs. H. Poster. Lee Evans was a guest at dinner with Mrs. C. King prescheduled a noble sarm Sunday at C. M. B. church, assisted by Rev. Redd.
Umbrians and Digar's give away $250 before September 21.