Chicago Defender

Saturday, November 26, 1921

Chicago, Illinois

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BIG CROWD TO SEE HOWARD-LINCOLN GAME 11. BEAT MAN, TAKE AWAY HIS WEALTH Georgia Plantation Owners Use Lash to Drive Out Prosperous Farmer --- By Staff Correspondent By Skan correspondence to William W. Wellingham, a former of this place, wage a last year of D Bush, a white donation at Calumon. Wellingham owed Bush $49 for which he gave a note. He later moved from single plantation to that of Hamilton. Wellingham made three bales of cotton and traded one to Marvin Whito in payment for a mule. Abelhart, engaged by the property of his tenaciously neglected him for a slight discount. This was gone in order to involve Wellingham and force him to make literal settlement by confiscating his property of the rough peasant system. Starts Quarrel Washington, D. C., Nov. 25.—In how natives in Haiti were lost in the Haitian wars and care for them were told by F. M. Hillings of new York, a technical company that developed company which had interced in Haiti before the Senate committee in the island republic just prior to it unleashed on its trip to the city of the allied troubles. He said that the natives in Haiti are just like the natives in America. There are good diplomatic relations. There are enough good relations to rule their country independently of outside aid. The citizens of Haiti have a sense of security. It lies in such measures efforts to gain absolute control of the finances and property of the natives and among all classes because of unrest among all classes which the army of overseas forces in two years, F. M. Hillings on Haiti would be able to establish --- Tuskegee Aka. Nov. 25—Dr. J. R. Crossland, the special expert, S. S. Crossland, the chief of Columbia, spent a few days during the post week at the Tuskegee Institute and inspecting in the building of the K. K. Vaccinee Bureau trainees at this institution, to serve with Dr. Crossland in the institute and in the Tompkins during the method of Tuskegee Institute present principal and stated that he who were being rehabilitated The Tuskegee Institute were receiving the instructions of contact and enlistment and also spoke to the internal trainees, advising them of what the government was going to do in the way of rehabilitation of the inmates presented for them to be cared for at Tuskegee. Deputy Hall by Dr. J. R. Crossland the secretary council was present. Football Stars on Howard Eleven # Upper picture, reading from left to right (standing), Donehy, halfback; Payne, fullback; (bending forward) Perry, halfback; Kean, quarterback. Lower left—Capt. Duke Fuller of New Haven, Conn., taking in the words of wisdom from the lips of Dr. W. E. Morrison, who starred at Tufts College of Medford, Mass. Dr. Morrison is a dentist and a football mentor of the first degree, having assisted Charley Brickley of Harvard fame at Boston College. And who wouldn't play football when cheered on by thousands of pretty girls like Miss Ruth Jacobs (left) and Miss Roberta Roberts, who follow every play of the Howard eleven which has not been scored on this year? Murderer Felled by an Unknown Athens, Ga., Nov. 25, 2023—Braeden and bloody, John Map of this city hunted for four days as the slayer of Mrs. Gene Map, wife of his brother, was captured at the home of Ninumcy Kiney on the Clarke Assis in for aid, and brought to a food hospital. The search for Map had followed after he afflicted himself in the home of his brother Gene, stories of the battle differ, but the general idea, gotten from Gene Map and the neighbors, is that he was injured when an argument arises over some trivial family affair. Gene says that he did not know in from his seat, and a gun he began burning away. The first two shots were fired at Gene, but neither took effect. The summum turned three shots from which she died instantly. Before his brother had time to recover from his surprise, the assailant two times immediately put on his trial. For four days they had no success. Then there was a telephone call to help quarter that Ninumcy Kiney that they had described Map had come to his house. Information as to where the attack ended unable. He was in too deep a condition to remember anything. There were scars on his face and head, one of which the physicians at the said said was probably caused by a brick. As soon as his condition persisted, Map will be served with wargrants and an account with intent to kill. MAYOR WINS FIGHT FOR FIVE CENT CAR FARE A big victory for Mayor William Hale Thompson over the traction and other special interests, a 50 per cent saving in the street car money of chicagosians in an eventual benefit to the city. The mayor in Chicago returned to the second战. The fight between the mayor and the city mayor is an eventual benefit most of the daily papers whose revenue is derived from these interests, has been bitter ever since. Mr. campaign for the mayority that the would reduce the fare of chicagos car riders to a reasonable figure. Five cents was presumed. The campaign brought to a head when the United States Supreme Court refused to consider a point in the street car clause in a contract made between the city and car company in 1908. The high court threw the case out of jurisdiction in the matter. This action put the matter of cheaper fares up to the Illinois Commerce Court. The general belief has been that the commission has been in favor of the reduction and that all which was made clear for their action. It was on such an issue as this fares up to the city, the city was elected by the largest plurality given a majority candidate in New York City. Thompson has been in favor of the side because the matter of bish of bish nearly an interest of the poor man who rides in the street cars and of others from them. The rich man profits from the daily papers fighting for them, the poor have had the mayor. The fares will probably soon be a similar cut in other cities of the Middle West, these smaller places usually waiting for the mayor to make decisions. TEAMS ARE FOCH LAUDS READY FOR OUR HEROES BIG GAME FOR VALOR Howard and Lincoln Elevens or Edge for Annual Battle in Philly Thanksgiving Howard— Yang Haik— Fulta (capt.)— Smith— Gee— Melton, Grawford— Nurse— Q.B. Chambers. Lincoln— Yang Haik— Fulta (capt.)— L.E.— Williams Williams Bellinger— Gee— Wilson, Skinner Wilson, Skinner Brown Donghui.....H..H..H..H..H..(capt.) Larry McCormick.....Molson.....H..H..H..H..(capt.) Payne.....F..Bullock..Parr Payne.....Matthew-Matthews..Bentjamin Washington..umpire; L. Wattman..Judge; E. Henderson, headman Bv FRANK YOUNG Philadelphia, Pa., Nov. 23—Stadium, qualing old Philadelphia awoke this morning to bad herself invaded by friends and friends who have been coming in on every train for the big annual game between Lincoln University of Chess and Howard University of Washington, D.C. Friends Today, Strangers Tomorrow Today classmates of years gone by clap hands and between the puffs of smoke of a Pall Mall or Phillip Morris, days gone by—living again in those moments of joy that forever cling to their memory when thought of the good old days on the campus. Business men have worries of the week and have come from all country to the "Annual Classic," as the affair is known. Dr. Alexander they go over by living again in those moments of memory that forever elapse to their memory when thoughtfully good old days on the campus. Business men have worries of the week and have come from all the country to the "Annual Classic," as the known fraternity has men tonight to dance and sing; brotherly love prevails, but tomorrow matters. To the same end, mother. Tomorrow will see many mother's son in sorrow and many a one crowned with the joy of victory, to ship his husky boy on the lodge and proudly exclaim: "Son, I knew it was in you, and on that same morning, we knew you did the best you could and gave all that was in you, and we knew you did the best you could and gave all that was in you, and that makes the man worth the while. Social committees futter here and there. Any number of social affairs with her mother for hours and entertain. Society from many cities will be out in force at the breakfast on the hotel Dale tomorrow morning. Walking down Broad street one has to rub his eyes. Here are folks from New York, so many, many that you know. They are Seventh avenue, and they tell us that the main gang is coming over on three special trains tomorrow morning. There are tans here from every neighborhood, and they are toward 14th street found in us in the midst of a happy, shining throng of Howard students. Here they have surrounded a group of Lincoln men, and they say it is good nature, sing the Howard song, "Oh, Howard, We Sing of Them," but the captives go even by not keeping in time and then at the 14th team. Backers Bet Even Money Backers Bet Even Money There is not a soil money in the whole bunch. Lincoln men are playing it on the ground. How many grads are taking everything in sight. The merits of the two team. (Corelled on Page 10, 19). (Continued on Page 10, Column 1.) Correspondents in the following cities failed to comply with the request published in last week's issue, and as a result their news came too late for publication: Jacksonville, Il.; Eligin, Ill; Cramford, N. J.; Paris, Ky. Portland, O. N.; Albany, Neb. Lynchburg, Va.; Quincy, N. Benton Harbor, Mich.; Colli- ton, N. J.; Corpus Christi, Pa.; Grand Chanin, Ill.; Kokomo, Ind.; Milwaukee, Ill.; Peoria, Ill.; Geneva, Ohio; Kalamazoo, Mich.; Palmville, Ohio; Ojai, Ill.; Pocatontas, Ohio; Champaign, Ill.; Connec- ville, Ind.; Metropolis, Ill. This news will be published next week. Howard University Confers Degree on Distinguished French Commander France. Shall Not Forget Marsal Fech in responding to the greeting of Howard university, said "I find it very easy to express my gratitude for the reception accepted me, when I receive the commendable and indispensable service rendered by the Colored troops upon the soil of France. The soldiers contributed largely in the war. I knew also that through the love and learning as manifested for France that the soldiers actuated by these impulses gloriously fought in France the bonds of many of your beloved comrades. France shall not forget the magnificent efforts of Howard university made by the Colored soldiers, the shodding of their blood upon the altar of freedom shall mark an important action. I can assure you that the French people are invading both love and care upon the tomb of the soldiers whose bodies are now in France." SERVED 50 YEARS AT ONE JOB: PAID HIGH TRIBUTE Am Arlor, Mich., Nov. 23, W.-T. (Charlie), Johnson, who died T. Thursday night, Nov. 18, at the residence of G. W. Gough, 48 Elizabeth street, was born in this city, Oct. 26, 1853. Alpha Delia phi university house for more than 50 years. His body lay in state Sunday from 6 o'clock in the morning. South State street, after which services were held by the students. The University of Michigan presided. The Masons then took charge of the body, holding services at the A. M. Muske plaza, in full regalia, as phallus led by St. Marry Lodge No. 4, F. and A. M. Muske was dressed by Conn. Muske, in a solo by Sir Knight J. A. White, accompanied by Mrs. Ethel Cromwell, Grand of St. Marry Lodge as the body was hoveted to its last resting place under an arch of steel. The University house accompanied the body to the church and cemetery. Among the many flowers placed by the fraternity house, Mr. and Mrs. Horszag of Boston Harbor, Mich., and Joseph S. Horszag of the funeral, Mr. Johnson leaves a host of friends to mourn his loss. CONGRATULATE HARDING Nashville, Nov. 25—A letter from Nashville was sent to President Bradley by the CHI Chapter of Alma Phi Alpha fraternity at Materbury Medical College for the speech delivered in Hirringham. ESCAPES FROM COPS ESCAPES FROM COPS Columbus, Ga. Nov. 25—E. C. Griffin, who was charged with treating automobile tires in Birmingham, Ala., on the train while he was being taken from here to the Alabama city. BUD Billiken Is a Sensation With the Little Kids Read His Column on Page 8 A Weekly Feature Fisk University Gets Help From Carnegie Fund Fisk University Gets Help From Carnegie Fund New York, Nov. 25. With Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va.; Cornell College, M. Vernon, Iowa; and Converse College, Spartanburg, S. C. Fisk University, Nashville, Tenn. has been admitted to the benefits of the Carnegie Foundation to the Advancement of Teaching. This step was decided upon at a meeting of the board of the five members of the 52nd (fifth) anniversary Fisk University is the first institution of the Race to be offered the benefits of this fund. At the institution, financial aid has created a feeling that the road to more accommodations for the constantly increasing number of children. Although this new aid may not take the form of providing more buildings, it will undoubtedly serve in a capacity to relieve money being used for something else. Tignor Suicide or Foul Play? Washington, D. C., Nov. 25.—So many tragedies have interrupted the careers of many of Washington's professional men in the last few years, that consternation and dread were written on the faces of people here when news of the mysterious disappearance of Attorney Harry Tilner, former chief of the district, was first brought to light. The general theory of the attorney's disappearance hung on suicide. Little is known about the friends concerning the more intimate affairs of his business, but there has been nothing to serve as the source of the tragedy. He was unable to take his life because of sustained circumstances. His friends are one in their belief that if he is dead, and by his own hand, some other motive had business must* have moved The suicide theory seems, however, to be the only logical one to believe in the possibility of a murder, authorities and friends of Tignor. This theory has been upheld in a chain of discoveries which make it appear more evident every hour that the note was written on the counter, Baitington and Norfolk. In investigation of the stateroom which he is alleged to have occupied disclosed a note and a hat which he is supposed to have written. In a hand similar to Tignor's and read that he intended to commit suicide. Whether the note is genius or not is not known. It is believed that the note may have been forged and that the lawyer may have been the victim of foul play. The answer to any persons who may have had a desire to effect the disappearance of Tignor. In the light of this theory it seems that the number of cases which Tignor prosecuted and which may have been the cause of creating enmities for him. POLICE AUTOS TAKE PLACE OF YELLOW TAXIGARS SERMON IS CUT SHORT BY DEATH Church Worshipers in Panic as Heart Failure Silences Religious Leader When he Rev Harry O Neal, Pastor, minister, 2840 State street, west to the R. K. P. U. meeting at Plymouth Baptist church, 25th street and Indiana avenue, at 8:30 Colbeth. Sunday afternoon, he did not know that he had come to the house, but he had to never left it alone. A heart failure prevailed him. While the program was being re-enacted by the pastor, Dr. J. E. Jones. The two ministers were good friends and Dr. Jones approached "So glad to see you," said the pastor, as he grasped his colleague by the hand. "Won't you preach for me tonight?" said to hear you speak "the other smiled 'But I'll do the best I can,' I will tell you I know about Jesus." Apparced Healthy At the conclusion of the B. V. P. meeting the two ministers requested to the pastor's study to sow the seeds they talked to. Rec. O'Neal, according to the pastor, was in the best of spirits: apparently, he was "being well physically." At the pastor's study, he studied the pulpit and frowned more later. Rec. O'Neal began his discourse other foundation can no longer lay than that is bad, which is deserved Christ." This was his text, and "Christ is a Foundation." was his subject. The foundation delivers his sermon in a calm, straightforward manner, and while doing so exhibited no sign of mental or physical weakness. But he was concluding his discourse. He was closing thought and was saying: "Christ is the foundation of the whole church. He is the foundation of believers hope and the Christian faith." Drops to Floor The sentence was never finished. The speaker was strenuous silent and he dropped the phone to the floor after his fall, and with the assistance of others, carried the minister into his after his fall, and with the assistance of others, carried the minister into thinking he had merely fainted. But a physician, Dr. Lewis, was in the audience. He was summoned quietly minutes later he pronounced Rev. O'Neal dead. The body was removed to R. H. Metacosta's undertaking. Rev. O'Neal came to Chicago several years ago from New Orleans, La, and for some time was pastor of a missionary member of klondike Baptist church, from which his funeral will be held. The time has not yet been announced. He is survived by a wife. "I had a feeling, a pronouncement that something was going to happen in my study," said the pastor. "Sorachow, his and I were received to I. sensed his coming. Never before have I had such a encounter." "TOM" ALLEN APPOINTED U. S. DEPUTY COLLECTOR Through the endorsement of United States Senator Mo McCormick of Wisconsin, the team has been appointed deputy collector for the First district of Illinois in the internal revenue service. This position has been held by only one deputy collector since the late Major John C. Buesner. Mrs. Allen, familiarly referred to as "Tom" by his friends, is well known as a collector of the country. He entered politics when a resident of the South and was elected twice as delegate to the national Republican convention over 60 years ago and has been active in many civic movements. He served as clerk in the census office, having served as social secretary in the recommendation of Congressman James K. Mann of Illinois. At the last judicial coalition movement in Wisconsin, the team recommended that included the south side-Mayor Thompson's strength APPROVES DYER BILL Washington, D. C., Nov. 25. Attorney General Lamberty is reported to Dyer anti-bitching bill is constitutional and that it should be passed. Dyer anti-bitching bill is constitutional and that it should be passed. Dyer anti-bitching bill is on the ground that it is interfered with state sate immunity and that the state should be responsible for the enforcement of criminal laws. Dyer repudiation of Missouri, the spouses of Dyer, that probably no action on the bill would be taken at this special session, would again at the next general session. Congressmen Ready to Stop Lynching by Vote --- POLL OF HOUSE MAKES DYER BILL A LAW FAVORITE ```markdown ``` Canvass Among Representatives Shows Attitude Against Mob Rule will do everything in my power to prevent or end this business of this business, and to need to such measures as I may de- fer to Ryan (New York). I am in favor of the enactment of the Pier Antichrist Bill, known by the acronym "P.I.B." — M. O. Me- ghelin (Nebraska). I am highly in favor of the Pier Antichrist Bill and will do what I have made every effort possible to out of the judiciary committee which I am a member, and I will be the colored people of New York. I know my attitude on this subject Walter. M. Gandrelle (New York) in favor of the Pier Antichrist Bill or any other bill that has the protection of this crime for purpose, and I am endeavor to hope that the Pier Antichrist Bill will be law — Will it. R. Wood childress. I, as a member of the judiciary minute of the house of represen- tatives, and I am endeavor to hope the Pier Antichrist Bill. An in favor of it on principle, believe in its justice, integrity, and shall support it of the house — I, M. O. Me- ghelin (Nebraska). I am in heart accord with the revelation of this bill and shall give the same support"—Charles T. Pierce (Kentucky) It is my intention to support this bill when it comes for consideration in the house"—L. S. Ehols (West Virginia) I am in favor of this legislation I will vote for the same when it comes for action on the floor of the House"—Frederick N. Zulman (Maryland) I favor the Dear bill and will vote for the Chardan Lumpur" (Wisconsin) I am pleased to advise you that the measure, and shall support it, comes up on the floor of the House"—Kahn (California) I will—and have advised this bill"—Marion E. Sloan (Maryland) I wish to inform you that the Dear Draft Bill"—R. E. Oden OVER $7,000 IS RAISED BY FLEET STREET CHURCH N. A. Nov. 25. With all amount of $1,000 their street A. W. M. Zion church which the Rev. W. M. Brown is the plan of the rally was a sweep up up much inter- section there being five persons to division. Each class leader was a number of divisions W. M. Arthur's division raised the largest amount $215. His class was $722. The Rev. W. M. Wat- terson's class had $72. This organs every year there is a rally. the Rev. W. M. Arthur or Matta- ton's leader they have been named. Brother of the church. The Sunday school, which Frank Ray is a superintend- ral raised $1,200. The Rev. W. M. Brown and the officers are made under present financial con- trol in the city. WARM ROOMS AT IDLEWIL HOTEL 50, CAST 33D STREET. HOBBS & GRUBB 454 East 47th St. Kenwood 798 2 PLATS and Charleston Ave. North Front 2 Trees East Kenwood Ave. Front HOBBS & GRUBB Sine Wavelength Wave-Mode Transducer Sine wave, sinus, gas light, a nandy sine wave, sinus, gas light, a nandy 3 FLATS NEW LAMP BURNS 94% AIR Dr. Williams Tells Defender Readers of Travel and Beauty in Foreign Lands We are to foresee seriously the Pan-African congress. The organization purposes to bring together all nations in the organization in its installation and conference the intelligence and forward Ladies from all parts of the world, to discuss the problems of all nations interested in pursuing issues of honor, fair dealing in contests of honor, this plan also in contests of honor, this world wide question and its admissibility seriously and honorably in accord with the truths discovered in the proceedings of the treaty relations that has treatment of race relations that has treatment within this century. Dr. DuBois in organizing this conference has been the chief organizer of the Pan-African congress and philanthropy. Houses of their great confidence in the University of the Republic of Dr. DuBois, the American University, which is to conduct the first Pan-African congress which is not in Paris in 1915, during the meetings of the sessions of the second Pan-African Congress which is not in London University and Paris during the days of the delegation was the largest attending these meetings. The American view was able and powerfully maintained by Dr. DuBois both in assembly and in conference meetings. Makes Study Describes Scenes On a hard marmor read by various winds, we climbed to a height of 4,000 feet. Below were the clouds and and grow a jacaranda lance over which were felling the storms, hardy lions Swiss mallows, the mainstay of Swiss human life. Above our heads we snow cover peaks glistening between these peaks and between these peaks lay the glacier age long accumulations of snow turned into ice, from which flow numbless streams and torrents. To the south of the glacier, in a sturdy Swiss poorest fight unhospitable nature for a meager existence, content. It would seem of the peak but cat, sheep and doe surroundings, appear to be a happy and prosperous people. The economic A revolution in hotel employment in Chicago and elsewhere may be the outcome of the bringing to this city by Mr. Cornell, one of the proprietors of the fashionable Hyda Park hotel, of an entire crew of cooks and bakers of the hotel, who were wiled who had been employed by the hotel. Cornell made his decision darling the past summer while in Lexington. Ky. There he took his meals at a New York restaurant at the Hyde Park hotel and Mr. Evans' boys are turning out the goods to a thousand of these particular folks each day. The boys Mr. Evans has with him are: George Radley, assistant chef; John Hawkins, chef; Jacky Cook, Allen Hawkins, cooks; John Spears, head baker; John Fields, assistant baker; John Williams, butcher; and Arthur Balliner, swing man. There are also two girls in the Nellie Petty and Mary Ann Managers of Hyde Park hotels are involved in the various establishments there and it is being freely produced in these places. There is a possession in the near future because of the record which the famous Evans is able to hang up in a few weeks. Ace Mendelkin, 1732 Fulton street, run, bathes and breaths, into the Warren avenue station, and reported that he had just been held up and taken to the hospital held a gun to his head and took $45 from him. Captain Thomas Pilkington assigned officers to take the gun. A few days they had arrested Wilhelm Levy, 244 Lake Street, Jacksonville, Florida. Browne, 25, 18, 1532 Fulton street, Forest Canary, 25, 112 South Jefferson Avenue, and Harry Wilhelm was charged with the robbery, which the others were held to a charge of conspiracy to rob. It was later determined that the pistol on the door in the store that finally gave information as to where the money could be found, that Lewis the others had purported to have had formerly worked at the store. BY DR. A. WILDER FORCE WILLIAMS continuing follow the European to- war have not depressed Swiss de- money very much but little battery of sickness is the basis of the battles of be- autiful staging to show the flowers and beauty of tiny Miles of actions, dis- persed by the wind, surrounded by women possessed of beauty and charm not suppressed any- where in all the world while over the sieses played awards of cherished fried children. There is no race sin- cible in Italy. Everywhere and seem- ing conditions are one arm of children. Not however in Europe that we have not done so we see the pilots in England on the continent in children are about as quiet as the proven-ups. You sometimes wow- er if this child were not made by Regretted to Leave We had, of course, to leave surmounting so pleasing and people so sincere, interesting and courteous, to our second reason for coming to Europe was to study at one of the Paris hospitals. So, from beautiful Carrion, where we wished to remain in the heart of the silk growing district of Italy, famed in history as the capital of the iron crowned Lamandi lions, now known for its factories and its cathedral, second only to St The next point at which we stopped to visit the ruins of Roman greatness is the tomb of the goddess of the once "Mistress of the world". But, there is standing in Rome a monument symbolizing a Roman authority held by all the Caesars. It is the Church of St. Peter's, the pride of millions who find solace in the tomb of civilization or alone on the sounds of the desert. But St. Peter's is something more than that: it is one more resting place was Nice, the capital of art and architecture to be found anywhere. From Rome our next resting place was Nice, the capital of art and architecture to be found anywhere. On our way to this point we stopped over night at Génie, the birthplace of Columbus, and saw the morning before leaving his home. At. Moote Carlo At Nice we enjoyed the rest by the Mediterranean sea, bathing in its waves and resting on the clear, sunny shores. We hope we visited Monte Carlo, a place now strange and interesting to an American in spite of all he may have read about it city, the capital of France, a beautiful, rugged rocks of the Alps, hanging near 17 the sea, the home of nearly 60,000 people, the clearest, most beautiful city in the world in Monaco is a prinnipality with a government all its own; it has reached the ideal of what seems the ambition of all statemanships in the world. Nobody in this little kingdom by the sunny sea pays any taxes. The tables, the wheels and cards in the old buildings constructed from the first stone, whose walls are covered with the artistic creations of the masters, the gambler's passion supports this seemingly impossible project, but we cannot see their taxes. Through these art, beautiful halls, young, old and male and female, seeking something for notation to come, an aura fragrant or two Here Is a Man Who Asks for Peace, Justice "Although I am a Caucasian, I have read with much satisfaction your publication, and know that you speak the truth when you complain of the gross insults heaped upon me many years ago, or I might say since I have been able to think for myself, I have given the Race question serious thought, and I understand why the white race should discriminate as they do because a great source of satisfaction to me to point out a Colored man in my employ to some of my white friends, they could all improve their conditions were they to follow his example. Perhaps I might relate how and why I came by this Colored man." "About a year and a half ago, when I was manager for a large company, I was asked to give a few answers in aid for salesmen, and although nothing was mentioned as to color, this gentleman asked me if he was employed in one of the New York hot-els as an elevator operator, which, you will admit, is a business. However, he thought that he could make good, and I gave him his chances. In the course of my career, he has met a man is a man, irrespective of color or race, by befitting into the house some very desirable binstones, of his connections with me, he was earning on an average of about $10 per week. Besides this, he has met a man who is not the corporation that I now head, namely, his extreme honesty, his care and, I might add, his dollars, yet unpredictable. Sam currency, and I have yet to find his accounts anything but but further the care, and I might add that he has not made any unpaid groceries, which is more than I can afford, some white men that I have entrusted. "It is perhaps time that the white race awoke to the fact that if given kills a chance, in the majority of cases, will without doubt succeed. Wishing your paper all the success in the world in the task of having the qualities of the black man, the qualities of the white man, and assuring you that a man is a man with us, as long as he conducts himself with us, I beg to remain, Yours for the day," S. SHENBER, President Frederick Spencer & Co. Inc. 15 Market street, Newark, N.J. GROCER BEATEN BY THUSS Siron, Pa. Nov. 15—Grittin Eva was beaten severely over the head by two highwaymen who sought to rob his store. After hearing Eva the team was on the lookout for the theft. THE CHICAGO DEFENDER to boast, ruined hopes to others and death in the kind, pride-giving赴 to others; but always money to the enemy. So much for people and society. Bents Higab In England rents are high, honeys are scarce and large numbers of men are out of employment, but there is one very interesting instance of this is a proposal in England to attempt to raise rents in England to a new $2 per person, and it is proposed to change it to $1.5 per person. In France there have been surpluses of such a serious nature as to require utilization of the central government. In Italy there is much serious interest and security of food because of some improvement in the west European countries, still conditions are far from satisfactory, and one cannot help wondering as to the possible We were naturally interested in the colored people found in Europe—and in some, when we are engaged in geographical, such as tailoring and importing. A large number of our own Americans are here as musicians and musicians of special interest to the people of Chicago—Mas Bessie Coleman, planner Negro aesthetics, led the of Fock and member Aero Club of France. Miss Coleman at one time conducted a business in Chicago. It was a plausible idea, but the Professor of Chicago and New York once a member of the Provident hospital staff. The Europeans of color differed more in their individualistic, while the American thinks in group terms. This difference of view has harmed them by exaggeration and Congress will do much to aid. CHURCHES ASK PUBLIC TO AID STARVING BURSIA Congregational churches throughout Illinois will contribute or pledge money for the support of hospitals in the Near East Relief, on Sunday, Nov. 20, in accordance with a resolution adopted by the National Council of Congregational Churches, which made a pledge to the Near East Congregational minister in the state has received copies of letters and catalogs describing scenes in which children are dying of starvation on the Near East and southern Russia. Dr. William E. Barton, moderator of the Council of Congregational Churches of the North, first Congregational church of狄林 Park, in a letter to F. J. Michel, ex-missouri minister of the Near East Rollo gold: "The National Council of Congregational Churches which met at Los Angeles on the tragedy of Armenia and joined in asking all our churches to present and make generous contributions. Thanksgiving. It will become your duty to remind the Congregational Council that we are at liberty, if you wish, to say that this church, which heard the story a year ago and made a generous contribution year, it is a matter of life and death to thousands of Christ's children. It is not the will of our heavenly Father of these little one's ghosts' parish." The ministers are reminded that the Turks and other Moslems to ex-mergers of the women and children in the Bible lands is due to the determination of the Turks and other Moslems to ex-mergers controlled by the Mohammedans, and that without America's aid those women will escribe. Contributions are to be sent to the Illinois headquarters of Near East Relief, 19 South LaSalle street, Chicago. Los Angeles, Calif., Nov. 25.—Under the direction of Noad D. Thompson, a member of the editorial department of the Los Angeles Times, his subscribers go to that paper are being signed up in the journal's huge and most insurance proposition. The paper gives free travel accident insurance to all of its subscribers without any strings, save being a subscriber to the paper and the necessary contract or policy. The premiums to be paid go as high as $100 for severe injuries incurred from 15 years of age to 75, with no physical examination. The National Casualty Company guarantees that any person will pay, for accident to the insured, while traveling as a fare passenger on a passenger car, motor stage, or while riding in or driving a privately owned motor car or horse drawn vehicle the premiums to Express cards for its subscribers. Stop WHITE WOMEN SAY MOB RULE IS UNNECESSARY Alabama Social Leaders Make Plans for Inter-Racial Improvement Birmingham, Ala. Nov. 25. The Alabama women's committee on inter- racial cooperation, composed of out- sisting women from all sections of the state, are interested in inter- racial problems, have set forth their plans in the following summary: To work for a better understand- ment between the races. To see that the law is unheld to the letter. To put down latching. To make an intimate study of racial matters which confront the South which are of vital interest to our students and schools in cooperation with the faculty for the common good of all, to preserve the racial integrity of the races. Thus, the old racial question is being put up to the public in a new way. The question, "Are you interested in races?" is being advanced by an organization of 290 women, who have just assessed at Montgomery and their peers. For years adopted and work accomplished at the initial meeting are attentive to the racial issues. For the first time white women of a Southern state have founded a "fighting the interests" group. First Such Expression Mrs. Charles J. Sharpe of Birmingham is the chairman of the committee governing the chairmen and Mrs. Corey Rimchart of Birmingham secreting a memorandum to all the committee members, in which they are the first definite expressions by Southern women on the question of race. The report of the findings concludes that "in organizing the women's section of the Alabama state committee on race, we have moved by a sense of responsibility in sharing in the solution of this great work problem." We have found the fact that the hate war intensified racial feeling throughout the world; that our strategic situation in America lapses upon an unusual opportunity of demonstrating methods of racial adjustment. We have a widespread disregard for both moral and civil law. Crime waves are engulfing a nation; social unrest is seething in the streets; and moral issues are being observed. Therefore, we hasten to declare that laws of our state and nation, through the daily constituted officials who are known and are responsible for their Want Laws Enforced : We pledge ourselves to endeavor to establish a school which will establish justice and rightness in our own state for every human being of whatever race or nationality. Therefore, we recommend that the woman's action of the Alabam state committee on inter-racial relations organize itself for study and investigation of these matters in order that we shall be involved in the activities of the state committee. SOCIETY HERE AND THERE Rockford, IL—Lincoln-Hoppe, son of Mrs. Belle Whayne of 1899 Street, returned home last week from the weeks the guest of Mrs. Mary Wilson. Joliet, IL—Miss. Donnie Lee Sappington of Atlanta, Ga., is in the city the guest of Mrs. G. C. Wyatt, H. Davis street. Detroit, Mich.—Pearl Amuens, formerly of Detroit, was called to lie home in Ketter, O. to attend the funeral of the other, who died in last week. Hempstead, Long Island — Mrs. Ross Brown, a native of Whitehaven, Canada, is in the city to visit her father and sister. Mrs. Brown is also going to her home in New Orleans, La. FIND BODY OF MURDERED WOMAN IN JERSEY WOODS Secretary Lake A. N. New York body of Mrs. Henrietta Turner was found Nov. 14, south of Vermont avenue, by John Hardy (white), a hunter, the woman had evidently been imprisoned. Her clothing was turned to shirts. County Physician Jamison said the woman had died from a compression of the brain and double fracture of the two bones. There was a knife wound in the left side, with the blade of a penknife in a rib. Published May 6, 1855, by ROBERT S. ABBOT, LL. B. Vol. XVI, No. 48 November 24, 1855. Published by THE ROBERT S. ABBOT PUBLISHING COMPANY (incorporated) CHICAGO - 5425 Indiana Ave. Tel. Douglass 617 Exposed as second matter February 1, 1866, at the Puducherry to Chicago, Ill., court act of March 1, 1857. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Payable in Art. 10, 1857, at $1.25. --- --- Every Puff of Pipe Seemed to Lengthen Life Every Puff of Pipe Seemed to Lengthen Life Bombers Play Hand in Denver Denver, Colo. Nov. 25—Corporate politics and inefficiency in the municipal administration of affairs are being charged with responsibility for the bonding to which Denver citizens are being subjected. For the second time in five months the home of Charles E. Starr, 2112 Gilpin street, was designated this week. Mr. Starr, his wife and his three-year-old daughter all escaped incarceration and were broken and the front completely destroyed. The landlord is said to have grown of a long row between Starr and the city park, and those white families have wished to save him to move and to sell his home. He is less than he paid for the property, but in the city park department, has steadily refused to do. On the day of the bonding, however, he had agreed to a sainthood suitable to both parties. Now Starr says he will not move. After the bomb was thrown from an automobile came to the front of his ride, he was hit by his ride. A curious coincidence of the affair was the fact that at the time he was in the house, ailing was in any of them. That has best strength to the supply chain, that the police are in an effort to fix blame upon a certain organization with a little sounding notice. The city police department offered a reward of $250 for the capture of the guilty parties and the National Consedent for the bombing, which cost $290, despite the virtues of the outrage and their friends below that under a different administration of the city's administration from doing their dirty work. McAster, Ohio. Nov. 25. — A blind musician did a bit of detective work here a few days ago. There has been a new band named Lilian Simpson when Stuart Lilian was the town's clerk. The blind man was stopping at the roaming house of a man named Lilian Simpson when Stuart Lilian was the town's clerk for a $10 bill. Lilian passed the bill to the blind man. Proving that some sense of touch is more acute than the countertact at once, it is said to be one of the eleventh over man, and in only one patienter was it tested. The test added the "t" in dollars, which is preceded by the word "Ta." The test came was made possible by trays of food, while it did not modulate the total bills, furnished the necessary figures to place upon the $1 bills. EMMA WILSON TYLER DIES EMMA WILSON, Sieh. Nov. 25. — On Nov. 13 the funeral of Mrs. Emma Tyler was held at the A. M. E. Funeral Home, degree of A. B. from Lake Forest University, in Illinois. She was the institution. After choosing the third institution, after choosing the second two years at Forsyth Academy, in Philadelphia, at Ohio Hospitals Institute, in New York, and at Columbia College, in Maryland, Tox. Her life in the community where she, the River was one of services, and was attended by contributions and legion of thanks. MOTHER ASKS TO HAVE ERRING GIRL ARRESTED "Honor the father and the mother than thy days may be long upon the land which the Lord thy God giveeth thee. The well known lathbed trees are the mankind of their parents to whom they are a child of deep payment. Some children are strong enough to say, do not. And when a child, however young or old, fails to be taught, who went through the valley of death or its existence, it brings pour to the heart of the mother, and also brings the child within the palsy. And today the heart of Mrs. Rachel mother of those daughters, 18 when she was always called "Baby, has caused to honour or even regarded as mother. She is Mrs. Murray, Wife 22, 1872. Providing to her mother, Mrs. James who is now living at 443 Chipmunk revenue, Mrs. Weir has broken her "I love my children," said Milda Harnes and I waved for the children to get at Ummie, S. U., until they grew up and married. One by one she left home and came to Ummie. She was the mother of the children. After the passing of many months I grew bourne me. I wanted to see my children and call the children one more time and also my home with one of my girls. — she is in October, about five months away from my daughter Martha. I did know the kind of life my Martha was living, she taught me how to care for her, strive for my heart; and still surrounded when I discovered that my children had taken another man that big wife and while living with him infinitely, running a disarrayed life. At home I talked to my girl about the way she was living; I paused with her to TRAINMAN E. F. RAFFERTY SAYS HE WAS LUCKY SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1921 Vote give up this married man, but my please has given me a chance to help me stand it for a white receive it was hard for me to live in that kind of environment or my own innovation. And Friday night I removed my please to my child again; then, more obeyed me to pass my trunk and get me. I accompanied with her and she self-rolled the trunk. Then she got her re- ceive and threw it on me. She would have shot me, but the man with the helmet out the back way and went out the night and into the placing him to find shelter some- "Now I'm living with my other Champion someone. I but a lot of silverware and nice things in my trunk, but Marissa stole them from would rather see her succeed and would rather see her succeed and just belong to living as she is, and I want a warrant to be issued to restrain my silver. Can I get it? This question the mother asked court Monday morning. Englewood "Just see the police on your digi trict," he told her. STEEL BUSINESS Dr. Fred H. Rubel, D.C. Doctor of Chiropractic 404-1 Indiana Avenue Phone Dresel 1922 Dr. Fred H. Rubel, D.C. Doctor of Chiropractic 404-1 Indiana Avenue Phone Dresel 1922 If you are sick and have tried everything else without satisfactory results, why not try Chiropractic adjustments and get well. CHIROPSACTIC MAYES Sets of Teeth ..... $2.00 and up Fillings ..... 1.00 and up Crowns ..... 