Chicago Defender
Saturday, January 14, 1922
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
South's "Back Against Wall," Fights Anti-Lynch Bill
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VOL. XVII NO. 2
DESI
DYER'S BILL DRAWS FIRE FROM SOUTH
Democrats Work Overtime to Accomplish Defeat of Anti-Lynch Measure
Washington, D. C., Jan. 13.—That the anti-pollution bill that is in line with suggestions made by President Harding will soon be passed by the house, was stated positively by Floor Leader Mondell, Republican. Under a recent rule adopted by the house, the measure of debate before a vote is taken in the measure. In the meantime the appropriation bill, which may consume several days, and other supply bills may be presented and unnecessary delays in providing needed funds for the different government agencies.
South Opposite Measure
opposition to the anti-lynching bill comes almost solely from the Southern Democrats, and in the opinion of Mr. Mendell it is for the most part temperate. For the most part, congress has no authority to pass such legislation, that such an act would be a section of impeachment upon the sovereign authority of the civil, but would have a tenency to encourage the outrage which frequently lead to lynching. During the debate on the bill statement, contrary to the propaganda spread throughout the South, the victims of the last majority of lynchings were not men accused of offenses against the country, author of the anti-lynching bill has a record to show that in the last 35 years there have been 4,086 lynchings in the country, and of that number charged with offenses against women. The charge this measure is aimed at any section, adds Mr. Dyer, or that particular section of the country is guilty of crimes. In future, declaring the bill had strong support in the South, he added: "There is no way to keep people from commit crimes except to courts of the United States jurisdiction, and thereby bring the juries from other sections to consider the Governor who will not be afraid." Mr. Mendell looks on this measure as one of major importance. He says enactment would remove a national stigma and a disgrace from
Representative Summers (Texas) is one of the leading opponents of the anti-binding bill. He says the prosecution of the police power of the states would better and degrade the state governments by subjecting them to the control of congress in the state and unfriended to them.
Alabama's Attitude
Alabama's Attorney
Alabama General Harvey G. Davis
Alabama's Department that so
as Alabama is concerned the en-
tachment of a federal anti-lynching
law is unnecessary. He has so ad-
dicated United States Senator John K
ing to the attorney general in all
states asking their opinion concern-
ing the federal action on the subject
proposed in the bill proposed by Rep-
resentative Garrett of Tennessee,
domestic leader, is unalterably
apposed to the bill. He has attached
it on the floor of the house.
WATSON RAVES BECAUSE
HIS "GRAPES" WERE SOUR
Austinia, Ga. Jan. 13 - Dispatches received here from Washington relate to the Senate investigation of the death of a doctor has disclosed the fact that in most cases the bodies of the unknown heroes which have been returned to America from France, and who died in their own guns, were not white.
---
That these bodies were plentiful is obvious, according to the direct testimony of Lansing, Mich. Elected told of the lynching of several of our soldiers by moss of white soldiers in France. He also hired additional testimony that showed how a dozen or more soldiers were killed when we went to what we ever accepted that they had insured the displeasure of the American military police. All this followed after the signing of the armistice. Relations of our boys made no cutcry when their sons and brothers failed to return. But white families such a clan that the country raised such a clan that we have to be done to satisfy them. So where the body of a white soldier could not be found it is said that the substitution was made. This was to the great surprise of the proud and conceived Georgians or Tewans, who had made extensive arrangements for the burial of their sons. Water was brought to his grave.
Recognized
Leader
of
French
Novelists
Rene Maran, an official of the French colonial administration, whose novel "Batouala" won for him the Prix Goncourt for 1922. "Batouala" exposed conditions of native life in French Africa.
Policemen Nab Bandits in Bold Act
A MAN IS A CITIZEN
Boston, Mass., Jan. 13—A jury of his peers will decide whether or not Clarence Loud, Melrose salesman, is guilty of the murder of Patrolman James A. Preston at Wakefield last April, and those peers will not all be W. L. Marshall, centerer at the Newton High school, who lives at 14 Newton place, was the third juryman and the state used all but one of their local quota of challenges in questioning or objecting to the vengeance, and the state used all but one of their local quota of challenges in questioning or objecting to the vengeance. He is the first man of his life to have ever been selected to sit at a murder trial in the history of Massachusetts independence. He is 63 years old.
Scarborough to Publish Farm Notes
Washington, D. C., Jan. 12—Dr. W. S. Scarborough, formerly president of Wollerton University, at Noxia, Co. on the campus of the University in the department of Agriculture, is now in Washington on business connected with the department. For several months past he has been mainstay of the Hampton Institute, Virginia, where he had held a number of important conferences with the Hampton professors, farmers and others interested in agriculture from various parts of the country.
He has been actively at work gathering much important information and data regarding farm ownership and country. He has made a commitment to the farmer by taking up the technical side of the subject, and will soon present a digest of his observations and recommendations in the form of a series of bullet points. He has information not hitherto published and designed to be of practical value to the public in general and to our farmers in particular. Dr. Scarborough and prosperity of the farmer along all lines, and he is soon to have a permanent office and headquarters in Washington, D. C, with an adequate office force to enable him to properly collect and publish the data mentioned.
When interviewed by your Washington correspondent he spoke in showing and grateful terms of the concerns and courteous treatment he received of President Harding, who impeded him, as well as from Hon. Henry C. Wallace, Secretary of Agriculture and all of the officials of that department. Said he, "in whatever position I may be, will find me as well as you have been told, and more true to the Republican party and true to my Race."
Alany, N. Y. Jan. 15—Facing the necessity of having five of his ties, which were free, an amputated, William Johnson, West Indian, who has established a reputation for jumping from fast-running trains, was declared insane and committed to the hospital for the insane at Bouchies-pesigy. Physicians who examined him declared that he is only insane a part of the time. That is when he insures any injured person in New York are after him. He jumped from Delaware and Hudson passenger trains twice within two days in Fort Edward and when caught in the grounds of St. John's Hospital, he walked from Fort Edward to Troy, about 30 miles, in zero weather.
KILLS WIFE BECAUSE SHE DISOBEYED
Sanders Vincent, 4598 Wabash avenue, had been drinking moonshine Monday night, so he thought that his
wife, Mrs. Alice Vincent, 30 years old, deserved to die because she attained club meeting at the home of Mrs. Ann Madison, 523 Indiana avenue, Madison, N.J. 1 of 14 St. Mark M. E. church, 50th and Wabash, conceived three Monday night. Mrs. Vincent, her husband.
wife, Mr. Joseph A. Almeida, to go out, deserved to die because she attended a church club meeting the Madison, Mrs. Amanda Madison, 333 Indiana avenue. The Ladies' Aid club M. I. Church, 50th, Waltham, convened there Monday night. Mrs. Almeida attended go. Her husband objected to her going, but she went anyway. She is dead now. Four buildings in her body, one in book, one in the衣柜, one in the left hip and one in the right leg. Her husband inflicted them. At her home, shortly after supper, Madison came an indication of gathering for a club meeting. Her husband begged her not to go.
"I don't want you to go out, Almeida," he said. "Why do you when I wump you, want me to do."
SAYS WILSON PERMITTED
INNOCENT SOLDIER TO HANG
HIGH COST OF MEAT
Washington, I. C. Jan. 13. Judge Hardison in police court used Charles A. Jackson $50 and sentenced him to serve 30 days in jail in case of desecration of meat, alleged theft, of two pounds of meat, worth 65 cents from his employer.
LOSE HOME BY FIRE
Austin, Tex. Jan. 13—The home of
the world's largest fire station
stretched by fire. The Pulaski
and railway companies contributed large-
er funding to the fire department.
du D. W. Wiggle and W. D. Scott
Dr. Milner Tells Story in Career of Guns aulus
Dr. Milner Tells Story in Career of Guns aulus
Dr. Duncan G. Miller, for five years pastor of Armour mission in the early years of Armour institute, the late Dr. Frank W. Gusmanstuhl, an interesting story about an incident in the life of the great educator.
Dr. Gusmanstuhl entered his other one day, Dr. Duncan said, "he was laughing heartily and told me an experience "It was the end of the school term. A woman, very finely and showly dressed, had just left his platoon and said very pompously: 'My son has been compelled to eat by a nigger, and if there cannot be a change we will not allow him to eat.'" Dr. Gusmanstuhl asked her to wait and he would find out what the records showed. He soon received copies of the examination papers only on conditions. The young son has utterly called in all of his studies and can continue in school only on conditions. The young son whom he sat is almost the first in his class in all his studies."
Girl Balks at Slavery; Put in Jail
Douglas, Artz, Jan. 18.—Nottiontion to the South has you to be made that slavery has been abolished and that peonage cannot exist. Since the exposure of conditions at the Williams farm in Georgia must have cases have been filed in court in point is that of Miss Lillian Dolton of Jamaica, who was brought here in the employ of a Mr. and Miss Paul of this city. The Southern, possessed of all the vindictiveness and ransom that it is possible for a Southerner to have, journeyed from his home in Jamaica to the South, and then he brought Miss Dolton to work in his family as a maid at a salary of $17.50 a month, with room and heard. But after her arrival in Douglas Miss Dolton found her husband had pictured. And the salary that she had been promised, she found, would be retained by Paul to cover the expenses of her transportation. Upon her refusal to be a druggie and a slave the mistress of the house caused her arrest and had a charge of disturbing the peace placed against her and the Druids had testified against her she was given the alternative of paying a $25 line or spending 25 days in jail. As is typed of the case, she was placed in a place where she was a place of choice, for two days and nights, when the Rev. J. R. Rector, pastor of the C. M. E. church, learned of her plight, went to the police and a plan in the court. She was released and the line was dropped.
Alabama, Ga., Jan. 12 — The first battle in the wide-water aide-officers of the toppling Ku Klux Klan against those who are now vainly endeavoring to maintain their power in a victory for the Ku Klux Klan insurgents.
Four former grand nobles, Harry B. Terrell, Lloyd I. Hoefer, Warren W. Whitten, and whom represented the Ku Klux in Northern states and who are said to have presented a petition of 174 bane members, the Ku Klux be thrown into recessorship. The date set for the hearing on this petition is Jan. 28. The action will be heard with Judge John T. Pendleton presiding. In the mounting a temporary induction restraints the order from disposing of any of the bane members, except for ordinary expenses, which must not include salaries of officers.
STEALS TOY BANK
State and Quincy Streets
74 West Madison Street
20 West Monroe Street
Corner Randolph & Clark
Corner Madison & State
THIS PAPER CONSISTS OF TWO PARTS—PART ONE LICE:
CAJ
Philadelphia, Pa., Jan. 13.—The Hotel钻, Philadelphia's leading hostelry, noted for its fine cuisine and for the celebrated characters who have imbued there, was sold at a sheriff's sale this week. The buyers were the receivers for the Hotel钻 Company.
Appomattox;500 Business and Professional Men to Lead in Court Fights
At the auction there was a spirited bidding contest waged between the receivers and three different sets of Jews who sought to buy the land, vessels, bankers, were also among the bidders. Their highest offer was $129,000. The receivers had been instructed to purchase the land to the stockholders and the face if the auction necessitated $200,000. At $148,000 bidding stopped and the receivers were declared possessors, a suit of a judgment secured on a mortgage with incurred interest amounting to $104,481.52. It was said that at the instance of the auction were urged to purchase the building so that the hotel might continue in the same relation to the people of the city that it has been the principal prow upon which the building in the ultimate success of the hotel was the influence of Bishop Hand, one of the receivers. Bishop Hand controls the ministers and 2000 bankers who will back up the institution.
Annual Call to Ministry Over1,700
Washington, D. C. Jan. 22 The first meeting of the recently organized advisory board of the School of Law was held on the university campus Wednesday. This board has been organized for the purpose of promoting a definite cooperative plan by which religious faith may work together for a better trained ministry. President J. Stanley Burke presented the larger plans of the university, accomplished and those being planned. He stressed the need of a great interdisciplinary theological school. Dean D. Butler Dr. Burke presented the larger plans of the school of Religion of Howard University. He presented the needs for a divinity hall, as the school of Religion was no longer built down and the presidents of additions and fossers, assistant director of extension work and the need of further chemical help. He told of the extension department of the School of Religion, presented by Dr. Sterling N. Brown director. He told of the growth of that work and of the last 12 years of the school's expansion. The most matter quite the number has increased to nearly 250 students, which number could be increased to thousands. The faculty property was increased. The starting fact that 1,200 annual calls for new pastors, and last year less than 100 graduates from all the schools to attend the annual pastoral situation. He said that with 200 presachers annually into the pasture with but little if any training presented a problem that the people have not yet seen to realize.
SPEAKER STIRS WHITES; LEAVES BY BACK DOOR
CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION
REVIEWS CONDITIONS
New York, Jan. 12. A statement of the significant facts in the debt of civil liberties has just been sent out by the American Civil Liberties Union to its 5,000 supporters, lawyers and correspondents throughout the United States, signed by Roger N. Haldwin and Albert Delliver, directors, as follows:
The general condition throughout the country is thoroughly reopening. Civil rights movements in labor movement escapes attack. All are on the defensive. Injunctions or troops restrict civil rights in industrial districts. Civil rights organizations are confined to a few centers. On the whole, conditions in the larger cities are more free. But most violence continues unabated. In the South and Middle West, with Texas as the center, and the Kn Klux Klan as the chief source of inspiration. Our protest in such cases, with local results of public opinion,
GIVEN FROM YEAR TO LIFE: KILLED COMMON-LAW MATE
"The city police in a few centers are arbitrary in breaking up meetings, notably in Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and San Francisco; the recent arrests are due largely to a fight between rival unions among the seamen. In which one side has enlisted the police. We are arresting the seamen. On the other, the police are less, attentive to radicals than in three years."
**E HAS FIRE**
Chaos, N. C., Jan. 13.—The industries-building of Idaho University, one of the largest of the institution, has been almost completely destroyed by fire with an estimated loss of property leased to a institution of the Northern Presbyterian assembly.
LARGE CLUB JOINS WAR ON BOMBERS
Wealthiest and most powerful of
the American Cities with a rightful
legitimate claim.
mine and is record of two bombings in which it was outraged that the bomber was now launched in the battle to send to the pentagon the men in the "hunter circle" of the bomb hoist trust.
A. S. S.
Leading business and professional men in the talent and their resources in the effort to crowd
Morris Lewis the criminals out of their hair. Capsule attorneys are at work marshalling the evidence "critics" as it was expressed by the citizens committee in the clubhome Tuesday night.
Lewis to Organize
Merris Lewi, announced as a candidate for the 52d general assembly, has been appointed to co-ordinate the work of the churches, clubs and various organizations fighting to purge the city of the dynamic terror. The organization or association he has appointed has been given its activities. Just recently letters have been written to residents of the 51st and 52nd blocks on Hardee Avenue with a view to inundation. Colored Dennison is in possession of a letter, written this month, in which a white real estate agent is urged and warned against permitting the construction of Cunquines have been published about the same property. Lawrence Timbers, manager of the Kenwood and Hyde Park Association, has been arrested and threaten in Deminion's possession.
"Whites Only" Says Bank
Princeton, S. C., Jan. 13—Princeton is a small town in Laurens county, the home of Gov. Robert A. Cooper and S. S. Sonatoro N. D. Dal. This distinction has caused citizens to feel proud of the little city. A month ago a man of our city, Mr. Robert A. Cooper, never was counted. Some people spoke of it and were shipped out by the whites. It was in this community that Sigmar Red Cross director of the American Red Cross recreation activities of the U. S. Pulple Health Service hospital, Greenville, delivered the address on the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the address Mr. Carroll demurred the whites, who were present, termed them cowards and beaten for permitting lynching and taking part in it. The auditorium was crowded with Carroll after speaking noted the discontent among the whites, and "concerted" himself from the auditorium by way of the back door. He was beaten by Mr. T. Elliot Hall, where he bearded a trans for Greenville.
Miss dennie Wilkerson was found guilty of manslaughter in the Criminal Court of Judge Joseph Pitch and sentenced to the penitentiary at Wilkerson shot and killed her common-law husband, Austin R. Sullivan, 47 years old, in their home at 3001 La Salle Avenue. Miss Wilkerson stated that Sullivan was attempting to beat her when she fired the fatal shot, but that both of them had been drinking instantly. Sullivan was killed instantly.
Read the Wills-Tate Fight Round by Round on Sport Page
CAUGHT
Jews Foiled in Attempt to Buy New Hotel Dale
E HAS FIRE
LONE JUDGE
RUNS DOWN
COP SLAYER
Murder, Kidnaping, Highway Robbery, Figure in Three Day "Reign of Terror"
Philadelphia, Pa., Jan. 15—Hounded and hunted by the police of three states, by posses made up of farmers who left their tasks to rid the countryside of one of the most daring desperades chronicled in the history of crime in the East, and starved and weakened by the riles of the chase, Luther Boddy, 15, notorious up jumper, was shot and killed in a locked house on Robbins street near Twentweth. Boddy's life story, since he attained the age of reason, is just the record of one crime after another. Newcomer of jail for any crime, he was on the cell walls of the jail of many states and became the known and feared bad actor of those whose duty it was to unmask the law. He was an unfortunate among policemen and detained the Tommy Goucher of the
His Last Crime
His latest crime occurred three day. Permitted to leave jail on parole he had failed to pay his prison sentence and had been told to assemble the cause. In the meantime he police officer, Rhodes had been shot and the circumstances pleaded for him to be taken to the police department and Buckley (white), he was led to make a report to the parole officer in the turbulent district. After the police officers informed him that he was under suspicion in connection with the murder of the police officer and that he would be carried to the station for questioning. Baldy house - from Miller, who had held of him, snatched an automobile from the street and another shot was sent into the abdomen of Buckley, who became unconscious. Both officers died. An effort to find the skimmer, but he fought his way out.
Disquised as Woman
Baddy, disfigured as a woman, with green hat, green tunic to hide the socks on his first, women's outfits, brown coat, black pants. York taxi driver, fled him to drive his car to Jersey City, then to Newark, and on to OMED Valley, Pa. The desparate war out of funds commanded the abducted chauffeur to stop passing cars and hold the inmates up. The taxi driver escaped one of the prisoner boarded cars of the driver to "drive like he—"1
First news of Boddy's arrival in Philadelphia was brought to the law Charles A. Thindley well known for his work on the congregation church, by John Coleman, a parishioner. Coleman informed the pre-virginian at 5:30 o'clock in the morning that at 5:40 o'clock the previous night a man answering the call from the congregation body had come to his living houses and sought a place to sleep.
Notifies Judge Scott
The minister communicated this information to Judge Amos Scott, Philadelphia's only and first. Judge Scott has always had an appreciation for the police station at 20th and Fifthwater streets. Only one officer, Banner, was available. Accompanied by him and by his companion, Patroness, he was on Kabman street. Before reaching there, however, he received a revolver at a pawnshop. When they got to the lair of their quarry the man approached the police station, known and Scott assisted the stairs, leaving Banner in the rear. At the door of the room where the man took the mandate could hear his knob and entered, his throat in the trigger of his gun. Bobby avoids and sprays up with the utility of a gun. It was too late. The Judge told him that if he moved he would "knee". The fictive supernatural.
Find Gun and Knife
Under his allowee were found a knife and his "sure death pawn." Beside the bed the women's clothes he was wearing had been put on his hands. He was allowed to put on his shoes and then married two blocks through the snow to the police station. He is alleged to have made a confession in which he gave his reason for shooting the policemen in New York City his fear that they were going to militrate him about Scott, by his capture of Boddy, became not only the object of high praise from municipal officials, but the object of the 19000 reward offered by Boddy. Boddy will be extradited to New York, where trial arrives him. Two indictments charged him with fire and been received by the Sturgeon County judge. Justice Wasservessel presiding.
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420 S, State St. Peri yt
Ax ditorial
OMMON SENSE
ie WO Bw)
RE you molding yonrtown financial destiny,.
or are you jeaving that work to chance—
hep'ng blindly shat you will be the oue per
son in ten thousand who gets rich quick?
If you have $1,000 or more to invest 7
it using good jadament fo pat it Into un
improved or improved p-opestias locaied in some towr
that is as dead as a door nail and wkere yon are in
luck if yon can sell afier holding it Tor years even at
a loss?