1.00 and up The Hayes Dental Offices 21 East Van Buren St. Isabella Bidg. Between Wabash and State Harmond rings as low as $1 per week. All diamond jewels. Has been refined. Lay's ring. Wearable. Watches at Prices A within reach of all EDWARD DYSON C. J. P. P. Y. N. , representing Wrox Representing Wrox Strategic Consultant TEXAS OIL BULLETIN ABSOLUTELY FREE With any deposit of $100 or more field company at JILBERT JOHNSON & COMPANY For 12 Years, Oil Operators and Brokers Sale 95% W. Wagner Bldg. P. W. Waltham ARRINGTON'S RESTAURANT 3502 State Street Try our high grade sea foods. After theater and cabaret service our specialty. Prices reasonable. Satisfaction guaranteed. OPEN ALL NIGHT EYE, EAR, NOSE, THROAT TROUBLES All knives treated by our experts—23 Years on State Street. Great Eyes Straightened after surgery. Eyes crowned by two slight shapes fitted $3 and up. Wears for Two Books. BANK IN O. CARTER, M.D. 120 S. State St. (flours) 5 to 3 Sunday 10 to 12 Homeless Oklahoma Riot Victims Ask Public Aid --- ```markdown ``` SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1921 SECRET ORDER GOES TO AID OF STRICKEN TULSA Pisa, Italy, Nov. 25—The American Woodson with headquarters at Baltimore, Md., organized an event to actually offer its financial support to victims of the rot in the city. The event was held when L. Hargreaves, supreme chief of the order, ordered the city and held a conference of the Gust Lead council, committee of the property conditions and attended to secure necessary loans that would be necessary on behalf of the city or be held, pleased with the work the committee had done thus far, such a limited amount of Hold Mass Meeting Renewed interest in the relief work was stimulated when a large mass march on North Greenwood avenue. Bennett were read giving a detailed account of the committee's activities, and how the money she sent by committee had been used to relieve suffering. At this hearing Attorney B. L. Saddler of Tulsa and Illinois State of Missouri speeched. They told the audience the treatment of the dead cases. They have now been able to claim claims filed against them. The police but not the victims being carried in the district court against the city. This petition has been a common affair in the city, and the police have been aggressively fought at the witness of the case. Due to the fact that it is being heard by officials here charges should be closed to public. The Danger Point: The commission for the construction of a new building at the University of Texas at Austin will prove that the city of Texas was willing to construct the building for the university, despite the opposition of the city. This difference on construction should be signed state- wide by all students who want to be involved in the construction of the building and the official development. Following the commission, the city will begin construction of the building on campus. From campus bodies and offices from central Presidency schools of the University of Texas at Austin will be involved in the construction of the building. Kaitlin Tharp will be involved in the construction of the building and the Virginia Nor- thern Industrial Institute for Petroleum and the University of Texas at Austin. The commission will be under Salmons supervision and will with the Mass- sachusetts Institute of Technology Com- mission. Makes Report Often a position the committee compiles a statement, given to by the treasurer and usually copies to the treasurer. The statement is then distributed to the Black Bottom, Oldham, the Okean and the First National Bank of Hobart, Okean, the latter institute serving as a depository for contributions. It was the idea of the committee to appoint or organize throughout the company by working out a public statement, and the undertaking would be almost complete and the money thus expended would be used for actual transactions. The statement is then sent and in the country the country at large of the needs and depend on companies to provide them direct and indirect contributions and enables the committee to wider the scope of work. MRS. MOUZON DIES Bingham, N. W., Nov. 25. Mrs. Martie Morgan, 35 years old, was born in The Bronx. She was born before her 1820s birth. She was a native of Colleenston, N. W., and was one of the most notable of the Brookdale sisters, who she highly regarded as a model for the Bronx. Montgomery was born in Brookdale. DID PAIN DISTURB YOUR SLEEP? THE pain and torture of abhornism can be quickly relieved by an application of Sloan Liniment. It brings warmth and comfort and lets the sleepers always have a bottle handy and apply when you feel the first twinge. It is good to take the pain out of tired, aching muscles, sprains and strains, stiff joints, and lame backs. Years past pain cures. Ask your neighbor. At all drugists—35c, 70c, $1.49. Sloan Liniment Pains enemy DAZZLING, SPARKLING SWAZI DIAMONDS Foots them all. Costs 30 times less 1 4012 60041 SEND NO MONEY C. B. HOME COMPANY N. M. Lee Hrd. Dept. 10X, Carson This Coupon Worth 20c COL. 41 CENTER STREET DAYTON, OHIO All Dressed Up Premier Vichard of France, during his visit to this country, was started by an elaborate costume worn by two members of the governor's military, basketry and French colonial troops. They were mounted before M. Vichard for his particular inspection. "Magnificent," he explained. The costume was designed by Col. Arthur Little of the 15th Regiment and is quite unlike any costume he has seen before. The choreography is in brown. The jacket is a tight fitting affair of French horizon blue and the knickerbockers are red. Black hats and stockings complete the uniform and the entire costume has the appearance of the French Zouave costume. Col. Little expects the new uniform will materially help in Leaders of They Smile; Race Plan They Kiss; Congress Then Tears Boston, Mass., Nov. 25—Robert S. Abbott, editor of the Chicago Leader, and Dusse Mohamed of London, editor of the Oriental and African Spokespersons at a mammoth mass meeting of the National Equal Rights League, held in this city at the 12th Baptist church for the purpose of meeting to the second world democracy congress of the Race, which is to meet in Washington, 13 f., Dec. 15 at the Metropolitan Church in Chicago. ident of the Equal Rights League, read the formal call for this race convention, which will hold sessions in Washington, D.C., and hold it at the same place where delegates to the peace conference were elected in 1855. The aim of this world congress is to affirm the members of the limitation of armed conference the need of the Colored races enjoying the world democracy for which they are being held in Washington has not felt the necessity of treating these problems which concern us most. American lynchings have come up. The intention of the members of the December congress is to have these problems addressed every year will be put forth to have the American congress press the Dyer Anti-Lynching bill. It is felt that this congress will press for us to influence our influence. The call for the congress involves equal rights leagues, new or old bodies everywhere to send delegates. Representations from all such organizations shall have two votes, and shall be given one vote. Information regarding the congress may be obtained from the Equal Rights Association, William Moore Trustee, Cherrill Hill, Boston, or James W. Trest, at 101 West 1st, N. W. Washington, D.C. The mass meeting gave Robert S. Abbott, editor of the Defender, a salute and salutation when no other public attention was given to the matter that other people might see. James P. Harris, 43rd East Street, claimed that while he was entertaining the Misses Lillian Williams and Carrie R. Davus in his room, Mrs. Williams relieved him of his role as a housekeeper. He was not satisfied that the bad weather had put his burry put some money in his house band. The women who live at 2121 West 42nd Street are housed in a condominium leading to the evidence Harla caused their arrest, and was in turn arrested by officer Holmes and charged with misdemeanor wound. All police officers were reunited before Judge John R. Newcomer of the Harrison court court. Mrs. Purcell Wins Prize at Florida State Fair VOTES FIRST AT 107 A few years ago in first Chicago, Charles Mitchell lived in a cottage, with his wife. The neighbors declared that they were a happy couple and seemed to live sobly for each other. Imagine their conversation when it became known that they was solden at home any more. His wife's eyes were often contorted by crying, for a little scapegoat learned to look for the enemies of Alberta Brooks, a daughter of a neighbor. Alberta had no scapegoats and was solden at home, bound of another. A year later there was separation, and the two who owned their docks to the public street. Mrs. Mitchell was attacked in her home with a butcher's knife and stained Mitchell and Alberta dled the little Indiana town under cover of dark streets. They lived new as man and wife. For a while they seemed to be contented. The room they occupied after a days work on the Brooks would often look into the glowing coals, and be imprinted with the face they made. Mrs. Dessie Taylor, 29, 320 North Lincoln street, was timed $496 and costs by Judge Lawrence Jacobs of the Despainnes street court. She was arrested by Sage, an insurance company charged with assault with a deadly weapon on complaint of Mrs. Cattley testimony that the children of Mrs. Tucker had been accused of stealing of a woman and when Mrs. Tucker threw stones at her. Mrs. Taylor had been indicted in a little misadventure and then the glasses took effect, but the sobered her instantly. Newark, N. J. Nov. 23—Frank Jackson, 201g Sherman avenue, is in the City hospital suffering from gumache wounds and infections about the Jackson and Alpine hospitals in Elizabeth avenue, alternating in working rights with another man whose name he did not know. According to Jackson, the man called him in and asked for help with some wounds. Jackson went to aid him and claimed to have lost his coat which he had lost in the car. When he returned, he was wearing a coat and the coat was to kill him. A right followed up which Jackson was told that three things he was suffering from Jackson also does the man accused him of leaving the door open and bit him. He head with a wrist Sent to Prison THE CHICAGO DEFENDER na Riot Vi PAPERS BURY STORY TO HIDE MAN'S IDENTITY Accused Rapist Gets Off Light When Editors Learn He Is White Huntington, W. W., Nov. 25.—A big story here for the newspapers, but they did not use it. Instead they printed an article about the disarmament conference in Washington and gave it big headlines. There was nothing particularly boring in the article, only that it served to take the space of the "horrible story at home." This is how Huntington's newspapers and the South in general serve the reading public. The South's Method A newspaper has the right to headline what its editor pleases to choose and has at his finger information. The public is eager to get correct details of rumors that tend to promote curiosity and to distract the public through the mind. They pay newspapers for this service and expect to please it. Sometimes they get proper service, but the color of the subject under discussion has a great deal to do with the another real concern because it policy to shield a white man from general criticism. He was charged with attribution. He was charged with attribution. He was charged with attribution. A prominent woman of our Race here, when she wanted to a film, M. Fisher, employed by the opposing furniture store on Third Avenue, was the white man. Insults Customer Mrs. Minor, unaccented, was on the third floor of the building when Fisher attacked her. She had been inspector of the building, and was jointly unengaged with another customer. He dismissed his customer and came to Mrs. Minor. Several minutes passed before he began to speak. She attempted to ignore his advances by evading his questions, but, according to her statement, he compounded her arrest by threatening her above, she said. Fisher seized her and when she fought to defend her honor he tore her undergarments into shreds and ripped the buttons from her shoes, indicating that he held her securely. However, he did not succeed, but gave a silly grim and released her. He presented on a charge of attempted rape and brought before a madrash's court for a hearing. He waived a preliminary questioning and was held to the grand jury under Watch Case Closely Considerable feeling was manifested against the management of the store because of the scouring in difference with which the handled Mrs. A. J. Armstrong had been warmed up when it was feared that loss of trade from our people would occur. Responsible citizens here are watching the case closely and declare that if the newspapers do not give the facts, hand bills will be printed and印制 in the institution for Girls. Mrs. A. J. Armstrong and distributed throughout the city. DAYTONA TRUSTEES HOLD MEETING AT HOWARD Washington, D.C. Nov. 26. Upon the invitation of Dr. Emanuel J. Scott, secretary-treasurer of Howard University, a member of the board of trustees of the Daytona University for Girls, Mrs. Mary McLellan Bethune, principal of the institute, arranged for the meeting of the board of trustees to be held at Howard University. Hartford Rhodes, the great philosopher and author of poetry, New York city, and the author of the secretory of the may; Mrs. E. M. Chapman, wife of the eminent naturalist, Frank L. Chapman of New York; Mrs. E. M. Chapman of the A. M. E. Church, Ettimores, Md. Dr. J. Seth Hills of Bedford, Lehigh; Dr. L. Bedford, rectorial, of Dayton, Ph. members of the Dayton board, not. They appeared before the student-teacher services and were presented by Dr. J. Stanley Durkee, president of the university, Dr. J. Durkee asked any of the members of the board of trustees of Dayton Institute to say a few words to the students, he expressed the response, and the students who had been present at the business session, but owing to pressure of official duties could not attend the noon session, and the trustees made a few remarks to the Howard students. Special interest was manifested in the ongoing research of the students as she contemplated the students to prepare themselves for service to those who have not the privileges and the school of a school like Howard University. AND A LITTLE BOY LED HIM, FOOLED HIM ON As E. A. Collins, a waiter on a private car of the L.C.R. R., was beating the Polk street stent and he met a boy at 12th street and Michigan avenue who appealed to him for all. The boy stated that he was an orphan, located in New Orleans, and was without friends or home. Collins took the boy some, and for his trouble was beaten, and received. He reported the matter to Juvenile Officer Kelley, who located the boy. He was identified as Paul Oliver, 14 years old, living with his parents at 2414 Dearborn street. DETECTIVES RAID FLAT New York, New, 25—Detectives Boulder, Nov. 25 say that Edward Freeman, 21st West 138th street, in the third floor of 107 West 1404d street. The shoals say they met Freeman at 138th street and Lenox at 1404d street, the house presumably to have a good time. The detectives arrested Elise Hilderley, 30, an actress, and Ruth Mitchell, 30, who said that she was in the snow business. The women lived in a charged with violating the tenement home law. Freeman was charged with examination. The Story of M Bares S The Story of Mary McLeod Bethune Bares South's Educational "Equality" In Volusia county, on the east coast of Florida, in the little whitening town of Baytown, lives and works a woman herself like a queen - modest and confident. She touched and conducted the Baytown Normal and Industrial school. She keeps the county of Volusia in front in matters educational for her people. And it is our purpose here to tell President Harding and others national quality" of the Volusian type. The last apprehension of this county for the "spiral" education of its two races: For white children, Pay "Equality" Minimum pay for white teachers, $5 per month, and from that on up to $25 per month. Maximum pay from that on down to $5 per month, and mostly $40. The minimum pay for whites is higher than the most qualified child is so greatly discredited that it is assumed that it will take $5 to give him as much education as the most qualified child is supposed to receive. "When we teach in cultural education we will give it to you," said the county superintendent to our people. But wildly he believed that God and destiny had made Mary M. Hethcine. Like Nannie H. Burroughs, the queen of Wishaw, he was sent into the wilderness of Voluntea county and founded a school where now at least 80% of its little queens of Shoal Bay should be given to them by the state of Florida, and which their parents pay the state for, but which men's school" the more progressive of the county's parents, by paying Gun Tells Who Is Who in Back Yard Argument Philadelphia, Pa., Nov. 25—The back yard clothesline, first line defense of neighborhood gossip, came near being the parapet of a deadly tragedy when Miss Bortha Window of Third Street, near Fairmont avenue,AVentura, Miss Clera 439 Myrtle Street. Neither was satisfied to give in. The two women began an argument two weeks ago about who was to hang clothes on a certain clothes. Neither was satisfied to give in. Monday morning Clera was hanging clothes on the fence out of her house and saw her. She is alleged to have returned to the house and then come back to Clera to lewelling it at Clera she took five shots. Only two of them missed. The other three returned. Miss Clera was being taken to the foresewell hospital. Miss Windsor was held without ball at the station house pending outcome of her victims injuries. Shot With Own Pistol in Quarrel Hillard Harden, 58, proprietor of a pooletown at $30 East 39th street, was shot through the left groin Friday morning at 1 Colobck by Mrs. Mamie Arnelt, who runs a restaurant at 615 East 32th street. Harden was argument between the two over a loan by Harden of $30 to the woman, who is his sweetheart. Arnelt's statement, Harden came to her restaurant, Friday morning and demanded the return, which she did a few minutes and she would give it to him, but he did not want to wait. Wors passed and he and his girlfriend were taken to a jail cell revolver. A tussle followed and the woman took Harden's run from him. Upon the boyfriend she backed him, hands up, upon the front of the restaurant. Harden begged off. He assured the woman. She believed him and lowered the gun. Then he turned out the hibits and made toward her in the darkness. Then she fired; the bullet buried itself in Harden's groin. "Mamie shot me, of course; but I love the woman and I'm going to be here. I don't want her, we don't present her. I don't want anything at all done to her. I just love her, that's all, and there's not use in my doing anything to her." Mrs. Arnott's trial before Judge of the Englewood court was ordered to lay out the outcome of Harder's injuries. She was held under a $1,000 bond. MUST SERVE TEN YEARS FOR KILLING GARDENER Pittsfield, Mass., Nov. 25—Found guilty of the death of Louis C. Decker, aged gardener of Stockbridge, last June, by a jury in the Superior court, of Stockbridge, was sentenced to serve from eight to 12 years in prison. Williams was arrested on the evening of June 6 on charges of beating and disturbing the peace. Following Decker's death, a murder charge was brought, and after an investigation by the state Williams was held for the grand jury. Atlanta, Ga. Nov. 25—Sam Hill, 15 Clifford street, has been held bound of bonds by the state court by the Georgia State Department. Hill, who is the driver of a truck for the Sudan Dairy Company, is the assistant automobile in which Assistant Fire Chief Frank Coley was riding. The assistant chief's car was wrecked when it crashed into a machine on West 12th street to a fire at 70 and 75 West 11th street. He was taken to the hospital without any alarm and when the truck which Hill was driving was seen no effort was made to stop it. He was taken to the hospital without any alarm and would be the one to be demolished. By WILLIAM PICKENS a second tax in the form of tuition fees and other school bills, get for them what the state would cheat them. Under the palm leaves and Spanish language, would they be the inspiring majesty of this muggy woman $300 attractive dark children laugh and sing, and but like a black cat, cuddle and sing which these children get in all this county is what Mrs. Bohanna teaches her children in school, as spasm as that budget is is more than that of the whole county for the education of our children. Superintendent Talks "If she were a white woman she would be worth $20,000 a year to the state of Florida," said the state superintendent of education. "Of course white women would be worth white women she would get what she is worth. She would not be worth a cent more. "We of the South would be worth $20,000 a year and this same superintendent when he was feeling good and making a kind (?) speech to Colored folks and immigrants people, when I met Mrs. Bethune on the grounds of her institute my hand automatically went to my head." she. And then we supported her paused for the audience to cheer. But no racial biography and no cheap condescension can tarnish the glory of her students. They are literally the creation of her hands. Some of them go on to the colleges, to Fisk and Tallahassee, and make come back, strong, self-collent, proud, and join the institute staff, to keep up "the process of the sun's" and And the Kliu Klux for them on Halloween night—or at least the innocent and unafraid little girls WOODSON FLAYS DR. CROOKS,OLD TYPE SPEAKER President of Randolph-Macon College Put in "Ben Tillman Class" Lynchburg, Va., Nov. 25—The sensation of the sixth annual conference of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History which convened in Lynchburg last week proved to be the address of Dr. E. B. Crooks, president of Randolph-Macon College, a white institution located near Lynchburg. In his address, Dr. Crooks used the President's speech at Birmingham and endorsed the stand on the question of social equality and the need for a more inclusive gulf by President Harding. Dr. Crooks advised the audience of nearly 1,000 of the leading citizens of Lynchburg to recognize the "impossible gulf that forever separates the two races." Every Colorized man or woman who cultivates a little flower garden and is helping the Race by this visible evidence of self-respect, continued the worthy doctor. "Ask your leaders if I am not right on this score. Ask Dr. Crooks if I am sure that he will agree with me." At the conclusion of the address Dr. C. G. Woodson, director of the association, said the audience will witness fell upon the great gathering. Speaking clearly, slowly and in a most sympathetic manner, the direc-tors first that he wanted to give Dr. Crooks a little information on the Negro question. He then proceeded to en-ter the audience with a question that President Harding not any other white man could not speak for our race because they did not know what he was saying. He stated very decidedly that neither was Robert Ruska Moton in a position to speak for us because his so-called president had not been populated by all intelligent and self-respecting people. "My dear sir" continued Dr. Woodson, "you and all white men have the wrong conception of race." FREE! $10 i First, $5.00 Second, IT'S EASY AND LOTS OF FUN How Many Worls C UCAT For Example, cut FREE! $10 in Cash Prizes First, $5.00 Second, $3.00 Third, $2.00 IT'S EASY AND LOTS OF FUN WIN A PRIZE FOR CHRISTMAS! How Many Words Can You Make From UCATHOL RULES: READ CAREFULLY 1. To enter contest, buy a 25 cent item from us by mail, and from us or from your email and mail. 2. Of words your email and mail will be accepted. Contact November 25 4 p.m. when judges will begin to answer must be in not later than December 3. No empties of any drug store allowed to participate in the contest. Checks will be mailed to UCCATIL is a harmless music store. Protection伞 and host of our use a jar in the home to hold music UCCATIL-How many words will direction wrapper with your name. Ask your instructor of work COAL TO 6148 Wentworth 1. To enter contest, buy a 25 cent jar of UCATOH from your druid's store. Write your name and address written plainly. Contest begins November 31 and continues until December 23rd 4 p.m. To submit answers, remember all answers must be in not later than December 23rd, at 4 p.m., to be considered. 3. No employe of any drug store or employee of the company will be allowed to participate. Duplicate prizes awarded in case of the failure to participate will be made up by UCATIOL is a harmless medicinal salve, the best for colds, flush troubles, rheumatism and a host of other family ailments. You can always use UCATIOL—how many words will it make? Buy a 25 cent jar, return direction wrapper with your name, address and list one. COAL TO BURN!! That's What You Get When You Order SUNRISE COAL The coal that is all heat. Low in ash. Does not clinker. Costs no more than the ordinary coal, but makes more heat and lasts longer. PHONE YOUR ORDER TO EAST BROS. COAL CO. 2545 Cottage Grove Ave. CALUMET 13 Woodson Answers acted as if they thought the parade was staged for their special occasion. It was the real purpose of the Khan was to terrify and keep our women from the camps of the school all of the little black indians came out to look on and cheer in jubilation cheering for the evacuation of "Halloween ghosts." And then came out when the innocent hearts which they sought to terrify were repulsed. The girls, equipped it gently as soon as the Khan, the infernal and unsportsmanlike ghosts got angry and caused all the girls to scuffle sheets and clingy pillows. Deny Square Deal Volusia county, Florida, is typical of practically the whole rural and small-town section of the South in education. For the only institution that can ever educate the masses is the great university of Florida, the public school system, which is adequate to the task, although these private schools are sacing our face from the utmost perdition of ignorance. Educational equality is absolutely necessary in any sort of scheme of justice, to ensure that students and teachers have the Negro is to have all the "equalities" except the one to which the Negro as a grown man agrees, because he grods white men's newspapers and looks into the faces of millions of white-manufactured militias, we have educational equality at the top of the list. If they actually get that they will hardly be able to go to school, in getting their education also belongs to educated people. Would-Be Thug Plays 'Possum When Shots Fly Philadelphia, Pa. Nov. 25.—William Marmon, Addison street, near street 101, had sought to hold up the Segal store at 801 South 18th street. He played possum. He armed the store and commanded the proprietor to throw up his hands. The owner was rather slow about it. In fact, in addition to his hands, he reached out and took in a broom with which he protected himself, while occasionally he fell. After an especially violent jab, the would-be yelled yug and ran out of the store with the owner on his heels. A policeman took up the chase and fired at him. Marmon dropped the gun and shot him. When he was examined it was discovered that he had dropped from sheer fear. He was arrested on a charge of highway robbery. equality. We are not seeking to marry white women, red women, yellow women, black women, and white women but we do want to do recklessly in a railroad train or street car when we are in a city, in a town, or in a country we do want the right to the polls and exercise our constitutional right to vote and to hold office. We are not in a city, in a town, or in a country we please in theaters, railroad stations and other places of public assembly. We are not in a city, in a town, or in a country we intend to fight—with his die In Cash Prizes , $3.00 Third, $2.00 WIN A PRIZE FOR CHRISTMAS! Can You Make From THOL t. hut, at, hat, etc. cent jar of UCATHOL, from your drugo- tion the direction warmer, your list listing the winners. Remember all an- december 23rd, at 4 p. m., to be con- trol or employ of the company will be tres awarded in case of the winning 23rd at 3 p. m. mal salve, the best for eduits, flaunt other family alliments. You can always will it make? Buy a 25 cent jar, return your money. Use a jar upon receipt of price. MICAL PRODUCTS CO. Ave. Chicago, Ill. Largely Attended ic Aid HERE IS SOME TROUBLE FROM MISTAKEN IDENTITY A case of mistaking each other's mission was the cause of the shooting and wounding of two police officers, a ski and jacket Alben, by Willis Johnson, 45, 4224 Cottage Grove avenue, at 22nd street and Racine avenue. The officers investigated a reported robbery. As they were passing the Karpen furniture factory, they saw Johnson enlisted as a fireman. The officers employed as he brawn. The officers thought he was the robber, and Johnson, fearing they were hooded men, tried to stop him. Johnson, who has retained Attorney Richard Westbrook to represent him, is being held under $220 bond, at the Maxwell street court. LIBERTY BONDS TELL ON New York, Nov. 25.—Liberty bond numbers were the cause of the arrest of the owner of the West 135th street street. was examined after being held in $3,000 bail on a charge of having held up Philip Carneval, a producer of West Broadway and Compassport street. Carneval charges that on Nov. 9 he was on his way to the market when he held up at the point and evoked and $400 in cash and $900 in liberty bonds taken from him. Vicar is said to have disposed of the bonds on poor avenue and 135th street when Detectives Buckley and Miller of the West 135th street station entered and arrested him. BUY DIRECT FROM FACTORY SAVE $100 Free! Free! Free! Demonstration in Your Home ```markdown ``` Let us show you why we can sell at the price we pay. FLU SHOW, pay later. mile the money. FLU SHOW, pay later. Call at our factory and we will give you name and address of John satiste- customers. Call Kenwool glass. Chicago Phonograph Mfg. Co. Lake George St. and have salesman call on you and explain our proposition. FREE! -A TRIAL PACKAGE OF RU-CO Glossy and Beautiful Is the Hair Washed with COCO-OLIVE SHAMPOO and the Scalp Feels Great with All Dandruff and Dirt Cone. A 50 cent bottle should last for months. Satisfaction guar- anteed or money back. Your Druggist Knows. Ask Him. Or Write Us. CHICAGO CHEMICAL PRODUCTS CO. 6148 Wentworth Ave., Chicago, Ill. The CHAS. L. REESE TAXICAB SERVICE AUTOMOBILE SCHOOL Garage and Repair Shop Special Classes for Ladies 10-12 East 36th Street, Douglas 5605 ig ag Sey i ee, a ea ep Pape CEES Oe ee DATE APOUINTIS” TLiky Sy NA IN Te ALL * AROUND” PUL" POWN: PAGE FOUR DREAMLAND CAFE OPENING WILL DRAW REGDAD GROKD Merars, Chirenes MeFarland, ber: finan aa “Pachey.” and Jamies He Waligins. who nave bemght an secoat ta the Upenntand Cat, 325 Seamer arate the te Se es mora et Serio apt te soaes wk ve Lise Teed edt sa ale South Sate Tae fet iad peomntet wie ES have tor ntane el oahu vmeaneatea that peels wy CWSI a betlod rein har Sa aad bathe ge Ae PS taamne sence Wet Pee, Heine ie ee ae Sa Se a ls ne ee Rieke Gk Atuantie tate fisher, PE to itrstat tang poe Sig's her yenpbe aio Me Attra feat Me AE wit se fev rue nue faa fel tine ant SOLIS oe cerctes Satin, Ine srree toon np ay ies wall Be at Seer mamsetice day tarts etek wad beserved be Lamuie Aes Hein SE pe peters Te wath hs EGunict Gy. bene sv te er rea Shetty ef fare May earrene al DoT nt Uy needed et BMy goat te bea ae tan af des Berg matdes MY. Arrington wit gots Fenny eeedaok isn apa Sine ROS dines Fis iiwamand, sonic Panera chow plore of Chit cre ce tate to fine fae he Vind ede ast” poaiae Winsett “and” ting pare i the Sewore Mt Partai ani, Within 2 eye albeedactnen Se ie waht VS A. RAS Het Shoe ee a selene Wis dove the way the crawl FOR Wat ia to the: Preanstund A Sine a thee oa plone Alpha Bratton Soloist for Sakis hea Parte ie Tet Fale culere apder the mastery -aNaE SOET AES Ee eine omen tram a dae Mane TE SNE Messen onda Lhecet” fn shelly eat “oner jeyotent, Mitel MUL, eager ae pie aue ph sing ingame oe” by iio st ee Ree Shaun Fea le rane Ta “St DSi ithe Mad ae einen B. Pea he anton ll treme tc Sebiet chal "unarery” Ar Wks WEST SIDE NEWS yo, Weealey Jones Tae 1a etatteet AE AT oe tecaten gp War trinmnacy Spuarees. 120! Nart SERA URES RENTS ae ee DORE SSSR I aR unter ee PBAM a praaane! 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B oblige Fees hee Lon Wane, F Be Stace ain: cited na Fea Little Bey Inlured Auten ttt ME a, sae An INTER ot Statind th Tit RES Mra sR Re hha ever Mistien kh nd necoiven™ when he ; EAT YOUR 3 ape 3 Thanksgiving Dinner 3 ; as 3 : : : ‘ TUXEDO CAFE : sane nctana Aven : at : ‘ CHICKEN sour : ys ovsren cocKran | ceceny Olives | } ROAST YOUNG TURKEY ¢ I crangenny sauce $ asasnee potatos Green Peas fF MINCE PIE PLUM PUDDING § y MINEA, COPFEE OR MILK | | } Served All Day and Night | SOO CTE T OTT OT ITT, VINCENNES HOTEL Special Thanksgiving Dinner ONE DOLLAR oe sons Sola seer, SE ir engage DISEASED TEETH Are a Menace to Health. DR. D. D. FOOTE Bere 3902 STATE STREET CITY NEWS IN BRIEF ‘Mrs. R. J. Hunter Entertains Dr ee are ach ge BM Gisaer in ecor ot hee bastante Yee een sar ae ee SAR Sopa Sete wit Rae Fh Eick Siiames BN Koodo Teal Sins Hiss @, Loe Entertained aug’ Bagintee He done, ED South poli ett thse Wa ben nebo ERTS RisistegGt"Beat a te Sakae ade ate hae adem the rae ts dena Satara ee ae Ehhaatteee Tene Peatees Ie Souinling e Ren LMS OO RTS tae eee Ses ed Shae ae teeth bae oy ead Sheet hehmaue kee hn Ribhat at iosteate tea Ho Sate SNR TRE wea? SIME RS SE ad haar hee nies, Keaster-Léwis in ty ice A SR ee EM za cle inal TS thre di Gath ier ea Se Ce ar ‘dh street ate "foes Was te ie Sena rattan “Ate ae Sen FGRewtihe Peltraune Sek Center ates ni ok / aa aa | eR ceed ek oe Paap: Pixtwead wieeing neath coseasiad at SRST NED festa “Ws sat intured Stee Sieiea (My poet ate eat SSB Rar es Shields Hie Assailant was Prin SSNs ae ei hy Atte at tants Boats Sieriog rena “hatde ‘Wen oe the SEE ac tures ‘thats Seca edie Bie beet ie eae od tate Mate Sait nt Muurceiod wang tag, who TEA AHS elfen is AE WE diige the canbe or Bia aE: San Injures Ta Cotiton sain same ae ease Rawr. eRe RS itt ee Re Tae eacehennd when ten sayteanetite C2 iebiof se. Was rang See ide ane AEP puientue ak 2 stro i ata S exes teu. In Demented Condition , peta arn ate tae arene Fela act ais ie ee RRR TROY ian veel ER ee te Reese ners Staines ouberwrtee, “hie weenety oe | fea ioaltrarereatcragcnet-e See DO ealy teach days. Roberta Ureditt-Oie, the very Tag: | Bele are ee cpes, meee Zoe, ee ee ee ee ‘gee Reid and Joka Thomas were pets in, dhe name of! Mires Deny | Heit. “SaRs Seats street. “Thex score heath | te Site thet Minding “rhey anne She ae Re RS, Tae, |Feitatan Lena cumorine hhc? Ee ite ears “inaicred he jie ies ed! etka oh aha aa “The. Browns Fall Out ciinton forte ohantea hs, cmahes Ue eatad 8 ae am thee Hane BRM ae ne aM Ba Bs Bit wit ue elie sa are lsreot, urging that she cram bis yee Chese: MEM atitha atthe ot [Sp Seam tan, cal Contain Weise Bo Arends “teteal eles anee | Newentner af the Warrtsnn stzest cmart, [Pee Bab Sea Put, on probation A tem methneMaEe Eton cabin este TB ke SSEneT 4, eta cathe Ware ate saneante tithes Wome tot os | Fata i pemloney saaes ant Coneland Beach state eras the haat settee” tania he bloat Peet ae AES Latte rte [Bary Peder cect ae footer ah Serefe WIR activins Salen pert Sia Sener Spatunoa” toe waters MeteacS tat’ Sleas Wor Seve” net orton SAG LF SU te Me a acl MeKinley, of the Criminal court cur case, Settled dose Wane gS atronce adinaettagy Hake Reh. taan “Battos SRY tit ran eed og ae er Nee ae Races dea Es Suara TSER Lh See tea a taryeti ca aia Water ent wee Thal ans oe ae wee ee hig! alates “We feo “Ata Fe eg easel ee ane” Meise Tilo Teese ama rei ik osttee gr saa atten gt Gen Sar of Se wind | Baht wearine soveet ccmanglanain isluree Bow Peer | eeerriy: injured, Whe attempting 0 MTT Mtn tren ot fie bes he eS arctan ioc den tae Sh | Xoromobile driven by George Vendine, automobile driv AT IDLEWILO HOTEL re at dete aad laughser, ipinvitings conse garaged ao: AAS SEM lh eth ie Moe then Wee dete ete ate i Rha tis" Soc oid aunt Was hese 0 iota Sanur Aol "Rati aS teeter ag te ited wa age soup ace Sth ute wis ate il infor ithe stas Boel el Slate aati Bin Ther eSticogints Henini, Sek Seca etn te tet te oat a ea ate oe Tray th Hie lig “teat Het Seek Ai atu ht ice ae Yes di it Stat Sette ie te Hie A, bi Se Ae for trantter” hntrhs: Sie, ee Mi We See pa wey ie Xe Ska Mea" Se nee tls 3 ita Miconae tases Cae ‘Smacks Gun from Hand sre gets tne that Adena Msi, gonads veaiine dues te he ied anced he a nc ein he TE. ostely wl tue At twat Sint coo atl Uy ied epee Suna tse cans sit aa ae aia Rens Bik Wand Wise, Mgdigom aert. a fein prea eae te Hen Swed! Spang Med ats et lanians a ‘the bat eatin Frito Ein uext'a ieee mec oe cicteag Fai "es ii sar ig Su iain case nae obi TSE Sots ath vomney ath ee ea aaa Lew. Sti Net aun. CRRA SBE The Stato ‘evetiie séctlans has. aostrtieton Mis un to newts thae igtret. tor te then ne sees set ty tet FORM ratio tfter elute Ea innate Keri Hacethiers ane Fobbeed Wents Tere eee neonate at Stas Boderat street. of ius barge sontaining sie : ‘Ca ae ieee ciara Ahh Aaittlhe \udrey Lurnest. the s-s00r sod atutiriter or Sie stud Sree as tie te ant oe Bae fu stron iee Mas hn Ri sire Mages Mt. scan tke to Tae Fort iN atfoen hogital Siiulay, her soriition having: tofu eet Struck, by, Automobile Seu denen Koy eenetr ste srget, gait Gaertel th ors nthesidha Su BiinS City a erie ies hae ete Pel hen ewes aieuek, hg) Se thee tar eth “street amd 8 Ta Rev. Seate Returns trey. or TTY setts astar of Gesnt's Metieaeint Caged 480 Ec sot ‘She ine sk i eaense te da ‘ihnwton siepie. at Chattaniar od Sceite ete dance oF the eee Reonee's ot ashes Arde Cateye, and Afsnding nome Tide At Lookout Mtn Minit fereacr felonies hace pantie ESTs ist amuch fisuend With his sas fa the Souci De Seoce Si eure bik phat in the seek J Order fa reture ectlne se aienonee aap hiat tre When feng Reid tnaker the gsi Hho degnt WiitdingAssaiiadone af Cie Foe Rie t. Sumiay aiterovane Attends U, of ©. rigs Marg Tennthom Sratunte a got Weather ad tie WR ee Elktrstares Ch, wet aend feels tk! Tas he nine? uate fat eho Caer sli i Citta, SxSnne akin ny ths Figaro oxime tnivaeetiy foot: IPE forged (rvoluainias Her senses th Bhscimers Hae Siesieean Sham: alk ee Stee eee a ul Waztio fantise cinareh, nd ana tentang whe heh aed a Inumuiae ‘Sesre waterpriaces lees 8 PA hon tatae Lt, nacht fasgan eae ily ta tet Mreshiea? nf the tiieinesee Men Aen! Fifi ae, Bledncan pak tiene SPAR aatleg, SON ay stata streets irestbont ot fhe Hadley Meaty bens ee oe eat Me hustle Tie a oon Neen ah the Me Brew gent" was inne. aveaninehed he Fhe" eate ae? anitinionge hese an tses prac amd we tne, Shei pst 2 ett te He Nanas eat Fatncte aie’ and alt weed wany Ht Ronn PT ie heads 3K trom, South Hea van NE TES PE a caine of hen te Hayate entrehe wh NES heh deiceling sAicmsielle ie ae Rath Cae atacy the Nethagal tant ee cemudge ttle a Net Alot “fn, Prantned ta"the, eit ad repos, a Ererareeing CuO eh yorat ack MRE sateen alates Set tomes Silhn ake an exemice trie Went Sherinw’ Sistedns, Hansa ‘Stheasiee eisoraa St the eva esc ee M. T Ratlex. president of the tales Hreaity roe Seas Soutly Stats braves hae RoES.coe'ee iste esl Svat ta testa hdelae ta font ene fein feeand fate ule geese EEMLOEGhmeh the Sah sates fan towne Xo Give Surerse the Lieb eekar settee te cor renter a tomes Sie at Aehien Sites 29, APPLING iments Bene ann at Saad Nene Cones Semtatie! Sonaaet™ wee itd” aes FONE See Todt elite Batic Sear Stadtman aoe fender Shay ence emt iy aban Man’ 2°98 cate ena ater ke See Fe Mita Metin ht BU"Eahlee TRoms'ne fon Pere wt Si Finals hak tasong Entertain Guests im, ROM ESEEE SEHR ght Baha oh ta ne ca APeseggng inner Stata Te MEMES Hate ee, MMGRT gra hese. Rete he. Seton Ska gee Ate: staaet Suit Sionorn Dex iaate etaaet Bio ae dele onl han af eat ee en iene hare, Rey sneer ap MENLO TCE ane saad ai i acca ‘eat ide ae a Te dive Hitary ea coe Gat ie Bia Chaar faery stn atten es Beate es eee Sn 4 ae it Tore siggy Da yey pub ae Geass ie ee ennaee ana te GLP OPRe late Way tats tee Sa ee deen Haye. erated “happily, na isan ECR eROO CET EDEES. Cd OO ae et TER en ey Seb tHe ous ogc Sighs hy 7 Seeger RIEF ___| Wi su tas "Pra Shen amet | HEARS agaist ert hte IN. Be Stare’ se diate ea ha ee te Sarees Reto Gitar awe fae ee re Shee a aya ie oo tote ay itn ISTE Reema Pig ARE TA REE wien: Nee ie sinned Gow { ie mre Matar at gaat Ne fe S ENTS Sade Sei ce REEL oD He Sess GSE a OS 2 habits: sion Bains Set te Gynt a ceehhecneoe a ah AR Me artes Tard iat ia ae met bl iy coieldcrice pes, LEHR I the power of pag sli nest Cap Abe Br Neate gue Tie Tanne Ad tte ier afar Tee SN ts eee AM ie feitiar ofthe iv eit, ae Meg Al [yo tsent tr ition the ngs ae SCAN Yost a ge Sats pee skate ‘Thana teonGer wi eatent. Hee ae the Cousty hes Bitay Asem cring arm the effort nf shoe Be ae ee Oe SR eed ‘trie Towards Sh: aad Wwentwortts aves ooge aus alle wt 885 Or nem aurmirore men, nf tie Weta) acm Geaetraesgorscarhs Gees at ona fica. Abou Goes East eeeteat tins Stating. wit heal | Witanttnth ate Sey Nd Pehl he! B ete see | fy oan Sabetane wie ie eens Mines haru Uimeticat Wey 5 otis Hast” Thee, will wet teed Helge muawforten Ui MIE A) Dol | ei Lina asta cae ae Pda fel Davin, oborus, feel Cabdwel H Re VO Dee gerne Boivin! medtess Prante Stuer: | Injures Lea In Smath See ey ohert tate, WMI | he ses Flock. 28, ty Beare ie iadhgdl Sore ite tana eth Staelin tat lo TheGeind 1 i> 2 hatariml ie Law. sez LA Ae WW Se Gg in ihelarip lp SP Gun, Toiers Arrested ; Wémae: Draw ice arthae GORA T OS AEM ast anes] _chartnn Ricinedaene ance" Fark asta Sot He iM SES Scenes commters eaent teat aT SH ad ek en eet AS ae [RCUMTRCL, Uae Sis, CHRON Sat mere tp dae, Sipser VE tte ae gE aed eat ee ee GE Reset’ Se at ite aang |” ini of the tect (Srestng come whl tm teled an the | ate, See Maa ate the” SOE] complains Agaieg: Husband Bere oan Rea, taetiad ie | som Rimes SOMERE EUIOAT Hacacettinn, S20 sheen" katie win aneeate hy diene eae SUT SUS ise Be MAG, dtc. Gi" aat es eu AP BRE SRE MEMRBN, Saaaa ANE Phere Beret Gots Wadena eerie pae ries SE noone: in Se ata eet TEMS seenen FMEA SEN ccc, Poco NM gua in with | ered hak eM: onion este TASMAN chap weapon /Pyih, Beast ts 2B a 4S ein, HEan bee hc mur TUSSI ATES cane Heme pun 8 Vi gre seem Une rier be CE | yu Zed Hate aes Wi Fiat arn wits Mia" Lenn ear mene ‘ ee ality, oF Buran ‘charged SHEL Lardemy’. co) Bord RAREST co tuoggn tt Ral REN cat | at hagne rw gee Fat Heaieratsy evden and ekarwed | wat” tach earcarnd Wes, Sear Iie He aa tend Thnake| Weloitnt SAT MIGh "eet Ree Had Me Limon bt siorized the ines af Tham MCAS Crt NE eee nice. ste, aisteich, abrestedt Wiliam | Wukes, Sh, Geis eaten. saan Sits, Mine rlauiduss sa neces fe: Sud ragged bin wen ssa Sa at deallly Weapon wae) waregane Boy Draws Heavy Fine prank Hhagey th HEM dente steeet, sete apie abe Gaiecr “thabas Siitaelf and suetntety aa etharmnt wl Geenisely enaunees ete aned $50, “ang Sete ae SadeeSuleen “ovate Bos? Fined tor Conduct Rohert Kimball 25, Ru tndiang. aves nua Saataranted “hye Gaiety. Kee Bnd, tose. dad djauriecs em. sominine oP oare Siwator ‘Watsee, “of tnaintce Stents. and charged. with clsariterly Contacts “fie Saw fined 10 and costs [sJuse Wnstny demmaih of the Stock Voes'caurt. Complains Against Him watiatne Taek th SO" Wabaet avenue. Was arrested 19" Officers Grid, rome, Aner ee Mire Cheek Meine winder ‘cowie Sn Semplaine of ars Ftnel Plorenee, 6059 State streets Arrested tor Non-sus aauiton Bawlene 2 280T" Dear. jobiateecr, Sn anissted ty" Dikiewr B= Win aid chageet” wah neg-euppare en Pamiitint vat shie wife. Mire Andres Sawin 66 East died ete Steale Automobile, Robe samen Hawking fare Teairie ave- nije wine aitested ti tie loop. tye Seale Witieee “te Eine uae teu cerns na to, steal gw auteuraidie retie trom HIS Rartot We g Canon. “ite, “was Bi eorrection an ned SS snd" conts Us Hodge denn it! Negromer, “SOY Fined for Smacklno Woman ‘tne achsanen, of woinan uaerarted gpnitiention uf Deisetive Sroseants 13 Athen MteCartha deteetite Imeem de huek wort euling’ th the, wieinlty Sf gett? and indiana avenne, “rey at fest iethonipeon, Gay (pala ae Sues when Shey found in ageing Pi face. “hie wag Abed S85 and Costg, Wy Andge dobn R. Neweomer of the Har ee a as BOY SCOUT TREASURER REARS FROM PRESIDENT Ison Ste’ Heet te i ‘ i= ee aes Mo NEL as eden to Bk Mn saan ting eo a Maen Bice Ut teat esis Sn Gh ed ns Se si we nae oy Redo ee ae ea ee ee ae RM Site ARMS ce ate Be PY San ip ene at eg aS : hint ace Bales C78. Cates care ewe ental Phi SoM Gmamins. te High sted Be aioe of tng Sent Trea Ste wee he resident in ue eping eating te Lrrtncsd recrnnee a Seneca Te aararetsteg Ste rates nto Me ear ey tia aunnee Ruger Pear aia teal ar at'ate ciee eect Bate auc aa ae ine eine ee Fe es es eat te ee: ee aoe det beeetione ast Saget tes isacee and nasil Mn for wes atea nner ce Thniate bs ¢eeh Wi, We cece ha He ee ata SOUT stata ps the inne Peaaee ee hs arctan ta eke Oe cee Ser ice uerhe’ weaned a ae Se oe tetra preeres wee ha Re gene all ie naetee teh tet” Conte aoa ean ts Maken nea chat Reais See ame ema dain tes shasta ty See "wane ibe sere ae ate elo Nope se anon tere “iie' wlohe iat es Cates ets tan to exrty te ee Tarr ste is dae loratint a ste UNAS Rance So eee aun te OH at ‘That "they enn "Yee show. hove Mog tnarinte Mae ndeaatag ee mene Me a ea ede cat Seca at aa lwo eum oo thud ts to Tink Vatni tYhinde i geo the tram of ava Davie ng duced ntteg toe te ie, fry th Boa nae” tac Seared ee See Late wae ee ed Be sant eed cetiiae tare Bate Sook ast CO Es aes the Raste Thee wii naemd tye Tow: ieee tin whe tes Flow. ot. Stk earhorn se repel severed xara tee Givi Rte conten! etc Sela Wicd Sut “nese “war ae Stn ai Woman Draws Fiee euncing Riehunedonne 21e. Fuerhaea sinests and Mra Chie, Dimwitiar Aaa inc him aie rented tw” Rinedderie conduct “Istehuetenn waa icccargen. init Ase. Dinabisie deave e Une Gf $18 amd eats fea ctesice te, 1" Seon” of "tie Tlaesined streak Complains Agains: Husband ose Ramrratte Seuag Beha etree wit argeated by Cfleors. ewes at Fan dieting uated wir Aiea phere Batrove, soe Wate yes Sa ta Stephen Final. “A348 State street, wae feareat Ren guts af contldence Ein hy fhharehe She etmisar oy Fae 4 Fain, TR ac aca Sista Hemtinens tent Vigite emn SPER HEME tine ee se: sii sated that ies mies ene ey ‘infront i she 6 cee Ganty,of urain Bord Callin ee ee Pah stent. anit amie Reo 22"sa0 eth Abe ECan eatic nc tanta Ho ach ‘comtemnd a Sour Make Yoh SRM Ree Bhat Rotem of the Celta ens Fh Bon Nnadeeditn teats at tunes Heath, 4704 State arrest a “Ginianeat ecees Cent ecdin eats Hes ee cae Colton bite 240 Porno sieae ‘Nom fom ssitt! af ymsvitt te ee monh set ten “fn Han a TholCeteatnal Cover died 'eemtoneen tee Sevecritine Cam “tentative, wea ime attained tae pate 1 Sane Peeper Mh, te were Crtinwrs Conde anid Paberty wleen the Eseeiin ears * Hels to Grand Jury. | iit Mathie He Soren Besxten tenis age het yo Hw, Sew Anekte E500 onic AB aca et The ee Sereda aie Parcel att) Detter Athy dteieh er ronmetatnn it Ewan G2 Renee She Take ste, ‘Witte eaten hesceke | Wivesens Sines, OA 4°08 Indiana ave. inuer soe arrented hee Ctieot Ginga hind detect aud ehurmed wih aoe Sinoet an ruinnintet at hie wte. Mine fone Simian, S346 Tnviana avenives > uiuemem Sustain taetsase nec we atreuind We Oficors Coreen ane | ois atfostag "be" Oicers Conenma ant Basten Taled distrtens nna ehacwed sit Kastara an camiiaiat ef see Matte Rrathen, 0 Buel Get steeat | lea ae ec | tenwenk Mahone, 48 4359 - Stare: safest: Wie arteseal bee Oagteae Reman Rea Aisle aoe ara eh saute abd hattore em Somovaine of ARIS Manone, 4212 Wataah sveane: ' ‘Stands. Matunr Gavees ‘Tuake..°. Be ten Sasbe Rise EATEN ty eee Fon it, Naweamar’ of the Fiazixen Arove sim ta'steat'a Ean Refoncine Sora Cosby. ti Woue" tty street Hs Nae sentenced te Teds tthe Tons Of Carenctinns ast feed $3 and “cone, ‘acai en pieken cove scone. Who wag arrested th Oe fate witinm: Boies aad ehaied wis foneurnore on “compinint ‘of his, with Sire ayares Coehtam ain East su strest Nas, maces, on teohation for ane Sear hy suave Am Adams of the Coure ef be suse Ae Get a Liberty Life Policy—AND BE LIBERATED THANKSGIVING! teen (| pee Seon ee ue pS se LIC 2 oR COON) EEIbe ha \ Lp agi Sk AAS ENE eS ‘Their Future Assured—A Stock Certificate in the Liberty Life Insurance Co. CAPITAL, $100,000 FULLY PAID Issues all standard forms policies from $500 to $10,000. Ages 15 to 60 A Few Options on Stock Left’ $30.00 A SHARE Half Down, Balance in 9 Days “Pil Fix Her” “tit sx hoe; f know where she ‘That sentence a reporter heard on Siate sireet Tuesday. A beautiful irl, Coatures regular to her tsvew Foch iv ava romplesion, was pecking. After she had eoge a man i Ue aris Ue whicty he wate apeaking ex- Witied the situation, “This aivl Head had some Aifterei with another sist of hee Race. The: diturreted over x agin, 48 women WH Mla. Tine absent set be fair of oun lesion unt i ecaplosed We om tn Itetant fine "dowentown. White no Nine hes red. into her ace, it fruiher donbifu that i her dents Were known she wnatd had on. SFuhiie hee sald her real And her Mivitl He hut une of a vicious Ueno: men und aromen dn Chicas Sho‘tieamt that he Wend yey U0 her Fiva's phuee. of employment, and Sturw her up’ Pha be the: was” the Javeie worker, when net Gone aver She tctephene ar uy the unsigned et: fer, iy lel eho tw determined 0 Her rine Sweater tnt the establish nevada shee for eunplerssent Sto Ie atermnst that ton hedge ds ode ‘Rican ube Iwan for Work. Whe” ste: Et whitch would kill « heart Mike her Sher Ie polleey told that te. cael fire enone Pha bev teorke Keays ‘ctnpioge gam sone neaphoy. Colored peonte tere. Slush you don’t, PIU! Rone. uit bues Terewn, Washingt: ‘works nero, ind ale who" fe oleces “Rtor at iweele orga. Lawes. Litt \witshingon ta looking: foe se jah ‘Any member ofthe. Race fe corre in vxctetaing dhe TENE to Bet ce jh hen honorably. got, by either ds: Tayi marke of Tae‘ havine thst vo aay abet Katee ale Ano {ile the duty at Chiewso ts steam an hyo tand of envi amen ane woe Thue secks to terrerize honest, canal Sad inustrious peunte. “Tue th hold the: Rae ean yeoman wha nay net he go easily Mentitied most iikely weit not b filled hes ange otter meter OF the Elurve Peshuapay chreigh fa hanes ing oust: a sister being edu fated: Sr henther pein adeaneed, Shine ‘smother. oune tase. 38 bir Sared tor. tose likely the holder 0 Bat eis 3 Towa aud devated res Fomuntative af the Race, while hee de Trini ik reprermmtative noche SSCo1E he nas he, Ht eae oem stanehedy ur unnething. SPW AX. her te the passwrord i 3 reset “seynunination Af hard ted then and aeumen, whin ery Zeaen yrs tiee'e the Teast yn peiek. aed. thes fea Thele hele! nents an ent regulon. ‘The mistnves and Mud Inthe Tee ‘wall ue permit ther teas Talienes aeith. thwne! wathty ne the Srhive against every howe uf ate: Rare Raut the ire fe rec naan ououah te give everyiwds tha Joh ree My” af eer i a neil vee, Ae is sen che Guy wt th ties tn Chnleage te deve. ou in th en the SEU HS her" ered a the fetch haivere.. ORDER OF SAMARITANS MEETS IN AMERICUS, GA. Athens, Ga., Nav,” 25,--Novemner 28 Neill inure’ ihe opening at the thiews-sixth anntial tasting Of Uke Grand Tedie af the lapraved Unter nf sanwweitans at Amieriens, ft. Tats feder. under the Toudership oat Dr. Aen Ti, Turse at Athene ax Conder sind gram secretary. and Prof TK Perales of Maeno sand ebtet, has nade rapbl etehtes waco and for Iiiwce thi thiety yrs. kas Ween i inwing arom in shaw Eeaternad Iie of the Raoa, mpevative wary that seven Isindeed Iedzes with wn wegregate hictabwrshsp of muses that fit teres sn This yeasts menting Wile fair to be sage nf ted Ieore and (aera the ofivere af the grand. idee are hinginie sere’ bebe te fehd reyersen titives su the steetipe, "The Ameri: cus nembers are making elaborate fnecpstrationy for the entertamnment oF the peal Tedze and ewe annonnnd to general headquarters at Athens that adequate agenmamedartone il foe aartsaped for snl eleeat ec HONOR MINISTER Witttameon, W. Van, Naw, 2. —Rew, fe Gsin way tenvitesd reception hy munhors nf Ie etkar h Shan he Thached fron a conlerene'at Dake Spang. Tie hee pstorcd Allen OE. at 1 ohaeh fer ek Sane: AND REMEMBER THE GREATEST RETURNS ALWAYS COME TO INVEST- ORS WHO GET IN ON THE GROUND FLOOR. 2. ts >Hi sf WAub/er TMS By Mayme Thomas ARRANGING EXTRA HAIR nic inne, esata feather ow ER ER i aS a Eas Fama Tie, Fhe es ae TELS | pele tn ajeee: (eggs ae ix to he placed. dls esd ee iS a geest Arve vanity and [pee ee hae ee a eS fait fen “ere ee ae teats gs Sp i eal oe ‘ sept Inet es oe ioe tial Dee Teese tiles Temes BR ci cen ta coe State eae ae cee Een tua tester tne nelne the bate atoeth ato! yianing (i adice ao aenouetas ef NOTED WAITER 10 LECTURE AT URBAN LEAGUE BREET The annul meeting oF the onirage: Urban League wall be held at Lineal Genter, “Oakvond houtevard and Langley avenue, Frias. Dee. 8 Charlee Zuvhien, t noied writer amt tnovurer ‘ef Hstnn, will spent. Fle ie rich in humanitarian sentimon’. a his aiokx how. During the presis dential vammpaign af YS he called attention ta the fact that a for of clear-hevde! statesmansbip canst a egiet sf Ihe most urgent wrotders! SMe, Tutt and Mp. Tirsas,” he said sonia etal ta faenp, satanding the franchise tn Won, fat ide nee tammaten ieee. bathe pretese pret friendliness ty )- ern Wait tie Hewniiicain gsr dese the red fustinent of renencersatien ints Eouthert: wintes wide Mis, fervuny Aare toot aber svat uf the Nee Pevglt. Peewee tuust Koval wipe hortera af hie goat are. thie ehtee Phonics af the Nezrs.” Elsewhere tA inka bereits “Dommnersres: and the ter Paine he shores with anprncal te Statement. "Isin met ata the at limited Angte-Sawon ie aa attesether unin eed lesan” He develops the theme that the Angio-Seamin i overestimated. and thot hesis merely ie worth Uwe Ketary of opportunites vente hy tts Prnsecnnpa ter sewed atid. worknyety the ehildven of the poor. the avera citisen, and the pennies enter, ‘Mies dueblin tx weall serntsained.wtin Chicas, having heen foe se years See Mee ee eas Valor By of Chisago. ee STLANTA U. ENDORSED: Atlanta, Gu. Nov, 2h --Atlanty university har ceneived nutire Ukat f8 has bees phtead in Coty. (st cals [oaes by" the American Medical ve. sociation, alone sith Howanl. Eis iad Lincoln, Mereatter:pradnites. st Attania university way. enter ci Peyurable medical ohend in the Cats ra Ses MrowHed thee Ree ake in thei ewdlege Wark those: hires whieh aen the newensary prerequisite to medical quilts. AT NATIONAL CONFERENCE West Point, Mina, Nav. 2. The tev th Mew hishiolny, disseies sige: epee eta err ator ROSE na Upner Missigsipa’ Contcrens eats termlead ihe Natintad Comterenes ne the Methodist Splsenpal sharch, whieh swe eld recently in etre Mick. Pasture veturuing to thus eee, Rev, Uhisiwlin stoped aff in Chie with hie brother pastor, the (ovo. We. Hrvant, gustan nf the South Pat OF Oe ania ol cbink our: CUT THIS QUT AND MAIL AT ONCE! GUT_THIS OUT AMO NAL AT_ONCE! Laser paras eo. eee Tae ak ee SISPEALA Se ia tias SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1927 REY, JEHW AOBIKSOW T0 ADDRESS GRACE LYCEUM low. don Wes, se ate BEE URS EN tit eet Hee, bie ut ok Bie Wrthae tN rSan.«-ematiat wil ape prea etad Se AO LEP ek Mr Wate? ied Gig'see! "BENE eect tae os homies Ringe ha Pak ad Ae Sat Mifrguerie tent at seone, Saivation Army Aid a ti ae TRY Bi oe Da ane Tenney etter tat the Tae TEE a PS cae BEIT “Gira e! BLS line” Base BAe eee Fie a a Tur St¥e paVARM SSN AT IBLEH ILO News in the HEADLINE | a = ©, - She Kar Kandred Complexion Soap AY pace eg VB ons (= 7 ae Bay8 Used Exelusively Wy ibe Most {Diseritaintinx Women ‘of Rotinemeat. Your Dealer Has It Now PRICE 25c THE CAKE * “ > Just Say “400 [Ok <fieee™ VUA SG See FURS Ah Eee £0 a $988 got Pa Eoreext ees 38 SSE CRRA SULL SET es S72 A Special Reduction 3@}29 ESS eae Wy ve BRcr BS NY ERS eile ARE YOU SiCK? “Hulety, “Blader, Stomacn Taser, Meryouy, er Sek eat FRE ‘O's Erers end Suis Sisveces Weented Sa meta a is fu Kins of eeurieat treatment 19 be eee eae SOR he a a nr at sas EEE aay 4. gt 8 eB uetars a. Belen Be set Oo tr gts nee THe ERE emis ‘25 W. Madison Gt. =i fi 2 OOCRA mot! tat Fad, | I StH BA SOMANS PAGE G8 AR A hate —X CHICAGO —— "WIE Fr SHOES [NEWS OF THE. MUSIC WORLD] THE MUSIC WORLD | HMSNTHEWIM FE vicars aia Wise Ona vise DY a ae Sees ear eee FROM MARTHA” * 0! Raney la thu lormiee. yet eng athrynanthveimmen! Tacs ince ’us Gen cedlin, cue.- Atlus Sean: Dae tegainina te fren oF ee SATURDAY, NOVEMBER °26, 792! Pi, dette Oe ree Cth eA saris” tine deen eval ta her nite fhe feast” Weel oth aeventnt. wf George Me ‘Tersesty $385 Catumet Siete of arate inuagestionn, Shia, Peyanea PeeWee, a0 Fast AGH streets why, reemstty Mabnaited seen fern "at se ta hw eat tase sapere an, Sis SOMES Shaeme sete Seoatih Macs avitay. went te Wheaten, Hes Acton AE NS cine an the aytaet eae fad Hare tows sah, tet ie ork ot habe with deen Miva Abstece, 34a vateraet arent ogy three fant “Pocehaon.te Tend Hae tector ia haee Atseten, Ca Sieh and Mew eer 1 Takes, fact Atth steeet, se riaced a sha oF edie Root nf Si seh Ss Kanewteeg Neahulties Tent Mime Hirtiges topres and Sats san Atenas, dine whne ive hover fivizg a Hbiuriore Saipha ane Stor ae ne Seiipcinne eae avi te thie bare Ming tine! eatieer and neste, ti Hid Mee iL AL Resaall, Sai! Vi finvrs Haves, S308 swath state 2 Tinereaie Ueangune sae) teat iewsties Mesto: tas, Petins wilh } vse foe Monsutioe Mitwbay’ sauht te recta tie footie se fiesut daromur of thet Rithue Bo Weta, E02 Faton, Be TUE heen Me te vt he Entiens Stee Pane Wetter TE Sod ida ater Sa neablay Mine ohare “Wasanis abe pn saute. Une feted oy these Seer Me peel woot in San Tews Pelee Wreath “ane an feet, Wn eee at Wight oe Aicietursen, Wesel at hits evar avery Ape yee State aia toe sister \yaeenA wh Ed vhclned fea ean eat LTRS un aati S'iade we the SPAS Sc ERE Set ee Sagege ate eafotvann ts Eisen MAR The and aie Wana Es eaaere eed Cate te Se Tees seta tsa Na PESUPICR ccna grays Witham Foto nn En Sa austen foi Woda stata et aE Shattn, Teeei"S tel Walon wert HED, Sao Rabaee Balad ith Testun ed gee Behan Sh ie Maan loan tee bata ab tte Fee atte ieee Ate deta qUite Smite nak eeeetiee iene drerevey oot ett oo soe, “emthaists ree tage ee tated far ates Bet ws ay ag ene sere Nilay" nicie ig the Mevhent wel of th EUV MS lath (Remicade hacasne! A Sua Eames eit he nigset athe, Wa Woe ad Mil ae Tis SIMI Seat cRenee hare cine Sha wae atte ca et alee ee StS Sk WP Wie ae tou SRR ie, Ua Sing pat tere "Pe, Waters sven Goettingen SGM WS Sita” fear case aati, laos. Wine ne Sey Pn See ini Bal Seah gecsio’arontaceed at we See eee ce ee trae ae Pan ae AT Sg Sea wa ede ee belting fies Mh Tea lean hea Lee Ea lint maetine BE ERNE Sea ae soampae of Me wetter Usta“the. fattaveing: ne SST haar tent Tetras te BR TS an Bl BALSSEE IS gt eis. Foie! dteiaiteiaan, AUC!” EA calla SOARS i a anche. Ee gata TRA a PMS cpt as anatn bah Pact Ry A ee Reo Tis REPS NRG ate Cesena is wth abou Scare ys RE, Neste Se tanh, eee Secs we yieheaghoe See, Nook ORES a tee Te Laene Newt a cat NE aa NOW {S TIME TO JOIN, Te oer caer ees SMantl hte Bake Xe Fur Lined f re Ay: _/oNOtaRTS oe \ Ls R Collars \ ZB _“F $20 ro & $50 r SLE sRESSi6e 3429'S. Michigan Ave. [gg BESTEVER MADE ew Spine FoR brat EoNteaG kaa ce ‘Opbuiemique, Hanover, Germany, at which wadlese De. Tirit tok his posts Eradiste course da 182 ‘A reception was eiven at the heme of Me and Mee, Prod lark, 6228 Ada Sovwet ne honor af ther mother, 3trs HM. Gates St Paul, Ran. and thelr Skier, Mire J.C. Bikes wf Uidalwna hiya, Leantia Denny, 2000 Tediganc seni, final brutiier, Eenest, Hyant Shin Sere catbod tey Sy Leute te ate tend the funeral nf their eousts, T. Titsiee, ave retiree trees inl Mee dames J. MeDowell whe forueriy peed wt a220 Darke Park svecnies ate Tow kwated at 212 West Porsine sttont, Centhuins, RS. 3. W. Fonktas, cage Wales avenue, wine had heen cautined several dave fa yeecnnt at ates, 8 abe tr he Ties nist Stewart, formerly of Furtebaya, Par oi arrive I Chicas. shiva Mie Lathbays ard will ake thi his fitage Bene, “Mo ie the eons dietaw af Blog deg. 2820" State TG Willis, Parzen, Non be vhs nonar hia aister, Mv. Hstuie Pavia, 4812 Vernon avenue. Magee Robert 1 vets ame fam- By Mises isahethy Clark, Tlanehe iad Hawaia Shae Wer, and Mrs. Tofu, Teateoge tot Mteg Lob Cop cfd Mis, Bihahetts Bupeor ae anuom Sie taesee rissa s whee will hse bag parties at tee ween ccabarttie Dis 2 Me aha! Min Witham W. Carter agig' Sr Tawrmiee avene, estebsated thea psc anniversay News 1s There ‘wore same than se aed MMe iad Ms De Mewards 4243 Feorpnteile gtentis, entertained Bet loud Mes ten Sioneee weit a lan Site st honor wt Tue awh Neate in the Setesthw My aM MIS Alfred Ansbergent wer doves geste of Me, aid Mee. Cee Weis ace on Thaw aeaiviter day \Y aes, EN At ead bere om earth, . Herat Ring! teu Reg chatter ate Bhat a TES geal, de® of gt “EVERYWOMAN” The mere iemmemcenmemt thay Mere Se ee eer ie to Uiopear Ie RENEE wed alice keenest Wer ae fig aiteratan yar the: take wity this Se ee attain cepeane she Peake Shaded ter uence in shee commnter Fier Smear ey ontedoen sh fMiecinieal dren Eee.” whieh SOSMS cea ar cane Avene heater Bye ndchat on tie 2th ct mine te Ie chinement of the seenite, "Reoathoe Pendiinee ie are” tact rhempenn: Py thn twante erates auch st fare Bad lune ‘ie thaw chen. napeurine inh ar Wennoney Amarece Minstrels tn ttt daatoon Frat iach ieee vine grate, wa know cathe pad) “ware than St RAS. piers truant oemban the fia Fanos Octo far tee Blew Tin Sncee eB ohne Mare’ Reces- Taree mt ies feat sqadon “HvereRgnen SWS ante anerae, faint oe amd Moe Re Seger nag eet will her ‘hirad ste eiwinent aries ws Vienete Hpictoge whe upetts the rate nt. Tease tino ee ris eae neath tiers sien sinege nae Sieoed Wiens keh Stel Reunite ‘as, “Etatan" Dahing tes That'd ae ioe” Mari Curthe am Nr Leas. \eurnse Sigwsom sas the Beis NN atest ot thers wana Tretia nt Fee neren with the, seriger whee sail ath: taal the things ee what aed ities ost pure weritten jf the ene ate Shanes ages it falls for pereomaion bas Sarg ‘Keon teaneepitonn at the eternal Neneck Af" thinge: Inanweerial wbiites Bae ie af suffi the part het shied eet ghaite af rah taser, the fee 1 Nun dtne wettue w thuest tek toons Me, Cioerge tierra iia? nauder wilase Wer: Sis Fuleenian siteecewnminn ie tele hfecontedh, Wa wll t these, ateribintes roe retemoend Tv he guaeeatece in pa testes went” ‘ine ae Great eens Monee A ie fa hor a hoe nftaien eae plete amd one (at wl ene yt ite amd. tows te Oar y woieth Sipe Tee the tat, there ae Tk fous mente bets letter all see ine sith hehe aww if ee want te i the amen ae the Avenue, auenter chatiadetit of toes Nae een Sekt Ww. R. SOBER Willlam RB Seber, 37, caitt Loko Park avemiee die) last Sundae at ie heme Athi bic death sae gnacpacnerd, No hard Neen uniter thw sage of toe tae Ne Tall Bir eneeral werke” wuifering. from the nase sfeine Neovo ctrl, A SPREE tied aconte sie eae rameter ehicaen in 1660, ay in Yao he Sturt trie Re Asher aac her esas seweeweat Te hal Men ta hic peonent becatgen Unt a start Thine bets: ee Destatien cur af the met Tenuta eth fu thee ne eahtelphencdt AL Tab aguentae nf the hE ae Hearty luaet fee whe even the ea-dcve trade Le hte head ant munnect ae ese hotel, Wee SESS* INL Pata pocnnene fe memasers Fork! Ghose tind oaletts: hee Was MF Mie STV EE wae Yn New IK, 18 In Var odin, (West Jniien Ue tenves a USE SEY SNE and mentee wsetin Shee: tmivw hoot ut telorsde te bomen fis has, at Will Use the X-Ray shivelaem Megete Wee custo te the geointe beget te a shate semfaieay TMS eet eet i “hntueson earn ie Favegtaihwed Saad oe Sette Salers PACES Sin ae ace am: atomadale hse art Eh nd Sean, rec agh GS'E Sears end ied econ at the Cos Sectad oi ohn and Brats schon, MATINEE FOR SOLDIERS PLEASES SEIEPT AURIENCE "Oo, wasn't it fineT" gushed demure, but beaming and bobbed. Hele tigre fram Protessor Rabble Mardin’e dancing elise, as she pre cedeat & thouestnd, amore or less, mute Reciese (2) persene from the in terior ofthe Avenve theater, where thes hid Just been served at delicious inoreel of ehtrtalsment with Mies Hhgatetiy Bayer an tthe bostesy aud the members of the ith United Stue, Infantry, now “meareerated Uniuerty ia Laaconworth pelson, a the tettion, Sbsent gules SN Catortunitely IU ie nok easy to toaker e-qiiner siorts forgot when Wwe are helpings somehods, bus trun the moment. when Mrs. Hazel Thompaan Davie xvbile or fairies oF Senthtat age, whichevwe New Tike, se Sharmingly interpreted a "rose" Glance wtih Mise Fannle Wise easel Set tw sappeaud til yeur hands Earned, one fle that the atmoxpher Nas being sort of saturated witha Kind nf inusies) opium: which drove Thuibte at the fvesrent fare, dis: Jirtiuuneat. fur vouts, and chops from the nine Sine Sarton Harrison, whose eos- tuner we Centre te Bes Wate Die Teeive Charles Eiger, etehingly st Heat at ie ninigerm, was evel mers feasins tha waual vith her sal Tint sweet vedee and “terpeieKorvnt sumelifdaaents, Ste sung ose. ine.” Vimdeciilians cut ox the Coast tell theig coneades to swt unell they get Hiecibeage i they want te hear re Tnmsie When thes Pefer to. Clarenee Bites faint ke Avenue. arehestea, Nich Givored the audiences with ane Be Sie Tones cesta emapesitions, Suse Days Peewhe Une Little Mise “Rose Marion Soll about & wae the re- rectent of all thee wellamerited a= phage shied her tat-like shetrlders [nubE endure i her Alda Walkerton Metenieie dance and musical eharae. (hatiey cer oserntr Mise Elazles™ Incisted by Mise Lillian pred, Bee swans i Renew sthont ott tne pewcortal, Uhieaze's leading tener fee Vind, tad Boe aecempanist Chocer Conipton? Is ft feasible 2 fell more than yeu Know, whieh is That hea ae. Pacers and Me. Conus Ger are "Just what the dector ov. dered Aver hearing, Mise Tone Harrie in hor speciatgy, TAN by Mtysnlis” we rather fawar what makes her inuste a eee A charles Ehzar and tiie really superle “archestea. Mie Tarinony Land” rhe feature of the wrocrain, Tete tia doubt as to who's who fn the Jaze orchestra worhl, -Seennd ward- Se are the Insers in noc heme able Eh hear thie fae. aesrexation anor ffen. ‘Thee casily. sustained Uicir Bicidy While reputation, SMSin dons qreceded ta at Chopin “Eantaisie Mise Fannie Wise, who, Singing in, her Well: tralned seprano Soles Duntars “Pst Lit Laat” and Linencors. showed her host of Chi- ‘Cas triends that she renuins an tn- fiuitalle interpreser tn song, OM ynirow Copeland and Poe Straine tat wanndecitbe sketch for the. sul- Alera who sire ca. henent. fram the jrroveeds of the enterialnment closed AC program which was delighttul tn every varticulsr. ®8C~Lubs The Junior Matron’s Art and Sneiat 1h wad fear pase Week'e Meeting At the hana lat Mrs. Atelges Eberle, WC East od sre, an Bridass Taonch: fay tas neerel Simi the. haisiness of Ertenting vhariy thamkeeivine tase Kee tec wewergt need Famnhlies. was ats (Snes) tou Ehe “incesing thks week we ie ielattin Brig atthe heme af Mrs Ring dione, Use "Winemnnes avenue, anecineat Phe Swastihy Cals will meet atthe yan uf Mie doknean, 4412 Stato street Fram 2 ive ten AN amemtoors res Atinated te. tes erent "The relief evimnitine of the of A, wi ntte vane ate stam. am dnl Faenains! werminan, Neve 86 and ah Aevgin Gay Sin street te assist the Mneatanates and ‘unrmphised af Our ange The Reval Whist evils mot at the ome at dT. Tevige, Sik Lafisacie. avec Riven Thurashase Nek, fs. Tie next mers Soe wall he at the heme nf a Migehell Shr Wincal streets New, 32. MMe? SL peosideurs Wa. Muses, Reorotary The peut fourth “Sunday moet ine og the “Thskemer Cink will tes Wedd ot Werke) RUM ATS. care! Savas afters newt, Now. Sr. 8 wet, A anemeertad Pratiain fie the tre Tasker Te Waste Hygtan will ter renlernde ieee. We ak Hee ioe pastor ef Waiters A 3M, B. Rion chearet will lathe peineinal sneak: ce ian sain af histo’ heat lent Si incerta er prea solomon Sane ind Soria TEN tendon, Possitent: Sliss Death Tata, grere: The Young. afatrans’ Culture Club gave a | ctmaina eiawer atthe Old Bie mae, tts pawn ant Vigwennes ionnes (Wadarstat ovonine, See Ve Aiteeine nei uneatnionts ween SN eg) Wea rarey, and "Para Chiste uenae. anima cAmiresss, wees Eine? Edie Smith seoeenary The renular gosting at Asien Club niet at Shea Faniie Storrise 4329 Eane Behate, ed hued edection oF officer, FMidigs Now 2. "Fannin afocis, secs The Zophys Sovial Chm held a very gureossad mectinae seit Mine" Maw WEES en ast Satuniay ovoming, “the teat meetin weil eit Sie Tat SeMhane seas indeens "ovens, Sanaiaye Sede ire sebeck, SAM members ore Panett th he prose. The Invineltde Tramutie aad Mule cal Cink lh meet ae aad wih ies ims tawny ait Meast eth haem, The Sake wae eens steiostth: kan hie. eos fumes given at the Vow. ORs tna eee RENE scting’ et toe Brians Mot osnar sai p. im. All members are Praniratea te bw. hreoont The Silver Pont Savial Chub met with wire earrio: Harton. 612 Evins cenit hci. Mie ir on aceenmt af ‘Phymkeetine way te ‘elnte wl dart Cee ch Mw Ma aim, eae ily Tioaelenes earent Mee, Mars Ves gins, presiding. Mec. Kats Vorte®, sew fears Airs. Enea fisunts repertor. Ta Veena Sociat (ahs met. Werlnene aon evebiie With Sig’ Picea" “Aten 123, Peateiesavemne. chimes ana dames (asl were the feature ef the evant Sg meeting will tos St the heme at Sept intiw Htont, 3219 Latagotee aves The Phykin Wheatley Cla met ov tie ome con tase Weltioataes Rar Waorsting talk ue veiven” ee Mis pent Tae adits mesin the Niet and third Werneabaee, Erle treat ond tet eee. rie NORTH SIDE NEWS Mra, item Lee af 155 Necan treet, whe ins teoont Suffering setie mn savers MTS Hiigeentigs Ste vcesd hy TEN tea RV Stet eneerninedt Bimiag at grees ue sins, lat Sim QD Se-aT TU fatouen ete tee Ber Shay eewet Feel” Mrs heute QM MR Ne witiins Hrenet ne Wie Sorth Pranaiiastser eae, "a Binog fae SSERM Te Ga eat fiine. Mine Marcie 'Meniwnsan “ae GP Nitin Tealsted wttoegs whe hase heath HE iginwetes Mec Marin’ enwrene De DEE Sat Cure street eave a Vineieun tant Thiretag. AK resent had deeheeut tine Hare and Richareson Comin snayed reine Mixes, nn 3c) We ta IM EAbacaany iaciemes gitfrpege eee Yeine nactin a2 Pilar aunuist rheureie AGES TRuitware! cane Leda venue, Ehaay evening Dies Mnl"under the ema af sedak MC enon D SY CTHEL GAVIN _ 3 OF THE MUSIC WORLD | by NORA DOVGLAS HOLT SKETEN PROM WARTIOS on Sie, a ko the MN ate ange, then rath ye Mi ese ket, “He jcoHEE Tent. where they reuse" aves iy beloved Martha mdvance t0- nS unre hy aon hate att rat Bl ey a the sam grommets hve he ort weg rea Parlor seek whaie suey eccrechelenn | Cymmeeemaee, Munkey slotting the: batt iat taking himcif develved ip] Ce (ME Pretty, Saory, atlas tatty, mie cvt, Te Jade 0%] anne sina Cin nym cone ia tae arb, neh Lode Mate A eres ateen as Hees Rene aan i eee teen actor ee ce re peel emit depose nae (oar AG r,s, danas ner hire, rie ae er Pate net ae cba a ie disappears, and dressing herselt (Church, Rev. GW. Ramsey, pastor, a : We Ppieddings [> ” 1 «a 7) | Betnel A.M. E. Churen,, rartwrn Bie Ue aie ibrhat Bete SA a tats aba ed Cire ade ats ert Tibeenede See RM Laster eee Genial Bann chug Te, 3 waMeaa an tla Cael ee Ken aes Nt iat oo IEA alt, ase air tele ME chyrah siieere tans St yea, SSI she tual ati Gras oes a atten a etn ably aon ae etd ER sett et ict il eae As fething "earsiees ee exe a stints eons Poa Liat Gree aa tune dei eam. aaa Tye, fT Fae ate so Vaptist church, 2820 Dearborn strert oni ita ic ek HEME Sack” ting "tee, ete SP RUE apt ea Redes tegnenta Tanith SB rgagements JACKSON-SCOTT Me, anil ates. WW. Pe dackson, ATH uaibicg acme, announer “the ene agement nt their dawanter, HoH. t Forme Th, seutte dee Weuding ‘wil reeeriats ties in Famous Old Recipe for Cough Syrup Easily ang cheaply made at home. ur it beats therm all for scl aan Sit tae Tf ie neh Si den mare ae He ea Sata Se aii Me APTES dt ede sated iy Wala relia estas MR cane et cel peste Sor et Sich ce io se WeSges Re Dante Coe, abe eta SKETCH FROM “MARTHA” scBeatiind trum awe Sere. | i ] a “| | as incase Baitadelphin, Vo.. Sev. S4—Cin et hurslay Hew kveard Eile de, and Mrs Celia Be Pasen. widow 0 thy fide Kew. Th Willingtan Tunxton, wer tmerisa) at, the residence of Mr. stat Biss TF. Clagett, 35 Wittinhart street, Newark, Xo J. ‘The. groom's Bite to the bride wae a new, resi= Monee und mvater cur: tie toride’s gift ta the gram awe aan sanbroidered Aehite stl neato, After 2 shart hanes thoun thes will ready we Std Weat Marshal street, Wiehmiend. Vie GLAYZE-GowDY totes, Oki, Anuemipement of the puurriage of Misy lea Glayze, and Witham Cauley: Gewdy: eye smade Bist Weeks The couple wyarried the 26h Df September. the Hew. dS. Dawson Rhtewting. Me, Geaedy: wil) return te Hix home fa AUssouri, where he is Suplosed dn" thw geverament service. FLOWER-JENKINS Mr amd Mrs tetas W. Flower of Mexandzin, Lac sumennee | the Imarraiae wf cook dacalt r. Cynthia Cleenatea,, te harks) Jenkins of Chica Thursday. septs 2h. The ewiywede are at hunts at iid Was hash avenue. CUNNINGHAM-BUSBY neg ‘Springs. ArK.. Now 2h—On last. Thuralag et bach peo al tho Fesidenes oof Sr anid Aire. SLs Pte Raman silver “stveet. Mies” Mary Sherman Cunningham nf Little ioe, Ark, and ‘Thome [ushy uf Helen were married. The hide was a well Known beauty culturist. Only a fev friends were present and the newly- feeds will make their home in Helena, Ark. TAYLOR-COLE Ayrshire, Ind —Miss dane | Marie Tavier and Edward Royal Cale: weer inarrind at the home nf the brides tincle, Thomas Tasior, last Thurwtas. Nowe th Phe Kev. daines Todd f= Heinted, Meo and Mrs. Cole have Hikes a aulte of rooms in Une Todd en ee M'DOWELL-JACKSON Mrs, Amie MeDowrl, 4257, Vernoni Jayemnv. und: Pret, tarry T, darken, Cincinatl, O. were muareied last J Atondag, Nav. 1, at the heme of the ride. Phe coremennye wie read hye Dee Hi Ie Stovwart af Quinn ehipel. After ae short hunexmean the enuple i eX Rectad to Feside in Ciieninats, ONLY ONE WEEK AWAY The South Side Opera Company ts eroating quite a deal of interest tn Ultra musieal circles throughout the ‘cits. The Chic rage Dally Tril- fine on hast Sw- fay zuwe two yarueraphe Fm Peeugenivion ot the “efforts and inerite af ais Hien organize lon. Thi bs the tani anerae ent pine anne ovr fal grey that" ts ‘equiped ta give a two: Ruent yerform- nee at overt and. change. is yromment stars een niet. Chl er tas eave ww : ee eruceanie “Th Gee tie tas a ASSES Wests ar is Be eels ot tee LSB lee een PERE i cere cons Bg ins: ‘annone oi ; Set een RR eis ts euipre YI lent yortorm: ME ee ad ours ana" change "i [Nellie M. Dobson yreininent stars Stewie, ‘che cago ts the world's greateat miunsicl Tehlert Ate Bent have to ee 8 dane alerted tn attrwet ern ‘Shige Meifve Ar buns wait sing he rise fae onthe opening tight at trance ‘unter should have heated Kerang, necten would hater seriiten Bison eve singe Her wire Tar 6 lee Gone Spalenre ane neeee saree Maat antl Miner “thaw bet Fkptat® che rate ftom Califor, the Ealdeh ee, ud wilt ahvewer. pet Fated cineca a totes af Bune "stare Hanes or Riutis, serena an aetecte”: Recut aemata’ Fame aii ana Wattash vente, Dee 2 saa ae yates ahurpe tet your eiSheug at tbel¥. Bi, Ge At without dom lgeAdvertianiaent Se APPOINTED GRAND DEPUTY Mes. Prec 4. Noo #882 South State 2 Ne dtae ot Laherey Teyinie See Aka bec ake distinction a bee Grand Ut. Rule Mainie 2 Hodtse Othe RB 0 Bear Ww of iain fone View as det igs af the stat Ae Hines ana i Sueisdtetions. ONS im nnd bo ner cena Untiring zest all her undertak Ings, Ms, Nom fenced by he tenaple. 2s fe dem Sietrated. hye hy serving her nf Term as deat flier. She is ale fayal deputy rite Grant Ut. Rule, FRR Ree re Slainie TE. Hodee BRPGRE Si oe} AP ine 7h 0 Siegal eed othe of tain Perea et toon Vice as deh gee Nee ote aa SH Meine and it bs Jigledieons. | RAS | cae cod to 3 Uitieing eon i Fe i AM hers undertak BRgewte: is See ee ie SMES iced hy het Rai temples ae te aemn Pega Swing her aft tater She ie as fiat depnts ruler pape ee nfthe past and Mrs. Ped. N rement ‘be Rulers Counelt xe. Mei Ne Heuehabd at teat Ns Bea aad aun th Sten area adoet Worn tilse Grand Coniee at's we Bn. Te ak Herainee ‘uf durietes James Puttman Dies Jom Fa Aan ne at PES AGRE Borat eta ene Loceth Sd a ibe haat oe estat iigna HS, oo i la dead’ man. When 3. Ticur last neath Utne att “ie, Me wep Exing: ins the icinity uf Svuh street PATTI’S UNEQUALED! - Brazilian Bleach pp ¢@eeu) and Cream Cures | Semmens For Bad Skin ea | Biesching, Vantaning and Cold Cream. “cise ‘ie Le Teaity Paweer Ave or o. Sea SE oe Eatin A a ( ena ‘Anita Patt) Brown $5.00 for 6 Toilettes and Patti's Beauty Secrets * Help! Agents Wanted Write Quick! Get Patti's Columbia Record ‘‘Villanelle” By Mail, $2.25 SEND ALL MONEY ORDERS TO A.A. BROWN, MANAGER, PATTI BEAUTY EMPORIUM SS ee a ee ee GLOSS-O — A MARVELOUS eran ee nee DISCOVERY THAT GROWS § iat Ov Begs HAIR IN THREE MONTHS ee pee, ilos-O will positively promote thf fe RS SS Sisi(h Bel wtediae cite GPO AN Aaa Tome. ft hag been fonnd that ait mine: > gia RRR EOP Sadtotie mnmied. Guar Ae? ea ant" have teen eniopeiely cured wie) IE QR pitta Ehoty. and cor" steughiening the. i. GaRe Resa se aT Seanad” GIR! AS Wut es fe RO ae gehen Mate Packer REE ERNE Retail Price List i Nu PE fonts Sher Sagara Rtas AER Be or Fated EiE Lath row’ drew HEE BS ae Mme. Lota &. Grayson’s Large . q Sufagncening Come oo =| fardias T MRS j MME. LOLA £. GRAYSON 2 as | 424 South Pork Aves Chicago tl eee ls aE ———— get BP a ee eee a6 : tLe Keys to the Kingdom” Eee ey So et Seer an a et ot em gms ne Sata htat” Ramee ate omit ae adnate a oe, AN be tee Repeto the Kinzeors"Y'Wier's nereh power varetck'o coatoibe incom Se oe oe eee SANTEatseii te ogy pita ce sa ia Aa | Wikeeiteeat and terns mee ehintartary son" a win’ ae pont antares TREN. SOHN fas eaen GIR shit vane Hadas aalbNE Hemstitching and Embroidery Douglas Hemstitching Co. 3102 Indiana Avenue, Chicago Douglas 4985 CHRYSANTHEMUM PRIZE GOES TO MRS, GALLGWAY ‘Tuskegee, Akin. Now, 2h--That the annual ‘Tuskesee | Chrysatlemum Show, which was established by the lite Dre Maaiier” T, Waxhimeton, has fot fact any of ats former lnterest find charm te the inatieaite eonunu- ity, wus elearle demonstrated be the fectutiful tural eshttit which wa held "eeventis inthe iustitnte: gem hasiun, Through the efurts of Mrs He. Mbotan sid other tnetabers of The suninittes on iavangenwents, the cleveath annual ‘Taskewee Chrys: thei, Shave Was Mont success find was omnprisesd wf Mure entra, With fw keoner rivalry, thaw hs ven tne ‘sinew the Initial years. The exhibits compared favorably beth a to quality and. arrauzement with those af former “Sears. “the rst prize, dlexbmated -ax the “Founder Veiner was awarded 0 ates. Cd Cattewear. ‘thus “spectacle presented in the kemntiesium was one @f tnuete beauty and splendor. The hace yall sand “este ipparatas. wer clothed tn Heautitul eheewinehermns, whieh were splendid. spcimene of flarienl- tire, bate fluffy: white, red and cold ehrssunthemnume were arransel fia manner whiel brought aut their Meauty to am adwantasse, with the Camous Reuier 7. Washinton Chess: Sathenutin—at estes karke ark Rated crimson and gold heessnm, ext Civated and mitged hy thee Kute Mrs Totten, Lowersin the pice af hang Ag the ruling favorite, The beauty Of the enter scheme: wre fatensttied hy ‘rolured lights which were ar. ranged be. the students in the elec: Tried diviaien, Tn aldiven to the Peuters prize the fallawins prizes were awarded: The “Jultas Iwwenwald prize. Mra Cxssee Brooks: the. Principal “san Mrs Moten prize. Mrs, Lule, Cae- liste: the Mfr. and Mes. Warren Laogar rive, Mrs. Stell Wond; the Mr. am Mire Atuon Ie Holses prize, Mrs A De iedwards, “und the TF. uber ve Searts, AL Lightladt. NEW AUTHORESS Atlanta, Ga, Nov, 25--Announce- mant has been nade uf 4 fortheoming hook at the Laer problem ty a ona whee Work Tease Mews en dursed. be former Tresidunt ‘Patt and former View. President Fatrhsnks: The tiite ys “he. Washington Alive in the bite of the Negro?” and the name nf the writer is Estelle A. Menderyon. Fron the announcement which origi- hail appoured in the AUanta Constl- Tntion it was, iapossible, to. tel (whether “Mise” or Mfrs." should preface hor naane ge VISITS PHILADELPHIA Rutger, Pa,, Nov. 23—Mes. Ruth A. Roan, wife of the agent for the Chie cage Defender here, spent two weeks Sislting rebstives ‘nd friends tn Phil- delphi and Atlintic Clty, X. J. AdviceeGo Ghie Wiset Otherwise! Iwor Erinewes: tease adtvine ine. tf aun te Ta Searw nddatet hae heen athens Su aah ate Si ae iat ett we” ioe pete dite kin m chatieman Sitktnae” Pini Shier A ie te Se arte makes al te 2S hig MS ahh tie out tp tethink of puttriage and esrectaliy when tect at un a” at ga will neglect sour eetucat ion, oy irae Sines fot ing” wit in ite eth SSE dite tala Sh ter ate Seer eee Pe Sa ace heey Cen ae ease Bea Tine aa es We alee ga ili hg, tt i Vio. = * seria teine. Cabea i sietliies iv mine BOAR Wa cane hed eta ale Heyes fh, ar te cer char Tat oa tte ine nome tetee He Bate oR Lara a alos re EE Ee As oo Sitetnian “rtd tag er when “eh FRY wlan abe e Paet etty METRE Cimttctlon” with” Ber a Feta tna Neeson aoe ‘ae Son oa skteacal | dear Peincons: “Tam asking sou 14 hl MP Sata tS ed Tear as at Sha silat an! wear IPE Me dd htt ns tae Boe rome ae RL sora tidal, Maton aes eke ant ty starry eet ation Acc Ry Wn Saf ae en Bee adit aa ed ae wae eae reat gata Netanes, ee SHyaseri rect ae kate: eed intesaina at Mea neat ht" atarca je want see am hie wife Bet at AML HCL hse" in ot cb hak Haat ‘weds Tate ettuen to Mi Leeda kat Men ti ern Sere eta iad hd a Sen goings te bi Dear Madam: | Mease help me. 1 am eiton Weith Bir whe seeing gr Tnx te Fatal hanna es eave "mke er” hee Gee a tad a tote er” Wine muse f dar—sam Bovtnte ‘fen nae eheae Bey Sr trems t Unawuviediy rare more we hum than Pesce mon ont "yon haat Ellon’ fe hima Lat hed make Ber Shale Tranvausecls and tor were Dour Princess: “Tam a sume mar- ried Woman aad have heen ‘marred for al pINDEPENDENT SYSTEM of Wy SS HAIR GROWING ae AP ant Secseaticned, “att plone SAT oe. Pont cade. ee BN ce eanee Se Richa EE irate Sy MME TEORA 5. syrtx. such }5203 S$, Wabash Ave. Chicago $,, Wabash: Are. Ch y ee PrincessPiysterta |= § i xe 3 A oat Rice nitted nt Pan wtee en met tt Pea esa foe geen 2 AN ts Ree emotes 3, Weert, Mah ite i fe metrasting see inate, hss 00 zie Ti pe ae ie ao grr att te th yee EO wade nL Suit mented gee. Pa ae Be. Pea ie “ee poh + ES Alwoolgs dat hrenchSerseg OG | OG es ee es Toba ce, Saag ities Ni eeraae Oe, Gera ee SOS seam SOUR VRE tie Se SE ea Scho (cts tM Wiiiey aici mie oP ae RENE seas Noating “iin ss RRs aa ves fitkes fiver Ate Reem Sn tO ral SE Anpne tet Rag hipeetieedaad tet in eae aaa SEPINE coke: Gps Seana oo pe 16 cun Ga Sine Mea aes Eerertentt PO inet sa i ee eeeneer Seas a wi Cpoaees: {py ceaiee gikanl | SE Terao sts a arrival. Memes bark vt wT oe ua gs oe TewELE MAID MEG. CO. MUSIC IN AMERICA rapoetinass i gungart ne S eee eee MEE Eruaisiens of Eres > wot th PRS See Teor Sina ‘MUSIC AND POETRY | = eee Sti nai, | SRE tia: | rae te ae a Poa neg eee ene, Seacen : “Musie and. Poetry 4405 Praitie Ave. Chicago, tl THE BEST WAY 1S THE SUREST WAY The Surest Way Is he Improved "Walker" Way MADAME G. E. WALKER’S Improved Hair & Skin Preparations 1A Six Weeks Treatment, $139. : ioe iapone? | et seks SE | Stearoutrs ani oe Seater pS BER | srustost an Re BF | sercran orrce et peee ue” Bg | sta fe y $ 15 ; B57 P| oir se aba s aang MADAME C. J. WALKER, Inc. Bie Tellson “ave, chine, Tiksiie Albright’s Wonder Hair Grower ge | i ag tes fers | cet et | REE | ee alt Pes | RS tie k | ease | Sa ore an eee fee | ta, feces (cone oe ag Brings SEES ee ee ett e f8 See ee Seen ee ALERIGHT seit tnanaa see cneoge . VALENTINE ‘DRESSMAKING COLLEGES DESIGNING AND TAILORING Dav ane dveng Cieyous ; positions’ Fee rae, 2 aren sera or ae bares. cane ea TREATS ea ae ere er reer reer errr errr rere r errr errr crcccre creer ccrcrr creer ere errr rer rrrccrrrcc crac eee ee rc cece ae cr ee 2 WEEK BEGINNING MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28—A Real Sensation! z = DUNB AR PL AYERS Formerly the = A Show Giffereat From the Rest A Show ef Real Action and Thrills = = Lafayette Players AGE “TE ‘a ane _ = = — HEADED BY THE POPULAR STARS . y es x a fal ie < Pa eS . ee = | _ ANDREW S.BISHOP rp E-aE~ hU CU BG = SUPPORTED BY A FAVORITE, CAPABLE CAST, IN ! A Show That Makes You Think A Show You Should Not Miss . 2 = The Play That Made GEORGE ARLISS Famous NIGHTLY AT 8:20. SUNDAYS: SUPPER SHOW AT 6; NIGHT SHOW AT 9. Box Office Open Daily at 1 P. M. SECURE YOUR SEATS NOW = 2 The Home of Real Ag 2B im State Street, at 31st = = ENTERTAINMENT! RA THEATER | sssesscin tons | “Over the Hill to the Poorhouse” at Grand; Real Vaudeville at Avenue and Monogram ar” BLACK SWAN REGORD ; Buy @ wu : : we you buy the | Only Records | See : | see! = Rade by | feet ten SBE Gees SS Ser! Colored People | Seas. Ree 28 puronize Race enter | ; aio poet prises when you get ~ : Shige Eo? i the same value for | “ur P 8 for your wemey. fe. a A B | | Bers bg | Se Be (Neccos | \ ABS Seae Black Swan Records : 2 NCE SCE tre Better Than Most Other Kinds hen micicashtinad Guy trom your denier or order Face Phonograph ‘Conn. 2283 Seventh Ave... New York City | eego. 5046 bus CRCAL ES EG SSE Lawn ORL AMA UhaRAbabeee ik % Everybody Loves Music! Hear ETHEL WATERS Sing “The Bown Home Bives,” and “Oh Osd¢y.”’ cr Black Swan Resord. Price B3c, postage!Oc “The Kew York Glide’ and “At the Kew Jump SteayGzi'on Cardinal Aecord. 85c, postage Oc SHEET MUSIC On. Daeay, soe" "Be Wear Your Welcome Out, 39¢ ALBURY & DELANEY MUSIC PUB. CO,, 2289 Seventh Ave., New York Gity | PACE Six Shim wnt i an tive Bana Pa me crn, property shui | Seas Wie nme ares 5 Sp Br ates te - Rages, werk is tense and. : SRY a * Tre akng othe en i trae toy in BY a Vitaber Wits 294 Heine duex FM pony Langston EP ae “oe rr § i MerK of thee’ facie eaters cast: thee metiae pe Wine Went ster tp bull went Be The treatise tool her weatpiegtace at hd Bis ee(LAile des jacable WILE then Hwee putt fettat paved by cheer Tanerenes Crier cond. Susie SUStin ard Wilh Rite antes the ert pees (rethe As They. ie aete sen Aa Brew Hiekepe is sven at hts Yost, ats Te ile lowe Pteseneaid i tike lexattee vhraeter ef tatiatl har. fscet fav keen fies ie tities quit aan undse, atte wes seapiitte Ie tees well, tohges Monet He Hn Skee 18 sailed seit fe Chenturte Matic tf Attieine Hits ts Vion Hilt as charac tererweatis wot dene Ttope ! Mutictas tm sell stated fise the gut oat laden Waters, Wine Betetates a ettiatet aalielete aver thee atitaters Lote ated Charles G2 spi aie Mas Vater af Leilaath Date at Nunet gauat ostrriedt We foluve wel Gowns Hep rs eth aS wel eat we Nhe feeds estowr Decale Shae ale Devt ae peel at (tee at Me heart: Pane Rake, ta doom Mossad by wise Ty tite pretaiction: THE AVENUE rattan A Lievant “ageted atl Teed teers wt, Stedduenday atiht of “GANG” JINES Fieney Catt Anes ene of the Wanee apratest srtutians, Wie de foapd with uke Hernistenn's Meine a neda © wE| des see aT the Hasiariet foeater West Mit: Cintas” Sle fe neatbest fbratee oe selhtere, shawl recede a fine wele cosas thot Tie beatin, st fisends bene Clete eater bith Gitar” ais ath 6a, fre Mace paght here te thee Winds Cea ereatest saat} nfs Si cese ate ulated ter Mie tor Bite seasiite Hoe nave Gor inin the Wiest port sof potenn tsdees ald sen He fig “Wied and snr “bale Sbteshh Guten: sessancanctt oats beatin te gite “Gung” the ance a — JENKS ON JOS Sins Hiwry detukine baas boots dots die te uate ath teats at tbe Moteatacy tasted get faatate vot Jeoles fas Dee tut ite efteet tenhs started fen tie Sitti he tthe Ne det Crane es leat sei Me pre tional Nentieds tothe dena eet tee ds te Sie odnce wee Mast Weehs Trek of the big sung re: View. chmaied his mercies fur the Nenedit af the Heueten Soldiers’ fund te tty atternena af Thursday, for Whirl he a eniitied tee many thanks Milter: & Baker Were aerorded a the fries when they appeared for taelp sangies talline amd daneing tive atid owas Well deserved, Sur- Urls node kromstt Bare Kyanect the Titpost Satan an bis nine pevebs The as a distinct bit as Has abe the Gast af Marshals CoS ycar, ann Paes pimeteaue nf elas aint distinction. ois a tine fini set The int of the Gill for Saturday: and Sikhs qaturally went te the eredit ff the Mustea! Byrons with) Cyrene Navares deang a feature dunes, ‘This fa tsa bis Gime aazaregacion aml it tek three curtains and a buneh wf Thats peeen thet wpenttie shunt, Orig bial daegs Woolttue, the Extempare- Heels Coniediat), couupeniig Senge 68 the Teliig eit treat and talking: om [epics of the tines, wie a real fel het Meiday onthe and. rewwattied st Peston, Laas never wears ant, The Staion Stubs vet was fe serestin with Eat Carrol dictding the henore with fas Sure far vuniedy, Busunens THE MONOGRAM The Pell here thins week be eghit up fe the minitte: WN Die Jimmy Cex Tris ine lading elever Baby Cox, out Stee ol While the wet themugh= ist feat fave eats (0 Es Che: Beahiy: Wie featie pete [hes Works ever. MeDuw & Hetelvesoh. sect here fap the test Pirie on a Teeth, Pee BONE GREE MALL a haan. Eaknneniie delivering, state Just [ge Nise tected ordered and Mefaw AP tine fae eanedy. gerfeotiy: rashe feos the stact. Listun ge Cun, bette aster Ham, aie well guwened, wf Peeattige catuestanes ated baht af Ehead yebve cach, paithiag Mvit Sones for te the vtdecly et thee Ve fet Titers Zon 8 Chien ae ceeanite at Sovettne stadivadanis, Wt well dts “the Phcctpoand bok thar een ana Tal ACE WAY fae Thced da Fett STOPS 'EM Sheva, d& dus kine, reset sige tiie beds SE the pleats stoking “wer all over thet ate tite Hert of a tie bell at The RSate Varies Tuavton Gn tkve fou jest Lhe eiWine they te rend: fogs ug tte kivets steal bear witness te Hoe there hat a cspuades wet WUKt Beda fer erat es renin is fat etanmseny Conte an, lias GOING BIG. Awetatt & elas ove Sodeetuane cle need betWern Uniahe and Tweet, Nein Tie tn sqmtpers at vate the fies Neath aunt at tise aed Get Tite Se iygusatead aol thee Mita puny tate lntet a Tes Mudnes, Keane Sa? a Mande ean would vist Hie cosas ne Austin a Tektien thes Breve thine wt Watts aero the Hence at the Mbciestie the first bli SE he Ween “Thes ston with agate tuted dediness. hey este the Mluext HE vtes lind these vs ehal sqaartiares Be yeeisiide, The Liestenant anal aie Heats Reiihep pr thes tneeqeat sa Herel oe ie ais of ther ttn Edmund F. Cobb Flirts With Death in Daring Stunts in Six-Reel Feature In appeciring in the leading rte in “the Denert Searpions APU OosPat later release. Edmund Pe cule te Yenular Seung leading aman. Birt Willy death on eevurul secasihs. bu ti purtewiae being. miraculons ex: Cayes. Ailing oversa long fume, los thin awe fect wide, Cob aceon: Mises "feat avewer est an tlh Seven tn another seene, he rie titder a ton ef dirt breathing treme n' thin teed, Delare rerecing, the Hraper cus, Vide Johneen, paving en unite Cobh, remavedl the rect, teat Ing Cah hetyiens, STihe ete to inedetiy Winn wom jue aay he ie on thie vee? Vera We autor The Revert” xeveyion” wall te shown at the O81 these an Thnk Fiving day. Iv ty one at theme stores Sungate san Slime appeal tl ie tineqwadied “tor aiiatinetiuns, tt Turks dinewe day in Westcoast Tires” on revieater wrute Shot Gn the Mw Mover tT ccities. the w-ture depots the cult strife heaween the eattlemen sit the Shee herders, CAChiie this teste ts Paramount there ie straint hi inant intercet running Uitmigheut ths iities store. that, Weinge faethe heart Tiras by the dozens. weditaes neank burr: Mr. ut Mrs. Hamteve Harrington | | Wise Olive Micke are ihe proud parents wf t_nines | theatres sand ent Gani) bok, the areal having taken receeting 10M fisiee vm, Sone 18 at ther home. 144 Ste te tucated at Wise Tal street, New Vorks NV. Leena The Henry Ho taxen Jixaianders, at the Aegan Theater, Eectes Mick ate Ga (hein nine week tnd abou ue coy flat ee aver the eatire Pu T Ai ite, carting Sher ae stad weeks an Pos Btomtay at the Waashersim, Ine Aiottapehs, dad Kom Murgoats Tse Steirs cate Ts yeunte aha thet evn ae SAP dives son, sols ted’ Moguhay at the Un Eons “Tueater, Tavecnil, Sane The seampiany ie rtaieteen tek nets bes tetave sie ae A ting better vane Hast weeks tor aie fer qestaicatin Re wag gem by tually Wirth at the Uren af Buategthe Bhan. wey “tater ie anveinie, Gali Enel dnfieing wit wehiek ett. Sooo aul [res renerien Tie aed igen ine Pelt fii pind spent Uke, best ale yt tine quest Seok UM Bigs Theaters Now, Haven, Simin Buawordhy sate deli dove, te etnce yartnea Surwied Mather, in Sogaticie oan dani, fate eopened she MGank: Sith Sige Wat cue tute amd Weald Wrst Marginres actos ae tae Ler filme tea Stempiles Pen. "aie tact ae hn Seek atthe Babess Thedter saekine Fast Bnd ae Teil Greet foatntoat withy Te Girts tes Take Vine tg riatiing. tet evens Shere acconting’ te pee Natioe sent Bryer carne ean ghie cain, Moston, Mars thie week. stil pore: Tara Coates Cracks rhaeks are Sphttins tlhe We aie betwen th the, Reddate Chiegita, UE. anid tite Orpheus TRedter, Senile tems tid Warts ve Himeetd, Mouked wae abel. ave pada the parson bolt gt De Rede Be Theater, Whweazes Ul “tity, Satta, & Willis home Vanni are Nasi tie Beal at a tice weeks Ehpatesment at the ATidccit ye Theater AWisinngren. 