Money making Gt luck. ‘The friend thet teday
is well of Enaneially siepiy hat fore Fh enonygh te
pick on alive place, such as Gary, Indiana, for insianee.
where some property has jumped in price from’ ten
dollars an acre 10 $400 we front Toot. Is it any wonder
these friends are ow “Easy Street” now?
Gary is growing by leaps and bonds, the largest
steel industries employing thousands of men and hun-
dreds of other mamifacturing concerns are located
there. The population is 100,00), the butldings are all
new and modern. It is sittated on Lake Michigan and
hax more railroad lines entering it than most any
other city,
Now is the tinte to invest your kurge savings in prop-
erties that will pay you from ten (0 fifteen. per cent
on your investment, There are no risks to take and
the properties offered by The MID-CITY REALTY CO.
—Gary's largest and most reliable real estate dealers—
will stand the fullest investigation. In fact, prospective
investors are urged to make inquiries both about our
re'iahility and the statements we make as to the prop-
erties we have for sale.
I you cannot come to Gary. the “wonder city,” and
see for yourself what the future hols for those who
get in now on the ground floor, write us. today and
jet us send you full particulars. IL-will cost you nothing
but a little postage, and we mizht be the means of
putting you on the read to fortune.
Yours for a suecessful New Year.
MID-CITY REALTY CO.
(Gary's Largest Real Estate Dealers.)
2201-3 roadway Gary. Indiana.
AnsorgeReady
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Baie tore re i a
haan ne Cour Gane
eae Ree aliens Sans
Welded Someta weeny at kes
Se a ce te
Perens Mi, Teena eres
Tar acriclyeen bet ta lie
‘tae Sct uke
SH Ried Wena ele fen
ee Aaa ee Re ae
Koch tat rata ae we, eee
A een ag a teen
HONE ati rear saa iavonionee
Bianjpittet hed settee roe
Hacer be ni cy
SE a ely ain
TRY Reel or eae ot hs
Hie Movin spatial
imei ie cag cea oe nes
Spe egs whe yn te
ITAA flat tinep, one tein
Speajiiie Whee vom i erates oh
Peat eee tee in can
srfth sour trenton ae: isity
Hyde Park
Thieves Get
Heavy Bond
De Ne ee teen
‘etna we the Avonaawen pee st
Hone aad anje ts tone reed
Gee aftheer sue at ation
SER CANINES GAT gah Met
tes inset wisn ae Woy Coe
ee a eta eked lever Eau
iehe tiein! 220g. Stow item
‘inf au ie wet, Eh, i dame
Harareris: canis at thee ste ne
triage teinal eabeelty aes ave
Be tte ere ae
iittala fy" okie a anite
teh tae eet meatod thea sere
sine test far ee tae whe
ERR: acetien and” ad gat for abe
tablet cert to" ae, Ctekte
Fertiles ot terete and enable
Srtesiee foe thee alcstess reo
yet that ane wt nie erage
Si oerltige ie cae maser mites
Siigieatem Gt gouph. ahead ee ae
enbictta hi seniels Thy carro or
Tate tien tht talboweed nd
Saf ot he stetee teat
ste fram theme
Ratvetae Se ect sit street, Me wd
Mi telty ate: Steta Farpase sehen,
ieee atts ted ad feowkny et raced
Ene kat thle eget
uth et yan agnor Sense bend
a Race trade at tes Eero
eae oaamtts Boel eax Hea at
ells creck ge thier for ths
Sao the eae St Turse and ite
edie seat centonfan wrcions 12
“AG linn overs ar eae
UWS liye teas was aftetea Stee
eatin eh cieeaancane sire Te
Te ae utube Vat th
[sty changoy ith the Inreony of
Tend ike yale Foal
reanine HAE ace ah gas, Se
eit team he. te ot Shins
sates” Santen hn that ine te
se Rta ae UE i
Ha foe, SR. cera, WI
ESTFLLE WILLIAMS IN WEST
ne er ar Mee Ce at
vp BUSINESS HE MEET,
WAITER MURDERS
WIFE TO STOP
MOMEHT FUSS
| Wastingten, BU, dan, 1% -Dis-
asreviment between hinsteand aud Wit
fouivalnated tn the frst muster 6 He
Sour in the Distrler of Columbia a
Svnt-hlowled aud Drutat howielle tn
shiek the biny oF Mra, Goneeters
Yoens. 24 gets ole, was redled with
cniete iw front of MMT str
Stathiyest, The “dseuvery of thy
Eeiinone entire Wass atte Iw eg.
Ronee enh Viies gate) Saath
Badia petaich, whe, MUA Hes
Ei tea at the heariceed Won
ssltty: tarot thst beat wa T often
find ee me
Taystery in” Crime
Rar Matte of swaltive ature bas
ce get Usca aoesetaaed Ge expla
Tin the tnetavec iar thea santo et
we iiaenese hwever, trou vis tein. te
Ranadion ssiwcesl in thes htmds eG
Shee aiepa tien UU eaontsy we
the tromptes
“rice tues Btn Hevrnesd that Mer.
Yours Visited Irkends on Monday
Ale ant telenhonent her Hush
Resviioein ateriert Vemss awit wen
Jes livin’ al 1320 street Nerthivest
She stm “would remahy over" Wish
sith her toads, The husband, He
SMe ne etalee att hes ftdenilae horse
Siont & wetoek hn! toy morning ssn
istered hat is wife nécatansany: Nite
Tomes Pherettpon Mrs. Yenme Ix Sus
to have. toll tier frends. that she
Nout yoo selthy Mit, Reariite he went
Tivate a seine It he corse,
From tive tt coakd seme thay. the
stand del wife eturzed for home
na atte & continnene round of quar.
elle amt Wekering the hnstand
Stsfppest wat fs pum aa det cee
Jade of shuts Into the tds of ttn ae-
Hucters woman, thas abrnntly: lee:
inating thelr disagreement
Husband Surrenders
Friday pth thw Kushal surren-
stesval to tive tice of the bishth piv
Vinnet, He tu tepmrtent te heat ated
Tihut tnaietiatoty ther tthe Halting We
Swen Sind stotal sitet sectarse from
Tine, sutton humse, canteso natin: sit
vines Wat lost his nave, Wet awa
fame Taek uate, at teh beetle Oe
tircessurg eomagte tue Hed tn the
Cini station net iwaredest x train foe
Heattisone, Ht Wat feven tere Ta) Ne
retrno.
Vinnie 26 yews af ge amd wos
a weaiter fu ine of tae local hetels,
id ws tar ns ean be seer tained belt
tee thee crime: bares coditabte repute
sion theswhse, Mess Younis, wats
Slaneher nt se minister, Iker. Shem,
Velining. iu Deeatiny ith, ane wus
Cromatnent in chiren wut, (wre, tte
ine a tember af the cheir of Sohn
Wea Ae Mi. Jan churehy ‘the
cronteady fe eesiareead by: al Whey Mew
Neale nantes ate a shiwst Lemteatitie
atta
1
SITTING (HARM CHAR
| Mis, Mary CMuebfiestom. Gs, 2287
peurdin tie ot ke Rear shed ate
Tne tf hee arin cats Sie sae
tint ot comet ame Satin She
Trey Teen nutri tors aewerat se
rea met fave hee. te wet ote
tie Mee cle elt vate Metzen ele
Sore Garay ate hl ed atte
or bers ne
He ‘Kearny a janitor af the
gesstirhoot ee atop, itaiad
Best eve in tha maine font er
tuo Sere Minastierioms weker see
itovea iota duiiey CORE id en
Bn 'cetensive tiaester, yeh ents
Thoiteden Tec Rbaeba. ashe” eo ee
rated br whe vera ee
Aettirs
kines His cnum
| Evansville, Ind. fin. 1. —Jonn
Kiteriis, 1S, 12 Oak rect, | wm
eed nf ree ater hn
fatale “wendtae is enn tay
Giana tert Mieco serest Ph
stealing ean thy aftermath OF 3 ait
el hetieern the tg tad ten ati
Shaina 'n nate eet te
Eoretont be antl te han
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Cn East
Saray . GS
=? More Mone Yo Sax
ee bd
[seo
(es Meee
Waku
h ‘
2
Madam C. J. Walker’s
iti i Off
| Additional Prize fer
| 500.00 in Cash
00.00 in Cas
‘The late Maram C.J. Watker was interested in her agents, in their success and in
their failure and Was extremely anxious to help them in every way she could, To
do this and fo stimulate an interest in their work. she offered an annual prize of
$1,000.00 for the sale of her hair preparations. To further inspire our agents and
te pay thon for iheir efforts we wiil sive an addfiional $400.00 in prizes for the
saic of Madam C. J. Walker's Superfine Tuillet Preparations. Given out as follows:
Ts the Madam C. J. Walker Agent salling : he larzest amount of Toilet Preparations:
Tet Prize.......00...9100.,00 ¢ Ird Prize........05... 30.00 as
2nd Prize.....s...+.. 75.00 | 4th Prize....2..0... 25.09
To the Madam C. J. Walker Club seliiny the largest ainouni of Toilet Preparations:
Ast Prize... ......:..$100.00 | 3rd Prize...2........ 50.09
* 2nd Prize.......5.... 75.00 | Sth Prize............ 25.00 *
- -
Enter Today No Rigid Rules
Simply send your name to the Contest Manager and state your desire to work for
a prize by selling Madam C. J. Walker's Toilet Preparations and your name will be ie
7 listed and you will receive credit for each order of Toilet Preparations that you ‘*
send in between now and July Ist, 1922. This special prize offer is made {n addition
to our Regular $1,000.00 Prize Offer for (he sale of Madam C. J. Walker's Hair
Preparations. And in the event of a liz dsplicate prizes will be given.
Contest Now Open Closes July 1, 1922
BE A WINNER ENTER TODAY
ponds
CONTEST MANAGER
5 x
The Madam C. J. Walker Mfg. Co., Inc.
640 N. WEST ST. INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
+ OPC, err ces aa ee eae ener FE) ET a OP gy as geo ep rnggeree 9 Tea re ag TE Ce
‘Man Bakes’ Are
Given Place of
Old ‘Clam Bake’
(rtrety, Sich, dam aseond
Feat ierery gran
iat mies a oo
ee A
soe ieee oe lew one oo
ean ey onvu aee
weet 5 ean me es
ee er ee ee
Poti aceite
Se eae en meet a.
seer Ue eines
BOE ts eats Sercetataes
Roe oe Sms
Saree te wae Rs attend
ioe Rac arc a ae 8
Mae ulthough: robbery wee the
rare ean caebees an, he
Si eee oe ere
Mee eerie a eerie
Serie een is totes tae eed
ie dimer
Hewkins
*
Frightens
fd. G. O.P.:
Kattiners, Md, Jan, 15.—For the
Hest time tm the Ibtory af the Mes
hubbean party nombers of our jraup
pave teen the recipients nf very eon
canenous neeventtion, tn the setion bf
Galen L, Talt, Vaited Sater Inter.
nal revemus cnlleetor for the Mary-
tunnd rewton, who his Just mated Ave
hen fo paces fa Wh departinent. of
the fedora nerve.
“Ther of the ve places given to
ua by Mr. Tait are warchonee agente,
nd] sine each coe deputy awl wpeaxon-
kee The gents sare Chutles. 1
Tishop, fervintah Cheater and Car-
full Te Dae, ttoorae AL Watty, the
Sepals, HN have eharge uf <tnthanory
nil otier supplie it the with ailice
Waltlam: La Walking will bye the meas
senger to the collector. ‘The five new
Appolntees xvereed White wen ape
falnted tinder the Demorrtse rein
Su weal Inte uillee tin, d,
The imiastiate cause nf thie action
can he Tail to D_AshbY. Hawking,
ive He the election of 120 run as Ih
futepetdene candidate for the Unlted
Sates Senate, therehy epelytse 0,
Iz, Wener. the white fepunitenu enn:
Aitate, of sine thousands. of voten
Repubitewn party Ieailers Hheough Us
setion hewn combine ae thy fet
that the Waharsy. of the Mace vier
swint ended,
In Marviand. ag tn other states,
there are members of aur stan ein:
ployed te the feterad wereien. ind
have eon fora lone tine, but ily 1
goaltions of Ute ar tu Iniurtanes
Shine buwmers, elevator sperters
And ther potions af lie ature un
Mer thy clei surgles, Wort (he atly
Kind that members uf the face emul
estrh wail Css By te A
Aisribation af patronage ax a recog:
Ssltion af quitiend sesistanes, -
The Veesident hive benemed the mte-
torial seut te him by the epublica
Yatrons camunlttes for Maryhind,
sungeestinie “Chat le pecasutaa the
sorties of Eoputblioan tleribers sf
the Racw by prestdention “appelat
BECOMES PARALYZED AS
RESULT OF SHIP'S FIRE
New Yorks, Jan, .—Whew he shy
Hine Peter Tarened “off Cys eoaat
Arsentinn and ebak Dee, 1B, Sahin
Senos, a member oF the ebewe, hecane
ante" mertetcen, “Sunday, when the
Sree, whe were reseuad nd rete
fe the Untied Sincee tay the Souther!
Shese of the: Muesen Linn, tenghed
here. fone wax tiken ashes. conn:
plovehe yeiratee Tie waue beanented
be Pellet hisgpital ine Borin ent
itebons
“LOVE GREATER
TH COLOR FR
WE," SHEWRTES
Florence, 8. €. Jan. 1%—A mob of
white farmers and business men cel-
ebrated the New Year near the coun-
ty line between Florence, and Wile
Hiamaburg by a Ivuching. ‘The report
caine thrigh the wiles of Sherif
Gamble of Wiilksusiurg county. A
party xent to locate the beily. Found
Te dungiins trom a teoe linab. Bullets
had perforated the face of the: vietin
to ACH degre shat he wies beyond
Fecntnttion, “However, Iie identity: i
fal to be known among & few here,
Woman Wrate Letters
‘the moldy verti that Mey
Iynehod the right party, necording to
Feports, A fetter found in the vle=
Uinta proe'éet Patel ae follows
“Dearest Fd:
“P thomsht of you all during the
show Last night, sand wanted you,
MED adhe TEAS tee badd thee We:
famine de tygetioe always. My
love for you ie greater thin Sout
want ainsi, Sometines Thveeme
fe" disgusted with eve vdttions Ie
Horeuee that E want ty leave nnd
gue suane pace Where penphe see
Scnsiblh, where Feun at Teast uli:
The atecete with yeu ty the days
Umne withgul danser amt tear.
“Fou caften ingicess” on mie the
fet that Sow are Colors an be unt
take any shinier, fnew thai.
Gurling, but Tuco ie ggeeager Uh
enor In-tng en, aml we atest eh
the Wrst we enn util bath af a
fare tb positon toy Weave: Charetiess
SS mppeate you seo the package
- siaet Wet ial fe the Barber sho foe
Sou, T have Ge Tee eareful ite buys
ine things downtown, hecattse my
Mite mivwe sows adune with ime and
Iw so noses. Thad a heautiqat shiet
for yon, int had to gtve tte me
name 1 hoes nlece Ue Hie prs
chuse tt.
“He a komt bow and don't forget
temierraw. Yours,
“DEVOTED.
Relstiden Cael timid
Reveral other bettors were found 00
the dade. hat ‘were syst th
Mood to adc, aa eatent thst te
Ween uneecidntde. Tie searnn site
A} how Identtey iy antics hese
Sfacvateal Manetvees prone hore nee
sort Unt aie te hewsen an ware
Hkdetwor in thes hie ‘tate. The
Sfetinn of the ‘mois te aah to. aes
Son tenered to Tene the eit ty hia
Heeannt triste: wy feared treats
Hieracae. afcthe! wunaare ations
HHteliulde sources ve the information
thi relative uf the wna Krewe of
her "apisoine "hut usta tin
forcwd then te ronest dhe aif
Whether thes were astrumental i
enenttenetnie toh eluetiee fs rdeatees
tis winiaars sweetheart hay not beet
eurned,
| BOOTLEGS DEFENDER
[_ Crawfordselile. Ati ain. TR—A
voheerte muvenient 4 on fowt here
To torwe the went pepe to Ln the
Shie'ot the citene Befenter ey ani
“section. Ae Mt te, peuple itvine th til
{own "and uthers ronabout ‘ure
Rorvest to ato atsmonie te. Mus it
nad heh ted igo Te nH ey el
[huane hehe recndiee It
age a
To VISIT DANVICLE, KY.
Payton Ohl date Homa We Re
Faz! Wot $5tth steed will vat fete
and eodntien far Duce, Ky, auch
thie Werks tunes 2 Stee Belt Bs
Surely Makes the Skin Whitr’and 42 = % A
Lighter Without Leaving a Shine pa “eb, j
FON MeN As WELL AD WOHEN SM
Cheteegeadcirecsscs Jo BARA ta \
Seg aroma amis ZY cena ae
BRST rant ’ 5a eat
Movey RACK GuanArTER fy oe | Pe eres,
qatar are, ae ee ean ea
Sect ate ‘gone a tate sient
Fe ieee eter Sie Sat te ack Mines
Mate etan ie neta Ny ae
Soon Gitine all welhg BUN TRE BERT ‘ 2
+ CAL. C9. 3 Sf Ae Sak
GOPIVA,, CHEMICAL 0 eet Sa Mf uk
| eR a gg
| Judge Releases |
| First Prisoner
| for Celebrating
) sald'that Aten Seven ot Fhtias
| ietlates who iste bite: beds
| Siete and that hts hase feb
stat ak eet ge
erate Ae ork ta aed
ase eras ue, oe eam 2
Geese cere aa er Braet
hus nehtealty tees teretved ene
Ragas anla at ier ana
| Nae scott test primer iene a
aie Saas ee ions faa
ari eg ones
Geen sos Pesce
Ma ved out” cokbrating, your
hetae nea oC ae te
See cee ata te
ty itie be ot tbe ce pave
AIRES, UNKNOWN, WAITS
PRSLIG TO NOTICE KIM
Nashvitt:, Tenn. Jan, 18.—Nash-
lite the eliy in ecntint with Asian
forthe’ scan, “the Athens ef the
Saucn™: Nashvtite, thes elty tamed
Hrltico) avers fe nen In for te
Biter iwaors It aestnes to he hier
ere CHS oF the Lente sian Crow
items, ae elty vonneltinn, wher ts
Scuenty Rouen testint the, tengnvll
ate eaivte or it: patieal hemehunen,
iia Coneefted tet Blew Uhi. he two
Mtorg nee Wonrtce: tengetiors tune Make
“ausinaedy." Wotan Vamieriaty Unters
(ao Fak Wnizeradty, Warner edmnn
“alieae amet Deabaaiy ‘Caller Men
stone tae Sn vite Hines, wii ss nun
tently” sewed fn pregistieey ts
sens tw tl
On iat Za Bla Cease wedinwnee
deuce Hadtodierd in the elt contell BY
Hilson tefortwal te Seeeial come
mittee vomiting mf Hines, Yaebrongh
Anu Wiad
"Phin wrdiconen jou Auster than
the brews’ oxintine wae ts puede
Beat se horton uf seh eur shen
esac for wae tee, asi at ete
Suppation lor enforced, tear ee
‘riatea and pocatie sess ar te be
{tee atu te entaimeast ac ait to
inj, Hy be take wife 3 a
Mer paeeatee
Hines the unkuwea, sh etovated
mioui™piore of his bad teat hemednann
Aucnrent. sourner ofp trusatnedaat
rociremente tes boon aed th
“onedinun eh Comfort Me
Stun frown meus of ae Wie the.
iufora ill eneortci_ seus Wt the Dane
iM even foe tee Reanth ehh
auntie Kersten ne tlahen. Menten
AraURT. MUDEDY WL, hts eee,
COLLEGE A, 8.9
“AE EN HH
GUS NTR
Pech ent en tern
SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1922
CeCe
y Ey oa Vp
WOOL SERGE
Batre testa. ecco
a= b
Noe OS y )
ro! 7 ey e
salet qa SY i
Sop ee 5 P
ne ea
GA BRN a twos
Spay Vd ens
bf Seem Bpetioss
Ly ey deere
By Be Nena skate
co ee
a Sa aE ee
E. Eee ge) emer
ia es ye Frock AE
ie Bek dee de al tavn suet
P35 BURR pee geen tess meek
ne OR ge Mage eer
Fa ue, B Sepp Bee siss taecdats
Bree GF Gan we cra ane poate tae
ea Ba aces a ae
LESTER-ROSECO.°gh.e?)
en Sea D
EES aS |
5 EEE: Remove be A
Teme s
ea E
BE A DOGTOR OF
CHIROPRACTIC
Raat a a
Dr. Fred H. Rebel, D. C.