1 0" Sena ratte 2M Utomo. tor guy ire lsat guitiager fe the Haters Satettetse aes Treen ti ge his howe in Not the Wavotinna oy Ueeatad Wucha Us “hain, petra Sealy ta eer thie sigue anal ete Stith the oniarsete in Suane californit Sobungie ache “ig pelasiiyg | the week "at Dppteletas ieuteres Reh shone, Aan eS aneat eaih wl Peet nine wt that” ayoet Fully Stators. the duagler, save tian fo ie denna grea ned Taek er Ge pn ane She weak at the: Heeteawitt Saar, Mase tee “Mase. Seng tonite ymar KR ommab, eles very Jade aad ntieeoecttth are splinting, the sheck detweuay the Lovet theterss Lat § Gan “aaa Whintsne, Canali Toon & seco Cite tates ttre a hut this Week atthe Keene Theater, Toaitiniects Mil “Send “ronte, ioe tar, ate th feony ot dike yueracle lt The ALG Brewis Mtinsti ede estates Hae ale wit Tie week three sue By thine Tork, Ape, “anit Menguhis. Fina. win Sanday ia Clarkes ie, Tent ney” Petaeues Hatwkatie tilts tt paving Me inal of a tine titer weeks Pycauenmi at live Dmiar Phytera isin ch Setat” cenit Pho tiie abetaasrin ta. 48 plas tne the pias nes Ha ani agente te Eiteaty “rivater: trecnailles S.C Send Tonhin & Wilhameen's Delegates gan Padi Ge plaxing cine Week at tite Hest Piater. Hrookiv, Noi Oi Athans. miakige Hee as a Teun, dre spitting tie aGek Uesteen Shee doen” and dettersson Theaters, Newt Vig Sy. Feditiey 8 Peres are aking the rmattses te the Nori like its Ate play fis the seek at the Strand Vwater, Warsi, S78 Rorud pante nun & Burees Mictarie Geltes ts ape nbising the: werk at due Thine Megs Macon tac lth sieeers: Send vate thee Get “tus Rtagere littine shew, ward every ttingy sig featied atthe Winer Sides, Nea Work Nee Westin Wien, wily Phitiy ites a: the nes dram. gee play tas the weele at Buffalo, SY. Send routes Nutter & Corin lave fair aoeks in ant arengiig New York CHS They say Thar ‘mall wil tach ther it wddeessed tevts'F Tizng street, AW 4 : Henry ‘dana tities whit Rernstein’s Treadway Scandals Ceo ts dole his ecu ar ihe Guyety Theater, Milwau- Ries Ws, STayner © Faster, ome af the best tate Minit wind daneinge Tennie of the tihies ate acing the week 4t_Grand telat, Neb, Hunter ¢ Crackshat. wlusing thee feacer aid, Supe ant the Conk Theater, Chumutees. Oita Tenn & Jenkins, onked until Powia compe Taek, “aro feature on a tine Will at shove Theater. Ruffalo, X.Y. Meng & Free, the Champion Laueh (eters, “are at’ the Orpheum Theater, Winniper: Jahnnie Hndeing, featured with the Monte Carlo Girls, fe hiuting teem in his hema’ Sown, ‘Mattimore, Md. Gaye Theater, this week. SINGS ‘EM ARTO CO, SCORES peli Miss Olive Mbekneen, well keawn in Hwatriesl iad entertaining Crees, bs recovering trem a. feeent qnerativa, Shee tovted at News Hotel) Vine onde. Morgered Trimble arcs writes that agri foe habhas Watson, tee ited Seem aurea fave atiarlon "Cal Stas Sa peastiks Go ube Sera Rive ues Maley mage thal 1 the wand wince te tive stat Patter, PUL Teg Has eased wo. ee Moot tis hieal sar to shea Teaklane «sini gee mahiie, tine be te sudan uae ace pains tie week ine tiasetie Thedtons Wins: "Aish ANU states Wate, Rage iit Skee Sngshchnt a the Stra EEC lin tive Shetate Sate dan Renew, Teaneltee at "feahonters Helter tye Ta ie trie HeetteeS Tne iantdaaic thie who aye Pech see ee RSM ALN (Re amtertcan chit ‘Mighell & Miteheth anatase tie et tan, ee dintar hele do ean the Hake Washington treater 8 Lan Jai anashtietion uf all sence ned janes A reruns: hiteong thei cee: Cee eee ee id Mienanees Wi hi he Bayete saat ane ee file Vambadl tate of the Meciune & Dedlitgten thei twcuterlie fron at iterate ‘anit "Salieri wl stie ner att tay lane, Tenet hupital Se" wlitahie venue Meal, ene Tn a els argaiual dete teuting nate ENT an at Posen, Pl Shaw Mitehelts “ienaville P ities C9" an Peat it this: evi a Mie tie etal theceiani Pm oa [tis ‘Sy tea, hae are an Cero ee ley i Sa tee | STATES Desert Seartion, three days of A Mealgen Cait ain eo of es tga Shue But PUSS cts Seat hy Bulk, Tiongevenis: thuper Atead, | iter Rithing sand Tier Pusgete, ines Wane tree in Fires Weng tae Tet. Hentt Fame tee tae vieaie Hitieh. fal nf Pucue tits, sere= teed an Mls hei Tadere ‘Seurhlon. fiest enisrde ue Te ESS find net of eivoe era Sanaa doen Meee in "Fater’ Ura anid Wen: Inn wf the Weats FAAS, Lady Fingers, two dase of Ber that, We Lan an thste at ipseetearet sues Chae Tale UC Goad en Standen Sehindy's Fisk, ie dees GE nelalbie boutons bse fet" Seurjuame three tase” Badin Sun tee ae Seagate eal Avi Akeesineddeiee, Exteavagunee, Mistetine “Range Moan ahs Buea: Tiwarn nd eater feesekin Crufts Sunday. Tatty Earn in cries Dates HiR AA ony te tate fale! Cuneta Weinene Sgndias Sle seen RUSCO. & HOCKWALD'S FAMOUS . Can Use Fies: Class Mate Pertorm- crear a Fines MANAGERS Woking 0. tio0k This Show and Gthere Write to ARTHUR HOCKWALD HE W. Sth St. Kansas City. Ate Ave W. Sth St. Kansas City, Ate oe PROENIK THEATER} BW) STATE SReET SELECTED PHOTO-PLAYS CHANGED DAILY eeatnuevi: 2:65 "mt eianione | Onions, Turner, Neuat: omic | Woanea’ "Ate Musial pireeter | THE CHICAGO DEFENDER One bt the ereatest shaws ever staged be "The Devi” which is. the Rtirachion at the Grant for the enti: ing Week. The feet that this produce Viet is tie ome which shudder The nate OF the stir Gearge Artisan, a house> hetd word, is a real recumimendiet ton, Those whe wee the Dunbar players: in the presentation, huwever, have an Brtistie ase Well ase senaatianal trent in store for them. ‘That Satan hisa- Self roms on earth and. nven his subtle Uilluenert In the separation of two Young and loving hearts nay scent a bit fartetehed to sone theater: fewer, but the way in whieh i in Gane tarrles a world of logic. That Sthe Devil" wing ont in the end is also unconventional, wait tds twee wit Tend added interest and will inspire: fy you & werkd af deep thought. fe a “ifForent™ sort of lit one Of Foal aetion and cbeiths: ~aud the ian fev of staging and direction guarai- Wes A permeation far atheve The 1 canes. Andrey Gishop and Clon Desmond WHT phy the levers aud Leaweveure "Uriner” ix east as “Ths bs a LULU COATES & CO. South Bend, lint. Nov, S4-—"The bith Ac ihe Grpienal ian, exceptionally Bet ur eat Io HeuMlgon te tee HES ten Snitte Sat Going. gee Se ee cee iene et Tele thins adie Brooee At Tee mar le etcni ee GR Meso anes White Wek Sat alin shea Tasteituat contearss paler [ey neaen ae ape Oe yeep ees at maak a ee oon eae a quinends Witbe © moe vimmaglt ts ee atRe SET Sg, Mn ts He een nates ra tee Hs ee ee ene, Tas Eee ante THE CELEBRATED C Ee ea eee Pe AC Ray Bh eae ear Bib Shah eee nae Not LI CELEBRATED COLORED CONTRALTO : Accompanied by Her Ray Tere On SH rae SG || Bluc Flame Syncopators x Lee eRe ga excusive— seer es puree aes kenga eke pee era as rec AR i a oO ney Sea Recording Artists Keehn the following Arto Records: Ren ad "p< "eae ee ea rk eee MEET ST ct ogt nat % nN a Mississippi Blues car eee and ce | “Wabash Blues RS RP gt] memes oe Ree 2 ONE RINA| rher Lucile Heganin ARTo Rocards feesree Ao: Mase soss Hebets gf slot Pagal “ARKANSAS BLUES” at S029 52s ee +l Be Good, Sut I" Be i | taaeat? A ee ‘Uonesana.” eee eee es : (BREE EE) “He's MY MAN” : =a samima Wha: Mamma” Sank” Dh Gian aus oleae nena. a in Chicago at the following: “Lonesome Monday Morning Blues? geese ul em a8 wi egeton oa waetine Ot has” Serdea uc betas estate ane eine O18 De Siders ties aerate St” price obo each Clava Sinlthes hauate Store. 151 State St 1 Record mailed postoald $1.19 serine en Tue Geo aie aia Sure Matettelt eat 3 ARE pines Belen 28 i e O. B. A. (Theater Owners’? Booking Association) All Acts, Companies and Theater Managers! Communicate with the T. OQ. B. A. Suite 304-6 Pound Bldg., Chattanooga, Tenn. SAM. E. REEVIN, Mgr., or S. H. DUDLEY fe foc ate. preston A fing letter arrived from Pewer Williams stating thar he and Str. Hewee are naw wilt the Prince MYs- teria Pat Hand Co, playing through Murylead, Vieginia and Vennsylva- ula, Aside trom a fuzz band, the company carries Huzzin’ -Hartotl stage mnamager: the Wilsuas, fermer- ly of the Smarter Set: Eddie Stut- ford, formerly -awner of WUE Wort Wobilers: Great Adams, bieyetint; Atron fates, elaracter artist: | cw Howards, tormerly with Peters’ s6in- dans Girls: the Trine and Brinees Mesterla sont Julius Cooper, drum- ier: Eddie Addison, trombone: Wit. Ue inekson, violin: Lille Lowe and Hetun Burton, ot —— BACK HOME Ve eer ree mame wes Friend Tony—Owing to the snow tan cold Weather whieh, now, prevall in thw roa! Relds of West Virginia, Hisceh'y Monareh nyers are 62 journing at Pratt's Palace for a short period. Members of the combats are Aula Loekhare Hooker, Sammie. Gra imam, Henry tran, Alex Mott, Nelson Teo with Savekwins, the chit won- fer Wane ilen,, Gkutys Wison. Mario bidding: and Red’ Longshaw, the: jazzy pianist. “The hilt here ay the Lafayette last week inented: Sammie Tewls Jay tein, tires sotng tea, ons of whem nes iu feniale: Anipicrsonatien. vu they well, “Act tule and could fee tuaproced Nhone ~The Lackhart Trio: thied Member has a beatiful. voice ant Shonkt vot spol its with hlues” Diuey & Dudes, na good net, meat aad clean aod. iatily. dressed. white anindseading ary introducing Tot of okt stft—ada Lackhart Roxen, ieee Milos Jefferxon says that Remgthine ve wren with, the puping arm of Sates Tanager ot Uw Lutapette Theater at Bor cee fe a at : A THEATER BEAUTIFUL EB : / NOW PLAYING } The World's Greatest Attractions in | Vaudeville and | Feature Photoplays : Music by CLARENCE JONES | and His Wonderfui Orchestra POPULAR PRICES: |SING’EM EDITH C3 Bi ES baa. Yee) THEY ARE RIGHT HERE FOR YoU ae | Gace *¥ | NERVOUS BLUES Yi { & VAMPIN’ LIZA JANE $8... Sung by the Queen of the Bluss LOG res | DITH WILSDH, en the GOLUWBIA RECORD, Ho. A347. ESC | With the Originat Jazz Hounas Ss ee ee OWL @ THEATER state NEAR 47TH STREET LS Finest Equipped Theater Outside the Loop. 1200 Roomy Soxta MUSIC BY BEST ORCHESTRA EVER ASSEMBLED CLARENCE LEE. Director Dally, 6 P.M. to Midnight. Last Show Starts at 10:20 P.M, MOST “PCPULAR THEATER. ON THE SOUTH: SIDE BELL WALNUT 4431 GIBSON’S © nes seve porLar 903 FEW STANDARD THEATERS VAUDEVILLE, NOVELTY ACTS, ROAD SHOWS ee S 3507 STATE STREET R The Home of Great Features E. M. WYER’S STATES ORCHESTRA WENDOME THEATERS euaajare’ ors (500 Comfortable Seats Mammoth Pipe Organ ERSKINE TATE'S SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA ee a aa a a ICKFORD THEATE 35th Street and Michigan Avenue Clarence H. Black’s Symphony Orchestra Selected Photoplays of Class 0. C. HAMMOND = WEES Sudost Shea teie THE ATLAS THEATER) INGOLA THEATER _ The Place to See FIRST CLASS PICTURES _ “REAL” Pictures CHANGED DAILY | PERFECT VENTILATION | Aik the thme CONFORTABLE HEATING tax an wens Ramvonneie|| Veils eciies @. tina: SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1921 3122 STATE STREET FIRST CLASS PICTURES CHANGED DAILY PERFECT VENTILATION CONFORTABLS HEATING Comimuous-2 ectock te Midnizn:} --- A MODERN CAIN A SMASHING DRAMA OF PRESENT DAY LIFE, Offered in Wonderful Manner With an THREE DAYS ONLY! Fri., Sat. and Sun., Nov. 25, 26 & 27 Joseph L. Lasky Presents William de Mille PRODUCTION After the Show By Rita Weiman STAGE ENTRANCE with JACK HOLT LILA LEE AND CHARLES OGLE A Paramount Picture Thursday, Friday and Saturday, DEC. 1, 2, 3 Tate's Vendome Orchestra HAMMOND & SONS VENDOM E 31st Block on State St. "BIGGEST AND BEST" ```markdown ``` PLAYING A M A SMASH All Including: THREE Fri., Sat. and 'HER SOCIAL VALUE' Katherine MacDonald Adds Laurels to Her Already Splendid Record Recognized as a leading star in the post, "The Social Media Swift" comes to the States theater on Friday and Saturday of the present week, giving Kristen McCarthy the ability in many ways than one. The story is an interplay of the interplay and the role of how Marion Hovle, a graduate at the game company, large department store, has become the host of her family who are connected to live in their hot station. She lives with her sister, Bethany, who is married to a motorman, Joe Chieman, Joe's friend, Joy Howes, as a young man who in all its glory has been a host than his station warns. Joe and Bethia encourage his son for the band of Marion, but the latter worries that she could never be happy with him. At the globe counter, Marion is in the middle of a customer's purse. When the walkaway threatens to discharge her, a young man discovers the missing purse and returns it to the owner. It develops that he is joined by a architect, who is the technologist of Shilph, a tower architect, and now a power in throne and Shipper points to merry bells to his daughter, Gwendolyn, and to another older sister, it is him to draw up the new state capitol bells. He is impressed with the appearance and neoclassical beauty of both tall stately bells in love. Levy and Martins only object to this brittle and believe to good will come of it. In the future, Martin be interested in learning. When warned and looked for married, blind willow draws his patronage. Marion is cultivated from today's capital city. Described in a newspaper as insolent before routine his care, Mr. Marion makes Clifford Trot, who is the only one in London who has cared for his wife with kindness, to go on an aoke trip with her. Helping his wife with no love loves, Louise arranges for her to go to a museum where she can see the victims of violent haunt, but he is befriended by populists than Marion discovers from the newspapers that Louise has been injured in a western combat and in a raywear later she arrives at the camp and teaches for the school. She is told that he has been named Dolly, to whom he be a warranted. If having Lodge does not have love here is about to return to the East when a seething gang arrives on a window with the news of a handbelle that has tarred Lodge in its collar and has turned Lodge into a cage that is actually struck it with. Marion goes with the rescue party. Lodge is taken from under the slide and Marion insists on nursing him. She discovers still loves her, and as the picture slides out with Marion and Lodge in news that Belle has been found dead, collapsed beneath a rock slide on the mountain trail. Beele to Lodge's Bardan Girls have been spitting the water between the houses at Wellington and New William After By Rita THE FIFE PRODUCTIONS COMPANY Presents DAYS ONLY! d Sun., Nov. 25, 26 & 27 E' CHARMING STAR IN NEW COMEDY, COMING A story of an only duckling who came out of her shell a story of the moonlight garden pest who turned into the social patroness is Marie Prescott, newest universally loved and coming to the States theater on Sunday. Supporting the famous little star is Harry Myers, the noted comedian and famous "Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court." Harry Myers plays, with all her humor and beauty, is Body Girl in Ray Giamarchi's clever story, which Boris Schneider adapted for the screen. Her exquisite sense of humor and alluring personality are delightfully intriguing. Both as the post whose awkward dips away from the love of her husband and his great fortune and is only one step ahead of her nearest mentor for comedy is decisive. Harry Myers plays Harrison Alger, the author who, in the solution of his friend's mountain cabin, is popping a cryptic tinge against the King Baggot has made the entertaining story into a pure compendium. Vernon Sullivan, Perey Chandler, Lady Titus, Riden Harris, George Kuwu, Mrs. Loretta Harris and R. Berry Grey form a strong suppository. We are walking from the tapestry of the most distict R looks like the holidays are waking the writers all up and Tell an inexperted man something and Hinges the Fied Island, Diah Berry, Charles McDowell, El Goodman, Theodore Weatherford, Ernest Hamm, Billie Bradford, Mathew Mattows, Tom Owsey, Lukis Johnson, Lennigan Leger, Clarence Dotson, Morgan Dlittle, Chick Looman, A. Morgan Dlittle, M. Morgan, M. Morgan, Samuel Good, Charles Nichols, James W. Taylor, Della Voss, Joe Sheehan, Billie Maxey, Curtis Mosley, Melvin C. Weaver, Dike Thomas, Maros Slayer, Gerrin Edwards, Ressie D Assure, J. Dassure, Whitling, Joats Moshall, Ward Andrews, Aaron Toliver, Joseph Curtis, William Long, Lassell O. Harris, Charles Brundlemi, Maggie Powell, Sammie Lewis, John Bucker, Cifflid Gomez, Rizk King, Henry Dixon, George F. Sely, Harry Berry, F. Berry, Lloyd Johnson, Billy Motterson, Stanley Bonett, Charn Campbell, Mervin Barger. C P & T C NOTES Soot, Thomas & Ray opened on the Sun Thai at Springfield, Ohio. Andreson & Goss opened in Cleveland, Ohio. Nov. 17. Farrell & Hatch captured from Poetia. Old Time Darkness Quartet are at the Tree Dale. Cho Abbeld sent to Grand Central, Cleveland, Ohio. **Visitors** Craiglea Haskey, Frank Keith, Dick Alecens the Movie Star. Dore Stramine, Henry Wooden, president of Colored Actors' Union; Kid Smith, Robert Thornton, Fred Vaughan, Leonard Burton, Emnest Roberts, Charles Moore, Gunbo Felia is served every Friday night, made by George Tevelon of New Orleans. **QUITS** A telegram announcing that the Northeast Jazz Quartet quit the Mamie Smith company was sent in by Henry Moore. It seems that the reason they quit was because Mamie wouldn't take back what she told him, 'oh, she didn't need it. Can any one m de Mille PRODUCTION the Show' NORMAN WARD. VIVIAN QUARLES. MAIL AERO QUITS It takes a branch of actors to get together and talk shop in a manner that is appropriate, clear from the side-sided hilarious of a bone reaking laugh to the day when who is being entertained along a aane that calls for it, no matter how ratton or tar-ticked the idea that is being presented. Indeed, man, while not an interesting sight as far as mainly beauty is concerned, is a fellow that has a sense of humor. The smile that splits his eyes across the middle both goes meek around by the back of his neck that makes him as good a minister off the stages as on. That's why we are busy reviewing the material, supported. And what is bigger, said "This latter had a comedian that didn't look like he was after seeing him put his wares on I combed that I had him skinned about a thousand ways from his skin. I stayed in that tent for three shows and the longer that I snuck the more I figured that that comedian was my friend." After the last afternoon show was over I missed to the grub tummy and the longer the show was going on their cases. I must have been body kind of shack around the backline to for me to go in and join in another minute then I was with a large jar of them and in front of me. I have him the history of the show and in another minute he took up and till in. I woke so good that after the show off I smoked a cigarette and sat down without one of the old bedroom window without saying goodbye or leaving a thing that would lead to me having an idea which way we were going. Three weeks later, I had replaced the regular copman, I had had a maze next two years. Well, the big mistake that I made was a common one: I didn't write home. Yessir, for two years in Pittsburgh, I did not get a follow on the street in Pittsburgh, he had lived next door to me in Pittsburgh. He told me that my father had had a car accident. Then I got love and sent a special delivery letter, but it came back marked. No such people live there. A short time after that I joined out with the Florida Minstrels, who had a great name, and we covered what looked like their line. I had worked up to be one of the supreme ondmen, and I do I say it myself: there wasn't a show that I didn't get ten honors not to be The End Man's Thanksgiving (Republished by request) By Tony Langston FRED WILLIAMS, HUGH MASON. GEORGE WRITES New York. Nov. 20. 4655 STATE STREET is Thanksgiving by request). braggin'. Well, three years ago today we were looked into a little town by the usual morning parade, and after the matinee we went down in a body to a little dingy lot, near the tree and take up every bit of game the man had in the place except the checkerboard. "Now, down in in that section, up the mounn floor and balcony of the theaters. As our band stood out in front of the theater that night, tearing off a bummy hat and putting on a pair of native out on masses (whatever that means) I got the old folks on my mind, and I think about they kept popping up in my head until I for miserable as a tether couch. It had been seven years ago, and I hadn't thought about they had even heard from them. When our free concert was over, the active population out, and the house was packed and jammed to the doors. The big 'first part' was a riot; song and dance, and the audience to a world of applause from the jam cut front, and then the middle man put on the audience-mant that introduced the audience to the Lubberies and Gentlemen: I take pleasure in introducting to your music, the greatest compilations in the world." "We busted out onto the stage in the regular manner, crossing over and just dropped into our seats when I heard a yell in the gallery. "That him, paw, that him, follow, follow, follow with his yodel stick and the loud shouts of the bunch on the right of the gallery—to take the whole theater was in an uprise; the white folks on the main floor and in the lobby were on their own, the commotion, and they didn't sit down again until I was well into the "The manager of the house went; into the gallery and discovered that the ornamentators of the racket were an aged man his own home as house-keeper and butler, and when they told him that their down back stage and they arrived just as the music was being played and I was stepping out to do my big job. As I hit the middle of the stage from the left wing out dashed the pair of men in the middle and before I had a chance to learn who they were or what was coming off the manager had a sweep of his hand and was saving: "Just a moment, please. This old man in my family for say years and this man is their son who they haven't seen for a long time. The show will go on in a minute. I can't go to try to tell you all that happened in the next few minutes, but when they are finished off my face by the turtles that I couldn't hold back had been rubbed off by the kisses me and through the mist and excitement of it all I could hear money hitting all around us on the floor. Dolphins, sharks, fish, and frosted all over the stage, and two or three nice rolls of bait to loot. It took me all the time to gather the dough and put it in to satchel and after the show when we counted up we had a little over $165. That sure was great. I would have been beat—even fled—if I live to be older than Bob Kelly or John Huckner. To do with it? What do you think they would do with it? They bought the best thing that money can lay in the South—clicks for the North." State street and the gang, also Tom Cross. Has he retired this time for good? So long, Tony. More done next time. Roy White's Stylish Stoppers are at the Douglas Theater, Macon, Ga. MAMIE SMITH The Greatest Race Phonograph Star can be heard only on Okeh Records THE RECORD OF QUALITY 4446 10 in. 85c. DOWN HOME BLUES—Mamie Smith and Her Jazz Band. ARKANSAS BLUES—Mamie Smith and Her Jazz Band. 4253 10 in. 85c. LOVIN' SAM FROM ALABAM.—Mamie Smith and Her Jazz Hounds. DON'T CARE BLUES—Mamie Smith and Her Jazz Hounds. Ask your dealer for complete list of Okeh Records by Race artists. He will be glad to play them for you. GENERAL PHONOGRAPH CORPORATION, NEW YORK Beginning on Friday of this week, Nov. 25, "A Modern Cain," the initial production of the Fife Producing Company of Chicago, will start a three days' engagement at the Owl theater. This picture, which has an all-too-talented vocal color, will fulfill of tone situations that the lovers of the dramatic are bound to be more than gratified. The theme tells the death of a man of wealth who is survived by two sons. One of these is a straightforward young man who gives every indication of being a son of his father. The other is a woman of wealth, the creation of the estate and then proceeds to harass his brother, who has invested his substance in a paying business. This intimidation reaches the love affair of the good brother and eventually leads to a struggle upon a high cliff in which the good brother is killed, and from there he dies, and from then on a retribution which would be hard to describe pursues the guilty ones. The ultimate outcue is one that forces a chain of gripping circumstances that will have to be seen to be appreciated, and the capable one must be to be a more than capable one. Don't miss seeing this fine production. Cabaret patrons throughout Chicago will be interested in the fact that the pretty Paradise Gardens, 53th street and Prairie avenue, has been purchased and will in future be the most popular young men in the business. The first thing that Fred did was to remove the tariff at the door, making the place open to all, absolutely free of charge. He followed up that move by signing contracts for the services of choir at Compton, the band's home, and they are now on the job, forming the greatest entertaining crew on the South Side. Fields' Crackerjack Jazz Band is dispensing the dance music and the place, which from now on will be known as Lorraine Garden, is fair to gain a world of popularity. Edie Wooding is the manager. THE STANDARD Philadelphia, Pa. Nov. 23. Jack Johnson in person by popular demand, is the attraction extraordinary here this week, and the resilient crowds drawn are filling the house at the Black Swan Theatre. Ex-champs we have the Black Swan Touradores, with Ethel Waters, Kibel Williams, Shick White and a great jazz band; Sandy Burns & Co. in a musical musical comedy offering such a character. You've not logged in or chased, Tucker & Gresham in songs, talk and footwork, and the singing, talking and dancing team of Shapter & Hollins. John B. Thomas announces to the world that he will re-enter the show business in the near future. He is writing some numbers for Kassin publishing to a letter received late last week. America's Greatest Burlesque Comedian. The Pocket Edition of Bert Williams WITH RUBE BERNSTEIN'S WELCOME YOUR FAVORITE ARTIST IRVIN BUYS A Sensational, Melodramatic Production FULL OF GRIPPING SITUATIONS! In a Fight for Right, Fame and Fortune and the Love of a Trusting, Faithful Woman! If you want to make a journey back stage, you should see William de Mille's splendid Parmenon, which will be the big feature at the Vendome theater for three days beginning Thursday, Dec. 1. The picture mirrors the lives of those behind the footlights, who mask the sorrows and tragedies of their own lives, and the song, that the world may be amused. A complete theater setting with a gorgeous hall, orchestra pit, stage and back stage areas, with dressing rooms, wings, flies and all the typical stage accoutrements, was constructed in California where the picture was filmed. For the theater sequence, a gorgeous musical show was staged, in which 30 beautifully gowned and costumed girls took part. The sketch was rehearsed and filmed starting. The studio groups, stage carpenters and electricians employed in the scenes were all perfectly at home in their roles. The scenes were prepared at an enormous expense, principally by carpenters of the story in Rich Holt, the wealthy backer of the show; Charles Gyle, the old stage door man, and Lila Lee, the little chorus girl, who having played in amateur theatricals in her home town, comes to the city to win fame, out of the lives of those three characters, comes a powerful and gripping outfit. GOING STRONG Bojangles Bill Robinson, batting 1,000 all along the line, is knocking them a twister at the American, Chicago, at the present writing. Bojangles is booked until the week of June 18, 1922, his trip carrying him over the Orpheum to the coast and over the strongest single seen in fast company for many seasons. We said it a long time ago. GET THIS! LUCILLE HEGAMIN —Sings— MISSISSIPPI BLUES WABASH BLUES ARTo. Record No. 9105 Your Dealer —or— ARTo COMPANY ORANGE, N. J. Announcement! Mr. Fred Irwin, proprietor of Lorella Garden, 4116 State street, Fred Irwin needs no introduction to Chicagoans. His great reputation as a Cafe Manager and Entrainer is an assurance of his business operation of this new enterprise, which will be known in future as BE MERRY TO THE MUSIC OF Prof. George Meyer's Jazz Phools SUPPORTED BY A SELECTED CORPS OF ENTERTAINERS 35TH STREET AT INDIANA AVENUE THE MOST BEAUTIFUL CAFE IN CHICAGO MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT SUPREME BAND AND ENTERTAINER CONTESTS Seuvenira for Ladies Boutounieres for Gents Largest and Most Beautiful Place of Amusement in the Middle West DANCING—REFRESHMENTS—MEALS DAVE PEYTON'S CLEF CLUB ORCHESTRA And a Select Corps of Entertainers 459 East 51st Street BUD RED, Manager DANCE NIGHTLY on the Finest Floor in Chicago COOK'S RIVERVIEW ORCHESTRA Direct From Riverview Park BROWN & BROWN, Novelty Dancers. A Corps of Capable Entertainers REFRESHMENTS of the FINEST QUALITY SPECK Vernon "Cowboy" Robinson, the well known cartoonist and ad man of St. Louis, Mo. is in Chicago on business and looking like a million smokers. He dropped in upon us Monday and shook us by the mitt. Kitty Myles writes that mail will be delivered to the Fayette Theater, Memphis, Tenn. Announcement Mr. Fred Irvin, proprietor of Lorelaire, purchased the PARADISE Fred Irvin needs no introduction, institution as a Cafe Manager and class and quality in the operation will be known in future as LORRAINE G. (Corner 25th Street) FRED IRVIN, Prop. There is positively no admission Café and Dance Floor in Our Everybody welcome. FIELD'S CRACKERJACK Ollie Powers, Alberta P. AND O JOHN L. SLAUGHTER, Prop. VISIT THE TURF WINTY 4300 STATE BE MERRY TO Prof. George Me SUPPORT SELECTED CORPS DOORS OPEN AT S P. M. 1. SMORR. PROP. ENTERTAINMENT 35TH STREET AT THE MOST BEAUTIFUL MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT POPULAR Every TUESDAY FROM 3 BAND AND ENTER Souvenirs for Ladies NEAR THE GIRLS SING RIFAS & FOX. Props. "NEW AND UP TO SUNSET FRANK NUBUELS Frank Scholl has honored the Herbert Hepburn and the show is having fine success in the East. This week, Plattsburgh, Malone, Canton and Ogdenburg, N. Y. Frank is the Defender agent on the show. MORE STAGE—NEXT PAGE ment! Garden Garden, 416 State street, GARDEN from Joe German, to Chicagoans. His great rep- Entertainer is an assurance of this new enterprise, which GARDEN No. 2 (and Prairie Avenue) EDDIE WOODING, Manager in charged. The most beautiful mango, free and without war tax. CK JAZZ BAND, With Hunter, Glover Compton Others HENRY "CAP" JONES, Mgr. BEAUTIFUL ER GARDEN THE STREET THE MUSIC OF Heyer's Jazz Phools ED BY A OF ENTERTAINERS REFRESHMENTS WM. GEORGE, MOM. INNER CAFE INDIANA AVENUE FUL CAFE IN CHICAGO TAINMENT SUPREME MATINEES Y AFTERNOON TO 7 P. M. TAINER CONTESTS Boutounieres for Gents MEAR THE BAND PLAY EARL WALKER, Mgr. TO THE MINUTE" ```markdown ``` Additional Stage Halachikha, Pt. I was sent home for repairs I was put at the station by known Company and Mr Louise have called to sure we have my libries. I have applied to one James Jack- kinson of the Kentucky company, sitting in the bank, on ground to count as my wife, we were there with me for an overbuilding. Mr also turnes her horses and cars to the undertakes of the grave that we did not re- quire. In Davon, one of the most and oldest and most intelligent physicians of America, a Cole in Mr. Lacey's New morning Sir said to Dr. "Doe, the one a friend of your kind, give you a way to help his ever "you see." "What seems to be help with your friend?" "Well, he has been running on that tires; he has been running on new shoes; his does not fill them; there are no toes on his trouble; his body requires to be gar a little out and that he is exposed to the trouble." "Humple, after that I guess he'll all know." ROLL TOP FABLES ```markdown ``` a1 BATTLING BILLY FAMOUS GEORGIAS Friend Tony—business has been up to four times, with good business in four days. business has been kept outdoor business showing a week hind view Mustles. You can certainly hear plenty of people in mind, and would be to the two mini- tures shows, not outdoors wanting to know the build- ing to do of the artists on both shows, etc. Sooena PETER Coy Herndon What's the trouble? "Kibbutz" Cairn from you. Write me at once to San Francisco, Cal, Savoy Thai. There week of 27th, COY. COAST DOPE Los Angeles, Cal. Burros Brothers are enclaring their company to 20 people before going on a tour of the beautiful people. Babcock's Expo Shows are in town and want a plant show. Al G Barnes has come into winter quarrels and has a bunch of new plants. SENSE AND NONSENSE A Colored man from Florida was discharged from the army in the North during the winter time, and he was able to work with the weather 20 degrees below zero and no work. In his wandering around the streets he became present and was found by two oops and taken to a hospital. After placing him in the furniture and waiting for his carcasses to burn up, they prepared to remove his bones. He found him sitting up cross-legged, and with a single eye his face he said, "Bless, shaw that done, there's no doubt. What great makes the most oppose to a man." "Hair! Macfeld!" "Clothes are going up again. They need to make sure they look good." JAG TIME BILLY Sucker 244 N. Bennett Brae. Chicago Trender Jr. Chicago Trender Jr. JOIN THE BUD BILLIKEN CLUB Every boy and girl reader of this column is eligible for membership. Contact us at info@microsoft.com. Fill out and return the application blank today, and become a member. I wish to become a member of The Chicago Defender's Bud Billiken Club. I have not written you for quite a while. I told you some time ago that I like it, and I am not afraid to write it on a serial form. It has been many years since Laura Louise lived or even her great grandmother for that matter. Since none of you have I am going to relate what was told in any years ago. The fact just come over from England and from Australia in my time, strange to them. ROBT. WATKINS (Bud Billiken) ```markdown ``` (You be continued.) The reason that I have not written to you is because I never received any letters from your club. When I get back home my uncle had stopped telling me the news I wish to tell you every day. My niece does not meet Friday evening and I was unable to go. I have been ill for four days—Brimmer Deming. I would approach very much to become a member of your club. I am very much surprised to find so few members in my club. I begin every week and read your column constantly. I am 18 years old, and I am writing my card and letter. I hope to see my letter in print—Freddie, Brown, Chicago, Ill. As I am a reader of your column and also interested in the letters and poems I am reading in my application bank to become a member of your club. I am soiling in my application bank to become a member of your club. I hope to see this letter in print this week. I am 10 years old and I am the grade—Anne Aunce, Beaunton, Tex. I saw my poor, in print last week and was very much delighted. I hope that I may be able to give you a good introduction. My teacher is very much interested in the club because I am a member. Leah, my friend, is very interested in two golden doors, each set with sixty diamond mines. I am also interested in a flower-fence—if necessary. Pamela Vickersburg, Miss. Enclosed you will find my application blank to become a member of the club. I will be interested in the column for some time, and I think it is very nice. I am in the right position to be interested in your club. I will be in town and I like it fine. I like to read, like music and all kinds of things. I have a pet kitten. Mother got me a pet rabbit. I wish that I was a member of your club. Please, send me a bounty and card so that I may consider my membership. I have a pet kitten and that I wish that I was a member of your club. Please, send me a bounty and card so that I may consider my membership. I hope to attend in print—Evridie H. Cooper, Mom, Nana. I wish to become a member of your club. I am a girl nine years old and pretty good in school. I am in the third grade and I want to join. Please send me a card and button. I hope to see this club—Ethel May West, homeward. I am a girl 12 years of age. I have been in the paper and I have read many books and letters from the members of the church and I believe that would like to be a number of your class. Well I will write future White frighten. Grade N. 3 Water stands in little pools; Stepping men across we pass. And see our faces in the class. Muddy through our feet may be. Wet, muddy, wet, muddy. Saying welcome, merry rain. Do not fall to come again. Mark Pranks in line, flouma. La. Enclosed your love, my application to the Bidell Billion club. This is the first time I have ever noted your column, and I am satisfied. I have 12 years old and in the seventh grade and the first grade in music. Please send me my address so that I may write to them— THE CHICAGO DEFENDER My mother takes the Detender every day and very much happens, as not seeing her is not worth it. Columns this week I unified my application for a little boy six years old. I to school to be numbered with the Bill Dillenks, how to see this letter in print soon. You always get the other kind; when you get one and think you are The loss walks out and says, here's time. — Henry A. Charles Jr., Knoxville, A. I am a boy 16 years old and I am sending in my application blank, as I need your columns every week. Please send me one of your cards and buttons. May I print a kiss on your check? I sheduled her sweet permission. So we went to press, and I rather guess, — Buttus Taylor, Chattanooga, Tenn. Don't think that I have forgotten you because I haven't written. How are you going to look at your cards and am still looking for my picture and lodge. He prayed well who loveth well, he prayed well who loveth well, he prayed best who loveth well. All things both great and small, he prayed best who loveth me. He prayed and loveth me. —Ina Iuth Nth, Columbus, Ohio. I am sending in my letter to become a member of your school, the paper right away. I want my boy and girl friends to see me. I want my boy and girl friends to see me. I have been reading the Defender for quite a while. I will be glad to see my children in 15 years old and in the seventh grade. The sunset burns across the sky, I love the air its warming色, I love the tower, I love the last, last hour. The work that centuries might have Must grow the land of setting sun. And through all hands the saving name, — Linda Mue Moody, Shirewood, La. I am sending in my application blank for a button and card. I am a girl 11 years old and in the fifth grade at St. Paul's School. I am a girl at the club. I live in St. Paul's School. My father buys the Defender every week. I the boy has an air, I the boy has a grape, and I the sweet boy a way. And the heartfence a face. We there is nothing like the rose, — Edith Emma Petitt, St. Paul, Minn. I am doing nicely in school. I am going to try to get some of my school friends to see me. The time once was a man travel- he put on. Once there was a man travelled to the house to sleep all night. One part of the house was covered and the other part was a world full of sleeping in the part of the house that was not covered, and he would mind sleeping in the part of the house that was not covered, and part. The traveler said, 'Why don't you cover all of your house?' The man couldn't believe, and when it wasn't he did not need 10. —Charles M. Lewis, Hope, ARK. I have been intending to write to you to have a cow but I have a cow. I have a cow, country and bird, and a grand time, and now I am back in country and again and I want to me one of my friends. I want to me a dogmate, and also want to be a true member of your club. I were sworn in the cabin, I could not sleep. It was midnight on the ocean, and a storm was on the deep. As we are there in the darkness, we are lost. We are lost, the captain ghosted, as they staggered down the stairs. But his little daughter whispered, As she took his kyckle hand, 'I am lost.' Just the same upon the land." —Amos Johnson, Morrisville, Pa. I wish to become a member of your group. I live in Oklahoma. I want to become one of the Bill Bollins and wear one of the hats. I will write a letter and write a time. Glinda White, Goddess, I wish to become a member of the Chicago Defender Bill Bollins and will grade my mother. My mother takes the Chicago Defender I enjoy training the young people and Lionel Barry, Billings, Monk. I am sending in my application to become a member of the Bill Bollins and I wish to join. I am 14 years of age and in the second grade. My mother is in this town. I hope that I am the first to write a poem in my city. I will write you a poem in my city. I will wear a Columbia, S. C. I was glad to see my name in print last week. I will tell some of the members of the club to write to me. I will be a sunshine tree. And try in all I say and do. To make the world more bright. Here are a few questions that I learn in 'It's an ill wind that blows nobody' good there. there's a way to say 'Time and time wait for no man.' God helps those who help them. Mary Catherine Brown, Goldsboro, S.C. I am 15 years old and in the third grade. I went to Normal school, Montgomery. Ala. My father takes the defender every week to practice. I measure for me to read the defender, column, wish to receive my buttocks, wish to learn that a head to learn in school. The metamobility days have come. The暑始 of the year, Willett, and he built woods, and meditated brown and sear. Willie Mace, Hughes, Montgomery, S.C. I am going to become a member of your club. I am a reader of your column and I hope that you will accept me as a member in the sixth grade in school. Please send me a button as soon as possible—claire Joyce, Atlanta, Ga. I am sending in my application blank to school, every day and I am in the opportunity to go to school all the opportunity but now I am going to try to keep in school until I finish. The fisher who draws in his net too Won't have any fishes to sell. The child that shuts up his book too I am a little girl 9 years old and in a college. I study in Lincoln high school. I study very well. I con- tact a member of your club. As me you are a member of our club. I am sending in one also. I will you will do not meet me as a member. I am you will do not meet me as a member. Earnes is K. Dilphin. Dilphin is The House Behind the Cedars The Great $10,000 Serial Story HOPPLEY After lunch, Rena had a visitor in the person of Mrs. Newberry, a vicious young widow of the town, who preferred her services to instruct Rena in the art of dressing. "Now, my dear," said Mrs. Newberry, "the first thing to do is to get your coronation role ready. It simply means a gown with a long train. You have to wear it, and you must hug my buggy, and well go down town to get the cloth, take it over to Mrs. Marshall, and god have her run you up. Mrs. Marshall placed herself unreservedly in the hands of Mrs. Newberry, who introduced her to the best dressmaker of the town, a woman of much experience in the art of dressing. After afternoon a gown suited to the occasion, Mrs. Marshall had made more than a dozen ball dresses during the day, and understanding and understanding business thoroughly, she had made each one of them so that with a few additional touches it might serve for the Queen of Love and understanding and understanding a direct order for the specific garmen; Tryon resort of Hena to the bad, which was held in the principal public hall of Tryon, the city's best people. The champions still were the costume of the morning. In place of evening dress, sage that long stockings and dainting pumps had taken the "You're doing splendidly, my dear!" Said Mr. Newberry, the consultant. "I trust your Gracious Majesty in pleased with the homage of your devoted subjects," said Troyen, who spent much of his time by her side and kept up the character of Knight in Elsa's "Very much," replied the Queen of Love and Beauty, with a somewhat tired smile. It was pleasant, but she would be glad, she thought, when it was "Keep up your courage," whispered her brother. "You are not only queen, but the holie of the ball. I am proud of you. A dozen woman here would be in your shoes tonight." Rena felt immensely relieved when the hour arrived at which she could take her seat in the carriage for the breaking up of the ball. She was driven home in Tryon's carriage, her brother accompanying them, mightily under the starlight, in the open carriage, and a soothing after upon Rena's excited nerves. The calm restfulness of the night, the crowded ballroom, the frogs in the cinnamon croaking of the frogs in a distant swamp, were much more in harmony with her nature than the crowded ballroom, and, leaning back in the carriage, thought of her mother, who she wished might have seen her daughter this night, with her presence of the sickness pierced her tender heart, and she furtively wired away the tears that came into her eyes. Queen" exclaimed Tryon, breaking into her reverie as the carriage rolled up to the doorstep, "and let your royal subject kiss your hand, and let your beloved knight never alidate her throne, and may she ever count me her humblest servant, and devoted knight." Warwick, when Tryon had been driven away, "now that the munquerde is over, let us sleep, and tomorrow take up the serious business," the day has "passed successfully." He put his arm around her and gave her a kiss and a brotherly hug. "It is a dream," she murmured sheeply, "only a dream. I am Chandler before the clock has struck Good night, light." "I am," she said, "the Roxy." CHAPTER VII WARWICK'S residence was situated in the outskirts of the town. It was a old plantation house, built in colonial The household consisted of her brother and herself, a cook, a coachman, a nurse, a doctor, a barber. The child, with a few instructors, had put out his pung stems to Rena. Bv CHARLES W. CHESNUTT Mr. Chessnutt was the first one of our group to win distinction as a novelist. The late William Dean Hewlett said of him: "He touches all the stops, he has wit, humor, pathos, imagination, tills the minds, and has a great sense of humor, the inside, and presents it in a manner that compels attention and admiration." ```markdown ``` It was a source of much gratification to Warwick that his sister seemed to adult herself so easily by the new connoisseur of elegance with which she wore even the slimest gown, the easy authoritativeness with which she showed superior elegance with which she wore correspondingly proud of her. His feeling for her was something more than motherly, but she had never have a clear sense of her degrees in brothelness, love, and that if she had been homely or sturdy, he would have always been behind the cedars. There had come to him from some source, down the stream of time, of the brook sense of proportion, of his proportion embodied, the perfect adoration of means to enda. He had perhaps clearly than time the undeveloped elements of discord between lena and her former life. He had never been to his own household. Still another motive, a purely psychological one, had more or less consciously influenced him, and he would ever be discovered—he had taken his precautions too thoroughly, he thought, for that; he could not have appreciated it. It was a conceivable hypothesis—it should be known, his fine social position would collapse like a house of which the world around him did not possess, he had felt now and then a certain sense of loneliness; and there was a certain sense of loneliness, for him who knew his past, and yet whose knowledge, because of their common interest, would not interfere with his world of opportunity, and Rena was not a world of opportunity. For he had always been, in a narrative sense, a naturalized foreigner in the world of wide opportunity, and Rena was not a world of opportunity. For he was glad to welcome into the populous loneliness of his adopted country. CHAPTER VIII THE COURTSHIP IN A Few weeks the echoes of the tournament died, and Ronala's life settled down into a pleasant place, with her own comfortable, more than recent spectacular prominence. Her queenship, while not entirely forgiven by the temporary coach, has prominence. Among her own sex, Mrs. Newberry proved a warm, and enthusiastic friend. Rumor whispered that the lovely young widow wished to be the loneliest of the old colonial mansion, to which his sheer was a most excellent medium of approach. Whether this was true or not it is unquestionable. This story, except as perhaps indicating why Mrs. Newberry played part of the female friend, without whom no woman is ever launched successfully. Her brother's standing gave her the right of social entry; the tournament opened wide the door, and Mrs. Newberry performed her best during the month following the tournament, and might have made her choice from among a dozen guitars; but her brother found most favor. With Renal's actress, however, he had been a bit of a fan of the movie. But he never made it to the movie. An Exclusive Chicago Defender Feature A. B. STIEFEL, PRES. EDWIN STIEFEL, SEC. Visit our Music and Demonstration Parlors PHONOGRAPHS & PLAYER PIANOS RECORDS and ROLLS of ALL MAKES Most Complete Line on South Side. WE'LL SAVE YOU MONEY! STATE ST. FURNITURE CO., Inc. 3131-33-35 STATE STREET Home Outfitters THE SQUARE DEAL WINS Cash or Credit AUGUST GUENTHER & SON Expert Cleaners of Ladies' and Gents' Garments Rugs, Carpets and Draperies OFFICE 316-18 EAST THIRTY-FIFTH STREET AUTO SERVICE, PHONE DOUGLAS 3274 WE OWN AND OPERATE OUR OWN PLANTS TELEPHONES—DOUGLAS 9445 AUTO 74-199 DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE CHARLES S. JACKSON FUNERAL DIRECTOR FINEST EQUIPPED UNDERTAKING ESTABLISHMENT IN AMERICA 3315-17 State Street CHICAGO, ILLINOIS Never does one feel so strongly the universal brotherhood of man as when one loves some other fellow's sister, and then one claps Tryon's extended hand with real emotion. He knew of no man whom he would have preferred to Tryon as a husband for his sister. He exclaimed, "I am very, very glad, I wish you every happiness. My sister is the most fortunate of women." "And I am the luckiest of men," crief Tryon said, "I wish you every happiness." re- SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1921 Chicago Defender Feature peated Warwick; adding, with a touch of solitude, as a certain thought, never far distant, occurred to him. "I hope that neither of you may ever regret your choice." This placed upon the footing of an accepted lover, Tyrona's visits to the house became more frequent. He wished to fix a time for the marriage, but at the point it item developed a strange reluctance. "Can we not love each other for a while?" she asked. "To be engaged in a place that I love but once it is too far to get to it." "Is it a pleasure that I would cheerfully disaffect with," he replied, "of the certainty of possession. I want you all to be happy." Things might happen. If I should die, for instance, before I married you"— "Oh, don't suppose, such awful things," she said, putting her hand over her mouth. He held it there and kissed it until she pulled it away. (Continued Next Week) SPECIAL NOTE. Now! Betty Gordon Offers Fall's Latest Fashion New York's Newest Style Blue Serge Suit Elaborately Embroidered with Silk Floss Only $439 Delivered FREE route to prove that Betty Gordon brings you the best of fashion and style as quickly as possible. Fifth Avenue—but with the best of half prices. This must be made with a blazer and a silk floss tie. The maddest blazer in the world is direct from minneapolis. 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COLOR LINE 8088 UP AGAN IN THE NERC ERO sem Yeek, Now, 2h-—The siren that co Sania, tueantera aL tes Ames bees Tahar’ Kiet ar the: preted fle aT Aueertoag Legion ts Heauece et annie: was Wee tes te Seaagects abitienicest tliat the tet SPI Bled tern aeseesrdes vtnesths OT Gat aged ER Sag statoninat Tee weenie 1 Senge Deteietee spree bite be oSGuastucatiany te ties New Vet oe Migeattniee lot “thee Amerie Foshan ithe fe Cot Pela, Ee tier, LOSI fuothopiel bean athe cones Ota atbn toe tat cited ty be dete fy deine tm tie tithe be sys ee te ha atte vy, ected FSEetotn Planes tin st hang ott coos pele tw tie mattis ad thie sit ca tegarterts Oana, Maret eas Sataed tae Past eatntegeanter eee no Wane the pubs te peemetie Fn aad Dearing te steko fio ated Mt snatinena anh ottint ensaedazieny fail ets ate "Bem Piatae ee Be beth tates ca estes Sonkiie it avant te in feomlhte o PETES, So Tae aera Foreign American Post Snubs yD eat pean ne tian Miter tee So aa TD Beton, FES eonlaciceae itonr apes ned en wa De RG genset dae tte ont fay tanh aa patho sur gern eS k Ge stamimettie ode SN SN patie ie tt eee Siete at tite ithe Atmvbenae bee PT ee ate Bed See eee ene ee ee tents of treo Nebelate neo Wy + Prone De Steg SE teleead fon TBD eee ae ee Midian Se NL aoa in Bann we tn SI bentaee cates bene Hie ats. 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Sak AREAL Ne hagas eaves Pe a ate ee TES EE eee ane Fe a er a Shia Bat auantsed rie tetas eg ae mare By Fae eet aco Sa agate ee eon te TL MIE a cemene Sare Jere eaten ar oa ee Ting? ie HPN OEE ob cutnopRactoas MEET 5 ROPR RC TORS A ir patteceailan maa ces re re acne tanec St tat,” atte eet terre AER Ratopenetae aS tb A ge Since were cette la ace ns eewtaa ie huetiend teetaneie eae a He eae ieee IT I as Meme ta cea Oe vet AAG eects Be eign ato a Weta ae LAFAYETTE THEATER Bee FRI. SAT. SUN,| NORMA TALMADGE in “THE SIGN ON THE DOOR” a eae NEW YORK“ Oe Ty. JB. 1. Bing. sweretary af the Work yn tive iacugue, fete New, 18 Tercivetun, Ra. ele home down, here yen he tha euwse of Ris parents Thwart Poy. 287 Enanbtin vent Asrouitici war thes guest of Me sae Me AC Tests Now Th at thet Meme. 8i8 Aciontte Avena, the fest anal receytion “at the cero “tose Skat “er gisen ‘Mecex Mall, EQwitsn, weet a hase Whe Hews doammes 42 Adians, pastor of Meee Bustier yssuech Henundsa, a. 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VOTH INFANTRY DETACHMENT HOWO GUARDS TO GEN. FOGK “espe eC. per st. Ty tI as RD I Cire tey. cetineats Cetnncte Koad Cape 3 West Lia aiects de ne Why thet seme water oa te Oh beat Une sis esten. Goste's terion te Bip dan! Pinae tue tas sin heh Var enteeainnome tan stich he ts Iauate Mie ts deuated seer thet, Dorey, ws he de vagttes swith put tect veel etiac to ake A te ean Spant E0 See ete x tee aoa at Sugeler cyeas sacnadoe With oil Bee ite satiicrore we Bisse Mare Sr tis, Mae a, Hetee ane. asia apd vine Docks, seeompanied ig" Ria “criti eciobratea gaz Phang, Av bie “potrs plese te WSR ved whe atten, HAPPY RHONE'S SUCCESS Psion, Xo. Now. Stapp man stared another sueeaes Of the Lacien tehet he pitied (iat the Tigh ‘Shane! “aativersim Arssttes ater witht hie veratiie wrehestra asl wMtod veer tad Mites The azul jerronettated Ine atadlte, yo. stn a foal, aad showed git he eam de it BON eee tere te, Wel edn Nee forks inner eae Zao perenne were fapray eh ose afte ctaers cate Fett Wire ize Incinetar tu eft fe anor Miu pekttated artis wees on the homie fer pastes athe the eevee See en Pala DROTHERHOOD OF DINING CAA HEADS it EXEGUTIVE MEET tea ablettnsit hues wed eee sistinte Gamat fa Seed etn Ronee eM Roatan Soc inet tency "had eke ae Sree ea ca Sis A ede thn rtd as sere edie hate ERM Leet eta? Aho!" Ss! 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Y. NEW LIFE OOS ON SER NYS | io nee See eee: “pict «tha tue treemmtly Goatiies FUN tom tes A ale Sate Pitive Totty sce, URW a ress teen, Le nie egier! weg st + Ceiy eahe eanndeg e Bete Hae teviatid at Ses ents eet cie nat Daat skeen, stmt ve dealt fe ee ee ET ged tenet te icin re ged tin eestor, shes Se Lewy eek g scree te shits Sight iteeetos, Ssgnte sare Malle ee Stree ob the cperienmet Ranatig eiettatnamessy inncthe fans mee guise foci beh dau yng. et lo Muageis aid ath ciate wf sine ne, stra age tinned pees pal ened Becton! wih gare os supene be ter weil te Pevearea, Aes anemia stan din © cote as tecnhiy aNidlobin ¢H stats tenes Te Me Merona sitcly si-tea aes AE sks the kine? 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WOMEN'S CLUBS MEET New Verk, Nov ok The exces tye Sunmniites ef tue hangin stoke poerecatvan of tesn's es hee FRCHEL ceastian oh ube seecun Bee Thee ese attic, Noh She nt tye ress debee AE the: oneisinat, 3th AE Wetmesy 238 wine tstet Sen The ues tang Wee weed nite aed Muwsh omestinse Gn bapertasies wea Aina iach order, apudhacion Yanee hese “sve tea shenutert tage tt fe geltenatien. Phe ext sna Ryectng welt tes be be in Seen ot ty RO ace ia seaming Sad meeting tre tear WesdewoskaS Ht costs minal RECEPTION TO ALDERMAN See. Yack, Now, Th A element eoler a Necug tio te Aldevadis Gee tBercte iin tescor af hires bls, Raltauat veto ats iets fioen eke cotanstteres tot Be ROD: [unm tt the Ate set ets Ne kip, tees Mier, stay eo adittord AL Whawet a ane ae leecege The “onnneitten, Behe ee Ment comings a Hebe See RestSnaage piuee te leis the degen SEER ib srs ise en aera) COLOR LINE AT Y. W. Syren, Me Ve Stes oaiy satite Fete Siththe, « wotke. ewan atsl flatten haven hee okra “Ue Signe pechilien of 28 whos scomets hie Hues thes ye Wee Mosinee are belie Wet sean the waltee vant the wottes th ee Hes akpare acces Vote! os fetes Tat ae Siiation if Sliss Sinlthy Ss albowed te reanale einpen RIIROMiGe BAT? Rew. EO NOS. Seine of she. many enduvatie affairs of the ager waa ‘napnriee grt xiven te Sire iach Sha, foe Wake en ene, Teor Satumdag: ening in honor ot he ick alr. Neste wate tive teelpe ean et wai heamited “tnesoats, Shirag ‘retrestmmente seer otal Tey Hnehasto=e, Among Gwe ie fo pnts Bee Mone guemicen ar Wier Sie he SBA) Ghul asi ounce, Prinew Rivers Teedkarter at seretoniens When she Salm of stlesme sttere dienes sve peeved Aanrked Gi end oF a peztoek Eoning. aes 2900 1085 ENDANGERED pete Re Saw dea nnthor ty anna bio struc a the em tesen Wi thie Cnited States arms. ince in Maun tevokeay Ear annoanecaent Satine: Sots Ho that a watiee SStenvuwe sll be leads “Thee al Wei the entice lasiue ‘of of mune (hon ile wacekesiae in fosin Unc Ie gee Lake wide “ane crise Lesion high ua are the sone Ben Uirions tere cians AGRIVALS AT OLGA Sine Wines Stee. Si. teecean are jel diet Ohi? Ne an 3b IRE “bawenine, Atianie ws ME A iat nee veoh Padua? Bo NM hres So Na Nia tome: Heh Guenete fale ena el are ine SS gol Bi eepere olin ies 3: Hilts, UE gkee en Bare Beery eee isa THE CHICAGO. DEFENDER _ BROQO ET VN lilis SHEETHE BROOKLYN BTS ms ‘The members at Concurd Sunday sto, oF wel, Se Se tank be 8s Teeineeaetoate are plane uw» ave an Satertatnmest ot tee church, Tonight Tihaen Stervopticen stews ell te intial, stewing Christ trom the Neuer "tothe cross. "Phe wraeeeal Koil ha tat dor the Sutnlay set Shetatinae runt Eigse eH be given hy the “tn see Circle Clute" Sov. 29 a8 (ananl Tate Sie nds tadsod wil oe tr Houde Tee of he eammmmnl ts Sve elute ie comport. uf jaernbiers Pinte odie and Contes. Courts Re 1 geno ig chaleman “of th cota commuter SNiartha trvan, the dancing mists eqened hee danciae chise ge Bhosle Cee Be eR ANE Baas re Vide awuste, ee mpvon, 46, of 2 Futon sheet wag strek gi aut te hits erocsiny Clusetn peote. at Tithe grates Nove 14, tie sata "tases tenes of thes tela iaevrations of the lacey. ve was taken 10 ihe teste stata. : ‘Canerat sereters were held at Union teethel ghareh Sees Le foe dees Niet a" isbins. iaette manutae: ase rhe Ie. avnndate icles Mer Rachals was tow bm Rasa 8 feire ago, Me eeelidest at fs Math Nekct and te survived byes whlow face daughter ated t9sisterr> “rue Spanteln Wee Voters fa sisal Philips Criss Ne, 18 are out fo Treen ee it ie hedieved that ter fee! matiy"war Weve eo Half fot members af any came. 1 PMfaltey ot Bhd Kent avenue f= eval jisan oF the reeruiting commitics. Rios mmemhers at one grep. 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SOCIETY IS BURIED Rivwitsn, NoTa Now, Shoe uoral sercines, wore” Ret it vile Owertoa Upnemaccng qaeinees Siz vende crest Sees iene Weedorte tanks fone father of WE tandten, Hiroe sepa ab tee eat ates, Tae ee, ee teats panto of Bleed Bipot chines, esha : Nie, (ative sie tas fe ternter ee penta yd fonmaeh treater fer Ue tie ure od Soatn Ueweediens aed EM atin tah cete: eee eae AU ee Masai Seaneae ‘heme So TO Fa deer Ge cachet ne deft deewptews wecteantot The WNRE APS euacninee He te Siretond ers ktons, on, pier bh Sucre ang the otstee MRS. JANE L. GUMBS ANSWERS LAST CALL Puuning, N.Y, Now, 8—The fu- nnorat seetiens of Mines dane Ty, amabe Bile ad Ave Re Gui, wipertne Terwlont cr tie tater Werke at Slots TORN TONGA, TE We de ana RADE Bethe Teor HW Gants, puetor SE Het A MOI elateet Hecakye, there held at Mivsomat’ Ae Me Bion chron Sua 1 “th arctan the $2 °%, Yo, Cyovordate aawatated by Beene tine BN pa Pe ees The teow d, Wee Sten att ths Hows Ulloa, caticisted Mes, Cantos wee Shetes oh eal Neal toon neckline: Phucting. tos etakt Seura ihe tae bent ain eet sensred at this church die emt at gr Leache avenues Shs i rarciced te lath danse a corel several stunvie a hen GiAGLED WALEYT Gao Sew, Verk. Nev, 25.~ Charles Waiey. a weil kneka ben ran ar the ald WSN tabsths Meine died at St sowie Hoenn ia tie Hane. 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HIM TO STEAL FROM EMPLOYER | Nie Norke Nov, 28.—"aty ayeeet: anira tates Seat ode i ata ae eae Sa" eee eae nsec tortie ta Hees ie cee wie ome Se Cia a hese mse Oo ane a ear aca ane DE areca oa Hou Se ecet hae Haat Seeoner Wee cae Ms eae ee aa Mesa ast tic anc nett Te ea eG ie dana LIBYA DINING ROOMS i TO HAVE NEW OWNERS ah i ie ian pb Att Thiet Riis ie can ie eanuea fann” wCa imac ane eats oun a Satara atte: i as east apg hone i Tiesey chitin aoe lat Uneke eR ate meh dee calles DEFENDER REPORTER |S | AUTHOR OF ESSAY BOOK Bats Sean Nao ADDS ENTERTAINERS | Remisign, N. ¥.. Now. 2k —Tiiy MASHES WOMAN'S FACE WINS APPOINTMENT. SPE PAM SNe are. 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Nelwm reached morning ann! ecrmings Sustay to sidendi cone Hteqatloara © ae Mtyewstonie Haitian Sitar ene bens, Bordon ot Galnee dan twénchent ‘Tharmday eeglnge Mens tihmés “Swranwreiiie: Cioetoms Anns TREN andthe, Hews Nelgon amd Seite faired ty Grav View ao Teekaltt, Ciitee tee? attemted the Sunday totes! Soineunttog “Siiates “Waamfe bene Finding Nesta “cand, Hewward Were Hii thet supertstemtent detan Welt oreagented Maren Sunes Qebwed fie ieee SS ieee preaehed Seva imernime azid ‘exstung Blethen ALT EE CER Sa Nile were edt act ESHML thaaiag ceentiye Mes Neca Fe Mita OE ee muta” yuo Chee: anterraanmnoia. whieh, Wee Beetle Cajaed ig a barge, andienen. Sts SEES" yang! tougn “eh! pratiesd at Bente, urmeated Uae elas?” ene eth EXC wannabes, Thursday ere fing Miss. dittiee: Cating, he “ta Rees itt Stes enna fr sant tim [Scie heck for arte umeiown. ‘Si Bhar: “Simacr stand Mee fea. geen fie" euewa gusuiy uf Mes, Abersuret FBingtican Sh Weng 1220 atront, See Fane Mrs tse ak Soatie Sawn Sitar, Wetter pon at Changes. Fl Sinn Mar ete Pet: Dien ee Sane heat eae an Nos agin a? ae Wet Third steer SS plevatoae ag Boaletpleisea ects rhttege, i tie nome nf Mea Fienagate mathe” A Set Tee hela fe citer eeywnters én get= Ha Hewes forint Gat Mee Kate Tere etd fier selina soxgeanon i Uo Vaated Sshnicth whales Naw Yak, “the Hee rene Ht Sting. pasion Me Siitened ise Waa hoes Neves foe seme tims wet ree athe Gor her ee home Eektda SCN some hee await The Girl Wee “hats” atthe Mane a Me Ser a AT ARS pie fret iaiety tie Age algae erly Meg iamese 25, Seuthe Sovemth: ate wie, I Mi Tecnds hea hea Maroy ET annie matic Steg Dae ons Uotiinicin cite Nat eae hues Sins een wae shee ‘Sidiees die 9 Varnted | Muntiomers, | Cuarmes | atl aud Weirst Withers wt Featiutos his, Guinan manent Haddin supa oe Prank of Curae ane dona ttgaente Pe Aude S eseak rycently bette at etn 8 ray accuse tat Ian ated eatane Wet thee’ Aitiesndarnes Stace teavelne tia Nee Stare Cempans. sane pea Tne srruertaaneal by the neanamarnt of He ateawted tase Wendt CA peatient ore Hntzrito Ie ac ag he eared Shae URN Tes lane mecunthe Rete frum’ Bitar, 3kines theres tee Wont tenet Wie dintenor. Stine Allee Tense, Fo tt pa purged gi seetia o, eie so Sa Bek Tale Teche see Beate Eades tea al Baie Beacons, Ma BA RSPR ite haa ilar site Pytce He st inden fetorecl Mascrtae. ane NEW YORK POLICE NEWS Xow York, Nov.” 2h —ealanrd.. nralines, EE Saad Sit teen Meets Rheatae we tethettee sis ie Meee teat Hii Ethic ao ita mad wot Cor sala Sy Er. . i Seg Wan, 28. Wont ene: Tuer A Tee STinniag “ont ches it Yebonions hee Fant dada Sgt nah ha ke Fa Sof aa atin en iene TER as! Wnt Tau ster, Sano te IES eae Cah Te Seiten Se SSE Wont aeath nt fait tapos uri te eee TRE Ena AS Sara oats ANE TODAS hee iis wt he whine ai PeNSsCdl foram anger sarap beg wer Sia Rhy nde Seika AS Same hc at Pete Seeaiue! ad ate Hemet as aie ane, wi dene Sire abit tnatiiyes wes ee iad AOS TAA alters aga pra Matt Serials Meron to eto Wiens tau Ba etait sc tr Mla SiS Lait tera dentate reins metic rms arate at Reet a eeeeme sta ntmaees ska" Hetgtetms 4 263 Teas Meme ect cekinanta iar Mone! hl AMT hs Siero ee ‘eek. | Horn dees PAGE NINE BARBER SHOP CHANGES HANDS New York, Nov, 26.—-The White palace "Pinional’” rion "Seventh see ty ate eae cant Sate strani ate ae tate Bae eet he Sic he eal Pony I can, Ts Sonica ernie I tetas Colored Dolls 25 Cents Each a eee eee AUB bee gee ae Fee | ae ee 4 5 2 ‘ i "3 a eRe, nee tte, CP alee lig aa eee cnet Factory BES we Oe Sel Siew veut HOTEL OLGA 695 Lenox Ave. . Cor. 145th St. New York City i poss SSS, as 5 ae 3 pee TO 3 Reeth amas oe Sear oe ED. H. 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Let the DEFENDER ===: Be Your ===== Traveling Salesman AARER i ts thecteaete, Teemaeens Pra ese aenerre yrearny cart P gobaerintion $2.00 Per Vener NEW YORK OFFICE, 58 Wer Si se GROWS ALL KINDS OF yi sleet ieee oe Errarations ‘at nce None Wonder City Chemical Co. ies ES arte dk Sy, BAD HAIR Shetty eget | Aitlataneas? atitecne gent ‘sun ie | Ma Eh lias yeeeer or Tlar | a A Et ie | MBean RAGE ats, WE GIVE SERVICE See DAVISON & LAURIE Shan sts wen wishing New York Ciey URES IS PCE een RORUFE ReueR saves 2 ME en W CLAY GLOVER Gon, HAW aLtS AU. aa ar re ere ```markdown ``` PAGE 114 LINCOLN AND HOWARD READY FOR BIG GAME Merits of Both Teams The Royal Society is a scientific society of the Royal Society of Sciences in London. gainst the pro- priety of the Nancy. He was now in win. Morristown was one of the painted at the Morristown Museum. Now he is been a thie and white hole in the park. He is beautiful. Tell me how he looks in display. How he looks in a park. He is painted with the right nose on poppies, like a who often goes to Hampton. He was the thick, cool tone in the sound working day, and polish with them properly is not a thing when Fall Weather Promised Newspaper companies are the most important source of information for the public. Nurse. Right End Big ArmySale BUY A TAG, MISTER? FOR THE BENEFIT OF A HOME FOR LONESOME MILLIONAIRES TAG MISTER? BILLY WALKER GETS DRAW WITH ITALIAN IN MIDDLEWEIGHT BOUT The commander, in sessions went to Orlando Williams of the 868th Infantry in the Middletown, Va., to give the soldiers训话. In the preliminaries Sailor Rogers of the Naval Militia whipped Kate Kane of the 868th Infantry in the Naval Militia and Shuffle Naval Dock Sailor of the 868th infantry drew and Harry third in the 868th Infantry in the Naval Militia after a few seconds. Kate Kane gave away the prisoners in weight, which was the commander for this Friday exercise. He will be there in four rounds, Sean Smith, Major Marshall Washburn of the 868th Infantry, in the Middletown, Va., to Terry Clinton and John Chalk of the 868th Infantry. RALPH TIBBS, BASKETBALL STAR, PASSES AWAY IN EAST LIVINGSTONE, 3; SHAW, 0 GAME CALLED OFF W LEBERFORCE OFF FOR VIRGINIA W LEBERFORCE OFF FOR VIRGINIA BOXING New York, Milton State, owner with Pioneer St. stage owner with W. Milton State stage owner with W. Milton State stage owner with W. Milton State stage owner who hopes to be the next ambrose beats collins New York, New York, ambrose business and kevyn Collins in the third season of the star attraction at the Medical Corps armory Saturday Boys—Earning Big Money! Throughout the country, "Our team lives in commissions and valuable in our paper to regular customers. Are you earning your phase? Begin low to the Circulation Dept. Chicago, Illinois. It IN THE SQUARED CIRCLE By JULI JONES, Jr. GANS AND DOBBS JOHNSON QUITS STAGE From a polite source the news story is that he was a stage. Tales to the story. His manager says that he wants to run the show. That's his old job. Dave says the manager wants to play big towns. Jack wants to play big towns and townships. So there you are. Hamilton, Va. Nov. 11, 2014—Hamilton has been named an all-time active fellow of the Hampshire Institute, graduates and former students, are raising money to construct and equip this unanticipated field under the auspices of the Hampshire Association of Teachers, and Hampshire everywhere are enthusiastic over the construction of the field which will be one of the finest in the country. The field will be equipped with watercraft, gravel tractors, standard straights, football and ice hockey, Dr. Gregg, principal of Hampshire the theatre and George J. Bava, principal of Hampshire the football stars, located the first sewerage Trench. The field will be equipped with air and observed the speakers in art and architecture and the Hampshire Institute. Value to Hampton. This field is going to be a blessing, as it represents the abilities the forward and vice versa play, but it is going to be an advantage if the teaching of the field is a result of the promotion of total control and cooperation. I am very grateful to Charles H. Hess, who is very helpful in teaching which he has been involved in with which he has given great help. I am also indebted to think that our graduates should be positioned to respond to them within the past few countries that I have visited. I have the best knowledge that all the money that is needed will be being spent on the proper education will be readily accepted, and that the students have definitely a chance that they will be given the best institution just the very best possible to be found anywhere. Forward Movement HARRY WILLS KNOCKS OUT D MARTIN IN ONE ROUND Portland, Ore. Nov. 15—Harry Willett, 75, of Portland, won the championship of the world, knocked out Jonas Bjornsson, 72, of Oslo, and won the championship. Martin went to the canvas six times, but Louise Loutch stopped the fight. Willett was extended himself to the fight. Willett was sent from Vancouver to the fight. George R. Farmer, Jr., headed to the fight. All light fights who attended the contest. ROYAL A C AFTER GAME New Haven, Conn. Nov. 25—The Royal A. B. Big Five, one of the best cities in after games in and out of this city. For further information write C. S. Gardner, 212 W. Street. ATLANTA U. VS. MORRIS BROWN Atlanta, Ga. Wednesday—Atlanta, Ga. Thursday—The postgame day game against Morris Brown's crack eleven which will be played on Friday. A break-in crowd is arrested. THE CHICAGO DEFENDER He Solves the TAG MISTER? SPORT E He Solves the Tag-Day Problem TAG MISTER? SPORT EDITORIAL POOR OFFICIALS Now that the football season annual Thanksgiving day game Union and Hampton and Wilberforce Institute, we feel that a officials would be in order, and next year there should be a de novo in vogue. Wilberforce when at Fisk sportsmanlike conduct on the pro run down the field with the manner that it makes it impossible and make a clean tackle with tential roughing of an official. In the Lincoln-Virginia U referee caused the Pennsylvania from the field notwithstanding minutes left to play. The play: Lincoln men claimed Capt. Lamar men claim their man broke to those who did not see the p. The odds are with the side have it is easier for one of the back caused by a bad pass than it through. However, the referee seen the play clearly and should at stake that it would go to the matter what the official's person. The part that needs remem of the two competing colleges, acting as the home team. It petent officials. Friendship do something so far as just decisions simply this: Nothing can be he should be paid from $25 to $40 o contests in proportion to the co and judge's a corresponding guaranteed, makes a pretty co the athletic bodies of the varic let us stop to think a moment Union affair will decrease the a increased attendance is attribute part of the public, which in turn lack of knowledge and inability part of the officials. The public is just beginning football. The season is short, the money brought into the athlete deficits in all other branches of demand for athletic activities o it means the retaining of high we to kill the goose that lays u interest? There is but one way our should be sent out by a committee. The officials not showing the pro Each eleven should know at le the selected officials are, and Any grievance should be forw committee and if so warranted out and played over or put do also should be some way to pro see something it does not see in on the visiting team or on the field, that fine to go into a fun athletic activities between the must be done before next season HAMPTON THREATENS TO UPSET UNION'S ASPIRATIONS that the football season is about to clear Thanksgiving Day games between Lincoln-Hampton and Wilberforce and West Virginia, we feel that a timely word on the schedule should be in order, and it is our belief that there should be a decided change from one force when at Fisk lays a justifiable call to conduct on the part of an official wagon in the field with the man carrying the ball but it makes it impossible for the opposing team to clean tackle without roughing the roughing of an official carries a heavy Lincoln-Virginia Union game a deposition the Pennsylvania school to withhold field notwithstanding the fact that they must to play. The play in question was a team claimed Capt. Laws recovered the man his man broke through and fell on the man did not see the play either side misrepresent with the side having the ball in its possession for one of the backfield men to recover a bad pass than it is for the opposite team. However, the referee was there and he clearly and should have had his hand that it would go to the one it right below the official's personal feeling in the matter that needs remedying is the athlete competing colleges, particularly the football team. It is up to them for all. Friendship does not count for such decisions are concerned. Nothing can be cheap. First credit will decrease the attendance at these public, which in turn is brought about by wedge and inability to give a square foot of officials. It is just beginning to interest itself in the season is short. The larger school brought into the athletic fund from four all other branches of sport which are can athletic activities on the part of the state retaining of high-priced, efficient coege the goose that lays the golden egg by which it but one way out. A list of competitor out by a committee organized for sports not showing the proper class should be should know at least thirty days in and officials are, and their ruling should once be forwarded under oath to and if so warranted the game should played over or put down as no game play be some way to protect the public wishing it does not see finished. A fine showing team or on the home team that wishing it goes into a fund to be used for activities between the collegiate bodies, one before next season starts. THREATENS TO EDITOR ABBOTT WILSON'S ASPIRATIONS HARVARD'S DEFENSE Now that the football season is about to close with the annual Thanksgiving day games between Lincoln and Howard, Union and Hampton and Wilberforce and West Virginia College Institute, we feel that a timely word on the selection of officials would be in order, and it is our belief that in all games next year there should be a decided change from the system now in vogue. Wilberforce when at Fisk lays a justifiable claim to unsportsmanlike conduct on the part of an official who attempts to run down the field with the man carrying the ball in such a manner that it makes it impossible for the opposition to come in and make a clean tackle without roughing the official. Intentional roughing of an official carries a heavy penalty. In the Lincoln-Virginia Union game a decision by the referee caused the Pennsylvania school to withdraw its eleven from the field notwithstanding the fact that there were four minutes left to play. The play in question was a fumbled ball. Lincoln men claimed Capt. Laws recovered the ball. Union men claim their man broke through and fell on the bail. Now to those who did not see the play either side might be right. The odds are with the side having the bail in its possession, as it is easier for one of the backfield men to recover a fumble caused by a bad pass than it is for the opposition to break through. However, the referee was there and should have seen the play clearly and should have had his honor so much at stake that it would go to the one it rightly belonged to no matter what the official's personal feeling in the matter could be. The part that needs remedying is the athletic councils of the two competing colleges, particularly the team which is acting as the home team. It is up to them to furnish competent officials. Friendship does not count for one earthly thing so far as just decisions are concerned. The fault is simply this: Nothing can be bad cheap. First class officials should be paid from $25 to $40 for refereeing big games. Minor contests in proportion to the crowd that they draw. Umpires and field judges a corresponding fee. This, added to expenses guaranteed, makes a pretty costly proposition, according to the athletic bodies of the various schools. Sure it does; but let us stop to think a moment. A repetition of the Lincoln-Union affair will decrease the attendance at these games. Decreased attendance is attributed to lack of enthusiasm on the part of the public, which in turn is brought about by poor work, lack of knowledge and inability to give a square verdict on the part of the officials. The public is just beginning to interest itself in the game of football. The season is short. The larger schools depend on the money brought into the athletic fund from football to offset deficits in all other branches of sport which are caused by the demand for athletic activities on the part of the students, and it means the retaining of high-priced, efficient coaches. Are we to kill the goose that lays the golden egg by killing public interest? There is but one way out. A list of competent officials should be sent out by a committee organized for such purpose. The officials not showing the proper class should be blacklisted. Each eleven should know at least thirty days in advance who the selected officials are, and their ruling should be the law. Any grievance should be forwarded under oath to a grievance committee and if so warranted the game should be chucked out and played over or put down as no game played. There also should be some way to protect the public which pays to see something it does not see finished. A fine should be placed on the visiting team or on the home team that walks off the field, that fine to go into a fund to be used for furthering the athletic activities between the collegiate bodies. Something must be done before next season starts. FAY. HAMPTON THREATENS TO EDITOR ABBOTT WITNESSES UPSET UNION'S ASPIRATIONS HARVARD'S DEFEAT OF YALE Richmond, Va. Wednesday. The city is planning to entertain the largest crowd that ever saw a football game when Hampton Institute meets Virginia Union tomorrow in the closing struggle of the season. Special trains will be run to this city from Hampton that will bring the students of the institute. Hampton defends the hands of both football players. The Hampton has caused the season to put every ounce in the possession that leads up to tomorrow's game. Hampton is anxious who knows but what she might? On the other hand, Union has gone through the season without her goal. Howard returned with Washington with Howard returned over the Virginia school by reason of having a good house of field goals. Washington drove. Ekaterina Alimova many of whom are planning to be here by the time the referees' whistle blows. Those who can not leave Hampton will be on the true story of the outcourt. In the meantime Richmond folks have thrown their doors wide open and true Southern hospitality supreme. The possible lineup. Brown.....R.K. Brown.....R.K. Hammel.....R.K. M. Baccal.....R.K. L. Baccal.....R.K. L. Baccal.....L.K. L. Baccal.....L.K. Baccal.....L.K. A. J. korn.....Q.K. Gregory.....L.H.R. Gregory.....L.H.R. Totten.....F.K. New York, Nov. 25—Jack Johnson, the tow van hotel Saturday, and left the same day for Philadelphia to cover a hurried engagement at the tounge the day before. To a reporter, Jack said: "Do they know if I am going or coming. I will know if I am going or coming. I will up the Passing review either in Chicago or Milwaukee. Jack was looking unimpressed. Our uniary was made about his new car he was well, all I have to do is to stop her." SLATER PLAYS LAST GAME Lake Stater, the giant tackle on the ball, played his last game as a member of the varsity squad hope at Northeastern. The team scored 14 to 10 Stater, in every play. It went to all of the Northwestern players, who fought by Northwestern, who had a member of the Race playing right end and a member of the Virginia Union eleven. TAG-DAY PROBLEM EDITORIAL OFFICIALS Jason is about to close with the ties between Lincoln and Howard. Corrforce and West Virginia Col-trimely word on the selection of it is our belief that in all games decided change from the system. It plays a justifiable claim to un- part of an official who attempts to man carrying the ball in such a visible for the opposition to come without roughing the official. In- d carries a heavy penalty. Union game a decision by the a school to withdraw its eleven to the fact that there were four in question was a fumbled ball. Union tough and fell on the bail. Now either side might be right, going the ball in its possession, as field men to recover a fumble is for the opposition to break it was there and should have had his honor so much one it rightly belonged to no actual feeling in the matter could be, by doing is the athletic councils particularly the team which is up to them to furnish com- poses not count for one earthly concern. The fault is and cheap. First class officials for refereeing big games. Minor crowd that they draw. Umpires fee. This, added to expenses mostly proposition, according to schools. Sure it does; but. A repetition of the Lincoln- tendance at these games. Be- d to lack of enthusiasm on the is brought about by poor work to give a square verdict on the to interest itself in the game of. The larger schools depend on the larger fund from football to offset sport which are caused by the on the part of the students, and-priced, efficient coaches. Are the golden egg by killing public. A list of competent officials are organized for such purpose. Super class should be blacklisted, must thirty days in advance who their ruling should be the law, ordered under oath to a grievance and the game should be chucked down as no game played. There protect the public which pays to finished. A fine should be placed home team that walks off the to be used for furthering the collegiate bodies. Something starts. FAY. EDITOR ABBOTT WITNESSES HARVARD'S DEFEAT OF YALE Boston, Mass., Saturday, Editor Robert S. Abbott, owner and publisher of the Chicago Democrat, in company with Associate Editor A. L. Jackson, a Harvard man, witnessed the greatest comedy ever staged when Harvard decided to work with the fourth quarter trailing Yale, 2 points behind. A two-hour show by their footwear with the cast crowd of Harvard followers, and in a few minutes the owner of the chihuahua armors around Junius Morgan, the boyfriend, both doing a little bear hug all to themselves. They one of his own reporters Editor Abbot said: "It was a bally funny; rather fanfied, disappointing; what I have been doing with the work counted. It was Harvard's team work that won today. They did a great story each man a story within himself, but each man with both one thought and that a Harvard victory. It was worth coming miles to." A. L. Jackson, who was class orator, was all smiles. "I knew they could do it," he said. "I knew they could do it." It was that old Hawkeye spirit that was brought into play. Both left last Sunday for home, where important engagements protect their attending the Lincoln- Roosevelt gathering held by the covered Chicago December in person. NEW YORK LEAGUERS Midtown, N. Y., Nov. 25—Referee a capacity house the New York league baseball team, The Trojan A, C, composed of former college players, and members of upper New York state, and recently defeated the Syracuse league baseball team, the St. Louis score sheet; leagues, I, Trojans, J, Players a five defensive game and more passing the winners came through 20 minutes. Nine players in halfes 20 minutes. Their schedule in December is part of their schedule in December, playing Trojan, Albany, Sebonet-et-alaye, Uptown and outlining throughout the Middle West. In the "minimal Kid Justice" of the Judge's decision during Yesterday's Court NATIONAL LEAGUE CIRCUIT WILL BE CHANGED AT JANUARY MEETING In and Around New York BY "BILL" WHITE The St. Christopher Athletic Club held its regular monthly meeting at the Parish house Tuesday evening, Nov. 15. Miss Kelsey Brown was recently elected member of the Y. W. C. A. basketball team. The proposed team between Jackie Moore and Benny Puntanue has been called off. Miss Jessie Barber the other day. Says she might go South, but will be on the rest up for the 1922 baseball season. Billy Bock takes us he will open up on the opening card will be Jackie Moore. Sailor Puntan and Terry Martin against some of white boys. I unconfirmed rumors state that Jesse Moore will have a baseball next season composed of some of the best baseball players of our group in the league. Some like friends in and of one of the sporting faceties attended the funeral Zoo chimp. The Jesse Shipp, J.A. Association attended in a body. At home, looking instructor of the 8th infantry was a caller at the office last week. Says he is developing the interview skills that will surprise the fans. Inside Moore, the clever little featherweight bobber who is under the management of Bay Set Seamun (white), the former amateur featherweight of the 58th Division Army. Moore will also be in action in Buffalo, Rochester and Syracuse. Jack Johnson made a wonderful season for the Buffalo Bulls. It included the fans who cheered him for many minutes. The Sperman Field club started playing Sunday backyard on the 26th. Getting more like their white beers every day. The recent announcement of a return must be infinitely infinitely and Bay Taylor of the naval militia should settle the dispute as to who is the better man, the former amateur or the young and tough in art 15 pounds, 2 check in the afternoon. SEASON'S RECORD OF HOWARD AND LINCOLN UNIVERSITIES The following record is compiled for the benefit of the fans who are taking a great amount of interest in Philadelphia on Turkey Day. The fact that Howard's goal line has not been crossed in two years sums then a chance and that by West Virginia College, Institute, a field goal for three points, has been a persistent against the best team developed a machine that is the easy of all eastern colleges. Notwithstanding this fact, football is uncertain. Howard is not the best Saturday night as wary of predicting what the score will be or how the game will come out other than to pay Howard is a chance in the field or not will be told in next week's issue. **HOWARD** Howard.....21 W. Hawk.....0 Howard.....22 W. White.....0 Howard.....23 W. Normal.....0 Howard.....24 W. Normal.....0 Howard.....25 W. Normal.....0 Howard.....26 W. Normal.....0 Table thoughes.....6 **LINCOLN** Lincoln.....15 Hampons.....0 Lincoln.....24 Amnesia.....0 Lincoln.....25 Amnesia.....0 Lincoln.....26 Bootham.....0 Lincoln.....26 Bootham.....0 **Gameoffers** Totals Lincoln.....16 Amnesia.....7 Morehouse, 7: Atlanta, 6 Atlanta, Nov. 17. 19-Morehouse College college educated Atlanta University here today in a son of mine on Morehouse College. We will be cold during the first three quarters. The Morehouse boys had been known in the final basketball game. Reveals, one of the most desirable fortunes to locate the big in this game. T FULLBACK GRAVES Who despite injuries has one of the manstags on the Michigan Aggies this year. Is a dedicated drop kicker. FER FAN The annual meeting of the National Negro League will be held the first week in January, the place to be decided later. It is very likely that either Detroit, Cleveland or Pittsburgh will get the hope of entertaining the magnates. Columbus and Cincinnati have put in a bid. It will be the largest gathering of baseball men and women in the history of baseball among our people. From a playing standpoint, the league has been a wonderful success and unemployment has worked its way among many of the clubs. The gate receipts were about twenty-five per cent lower than last season. All of them were in the financial district on the season and it not been for the heavy inflation and operating expenses which were much higher than last season. Columbus, Detroit, St. Louis and low last season's financial mark Detroit, ewing to the industrial depression in the automobile manufacture, the many of the supposed good news Chicago was the only city in the circuit that played to the same amount of people and finished the season as last season. Change of Circuit and Owners At this time minor league that the circuit will be changed. There is every reason to believe from the league gathered from those on "the league" that the Columbus franchise will be transferred to Cincinnati, and it is a known certainty that Chardy Mills who heads the present St. Louis Giants, will not be allowed to reenter the association. The alleged Louis which boasts of one of the best clubs in the league, is directly the cause of this move. The failure to suit instigated against the club has diminished the popularity of the National League in the Mound City, where the players were to play the St. Louis club of the National League (white) in the post-season series arrangement between the two clubs, to be played at the home stadium, brought bitter condemnation on the league. These players failed to put an appearance for one of the players of the Mills' creditors attending the recipies. This has hurt both St. Louis as a bus-ball town and the league in gen- Foster a Busy Man Despite the fact that the president, Rube Foster, head of the league and owner of the Chicago American Giants has met with the mistrust by sudden death of his daughter, Sarah, he is busy interrupting business talks over the different clubs that will change the personnel of owners. Foster realizes, more than anyone else, that he needs to change the chance of ownership. This is based upon the fact that no club can be successful unless the patrons have confidence in the owners. The team needs more business men, those capable of meeting an issue and who are able to help guide, direct and work necessary to maintain a league. Indications have been offered to business men in Cincinnati, Cleveland and other cities, just that results have been accomplished will be determined at the league meeting. To all the owners of the league clubs to attend the next meeting so that they can get together on a policy that will all and one that will be baseball. An interview with Rube Foster leads us to believe that he does not want the presidency of the league to be taken away from the secret that Foster did not care for the presidency of the league in the past but only accepted the same when he was elected. He has shown that for the best interest he should accept. It is a hard job to be president of the league, and at the same time manage a baseball club. He has also elected as president and he will be willing to accept the business management of the league. In other words, he has a commissioner of baseball. The league secretary will have to be elected. There are several candidates who are now being considered for the next meeting will go down in history as the biggest step to advance Colored baseball in the history of the game. VANDAL QUINTET READY Atlantic City, N. J., 11-5—The Yandall Christmas Nightingale gift to the New Waltz Dream Academy with the Hands- drawn A. A. of Philadelphia as their guest. After a great deal of internal strife and differences have been found, and a ban on seasickness has been imposed, the hall has tripped the seating capacity of the room, instead of the Turtle. The playing space remaining the same, the executive committee decided continue playing in the room in preference to the modern court play. Hilton, guard, and Lee, center, will miss meeting this year and the playing in the Lord's professional, of Pittsburgh, Lawrence, professionals, of Pittsburgh, to the sound, and a number of coming young stars trying to make the "Big Five," more than fills the void made by Lee and Hilton. Rust Downs Tougaloo, 19-0 Holly Springs, Misa, Saturday—The Tougaloo football eleven lost to the Rust eleven, 15 to 6. Rust Downs Holly Springs, Misa, Saturday—The Tougaloo football eleven lost to the Rust eleven, 15 to 6. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, DEFENDER A. C. TO FACE THE "CINCY" FIVE Famous Ohio Basketball Team Will Be Next Opponents of Local Tossers The unusual display of team work by the Chicago, Detroit, Detroit, showing midseason team, surprised the fans who turned out at the Evanston Arrow game at the Eight Regional Army, and these fans are now thrused and are particularly awaiting the next game which will be against the Cleveland five. The Ohio club, always in the game from time to time, the player who brings his best to the game, the new additions, thereby strengthening its lineup. One player hails from Lincoln, Ohio, and is credited with Eight's胜利. The Ohio state is anxious to make an impression on the Chicago tandem and sow woe in advance that they will have a one doubles this. At the same time if the visitors win, they can be assured that they will have won a title. Led by Virgil Blindt, the most successful individual basketball player in the country, the Chicago Hornets spurned on their history over the past decade and warded the national championship. So Hutter, who heads from Bantam College and who plays with the local combination, wished to improve an improvement in form so per cent over his last years playing. The playing of the others, Duff, Winters, Hubbard and Bobby Anderson, was all that could have been done. The public will be given a view of its money in the competition that will be brought to Chicago. The strong floor. The amendments of their coming will be made tough enough in advance to allow the potions plenty of time to arrange their social affairs that they will attend these games. LINCOLN A. C. TO PLAY PORTAGE PARK SUNDAY The Lincoln Athletic Club football team, under the management of William Bottoms, will play the Fortune Park seven weeks Sunday afternoon. The first game will be the first club to come to the South Side kids tall that has two more inches of the face on its team. Two brothers will play with the white boys. The Lincoln eleven has been grown in no playing has caused Clyde Blair to renew the partnership with vision from fear the men might be unable to play. With witness this contest, the team will start promptly at 2:50. "FILIPINO," WELL KNOWN SPORT, DIES IN EAST New York, Nov. 25, 1983. Andrew W. carter, well known sportsman, known as Philipino, died at 75 of his sinusitis. He was a long-time illness from a bone disease. Carker was 35 years old and an old New Yorker. Funeral services were held Friday night at Mother Zion Church. The deceased was a member of Monarch Lodge of EIk, the Children's Beneficial Society and other organizations. A large care unit, central contributions were many. Durna is a brother, 230 Seventh avenue, had charge of the funeral. Swastika Champs Are Ready Cleveland, Co. Nov. 25—Scully the new Swatman charges in to the playing offence of the team and when he is called upon to play, he will be stopping along as a direct gait. The swatman's record is rapidly learning to fill the oval tavern. With his improvement the team will be working well with all machines they have to play games. All swatons will be the Swatman's schedule and these can be filled by communicating immediately to the general suite in Cleveland. CAMPRELL DEFEATS UTICA Ulma, Miss., Nov. 11, Campbell College, Campbell Industrial Institute, 1200. The first tap which consisted of a mutual pounding of the Campbell discovered their ability to outflank their opponents at wrist level. Campbell made a spectacular run for the first time and Harrison, both men, and Capt. Smith, whose work in intercepting featured the game. The second toppled down was achieved by Bassar after two downs. Campbell downed the score at 13-0. Good hunter. University 189, has developed what bids fair to be an interesting activity for interest-hungry students in this section. INVESTMENT BANKERS 3507 Grand Blvd. (Roosevelt Bank Blvd.) CHICAGO 666 is a Prescription for Colds. Fever and LaGripppe. It's the most speedy remedy we know, preventing Pneumonia. 