DOCTOR OF cHinOMAGTIC
hanes use
Ieson see ict and nave. tied
Sebel
a
DENTIST
ex Se
Gh 2 7 OS A Qrerrererpess
RNS
Bec ione cuaneu an
GAS — X-RAY
Sete oF Teeth essecess88.0 ane ip
Greve ecru tam anaas
EXAMINATIONS FREE
‘Open nights; dunany 9004
DP. T. T. WOOLENS
ta'yeary Samer of
the Hayes Dent-! Offices
Casens Wp lameeen
= “ Se Boece
| Sees IE ete ee
ee “The mort sersational bargain ewer
Rela) moar Base
eg Seine ee demas
Rig] cescimreneraatiae
Bey BA] Costar elec orUardavvn ten:
PE pi Send No Honey
fal Repent rdipe
Wea SRE aie seat aty
NG) eee
a9. $08 soar vs nityram fee nonals ied
Krthur Lenard Co, tat" oo entaea
TAOIES
se
EDDINE DOUCHE
TABLETS
wo teotets: 31
eee ehcnat Gee
Sees erste eae
Sree:
Beckran aE ates Cleselend, Obie
rs wancee
ea SMDEPENDENT SYSTEM of
eeteea| AIR GROWING
HE Mw achat Sa
a
Pe et ee
| Se eae
sj tener. thcm Drexel 4656.
ey SGr thar FAT
ER OE TEL oom
gi aner ey Wiese
SEER fees
Dei rim. “atwtels sate aud
SOW eee BE
oP ata atettta epee
Se Eo ao ae
TRE TEE GIINIER WAIGE CHEERS
PGAE FOUR
DREAMLAND GAFE CONTINUES TO DRAW CROWDED HOUSES
The greatest show in the world, Lorraine is as well the most entertaining every evening and Thursday matinee. Most of her performances "doing her but is" like reading from a first primer, because Miss Lorraine has graduated long ago. She is what you must call a top line in the world. These girls the folks she plays in the Folies have to take care of, and that is one of the reasons she can be the happy joyful crowd. Assistant Miss Hill is the ever-represented Miss Alberta Hunter, who is in a class by herself, and the Miss Crita Lewis, Marjorie Ross and the Miss Catherine Cox, Marjorie Ross and three in for his port of the applause all times. Then to cap the climax the treedaffold orchestra is blaring with that baroqueing, scrutinizing, torturing forest all your coaches and cares.
To the owners of Messes, William Bortons, Clarence McFarland and sending Jimmy Williams the publicity materials for the kind and class of entertainment to be found there from the Atlantic to the Pacific but here. Added to all this comes Lewis Arrington, Chicago careerer on amateur tennis to be found on the bill of fare. The popular Sunday dinner at one dollar is drawing many couples who find a pleasant place to dance and play. The place is served from 7 to 9 o'clock.
EVANSTON NEWS
NORTH SIDE NEWS
Mrs. C. X. Wesley, who has been committed to home for four weeks is co-valued with Mrs. Cee. Gray has two days visiting her sister-in-law in Omaha, Neb. Rufus Dotson, son of Mrs. Mimosa Dotson, who was home for the holidays, has visited her daughter and wankee. Miss Rubie Horton, daughter of Mrs. Drew Horton, entertained in daughters of Mrs. R. D. Bower of soo South Riverville avenue, Englewood. The members of Wayman Chapel A. X. B. are engaged an orchestra for Sunday school.
Lectures at Bethel
Hold to Grand Jury
Held to Grand Jury
Old Sidney Saunders, a gavage,
was held to the grand jury under
bands by Judek Samuel Squirrel on a
charke of coltery. He was arrested by
other gavage men and Culathan after
he was found guilty. Row 425, 424 Grand Jury
TUXEDO CAFE
2022 Indiana Avenue
Corner of 31st Street Upstairs
THE FINEST
CHINESE &
AMERICAN
RESTAURANT IN CHICAGO
Music by the "Wonderful Orchestra"
MEALS from 11 A.M. TO 2 A.M.
WE SERVE NOTHING BUT THE
FINEST FOODS
Our Service Is Second to None
REPRESENTATIVES
WANTLE a capable man for each STATE
Must have a good education, and be willing to take responsibility as a pro-
fessor in the field of the man who sees you and possibilities are great. Ancestry likely to sell.
Write for a Representative Letter.
P. O. B. Z. St. Connerville, Inc.
Mrx. George Terrell Dies
Mrs. George Ferrell, 262 Columns
avena, avenue, Wednesday morning, Jan. 9
after a long illness. Funeral Thursday,
at 12:50 p.m. from the late
residence.
Removal Notice
Dr. F. W. Adams announces that after Jan. 15 his office will be beaten at 10 a.m. on Monday, March 6 to 9 p.m. Sundays by appointment. Phone Kenwauk 6177. Advertisement.
St. Mack's Lycum
Such a subordinated program is planned for St. Mark's Lyceum, 50th and Washougal avenue, Sunday, Jan 15, all y'all are invited to be in their seats promptly at 5 o'clock, in order to hear every number of subjects, in order to hear the subject's "Economic Achievement as a Solution for the American Race Problem" and in order to hear the president of Miss Pauline Lee Miss L. P. Donnets, soprano, and little laurel banks, reader, pupil of Miss Carol McMurray, president of Miss Albera C. M. Mason, president; Ruth L. Allen, chairman program committee.
The Misses Mason Return
The Musses, Vivian and Eilaria Musses, who were born in Musses, have returned from the first, where they spent great holidays, they have chartered at the annual convention of the Musses, and were tendered many gifts, to the Musses and Railfitters.
Leroy James Dies
Leroy James Dies
Leroy James, a Sister of
Mr. and Mrs. James, died Jan.
A funeral was from the late residence
and interment at Mr. Rose cemetery.
Birthday Party
Mrs. Alice Pates, cousin, 1476 Fulton
street, and Mr. and Mrs. Jones, 655
Sholes, of Belfast, entertained Mrs. Sidle
of Belfast of Ireland, the occasion
of Mrs. Preston's birthday
Entertained
Class No. 11 of the Metropolitan Community Center People's church totehouse. Adie A. Mosez and Calmeneva-Sunday, Jan. 5. S. Games and goodies were the afterparties parties. Hedrick Kirkling, Kiel Red, Wayman Sweechan, Lewis Branch, Joad S. Steele, Garland Johnson and George D.
A.
Sent to County Hospital
Suffering With Abuse
Frank Johnson, GS, SA, Federal
officer with an aide of the
participing with an aide of the
Arthur Johnson
Arthur Johnson, 13, and Wentworth
avanna, was taken suddenly sick in his
home; there it was found that he was
suffering with a hemorrhage of the
lungs.
Dime of Power
John Ewell, alius Ben Jooney, 40, 2008
Federal street, was carried to
the County hospital suffering with
pneumonia the next day after
he being carried there.
---
Y. W. Secretary Visits
Mrs. Ferguson, Secretary of the
Y. W. E. A. at Beaverport, soon
scent the holidays with her mother,
Mrs. C. A. grand boutailard.
Injurious Court
Ab. Sander Stone, 222, shaken up and
afraid, was so severely shaken up and
too scared to talk to anyone to
tombole which he was draining collided
at machine at 210 street and
indoor avenue.
Falls Quiz Register
While delivering a bag of coal at the
hospital, a man fell and was hospitalized.
After James bondy, 52, born after
the war, the lambarrier from the second floor to the
hospital was carried to the county hospital.
Has Enlantic Elite
Moses Bryant, 29, 412 Vincennes avenue, was picked up on the street in front of the avenue avenue. Upon examination it was clear that he was suffering with epilepsy.
Hit by "Vamp" Auto
Car Meadows Injured
Mr. Medfordos, 3,355 Vinehouses, are dedicated in honorations on the bank of the 25th street and College Grove avenue.
Dr. Roberts Heads Chapter
The annual Chapter of the Kappa
Alpha chapter house, 3212 Calumet avenue,
on Thursday evening, Jan. 4. Dr. Carl G.
Dickerson was elected president in
year. The other officers elected
wrote. Dr. Fred G. Trump, Vol. pol-
loyalty co-chair, Dr. H. D. Duk-
strangus, Attorney Joseph E. Snowden,
Smith, member of board of directors,
Carl E. Dickerson was elected a mem-
ber of board of directors, and
during the holiday week. The
chapter has one of the clearest
chapter that convenes in the
land. O. during the holiday week.
The Chapter has one of the clearest
chapter that convenes in the
country.
East Meets West in Party
W. C. Williams, W. C. Williams,
who was in the city last week after spend
with relatives and friends in New York,
were the greatest of the other
Walter W. of the New York A-
cademy. O. during the city last Thursday, Mr. W.
williams bet the California Friday after
the many points of interest in the city.
Leroy Jamaica Dias
Leroy S. James, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leroy James, died on March 11, 2015, at Mediol. 3, after a nine-day illness. He was an outstanding son of Adrian James. He was a devoted father, aunt and uncle to modern life at Mediol.
CITY NEWS IN BRIEF
Barber Uses Knots
Supervisora Elect Officera
At the regular meeting of the Juvenile and Adult United order of old Fellows, all old Fellows had Sunday the following day: Lettie Brown, last president and chairman of Sick Committee; Maureen Johnson, correspondent secretary; Mary K. Barr, treasurer; Adele Cook, president; Florence Weil, second conductors; Hartie Lewis, inside guardian; Ella Young and Laura Johnson, right and left supporters to the president, and Gwen right and Lester Johnson to the vice president.
**Death Ends Long Liness**
Grace Lewis, 71, 357 Street state, years. Mr. Lewis lived in Chicago 25 years. He was born in Chicago, he married Miss Mary Desmond and designed and built her home in Arbison, Koca, where his children were both. He is survived by five children, Maureen Johnson, Board, St. Loren, Mrs. Nancy Harper, St. Joseph, Ms. Miss Millett (Gail), St. Lewis, A. L. Lewis of Weatherford, Okin.
Mose W. White Read
Season Gavett in Years
The special life of Chicago was revived during the holiday season in 1822 which proved the greatest in many years. There was an unusual interest in all social functions. Among those who were Mrs. Edward Wilson, 301 Pride Street, in honor of Meshames Famill, 201 Pride Street, in Grass Grace Landslide of St. Paul, Minn. The assembly dance, Dec. 16, the military ball and basketball game, Jan. 2, the annual Christmas concert, Jan. 3, Mrs. Maud Cuney Hare and William Richardson, Jan. 5, at South Park church.
Col. Hall in Kansas City
Col. Hall in Kansas City
has just returned from Kansas City, Mo., where he was called to attend the funeral of his mother, Mrs. Christina
Bex Tutt Optimistic
Rev, J. W, Tattletail of Inventport, Iowa, grand master of U. of I. F. & B. S. College, during the past week, after attending city during the past week, after attending the Vincennes hotel, spotted prominently about the great work geocentric F. & S. M. T, and his future outlook.
Wells Makes Trlp
I. W. Wells, president of The Web
Book Company, 5710 Indiana avenue, and
widely known in the fraternal world.
Made in New York.
Treasures and lessons.
Erecting Home
Mr. and Mrs. H. Benjamin Sullivan have begun to rent the home at 1827 South May street, Morgan Park.
Mrs. Eileen H. South State street, D. G. W. X. of the Household of Ruth, left during the week for Rockford and outer parts of Illinois in the fall. Where in Illinois and junction, where she will use with other district officers cover many cities in the junction.
Stork Visit Mrs. Prince
Mrs. Anna S. Prince became the mother of a baby girl Monday morning. Prince was born on this city and lives here until she left 11 years ago to join her husband in San Diego and in Los Angeles, Cal. Here she was married and accounted for the Tenet, cavalry garrison. She returned to the city last August.
Rev. Woods in Maywood
Rev. Woods has been called as pastor for the Second Baptist church, Maywood. Rev. Woods is to be commenced upon its selection.
Mrs. Nellie Waters Entertains
Mrs. Nellie Waters, 2327 Walsh avenue, entertained a few out-of-town guests at a dinner at the Vineennes hotel last week. Among those present were the Virginia White and Heart Sunset.
Removed to Provident Hospital
Mrs. W. I. Sammons, 696 East 23rd avenue, was billed to repay her $1000 in a Problem hospital, where it is hoped that he can continue to improve rapidly.
Mrs. A. G. Hill, 174th South State street, an entertainer in home of Mr. HILL's guests were Miss Hattie Dexter, Detroit, Mich. G. H. Wilson, Los Angeles, Mr. and Mrs. B. B. B. B., Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin, Tulsa, Oklahoma, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Dexter, Indianapolis, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ellison Chicago, Mr. Hill provided a charming hostess.
Dear of His Own
While accompanying with William Moon, Susan and her husband, the Kimmel brothers, Edford Brooks, 21, 315 Dearborn street was severely cut out with a knife about the size of a finger. Edford Brooks was arrested by Gilberts dehn son and Saving for Shooting Mr. and Mrs. William Dilian, 2145 Dearborn street.
**Weaker Sex Is Stronger**
Mr. and Mrs. William Kimmel had a temper. He exerted the strength of his wife. He was also at his wife. The first three rounds dispatched Louis' But Mrs. Kimmel had the power to fight the family ammunition and Louis saw stars when she healed him over the Kimmel lives at 110 St. street.
Falls Down Stairs
Daniel Reilly, 29, 2006 State street
wearing a Presidential hospital sur-
facing with injuries received when
he accidentally fell down the stairs
at a railway at 3200 State street. It
sustained a deep abrasion over the left
eyes.
STORE AND OFFICES
IN
ROOSEVELT BANK
BUILDING
Apply ROOSEVELT BANK
Grand Boulevard & 30th St.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
AT IDLEWILD HOTEL
Ncs Simvong Smiles
Mrs. Jib Simmons, one of the past owners of S. M. T. of the state of Oklahoma, was born in 1906 to O. A., was no smiles at thirteen's hall, 243 South State avenue, Satellite Jackson, state vice president of S. M. T., arrived, together with Ms. Meshan Elizabeth Bison, Dora Cannon, Nelly Bannon, Mrs. Bannon, Hilli Jackson, Georgia E. Harding, Hattie Sawyers and others to organize a team which had been worked up by herself.
Mrs. Galloway Entertained Mrs. Galloway Entertained Mrs. Galloway is the guest of her idea, Mrs. William Jackson, 600 Illinois avenue, Mrs. Galloway, the holiday season, as many social functions are being given in her honor.
Has Internal Hemorrhage
Charles Goff, 15, 2523 State street, was taken suddenly ill in his home. It was ascertained that he was suffering with internal hemorrhage.
Has Heart Trouble
Has Heart Trouble
While white men in 250
State street, Jesse Pugh, 15 years old,
the street, was taken unharmed
ill. The man's troubled heart
the troubled due to organ-
heart trouble.
Accidentally Shots
Accidentally shot
Granville Avenue, Granville
Avenue, is contained at the Illinois
General hospital suffering with a balk
wound in foot, fearing that it was
hit by a stray dog by a stray dog.
Attacked by Unknown Man
Attacked Kluwe, 25, SHI State street,
sustained a three-inch wound on his
scalp, injured by a knife, when he was
street and cities avenue. He started to
Officer Christopher C. Condon that he
knowed of no reason why he was as
sulted.
Falls from Street Car
Huine Wheates, 35, 427 Pleasant avenue,
brushed himself poorly when he
accidentally lost his balance on a street
car and to the ground at 51st street
ottawa.
Balloy Invited to Speak
M. T. Bailey, 2555 South Street street president of the Alumni Association of the University of Wisconsin, has been invited to attend and will speak in person or will be represented by Thomas Newsworth of Vigil-la at a great mass meeting to be held in Richland, WI. Citizens of all counties will take a part. At this meeting President John M. O'Rourke, of the principal schools and will make public the appointment of Mrs. Ora Brown Stobes as nonrepresenter of the faculty of the V. N. & W. 1.
Mrs. Thomas Combs Entertains
Mrs. Thomas Combs of Oak Park and the University of Wisconsin, will host a funeral in honor of Mrs. America Mathis-william of Oak Park, whose engagement was announced, and the birthday of Thomas Combs celebrated. A six-course dinner was served, with overeagled for men.
Mrs. Roots En Route Home
Mrs. I. K. Roots of Gatlin, Wash., sister of the late W. Allison Sweeney, who was a member of the faculty of the University in Battle Creek, Md., was in the city a few days ago, week the day of her memorial at 2325 S. Park avenue. She left Saturday for Milwaukee to visit her sister, Mrs. Ora Brown Stobes. She will there to her home in the Northwest.
Mrs. Garrett Leaves City
Mrs. Garett Leaves City
Mrs. Leaves City, Omaha,
has returned to her home after a
sunday trip to New York. Ms.
G. Grant, 322 S. Park avenue, and her
robert, Arthur Berkden, 322 Dear-
born home at many social functions while here.
Miss Porter Entertains
Miss Lilian Porter, 324 Grand bou-
leau friends Monday evening with a white
party and dance of the honored
travelers. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Graves,
Toronto, Canada, Mrs. G. Outhway, L.
Jones, Miss Florida Alma, Ana-
dela J. Harrison, Ana. Jessica H. Porter,
W. H. Johnson and E.L. K. Porter
To Lecture on Rome
On Sunday, Jan. 18, at 8 o'clock in the evening, there will be a lecture on the history of the school hall, 57th and Wabash Avenue. The lecture will be given by Sir Knight McCormick, who is a professor in Europe and is known as the best lecturer on Rome in the Middle Ages. The program will be under the auspices of the Holy Name Society of St. Monica and the church. No admission will be charged.
Mrs. Ella Walker Dies
Mrs. Ella Henderson Walker died Dec. 26, 1921, at the State Normal school, Chicago, and was a prominent teacher. Mrs. Walker formerly lived in Chicago and was a prominent inmate of the Iowa State Prison. She was survived by a daughter, Linda H. Hess, two grandchildren, F. Elizabeth H. Hess, C. and David G. Smith, and many living friends. The interment was in Lexington, Ky., on Dec. 22.
THE MAN RELOW
HAN GODERSON NOT TO SUMMER
THE COAL PLEA, but keep the IDLEWILD HOTEL
50 E. 23RD STREET, Chicago, IL.
Warm and "Coffee"
1. Comforts of the Home in This. Chicago's Most Popular Hotel. Cottage Located Near 3 Car Lines. RATES:
$4.00, $5.00 PER WEEK UP
AY. Polks, the pie you see
represents 14% of Consumers' Co-
sume run and more ongoing—Firman
Glendora
(TEMPLETON'S)
Coal
The Wonder Coal
Recently discovered and of the finest quality.
Glendora, properly fired, is smokeless, will not clinker and yields less ash than Pocahontas.
Its heating power is tremendous and it carries the greatest value for the money of any known coal.
Lump ..... $8.50
Egg ..... 8.50
Nut ..... 8.50
All orders are taken under GUARANTEE OF SATISFACTION and prices are now lowest.
Eastman Coal Company
Exclusive Distributors on the South Side
Telephone Yards 0968 3443 La Salle St.
Umbriana In Leen
To Teach Plane
Miss Nocca McLethy, the young plan-
ner, will be the center for the
university Center chair, will touch
the department of the upper
Mississippi State University,
instruction of Mr. Knab, in
the Cheng's.
Choral Society
The Progressive Choral Society will have its regular rehearsal at Wendell Hall, on Monday, 15, at 3:20 p.m. in Samuel McMahon, president; Magnolia Lewis, secretary.
Tillman Layce City
James II, Tilman left the city Tuesday for West Virginia, to care for an invalid brother. Mr. Tilman was the son of William and Elizabeth C. A., and had been connected with the Telphil Co. for 25 years, and is also a member of Nazarene Tabernacle. He was tendered a reception Monday by members and friends of the church.