01111111, 01111111, 01111111 LAND O' DREAMS HARBORS CORPSES OF DOPE FIENDS Washington, D. C., Nov. 23—New York has its white lights and a city where tragedy and comedy walk hand in hand and story have been poured marble pastels of the gay night life of bright, questionable cabarches, of the glamorous show for a crumble in toth these palaces. But Washington has a "Land Dream." A city of dreams with beaches, bridges and toon, the animatue and the immature a truly invisible companion. It compiles the region in the city's vibrant streets and its ethereal existence is in the minds of the city's done addicts, a new city blocks they dwell in the city, and their dwellings their habitat, their dreamland. A Gnawing Wretchedness They Are All Thieves There are three members of the Washington police squads who are deliberately tainted by the drug police department and Pharmacy Inspectors Sounders and Evans. Here in this "Land of Blessings," these officers have led the activities of city and federal numbers in the investigation of an undercover caricature, growth on the far end of the city. They have had little success. Maefield says that the men are all thieves. In his words, "I doubt it is one drug addict in the city that would not steal, if given half a chance. The use of the decompiles them unit for manual or mechanical purposes, the police class, they have to exist, and not being able to work there is only one opening left, stealing." The officers are men armed with guns. But, the officers all have master minds behind deliberate a huge sale of morphine, or ordinance of hops, and other narcotics. It is almost impossible to secure a conviction for those arrested or to commit a crime so severe that the condemned person can be on the bail to bail the condemned out. Police tell of the fraud, the theft, the defrauding or the mistreatment of an evidence when they are arrested. They have been taught that that is one way to evade justice. Fatal Morphine—Crushed Greenville, Texas, Nov. 25. A stranger tale is told by Tole Wade and Pat Mays, both in modelling with Addison Moore, a prominent young white former of the Elma Creek community near Caddo Mills, who was fatally drowned white out on the road with them. The white boy says that they were driving along on the way to Greenville, where they rode a bicycle. The latter is said to have abstained from his wheel and obstructed the road. When the auto-mobilists reunited with him, he rides to refrain to give them a share of the road. Wade and Mays say that they then set out of the car in company with the police, who ride to get out of the way. A night and the cutting is said to have followed. The alleged assault had little attention to the improbability of one man being able to three in such a battle and to the fact that returned without any wounds, while their companion was killed. ```markdown ``` CHI CHAPTER INITIATES Would Use Universal Finger Print System as Protection Against Crime The Kashmir Girl Uses Nile Queen NILE QUEEN Hair Beautifier—The perfect pomade..... 50c Each NILE QUEEN Whitener—A real bleach..... 50c Each NILE QUEEN Nail Polish shades..... 50c Each NILE QUEEN Vanishing Cream..... 50c Each NILE QUEEN Cold Cream..... 50c Each Per Article God's finger print language, the coveness speech and indicative writing, the foot soils of humanity and the all-wise Creator for some good and useful purpose, in the structure and cognition of bodies has in recent years been utilized lands not only for the identification of criminals, but also by insurance companies, banks, express companies, and the immigration department and elsewhere for the absolute protection of the sorts of business and development. The necessity of a means of positively identifying individuals has long realized the use of the which supersedes world, or the which supersedes means of identification could not be manifold and of inestimable value. For centuries the various governmental tendencies with impersonations and falsifications of public and local documents. Unscrupulous men in all ages have, with more or less success, torpedied large numbers of a men's society, and other means to illegally secure money, authority or make gains. The English government first realized the need of a men's society as early as 1855. Previous to that time we have no authentic records, but it is reasonable to assume that the Romans need of and used some method of personal identification during their times of supremacy in earlier ages. Identification upon some personal physical quality, peculiar only to the individual under consideration, and one that remains permanent and unchangeable through the ages, is a necessity or the system as a whole is no good. Either marks or scars could be effaced, duplicated, altered, or lost. The means of classifying them could be worked out. Therefore, none of them was a positive means of identification, as absolute proof is the missing evidence. They need no further discussion. About 55 years ago Sir K. R. Henry, police commissioner of London, deprived prints which was adopted and is universally used today, so at last we have a positive means of identification, by the army and navy, and in Chicago there are 150 banks that use the finger print system. Identification is important part of branch of criminal investigation and has proved to be of signal service both in the application of the offender, and is undoubtedly of very great assistance in tracking both criminals and crimes out of the civilized world it appears that within a new years no business paper of any major importance will be accepted, and while the finger print system is an absolute one on which to defend for identification and to defend just as thoroughly. This helps the case, the subject becomes doubly important and intersting to business men in commercial and civilized of the land. Why? Because there were 540 people buried unidentified in this compound that many unidentified bodies are buried in unknown graves every year, and from print difficulties. Universal further findal this and every person found dead would be identified. Before proceeding further with this interesting subject, I will define a finger print, so Athens, Ala. Nov. 25. A griecemurder was found to have been committed on the Athens Moorwalk, on November 25, 1921, where a found riddled with ballots in the hall of lootwood flats just south of C. W. Cebiah's home. The lootwood flats was discovered, police over notified. They came and took Jones' body and, at the same time, arrested Arch Shoulders. Jake Lane, Shelly Townsend and Jamie McCarthy, to attach any blanks to these near the time of the arrest, they were placed in the county jail peeling an investigation. It is believed by some to be the lootwood flats, in the killing, several persons seeming to have knowledge of some sort of disagreement between him and the detective. However, there is an identical suspect. The people have gone so far as to say that Shoulders used Lane's gun to commit the murder. LUXURIES BEING BOUGHT New York—Sales in jewelry, silverware and leather goods for the first two months in 1921 show an increase in the number of the corresponding period of last year. the reader will understand just what it is. The best definition I have is that someone with a same smooth surface of the pattern or design formed by the ridges on the inside of the first joint or tip of a finger will notice your finger tips you will notice a curious network of lines or ridges on each thumb and finger. The remarkable thing about it is that never in the past have you seen two fingers been found where the dithered patterns were exactly the same game, and since all ten fingers and two fingers have been found there two persons having the same patterns is beyond the pale of possibility; therefore there are no two persons in the same finger point patterns. I want to call your attention to the many uses aside from criminal identification to which the system may be more related. There are on the average 40,000 unidentified bodies buried in unknown graves every year. In this regard, there are more cases of visual identification print registration. Think what it would mean in our own country if every person were required to place their linen prints on file in the county-house, a duplicate being sent to the state central office or clearing house and one to the national bureau. As long as a person remained homestead against crime, if he committed an crime it would be a sure method of identification if he were captured. If he was sent to prison, the identification would be against crime. When the seized the torture toll of human life in the wreck of the Titanic scores of bodies were picked up weeks afterward, but homesteads were picked up on the identification would have been an easy matter. It would prevent the awful trial that one rights in the case of the most pitiful stints in pass through the great memorials or the wilderness and see the long rows of headstones. Next to death, and a single finger print would have prevented it all. In every fire, in every great storm or flood, every grave or headstone would be added to the grand total. Not only from a sentimental standpoint, but from a legal one as AWAY: FOUR ARRESTED THE CHICAGO DEFENDER with such things should not be. As long as a finger remains on the body identification is sure and quiet, and any legal matters that might arise are not handled, the print cannot be forced and cannot be limited in any way. It tells its own mute glory in such a way that no one can dispute it, as the lines on the finger remain unchanged even decomposes until the body entirely decomposes. For instance, if we had universal finger print registration the personal bureau could be operated independently. A child is born; at the age of 1 year it would be finger printed and as the years go by and it grows to meadow or womanhood and separates from its parents, a child is born; in the saliva, and goes to California and meets with an accident. The body is found dead, maybe mutilated to the bone, or not mutilated or not mizable or not nothing about it in the way of identification. Where the body is found the finger prints would be taken and classified and described hours' time they would know who the party was and where his or her people reside. They in turn would be notified but as in today that body loved ones would be known who happened. So you can easily see the value and necessity of universal finger print registration and why I advocate it. And I believe that this system of identification, which was provided by the Creator for beneficent purposes, from Oriental lands and which we are only now beginning to appreciate, will soon be used as commonly in all important business and legal transactions today, and I sincerely hope that the time is not far off when we will have universal finger point registration. It will be one of the greatest promoters of the greatest safeguards to the highest and the most secure measure to the thief, the crook, the forger, the swindler and the false claimant which the incumbent must understand and mean the prevention of much needless and expensive litigation, will help bereaved families whose loved ones may have met with dire consequences, the floods and fires, storms and railroad wrecks of their most pitiable features, protect the innocent, identify the guilty and render safe and certain the protection of illegal business transactions. It needs only to be known to make its merit patent to the most casual observer, and I trust that I have succeeded in, that this voiced evidence of the finger tip is the greatest foe to wormdoling and the greatest friend to sight-doling which the rogues of man have been known to do. Old Mother Nature, who never makes a mistake when she forms a living thing, whether it be a blade of grass, a leaf of a tree or her most perfect creature-man. C. GILBERT LAWFORD, (creating detective and finger expert. Member International Association for identification. SYMPTOMS OF CANCER Surden constipation, oftithes with mucus when movement dose come. Feeling of weight, discomfort, pain below stomach. Desire continuously to go to the toilet, but without result. Chronic indigestion. Lack of appetite. et Us Give AND with this proclamation the bowed before the throne of A for the health of all New England savage red men, for the peace of re opportunity and for the blessings of So the birth of presidential pro annual retrospection, and of individ "Let Us Give Thanks" AND with this proclamation the small, courageous band of Pilgrims bowed before the throne of Alnaughty (tod in humble thanksgiving for the health of all New England, for no greater violence of the savage red men, for the peace of religious freedom, the joys of boundless opportunity and for the blessings of the season. So the birth of presidential proclamations, national thanksgivings, annual retrospection, and of individual and collective count of blessings. Within the bosom of the Madison C. J. Walker Mfg. Co., Inc. grows a consciousness sensitive and true that joins with all the Nation and proclaims the Pilgrims' message "Let Us Give Thanks." Thanks that we are part of America's commercial life, that our fame and usefulness is bounded no wealth, but that peoples of 29 far-off countries endure our daily output; thanks for the peace we enjoy, an official and a man of integrity; thanks for the lives we give thanks for the Nation that becomes the supreme sacrifice of its unknown dead, be they native sons or foreign born; protestant or Catholic, Jew or Gentile, black or white; be a student bag and broad enough and with courage of conviction to summon the powers of the Let us give thanks that God Alm "WHOSOEVER BE HIM SHALL NOT HAVE EVERL THE MADAM DEMOCRACY IS A FABLE, DECLARES EMMETT SCOTT War Leader Tells Churchmen Our Boys Fought for What They Little Understood Detroit, Mich., Nov. 25.—Over 3,000 leaders of the Methodist Episcopal church assembled here Tuesday, Nov. 25, for a three-day national conference to the discussion of the conservation and advance of the Methodist Episcopal church, and concluded world-wide missionary and benevolent interests, the first night's session was devoted to race relations in the United States. Present Day Thought The first address of the evening session of the conference, held in the central Methodist Episcopal church of St. Louis, was delivered by Dr. Kenneth D. Scott, secretary-treasurer of Howard University, Washington, D.C., who served during the World War as special assistant to matters affecting troops and civilians. Dr. Scott is a product of one of the schools of the Methodist Episcopal church and has been associated with the university for years that relate to the interests of the people. His address was a psychological analysis of our present thought regarding ourselves, our future, our future relationships and destiny. He sought to present the point of view of the race man of the present day, tracing the several currents of race and the future of the Race in America. After referring to "the new spirit which has gripped the hearts and minds of our soldiers since the war," Dr. Seuss said, "we are and willing, 400,000 American black men responded to the call to the colors, to fight for a democracy where justice but - imperfectly understood, but which had been pictured to them as a comical force to kettle, our beauty combined untainted. We resisted the temptation to nurse our grievances. Patriotically and hecolocally, we met A Fabled Democracy "Now the war is over. The discontinuities of a faded democracy have set us thinking anew. Disappointment. Now as never before we are thinking as individuals, but as a group. We share a common grief, a common discontinuity that a great man should have peacefully should he peacefully deny to us the new freedom. We were told to the colors like other men. We fought like other men. We fought like other men. We believed that if our country in its home of trial and peril compels us to fight its battles, it should, in time of peace, secure to us complete protection of our manhood like other men. We feel that we should enjoy the same civil and political rights without distinction that other men of the republic enjoy." WARNING! People are hereby warned not to pay their subscriptions to nowadays. If you are not sure you are not "WHOSOEVER BELIEVETH ON HIM SHALL NOT PERISH, BUT HAVE EVERLASTING LIFE." Bitter Pills; Better Bodies e Thanks" e small, courageous band of Pilgrims almighty God in humble thanksgiving land, for no greater violence of the religious freedom, the joys of boundless the season. ooclamations, national thanksgivings, individual and collective count of blessings. world to a discussion of international peace and that there are still individuals, groups and Nations who believe that war is de- sistence and that peace is prosperity and that right will prevail. Let us give thanks for our founder, the bishop and the bourgeois hephasites that she made to Nexro educational and charitable institutions in the Madrid C. J. Weller Mx. Co., Inc., which they will for all time to remember; thanks gonea, big-tailed daughter, who carries the greetings and best wishes to our brothers occasions; thanks for the new and women of our own Race who gibble the co- njunction of their lives; the emploiy character still inspires the lives and activities of her many representatives. mighty still lives; and that BELIEVETH ON NOT PERISH, BUT EASTING LIFE." M C. J. WALKER MFG. 640 North West Street INDIANAPOLIS, INDIA What Hardier gave in his column at Arlington was something like this: "This boy whom we bury without a name, whom we pay on to the whitout title as a gubernator, who died not in the service of his country, but in the service of humanity" ... and if that boy could get up from his bed, likely he would say: "Is that so?" ... ... A second honourary troop: Mr. Hardier went on to Arlington. It took a second honour to do that. But on went the President, with all the world following after, "toward your speech," and the world "your speech," and the world "your speech," and the all the fightings has been done." "God pity a soldier," said Commandant, who killed thousands by a small community. After the event the spike angers. After the fighting, then the speeches. All the world followed Harding all save a world of 120,000 living under the Stars and Stripes. "This black man is a wonder," Jefferson once told Patrick Henry. A hundred years later, in the autumn, said that this same man is the ghost of every American banquet. True and he will continue. "He got a hearing in stubborn hearts. The exercises held at Arlington, grand display that they were, were toy to the alter of any presentatives of a race that held nothing back when the call came. "Our country is hard to land, though these chaining on our limbs are heavy, we will go and do what we can." French warrior Pelham, dashing leader, and Pooh about whom so much fries is being made all over the land, said no braver soldiers, no fierer gentleness, ever blacked the black boys from the U.S. A. But look at the procession, observe the mirrors, view the porch and see our handsome, gracious, elegant President - winging through the closet; then look at the closet; then look again to be sure. Then, with heavy heart and mollus ARMSTRONG ASSOCIATION IS BIG AID TO WORKERS Philadelphia, Pa., Nov. 25,—The Armstrong Association of Philadelphia, affiliated with the National Urban League, has issued a most interesting and encouraging report of its years work in benefit of citizens of Philadelphia. The association specializes in industrial activity, having played 1,523 contracts amounting to $2,955, and estimated value of $24,337 per month. Nine contracts were awarded to Knee contractors amounting to $2,955, and with the Pennsylvania district, the first time that this company engaged a Race man in this country, they socialized from their residential center into the homes of the pupils, making on the average 100 visits each year. They are also listed in starting a Little Mother's Club and a club for Holes, and it investigating the problem of displacement. They have inaugurated a successful drive reform, and a campaign against strengthening the Big Sister and scout movements. A membership fund of $1,527,945 was established at the University of lived here, now your head and say, "We we were good enough to fight, we being big enough to fight, but when companies come for the great day of possession and the meaning of virtue and pride they can be no help and ask, 'No.' After all, but it will make better bodies; it will aid medicine and our country can have taken, but some may never will happen, upon a heart-breaking calefaction. Maybe this is the way in the heights—grief, pain, despairment, depression, poise. If, on the other hand, well and steps well, improved hands." When we bring us to the observational contest, the whole world is at Washington. "Lets go with your ships and goose to build your boats. Let us do this for the sake of peace." France, nay all right, "Let France have no ships to do with away." Erichard and Japar look at each other and whisper the other word. England, and the United States, both look at each other a story, but be indoors with England, and distracts the United States about race and other wonders Japan, and then winks the eye not winked before. A better conference than the would be one called to "fight high the height of Cairnal that our white talks with, calm along and consider how best to how to cook the Irish spirit, and give a man of any color a glass of water and a plate of food without going to the restaurant." The short conference will end and it is begun that is everybody will be feeding pigs and apples and the children will be eating on the other, and war will keep up the listening post. When war ends then the militants will be carried to be burned. To do this is much easier than to do what the contender at Washington makes it is trying. It is good thing, but the cart appears to be before the horse. Pennsylvania, one at a medical college and one at Temple-University. Assistance was given to two students at the University of Pennsylvania and to one who is preparing to enter theological institute. HERE is idealization for elderly people who find them difficult to understand. Dr. Goldwell Syrnum Peskin will give you cally elimination in a mild, gentle way without痛苦, and soon medicines of all kinds can be dispensed with. It is much better than arthritic, cuts, mines, pills, etc. DR. CALDWELL'S SYRUP PEPSIN THE FAMILY LANATIVE Thousands of old folks will only be able to eat a few vegetables compend of European Senuis and other simple laxative packages. A douceuse less than a coint package. A douceuse less than a coint HALF-OUNCE BOTTLE FREE --- Will Pro- m- mene a Full Growth of Hair Will Restore the STRENGTH, VITALITY AND THE OVER-TIME OF THE HAIR. If Your Hair Is Dew and Wrinky, Try EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER If you have any questions with us, please call us at (212) 555-1234. S. D. TONS, General Agent, 318 N. Crescent, Green Bay, Ohio. AGLETS OUTSIDE VELVET BROWN PREPARATIONS FOR SKIN AND HAIR in the reduced years of age and desire to wear it. A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. The fact that I am a graduate to do justice to and a GUARANTEE that the best drugs, property in my possession, in my possession, in less than a year than these goods have replaced this DEFEAT AD into these of bones and made good. BEAUTIFUL in every blossom also toils my passion perfectly all these of bones, soft and tender as a springing thin rimmed by paste or harm- ing, or may be GERM. THE PRESSING is on the glass and is nearly smooth. You can see the variations and you will catch the smile. will attend the clinic. Velvet Brown Face Cream.....$1.10 Velvet Brown Pressing Oil.....$52 Velvet Brown Grower.....$52 Velvet Brown Powder.....$65 Velvet Brown Rouge.....$50 Velvet Brown Press (for men (any)) Agents wanted: Liberal commu- sion information given and red-ra- died DR. FRANK J. HAWKINS, M. D., D. D. S. DEPT. D. CHIANG, 3135 GIARD, CA ARE YOU Sick or Ailing? If So, Have You the Following Symptoms? Paint in the basin has to be carefully chosen to suit the surfaces in the basin. Water, heavy metals or paint in the basin can stain water-borne oils. Include information on the construction of the basin and the application of paint in the basin. Paint in the basin can stain water-borne oils. Include information on the construction of the basin and the application of paint in the basin. Paint in the basin can stain water-borne oils. Include information on the construction of the basin and the application of paint in the basin. The uses of paint are listed below. Natural waters port of any coming shipment. Take care. The most comprehensive and comprehensive public problem. Should be EVERY HOME WHERE RACE PRIDE DWELLS 100 laps at Kansas City, covering 400 km be prepared for all of the Money Green Elevator with a money control HAIR GROWS When McKISSICK'S FAMOUS TREATMENTS are used. Learn McKISSICK'S FAMOUS SYSTEMS & BEAUTY CULTURE. $15.00 Complete Course for $10.00 100% of Impression tools are included free of charge. Free free free limited. TREATMENTS Tetracycline. S.O.C. Sanofi. Sanofi Oxy. S.O.C. Tetracycline, Lutetine and Pressing Oil. S.O.C. and $1.00. S.C. & B. Skin Cleanser. $1.00. Special Carbon Fiber Cream. $1.00. Poreless. Use extra. Send cash with order. A card brings new term. W. T. McKISSICK & CO. the Land of 25,000 Barrel Gush Free owner-occupied map of Mexico, covering entire field from Coronado to Kosovo, showing property and other locations, towns, milions, rivers and a world tourism on Mexia, on Stephens County and on the Great Tortoise Write talks for this free map and information to SCHIMMEL & COMPANY Suite 902, Neil P. Anderson Bldg., Fort Worth, Texas PAGE TWELVE AROUND THE HUB By Alexander WARNING! People are hereby warned not to pay if they are in or at their own risk. We have a full line of John's Fine Art Glass, OFFS & Fine Art Glass, OFFS & Fine Art Glass, OFFS & Bath. He Nishimachi Sculpture. Set at whole- house and retail. --- We have made a large stock of medicine from fresh roots and plants. SERVICES FOR FOUR NEW BOOK WORTH SERVICES IN THE MEDICAL SCIENCES SERVICES IN FOOT AND HEALTH SCIENCES SERVICES IN MEDICAL SCIENCES NOW THE LAST CHANCE Medicine Co. Dept. 51, E. 31st St., Chicago, IL. HOW TO GET WHAT WANT TO GET WHAT CESS AND HAPPINESS HOW TO GET WHAT WANT AND NEED also 2 wonderful little things you should have. They roll down to many things, both happiness, business and the joy of life. SPECIAL COMBINATION OFFER Would be beneficial with the company's business, being hand portable to tractors and 2 lawns of the company's business. Please contact with directions to use,肥价 for $1.12 bounty offer. Send proof of it once and receive a complimentary $100 MN. Reprint: Philadelphia MN WANT A JOB? Read This Anyone can make big money Cleaning, Drying and Pressing. Same only because you can do it yourself. It is worth $20 to my home or shop. Explains everything. Address Brown Cleaning, 100 N. Vineetas Ave. Chicago, IL. THE BUCKEYE STATE By Alexander O. Taylor Ukrainian, also known as the "Blue Eagle," became of his giant the statue, last week to take his place. Mr. Smith called on his old friend, Co. Wills & Co., holding him on his knees on the land. Defended the representation of the Avenue Bath, Mr. Wills, much in the impressive city in which he lived. A. O Taylor 2265 E. 40th St. "The St. John" CLEVELAND, OHIO Parlors equipped with the most modern appliances for efficiency and service. Gas administered. In attendance: Dr. Le Roy N. Bundy SURGEON DENTIST Dr. Charles Gray MECHANICAL EXPERT Pi Chapter Entertains Talbot In Drama, Comedy Gospel Quintette Pleases The singing of the Alliance Gospel Church morning was indeed a spiritual treat for the hundreds that filled the church plaza and so stirring many were pleasing and so stirring many were come from every section of the church and Sunday school room. The person and Sunday school room of men from Christian Missionary Alliance of men from Christian Missionary Alliance of men from Central Avenue, is Floors Lakes, in W. Jankey and Sargent Jones, tempers, and St. John's to hear them again. Walr-Jeter Trio Scorés "Y" Secretary Honored Mrs. William Anderson, 2326 East each street, received word from her brother, David Blyton, O. "Y" that he was one of the few members of the lace summoned to the court for the funeral of the "unknown" soldier which Mr. Banks made a soldier record in France during the World War and re-created the of the distinct decorations for brevity. THE CHICAGO DEFENDER TATE was introduced by Joe Hanks, of Bayton, O. Missouri, as the first Baptist chur short time for East Eastern Ohio Association Shaw of Cherry street Toledo, Ohio Troy Ohio The Barber Kennedy Joke No. 74. K. of P. gave his first annual celebration day afternoon. The revival services conducted by Mrs. North Davis the day before and Chapel M. E. church is still going on. Mr. and Mrs. Felix Brown and Mrs. Harper are visiting their little daughter are visiting Mrs. Brown's parents. Edward Harrison is very ill and canoes are at his bedside. There is a three day entertainment at Lincoln Park on Monday, Wednesday and week. Rev. and Mrs. Hicks and Mrs. Westerman avenue to corner Sherman and Ash street. Owing to the Westerman game a game Sunday the majority of the team went to Dayton to see Paladin and the Akron Indians against the Triangles. Sabring Ohio Mrs. Edward Woolley underwent an MRI and was diagnosed with a small wound in Soaring on business Friday night. Mrs. Tinker is impatient and was scheduled to speak. Sheed were the Sunday dinner guests of Mrs. Reath Jones. Mrs. Peterson was scheduled to speak on Saturday evening. Mrs. George Hood was the guest of Mine. I. Easker Weddell was the guest of Mrs. Tinker was in Soaring on business Kent. Ohio. The Kent Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Creatives has appointed the Normal school auditor-in-charge Friday. Owen B. Major, S.J. Smith of the normal school, Major J. Smith of the normal school, Attorney Planning of Aaron Spikes, a spike attorney, a treat to all Mrs. Brown of Ravenna was next with some very good news. The speaker then the speaker of the book. The Most of Skin Whitene You owe it to yourself and you as attractive as possible at all gestions for improving your lo TO WHAT your comp Ointment delightful paid upon Most Exquisite of all tener preparations elf and your friends to make yourself able at all times, and here are a few sug- g your looks generally. The Most Exquisite of all Skin Whitener Preparations TO WHITEN THE SKIN, no matter how dark your completion, Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Ointment bleaches quickly, is perfectly safe and delightful to use. At your druggist or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c plus 1e war tax. If your completion is shiny or bumpy, you can make it soft and smooth by using Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Soap, followed by his Face Powder. At your druggist or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c each plus 1e war tax on the Powder. upon recei the Powder TO SMOO Fred Palmer can to dress 16. As your 25c plus 1c DR. FRED PALMER Dept. D1, AT PALMER PALMER WASHINGTON D SKIN P A Rare Opportunity ARE YOU DOING The Underwriters Lo (Incorporated under the L. Securities in Class "D" under Speculative AUTHORIZED CA Stock, $5.00 Par Value FINANCIAL STATEMENT Assets TO SMOOTH THE HAIR and make it grow. Drew Fred Palmer's Hair Dresser will make your hair straight, easy to dress and attractive in loos and not heem a strand of hair that is not sent paid upon receipt of prize 2 plus 1 ear kit. ALMER'S LABORATORIES L. DI, ATLANTA, GA. Dr.Ered Palmer's SKIN WHITENER PREPARATIONS Opportunity for Investment YOU DOING YOUR SHARE? Lers Loan and Agency Corp. Under the Laws of the State of Illinois Dr. under Illinois Securities Law. These are Speculative Securities. ED CAPITAL $100,000.00 Value Price, $7.50 Per Share STATEMENT AS OF JUNE 1, 1921 Liabilities DR. FRED PALMER'S LABORATORIES Dept. D1, ATLANTA, GA. DrFred Palmer's SKIN WHITENER PREPARATIONS A Rare Opportunity for Investment ARE YOU DOING YOUR SHARE? Securities in Class "D" under Illinois Securities Law. These are Speculative Securities. Cash on deposit. $2,945.01 Stock subscriptions. 3,500.01 Prepaid expenses. 260.09 Total. $2,954.01 The Corporation is licensed to do and manage the following: MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY based as well as THE UNDERWINTER A GOING CONCERN, having paid income of $143,257.45, paid claims of and women in salaries ATT J. H. Bowers, Brower, 240 Walshau E. 242d, E. Mitchem, S. 242d, F. 242d, S. 242d, W. 242d, W. William McGullough, 4235 Wahshau Akce, Wis. nced to do a general loan and agency business will be to promote the UNDERWRITERS COMPANY. It will be on a legal reserve health and acclimatization. MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY IS NOW the issued more than 18,600 acres; a premium rate of $100 per acre paid to Race men and commissions 180,885,47. ICERS AND DIRECTORS m. Sec. 415 Champlain Ave. Win, J. Wright, Lewis E. Johnson, J. Counsil, 2 E. Alst St.: Wakash AV. J. B. Lettelf. 250th 4th. Milwau. The Corporation is licensed to do a general loan and agency business and is a member of the MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY and to convert it on a legal reserve basis to write life as well as health and accident insurance. THE UNDERWRITERS MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY IS NOW A MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY. The annual income of $143,527.48, paid claims of $43,149.41 and has paid to Race men and women in salaries and commissions $88,884.47. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS 1. H. Brower, Press, Inc. 2. E. 42nd St.; J. E. Mitchel, Sec. 4752 Champlain Ave. Win, J. Wright, Treas. 5754 Walash Ave. Lewis E. Johnson, Gettell, 2 E. 31st St. 3. Jim McCullough, 535 Walash Ave. J. B. Lettell, 50th C. Allwaugh, EXPERIENCED SALESMEN WANTED 2 East 31st Street, Chicago, Ill. Phone: Victory 3883 Name Address y 3883 WRITE FOR AGENTS' ATTRACTIVE PROPOSITION was introduced by John Combs, E. T. "Mining season"; R. Roy Teague of the First Baptist church will leave in a preach the anniversary session of the Eastern Ohio Association, W. W. C. "Mining season"; and the decile of her sister, who is in Detiance, Ohio Mrs. Cary Tippon is visiting her niece, Mrs. Louise Jamis, a visiting palate and friends in Cleveland, Mich. Mrs. Louise Jamis is visiting palate and friends in Manchester this week. Mrs. Jamis is visiting Cleveland and Manchester sport week and in Columbia with her daughter, who was called to Yellow Springs, by her father, Brown. Mrs. Heart is Feeding, who is in Boston at the outside of her home, and Mrs. Jeffrey, who is Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Williams have as their parents. Seminole, Mrs. Mason, Cubes spent Saturday in Columbus. **Salem, Ohio.** Mrs. Lacey, the guest of Mrs. Silver, 82 Howard street, Rock Creek has moved to his home on East 40th street, of West 81st street are the proud of a daughter which arrived last Saturday at the home, is improving. J. Hineson of Pittsburgh is the guest of the last attending 112nd street to 785th ave. NEW JERSEY Jersey City, N. J. Mrs. Ellen Ward of 562 Bigham avenue, June 10. A number of friends of New York and Jersey were present, including players. A wonderful evening was spent with Mr. Chippeau, who is member of Chicago are how mukewak Jersey City their home. Mrs. Powers home Thursday evening, Nov. 10. For the evening, Mrs. Powers home which was quite a success. Mr. and Mrs. W. Chapman of offiff are visiting relatives in Jersey city. New Brunswick, N. J. The Rev. W. T. Rogers of Jersey City, N. J., was in the city on Thursday and night at the Ehrenzee Baptist church. Miss Rogers, 50, this city, and Anderson Williams of Youngstown, Ohio, were married last week. Youngstown, Miss. Mildred R. Venable, 50, aide of Seamon street, died Monday evening. Funeral was held from the church of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Williams, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Williams, Mrs. W. M. Bowman of 305 commercial avenue was visiting her aunt, 209 Eskin avenue, Omaha, Neb. Bridgeton N. J. Bridgeman. Miss Alma Humphrey, while riding home on her bicycle on the tupike rise last Tuesday night was struck by a Ford Mustang that was damaged and the rider was body bruised and cut. Mrs. Wilbill Harris of Harrods and Mrs. Robert Harris of her mother, Mrs. Clara Crombs, and her son and daughter, Miss Alma Harris and Rayd Harris. Miss Alma Harris and Rayd Harris more. Mrs. John of Lower Howell is spending some time with Miss Christmas and Linda No. 18, B. P. O. E. K. held memorial services in the home on Accounts payable . . $ 54.10 Capital stock . . $ 4,200.00 Stock subscriptions . . $ 5,000.00 Total . . $ 9,045.00 MAIL * THIS COUPON AT ONCE * THIS COUPON AT ONCE * Please send me without objection * complete information concerning * writers Loren & Agency * Corporation Salem, Ohio Home Brew for Your Liver feel sluggish today—all out get you a package of St. Jo- ver Regulator, a vegetable Put two teaspoonsful in a Add two-thirds of a cup of water. Let it steep for a few and then strain. Sweeten or le lemon juice. half of the tea-brew at if necessary, the remainder morning. My! How fine Joseph's Liver Regulator will date or gripe. The standard forty years. Large yellow will last a long time. Just Sample on request. Dept. tle Medicine Co., Memphis, Joseph's Liver Regulator only Vegetable Laxative Air Automobiles and Aeroplanes EARN WHILE YOU LEARN MANICAI SCHOOL 14400 in the Year Established 1890. Mountains, Numbers, 14th and Newmore Streets NORTH CAMERON ST. HARRISBURG, PA. A BUSINESS! Independent of a Job A Home for If you feel slack of sorts, get your seph's Liver Re-powder. Put two teacup. Add two boiling water. Minutes and the add a little lemma. Drink half bedtime—if need the next morning you'll feel. St. Joseph's not nauseate or for over forty cans 25c—will leave you try it. Sampl 121, Gerstle Meed Tenn. St. Joseph Liver A Purely Veg Learn to Repair Auton Home Brew for Your Liver If you feel sluggish today—all out of sorts, get you a package of St. Joseph's Liver Regulator, a vegetable powder. Put two teaspoonsful in a teacup. Add two-thirds of a cup of boiling water. Let it steep for a few minutes and then strain. Sweeten or add a little lemon juice. Drink half of the tea-brew at bedtime—if necessary, the remainder the next morning. My! How fine you'll feel. St. Joseph's Liver Regulator will not nauseate or gripe. The standard for over forty years. Large yellow cans 25c—will last a long time. Just you try it. Sample on request. Dept. 121. Gerstle Medicine Co., Memphis, Tenn. St. Joseph's Liver Regulator A Purely Vegetable Laxative AUTO AND AERO MECHANICAL Instructor and Training Flying Field and Training Quiz OFFICES: 25 NORTH CAMP LEARN A Become Independent LEARN A BUSINESS! J. D. BELL & CO. 3425 Indiana Ave., Chicago "BEAUTY RESTORED" Blemishes Removed in A Few Days Celestial Bleaching Cream WHITEN THE SKIN AT ONCE Removes Liver Spots, Freckles, Tan and Sunburn. Absolutely pure and harmless. No trace of mercury or acid.—Ask your druggist or by mail 586. Manufactured by the CELESTIAL CHEMICAL COMPANY 3523 Calumet Ave. CHICAGO, ILL. Live Agents Wanted WHITENTS THE SKIN AT ONCE Removes Liver Spots, Freckles, Tan and Sunburn. Absolutely pure and harmless. No trace of mercury or acid. Ask your drummyst or by mail 98c. A Some of our students are male and white with white learning We can place you. teach aeroplanes, plot- tography, wireless christmas, wireless telegraphy, radio telephone, white and colored men. Write for particular. 1 CE Rem Abs or a 3523 LEARN A TRADE! In thirty days you can be prepared to earn from $200 to $300 a month in the Cleaning. Dyeing and Pressing business. Full details upon request and 2 cents for postage. Greater opportunities are offered in the HJD demand for Skilled Mechanics, GET HJD demand for Skilled Mechanics, GET Trained Auto Mechanics, USED HJD HERE's your opportunity, Grasp, Lift. Largest INDUSTRIAL LINCOLN AUTO & TRACTOR INSTITUTE DEP. 16, 3100-0 Pine Street, St. Louis, Mo. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1921 For Health & Strength PURES FREQUENTLY KIDNEY & LEYER MEDICINE Will give you or you can have your money back. It becomes worthwhile, well and strong again. It purifies the blood and doubles the heart action. Only by taking it daily can be sure it works. In our heart it has not called on you, you will have him will have once if there is not an in your heart will send you a bottle paid or $1.00. AZTEC MEDICAL CO. Memphis Tenn. The most wonderful discovery of the age. If you want long, beautiful hair, use COCOA BALM America's Greatest Hair Crown. It clears the hair of gaudish, fluffy itching, stains the hair from tearing the roots and puts it back in the roots and puts it life into it. fully guaranteed. Shampoo, Conditioner, Hair Shampoo, Jelly Soap, Shampoo Jelly Soap, Shampoo Soap, 250. Regional Oil Soap, 250. Regional Oil Soap, Pressing Oil Soap, 100 all by six. You can take REGINALL PERFEC FOCUS on your hair and make it mail Written SPECIAL TERMS TO AGENTS. Address The Regina Laboratory EVERY WOMAN WANTS A BEAUTIFUL HEAD OF HAIR USE THE GUARANTEED HOR-TON-A HAIR ```markdown ``` Hair Grower 50c Temps 50c Grower 50c Tire the Salve 50c Salve 50c Shampo 50c Poo 50c Girl Beauty 50c Cream 50c Cream 35c Perf. Powder 50c HORTON-A Hair Grower graft this hair. It grows your. Men and women of the race can make hair. Deficient hair, send $1.60 per six weeks, hair treatment. A Lakeside MFG. System of hair cultivation by mail or at college $10 free until given with course Deposit. For further part-owners write EVELYN HORTON MFG. CO. Dept. A St. Louis, Mo. G 500 Agents Wanted for Hair Dressers, Teachers, Scalp and Skin Specialists in Beauty Culture. I teach by mail or in person. Diplomas enough. Improved Hair and. Skin Powders given to earn your money back. Give wedding flowers a treat to a few to be teachers of my system. The Improved Hair Grower grew own. Let it Half size Hair Grower and Shampoo, 50c. Large size. $1.00 Preshing Oil, 50c. and $1.00 a box. OIL. Great for infusing and making fair skin. $1.00. Postage 10c. extra. Write for term and send cash payable. 12 year experience. Graduate Specialist. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1921 the last week in the president does want died Lincoln public school. It Cifton avenue, Sharon I. was in public all of the there to the world's van uniform Alexander H. By J. H. Grav Negro's Invention Straightens Hair Wonderful Device Patented by Kansas City Man Gives Quick Results with Absolute Safety A perfect hair straightener has been designed at last by a New York inventor, the man who invented the straightener. The new device straightens hair in one fourth the time required and positively curls cut, scratches or burns the hair. It is the only parented device on the market. A --- Arrivals Hotel Dale Washington Pa Washington, Pa MONTANA Miss Goldie Ford of this city and Chrissie Sanders of Deer Lodge were justice. Miss Ford is a notice of A. J. Walton of this city. She left the 18th home in Deer Lodge. Her many friends wish her success and happiness. Boss treatment for the oversees boys at Fri- ternal hall Nov. 12. H. J. Baker was master, planted, planted, opened the program by sitting. The Star Spanned Banners sitting. Miss drove. Welcome address by H. J. Baker. Response by Master George Donnel. Master Lee Acres University. Holly Springs, Ark. recently. Newport, Ark. IN THE SMOKY CITY BY W. BOLLO WILSON KANSAS Leavenworth, Kan. Et. Scott. Kan Rev. M. J. Smith, pastor of Shilch Baptist church, and members have enlisted 8 a.m. m. Orcia Sanders, who was Louis Thomson died Sunday morning about 8 a.m. Orcia Sanders, who was home, but is not so well at this writing. We hope for him a speedy recovery. He has been her parents and friends. Mrs. William Knight is doing nicely since her operation at the Mervy hospital. Mrs. Dorothy Owens is confined to her room on a bed. Mrs. Owens and wife, pastor of the C. M. E. church, arrived with W. wish him much success. The B. W. I. H. Chin went with Mrs. W. 13:00 clock. Every one having news for the Chicago Defender, see or call Brown, 415 ivy street, FL Scott, Kan. Baxter Sparner, Ken The Halloween social given by the teachers, C. R. Walker and Miss Anna Walker, was a celebration of the account of illness, Fred, C. R. Walker was unable to attend the Halloween social given by the teachers in making it a success. The funeral of Frank Marford, who lost his life in the fireworks display, is. A military ceremony was performed. The body was brought to the Haven of the Lions Legion. Music was furnished by the Joplin band. There was a large number from Hayward, Joplin last Thursday, Mrs. Currier of Joplin last Thursday. LOUISIANA Miss Marcelia L. Jackson, the recently appointed teacher in the White Caule Institute, will teach in the wards, the teacher at the Bayou Goul school, last Saturday. William C. Johnston, the associate professor in the Institute, Ala., is making great progress in his guildes and will return home someday a school. B. F. Harrington, from a school in Brownsville, will be working on a house was being built in the city last week to report on the progress at the Capital city. Our current physician, Dr. F. R. Dean, has begun business in the city. It is a beautiful building and reflects credit on its builders. Crowley Le The annual rally of the Morning Star Association, held in New York, teemed. They raised $400.44, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kissel of Bosemount, Iowa, who made Crawley their home again. The young men, the Young Ministers Club of Louisiana, met in New York, convened in Jen-lyn Spring, Nov. 8. Morgan City, La. Dr. T. Taylor of Natehite Las, Ia., is the guest of Mrs. and Mrs. Mills, Jr. of Natehite Las, Ia., Mrs. Ghee and Dr. and Mrs. F. M. Nelsom mentored to Patterson to attend the Wren-Figure School. Union Grocery Co., a stock company, began actual business on the first of October and is progressing nicely to be a general manager to be hired by a severe illness. Patterson. La. There was an 601 Saint Conrad convention given Monday at Lakeside church which was a success. Mose Fliginis and Miss Beuthenburg night at the residence of her parents Mr. and Miss James of the University friends and relatives were present. Tuesday evening to honor of Miss Katherine Fliginis at the May Mrs. Chapman's home. James, James, James, Jack, Jock, Vilmorin Sehoxmay-Clinton Walker, Johnny Young, Theodore Chapman, Wellington Amlane, James, James, James, Gladys Jackson, Elizabeth Pleckett, Sadie Cohen, Seelie W. Nelson, Jennifer Ward, Gertrude J. Worton, Anita Monck and cake and ice cream were served. Mrs. Orca Young returned Tuesday night There was a barn party given Monday night, night Lewis, Victoria S. Hurge and Lydia Porter. There will be a big rally on Saturday, Lewis, Victoria L. Hurge and L. B. P. Church. All are cordially invited. Rev. S. J. M. Payno is here with relatives. Rev. S. J. Payno is here with relatives. Rev. S. J. Payno is here with relatives. MICHIGAN THE CHICAGO DEFENDER Federal agencies received reports which included that he to believe that husks sims of money are being sent to the United States to be used for the war. Berdogel, the notorious inflation-draft evader. The latter amount was rumored to be $100,000. The English authorities are considering plans to use $200,000 in the extension of money underground railway. They are also improving the lines, but also to turn work to the employ. It is estimated that the job would keep 200 men at work for two years. Mrs. Joseph Sims, New York, widow of the world traveler and eccentric lady, lost $2000 to the war. She is now living in the United States. The latter, upon searching for apartment, found $25,500 in bills buried under some rags in the woman's trunk at the Empire Hotel. United States District Judge Mayer New York, has ruled that liquor can be stored in States from country to another under the provisions of the eighteenth amendment. It is felt that this ruling will work to prevent Washington from being held accountable for its antitreaty attitudes during the sessions of the coming disarmament conference. Col. Charles R. Forges, director of the United States veterans Bureau, announced the government rehabilitation program for disabled soldier Harding in which he argues the establishment of national universities for these men. He suggests Camp Sherman, Chillicothe, O. as the site of the public opposition to the marching of the Japanese Crown Prince Hirohito. Plough's Prescription C-2223 RHEUMATISM Gout, Sclatica, Lumbago, Lame Back, Uric and Lactic Acid Conditions BLOOD DISORDERS Eczema, Chronic Sores and similar affections arising from bad blood Prescription C-2223 is for internal use only. It is absorbed and cir- cultated readily in the blood and acts almost directly upon the disease. Contains no opium, morphine, chloral, atrychnine or mercury. GUARANTEE The manufactures will refund your money if you are not born reared. Ask, or read circular enclosed. Directions on every Bottle Price $1.00 THE C-2223 Laboratory MEMPHIS, TENN. This is the original C-2223 PRICE 25¢ Plough's 2223 LIVER PILLS ADAGASCO Straightens any head of rigid, stubborn or harsh hair in 15 minutes. Makes the hair straight or wavy as desired, soft and pliable. Does not make the hair "Red," but makes a jet black "MALAGASY" finish that will not wear off, with only one application. Will last from 4 to 7 weeks. MADAGASCO is a highly perfumed, soft lathering cream. Easy to wash out, easy to spread. Makes a rich, foamy lather. It is a straightener, shampoo and dandruff remover. It does not gum or tangle the hair; makes going easy for the comb. Wash the hair any time without fear of it turning back to former state. Looks better after each washing. MADAGASCO is simply "different from the rest." Price. $1.00 a large jar, enough to last from 6 months to a year. NOIR-OL, a native perfumed jet black dressing, 35c. The two together sent anywhere, postpaid. $1.35. Special prices to barbers and hairdressers. Stobal & Hudson Forest Pharmacy Hirschfeld & Roseburg, 2978 State St. General Drug Co., 2007 State St. Mutual Drug Co., 2638 State St. Walgren Drug Co., 2438 Gortage Grove Ave. Kruno Schutz Pharmacy, 12 East 35th St. W. W. Lefteri Pharmacy, 12 East 35th St. Boman Pharmacy, 459 East 35th St. Edward Holland Barber Shop, 19 West 31st St. Schutz Pharmacy, 4666 State St. C. N. Alper, 100 State St. Joseph B. Falken, 443 State St. O'NEALL CHEMICAL CO., 2927 State St., Chicago, Ill. Hirschfeld & Roseburg, 2978 State St. Pembroke Powell, 41 Main St. Providence, R. F. Fennell Pharmacy, 2007 State St. Jackson, Tham H. W. Patrish, 2007 South Sandy St. Jackson, Ill. James Collier, Ocean, N. C. W. W. Lefteri Pharmacy, 12 East 35th St. W. W. Lefteri Pharmacy, 12 East 35th St. R. Johnson, 420 Front St. Laurel, Miss. N. M. Nielsen Pharmacy, 420 Front St. Laurel, Miss. L. D. Easlon, 426 Coplin Ave. Detroit, Mich. born, Nov. 2, to Mr. and Mrs. J. Warren, a daughter, Mrs. Sylvia Mitchell, a brother, and Mr. and Mrs. rest club Nov. 10. Covers was inferred for Roland Harris and Miss Mavinny. The last party range Nov. 10. Rev. M. L. Robinson performed the ceremony. A reception was held by bible parents, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Scott, a Scotts avowal. Only eight persons attended. Only weds received many presents. Mrs. Quincey, M. and St. Louis, M. W. S. football sound of Paris defeated Frankfurt. Nov. 11, games. 200. Mrs. America Rhode, 32, died Nov. 10. P. H. church, conducted by Rev. J. E. Wood, Husband, father, one sister, four brothers, children and other relatives survive. Sebree, Kv. Nov. 26 M. Martin, pastor of the Church, the Sunday. The members of Bristol Chapel stormed their pastor Wednesday and Sunday. The members of Bristol Chapel stormed their pastor Wednesday and Sunday. All there will be a program at Bristol Chapel. Thank-saving. Mrs. Sinclair, Mrs. Irene and Mrs. Sunday, Mrs. Irene and Heath and Emily priests to Pixom to Pixom to Pixom to Pixom. Will Wynn to Henderson Saturn. Wynn to Henderson Saturn. Will Wynn to Henderson Saturn. Will Wynn to Henderson Saturn. Been at the backside of her shelter, returned to her home in Madisonville, NC. Returned to Madisonville. Returned to Evansville Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Stone of Roberts apen Frankfort KY Middlesboro, Ky. TEXAS Wichita Falls, Texas Anderson Chapel A. M. E. church had splendid services all day Sunday. Collection for the day was very good. The church Sunday. Many gathered at an early hour to hear the great evangelist, Portia, a fine trip to the Southwest, where he went on a hunting expedition few weeks in Ft. Worth visiting and returned Saturday to the Newwood café and is in readiness to serve the public, who was badly hurt on the 30th when the car in which he was riding was wrecked a switch stand at the crossing on Farmland street. Of Welch and Brick street, died Saturday at 7:30 p.m. You will be guarded by a police guard. Defender at the Mint Drug Store. Brinham, Texas Toronto, Toronto A. S. Davis of Palestine was called to the bedside of his brother, C. J. Stroke. He is better at this writing. Rev. P. H. Jackson returned home from visiting his wife. The rally at M. C. Church Baptist church last Sunday was quite a success. Preaching at 326 p.m. in Allen Chapel A. M. E. church, Dr. T. J. Clever returned home in his new from a pleasant trip to Henderson. MINNESOTA Duluth, Minn. Stoball & Hudson Forest Pharmacy General Drug Co. 3027 State St. Mutual Drug Co. 3653 State St. Brown Pharmacy 452 State St. Boman Pharmacy 459 East 35th St. Schutz Pharmacy 4668 State St. Joseph B. Folken 4642 State St. CURRENT EVENTS Ly to the Panama Canal, the department is subsidized and it is now unavailable that spring. He met the president of Yokohama on his return from his world tour. Statistical experts of the department of Agriculture declare that if the annual loss of wheat from disease could be increased into four percent, the annual loss of wheat from disease is around 155,000,000 bushels. Los Angeles plans a new criminal courts building which will house six court rooms for the trial of criminal cases. Special preparations are being made to increase number of criminals who are expected to reach the courts with the beginning of the winter season. The number of cases handled by the department this year has increased 25 percent. Lloyd's "Register of Shipping" contains information tending to show that United States shipbuilding is on the march. At present only 1% cont of the total tonnage under construction in various parts of the world is in American shipyards. England compares 50 per cent of this industry. In the last nine years production in American yards has declined 300,000 gross tons in the United States and 425,000 tons in the United Kingdom. Five western states, Idaho, Montana, Utah, Washington and Wyoming, the coastal in literacy, receiving to the eminent figures for 1920, Arizona lot all the states in decreasing its illiteracy. Since the announcement of Secretary of the Treasury Molloy to the Scratching and burning skin, must be torture is so great. The dull, throsores—the mussy ding— The aching to muscles— And that half-feeling— All are caused need medicine to and make your blo Prescription Ctor's treatment for eases. It made happy It should do Do this today. store. Get a bottle The large size costs 50c. You must take to make the liver ac These splendid Pill headache and other tion. Sold only in Write Prescrip Laboratory, Mempples of Pills, leaflet the doctor's treatmatic diseases, and DAGASCO (NATURE'S ONLY RIVAL) Hair in 15 minutes. Makes the hair "Red," but makes a jet black w. Will last from 4 to 7 weeks. Cash out, easy to spread. Makes ever. It does not gum or tang be without fear of it turning ba is simply "different from the n. NOIR-OL, a native perfume $1.35. Special prices to barber Dealers in Chicago and Elsewhere CO., 2927 State St alumet 3704 G K S C O ing, Scaly Skin Diseases Scratching and rubbing your itch burning skin, must run you almost crazy torture is so great. The dull, throbbing pain of ulcer sores—the mussy discomfort of daily diving— The aching torture of your bones muscles— And that half-sick, "tired-all-the-t feeling— All are caused by poisoned blood. need medicine to throw these poisons and make your blood pure, rich and rea Prescription C-2223 was for years a doctor's treatment for blood and rheumatic eases. It made thousands healthy happy It should do the same for you. Do this today. Go to your nearest store. Get a bottle of Prescription C- The large size costs only $1.00—the trial 50c. You must take Plough's 2223 Liver to make the liver active and open the box. These splendid Pills are also fine for headache and other ills caused by constriction. Sold only in the blue tin box—25 Write Prescription Dept. 2, The Laboratory, Memphis, Tenn., for free samples of Pills, leaflet which tells you all the doctor's treatment for blood and rheumatic diseases, and a 1922 Almanac. Prescription C-2223 Scratching and rubbing your itching, burning skin, must run you almost crazy, the torture is so great. The dull, throbbing pain of ulcerous sores—the mussy discomfort of daily dressing— The aching torture of your bones and muscles— And that half-sick, "tired-all-the-time" feeling— All are caused by poisoned blood. You need medicine to throw these poisons out and make your blood pure, rich and red. Prescription C-2223 was for years a doctor's treatment for blood and rheumatic diseases. It made thousands healthy and happy. It should do the same for you. Do this today. Go to your nearest drug store. Get a bottle of Prescription C-2223. The large size costs only $1.00—the trial size 50c. You must take Plough's 2223 Liver Pills to make the liver active and open the bowels. These splendid Pills are also fine for sick headache and other ills caused by constipation. Sold only in the blue tin box—25c. Write Prescription Dept. 2, The 2223 Laboratory, Memphis, Tenn., for free samples of Pills, leaflet which tells you all about the doctor's treatment for blood and rheumatic diseases, and a 1922 Almanac. Prescription C-2223 A Reliable Blood Purifier 8CO (AL) Pembroke Powell, 61 Main St., Providence, R. I. Fowler, 61 Main St., Providence, R. I. W. H. Parish, 447 South Sandy St., Jacksonville, H. James Collier, Owen, N. E. W. E. Stokes, 685 Green St., St. Paul, M. W. E. Stokes, 685 Green St., Cambridge, Mass. R. Johnson, 420 Front St., Laurel, Miss. Mississippi St., Memphis, T. L. D. Easton, 469 Coplin Ave., Detroit, Mt. Lester that the state should be responsible for public purposes. She will be appointed to the judicial division of the federal laws and the ruling of state laws. A decision to be made in the United States Supreme court. Professor Allen Johnson of Fulbright university declared before the Commission of Laws of Women. Notice that the majority of state legislators are undecided, but 50% have had a common school education. Mrs. Emma Burkert of Hillsdale, was sentenced to prison for three years, and the state paid $20,000. BIG MONEY FOR NEGRO BARBERS Either Owner or Employee Can Increase His Income Without Interfering with His Shop Work Any Negro better can now work from $10 to $20 extra money every week without interfering with his work in the shop. No additional less than $10 extra money can take advantage of the opportunity to simply keep to the basic training of a wonderful new hair-straining device perfected by a Negro inventor. This device has attracted attention for that ability to provide training to his kind in the world. It is bound in every Negro none. It must just leave it where it can be seen and it sells its life. It can make easy money for it. It can get full participants writing E. K. Loe 1500 B East 11th Street Kansas City. No cost or additional my kind. Write today. A postcard will do. d Swellings a rubbing your itching, un you almost crazy, the a rubbing pain of ulcerous comfort of daily dress- ture of your bones and sick, "tired-all-the-time" by poisoned blood. You throw these poisons out good pure, rich and red. 2223 was for years a doc- blood and rheumatic dis- thousands healthy and to the same for you. Go to your nearest drug of Prescription C-2223. only $1.00—the trial size Plough's 2223 Liver Pills active and open the bowels. Is also fine for sick ills caused by constipa- the blue tin box—25c. tion Dept. 2, The 2223 nis, Tenn., for free sam- which tells you all about ment for blood and rheu- a 1922 Almanac. [ 𐬨 𐬨 𐬨 ] PAGE THIRTEEN OPEN LETTER TO THE RACE BY W. C. HUESTON Soci. Treas. of National Realty and Investment Co. Gary, Indiana. Dear Ease, Men and Women: I assume to inform you that Gary is the first to bring the place of the Ipee, Indiana. We are fully developed as we all the other places that are large Ipee centers, before we had the opportunity to get there; we came to Gary with other groups. We received many wages for the same work, our educational facilities are suitable. So, after years, we cannot defend if we do not compare payable with other groups, on the ground that we did not pay. In order to do our port we must have sanitary houses and plenty of them, and it is the obligation of the members of our line to satisfy. Heal it come to glory or not. We guarantee your investment will be a growing one. Every house of five points built for our groups adds four points to the pay. The cost is $712.40 per平方米. If you will invest $1,000 on corporation will furnish for and build the house, and it will pay for itself out of the income generated in this, the greatest of industrial $102. Write today for participation. NATIONAL REALTY and INVESTMENT CO. BY W. C. Hueston, Sec. Treas. Central Bank Bldg., Gary, Ind. SALVASENA WILL KEEP YOU WELL Has No Equal For STOMACH TROUBLES Colds, Headache, Constipation, Etc. Relieves Indigestion Immediately TONIC-LAXATIVE $1.00 The Bottle Everywhere Salvassna Medicine Co., Memphis PEOPLE HELD IN AMAZEMENT At the Marvelous Manner in Which This Man Can Read Your Life Every Reader of This Paper May Test His Power Do you wish to know what the counting moment is in business? Changes Marriages, Investments, Journeys, Disease, Talk, Business, Finance, Business, Difficulties, Miscellaneous Affairs and other matters of a vital nature? Send $10 coin or stamps, Astro Psycho Reading, Logos of New pages, Astro Scientific Publishing and Stocks, and Houses. This work is considered the best the deepest ever prepared. Address: PROF. THEO. WHITE 8684 Moneta Ave., Los Angeles, Calif. Please mention the name of this paper SONG WRITERS ASSOCIATE THE CARE OF THE LOST SONGS CENTER Learn of the public's demand for songs suitable for dancing and the ner- opportunity to entertain writers and a suit of greatly changed conditions which are described fully and obtain- able. Send your ideas to Manual and Guide." SENT FREE on request. Submit your ideas for song security. Send your ideas for music. We rewrite poems, compose mu- sic, secure copyright and facilitate free publication or sale of songs. Knickerbocker Music Galey Blda. NEW YORK Why Not Settle in Mexico? Don't delay. Write today without missing out. The American Negro for safe investment in a great country can grow to be men and women dcn can grow to be men and women respected the equal of any other race. LOWER CALIFORNIA MEXICAN LAND & DEVELOPMENT CO. HUGH M. MAGBRIT, Press. HUGH E. MACBETH, Sec. Lissar Bldg., Los Angeles, Gaff. WEAK WOMEN ATTENTION WEAK WOMEN ATTENTION If you suffer with FEMALE TROUBLE the lower part of the Stomach, Bearing-down, Plains, Headache, Backache, Backache, If you have that tired, worn-out Nervous and run-down feeling so common of medicines and doctors, and even though you have easy access to WORK, PAYMENT MADE WELL, AND STRONG AGAIN, and daily therapy, THE FELLO MEDICINE CO. Dept. D. Memphis, Tenn. Miller's Antisepic Oil, Known as SNAKE OIL Will Limber You Up—A New Creation Pain Killer and Antiseptic Combined For congestion, sepsis, hernia, and pain without an equal. For cuts, bruises, burns, and emboli. For arthritis. For general use in the great oil is golden red color only. There is nothing at all allergic. Every bottle is instituted at all allergies. --- UNDER THE CAPITOL DOME By LORD JEEF Organization Offences ```markdown ``` --- ASTHMA CURED BY SIMPLE REMEDY Famous Duxport Discover Sims Remit to American Express FREE TRIAL Offer to Recipient ```markdown ``` Union Station Notes Hotel Happenings. Des Moines, Iowa The Prairie State All Prairie State news must reach thi; office by Tuesday noon to insure pul caton. Springfield, Ill Decatur, Il. Galcabuse III Worstie Williams is more to be admired after her career. Anderson, she spent several days in Ottawa visiting Mr. and Mrs. Williams and Tuesday was a great success socially and financially. A friend and a chance Sunday in honor of her birthday. The Autumn in the home calls at after Alma M. K. Chin, some calls at going morning. The Autumn served a chilliness Tuesday, November at Watch for the ben events of the Trustee Art. Mr. Maude Counselly is our guest. The Free Dec. 8 burial of mortgage on Second Baptist Cemetery. Some everybody and enjoy the Harvey, III. Jerseyville, IL Chicago, Heights, Ill. Chicago Heights. Another street was called to Louisiana and Dolly Street and father. The missionaries of British Church are progressing since Thursday and have entertained Thursday to 12 present. The Parson A. M. K.尊敬给 a grand Thanksgiving dinner and dinner on Thanksgiving day. Sorita !! BE A DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC Streator, III Hugh Serritt of Princeton was a graduate of Princeton and Riverside. Rev. A. Lawry was returned to Storrer, Ill., by the Illinois Annual Board of Trustees, and he attended all his hours north of the city. Mrs. Mary Gillson is ill at all this writing. Miss Gillson is recovering after underwent a heart transplant. Mrs. John Ford of West Street underwent an operation at the William Thomas Jr. and Cool Street was a Toluca after last week. Lee Mo. was a graduate of Princeton. Mo. where he was called on account of the death of his mother. Those your mother was visiting in our city for the winter. Clinton, III. By Katherine Kent Lambert Marlon, Ala. Miss. Lazie Wilson's granddaughter, Sally Wilson, was on Wednesday 12, and died Monday morning at the home of her grandmother, E. Church, will leave soon for Timmons, where he will mourn her death. E. Church is connected with the Y. M. A. at some guest of his parents. Ms. and Mrs. Prince Walker, Sunday, bumps next door to Mrs. Kezil Ferry, who is in a saw room the Miller miller. The Federation Club will meet at the Patton's sawmill was moved 20 miles below Sebastian. Guests included dames Munster, Miss Pella Holle Jones was in school there. When you want to know what's going on around the world and take it home, Please have all of her friends in from her Mingery's Home. Ensley, Ala. WARNING! People are hereby warned not to pay their subscriptions to newaboys. If they do so it is at their own risk. FULTOFO Why? It GROW'S HAIR FULTOFOOD-BESTYETT BE AN AGENT BE A H Send $15.00 for agent's outfit and start making money. premium fee RETAIL PRICE: Futu Hair Food (double strength) Futu Hair Food (plain) Futu Temple Oil Futu Pressing Oil DIPLOMAS GIVEN. A THOROUGH NO S Address MRS. E. DIPLOMAS GIVEN. A THOROUGH COURSE BY MAIL. TERMS REASONABLE. NO C. O. D. ORDERS NO SAMPLES. NO CHECKS ACCEPTED. THE CHICAGO DEFENDER BE A HAIRDRESSER Send $5.00 for first lesson printed instructions and $3.00 premium free Connersville, Ind. South Bend, Ind. The annual hostage of the Literature and Art Research Club was held Friday at the Washington hall on W. Washington street. Rev. Charles Hall was the speaker of the unpublished Task. The "Signed-Order Three" orientated with a variety of institutions in Washington, under the direction of 180f. William H. Gorilla will give a church Sunday afternoon, Nov 29. Joan Grady of 18s. South Chapel, on the above addresses, is also manufacturing food furniture, and is also manufacturing road furniture. Ursula Church, N. Ridwell street, will present the Warrior Jeter Trio, Nov 24. L. H. Clerk of 800 W. Thomas street is greatly improved and expects a future. A beaming baby boy was presented to Mr. and Mrs. Clerk. Cider Sunday, Nov 24, drew nearly 600 Gerald Richardson has returned to the city after spending the 1915. N. Ridwell street is manufacturing shopping bags. The Chicago Institute, L. H. Sull, 15th Washington street. Winchester, Tenn. OBEY the signal of danger abroad. Don't play with a Cold - cure it immediately with HAT C. Q. Tablet. At the first sign of infection, take HAT - but by test, the standard remedy the world over Ice Cold, Cough, Headache, and La Grippe. Hat's C. B. Q. acts at one- Dinisterate and start work in ten seconds, grim quick relief and curing the Cold. Drenand red bar bearing HAT. Hat's pillure and signature. At All Dressers - 30 Cent W. H. BILL COMPANY, DETROIT FOOD-BEST ON THE SQUARE HAIR FOOD FULTON CALLED THE BEST STANDS THE TEST "The Cures STO Live A COURSE BY MAIL. TERMS REASONS SAMPLES. NO CHECKS ACCEPTED. G. FULTON, 480 PHONE OAKLAND 2439 n. Take full course by mail. Study at home. o. Graduate receives a diploma and $600 premium free. Prices reasonable. Write. i. It keeps the soap healthy, free from chlorine, free color and promotes an abundant growth of new life. See the careers; $6 extra for postage. William Gray, for an indefinite length visiting Mr. and Mrs. Gray, key visiting Mr. and Mrs. Gray, key M. Caney of Knoxville was in the city and evening at the First Church, church and evening at the First Church, Dyersburg, Tenn. Clarksville, Tenn. Portal high school of Nashville, Tenn., detected the high school of this city in Attacka club just Friday night with its new bounces of Arkansas, Kan., and ten bounces of Kentucky. It was Thursday morning and was buried Friday at Golden Hill cemetery. Mrs. Robert Hester, of her daughter Gina to Gosay Hester, of her daughter Eleanor to Gosay Hester, one of the oldest citizens of this city, died Wednesday night. Friend of the church. Therefore Eleanor is reburied in the church. Therefore Eleanor is reburied in the church. Therefore Eleanor is reburied in the church. Mrs. Robert Hester and little daughter returned Friday from Arkansas, where she was visiting her daughter, Mrs. Robert Hester. The inharmony force is delicately with mass, seismic, shear, shear, respectively. THE NEWS "pressing and training the GA. MORGAN'S HAIR Before PRICE $15.00 OUR MOTTO IS QUALITY. We pride ourselves very highly with the first enterprise that has any and all original before our prices and in quantity with the original guarantee of our products. Tollemany, October 15, 1929. RETAIL PRICE LIST OF G. A. Hair Refiner Cream, positively straight, Bleichem Ointment, beauties and cleanses, Hair Pressing Night Cap, presses and adorns Italian Hair Oil, beauties and softens the Black Hair Stain, temporarily changes Hair Lay-Fine Pomade, makes unruly Hair Refiner Soap, necessary for treating a Beautiful Tail, and shampoo. We Guarantee Our Products Individual Advertiser or Money Reprints must be company name No goods shipped. Call 012-345-6789 Ask your Drug. THE G. A. MORGAN 5004 HARLEM AVENUE, N. SALESMEN AND B TO BUY AND SELL LOTS A GLASSBORO and FL We are the largest and most the country. Friends in your purchased. Ask them. They The bridge connecting Ping in the neighborhood of 838 For further information write WM. LIPKIN 250 S. Br. $4,000 A WANTED—A man capable of be man now holding responsibility some selling sense and organization. Must be able to train position has possibilities unlimited make good. Address, B. Use STONE Makes You Wh After you have tried all others use Stone White product. Have dead skin and leaves the large looking wonderful beauty wash. But in this case. Stone-White Beauty Wash. 833 a boston STONE-WHITE MFG. CO. TYETT Year Round" Diseased Scalps PS FALLING OUT Agents Wanted! WRITE! THE NEW IDEA "pressing and training the Hair while you sleep" G.A. MORGAN'S HAIR REFINER CREAM Before After PRICE $100 OUR MOTTO IS QUALITY. QUANTITY AND SERVICE We price ourselves very highly when we say so, so that we are one of the few establishments that have now a stake from altering our original before-the-wear price and maintain our high standard of quality and quantity with the original guarantee that we started with since the birth of our company in 1823. RETAIL PRICE LIST OF G. A. MORGAN'S HAIR PRODUCTS Hair Friern Cream, positively straighten hair in 15 minutes.....$1.00 Hair Grower, promotes an excellent growth of good-looking hair.....$1.00 Hair Preening Night Cap, presses and trains the hair while you sleep.....$1.00 Hair Pressing Gloss, makes the hair soft, straight and glossy.....$1.00 Oandruff and Tetter Ointment, rides the head of dandruff and other dandruff.....$1.00 Black Hair Stain, temporarily changes taded hair black.....$1.00 Hair Lay-Fine Pomade, makes unruly hair lay where you want it.....$1.00 Hair Preening Ointment, provides treatment with hair refiner cream and beautiful tails and shampoo.....$1.00 We Guarantee Our Products Individually and Collectively to Do Exactly.....$1.00 Advertised or Money Cheerfully Refunded. Dimensions not specified. No prices shown. 0.00 unless accompanied by a warranty. Ask your Drugmaster, or write. THE G. A. MORGAN HAIR REFINING CO. SALESMEN AND BUYERS WANTED! TO BUY AND SELL LOTS AND BUNGALOWS IN THE GLASSBORO and FLORENCE ESTATES We are the largest and most reputable land dealers in the country. Friends in your town, no matter where, have purchased. Ask them. They know. The bridge connecting Philadelphia and Camden, costing in the neighborhood of $30,000,000, is now being built. For further information write WM. LIPKIN 250 S. Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa. $4,000 A YEAR! WANTED—A man capable of earning $4,000 a year. Must be man now holding responsible position, aggressive, have some selling sense and organizing ability, have good education. Must be able to train men and get results. Our proposition has possibilities unlimited for the man who wants to make good. Address, Box A, CHA-OG DEFENDER. Use STONE-WHITE After you have tried all others use Stone-White and see for yourself the next a soft, white velvet, skin Smooth. Stone-White takes off the dead skin and makes it look a real person. Harmony. A wonderful beauty wash. Butts these. 100 Agents Wanted Stone-White Beauty. Wash. $1.25 a bottle. Stone-White Face Bleach. 60c. STONE-WHITE MFG. CO. 1631 Jefferson St. Nashville, Tenn. BE A GRADUATE TABLE NO C. O. D. ORDERS 05 Prairie Ave., Apt. 2 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS THE NEW IDEA training the Hair w HAIR RE PRICE $100. QUALITY, QUANTITY, finitely when we sa now and have to and maintain the for treatment w 1839. OF G. A. MORGAN straightens hair w excellent growth of go trains and trains the hair soft, straight it rides the head of wipes. changes taded hair w unruly hair w all hairs. individually, and C marry Mary Cerdanfuly all hairs. will accommodate your Druogist, er w REVENUE, N. E. OLE. AND BUYER LOTS AND BEN FLOREED t and most rep in your town, w they know. getting Philadelphia of $30,000,000 on write 50 S. Broad St. enable of earning responsible posi organizing abi train men and unlimited for the address. Box A. C NE-W White Stone use Stone-White skin Smooth, like a skin like a stone. THE NEW IDEA training the Hair while you sleep" S HAIR REFINER CREAM After PRICE $100 QUALITY, QUANTITY AND SERVICE highly when we say to you that we are one of now and can be helpful to guide you on care and maintain our high standards of quality that we started with the Hair, 1899. OF G. A. MORGAN'S HAIR PRODUCTS very straightens hair in 15 minutes $1.00 excellent growth of good-looking hair .100 presses and trains the hair while you sleep .100 and softens it and disables .100 hands, softs, straightens and relaxes .100 entails the head of dandruff and other dis- .100 changes taded hair black .100 uses unruly hair law where you want it .100 by treatment with hair refiner cream and ampoura .100 individually and Collectively to Do Exactly as Morgue Carefully Retarded. company advisers. We may not be or express as accompanied by satisfactory reference your Drugst. or write. ORGAN HAIR REFINING CO. AVENUE, N. E. CLEVELAND, OHIO. AND BUYERS WANTED! LOTS AND BUNGALOWS IN THE FLORENCE ESTATES and most reputable land dealers in in your town, no matter where, have it. They know. Collecting Philadelphia and Camden, cost- ood of $30,000,000, is now being built. on write 550 S. Broad Street, Philadelphia, Pa. O A YEAR! capable of earning $4,000 a year. Must responsible position, aggressive, have and organizing ability, have good educa- train men and get results. Our proposals unlimited for the who wants to address, Box A, CHICAGO DEFENDER. NE-WHITE You White Over Night uses Stone-White and see for yourself the skin. Smoothe. Stone-White takes off the skin like a real person. Hardness. A :00 Agents Wanted THE LADY OF THE MIDDLE AGE MRS. MRS. E. G. FULTON MEN-WOMEN! Our LAK-O-PEI box is a sure product and is made in the Begins back of not satisfied. Only E2 box of 2 boxes. R. Mallet in white water. With twig. The LAK-O-PEI Graphic Arts Bldg. Kansas City, Mo. MISSISSIPPI Coffeville Miss SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1921 Oil Business Booming Prices Advancing Almost Daily Buy 8 Per Cent Preferred Stock. We have for sale 8 per cent Preferred stock in the state of Delaware. This is the largest and most successful with the best sales and the best selling in a million dollar corporation. This stock is 1166 per share in blocks of 100 shares and each cash to down and buy the most. at $20 per share, $200 cash or $50 down and $60 per month. GOOD INSURANCE for your own benefit for the benefits of your children and your children's homes, with a reputation. J. J. Allen has the reputation of being the greatest and most successful insurance broker. We expect to establish offers throughout the country. J. J. Allen is a successful salaried insurance broker. We are so committed to PUNDER INFORMATION WRITE US. J. J. ALLEN & CO. Dear顾客, Great Securities 1509 East 15th Street Kansas City, Missouri APPLICATION FOR PURCHASE J. J. ALLEN & CO. 1869 East 186 street, Kansas City, Missouri Nice Linda to have a new Specialty Lease. (Garrison County Royale (World Ward) Grated Stock. Mid-West Life Insurance Stock. Incline, and F. F. F. F. Balance F. F. per month. Name ... Address ... City ... State ... APPLICATION FOR FURTHER INFORMATION Late. J. J. ALLEN & CO. 1869 18th street Kansas City, Missouri: Nice Linda to have a new Specialty Lease. (Garrison County Royale (World Ward) Grated Stock. Mid-West Life Insurance Stock. Please send me further information. Name Address City State STRENGTH & VIGOR 60 DAYS' TRIAL YOU CAN'T LOSE If you seek that perfect bond, please mail us at music.music.music.com Send for FREE BOOK Send No Money I College Dreary New - da Ce. Dept. DC, Atlanta, En. RESULTS COUNT USE THIS PAGE when you want Help, to buy or sell Real Estate, to sell Household Goods, Automobiles, Clothing; in fact, to exchange anything you don't want for something you can use. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1921 SECRET LOVER; GRAZED HUSBAND; MURDER; FREED Ludie Cuvely and a story in the comic book room to have found a new friend, the case of Henry Woods, confessedayer of Lottery Green Sisters, evoked by the novel of Woods, who was might be trial the jury required after only 10 minutes of deliberation. The story of the character and the characters looking up at last April for the answer to the mystery. The characters in the drama of truth as they proved to be were Eric Woods and identified to the Woods. Meet in Hospital The setting for the story was beaten at the Fort Sipham hospital, a location of the triumphant begin, Mrs. Woods and been a clerk and had drawn the lines that that she painted them, which he had received over there, and the compassionate woman who came his fire. There was no patience which he had received, and his disappointment was his war of belief. When Mrs. Woods would go to get her husband, she would talk to him, and he would tell the poor fellow whom she was befriending and the husband carrying an essential organ he was using, and insisting his wife's help in the hospital himself, he arranged her to be in the hospital instead of the husband, and insisted that he be given the hospital himself, even though all Mrs. Woods accompanied his wife to the hospital. Bye Spires get well enough to leave the hospital and as he goes in other places to go, the Woods entered the opportunity to come and meet the staff in the prison which had been cut between Spires and Mrs. Woods at the hospital to see him. A virtuous devout The Tragedy PRESENTATIONS He is one and pastor of Andrew who departed this life Nov. 19, 1949, leaving behind binding their many friends who wished in believing the poni- mity of one of the greatest servants of their country, the most devoted and attributable to the mothers of daughters in her life No. 45, 1, 14, 4, 0, K. E. for their unswerving devotion to distress That a kind Presidence always watch over you and care for your well-being and privacy and pride Mrs Burke and Miss George Carney New Indiana N. V A wish to thank many grand- children of their kindness during the long life of Eleanor A. Berry who saved New Indiana N. V for the beautiful ideal ornaments from friends, the Collegiate Innets We also Humbu G. Father son for his works of compassion of W. Martin A. Lewis, mother of Littleton. in the law that bears its seal the moors as years glade to the. The loved one is an appreciate and an appreciated person in a civilization. W. E. Woodford The work of Work shows how art is differentiative. You are in- spired by spondial partion and view the art artistic beauty of mountain photography. MEN! HERE IS A CHRISTMAS SUGCESTIONS Your wire has probably been trying to capture a good photograph taken. Surprise me of our "True to Life" photographs of yourself this Christmas. She will arrive on Friday. WOODARD STUDIO 42 E. John St. Photo Douglass 5679 The Phillipsite, Jr. Can You Imagine Leroyce Hurry leaving Louisville and Helen Woolf of South Carolina after Christine Johnson's choice. Henry Daster takes the podium with six hits in his pocket and Filippe Ackermann in third. No players are at the top. Todd Ellis. Thomas W. Fleming of Cleveland and in Chuck Lewis of Louisville touring the state for a summer's president, Young, in bluff street, Akron. Sara Photo showing in Los Angeles for three days and Mrs. W. B. Bickford of Louisville for two. Mrs. Jasper H. Lord of Columbus column in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Jasper out riding in their overnight resupply. H. Thirteen and Second avenue. St. Louisport. Mrs. Martin is resting. She works the world in an applicant for Garden 221 West 10th dusk. 0600. Sister Gorman and old Kiss Show setting the air and so on among mothers of the world for naked models. Gorman Lakeview. 0600. Charley Martin is resting to frame Charley Martin. W. Jones, I. West Lockwood avenue, St. Louis, Mo. Joseph W. W. Benson, playing Howe. Von W. Benson kept the down on the floor, so the opening horn at the entrance, I. W. Armand, the Wentworth at aviation, Chamble. Kevin J. Benson playing pool. Von W. Benson takes a interview from the Williams, Ack Broadway, Little Rock, Ark. Gus Nichow of Port Clinton purchasing a concrete batting suit from "Fabriqué" to take a interview from the Wentworth huge salary? "Friend", Vicksburg, Miss. Willie Johns going to St. Louis and Walter Williams, I. West Lockwood Akron, Wichler Groves, Mo. G. W. Bryson signing a contract with the Chicago Opera Co. as a leading tenor. Mrs. J. B. Delpone, 190 Parrow street, Orlando, N.J. Mrs. Mary Thompson, 7 West 50th street, holding Casey Jones and his baby for a rainbow of $22,000. Wilkins, Chicago. Bob Halloran, John Walsgel, Avenue, S12, for the latest models for cannada roc- tie, Hancock, Chicago. Rene Lowdy and Charnie Charnier in Mobile giving birth to secure funds for the models back to Chicago. E. J. Mobile, Ala. Marie Hoehneman of St. Louis trying to vamp the models 100% H. Richardson, Mobile, Ala. The old movie announcement which would be a moment please, while the models close, H. Richardson, Mobile, Ala. H. Othoite Paterson Jr. now in the height of fashion, Johnson, Mobile, Ala. If there's anything that someone that you know would appear ridiculous doing, or that you don't believe you could happen, write it down and send it to L. Rogers, care the Chicago Defender. The Phill Devoted to Interest of Wendell LOTTIE TURNLEY. Editor Decorating the Music Room The Pascant Miss Smith Leaves Miss Fanny Smith, dean of the school and teacher of English, will leave us after this week. Miss Smith is one of our teachers, and we are sure all will agree that she has gone. her work faithfully and uninterrupted, and that her kindness has been her best gift. DIXIE SOCIETY MUST FOOT BILL FOR LYNCHINGS Paying for "Necktie Parties" Frightens South's Rich Murder Instigators By a Staff Correspondent Mittulis, Tong, Nov. 25. It all the builings in the United States during the ten months of this year had been paid for at the rate the county of Lancaster in South Carolina has been paid for this year. Joseph Newland, county of the South, would have been bribed to pay on $24000 for these "Necktie Parties" and would have been bribed to pay on $2000 as the price of her bond's life. There have been 25 Lynch- s A peculiar feature of the fight which is being made by the opposition of the South in the urban center of the North is the standing of the individuals in the opposition. It is claimed that most rallied attacks of men of the North on white women. Those who are accused of rallied attacks of men of the North are antislavery bills as the slave men who tested the wholesale positions of thousands of those men against them in which we have today. But they are not not testing the bill because they such condition contact with the women of a so-called insular race. They are testing to protect their poor ideals, their ambitions at the institution of the rich, but both classes will have to love and those they feel that they Would you put a million dollars now in keeping the press subservient in years to come the millions which the families of the men killed would pay? The Race man in the South is making as strong a fight as he can to have the measure go over. People are beginning to believe the impotence and the most they can do is to look for the Free man in the North to see that his politics politically exculved in the South are looking to those millions in the North whom old Tom Watson warns of having power to make the South's "beckish parties" as expensive as a royal wedding. LARGE TINPLATE PLANT Pittsburgh, Pa. -- The McKeepson tinplate plant, the largest in the world, will roll its mills foil plating over 500 lipsite, Jr. Phillips High School Students CECH, BRATTON, Assoc. Editor A New Club One of the most treasured of old organization journals. The members of the club are annually. The members of the club are kept a loot of it. An interesting program for the year has been published. Schnitzler. We shall have a group of students to attend. We wish them success, as it will happen in the future to be able to speak Schnitzler. We shall a club will ever be able to speak Schnitzler. Athletics Shorthand The sheriffard department is one of the oldest schools of the Pilgrim high school. 250 pupils are enrolled in the nine rooms, each with a typewriter, typewriting instruction. New computer typesetting is in use than before. Six distractors are seen in the hall, and hand pumps will be given an ammunition to learn this branch of chemical work. Community Night The first of a series of meetings designed to enhance the relationship and community with the school and anms of Wendell Phillips was held Tuesday, March 16, 2014, to honor Dr W. A. Evans, health executive to Dr. Phillips, and the gubernator, "The Physical Well Reef of the Child." There were sessions by Dr. Phillips, Dr. Evans, and by Principal Reef. After the evening was most enjoyable and helpful, THE CHICAGO DEFENDER THIS PAGE when you want robiles, Clothing; in fact, to ex LOST RELATIVES FURNISHED ROOM P. FRANK [ADVERTISINGMENTS] Would like to hear from my brother, Billion A. Cordell, last heard of in Chicago. He was on the island and had a British friend also a blogger by name of A. W. Vincent Cordell, M. D., residing in Aurora, N. C., Notify sister, Sister Cordell, 1311 Linton street, Pittsburgh, Pa. **ESTELLE THOMPKINS** Would like to hear from my brother, number 1 of Miss Estelle Thompson, last known address, Downtown street. Formerly of Memphis, Tenn. She may miss Miss Avenue, Phenix Avenue 4075. WILBUR JONES Zack J. Jones died Oct. 4 in Lexington, Ky. His son has not been identified yet. Last board of Inventors passed away on June 14. Inmates receive word from him. Address communications to him, care of D. K. Laird, 765 North Mill street, Lexington, Ky. **C. J. HOWERTON** Hawerton, color beacon, height 55 feet, weight 165 pounds, age 52. Laird has included, Tapett, Originally from Appalachian county, Virginia. Please notify Mrs. L. Tapett, street, Saratoga Springs, N.J. **GEORGE L. FORD** Will George L. Ford, who left Washington, D.C. for Detroit, Mich. Sunday, June 12, or any one known, his whereabouts write his grandmother, Washington, D.C. NRS GRACE JOHNSON Any one knowing the present address of the residence some years ago died in Vienna avenue, near 41th street, kindly inurnished, 252 West 41st street, New York. ARTHUR CURRY Anyone knowing the whirlbands of Arthur Curry, better known as Pete Curry, first behead of in Fourth Avenue, Manhattan, Amanda Curry, Olson, Penn. ARTHUR P. THOMAS Will Arthur I. Thomas of St. Louis, KY, write his father, Bey Thomas, who is ill at Eastern State Hospital, Lexington, Ky. 7 JAMES JACKSON Will James Jackson write his sister, Mrs. Della Jackson Runsnels, 26th East Macon street, Clinton, 10.7 **STANLEY BENNETT** Stanley Bennett S. R. Williams, Winchester, Ky at once. **FORMULAS** Correct working formulas for any manufacturing purpose. Laude's formulas corrected and improved upon. Welling formulas given. Family formulas corrected and improved upon. W. Collins & A. 360th East State street, Chicago, IL—Advt. IN MEMORIAM Dowling Green Ky. Nov. 25—In loving memory of our dear father, Jacob Underwood Stewart, who died Where we now our darting father Joshua your age today. -Loving you, Mr. Pearl Steele, T. C. Erwin, Mrs. Amia Cobman, Allye and Walter Stewart, in loving memory of John H. Ste- ewell this life, one year ago Nov. 3, 1929. "Shake on, dear John, and take your rest! God will take care of me. And when our work on earth is done Your face I know well see. —Carrie Stevenson, mother, Fred D. Carter, father, Mary Young, friends. In loving memory of my dear mother, Sarah Plynn, who passed away a few years ago, Nov. 26, 1919. "To the sound of a voice that is still. And touch of a hand that has amused." —Mary Maber, daughter. **EMBROIDERY EXHIBITION** Miss Laura Davis, Louis embroiderer, will celebrate her 11th birthday in Christ Nov. 26 at her residence, 5444 Davenport street. Sermon will be held Nov. 26 at Text, "The Kingdom Come." Five decorated tables and Miss Laura Davis' religious embroiderer will be exhibited daily from Nov. 26 through Free will offering. Advertisement. SHIPLOADS OF TOYS Baltimore, Md.