James B. Fisher Dies
James Baker Fisher, son of Mr. and Mrs. James W. Fisher, died Tuesday, at the age of eight years. The little boy was the year to Durand Hospital, 20th and 21st and he is survived by a mother, a father, his sister, a brother, and other relatives. Funeral at the hospital Friday, Sunday, a brother and other m. interment at caskwell cemetery.
Mrs. Rutherford Returns
Mrs. Rutherford, 109 Caldwell avenue, returned home Tuesday from Alameda, where she will attend the funeral of her mother.
THANKS CHICAGOANS
"I wish to thank the many friends in Chicago who helped to make the recent presentation of the drum "Excuse Me" by Mr. B. J. B. and Jan. I, respectively. I thank I could never express in words the deep gratitude I feel for the very pretty compliment of my play, and to my wonderful friend, for what you are doing with your presence the second time. Your support of myself and cast at our second performance has given great inspiration to go on and do a great thing. I have a great source of pleasure to me to have found in your midst such wonderful talent in your young men and women. The work in training them for the piano was a great help, me instead of tiring me, and I am extremely grateful for their loyalty and support."—Mrs. Mary Ross Dorsey.
HIGH SCHOOL GIRL LED
OFF B7 FALSE PROMISES
"Dear Aunty:
"Please do not worry yourself
about me, because I'm all right.
My life, the one of me, is
unhappy. Forgive me, but I
cannot come home until my life is
better. I do not feel good at heart
when I have to depend on anyone
whatever I get, because it is
not right.
"You said some time ago that
my life was going to remain just
as it was, but I will show you that
you can do better. Tell my father
that I will be ashamed of me when
he sees me. Good-by. From
"JYV."
The above letter was written by
Miss Ivy Elliot, a 16-year-old
Eaglewood high school girl, who
appeared from her home at 6518 Champlain avenue, on the 23rd of December, when she was written to her aunt, Mrs. Meta Elliott, with whom the girl lived, on the morning of her 10th birthday, little more than two weeks ago.
appeared from 91st St. Champaign avenue, on the 23d of December. The missive was written to Mrs. Mota Elliott, with whom the girl lived, on the morning of disarrubition, a little more than two weeks ago. Diligent search of files and records of the port of her relatives revealed no else whatever Miss by Elliott as to her whereabouts. The Keystone Police Agency was finally recommended. January 6 the girl was located through the agency. She was living at 4333 Indian avenue at the 22nd Dearborn street. He is alleged to have entitled her to leave home with a promise of marriage. It is further alleged that he engineered a fake marriage ceremony. Lee was arrested Friday night by Sergey Doyle, Corcoran and Burns of the Third district, on a charge of contributing to the delinquency of a child.
He was found guilty Tuesday
morning by Judge S. H. Trade of the
Englewood court and finel $200 and
cost.
EQUAL RIGHTS LEAGUE HEAD
ADDRESSES GRACE LYCEUM
Attorney N. S. Taylor, president of the National Fight Rights League,介导 subject. "The Psychology and Pathology of the Human Mind." The large apprehended the scholarly member in which Attorney Taylor presented the Wolf Smith was unable to sing, but had Camille Jones, soprano, of New York, whose demeanor was greatly pleased with Mrs. Jones, who sang an Ava Maria in French soon to open a school of French here Walter Allen, lorraine, was enthusiastic of beauty and interplaced his songs with intelligence and scientific enunciation. Most representatives from tary ind. This program has caused much interest south of open is done at all Lyceum meetings. Miss Lewis will preside.
LODGES WELCOME HEAD
Amsonia. Cohn, Jan. 13-14 it has been announced by members of the those of the Amsonia that the supreme chancellor, S. W. Green, of New Orleans, Ia., will attend in the near future to adjust matters of relevance which has caused the lodge to be moved to the state in the state the supreme chancellor will visit other lodges of the state in interest of the order. Preparations are being a royal entertainment in home of him.
AT THE VINCENNES
PAGE 2
Dr. George C. Hall, 2835 Grand home
South and East has returned to the
South and East has returned to the
1. Meets all requirements of the State Banking Department.
2. Examined and accepted for membership in Chicago Clearing House Association.
3. Has adopted all modern devices for safety, security and convenience of depositors.
4. Denies no application for use of its funds which is consistent with good banking principles.
5. The only Bank in Illinois exclusively owned and operated for and by our people.
THE BINGA STATE BANK
JESSE BINGA, President C. N. LANGSTON, Cashier
Hundreds of Dollars' Worth of the Genuine Red Eagle Nerve Tonic Tablets
THE FIRST BOSE WILL PROVE
Every hard working man or woman can own their own homes. It is within the reach of all. Never before has anything like it been offered to you.
SALESMEN WANTED To enable us to explain our plan to members of the Race, we will require several men capable of following our instructions. No experience needed. We will teach you. An opportunity to make big money from the start. Call any day after 9:30 m.
Sunday morning, Jan. 15. Dr. W. D. Cooke, chief in chirurgical medicine, the morning sermon. Special music by the Metropolitan Community Church, under the leadership of Prof. J. Jones, a musician and orchestrator the director of the church, Eminenton Brown, one of the greatest church rectors in the country, who has been abroad and played in England, King George of England and who gives Metropolitan Community Conference the gospel church, one of the greatest orchestras
Is Armed with Gun
John Driscoll, 1849 Langley acree
Stork and Smith of the date dee-
partment at 47th street and St. law-
rence. He was first $16,000. He
was first $16,000 and coste
sentenced to three months in the hour-
season by Judice John K. Prindil-
ville.
Some Reasons Why:
SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1922
ELEGT WESTBROOK HEAD
OF BAR ASSOCIATION
The annual election of the Cook
County Bar Association, at which
offers for the forthcoming year were
elected, was held at the Appomattox
Club.
VINCENNES HOTEL
36th St. and Vincennes Ave.
FOLLOW THE CROWD
Dr. Dubois
Col. Rousse Simmons
Col. Young
Former Aest. U. S. Atty.
General Wm. Lewis
Dr. Benthoush
Dr. Emmet J. Scott
Burt W. Lams
and others pop at
"America's Finest" Hotel
when in Chicago, because it
is the only host of its kind
in this country.
Is Your Money!
T YOU?
```markdown
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CHICAGO SOCIETY
SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1922
An examination of the pulse of local community shows that it has not thoroughly thrashed and special activities incident to the holiday season. New Year's or Christmas dimers or parties, who visited us from his rural home, say in Kankakee, and those of us urbanites who shake our skirts of the season, still coming and going to our homes. A fall is to be expected before the usual spurt which comes as a sort of forewarning of the Lenten season. When the war is not to be so much the vogue now since the war, are secured in the plans now being formulated by those maturing out the late January and early February evenings.
Mrs. Newair A. Betts, 347, Calumet avenue, is contained at Jefferson Park hospital, where she underwent an appendix operation, Dovell and Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Ferguson, 3525 Dollin Avenue, spent Christmas day in the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Ferguson.
Mr. and Mrs. William R. Gerald,
a cast tourolk street, entertained with
dinner presented were Prof. W. L. Jackson,
Mrs. Bowls, J. W. Rolling, Mrs. Mar-
rion, Mrs. Grace, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs.
Thelton, Mrs. Grace, Mr. and Mrs.
Gunn and family.
Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Champion, 4836
dinner Sunday afternoon in honor of
Mrs. Guy Houston of Los Angeles.
Cal. Guests present were Mr. and
Mrs. Grace, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs.
Gravin and Harry Woods. An auto-
mobile party followed the dinner.
Mrs. H. Washington, teacher in
the high school, Mrs. C. was in the city last week, the guest of Mrs. J. M. Joyce, 50 East
of the leading educators of America
and was highly entertained white
hear. Fletcher entertained with a
stag after the New Year's midnight
performance at the Avenue theater.
Among those present were Samid
Edward Gillippe and Harry Scott.
S. N. Thompson, Kansas City, Kan.
a guest of Arthur A. Brown, 673
of Gillippe and Harry Scott.
Miss. Lola Gary, 3319 Vernon avenue, spent the New Year's holidays with her son and daughter, Wesley Wiston, 3319 Pittston, Wis. Fred Claudia, 3425 Camelnet avenue, spent the holidays in Kansas City and Pittsburgh, Kan., visiting relatives and friends. He returned to Kansas City, Sunday, resorting a wonderful trip. Dr. C. Lee Wilson and Leroy Haford, members of the Kappa Alpha University, returned to the city last Monday after a two weeks' visit in the East. While in the East they attended the Grand chapter meeting of the fraternity. Mrs. Cedda Hurgess, 6332 Rhodes avenue, who has been visiting Kentucky, has returned to the city, friends and Tillahua Hawkins, Wesley Wiston, who visited Lonnie Hawkins, left Saturday for Brownville, Tennessee, to attend the general of their father, George W. Hawkins. L. M. Covington, real estate broker, 353g East 353th street, has returned from a visit to Quincy, Hekoku, Iowa, and Hambled, Mo., where she visited relatives and
Mr. and Mrs. Jones, Toronto, Canada, and Mrs. Guy Houston, Los Angeles, CA, and Mrs. Ambrose Gordon, and筷on by Mrs. Ambrose Gordon. The house was decorated with terms and flowers. Mrs. Felix, nursing, Jan. 7 to Mr. and Mrs. Felix, bead, a baby boy weighing 162 pounds. Mother and son are doing neatly at their home. Hilda Jackson, Jackson, Versellson, Kv. is the guest of her niece, T. L. Jefferson, 304 Prairie avenue. Mrs. G. D. Hond and daughter, Mrs. G. D. Hond, are at the house of Mrs. and Mrs. J. W. Malone of Evans during the holidays. Vernon D. Hond, the son, is a student at the house of Mrs. and Mrs. J. W. Malone of Evans. Miss Virginia D. Gillmer, who has been the guest of Miss Ether Fulls, left Wednesday for a visit to the house of Miss William B. While Miss Gibmer was the recipient of many social affairs, George Moss has returned to the south visiting relatives and friends.
---
Little Walter Speedy, Jr. in the 6-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter, confined to his bed for several days suffering from an attack of chicken pox. He is testing fine and will soon be on again. Speedy, 2512 Indiana avenue, has just returned home after spending the holidays with his parents in Homestead, Teen. Mich. 2512 Indiana avenue, left for Detroit, Mich. Wednesday, Jan. 11, to spend several days with relatives and friends. Bertha Taylon, 128 East 33rd street, who has been confined to her bed for several days suffering with difficulty, will be get out again. Rev. and Mrs. J. T. Carroll, 346 33rd street, had Mrs. Patrice Massey of immah, as dinner Mrs. and Mrs. Joe Carter, 1348 West 41st street, were surprised with a shower Dec. 25 by the choir from Mrs. Estella Zimmerman, who has been home during the vacation, returned to Gary this week to resume work at the middle schools.
Mrs. Anna Eaton, 4255 Indiana avenue, entertained a number of friends at a progressive whistle party in honor of Mr. Joseph Sweeeng of New York.
The guests consisted of Mrs. Brooks, Mrs. Johnson, Mrs. Johnson, Mrs. Bradshaw, Mrs. Stalworth and Mrs. Morphis, Henry, 5401 Waltham avenue, have returned home after a three weeks visit in Port Hudson, Mich, with Mr. Hallda
Mr. and Mrs. J. Ervin, 5224 Dearborn street, gave their New Year's dinner in honor of Mr. and Mrs. J. Ervin, 5224 Dearborn street, Mr. and Mrs. J. Ervin, 5224 Dearborn street, Mr. and Mrs. J. I. Deltruth, 5267 East 343 place, had as their dinner guests New Year's day Dr. Ed W. McLean, 5267 East 343 place, Miss Olive Malone, who has been ill for many months, is improving and able to be about. Her address is 54 East 434 street, Conway, 4029 Vincennes avenue, has just returned after spending her vacation with Dr. and Mrs. A. L. Hawkins of Omama, Neb. Mrs. Conway was the recipient many social honors while in the city. Clyde Donaldson, an employee of the state at Springfield, ill. spent
Mrs. Benjamin T. Bibles was the recipient of many presents at her last week. Music and dancing furnished the program for the evening.
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Reeves were the host and hostess to a six-course luncheon Friday, Dec. 20. Covers were Mrs. Emma Williams; 25 West Liberty street, Springfield, O. spent a delightful two weeks in the city with Martin and Elizabeth Meece, 4235 Wabash avenue and 4650 Indian avenue, respectively.
Rebeannah 2118 Prairie avenue, gave party Jan. 7 in honor of Miss Cordia Payne of Cleveland, Ohio.
Mrs. Emma Baker, a bride of Sept. 16, gave a bridal show Thursday evening. The maids were: Miss Ward, Mrs. Stratton *Cheatham*. The matron of honour Mrs. Maudie Mitchell, the bridesmaids and dancing featured the evening.
of 70 years, she formerly lived in
where she was an artist. Mittenburg had many friends in Chicago, and prior to 1888, when she left for Calgary to nurse her loss in Lafayette, her home in Lafayette, her home in Pena n; a grandmother, 1, clarice; a great aunt, a baughman, a clarice; and a host, a son, son Alexander Thornton, died in the please copy.
PETER S.
PHALANX CLUB INSTALLS
NEW YEAR OFFICIALS
With Franklin S. Stevens officiating, the newly elected officers of the Philadelphia Club were installed the postmaster, and many activities of the organization during the present year are: A. M. Duerer, president; I. H. Burst, first president; Ralph McCarthy, financial secretary; Ralph McCarthy, recording secretary; and Z. T. Ross, treasurer. Connection with the installation ceremonies, which were held in the Soldiers' and Sailors' Community house at 3261 Wabash avenue, a museum, and program was reopened. Principal program was made that of the Honorable Arthur U. Lueder, Chicago's postmaster. He was introduced by John B. Jenkins.
Barton Breakfast Party.
Mrs. Frank Barton, $334 Calumet Inn, Philadelphia. Program was followed breakfast. At 31 the clock guests: Miss Jesse Love, Mrs. Hattie Hall, Mrs. A. Bradish, Mrs. Wiltie Hall, Mrs. A. Bradish, Mrs. Wiltie Hall, After breakfast they attended a matinee party at the Grand theater.
Real Giggles will tell you Gummies on Side Community Service. Eighth Side Community Service. Jan. 15—Advertisement.
Charm,Asset in Girls' New "Y" Buildings
Thirty-seven girls can be accommodated in the building. The rooms vary in price according to location, and the prices range from $2 on the fourth floor, Transients are charged 4,150 a night. All of the rooms have been filled by students, or by girls employed in the city. There is opportunity for students to obtain that privilege dear to the hearts of all girls—and there are also sets of tubs and a space on the roof for laundry purposes. The building is steam heated and the floors are covered with a layer that lasts the number of persons coming to the building was 7,500.
CHICAGO PRAISES HIGH FOR EVERYWOMAN CAST
The Avenue theater on New Year's night at its midnight performance, which was none other than the popular drama "Everywoman," was the scene of much gregory and excitement over the repetition by popular demand of the play, and hundreds packed the doors of the theater, doors were opened for the second performance. The boxes were repellent with the society grateful for the success, and the curtain went up at 12 o'clock the house was packed to capacity. It was indeed a beautiful compliment to Mrs. Mary Murray, the drama, as well as to the entire cast that many hundreds who saw the drama, as well as to the entire look again at midnight to witness the performance and remained until drawn up to the echo Mrs. Dorsay, who does not permit mentioning of all the characters who were excellent, but the loyalty of the entire cast was a thing long to be remembered by the characters.
Those deserving honorable mention are as follows: Merrill Curtis, who played the role of "Nobody," made a concerted effort to share and shared honors with Mrs. Dorssey, Miss Vivian Mason, who played so beautifully the role of "Truth," and returned for her third and final Christmas visit Baltimore, for the sole purpose of taking her part in the play that could not be easily filled. Miss Dorethay Brooke, who played "Truth," proclaimed all pur seure. Miss Melowall and Miss Glady Allen were also very fine as "Modesty," and Beauty, Miss Marilian Harrison, and Beauty, Miss Marilian Harrison, critical audience, was at her best and her able aide support in more ways than one on the stage. Misses borely Shewcraft, Lilian Speed, and Speed received much applause for their graceful dancing. Miss Roberta Crawford, who sang the role of "Conscience" completely captivated the audience.
The chorns was the most spectacular ever seen in Chicago. Richard Browning, who played the role of "Passion," the Protter, who played the role of "Passion," was the real lover as ardent as before. Leonard Speed, as William Wilson, and Leonard Speed, played and was extremely good. Cherley A. Wilson and this Rent, who played the roles of "Buff" and "Stuff," kept the thunder in a rear. William Hill, who played the role of "Buff," was as good as before, playing so ardently that it was almost like real. Miss Patineau Mebowell of Chicago, who played the most gracefully in the third set.
Madame Jones Entertains
at Fleur de Lis Reception
At the annual reception of the Fleur de Lis Residence of Mrs. D. E. M. Smith on Monday, a program was rendered; the guests were with delighted the guests was Mrs. C. G. Jones. Jones she sang two delightful French sales. Mine. Jones pleased she sang to sing noun at the Ursary Club the following Thursday. Mine. Jones rendered the familiar encore sang the encore sang the encore sang "Mignon." Those present not familiar with the French openings and enjoyed Mine. Jones's openings and enjoyed Mine. Jones's openings and enjoyed the soffitions.
AT THE WATERS' HOME
AT THE WATERS' HOME
attained at their house in honor of
Mrs. and Mrs. Gearn D. Jones on last
Wednesday night. Cards were played
all guests left at a very late hour.
Mine Jones rendered several French
selections during the evening to the
delight of the guests.
W. WALKER TO GIVE PARTY
Groenville, Miss. Jan. 13.—W. Walker, 503 Gibbs street, will enter
Mine Jones' sixteenth band from Memphis. Admission $1. Advertisement.
Mrs. Cummins Visits Memphis
Museum, Memphis. Mrs. B. Reynolds, 503 Mulberry street, had
her guests for the holidays Mrs. L. W. Cummins, who spent several
hours with Mrs. L. Leslie Cummins, teacher of Sinnifer High School, St. Louis, Mo.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Talks on Racial Encouragement BY WM. HENRY HARRISON, JR.
CRUSHING ONE'S OWN TALENT
When we find one on our practical work,
we can use it to help others.
It for some sad fad we have no taste.
And thus our talents throw to waste.
Some years ago while visiting a Southern city, the writer was greatly impressed and touched by the discouraged and medically talks and interviews of whose acquaintance had just been formed. This young man, after graduating from one of the leading tattoo firms three years before to follow his profession. In talking about his work he considered to me that he had made very little success and could not uncover the reasons for the losses of the those had since come to town and width two years time had built up a larger practice than they could have been able to build enough practice to keep him more than half busy. He worried day and night trying to find the cause of his failure and thus he had him and he would have had bad luck as long as he stalked them. He, therefore, was making arrangements to locate in a strange city in another state to work.
A few days later I went with him to size up the new city he had selected as his future home and place in the city. He walked the streets for a few hours and then sauntered out into the suburbs. After going a little distance the clear ringing sounds of a black hammers and loudly squirrelly noises to our cars. Up until that time the young doctor had been talking in a down-hearted and discouraged manner about his unsuccessful medical career. Then as the hammers ringed to an end the bell-lights of that until were heard by him a most startling change overheared his attitude. He stopped short in his walk and talk to listen. Then as the hammers sounded to us once more he straightened up to his giant height of six feet two inches as a new spark of interest and enthusiasm glowed in his eyes. He remembered overheard his face. Turning to me with an earnest I had never before heard in his voice, he said, "Let's go over there a minute. I used to enter the building we found it of modernly equipped construction
Churches
Michigan Ave. A, M. E. Zion Church
W. Rivers. E, 12 post. The pastor is busy proposing for our great spring
The church is being divided into sections, with a captain in charge of each section.
The church is being divided into 40 sections by 50 for the fourth Sunday in February.
The Sunday School Union meets on the second Sunday in February.
All Sunday school workers are requested to avail themselves of the opportunity to attend these meetings.
Carter's Tempel C. M. E. Church, 64 and Champlain Hall A. A. pastor-st Sunday, Jan. 8. Bishop R. A. Carter presided at 11 a.m. and pastor-evening. Each service was well attended. The Ewynorth League and Sunday School still maintains their
Zion Hill Baptist Church, $14.24 Newborn street, Rev. A. M. Martin, pastor—Sunday. The Zion Hill church, which is only two years old, paid $2,400 last night to install a significant building, where they are now permanently located. This church is so called. Revival will begin at this church next Sunday night, Rev. B. J. Perkins, D. D. of Memphis, Teen, will conduct the meeting. Public invitation.
St. John's Baptist Church, Rev. P. A. Moore were attended, two twenty-five people were added to the membership, showed $1,180 raised January to October, 1921. Announcement was also made by Dr. M. O'Bourn of sourcing Proof choirmaster Henry as organist and choirmaster.
Bettel, A. M. E. Church, Dearborn and 20th streets—Savation alone will solve the problems of the world, says Dr. M. O'Bourn. Our music will inspire. Welcome to Bethel. Woman's day at: 2 p. m. Sunday, four hours. Quarterly meeting first Sunday in February, Rev. I. G. Owens, four hours. addressed the members and friends of the church Sunday evening.
THEL GAVIN
Encouragement
HARRISON, JR.
which was owned and run by a man of our Race and his two assistants, all three of them as busy as they were waiting for the upper hearing of a wagon stepper, the owner of the shop stepped over to introduce himself. He and the doctor were delightfully surprised to recognize each other as students waiting for the upper hearing of a wagon stepper, the owner of the shop stepped over to introduce himself. During their exchange of greetings and general conversation, they attended a certain industrial institution and graduated at the same time as blacksmiths. During their exchange of greetings and general conversation, they studied medicine and while in the trade school my companion had shown exceptional talents and abilities as an all-round tradesman and student of the trade school, a south and cabinetmaking departments, where he far excelled any student the school had ever turned out as an artistic iron worker and
After being repeatedly jested by the proprietor of the shop as to how much ability and skill he still remains, he the doctor finally pulled off his coat and collar, rolled up his sleeves and shipped on a leather apron. Stepping at once became hasty humming out and fitting on a set of shoes to a frisky mule just brought in by a quickness and quickness and dexterity that the other blacksmiths looked on in amazement, especially as that mule had carried for years the head of the heed sniffily in that shop to handle or put shoes on her feet. But the physician's 200 pounds of solid flesh and two-inch vice grip of his unequally big and powerful hands, guided by his full knowledge and natural fearlessness, gave the vice grip of his dooing with apparent case. While working over the anvil he was constantly laughing and joking with his colleagues, and doing discontent. Some heavy burden seemed to have suddenly and completely fallen from his shoulders, as he pleased and pleasure—happiness in doing the work he lived and knew best, and the work which God had meant for him to follow by endowing him such unusual talents along that line.
(Continued next week)
The S. S. and E. Club had their Nixes of Mrs. C. Guy. The president was given a beautiful hand-embellished meeting will be Friday, Jan. 12, at Mrs. T. Truss's residence, 646 I. Perching C. Guy, secretary. Club will be Monday night, Jan. 9, with Mrs. I. J. Williams. Next meeting at the home of Mrs. E. Adams, president, Mrs. E. L. Augus, secretary. Lodge of Theophany, 3201 Wabash avenue, will meet Sunday, Jan. 10, at the Vine decorated and there was a special room for dancing, which lasted until the wee officers will take place Saturday, Jan. 11, at 2:30 street. James Harris, president, oroby boyd, secretary. The next meeting will be further 121 I. 1st street, Jan. 20, at Mrs. J. Jackson, secretary. Mrs. I. J. Jackson
The Zebra Social Club met with Miss
Zebra and Miss Jordans, 3406
instructor, meeting was held. The next
meeting will be at Miss Jordans', 3406
instructor; Miss M. Wesson, secretary;
The Young Matrons' Culture Club met
the Young Matrons' Culture Hall, 541
St. Lawrence Avenue.
ROBERTS AT OLIVET
The Hon. Adelbert H. Roberts, representative in the Illinois genesis association, will attend at 3 o'clock in the Olivey Baptist church, 11st street; and Santa Jack street. He will attend Standard Literacy Society. There will be short talks and musical selections by others.
Girl Prefers Charges
William Bogus, 57, 346 State street.
Jackson and charged with rape on complaint of Miss Ruth Gillispie, 346 State street.
Hair Grown in Three Months
Joseph Green Dies; Masons Hold Funeral
Joseph H. Greene, one of Chicago's best business men and undertraders, died Thursday morning at 9 o'clock in the afternoon. He was 83. Wabash avenue, where he lived with his mother, Mrs. Louise Greene, with his distinct shock to his family and many friends, for it was rather probable following an illness of only three days.
JOHN H. HARRIS
Mr. Greene took to
his bed Mon-
tay with his
diabetes.
His funeral, a
Joseph Greene Masonic one, was held Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock in church, 35th and Deerhurst streets, low, Blackwell, the pastor, officiating. The remains were in charge of the undertakers. Associated headed by Gowan & Morseil, 3515 Indiana avenue. Following the funeral of Mr. Greene, the pastor state at his former place of business, 3522 Stuart street, from 5 o'clock Sunday afternoon to midnight. Then it was reopened in place Monday at Lincoln cemetery. The deceased, at the time of his death, was 35 years old. He was a teacher in the public school. He came to Normal, 11, in 1882, where he received his education in the public school. He came to Chicago for two years, but gave it up to study embalming. Following a brief career in the tailoring business, Mr. Greene became associated with brother, W. Greene, the undertaker, at 3522 Stuart street. He was his brother's embalmer until the late 1930s, three years ago. Then he took full time in business and continued until his death.
Mr. Greene was prominent in all of the large organizations, and besides his circle of friends, he is survived by his mother, Mrs. Louise Greene, a nephew, Andrew Smith, and a sister, Andrew Smith, who resides at 359 Wabash avenue.
WOMEN ORGANIZE WITHIN
NATIONAL COUNCIL BANKS
The executive committee of the National Council of the United States requires regular meeting this semester to plan and drive to interest the public in the resurrection of the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments to the United States constitution, and for a grand charity ball will be laid.
The drive in the interest of the national council, each scope, each state being represented by a lawyer of known ability, all of whom will work under a plan of procedure now being worked out by the national committee of social adjustment.
Tuesday the women's department of the national council organizes work in harpery on the national executive committee. Its main work will be to organize the women of the national council to lobby for theitable purpose of the council and to develop its social service department.
Twelve women form the official head of the department. Mrs. Lillian Fane Williams, secretary. Mrs. Camille Williams, secretary.
Chicago headquarters of the national council are at 1202 Indiana avenue, suite 4.
MRS. JENNIE E. LEWIS
IS NATIONAL EMPRESS
Twelve evening at the People's Movement Club new officers of the United Brothers of Friendship and Sister of Mysterious Ten were installed.
The national grand master, H. W. Jamison, made the address placing in the center of the building the names of the mule E. Lowis. Speeches to the other lady officers were made by Mrs. Katie L. Gosby and to the male officers by Mrs. Robert R. Jackson in addition to the installation exercises a program was given. Major Robert R. Jackson served as master of ceremonies.
TEXANS HAVE THEIR WAY
San Antonio, Tex., Jan. 13—George McKinley Grace, 22, alleged to have been the victim of a woman in 1829, was hanged in the Bexar county jail. Repeated efforts had been made to free Grace, due to persistent rumors that he was in the Bexar county jail at the last moment Governor Neff refused to intervene. One of the most prominent persons working in behalf of the Bexar county judge, George Branicke, sister of the late George W. Branicke, financier.
Valuable prizes will be given at the Community Service benefit Eighth Regiment Monday night, Jan 16. Be there: Advertisement.
GLOSS-O—A MARVELOUS DISCOVERY THAT GROWS HAIR IN THREE MONTHS
Gloss-O will positively women the growth of the hair in three months. provided it is used according to directions. It has no scent, does not dull, falls, itching scalp, eye, must succumb and have been combed. As a hair dressing, Gloss-O is undoubtedly unexcelled. It makes the hair soft and shiny. It has no scent. If it has no scent, Gloss-O a three months' trial; it will surprise and delight on receipt of P. G. Money Order (personal checks not accepted), any of the checks addressed to others for payment.
Retail Price List
Gloss- $60; cottage; 8c extra
Eyebrow and lash (Postage, 6c extra).
(Postage, 2c extra).
Tetter Cure, $1.00; postage; 8c extra.
Straightening Comb. $3.58.
Straightening Comb. $3.58.
MME, LOLA E. GRAYSON
3424 South Park Ave. Chicago, Ill.
PROMINENT CHICAGOANS
ENTERTAINED IN MOBILE
Mobile, Ala., Jan. 13—Mrs. Alva L. Bates and W. T. Jefferson of Chicago, Mrs. H. J. Abrams of Philadelphia and Mrs. F. Hawkins Allston of Washington were among those from other points who joined Mobil's activities incident to the holiday season. Many delightful social affairs were given in their honor. These included parties, parties, motor parties and dinners. Some of Mobil's most charming homes, notably those of Mrs. R. K. Bates, were graced by the presence of society in gay parties. The Hotel Marietta was the center of several scintillating gatherings. One of the feature events of the winter social season was the motor trip given by Mrs. J. H. Allen to a summer home in Coden for a house party. Mrs. Allen, a delightful hostess, provided varied forms of entertaining, bordering her country home, added to the beauty of the landscape. On a hiking party the guests observed the scenery in Northern places, in beds. Many were taken away as souvenirs.
APPOMATTOX CLUB INVITES
LADIES TO BILLIARD MEET
APPOMATTOX CLUB INVITES
LADIES TO BILLIARD MEET
At the last session of the whistle tournament Frank Gray and Rueben Brimm were high with a score of 81. Clark Crawford and Edward are leading with a score of 145. The next game will be played Friday, Jan. 20. The tournament is being treated to a good deal of attention. Caldwell Watkins, Frank Nolls, D. A McGowan and Dr. E. J. Bickes are leading the night. A bidders' night is planned for Jan. 19, when the billardists will entertain their lady friends with exhibitions of their skills. Sunday afternoon musicians will be continued under the supervision of J. Gray Luces, chairman of the music committee. In connection with the tournament, Dr. A. Wilmerford Williams will be present and relate some of the work of the Pan-African Conference, to which he was a delegate.
New members recently added to the
new board of the C.J. Teher Euler J. Meyer Thomas
H. Motis, Benjamin Hoxter and
Charles C. Breckkindle of Evanson.
The board is also interested in
later at the club innside L. D. S
Shleton of Detroit, E. H. Green of
Cleveland and George Breck of In-
nermolls, father of the搜, Lee
Brooks.
COMMUNITY CENTER TO
The Metropolitan Community Center choir, 203 voices, under the direction of Dr. John B. Elkham, an artistic director of the Metropolitan Community's "Elkham" an artistic director of the musical world time in the history of the musical world, will be given a performance of this kind. Some of America's best artists have been seen by William D. Cook, the pastor, and board of directors have directed Prof. Jones's greatest production in the country. Arrangements will be held of the Auditorium for this mammoth musical event. Miss Elkham will be assisted by Melvin Charlton of New York and Walter E. Cossette of Chicago and as do other choreographers of note.
1
PAGE FIVE
e a Otherwise
Princess Mysteria
For you does not force her to remain from the conditions you describe, then I can not do them, in my mind, strong enough to change her. Where I your place, it voluntarily, and if she would not then I would let her have her freedom and living in preference to my love and protection.
**Princess Mysteria:** What can I do to get rid of a birthmark on my face? Best, consult a dermatologist. It is suicide in most cases to transfer with a dermatologist. Discoveries. You may be helped.
**Madam Mysteria:** My sweetheart has gone away from me and I have not heard from him, yet. I yet be always thinking about him. He has gone for good. I have been gone three months.—Loncose. Chu-tien.
**Promises are like pie crusts—easily broken:** I think he has gone for good. It looks as if he had when three months ago. You are in a big city and admit you are lonely, keep your eyes open. They are in the sea and he has never been caught.
MUSIC & POETRY
MUSIC IN AMERICA
is swolling to unlocked for proportions. In support of the adults are developing into supermusicians locked by the mental freedom of the New World. With precedence and examples for our conception, we can ill afford to be apathetic.
MUSIC AND POETRY
portraits through composition,
literature and poetry, the
music who are matching the
onward stride of musical civil
ism in your home, in your
capability to recognize,
assistive and support the
best in musical art.
30 per copy by mail or e-mail 30 per copy
from your local dealer. If they do
not keep it, it will name and address
and we will have them supply you.
$2.50 PER YEAR
Address Music and Poetry
4405 Prairie Ave. Chicago, IL.
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A
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“Smarter Set” Closes Fine
Engagement; Good Shows
at Avenue and Monogram
fe night euge gement=, “Phe Spiaries
Sor Oa, ail aways lind a warm wel.
Seane ft The Grated ty” tee pittgans oy
Tat jouer theaies.
THE AVENUE,
Phe stud splaraied Wit fe getting
tent oH hee at eve PS. qwegaenanece
Foliter ae teers ent Wright les
fre he featited acts the iat hal
SP oe tet Week, Te fermen teats
latte go Reet -treakine Jump, aah Ut
Sy trem Ruston, Musa. fer. tir
motes, Tete tine bent et twhyete the
users charieter artist. Piddier. hee
beer lett see, Ale hate 2c eatnttnns ah
thw ayers hd iY MiSs Peres, whe
ix a Sweet stnzer and an sean
feted tausicutt, Wrirhe & Teve ire
He nett "crae of staging, eoking ne
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Uisle seatsen asd. Urls elterings wae
Lisist apmestated, Miurrie a folle.
teept sratte Hae Bat, cretion ap splot
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beraeei ween, It is a einai, talk
fag Gnd shanem pan shat has mute
aie nate for feel. Full ef pep.
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Sn wih de Hatal to wake @ tulse in
iicksarude catupuny 1 the tear ft
fire, Huelvt Prser & Ca. whl oper
here ty sores af one-iet- playlets
fepiening nest wees
THE MONOGRAM
Davie Harris is a eumnedy sink
fac tallme And dancing turn. are
here us Ween ned ROME ver nieEtS-
Others os the bi ave tong & Jack-
son, Tae Winn whe really knew how
Hoeunteriacn, bea spends coatedys af
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dies feahy'tdts at Stew Brae poexentad sty
TH ex -mhave: the avectise Work, tht
Walia & Wetams, The acute mem
Wor of this team, both uf whom work
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the mew seine: he hus heen rick=
tataed “The fied" huvtny eamed 5
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Gea (he sane Whin peril aa s
Shiels te dnteedues Bis alsiitye Fe
Haeleser regia sind the a0 is a2 rest
shealeet ome. Nu changes OMUl after
she tak show wn standay wieht.
BITS FROM BROADWAY
aokat te Riek them, won't pay sae
wr mia tents ater they sw klewed,
Se Catecdl tant me esha Been tn
tie shaw Wnisiness for 39 Sears Ae
ho Bicw hfs bateiness.
wall, Tons, there i show phasis
Lee iat fie Eltinge Uewter eae
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ay The watherithes Mier been try
ing to star the show, bet i ons
frosted baciuenss, Thode Date teen 2
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Veehig', atid. verve savers tee be
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fe ihn eco, "tiered se rng,
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konekithy thei oi ahvie wats, They
iaee Fiaaea hat Wvelk, hh do
tu, Welle te, Miller we Lise, Sie
tla Nhs, ottie, Gee, “Florence
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Along! ire the Unik of Teoadwess
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Weil, We tey gaa 8) they will wet sorte
‘stat. eerie foe fe ANEop ke Ure
vue br steat ail of eur best artists
Pa reahieers,
Tee hae stoten Georzy M. Cohn
roam Hie. wie oF Ue Ie Ue pee
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ihe: helinee qusisecton ie a tine, falls
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pes DAYS ONLY!
LULU COATES
: . AND HER =
| CRACKERJACKS
| EGS SP AD
MONDAY TO SATURDAY
— Semuavy 16-17-18-19-26-21
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Hise entine cagecrs atttumadt ah
Bea. eeyazazatiely stadt, That
Be strenethened the eels ses
feo ay Tae bed inte the utehiition at
Amey Maviss ame: OF the Beet sensi
wee Te tees mikes “apparent
The Wet tha: Tee Leone sett umes
footexeionniiy, In the avikesuy at
Face ghey pollute s dread hey ave te
PO Gammeraeg! for this eondicbon,
Poke Lot er the upreew-rmindad
SscmuMeal Monee they aestn te. te
Poo a thar sae the testibe thes
ley ge abuew (ie publi the a tallties-
Cand jar wien iaitrad expenditure
coe tudes sae in jivtive tw alt hn
‘ete nerehy stated thay ft there i
fo dae ie URbe sagerecuntte
Chie Ren Hat hile, fe feud that
Genie Amasky, The esate seus,
Sooheger it advades, thas armnged a
mest ead of houking i wlich then:
: feueee! stat dneludbed, ‘Phite
show anal lor ae tony cond ton
so Uae sees dn neatly. tone such at
yt Riction tw de sitive So hvelt “on
weil, FPL Marist Tony. ‘The
Ryatl ara! dea" shaw are elumeny
Why th vetse white writers cannes
Wee nisi! vonedies gar Colued,
SUSIE UY Ge. buy Gen Write: ews
TAP White jatiats, hat iC as amapecrttale
By them te write for Colorwd artista,
She Giewte ot de vata mudd det
sone tics Hud Fishes amd Richart
FM priedt, and Chrvolf wonld met i
Spt uta MamRestiegs Maan ine about
QeCStIN nog he wate airaid that
Tacit get a Lith a tae credit. ur
Pde sae Relist. iene East
set the Wamters. etd atae wiets
ec ométaiew Mania se fog tie ata, am
Weeki ag hont ns Cowen dere
posite forte ad tes airy shows ter
Woes Baty op nanied as
Bo uae tos Tt peat the
Wave thee Ha gut” het 1 was
wen ekuer Nace. “Sacral
anh ele fired ign’ ave Tall aways
Fora soat tens anything fn
be SU adat fan Bee Gp Career
Hes i rhe tea net amt abewe tour
eis sane, Whe pare tiaty tot
Stl Tasty eae,” Co ailelaen niet
b Weotine Eve tate cyceklty
Miebe sone (tid the Gamble mutas
i cet ries Bloc ee Maud at xenad
eet oad wat sated hen buf
een soak wets tee Ket Wet tts
Boyle hate Seat Me Cemtates the
tineaiy ue oie Shute, de ae wemdertnd
Pecos Stak ad te teeitneny, f tever
Deno Baer ir my ie When
Mis hetain cot suet a eobl she
veda umes th Me shi: | “Fad,
poo ibe test shi ginliaadn, New. Yor
Ci) opens a iames” And, bee
Tren 2 pci twas have a warm
rea ena Lent at Mr, Conuly Tor
Bho Rivsiness te taye dt and. wire.
We came 1 Beveret any kick as to
cay tieattuent bye Mrs Caroll, Bet T
voted te ere the shaw ge over for
By iat, and Hf he donk jet allowed me
she Metis hin a Mise mere and ae
fewest co few ef my eugcestlons it
‘enuid Lave beus letter Tor everyens
roneersed, Poult bia that there
Sos enoneienapty munabery bin tie
aonend wet, Wut he ide’ Ter me gat
Br ary tueres Bint, rea see, some peu
We, 2 yen M there there is a mule
WANTED!
—FoR—
Ruscoe & Hockwald’s
GEORGIA
MINSTRELS
Trombone, Baritone,
Cornet ind Clarinet
wine
@&RTHUR HOCKWALD,
Dallas, Tex., Jan, 12; _Ozninon,
Tex. Jan. te: McAlester, Omen
San: Mustogees Okla. Jane 1
Permanont Address
ARTHUR HOCKIWALD,
IW. Tan St. Kansas City, tie.