-Two steamships with Low cases of German made tools have just unbilled here. American imports imply large cargo装船 are now on route from Hamburg and are here in a few days. THE DEATH LIST UNDERTAKERS OFFICE PHONE DOUG. $285 KERSEY, McGOWAN & MORSELL Undertakers 3515 Indiana Avenue J. L. PARKS UNDERTAKER 4344 S. State St. Chicago Phone Kenwood 6857 dec.13 in you want Help, in fact, to exchange FURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT. P. FRANKLIN'S FAMILY HOTELS 3340-42 Indiana Avenue Phone Bldd. 2918 422-5333, Indian Ave. Phone Drexel 5164 Beautiful, Cozy, Warm FURNISHED ROOMS Electric Lights, Gas, Hot and Aid Water Hardware Lines, Gail Stover Handy Lines, Gail Stover Stevens, Weekly Lates, 5:50 to 8:00. Hardy to Surface Lines to Rated, MRS, P. DANKH, LAX, Pro. E, 420 Ft., 425 Ft. APT, FTEN, ROOM for comps of single lattice steam and compressor. Compressor to receiver. Compressor to 1424. Compressor to 1424. STME Ft., 345 Ft. APT, FTEN, ROOM moderate impulse comps of single lattice steam. Compressor to Mrs. S. Talbert. SW LAWRIE Ave, 800 TWO LABOR comps of single lattice steam. Compressor to Mrs. S. Talbert. SW LAWRIE Ave, 800 TWO LABOR comps of single lattice steam. Compressor to Mrs. S. Talbert. [LOWA AVE, 491, 491 FL- DESHRAPE or engine or steam boat. Heat 1420 room, stream, bleach, hot water, cold water E 9TH ST. 5 10 AM. STERILIZED STOCK room, room WASHINGTON ST. 427 NEATY LANE room, room, bleach, removed label INDIANA AVE. 425 427 APST. PURPUR room, stream, bleach, also linen 440 450 CAMPFIELD AVE. 2016 SUPP ROM room, cold water, bleach, doubles 425 427 BROOKS AVE. 300 3D FL. NEPHAL BROOKS AVE. room link. BROOKS 7400 BROOKS AVE. all room link. ELK BROOKS AVE. all room link. ELK PRESERVE AVE. 300 3D FL. FIRESTORM BROOKS AVE. room link. BROOKS 7400 BROOKS AVE. all room link. ELK BROOKS AVE. all room link. ELK INHANA AVE. 321S NEXTLY FURN. dovey store, 321S NEXTLY VIA 1952. DOEGLAS HOTEL UNFURNISHED ROOMS FLATS FOR RENT 527TH AND CALMETT AVE 22nd St. and 7th floor apartments. Fixtures and furniture spaces. Fixtures and furniture spaces. Convenience to Car Lanes. Downtown Rental! in Chicago. A Few Ohio Flats. Airtel quick. A Few Ohio Flats. Airtel quick. SOUTH SIDE REALTY CO. Kennedy St. 12 9th E. 6th SIN-ROOF FLAT PLAT FOR RENT STATE T-1, S-1, 2B FLAI + SENN BMS STATE T-1, S-1, 2B FLAI + SENN BMS COLUMBIA COLUMBIA FOR RENT SAVE IN STORE FOR MILLERLAND FOR practicality, security, and durability. PLEASE DO NOT BUILD. DO NOT USE. DO NOT REMOVE. INDIAA AVENUE. THIS SAVE IN STORE is available light, strong steel, reflective material. FLATS WANTED WANTED: FORR BOMB, ELECTRICITY not particularly about one of her joint and wife. For 40. Chicago, Defender. FLATS FOR SALE FLATS FOR FLAT ALL FURN. APPLE. For 51. Chicago, Defender. BOOM AND BOARD FOR GROUP JOKE ORNING AT PORTLAND prize comes to the largest Hearst Holdings in the United States. A bookkeeping prize and奖金 by by by at the largest prize. The Little Little BOARD MERIT ME AT WHITTAKER'S DINNER 266, 268, 270, 272, 274, 276 10:23 We Cut, Trim and Make for MERCHANT TAILORS Cor. 36th st. and Vincentes ave. Vincentes hotel 1f HIGH SALLE AT THE JEWISH HALL on 40th st. at Webb's at 36th st. Tuesday and Wednesday at 36th st. campus and waterfront location SEWING MACHINES SINGLE Sewing Machines - SINGER FAN all sizes of sewing machines - compatible continuous sewing machines - compatible for your home sewing machine - durable sewing machines - EK 400 - Oakland South 36th st. in Oakland - 600-17 FORMULAS GREED T WORKING TEMPORARY FOR ANY EMPLOYMENT. SEE ADVERTISING. given family funnels, travel and training given family funnels, travel and training given family funnels, travel and training W. Cottage & Co. 905 S. 561H, Chicago, IL 80611 LAUNDRY WORK WPF WASH 25 LBS 51F NONE FINE 51F NONE FINE Model: Laundry 420 gb 25 FINE 51F NONE FINE Model: Laundry 420 gb 25 FINE 51F NONE FINE LAKESH DEVELOP MALLE AND WHITMAN DEVELOP MALLE AND WANLP ARTS AND SEN TO LEARN BETWEEN THEM AT STATE HIGHWAY BANNER COLLEGE, STATE HIGHWAY BANNER COLLEGE, STATE HELP WANTED—MALE BE A DEVELOPING WORKER WHILE ALSO BE A DEVELOPING WORKER HELP WANTED—FEMALE BE A DEVELOPING WORKER WHILE ALSO BE A DEVELOPING WORKER HELP WANTED—FEMALE We can use all the experi- enced Silk Shade Makers available. Highest wages paid. Come ready for work. 11-25 FIRST WANTED Associate in Business for South Carolina State University and Mississippi State University in Mississippi State University. L. Whatz. D. W. McWherter. Wanted: A NEW INVESTMENT MASTER to inform an investment company in a pertinent project from Louisiana to connect with investors in South Carolina. PERSONAL AGENTS WANTED KNOW COLLEGE OF BEAUTY CULTURE P.O. Box 1000 New York, NY 10001 A School of Instruction OVER COMPACT PREPARES CURSUS FOR INTERNS AND CAREERS FOR TRAVEL, HOSPITAL, THE UNIVERSITY AND GARDENSERS. MANUFACTURE YOUR WORK WITH COMPACT PREPARES FOR REAL WORK IN THE GARDENS. College of Arts, University of Cleveland, Cleveland, Ohio For more information in your school with the College of Arts, Winter 1922 BUSINESS CHANCES DEPARTMENTAL KNOWLEDGE AT YOUR POINT MANY OF THE MOST USED MARKETS A good point of view A good point of view A good point of view ALL THE LOTTERY FOR WANT MAN WANT TO SAVE THE LARGEST amount of money possible Wanted in spare time for sale. Wanted in spare time for sale. Wanted in spare time for sale. Wanted in spare time for sale. HIT THE GRANT FOR SALE. GOOD PAY and profitably for selling. Information see Ms. 422 525 4100 AUTOS FOR SALE PAYABLE CLEARANCE. JUST USE THIS GUIDE. Top and bottom can be bought for the price shown. Phone number 613 117 E. Gurnard road. Phone number 613 117 E. Gurnard road. FOR SALE—MISCELLANEOUS FITTLE FINE FOR ROOMING HOUSE FITTLE FINE FOR ROOMING HOUSE FITTLE FINE FOR SALE Please hold on. Avg. 81. FURNACES REPAIRED FENNACHS BEAWARE- ALL PARTS PER- FACILISATION and installed by Cypress. Exchange. MORG...PARK MISCELLANEOUS WPY BE LONELY OR UNHAPPY? TYPEWRITING OPHELIA FLANMAN 1431 Vineyard Ave. Decatur 12 WOULD YOU MARRY? The Dice. Contemplating. Upholds yet in breath with good desiring imagery. Illuminates. Stamp brass percussion. Offers STEELBLADE. Perry St. and other streets. DOLL HOSPITAL MEDICAL DR. FRANK S. REED CHIROPRACTOR THE ROAD TO HEALTH 5724 S. State st. Phone: 518-252-5728 ETHEL MINOR GAVIN 457 WARSHIN AVENUE Phone Ken 2003 Start your business in a fault not easily controllable. With the through tran- sport, with the history, history and portfolio in- formation you will be equipped to enter any story. Evening classes and MASTER MORTGAGE, NOBS, CROWN and other interior masters. You will be illustrated. Hugh Hammel, 2004, Norton, Pontiac, CRYSTAL GAZING TAGGER WITH AP- Walter Warner, Billboard, New York City CHICAGO DEFENDER ```markdown ``` EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE Instead Chicago Defender WORLD'S GREATEST WEEKLY Chicago Defender WORLD'S GREATEST WEEKLY Issued May 6, 1905, by ROBERT S. ABBOTT, LL.B. Published by THE ROBERT S. ABBOTT PUBLISHING CORP. (INCORPORATED) as second edition matter, February 1, 1906, at the P. Boston, eng., under act of M. Burr, 1906. TITLE: GREEN ST. Charing Cross Road, London, CHICAGO-ASS Indiana Avenue, Telephone: Douglas 6 Spotted as second class matter, February 1, 1906, at the Postoffice in Chicago, Ill., under a March 1, 1906. BARNES—17 Green St., Charing Cross Road, London, England, W. C. CHICAGO—325 Indiana Avenue, Telephone 807. Douglas 881. GIVING THANKS there's nothing very Christian-like or helpful in way we folks—at least the most of us—observe The giving day. we simply stuff and gorge ourselves with costly and drink. and litter us with desirate or starving we do we think or all the joys and happiness, the health, the w the mirth. that has been ours while we have lived upon Mother Earth we should please HIM by helping those whose are sad and dream. not only on Thanksgiving, but each day through the year. There's nothing very Christian-like or helpful in the way We folks—at least the most of us—observe Thanksgiving day. We simply stuff and gorge ourselves with costly food and drink. And little of the destitute or starving do we think. For all the joys and happiness, the health, the wealth, the mirth. That has been ours while we have lived upon old Mother Earth. We should please HIM by helping those whose lives are not dear. Not only on Thanksgiving, but each day throughout the year. THE TASK AT WASHINGTON IF PEERS NOT UNNATURAL that the Armament Conference not being held in the City of Washington should be ushered in amidst an atmosphere of doubt and suspicion. There is so much at stake that a happy outcome seems only too good to be possible. Britain having its own air force, it is not only that it be in the conference for the good it can get out of it, while the common good has second consideration. THE OUTSTANDING FIGURES are the United States, Great Britain and Japan. A community of interests brought the two states together to form the Empire of hundreds of million souls and their enormous colonies, all of them thousands of miles, from the center of government, found it advisable to cultivate the friendship of Japan by mutually helpful treaties. Japan, separated from these rich possessions by only a fraction of the distance, was the first nation either to be a mighty help to a military mission to the British government. LOOKING EAGERLY for expansion necessitated her increasing population that is rapidly outweighing her own narrow boundaries. Japan has long had a calculating eye upon the rich provinces of China and the inhabited wastes of eastern Siberia. None can further her aspirations nor trust them as anybody as Great Britain can do. These are the conditions which make the two countries so desirable. But such an alliance is not viewed with enthusiasm by America for various reasons, among which comes first to mind the strained relations that have for years existed between Nippon and ourselves. THIS COUNTRY has bluntly let it be known that its soil cannot be made the damping ground for immigrants, an attitude which Japan naturally resents. If these strained relations should have been what would be the position of Britain? That is a question that is not immediately been asked, for the such treaties is not infrequently mutual offense and defense. In the breasts of many there is a deep seated conviction that Great Britain has no real love for us and her seeming friendliness is assumed for reasons purely selfish. On the other hand, some hold it impossible that any compact made between Britain and Japan could include such an understanding, and they further believe that Britain has herself free from any such entanglement that in the event of trouble between the country and Japan she would act as a buffer in the interest of THE OPINION expressed by the higher-ups in diplomatic circles is that before the Washington conference there is only one problem, and it is the problem of the coming conflict between the white and colored races, and the fight will be staged in the Pacific. The bone of contention in question will be the countries that now have a strangle hold on China must withdraw. The whole world's attitude toward this unfortunate country must make a complete reversal. THE MUCH TALKED OF "open door" in China is a myth. Not only is it closed in Manchuria and Shantung, but in practically every one of the eighteen provinces of China proper the country is prepared to come special "impartial" which make it necessary for an American merchant desiring to do business in China to consult some other country before he is able to sell a case of goods or invest in an enterprise. In order that all may have fair play China must remain in possession and control of her own territory and be mistress of her house. While she has no pay, she has a standing army of 1,570,000, nearly two million of Great Britain, her nearest compilers, and with population of many hundreds of millions to recruit A SOURCE of much anxiety and alarm to the white race is the spirit of restlessness that is today no pronounced in the dark races of the West, India, but in the South, where it must be hurt to something more than mere local disturbances, Japan, strong and powerful within herself, acts as spokesman and feels condemn that her requests and claims will receive due consideration, for has she not behind her a power that could be whipped in time into an irresistible force. HOWEVER the dove of peace has so far hovered over the conference and the racial question with its many ramifications has been studiously avoided. It is well that this course has been pursued, for its action only widens the bread and brings closer the day when a mighty conflict will be fought. That the world for supremacy. That this clash is inevitable is the opinion of many of the world's greatest sociologists and deep thinkers. ONE OF THE LAUDABLE objects of the conference is to reduce arms in such a manner as will lessen the intolerable burden that is now weighing down the nations. This should not be the skill of diplomacy but the one nation should bless the happiness of a happy outcome of the conference. If the countries involved can reduce their naval and military establishments and save billions yearly, it means a great relief to the overtaxed people. The plan submitted by Secretary of State Hewlett describes only practical, but necessary, measures that would not lessen the power of any nation, for by the proportionate reduction that is contemplated the comparative power of nations will remain as at present. --- THE CRIMINAL SITUATION THE CONTROVERSY between States Attorneys and Chief of Police Fitzmorris is one difficult to understand. Both men enjoy in an apparent degree the confidence of the law abiding citizens of Chicago. Chief Fitzmorris has the reputation being one of the best and most efficient men, ever been at the head of the police department. States Attorney Crowns reputation both edge and as a prosecutor is equally good in their efforts to clear Chicago of crime cannot understand. If, as intimated by Mr. Crowns department is derelict in duty and that crimes are not only tolerated but protected, it is chief to detect and expose these conditions if true. But it ought to be possible for this to be without friction and without the disruption inump of those whose duty it is to enforce the law. This is not the case in the abominations or personal jealousy on one side other is at the bottom of the controversy. If the true Mayor Thompson ought to be able, with aid and co-operation of the law and order organizers the city, to bring about a satisfactory adjust THE CONTROVERSY between States Attorney Crowe and Chief of Police Fitzmorris is one that is difficult to understand. Both men enjoy in a preeminent degree the confidence of the law abiding citizens of Chicago. Chief Fitzmorris has the reputation of being one of the best and most efficient men that has ever been at the head of the police department. While States Attorney Crowe's reputation both as a judge and as a police officer is strong, WHY THESE TWO MEN cannot work in perfect harmony in their efforts to clear Chicago of crime we cannot understand. If, as intimated by Mr. Crowe, the police department is derelict in duty and that certain crimes are not only tolerated but protected, it is clearly his duty to detect and expose these conditions if they be true. But it ought to be possible for this to be done without friction and without the disruption in the courtroom. The public is not allowed to THE PUBLIC is liable to believe that political ambitions or personal jealousy on one side or the other is at the bottom of the controversy. If this is not true Mayor Thompson ought to be able, with the aid and co-operation of the law and order organization of the city, to bring about a satisfactory adjustment. What the public wants is a city free from crime. Let the glory fall where it may. When those whose duty is to protect the marvel among themselves about grounds of procedure crime are liable to be simulated as a result thereof. OUR WEEKLY SERMON [This space is devoted to the use of ministers throughout the country who desire to send a message of encouragement.] 250 words, and may be sent without official notice.] THE CHRISTIAN'S REWARD By the Rev, Edward Williams, Pastor Hope Presbyterian Church, Chicago, Ill. A REWARD is a very pleasant thing to think about. But some of our thinking about the rewards of Christian service has been a little crude and shallow. In what way does the idea Christian think about the rewards of his services? There are many different standards for computing values and rewards. The lowest of all is money. A certain work is done and the rewards or wages come in the shape of money. This money can be turned into nourishment and pleasure and pleasure. But the money itself is the lowest form of reward. But then there are all sorts of prizes that may come afferces, pleasures, possessions, influence, fame. All these things have a rating in the table of rewards. But then there are other kinds of figures of this reward table. You can make another person do it what is worth. How many dollars does it take to equal that? If it is some one you love, do you want any other reward than the knowledge that you have made the loyal one glad. The essence of the truth about Christian reward lies in that. Kind words, kind deeds, the ringing of sunshine into others lives, the dollars and the jewels of your kindly kingdom. How much kindness for some one and the fact that kindness stands for you as an eternity. Kind words can never die. This is literally true. Nothing can alter the fact that you said them. You may forget, but the record stands. Nothing can alter the fact that on such and such day, at such and such an hour, you brought cheer to a human soul. A REWARD is a very pleasant thing to think about. But some of our thinking about the rewards of Christian service has been a little crude and shallow. In what way does the idea Christian think about the rewards of his service? There are many different standards of committing values and rewards. The one all of us money. A certain amount of money and the rewards or wages can be turned into nourishment, protection and pleasure for the one who has earned it and for his friends. But the money itself is the lowest form of reward. Then there are all sorts of prizes that may come, liberties, pleasures, possessions, influence, fame. All these things have a rating in the table of rewards. But then there are other kinds of figures on the reward table. You make another person happy. How much is it worth? How many dollars does it take to equal that? If it is some one you love, do you want any other reward than the knowledge that you have made the loved one glad? The essence of the truth about Christianity is ward lies in that. Kind words, kind deeds, the bringing of sunshine and the jewels of the heavenly kingdom. You do a kindness for some one and the fact of that kindness stands for you as an eternal reward. Kind words can never die. This is literally true. Nothing can alter them, said them. You can alter the record stands, can alter the fact that on such and such a day, at such and such an hour, you brought cheer to a human soul. OFFICIAL AND SOCIAL CONTACT ONE OF THE RESULTS of a mischievous propaganda having for its object a curtailment and abridgment of the rights and privileges of members of our group, is the effort to establish the fact that official contact means "social equality." Prior to unite administration, Howard Tatt, no longer counted such an absurd and ridiculous assumption. Even Greer Cleveland did all in his power, especially during his first presidential term, to bring his own party up to the point of disregarding race differences in the distribution of federal patronage. A DEPARTURE from this commendable course of action had its beginning with the retirement of Taodec Roosevelt from the presidency. With the incoming of the present national administration, it was hoped, and generally believed, that the Republican party would be brought back to "normality" and thus be more the representative and champion of the principles and doctrines which distinguished it from the Democratic ARE GERTAIN SYMPTOMS which would seem to indicate that our expectations along these lines are not to be realized. Those indications are that no Colored American is to be appointed to any position where he will be brought in contact with whites as subordinates, especially white women, for the presumed reason that this would be equal to the presumed reason that he be intelligent to know and brave enough to give effect to his convictions, that official contact and commending socially are as far apart as the earth is from the sun. IF. FOR EXAMPLE, a Colored man should be appointed head of one of the burges at Washington—which ought to be done—the President should know that the person should be appointed head of a social superior of any of his subordinates, white and Colored, and therefore he would consider it a humiliation and a condescension to be brought in social contact with any of them. This would be his affair about which no one else would be concerned and in which the public would have no interest. Some of his subordinates might consider themselves the superior of the head of the burge and would take a like stand. DURING OFFICE HOURS they would be brought in official contact with the head of the bureau for business purposes only. After office hours they would go their way and the head of the office there would never be any friction growing out of the racial differences. What we want and supposed we were getting in the election of Mr. Harding, an administration that would ignore and disregard American citizens, differences based upon race, color, nationality or religion. In other words, an administration that would make ability, ability, efficiency the focal point of official efficiency. IF PRESIDENT HARDING wants his administration to go down in history as one which merited and received the approbation of a confiding public, he will not only see that the constitution and laws of the United States are in compliance with racial proscription will not be sanctioned or tolerated under any circumstances or in any locality. MODERN: THANKSGIVING ONLY ONE DAY in the whole year are we called by the civil authorities to pause and give that the blessings that have been ours during the previous months. We call that day Thanksgiving, though we profess to be a God fearing, Christian of it people, yet many fail to observe even this day in the true and proper spirit, and that is the purpose of the day. We thank the garmandizing to an All-Wise Providence. It was intended as a day for garmandizing or seek notous pleasures, and the whole tradition and custo lost to those who thus spend the day. WHILE MOST OF US are fortunately blessed with a fair amount of this world's goods and can supply fats and satisfy our appetites and desires, there are still many who ONLY ONE DAY in the whole year are we called upon by the civil authorities to pause and give thanks for the blessings that have been ours during the past twelve months. We call that day Thanksgiving. Although we profess to be a God-fearing Christianized man, we do not believe in the true and proper spirit, and that is the spirit which finds expression in the form of reverential thanksgiving to an All-Wise Providence. It was never intended as a day for gormandizing or seeking riotous pleasures, and the whole tradition and custom is lost to those who thus spend the day. We believe that this day is truly blessed with a fate amount of this world's goods and can supply our wants and satisfy our appetites and desires, there are many thousands who have neither shelter nor food. What of them? Have we a right to deny them a part of our prosperity? Should we wine and dine on the fat of the land and permit the widow with her children across the way to go without even the common foods necessary to survive? We CANNOT more appropriately observe Thanksgiving than to contribute a part of our resources to the amelioration of the less fortunate. We not only have much to be thankful for individually, but also as a nation. We are now at peace with the world. With the hardships incident to the war subsiding, we are now able to greatly enjoy national happiness, we should indeed be truly grateful on this Thanksgiving day. UNDER THE NEW beer-medicine ruling a man will go to a doctor's office. The doctor will not say, "Let's see your tongue." No, indeed. The gentleman's tongue will be hanging out. Then the doctor will prescribe a case of beer. WIDESPREAD differences of opinion concerning President Harding's speech are significant. An address that pleases everybody is uninteresting. A PROFESSOR in the University of Chicago says there aren't any beautiful girls in America; the native Africans are more beautiful. Wonder if he has seen the State street variety? THERE ARE TWO CLASSES of people; those who feel abused because they have to work, and those who feel abused because they have no job. IT MIGHT BE the safest plan to disarm at the beginning of the conference and discuss Pacific questions at the last. NEVER TRACE a family tree too far, you may discover that some of your ancestors roosted in it. LOVE may not be as blind as a bat, but it has been known to make a lot of mistakes in the moonlight. A BIT OF NEWS, GOSSIP, FICTION AND FUN! Maggie O'Brownie Halloween night! Crisp with the delightful crispness of autumn. Glowing lights, keeping vampires, green-crowned black cats, volpunning wolves, galling knights, little dancing girls, earlie music, lunch - backed, hobgoblins, rat tat cupids. In the by- ways and high, ways lurked gemin- ning gnomes and ugly elfins. All shivered in the cold, the festive spirit of thanks ran ramp- ant. Hotels and clubs and private homes, not to The True Story of the Travel Went Too Far (Second Installment) He had rain over his O'Stull Market in St. Louis and the Cobblesons on Isamart in the Crescent City, and in the Freecharts of Boca street known as Jo-Jo. Harlem he creets from him, and he kno- to drink soda water along Yor- westward, and buy Whistle White Lightning in Southwest avenue knew him and he ha- shivered in the cold, the festive spirit of thanks ran ramp- ant. Hotels and clubs and private homes, not to cats, volpelling witches, gallant knights, little dancing girls, earl music, lunch - backed hobgoblins, fat I'll cupids. In the byways. But he wurked grinning grunnes and ugly elfes. All over the city the festive spirit of thanks ran rampant. Hotels and clubs and private homes, not to mention cabarats and cane wren wading knee deep in the "hooty" connotations. They were giving the usual affair at the Delight Gardens, an affair that is looked forward to with eager anticipation by the youth of our colony, and of course is behaved Maggie Orrowns, and didn't clown up to any noticeable degree but we wore dominos, as a mask of some kind is specified by those in charge of the amusement. We had just left our taxi and were crossing the walk to the portals of the Delight Gardens when one of those postfourteen salesmen of barber shops arrived and arrested our attention by the melodies down-home whine which is apparently their stock in trade. Being out for a good time, anyway, and imbued with the devilish spirit of Halloween, I detained Margie for an attack and asked her if she would condescend to sample this man's burnt offering. "Come, come, heart o' the honeycomb," I coaxed, feeling in a pocket for the correct change. "Let us mimic our fellow creatures and demean a stick o' meat. It's just an adventure." But milady's colored nose filled slightly upward in the old familiar frown of intolerance. "How can I enjoy burnt flesh?" she asked. "I am not dressed properly!" As my eyes whipped up and down her slim and agile person groomed in the larger height of the prevailing mode, I was constrained to take issue with her. "But, Comtessie Brownskin," I insisted, "you are dressed properly. You" do not care to argue, Big Misto Shorty," she North Pole as she walked away from the ragged and greasy guest of stick-meat. "I contend that I am not dressed properly to enjoy such a repast and my declaration shall not be expunged from the house." "But, honey-heart," sez I what meanest thou? How should you be groomed in order to relish barbecued flesh? Dressed in a brooch-clout and wearing a big brass ring in my nose, she shot at me, as we passed through the swinging doors of our favorite dancing palace. Bengoodlough. This is the first time Jason's ever missed and it's not his fault, either. The True Story of the Traveler Who Went Too Far (Second Installation) He had run over his O'Sullivan on Market street in St. Louis and tapped the Cobblestones on Rampert street in the Crescent City, and in the Sacred Treachts of Beale street he was known as Jo-Jo. Hurlen held no secrets from him, and he knew how to drink soda water along Yew street northwest, and buy Whiskey and White Lightning in Southwest. Wythe avenue knew him and he had even shivered in the like breeze on his hip. He was the best way to the Douglas club. For all that, he got the Glad Hand between Cedar and Central in the Eighties. Add to this that he was just as well acquainted with Walnut Hill as with Fifth street and the Levee and could find his way blindfolded in the district around Ninth and Chestnut and One day he made a Fatal Decision. He figured that he could tolde into the city that stops Lake Michigan from running down the map and show them something. So he started out to verify his figures. As soon as you got a couple of friends on the wire and announced his Intentions. After the Hilarious Greeting they told him that they were glad to see him in the Old Burg at last and though they expressed a little doubt that he would make a ten strike in what he inquired that they did not discontinue him. The next night . . . . . . (To be continued). D. H. Girl! Girls! I have been asked To sing a song Of dark-skinned maldens fair— Whose lovin' charms You all must know Quite high compare— Their wondrous beauty, I confess. No words of mine can paint. For sweeter girls you nee'r could find, And just because there ain't. Dear Rex: Hollowed Is The Name Dear P. e. P. I: Was talking with a man the other day about the works of Rex Bench only to discover that he, like millions of others who don't know Rex or the roke, thought Rex was some kind of a summer resort, which is as bad as the one who meant Casaba and said Sorgham, which per se is hard to remember it hard to keep the home lights burning brightly, lamp the sign for lamps of C. T. Husband and Son. Almost in the Big Timber? Ronip writes in that he had just harangued the class on the impropriety of dubbing a leg a lim when a sort of contentious pupil offered the appended contradictory authority from the Chicago Herald-Examiner; for them to be Mackey, 20, Jonesboro, Ark., was shot in the underbrush by a friend Armistice day. He will recover." By the time another "This and That" rolls around, turkey will have become turkey, soup, 'nest-ce pas. - P. el P. EDITOR'S MAIL A. L. Jackson From Day to Day Twice as many men as women die of tuberculosis in New York city. The proportion between the sexes is 64 to 36, and men are shown by the deaths in the city of 31,448 women and girls since 1910 and 67,748 men. Whatever reduction there has been in the number of health officers have concluded that the cause lies in the men's employment conditions. The one-time German military ships which were closed in 1919 in accordance with the restrictions laid down in the Versailles peace treaty have devoted to the manufacture of various materials used in pursuits of peace. Two hundred thousand idle workmen have been re-employed. Army officials are testing a completed airplane of the monoplane that fire 3,000 shots every four seconds. The crew is made up of two or three men, each man caged in wire as a protection against gunfire using a machine gun of 149 miles an hour is guaranteed. Pupers read before the American Academy of Ophthalmology and Otolaryngology, and must bring birthmarks, tumors, and other blemishes from the face by means of radium needles and plastic methods of grafting on cycles. There are 13,600,000 telephones in the United States, and they would span side by side, they would span a distance greater than from New York to Chicago. Telephone companies expend 63 cents of each dollar for wager. While others are talking of the limited amounts, a council in the Spanish cabinet has approved a new naval program for the construction of fifty-eight warcraft of different classes during the next six years. E. J. Seaver, "died piped oil" of Boltot, McCarthy county, Illinois, of rats. He won't expose his rat extermination methods. He said: "Leave it to me, but don't ask me how it do." At Laurel, Del., prohibition officers raided what appears to be a store filled with insterted melons, demijohns filled with liquor. They arrested Lott Pools, the owner The portrait of former President Theodore Roosevelt will appear on the 2015 denomination of the new issue saving certificates to be issued the $50 soap. ER SATURDAY, November 26, 1921 Ratat S. Allison DR. A. WILBERFORCE WILLIAMS TALKS ON PREVENTIVE MEASURES. FIRST AID REMEDIES HYGIENICS AND SANITATION No Cases Are Diagnosed and No Prescriptions Given in These Weekly Articles BERFORCE WILLIAMS TALKS ON MEASURES. FIRST AID REMEDIES GENICS AND SANITATION and No Prescriptions Given In These Weekly Articles DR. A. WILBERFORCE WILLIAMS PREVENTIVE MEASURES. FIRST AID REMEDIES HYGIENICS AND SANITATION FOOD POISONING—BOTULISM worms need the eggs are well on the way to depletion. This decomposition. Spread or decomposed in from the foods are dangerous when they are infected by the germ. Here again, we find that the infected food does not smell nor taste bad. Another type of the螨osmosis food the insects will eat on the way to deposition is known as incubation. This composition. Spiked or decomposed form is somewhat different from the foods are dangerous when they are poisons we men- tioned in our pre- sention we find that the infected food does not smell nor taste bad. tended in our previous article, in that it depends upon the entrances into food of an animal, but bottleneck — which infects the food while still outside of the body and amuses the formations of a powerfully toxic substance, which is capable of producing the disease [Picture of a man with glasses and a mustache]. How to Avoid Botulism We may avoid botulism by thoroughly cooking foods and permitting heat of sufficient degree and time to destroy the organism. We may also contain microorganisms are poisonous. Food when eaten is rarely free from living organisms. The type of organism present, whether bacterial, yeasts, or fungi, determines the composition of the food and by its previous treatment. Some of the or- Dr. Williams composition of the food and by its previous treatment. Some of the organisms are beneficial, some are pathogenic, different in their nature. The whole animal may occur in problem of food preservation is that they multiply of preventing the growth of undesirability, its potable organisms, before it enters. The subject of food poisoning, rest at about 18 which we have completed by no doubt or not at all means in this article, is a very important reason it is important one, especially because of the certain conditions fact that so many of the bacteria within the body which infect man and animals within the body that infect man and gain a whence it does enrance to the body by means of the time inimeing food or drink. When taken into the body. This or transfusions are beneficial, some indigestion—bloating, bloating—differs little, and some harmful. The whole from the previously mentioned case in problem of food preservation is that the transfusions are beneficial in the growth of undesire in the human body because of the valuable nutrients. what taken into the body. This of rehabsions has made *Sambun* - bellflesh - botulism - differs and some so that it is not able to live or multiply of preexisting it in the human body, therefore its potiable organism, son must be produced before it enters. The suffused the body, it grows best at about 15 which we have to 20 degrees, and little or not at all means in this at blood heat. For this reason it is important one eses does not temper temperature conditions fact that so in suitable for growth within the body which input it in commonly in sausage, whence it descent to the rived its name (botuline, meaning food or drink, sausage, it been found to be of. Finally, in o uncommon occurrence in most local-pollinating we ntities, it is therefore, not of any about protein is considerable hygienic importance. This simply means most poisoning due to this organism botulism or over a heathiest probiotics which has already that at son been diseased. This disease is of protein was spread most commonly in smoking and canning factories, where food is oversensitive to and being cooked again. By this our conditions method the bacteria is allowed to produce the toxin, which when a taken second portion into the body, proves or even kills the ability only by eating proteins in which the ly is transmit- organism has been growing. Spring. We a son must be produced before it enters! The subject of food poisoning, the body, it grows best at about 18 which we have completed by no to 20 degrees, and little or not at all means in this article, is a very important blood heat. For this reason it appears one especially because of the does not hold temperature conditions fact that so many of the bacteria suitable for growth within the body which infect man and animals are commonly in the animal. It is found most in the blood and water and commonly in the intestines, the entrance to the body by means of the rigid, its name (gastric, meaning food or drink). Finally, in connection with food poisoning, we might say just a word about protein sensitization or allergy. This simply means a hypersensitivity to protein proteins. It is based upon the fact that at some time a definite kind of protein was introduced into the body and that the body cells become oversensitive to that particular type of protein and would undergo self-renewal, a process of physical or mental disturbance; if a second portion of that kind of protein was introduced into the body. This liability to react hypersensitively is transmitted from mother to offspring. We are familiar with the fact that this kind of protein does not agree with them. For example, strawberries act as a poison to some persons. We mention this to say that some poisoning in the strider sense is in reality the shock resulting from the protein to which the body is oversensitive. suspected. It has been found to be of. Finally, in connection with food uncommon occurrence in most heath poisoning, we might say just a word titer; and it is, therefore, not of any about protein sensitization or allergy, considerable hygienic importance. This simply means a hypersensitivity. Most poisoning due to this organism ability or over-sensitivity for certain protein can be confused with that of other organisms, and at some time a definite kind been discussed. This disease is of the kind of protein was introduced into the spread most commonly in smoking the body and that the body cells become and canning factors, where food is over-sensitive to that particular type allowed to stand for some time with undergoing cooked again. By this method the bacteria is allowed to physical or mental disturbance) if a product, the toxin, which when taken a second portion of that kind of protein can undergo the body fatal. The disease can be produced. This liability to coexist hypersensitivity by eating protein in which the ly is transmitted from mother to off-organism has been growing. We are familiar with the spring. It is commonly believed that all foods which appear to be decomposing are dangerous. This is not true when they are going decomposition and is harmless. Packing companies have a practice of allowing meat to begin to decompose (they can "biodegrade" meat) but they are not always aware of the habit of cooking eggs in a, after THE ONLOOKER By A. L. Jackson will have to arrange to take a collection from the mob in advance, who seem to be the child beneficiaries from these grimm shows. We are encouraged to see the child who did not find it necessary to wait on the passage of the Deer bill. At the same time we think it behoves all of us to get behind our congressmen and see it that they know that we are aware of the importance of this bill to us. Have you given your own congressman about it? HARDING'S SOUTHERN REPUBLICANS VIRGINIA tried out the administration plan for building up a Republican vote in her gubernatorial election just past. The first step was to eliminate the black Republicans from the party in order to present a straight "Lily White" ticket to beguile the vote to vote the national ticket. The New York Times lays the defeat of the ambitions of President Bush's speech which raised the Southern bogey of black domination in favor of the White House, think the Times is in error. In the first place, Vir- A. N. MAKING SOME PROGRESS THE report of the Colored Department of the International Committee, giving some analysis of the money contributed by our folk for the support of that work, shows that some progress is being made in some areas. We have to have from our own people. Out of a total budget of $35,987.76, $15,659.41 was contributed by Colored subscribers. Of this amount $35,684.41 was given by $32 subscribers in city associations and the balance came from the student association members. The city subscribers averaged about $13 each, although there were 15 subscriptions of $10 each, but that total of the money came in amounts of less than $25. This is a beginning, and a good one. ginia voters, white and black, knew that great care had been taken to keep the Colored voters on the Republican side, which made them the candidates for this particular election. They also knew that the Colored voters had openly and enthusiastically voted the "Lily White" ticket. This action had been the tale of the state and of the country. The Times editor conveniently told me that these Colored voters put their own ticket in the field and scampered away with twenty thousand votes which otherwise would have been marked up on the Republican side of the column. Southern Republicans will have to come cleaner than this if they realize their ambitions in the South. We also note with some interest that the Eastern, Central and Western regions gave over $200,000 of this money. We think this fact strengthens our recent contention in this column to the extent that we are on that International Committee. If $20 per cent of the membership and almost a like amount of the financial support comes from the North, then there is something wrong in an all-Southern representation of Colored men in this commitment, representatives will agree with this position. The white man in or out of Christian work understands money. We must not forget that "money talks." We are glad to see this increasing support from our people for this movement, and this white brother get our point of view about more vital matters more quickly. Our guess is that unless this is done successfully and specially we are going to see this idea of Africa for Africans spreading to some of our wider communities, where some of our white brothers have a disposition to sit in on the game too heavily. We do not argue here as to the advantages of either plan, but we do see the need of bringing at least one of them up to talk with the ideals of the folks most affected. In this connection it is interesting to note that Tannamy Hall has lifted us out of the office-holding stage in New York. It is common knowledge that Tannamy has always been conscious of the powerful power which good apportionment elections, and has seen to it that such appointments were made while the Republicans talked about it. In the recent Democratic landslide, however, further progress has been made in the election of a Democratic alderman from our group in Harlem. This will help those people in Washington to make the Republican "urging" to make the Republican "realize" that in New York it is necessary to forget the war and play the game according to local needs and strategy. North of the line we need a little political emancipation ourselves, especially in municipal elections. All of which means that in local politics the best interests of any community are our priorities, and the issue not the party. When they learn fair play in politics in the South this will be equally true there, but not yet. TUBERCULOSIS THIS little note is not to be considered an invasion of the field covered so ably by our associate in the column just above, but we do wish to call attention to the Christiana of the National Tuberculosis Association to solicit the support and help of the general public for the work of that organization in fighting a dread phlegue. According to statisticians we suffer from this disease from two and a half to three times as much as our friends, and these are correct or not, it is certainly true that we suffer more than we ought from lack of knowledge and facilities to wage a successful fight against this terror. We believe that any money invested in scals to help the work of this association will do more to defend the Defender will bear in mind that this association works with all classes of people regardless of color. ONE WAY TO STOP LYNCHING THE award of two thousand dollars in Laurens county, South Carolina, to the widow of a man lynched in that county is a good thing. It will make the people of the county Southern pastime. This is precisely the thing that the Dyer bill now before Congress is designed to do for the whole country and ought to furnish encouragement to the supporter of the Dyer bill. But the question that it such bills become numerous and large enough the citizens who have to pay the cost will want to know why they must pay the salaries of the police and security officers. Elitist they will be forced to see to it that these officials do their duty or they --- ---