‘The inner side of every cloud
is bright and shining:
1 therefore turn my clouds about
An always wear them imside aut—
ee shee the talon,
en a nee ael Se yey are r meet ere een on ee natennnennNerenraey
Frese SD FB Ss ee YT ae .
a o fe Ya a A ed Nw Ay
e € >} Pasa EEE. 7 Direct from
nn? Wea” dn Yi SA A SS SS 8 the Loop
é -~ JACK JOHNSON
Greatest Saige VERSUS
Fighter Bee 3
< |) JAMES J. JEFFRIES
Al Seiten aee a °
Be ecaree E WORLD'S CHAMPIONSHIP CONTEST ,
ees) OFFICIAL FIGHT PICTURES
War ease od
[)) 9 15 SENSATIONAL ROUNDS
Enno eee ce
ee oe an
6 ar ALL FIGHT!
Gogo GES: Im .
re TRF Le on SHOWS ALL DETAILS UP TO AND INCLUDING
Ge ORO He BR “TAT CKO UT
ee 4 THE KNO UT!
Sabo eae z se eee Nee
eee SES | fog gan eee OCCURRING IN THE FIFTEENTH ROUND
SEI Ree RATERS SS ca Re ee Ge eer
oe a
Se ee a NOTICE! |
SRE ean ay aye
ee SO ay ee eed BY A NEW PROCESS OF ENILARGEMENT, THE
ners pe fi GB RA Abe S@ FIRST TIME USED IN MOTION PICTURE: PHO-
Sa oe See har cigs Sats UO Sey «= TOGRAPHY. THE ACTION [S BROUGHT UP FAR
saieecae Sie ee i Se Coe ‘CLOSER THAN EVER BEFORE IN ANY FIGHT
es RENE, Ciaeg sees eeecsy © FILM. ENABLES YOU TO SEE EVERY. MOVE MADE
een BY SU aries Ce AND EVERY BLOW STRUCK FOR THE ENTIRE
Raa PS a ADEN aCe es Eyed”
es eee 15 FULL ROUNDS 15
| JACK JOHNSGN rs
>= 4
SENSATIONAL and THRILLING
| EVERY SZAT IN THE THEATER A RINGSIDE SEAT—CLOSE-UP VIEWS OF
| EVERY MOVEMENT ENABLING A FERFECT SHOWING OF THE ENTIRE
HEAVYWEIGHT BATTLE for the WORLD'S CHAMPIONSHIP
eee
, 25 SENTS—ALL SEATS BOTH THEATERS 25 CENTS—ALL SEATS
OOO ES
Days fabas. Fai, “sar Jan. 23-24-25-26-27-28 | 4 Days rast: Jan. 25-26-27-28
p= 2P. Bi, TO BIDNICHT 5 | 2 P.M. TO MIDNIGHT .
be, ET ot = Paces rm 2 yp
S zER | Ow ATER
STATES THEATER | L THEATER
Famous Star Will Be Seen
at States Theater
on Saturday
i Neat Hart, the popular star, wilt be
Haver at the States Uhestter. wy Mitts
flay Ot thee resent. werk, tie reat
Muee of “de Canadian Northwest
Ssratueled Prats” dektig Uhe witete ot
the tenture,
What ruinanes, what (rucedy and
stirring events ave attached to “the
[tee te tenga sfnneste= We
2Ue ullleor gevolvone a conunission tee
cis Chie, Ins ee satin in fe bs 00 "set
Ris meas and Tike: a Bontiwinnd on
ths: avert be avill follow eaet elite at
Tit thought 1 leads to the end oF ths
world,
ote STanptet Tratts? Neat Hare as
dock Ronien, whom evihbwrs lel
hamed “Phe Ther." rewive instr te
Mona to 1aike in Chi Laasen, thas
Murdock, i croubed mtg bennote:,
eho iad stead amuder tor his stl
‘Critics, taal gets wag. The leaves
Very tangled tril, whieh fick stu ts
out to solve Feading to tainy sera
Alonal episodes,
ota his ifort to evate arrest, Live.
Jon geome ever the Canali horder.
Lun teat dors ot prevent ek ravi
ollowln hitn. Disearding his wut.
Tun, Ae trails fanecon ty New Vor
Anta "the very Heart ot the dinanetst
distelet, and-on Ute wiwteentht oor
ean non Itai he wes is
Rian Lauweson fs desperute aie Agiit=
tor his Ife. A tance ceilings battle
Benween Gey” pare ttn men takes
place In whieh a palatal oitlee 1°
wreekedand Laws has Jck al
lest through window Okie looks
down upan the tratfle: Delos ech
ts not witllyg to drwy tram such.
Websht ast ens the tide fi his Favor.
As ocenyanta of he bitdig gather
Lawson slips sway and fe Ich in te
city's canyons, but “The Theor.” nw
arauaed, fe in puureuft, Thy tralls Law
son to an umlerworhd ‘retreat, “ane
catches ty with Rie man once Mor
iewt a series of thellling scenes take
Wace.
“Aided by bis henghmen Tawso%
once more gets away, “TMNKINg te
throw the human Mecdhound off hie
Aral, he sioubles on it, fund tverosss
the tender into the Northwest toa
laren retzeat, where We helleves
himself sate. But he abl not knew
Jack fenton and the mottu Tek
tersd by the amen of the Royal
Mounted—"Get your nein” Aid atter
many More adventures, the, Lingle
teu is straightened eit nat “Th
‘Viet hax Sia vend Wand “ands fan.
/ ATI:
| LULU COATES. & CO.
| Rast’ St Louis, ML, dan. (.—One
oof the strangest Bis Of tne seavon ds
plising the present halt at tie Er-
Awers theater, ‘The entire fiat of of
ferings ix of the highest prade and 1
Reaitised by the famows suet, Las
Coates & Crackeriucks, the myst sen
sational Girn seen here for a lens
Lime. There aire a number. of iow:
ekivs in the line-up, all of which are
Aving well,
————_—_—_
ADDITIONAL NOTES
Catuintus Jackson arises to remark
yhat mall will reach Wim If ladavess
je Vents theater, Meniphis, Tem.
(A Rie Yetterareivel than Unde 1
Allen. wher tells the wera that nual wPl
Fre Per ut ay Carroll avenue, St
Paui, Minn.
ptm ites uf the Linwln Payers
wie dave run Gh Woeine ih Ramee
CUY, SA head a show over thie tse:
inthe near iutire.
ce lnsier © trehain are piwine the
weet atthe Star theater, ‘Shrewenars.
Tig aut favvitis marked stiecres,
illte'dohinwon and hep Comacen (ay
ers are at the Florida ‘Theater, Wash
ington PC.
SOW eon 6 Witeen, Wit entice
alles, ate atwihing tite Week betwen
Hewkiad, (i. sab Mlaiteon, Wis. Send
rotate:
AX Totter sent in be limare Marshall
“ef The tra ot Mowe @ Fivkis, Tonecriy
Marshals Covert, atte a wort of Ene
information tog Free nan The set
te laying the present week at the fees
prt Theater ittotaarss hat “amd “Is
Vink GHICAGO DEFENDER
Have you heard
ON ( ) ee R, d No. ?
WAIVER INSCOMCG 8025 6
THE RECORD OF QUALITY
rs the newest blues from down home in Texas. Yes sir, it’s
a corker and so are these other best sellers of the month.
STINGAREE BLUES—Cather Bizeou, 8024 CURANITA (Fox Trot)~Mamie
goas { Senate nithOvcenans Om atte | CURLS dee Hesnds
Win.4 IF THAT'S WHAT YO! vs . LAL ANC ‘ox Trot
852 | HERE IT 1S—tuher Bigeou, Con~ 85 | RAMBLING, BLUES (Fox, Trot)—
Uitorwtth Orchestees
AROLDS! D Fox! ‘Pi
fst f DSERORPRRRISEA RSet ates \ pe A ella
go) BAND: Ney Fox T: Sc) CAROLINA SHOUT (Pian:
Se | Ne Receteteckec ere, © 6 | CARQEINE Bacue (Pine Sole)
MAMIE SMITH, the queen of jazz, sings exclusively for OKeh Records.
Have you heard her latest records? Ask your dealer to play them.
GENERAL PHONOGRAPH CORPORATION — 25 West 45th Street, New York City
Johnson-Jeffries
Fight Film
Coming to. States and Owl
deren Hea
An exciting, turbulent battle is
fonght on the Suir sereen” An eb-
Lony man aol his. white smtagontst
jckese san wrestle fn thelr squared
[aeeina sid! 40,000 reapte Took a
| her e
the duhnsan-Jefiries tray, hietd 0
many years ugo, flashes with uneanny
realiwin from the Madison street the-
Ater prejertion feoni” The. teten
rounds Hat tele i bE puygiliee
Hert champlon are tnrectone St
[yr stiie the camer follows the tw
‘gkutiators, eatehing the fue tech
Biqes of blows wiven and raced ves
Fecording impartially hard welts sn
[tists fats.
| the lnwestung body of le flriea, tir-
Hing white most of the ght was yet
fer coniny dttal the plaellite sturdiawns
ut slelinsen enduring te Ue lt, are
AMsures Wo KUL of interest ter bo hee
Jret by Spartstnen. pete ght 1
A pet taht, cand where dhe tletor
“Ig at Denayniey nt today’ or ohnen
of Sentetny. the Unwate tat here to
Megory is a seit not to ens,
‘Tine imation yleturs, makes gev~
ert years thm, uf THs great xerap
fi cleansestt record, There i never
jc iMieker when the eanera, ta not
ives einplogind $0. the beet sudvantare
the otering on view atthe Star is
a thswd doeuent of 2 shurte wvent
Of peal nterest.--Cldeaso Tally Juure
at Tauralay. Dee. 8. Us2t.
eek
TIM, WHERE YEH?
AN greut inany inguleio hive ar-
“rived af late asking a 10 ths wheres
Bbnute of Thi & Cerite, Sere, Whe
Soci tee hase disagaweweeal tte the
ain Where sire vat, "Thi Tell a
Sania nei ieiaena ice
“THE GRIM
COMERAN”
“The Grim Comedian.” the now
Goblwgn pieture to be shewe at the
Vendome theater, for the we days,
‘Thostlay and Wednesday, Jan. 17 and
18, 4 the story of an aertexs-moth-
ers sueritive of a lite of luxury that
ler couvent-bred daughter inay not
Know of the.meuns by whiel she was
eauested. ‘Thy nether i 0 iainur
wetress Who kus won the cadeomn of at
Hrowdway ruunder, and tirowsh hie
tenvticenve has beet able te provide
well for her daughter.
fut when the yiel grow up and
wuts (9 Cone to ber morber, Ue it
ter cunnol go on with her former lite,
‘The man fm the cane, however, is not
te be alisposed of sitalls, awetaliy
xfter svelng the daughter. Then 2
contli*t Letwoen the mother's love for
her daughter and the rs: genuine
affection of the cuunder for-the.un-
Spndlet girl furaisten se Uhellting ett
ming f9 fue unusnel alory,
Htta Wein, the author of “The
Grin Comedian” hus written many
short stories and plays. ‘This fs hee
first story Weitten dircetly tor the
screen. She wae present, during the
Mining of Une peeture ana adviged
with the direetor and the producine
Staff Unrotighout the making of the
photoplay.” Miss Weiman'e stories
have been matty devoted to theatel-
cal lifer and her tirst orizinat photy-
flay deplets a phase of thar existence
Of which the general publle i fu-
nuillur only by heresay.
An excellent cart wilt be seen! in
“The Grim Comedian” Ameng. the
players tite Mhoche éhint, | Glorkt
Hlape, duck Hott att tok urron.
The picture was directed by Franks
tient.
a Drama, with Nest Hart
in the Title Role, Gomes to
‘Owl on Sunday
| crnern se few natn in the moving
plettire category of stars whieh are 25
[wownler as that of Neal art, whose
Hurting in red-blooded remanees ot
ihe! Went find. Northwest hos, gained
for hla the wilest sert or following.
fOn Sunday he wht be seou at the
Ow theater in a stirring romance OF
the. great Nocthwest. "Tangled
‘Tralis” Is the ttle of the fexture and
upper Canada is the scene In witch
the action fy plied. ‘That Hart tlie
Saif consifers this une ov his best pe~
tures I shown by: the following tetter
setter by hin some time age and
addressed to Uhe exhibitors: :
phe William Steiner Production:
nave planned some bis Uiings for ta,
and tt looks ax it Eada lot at
Streauous Wark ahead, bat Tat gottis
to TC sith a teeaee und at Wale, stud
Will haake every effort to give Sou ns
the public the sort or pleture thn:
SSH please every ante ar the rout.
Fact pietire will be mate tn virgin
territory, In Pangied ‘Trils” a0 ex-
pense hax hoon spared in getting
Proper locations, “We covered trom
the far Canadian Northwest. w New
York elty wut back, and worked bash
fa stnstine and In“snows. With ity
Very best. Wisltes: for your sccess,
Tain Yours truly,
NEAL HART,
2g TESS
eetaire ia
Win BH. Homten of thie team ot
Nooten & Hooton fell and frnetured
her rhent ankle in Chleago during thy
holidays. The Urals is rapidly mend
Inge but it wilt We some time before
she will be able te work with the Act
Tn the menuthas Daddy. foward: ts
temaing with Engene Hoeten. Mail
will resell the Hootena Ir culdresved
to 3209 State street, Chiense, Hb
Ee y
|e eee
>. DY «ns me)
| a RN Give her up. or oh o
| 2 ey
| Sage 9777 tail you FBS
a ED
| PEPER | sho was ight | Aes
| Eso h | ing now | jae
aad fighting this feet
: a Bs\ ff ian who had | Ree
Bsa] once been her ee eer
| peat ah lover — fight- | Rasaepageesd
areata | ing to save her pias te
Fes W}innocent [im \
Bite: oak | daughter from [eI ah
Ces AYA ruin. An cpic fegeaeg: aM
bn M44 photoplay of Fg a: be
CETERA AS vu: f ey oe
Gee gee ee
Re Src EA a
GOLDWYN PRESENTS
“THE
GRIM COMEDIAN”
FULL OF THRILLS AND SENSATION!
errr
TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17 AND 18
a a
Tate's HRAMORO.& SONS 31st Block
Vendome f
sam WENDOM E we.
"BIGGEST AND BEST"
"EM EDITH
SING "EM !
WHILE THE
oe »)
Criginal Jazz Hounds Play Em
Nervous Blues ana (Pe
Vampin’ Liza Jane fies. Bg
COLUNAIA RECORD No, A-2574 ee ey
Frankie Blues ana eae f
Qld Time Blues a
COLUMBIA RECORD No. A-3506 eis
: SUNG BY face oN
Edith Wilson ccoro'stax Seaitiiy
PUBLISHE TY
PERRY BRADFORD (he)
1547 BROADWAY NEW YORK, N. Y.
Everybody Loves Masic!
Hear ETHEL WATERS Sing
“The Down Home Slues,”’ and "On addy,” on Black Swan Record. Price 85c, postagstJz
I “The Kew York Glide’ and ‘At the New Jump Steady Ball’an Cardinal Record. 85c, pastegetQs
SHEET MUSIC
ALBURY & DELAREY HUSIC PUB. CO., 2289 Seventh Ave., New York Gity
Finest Equipped Theater Outside the Loop. 1200 Roomy Seats
MUSIC BY BEST ORCHESTRA EVER ASSEMBLED
MOST POPULAR THEATER ON THE SOUTH SIDE
BELL WALNUT 4631 GIBSON’S © ees, esti porcan 95
. ;
A a STARBARD TREATER®
VAUDEVILLE, NOVELTY ACTS, ROAD SHOWS.
9 aT
GTATES THEATER
| 3507 STATE STREET
|The Home of Great Features
€. M. WYER’S STATES ORCHESTRA
f M&MMOND £ SOMS
Wenbowe THEATER
{506 Comforiakie Seats Mammath Pipe Organ
ERSKINE TATE'’S SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
RICKFORD THEATE
a 35th Street and Michigan Avenue
Glarence H. Black’s Symphony Orchestra
Selected Photoplays of Class
O..C. HAMMOND — OWES MusolS Tea reen*
FD SS
BuO ANY THEATER {ie ii THER ;
PHOENIA THEATER) |LINEGUA THEATER
Tigh STATE STREET i 32 STATE STREET
SELECTRD PHOTO-PLAYS |:| FIRST CLASS PICTURES
CHANGED DAILY i CHANGED DAILY
Continuous, 245-p..m.ste Midntant |: | PERFECT VENTILATION
Benjamin Turner, tiusical Olractor COMPORTARLE HEATING
Ma santer Ale Vaatiuion "II | eensingeue-—2. grciccie 6. idtentents|
BATUADAY, JANUAR? 14, oo
EULA THEATER
LUREGU THEATER
FIRST CLASS PICTURES
CHANGED DAILY
ONE WEEK ONLY-STARTING MONDAY, JAN. 16-ONE WEEK ONLY
SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 1922
Mary
ETHEL WATERS
Queen of the Blues Singers
WHY GIRLS
LEAVE HOME
Screen Version of Famous
Play Now at Avenue
Theater
"Why Girls Leave Home," the Warner Bros. production which opened a five-day engagement at the Avenue theater on Wednesday, stitches a new note in photoy presentation and demonstrates that a vital lesson may be learned without undue stress of mawkish sentimentality. Harry Hap, who produced the picture, and William Nigh, who directed the actual photographing of the scenes, have left little of the famous old American melodrama its title. But in this instance the change is all for the best, as the present photoy version is entirely tree from the melodrastic artificiality that necessarily was found in the older stage version.
Another thing that will particularly please the regular photophylla rans is the new screen discovery in Miss Maurine Powers. What makes her work the more remarkable is the fact that it stands out in such strong company as Anna Q. Milson, Julia Swayne Goron, George Lessie, Mrs. Owen Moore (Katherine Perry, Claude King, Catherine Barber) and the other familiar of what is practically an all-star cast. As to the story itself, it is simple and powerful. It deals with two girls who spy and represent all daughters who have grown to womanhood. The unfairness and narrow-minded actions of one parent drive one child to hide and hide, and the indifference and careless neglect of another parent are the cause of the second girl's leaving home. The paths of the two girls cross, and it is a junction that has a far-reaching effect which is worked out in a sequence of scenes that does not let the girls leave Home, is above all, one of the cleanest and most thoroughly satisfying entertainments the silver hoops has offered us in some time.
THE STANDARD
Philadelphia, Ph., Jan. 12.—Mae-
Unkard and Edna Alexander, in a
one piano set, are playing the work
here. Others on the bill are Freeman,
Giles, Sandy Barns & Co., in a
electric musical comedy offering
Sater & Dell in a boggle novelty
Eddie Hunter & Co. in a "A Clock
sparrow" and Matt Hossey's
musical nets in the business. It is a
great show throughout and capacity
nets are being driven.
ANOTHER PAYNE
New York, Jan. 15.-Mr. and Mrs.
A. "Strut" Payne, 145 West 12th
street, are the proud parents of a
nine-pound baby girl. Strut is
providing the usual congratulations
from his many friends.
THE ATLAS THEATER
4711-17 S. State St., East Side Street
The Place to See
"REAL" Pictures
All the time
Hear the Famous Atlas Orchestra
T. O.
(Theater Owners' Book
ALL ACTS, COMPANIES and
Communicate
T. B.
Suite 304-305 Pound Bldg.
SAM E. PEEVIN, Mar. 304-306 Po-
or S. H. DUDLEY, 1223 Seventh St
"NEW AND UP-TO-
SUNSET
313-315-317 EAST THIRTY-FIFTH
Largest and Most Beautiful Place of
Amusement in the Middle West
DANCING ::: REFRESHMENTS :::
CHINESE and AMERICAN COO
SUNSET SYNCOPATED ORCHE
and a SELECT CORPS OF ENTERTA
RIFAS & FOX, Props. B. MILLE
DANCING ::= REFRESHMENTS ::= MEALS
CHINESE and AMERICAN COOKING
SUNSET SYNCOPATED ORCHESTRA
and a SELECT CORPS OF ENTERTAINERS
BIEAS & FOX, Props
B. MILLER, Mgr.
---
NIGHTLY AT 8:30
Sundays and Holidays: Supper Show,
6 P. M.; Night Show at 9. BARGAIN
MATINEE on SATURDAYS at 2:30.
Dear Gen. Tony—Just a few lines to you know that I am still in the land of thirst and hard times, but that to say that Eddie and I don't know that the panic is on, as we are always in somebody's theater making the customers laugh a lot we have been trying to stop so far as work is concerned. Of course we will work for anyone that will pay us our figure: no house too large, or none too small. High now we are working for Marcus Lawn. We were to open the kaleidoscope time Jan. 14, we signed up to play Lawn, Well, Duke, Eddie Rector and I are still together and getting time fine. We were in New York two weeks ago and a big hit around there for five weeks. Rufus Greencoe and Teddy Draxton were a panic at Dulce, and we were in Winter Garden for three successive weeks, next to closing a tenet act, following all the big stars each week. Little Leonard Ruffin is doing a single, working all the time, so that's the answer. "Holiday in Dixieland" has at last jump its shu, and has a game that isn't jump over. Howard and Brown are a week behind us and going great. Jones & Jones, the two liquor hounds, are due in the Keith Alhambra, New York, next week for their big time showing, and Williams & Taylor at Koth's, for course or course somewhere, always joining Jones somewhere, and he has big red Stutz now. Ruth is with the Three Cliffords, due at the Ralto, Chicago, next week. She has been real slack out West, and I have been trying to make her quit working, but she won't do it. Well, Tony will be doing it, and I know he is reading this dope. However, I will keep you posted on anything new I see or hear.
I am putting down a few weeks of
my route for you. Of course, you
know our stage name now is "Moore
& Fields" but it is us just the same.
Week of Jan. 9, Lycceum, Pittsburgh.
Pa. Write me real soon and tell me
Chicago news. With best
wishes for a happy and successful
New Year, I am
Yours friendly,
JIMMIE MAINHALL.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Dear Mr. Langston, Just a few
lines to extend best wishes for the
new year.
I am doing fair enough considering
"hard times" Have been here in
Philly since September with "The
Sandy Burns Co." playing stock at
the standard theater. The company
comprises the following: Maude Russell,
Waltshire, Eileen Heinson, Tiny
Gray, Sandy Burns, Sam Russell,
Fred Hart, George Wiltshire and myself.
Mrs. Fountain is here with me, but
is not working.
Mail will reach any of the above
at the Standard theater. All join me in
best regards to you and members of
the profession.
Mr. Tony: Now for your big town stuff pulled off in a small town. You have got to band it to Ralph Love, one of the best entertainers from the coast. He is now in Pocatello, Idaho. Captain of the bread line. He is a great winger, and full of late jazz. He's expecting to go East to sell some compositions of his own. He has wired several S. O. S.'s all over the country, but received no favorable reply, so he decided to give a transportation ball, and I guess you know what I mean by this? I trying to have you have got him it to Brother Love, for he has got some songs of his own. I had the pleasure of hearing one of his compositions at the Orpheum theater, the leading picture theater of Pocatello, and the organist pro-
World's Greatest Singer of Blues and Her JAZZ MASTERS New York's Leading Exponents of Syncopation
LETTERS
claimed it the greatest ballad he had ever had the pleasure of playing. I read in last week's Defender some comment on the ballad, the country, but I claim the Black and Tan is the beat. I suggest that the Colored music publishers get in touch with this boy Ralph, as he has some wonderful numbers—at thats what the ofays say—in 1915 Holmes street, Kansas City, Mo. Well, boys, I have just sent up an S. C. S. myself and expect to be in dear old Los Angeles soon. HORACE DAVIS.
314 East Clark street, Pocatello,
Idaho. Self-appointed correspondent.
Raleigh, N. C.
Dear Friend Tony: Just a word or
two to let you know that I am still
alive and doing fine. I truly hope
you are well and enjoying the new
year, as it seems to be a glorious one.
I just finished reading the old re-
liable and it certainly fits my heart
with joy to read about my old pals
that I feel that I should like
to be with them. Nevertheless I am
getting along fine with my magic
show in North Carolina. I will be
back East soon.
From your friend,
JOSHIPH M. MEANS.
Quobee City, Que. Princess Theater, St. Joseph Street, Jan. 4. 1922. Friend Tony; It has been a long time since you heard from me. Well I am sailing along line at present, and I wish friends to inform me. I wish friends through the "Old Reelable" that I am on my second season, featured over the Drapeau's Canadian circuit as a special attraction, along with the Chicago Novelty orchestra. I am syncopating on the xylophones and drums, with the greatest of returns, with the clips on it, bit of French, all French through these parts. Thanking you, old boy, for past favors I remain, yours.
AVENUE THEATER 5 Days
Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat. and Sun.
Now Running—See It Tonight
Jan. 11-12-13-14-15
THE GREATEST HUMAN INTEREST PHOTO DRAMA EVER PRODUCED
WARNER BROTHERS presents
"WHY GIRLS LEAVE HOME
ADAPTED FROM THE FAMOUS STAGE SUCCESS
With ANNA Q. NILLSON and
— All Star Cast —
DIRECTED BY WILLIAM NIGH
ALSO
5—ACTS—5
OF CLASSY VAUDEVILLE
She Vowed She Never Again Would Enter Her Father's House!
WHY?
See this powerful screen drama that throws a searchlight of revelation on one of the most vital problems of the home.
Lavishly Staged! Wonderfully Acted!
NOTICE—EVELYN PREER & CO. engagement postponed until week of Jan. 23, when Wm. A. Moore's one-act playlet positively will be presented.
JASPER TAYLOR.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
BETTING MONDAY
WALT
ring ETH
Blues and Her JAZZ
WIAMS and FRON
AND OTHER
Chicago's First
THE HOME OF
GRAND
STATE STREET AT THIRTY-F
WALTON & PACE Present the
ETHEL
AND OTHER NOVELTY FEATURES
ETHEL WATERS CO.
Famous "Black Swan" Songstress Opens at Grand Next Monday Night
Chicapans will have their first chance to hear Ethel Waters, known as "The Queen of the Blues Singers" and star recorder for the famous singer when she makes her appearance for a week's engagement at the Grand theater, starting next Monday, Jan. 16. The press notices which have been accorded this famous artist by the press, a treat a treat a treat is certainly in store for those fortunate enough to give her the once over. She is supported by the greatest jazz band ever assembled and a diversified line-up of s-elected novelties involved in the making of a partner. Ethel Williams and a male partner, her engagement is limited to one week only. Seats are now selling in advance.
C. GORGAS DIES
George Gorgas, father of Alice Gorgas, the popular actress, died at his home in Philadelphia, Pa., on Jan. 4. Mr. Gorgas was one of the oldest residents of the duplex, and is also the father of many friends. Burial took place on Monday, Jan. 9. The family address is 407 Green street, Philadelphia, Pa.
SENDS CANE
Hillie Bradford, who has been rusticating in the wilds of Wayne, Pa. sent the Old Roll Top Desk Man a hand-served cane, made 'way down' in Mickow, Pa. just what we needed and from now on we will give the knockers a headache at the expense of Hillie. Many thanks, Hill.
Kid Thomas & Co. are At the Lafayette Theater, Winston-Salem, N. C.
SUNDAY, JANUARY
TON & PACE PRESENTS
HEL
Z MASTER
NCELL MANLEY
HER NOVELTY FE
Chance to S
F REAL ENTERTAINMENT
THEAT
FIRST VIC
COATES ACT BOCKED
The Avenue theater has again demonstrated the fact that expense will not stand between the best entertainment and its patrons. Making arrangements over the long-distance rentals for its six days, beginning on Monday, Jan. 16, the celebrated big time vaudeville act Lulu Custer and Crackerjacks. This act is one of the highest paid in the business and is called by the theater managers the most consistent "show stopper" of many reasons. Ms. Custer said to see this act in its Mistreatment, and no doubt her thousands of admirers will catch the act during its engagement.
STATES—Hills of Hate, Love, Hate and Women, Three days of Trailing and Hard in Tangled Trails, Sunday, Oliver Carson's Gods Country and the Law.
PIGENIX—Exit the Vamp, The Battling Kibb, A Western Demon, Eden and Leach, The Emerson Cross, Sunday, Poverty, The Rush
LINCOLN—Foke Kisses, Hurricane Hutch, two days each of Riding with Death, Adventures of Tarzan and Thunderbird, Hills of Hate and Blue Wagon, Winn, Russell in Desert Blossom.
VENDOME—The Hole in the Wall, two days of Five Days to Live and three of Under the Lash, Sunday, Lucky Carson.
OWL—The Battling Kibb, Hills of Hate and the Woman, Sunday, Tangled Trails.
ATLAS—Beau Revell, Silver Lining, three days of The Old Nost, To Please One Woman, Sunday, Winn, Duncan in Under the Lash, Sunday, Tangled Trails.
PICKORD—Eden and Return, two days each of What Do Men Want and White Oak, Guilty Concience, Sunday, A Prince There Was.
MORE STAGE
NEXT PAGE
S Wed., Thurs., New R
Fri., Sat.
and Sun.
Jan.
WATERS
R
GOD'S COUNTRY
James Oliver Curwool's great feature, "God's Country and the Law," will be the attraction at the States theater on Sunday. It is one of the most sensational films made for several seasons. The story, which is of the most virile type, follows: Pobon and his daughter, Ochi. Give a happy existence in the north woods, where blissful Marle, young wife of Andre. Over these two gardens of contentment booms a sinister shadow, that of Dore, villainous whisky runner. Dore believes in the charm of a rattlesnake's tail he carries as an amulet. Escaping from the Northwest Mountain where Pobon's cabin is located. They give him the hospitality of their home.
In *Pursuing Dore* forces his insulting attentions upon Oachi. In the snuffle Dore loses his ugly amulet. Dolemons it benceth his host. Shoen of his communion with the evil spirits. Dore is stricken with Almay. Dolemons it benceth his host. Belfhil him comes over Dole. He wanders blindly through the forest, ever pursued by his guilty conscience. He comes upon the cabin of Andre and Marle. Accepts their hospitality also and again tries his old tricks. And soundly thrashes him and sends him on his way. In return when Marle is ill and Andre is away. He kidnaps her and takes her with him to the forest. During a terrific storm Marle escapes. She is found the next day unconscious by none other than Oachi. Oachi takes her to their cabin. Fate likewise brings Dore stark mad, staggering into their little home. Believing that all he sees is an apation, he falls dead in a spasm of fear. Ante finds Marle and learns that death has taken vengeance.
MAKE RESERVATIONS EARLY Box Office Open Daily at 1:00 P.M.
LUCILLE HEGAMIN
On Sale by the Following ARTo Dealers and Distributors:
Home Amusement Co. 1437 Broadway, New York City
ARTO Distributing Co. 336 Lenox avenue, New York City
ARTO Musical Sales Co. 343 W. Baltimore streets, Baltimore, Md.
Maryland 343 N. St. Louis, Omaha, Pa.
Scoville Mercantile Co. 135 N. St. Louis, Omaha, Pa.
Scoville Mercantile Co. Peach street, Atlanta, Ga.
Consolidated Talking Machine Co. 227 W. Washington street, Chicago, Ill.
Choral Manufacturing Co. 408 Hawthorne avenue, Portland, Ore.
When You Buy a BLACK SWAN RECORD
Ethel Waters, Queen of Blues Singers
Pace Phonograph Corp., 2289 Seventh Ave., New York City
Most Beautiful Cabaret-Best Dance Floor in Chicago Positively No Admission Charged
Formerly Entertainer Cafe Orchestra
INDOOR CARNIVAL : SMARTER SET : MASQUERADE BALL
Thurs. P. M., Dec. 8 Thurs. P. M. Dec. 15 Mon. P. M., Dec. 12
Entertainers: HENRIETTA DAVIS, MAYBELL DELANEY
9058
"HE'S MY MAN"
"Mamma Whip; Mamma Spank"
9074
"Lonesome Monday Morning Blues" and "Getting Old Blues"
Price 85c each
1 Record mailed postpaid... $1.00
2 Records mailed postpaid... 1.25
3 Records mailed postpaid... 2.75
4 Records mailed postpaid... 3.60
On Sale by the Following ART0
Home Amusement Co., 1437 Broadway,
ART0 Distributing Co., 336 Lenox ave.
ART0 Musical Sales Co., 1434 W. Battl
Morris Music Pub. Co., 135 N. 9th st.
Southern N. Michigan Co., 135 N. 9th st.
Consolidated Ta King Machine Co., 227 W.
Choral Manufacturing Co., 408 Hawthorn
SHEET MUSIC
ON SALE AT ALL
S. H. KRESS STORES
S. KRESS STORES
METROPOLITAN STORES
McCROY STORES
McCLEOD STORES
FRANCES CLIFFORD MUSIC
When You
Buy a
BLACK SW
THE LADY OF THE WEST
Ethel Waters, Queen of Blues Singers
Pace Phonograph Corp., 2289 S
FRED IRVIN, Prop.
LORRAINE GA
PAGE SEVEN
K ONLY
ERS
pation
ALTY
t Sensation
TIONS EARLY
ily at 1:00 P. M.
HEGAMIN
Colored Contralto
LUE FLAME SYNCOPATORS
THE WORLD'S FIRST WOMEN'S HISTORY MUSEUM
ARTO Dealers and Distributors:
Dway, New York City
44 avenue, New York City
Baltimore street, Baltimore, Md.
n street, Philadelphia, Pa.
west, Atlanta, Ga.
0207 W. Washington street, Chicago, Ill.
worthy Avenue, Portland, Ore.
RECORDS Made for you by the
lowing Chicago dealers:
Brownwick Music Shop, 3203 W. Kalmack St.
Vernon's Music Store, 55 E. 21st St.
Morgan Street, Chicago, Ill.
Walden Street, Chicago, Ill.
Walden Street, Chicago, Ill.
Williams & Pritchard, 4594 S. State St.
SWAN RECORD
you buy the
Only Records
Made by
Colored People
Patronize Race enterprises when you get the same value for
for your money.
BLACK SWAN
RECORDS
Black Swan Records
Are Better Than Most Other Kinds
Buy from your dealer or order direct from
289 Seventh Ave.. New York City
EDDIE WOODING. Mec.
GARDEN No.2
(ARADISE GARDENS)
Street and Prairie Avenue
POWERS
S OF REAL ENTERTAINERS
ERJACK JAZZ BAND
---
MICKEY'S
INN
Mickey Thomas, Prop.
3889 Penn Ave, Indiana Harbor, Ind.
Telephone INDIANA HARBOR 1405
Dancing & Classy Entertaining
Music by a REAL Jazz Band
CHICKEN and FISH
DINNERS Featured
CALL UP BEFORE STARTING
All Ready When You Arrive
25 Minutes From 25th Street
Ask Taxi Driver—HE KNOWS
JOHN L. SLAUGHTER, Prop. HENRY "CAP" JONES, Mgr.
VISIT THE BEAUTIFUL
TURF WINTER GARDEN
4300 STATE STREET
BE MERRY TO THE MUSIC OF
Prof. George Meyer's Jazz Phools
SUPPORTED BY A
SELECTED CORPS OF ENTERTAINERS
DOORS OPEN AT 8 P. M.
REFRESHMENTS
PAGE EIGHT
FAMBUS GEORGIAS
FAMBUS GEORGIAS
A Journey from heaven to hell is not a journey no man can afford to miss. A journey from beautiful Denver, Colo., the land of civility, to the land of violence, is in the Panhandle of Texas. And we ever in life, New York, New York, ever. Would you be keen in the jumies of Africa, surounded with wild animal imagery to one chapter, and out of the jumies of another unimpaired rather than unimpaired.
ration to Chyton,
Hawkesbury, Port
Troy, and Bk City.
The bundle of Poet
bundle of Poet
in Bk City. N ew
Years ago, the
wife would just soon have
been jaunched.
After a few weeks
with animal imag-
nible, with ten to
four years, you would come
unimagined rather
than harpous hu-
mor large. L'ebook
There is no puzzle to reading human nature once you gaze upon those breathtaking faces. You can as easily burn a human heart and go to sleep and not even let you wake up. You could take a drink of water. They say the audience talking to one another and one another on a friend's ones on the stage, and not a family living within a hundred feet.
There is quite a lot of opposition to Southern politicians, as it seems a little drastic in its present form, but if you want to visit one of the no-fee town towns hundreds are gathered for the occasion, and without the son-in-law owning beds and eyes, I am sure they will be a quick passage of the bill would be in evidence and considered very, very Oklahoma City, New Year's day, an afternoon at the theater and the Queen's Abbey the theater and the Georgia Minnistry, and the Georgia Minnistry said that this year surpasses all previous efforts of the Georgia Minnistry, which are established, and although no Colonel very alcoxy and showed to capacity both matrine and night, and there writers have written about it, and there isn't any barbarians and premeditated injustice ever committed upon human beings. I should indicate, you would have to see it being burned out the Negrus, destroying everything possible, the white man business where the Colored were, and business where the Negro was. Why I would scratch with the clickons rather than trade other
I was the guise of Mrs. M. M. Brown, a former drama superintendent for the last four years in the riot. Mrs. Brown is well known in the theater. I also met Dr. William Kyle, who has been a professor at Dr. Ferguson and Dr. Matty Ackman, who raised programs and directed the theater has just about completed the work before I was able to attend local attractions will be able to play the roles.
S. D. Hooker has an big dry goods store in S. D. Hooker, 1000 N. 10th Street, Stock. We are nearby in the possession of a large pool hall and has a news room all the leading Colored papers, a restaurant, a Juan hotel, clean and neat an can the They made me clean. We can help the They should you visit Tolisa call on the Hardy. They FIlmer will forget Mrs. Dr. Kyle, the wife she separates from her husband. You wouldn't want to meet anyone with a
MAIL AERO
Roynolds & Jones, who have been joined by the late J. Pa. are inished with that tertio-second and final show at the Theater, Baltimore, Md. Lulu Touton & Crackerjacks are inished with that tertio-second and final show at the Theater, Baltimore, Md. Lulu Touton & Crackerjacks are inished with that tertio-second and final show at the Theater, Baltimore, Md. Drake & Walker's Hominy Girls are inished with that tertio-second and final show at the Theater, Augusta, and the Auditorium. The Leggett, Whidley & Leggett Torto are playing the week at the Lyceum. Billy Huss is working for the American Express, and he will reach him all the way from its seventh street.
The Old Timm. Jackles Quartet are, dli-
lly, the Old Timm. City, La. and Sloux City, La.
and Sloux City, La. Enniston, making go at all sunny, are
spitting the work between the Lyfe
horshong, and the Empire, and the River
Mus. with the with器 Martin St. Co. at
the Bliju theater, Nashville, Teen, this
certainly is making the sly tha' there a
red-hot one, Johnson, strutting the
satisfaction of all interested are, at the
week. Orleans, La. this week. Send route.
McCrivey is Johnson, traveling over the
press notice. This week. Jefferson
between Jaen Theater, Waterbury,
Com. and De Kahl Theater, Brooklyn.
Norma Thomas. Modern cocktail at the
Lincoln Theater, Chicago. Ill.
single in the world, having had 16 consecutive
works and still going. Mail will reach
No. F. Field, playing the Doe play out in front, are playing Harrison,
H. Haesetown and Cumberland, Md.
Gettie Sanders & Co. are playing
the week at the Pantages Theater.
Joykin c. W.illiamson, whose home is in New York, N.Y., are spelling the week between Louss American and National teams. Gina Gervais and Georgia Gervais are playing the week
Grenn & Jenkins are playing the work at the Orchestra, N. Y. The latter lost his mother through death last month. He is the greatest single in the world, at the Orchestra Green with the Girl De Loaks Hulltown Co. is playing the week at the Moss & Frox, the champion laughing playing the work at the Orchestra Theater, Oakland, Johnny Gravity Hudlein, featured with the playing the work at the Oehner's Theater, Newburgh and Wongkokseau, N.Y. Laurin Co. is playing the week at the弥漫 Theater, Newport News, Va. Joy White's Stylish Stoppers, after Birmingham, Ala., are at the Liberty, Chattanooga, Tenn. are playing the week at the Pay Theater, Rochester, Brown & Brown, the Whirlwind Dancers, are at the Lyric Theater, New La, and send regards to all friends.
"UNGLE TOM'S CABIN"
Not many weeks ago, in an article in the Sunday Star on Mrs. Southworth's book *Better Stowe* were close friends of long standing. Mrs. Stowe, after meeting the booker Stowe were close friends to visit Mrs. Southworth at her contac. Mrs. Southworth had then become a women strong anti-slavery opinion. Mrs. Stowe, in lining of her book, held a meeting he had held, *Better Stowe*. Southworth, just at that time Dr. Gannalley Bailley, publisher of the National Em of this city, Southworth's early stories had appeared, called at the contac. He called it appropriate for a forthcoming Christmas number of the Em. Bailley to Mrs. Stowe and suggested that she, Mrs. Stowe, submit to Dr. Bailley the story which she had written in this meeting Mrs. Stowe handed to Dr. Bailley a short story entitled published it and it was well received readers of the Em. Both Dr. Bailley and the one of the leaving for another chapter. This was followed by another and another, and thus the story grew. It later was published *Tale Tom's Cabin*.
Slim Jim Austin, featured with the Kana, at the present event. Newspaper clippings poll of the students of the clever young lady and her assistants are wrestling all performances on the circuit. This week, Saskatchewan, Sask. Amanda Richardson, comedian, 20-year-old, and wire worker, is at the Protam Theatre. A fine line came from Kimmel University, and the students reigned to all frolls in and out of the profession. Mattie's Joyland Glae is playing at the Houlton theater, Nashville. Tran, Elgar will arrive at the University, and Ith to look after business deal. Highbower & Jones are playing at the Stratford theater. They are playing the week at the Stratford theater. William Hainey, formerly of the Tim Owley Theater of Fun Pun, is musical copiators. Mail will reach him at 52 South Highland street, Winchester, Frank Clark, writer and copyrightor of How I Miss Miam, the musical copiators. Mail is now playing at the Poole Dog Life, Mail Northwest, Washington, D.C. Samilee Taylor, 100 Hopkins avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio, and says hello world for the Sun people at the Prisca, Pearlville, Ohio, and are at present in
Alfred Franks, late of the team at Alfred Franks and Francis, as airmen at II. She would like to hear from Joan and Klink clark, Roxie Calka and Ma
Jolly Sanders can be reached 31 55
800-222-2222. Jolly is out of business. Write direct to
tower care of Tom Norman.
Jolly is on harness and is
playing the Mid-City Theater. Washington, D. C. with room to rehearse. T. O. B.
Leon Loon is out of ahead of the Riffle
Intention Theater, Indianapolis. Ind. on Monday, Jan. 16, operating the Central theater at Mondays II. and making the folly like it with the screen-
ing.
Father & Perry, with their up-to-the-minute notice, are a bit the present batt at the Academy theater, Chicago. Amanda Richardson, the wife with whom she met at the Strand theater, Jacksonville. Frank Tansel, late of Houto & Tansel, is open for enquiries with a stock company, or an auction company. A fine letter arrived from Josephine, who has given fine success in the South this week. Lenox Theater, Amugata, Burt in care of Defender, Josephine.
HERE AND THERE
By Jack L. Cooper
If you must chew the rag, chew a elephant.
Wise people judge you by your ability to listen.
Some people lose their voice trying to be heard and lose their agility the same way.
One reason why a clean, moral act will suffer humiliation at the hands of a man who is not a man of some mouses can cancel a real act rather than to have a "rat" thrown out, fearing that he will be punished. The "suit hound" spends weekly. Another reason is that some of the counsellors in the game are afraid to educate the rats along the line of cleaner and more refined shows.
C. T. & P. C. NEWS
C. T. & P. C. NEWS
Among the Gang
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Boll Top Fables
One day another very wise man came, the musket and admitted to their mental anatomism. Each day he came to the other, and the word was spoken between the three, not the word he had not yet admitted but he had not admitted to the fellowship of the others. So insistent was the third of the others, after they had sat in silence for some minutes, that he came up with a cup on its very rim with what significance that their cup of knowledge contained, and fitted it upon some minutes the third wise man resumed his service, then he took from his riment a needle and fitted it upon the water a needle and fitted it upon the other two, daintily accepted by the other two, and may be about our wagon, our cup of water, so full that we can not assume, we place ourselves in a precious mood.
CLIPPINGS
J. Rossman Johnson & Co. are at the Baldwin Theater, 100 Fifth Avenue, for T.J. Polliver & Joe Slesby. There will be a big hit at the New Doughlass theater. Huck & Bubbles are at the Orpheum theater, Seattle, Wash. At 11:30 p.m. the Metropolitan theater, Cleveland, Ohio. When the Honeymoon Was Over "is a bait for Billy J. Elles, the popular singer.
are at the Low
theatre. Heavenly
Mason and Fallen are at the Low
theatre.
London, Can.
Winter Garden, are at the Orpheum
theatre, Galileo, Bl.
London, Can.
Joe & Lilian Russi are playing sure
sure in the vaudieu houses in
New York. The Tennessee Ten are at the Davis
Miller & Anthony are at the Epiper
theater, Faith River, Mass.,
and Robinson are at the Orchard
theatre.
the orphanage theater, Jackson, Men.
the opium house, Oakland, Calif.
Lawrence Chonault, popular film art
director, was returned to New
York from the West.
STAGE DOINGS
Bille Bradford, who has spent some time in the music world, vanilla, writes from Wayne that after he, in mail we reach him if addressed to him. He will be with Harry R. Dixon and his Jazzband Harry R. Dixon and his Jazzband the Strand, Jacksonville, Fla.
Midred Scott, with the Josephine
Midtred Scott, with the Josephine
week at the
Globe, The Artist, August 19.
Gem Thief Used Gold Melting Pot
The millionaire robber claimed that he had robbed so many of them, that they were led to at least 20 residences which he had entered and filmed. The robber was also discovered. In this pot Dixon metted all the gold which he stole. This work Dixon performed at his studio. It has not been learned what Dixon did. He made a video of him made from his robberies. When he was arrested he gave $400 on him.
TO BE ADVANCED
LOFTON TO BE ADVANCED
Brooklyn, N. Y., X. 13. - The *Election* office would position a for a position in the internal revenue service under *Commissions* Inffairty. There are a number of vacancies, and it is the contention of the *Election* office to be president, that a face man should have one of the postings.
KENTUCKY
Mr. and Mrs. Gee, Ricks of Dyersburg, Tenn., spend a week with friends at Leona Wade of Dyersburg, Tenn., spend a few of the days at Roberts of Danville, Ill.: I. Wade of Dyersburg and Miss Hess of Danville, Ill.: I. Wade of Dyersburg and Miss M. E. M. Morris Tuesday and were served a two-course lunch at Leona Wade and Miss M. E. Morris Tuesday and were served a few momenta at the home of a few momenta at Leona Wade and Miss M. E. Wainwright Tuesday afternoon.
Mt. Sterling, Ky.
Danyllc, Ky.
Business man of Danville can host a live event owned by J. T. Prewitt. Wall street. Also entertaining jersey fans. The opening fire in the santo. The Pioneer Mercantileville's leading business men and women cleaning and maintaining the four luxury cabins one of the largest insurance company branch. Our insurance company branch. The mollon being the visiting his old house in Danville and living in the city. Billy G. Jones of the news service of Billy G. Jones of the news service a social at the residence of Mrs. Lovejoy. McCarthy Wesley night, night, night. The assistant secretary. Watch this huge business G. Jones, reporter.
Lexington Ky
Middlebury, Ky
John Glynn, Lynch, Ken, was married to Catherine, Taylor Brooks, Clalborn county, Tenn, is visiting his son, William John Williams, Detroit, Mich., the a supper in honor of Mr. and Mrs. John Williams, Detroit, Mich., the a supper in honor of Mrs. and Mrs. John Jornette, Knoxville college, speak the funeral of Mrs. and Mrs. John Jornette Reeves, Winchester, Ky., snort a few days with Mrs.伊拉 Rautts, Ky., party Jan. 1. Covers were laid for twelve, Mrs. Frank Rutts, aunt officers for the year First Sunday, Rev. M. Morrish Sunday school elected officers for the year First Sunday, Rev. M. Morrish Sunday school elected superintendent; Joe Fokker, a century Master, treasurer; Teachers, Miss A. George, Miss W. Alexander, John Foster and King McKenny, Rev. G. P. Barkhalle is hays Elizabeth Larnom returned last Thursday from Lynch, Ky., Mr. and Mrs. Elizabeth Larnom returned last Thursday from Lynch, Ky., Mr. and Mrs.
LEG TROUBLES
STOPPED BY
NEW DISCOVERY
We have a number of Excellent Properties in Gary we would like to talk to you about. It costs you nothing to get our proposition. Why not write us today? Tell us what you have to trade. Gary is a City of Nearly 100,000. Good Schools, Churches, and in normal times work is plentiful for all.
Mid-City Realty Co.
Paris, Ky
Sebree, Ky.
Frankfort KY
Madisonville, KY
The Dixie Flyer Social Club entertainers of Chicago and Evansville, Ind., Jan. 4, at Teague's ball, Mrs. Nance Dale, daughter of Mrs. Dale, daughter of this city, were called to Nashville Saturday to the bedside. P. G. Lester returned home from the hospital. Mrs. Henry Maxwell of Earlinston to the Hale hospital. Mrs. Alice Kay returned, Nashville, Saturday night. Dec. 1, undergoing a serious operation. The Dixie Flyer entertainers stained at the table while in the city. Mrs. Joseph Strother, to visit her daughter, Mrs. Bertil Dorter, J. A. Watters returned from the hospital to be spent several days on business. He grazed Chotton avenue.
A. B. STIEFEL, PRES.
EDWIN STIEFEL, SEC.
50,000 SATISFACTORY CREDIT ACCOUNTS
OUR RECORD AND RECOMMENDATION
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 $145
AUTO 74-193
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FUNERAL DIRECTOR
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3315-17 State Street
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
RADE that Farm. Lot or House and Lot of yours for good Income Property in Gary, Indiana. The Greatest Industrial City in America. It does not matter what part of the country your property is in, we can handle it, owing to Our Large Selling Force, and give you the Best Terms.
The Brotherhood of the Mt. Zion Baptist church gave an age limit program and the parishioner a New Year tree and program were given. Admission was I went for each year that you were old. There was to be a prize for the best student, but no one received the prize, and she joined her husband in Davenport, Iowa. She is停歇 at 1019 Sout. street, turned to her home in Davenport, Iowa, and spent the holidays with her daughter.
Des Moines, Iowa
Mrs. Archie Alexander was hostess to a reunion, commuting Mrs. Miller, house guest of Mrs. Maudle Wood. The reunion included card party Monday, having their wives and sweethearts as table host and card party Monday, having their wives and sweethearts as table host and week was buried Tuesday. Mr. Leonard is assisting mannequin Mrs. Eleanor and Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Eleanor have been married to Mr. and Mrs. Kry. Mr. and Mrs. Eleanor home. They also visited Cincinnati, Ohio and New York, where they were routinely entertained by relatives and friends. This was Mr. Eleanor's first visit to the Rock Island private car motel where the Rock Island private car motel was all churches observed New Year's with an anniversary services. Rev. and Mrs. Eleanor also attended friends' alba. Rev. and Mrs. Robinson.
Fairfield, Iowa
The Watts & Watts Co. played to an A. E. church, Encouraged A. I. A. Jones was in Mt. Pleasant Thursday. There were many during the Christmas holidays. Misty Pleasant, Iowa was in the city has Monday night, eight, at the Misty Pleasant & Co. program. Ms. Lusia Greentown of Ottoville with her relatives on a Manhattan returned home Monday, 8 a.m. at Armsfield and daughter, Miss Lia Armsfield. The session last Wednesday at 8:30 a.m. Crawford made a trip to Washington, Iowa, last Thursday, 11 a.m. at St. Louis and Indianapolis, Ind. In St. Louis and Indianapolis, Ind. Father and mother doing nicely, Todd Coppin Jr., Missionary Society are Saturday afternoon, Ms. Brown is the illness of her husband's mother.
Fort Madison, Iowa
Rev. Lewis Owens, presiding elder of the Koduk district school, M. E. church, the guest of Mrs. King, the dancer of the dance troupe, the guest hall was well attended. J. C. Ewing of the Fort Madison School Sunday, Mrs. Henry Toliver has returned from an extended visit with George Stewart left Saturday for Hurtown from Des Moines Friday. Mr. and Mrs. George McKenna entertained at dinner Saturday and Second Quaint church, Mrs. George Kinnan has been confined to bed for two weeks.
A. B. STIEFEL, PRES.
50,000 SATISFACTOR
OUR RECORD AND
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State St. Funeral
3131-33-35
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Outfitters
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2201-3 BROADWAY
GARY, INDIANA
SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1922
Charles Payton and children are visit-
ing Raymond Black for New York City
lifesites who were routed from their homa-
neal sites who were routed from their homa-
neal sites to reside. Mrs. Alice
Blackley cooks up breakfast. Mrs. Alice
Blackley mends dinner. December is
delivered at your door every day. Speak
Douglas, Arlz
All members of the Douglas Burial Center at the next regular meeting at $42 per person, preached at the A. M. E. church, 16th Hayes of 18th St. were host and Hayes of 18th St. were host and last week, Mrs. R. V. Wells of 24s 10th week, but is much improved now.
An Emmanuel moving was held and the Jupiter arrived from Pan-hatataka and Jupiter arrived from Pan-hatataka. Gorba on a visit to her mother-in-law M. Dora Davaa had let for Orange, Toca
MISS JACKSON WEDS
New York, Jan. 14—Miss Sissie Jack-
ack, 12, of New York, attended a
Wednesday afternoon, Dec. 28,
the liv. W. H. Jibrosi outlining: Mr. and
Mrs. Jibrosi, their home at
250 West 12th Street.
NEW BARK EXTRACT GIVES GREAT VIGOR
SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1922
pee le
INDIFFERENCE OF | Notice of
GUTIZERG MAKES I corn
{|| cations to u
HYLAN FORGET) 2
Morton’ lg. Not~ Among ‘thel[| eveae” =
Magistrates Appointed;
Admirers Disappointed carpe
New York, Jan, 13.—Sume tine ac
a waepesend 4 fiesta ton-yartaah
Siayor Hytan to ordur tu present et
ain for the appointment of Ae
sina. Diaurie “Adtornes Reena
Gorin maglateate was feted
Siganentiy the enmmauue "aied Ue
ine yt waa ‘bora, as it neva habe
iat
iiiat wes Mayor Mslan an.
sisineed Bit setctigny for ty ana
ineraten, and motwitoatandiog: a th
EXoratie renurus ‘concerning. Aer
fan apeiteaeee nie eine waa ee
Mitong hone alectea Wate ee
Eihure. qbanige easy the hs
‘dinioiaceston an Hite dierent from
“the oer thud fe tons on pene
ea aura oan evermneee: Bor ee
Ie Sew Plt ur ehate tie ase
Weaaceseaece a teas Coe:
Rated action Wo get dette aloe
Sad “ae "ales Setrate teers oh
iniked ie ove white ‘argue
Sore sctivay tentanl thele en aa te
Sad tat thes arauved hepa
van Meat re that Ste See
Pomineelane “Wine tile wort wae
RUN advinee int arg ewer. i
Wheserabetva takes fran et ake
Hebe there’ bec ome" of
Serer ite date atlurnesiy OF
See seen socom ease Sane tate a
iss came Shee Saeeriaets tates a
Sia time cae of wut Kind hoe el
ite pase,
ee
NOT TO ENTER HS CHURCH
{ Hoh
NEELEGTED SICK HUSEAND:
TRSLEMY HAS. ELEVER?
DEATHS; WOOD ALEDHOL
Sew York an. 121th the hot
fetes i dia aetna
Watton eons Pee at
ee Tee Beg eet Saeat a
THE |
FIFTEENTH INFANTRY |
candies the
| First Annual Concert
and Bali
en
LIEUT. BILL VODERY .
Fue ipsa eevee conarice
Le |
fia |
es
LIEUT. NOBLE SISSLE
oye aartng. in Shofle Alors
ahs ft Rane te
a
MANHATTAN CASINO.
‘STH “STREET
| Friday Evening, Jan. 20
concent at aa
puves coxrinuous TO 1120
Qaneine CONTINUOUS TO
General Admission 75¢
Boxes $6.00
| A. Stein Vitaetion: Nationut
veh aie train: Ra enat
Lee ee, erred
roms tat ihc
See ge esen k
Fea Seren era
J Siter Cup te winner,
|
FGR SALE
Five-rtory triple flat: three ¢~room
apartments to 2 Moor: all improve.
mente. Pesseesion ean We had en all
Bpartmenta, Inquire 500 Fifth ave,
dooms 420. Phone Lutigucre 6336.-~Adv,,
Notice of Removal
Correspondents and
others sending communi-
cations 10 the New York
office of the Chicago De-
fender are requested to
address same to its new
quarters, - 2352 Seventh
rent
EQOCIE T
tiga Meek 2 att a
the guest of Miss Marie Jucksou at the
ee tt
ee Oe coe are oe
Rai cote Meh ones irate
eee eS eee
i AAS AL ang ane
arated em artes
Bale
are eA Ss te
Ge hype car eee
Se nuh, 982 Fulton set
yodings Tath J ei, ttt
pele ar ter ame oe
ate
Aa a shen Chureg Webel
tepals hte SN
Foci ern
pee hs
Sony ey wea ten
Reeser grant
iS, Seah ue nan
Se pei :
SAMA MOE: treaerck, Cane, 1
wor aac, Coat ear
TS ea ee
te BS BEET aay tr
ae auc cone ee
Sp tiadle BEAR SSA a
Se? sy eines Revinei ale
FEO atin, Aengeng Marten, 1
Pas SE ited Saeed
Sg eon te ee
set rs ures auc
Bech tase ota Shan
OTe inn a. Adan
Sear Re
SOE ah Gu less a
Sera siete
SLINGS. rmatin and Vek
grees Sole oe
ie OE oe tn a
what ha eoe Cette de
Se ays ae tes a ot oc
oe eer oe a
ie St Pa Te Sin avon
Pe i UR eae
a Eason inane te
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"Bim Tec, forms, 62 Went 8
ant Bette, Caer Se
S55 SESE NPE Wak
ert aE Pac Rint 8 Wee
Gilet Pain semrvir, 142 Wet 20
oe eee dS Mee
SEG Bee et
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Beni Todt TOE Seald Sada
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RC: Crete now geturneg co fat
a ea si dh
er He Be progr Co
Siemlay evening. ce
AER EIT wean, sore
eee er ane en SS
ost dec es em fe
Srey Get eta,
Se SA eee,
UR Stille i
(oo, Gaara eRe
Mera bac a AIR
Ann street, Gceining, (N.Y, :
Sa: Co a. in ar
Bie eat eect ete
Se ee a
See WaNGe ae ae a
ee thea en he OG
ee eee Gee Pe ae
ee
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Soe ties nek hee
er etme hte
inion a
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foe PSL ON oa
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Gis eeatcte Met Reling tas
metadata eee eg
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geet
REAP stm Prank Palen, torments
wea hie ack Ra ert
dott et Sais Relea aa
Wier, er, 138 ay it
re cures a es
Sigh ng aT Rone st SS
ESC ecerton mat. sm
pited Cane TCL et ete a
Smee ga Ae ead
ahapal ere panes. orn
ea ete cae ee eaine
CPUSHED SY CASE
Trooklyn, N.Y. Jan. 13—A,
Smith, 1985 Putten street, met with
an acéldem lant week while at work
fon the Wuterfront.. A huge eee fl
on bis rent fees. After medical at-
tention he was taken to bis home.
| ¥
[FIFTEENTH INFANTAY BARD
i
TO ELO CONCERT AED BA
‘mul concert and ball af the 15th In-
in “Shufle Along,” who are. now tn
LMary Saiford and others. The wit-
[Castle Irving Berlix, “At olson and
Caserta be Bias
fet tha oi Necro ao
ean nes fons eee
COUNCILS CORSIEER HORE
!
/RSSIOH WORK til AMERICA
Sew York, Jan. 18—The_tfome
Jistac Fisher. elltor of the Fist Unie
| Byrd, derey City; Bishop Clement of
Perea scar ease ecrar
oe Eaa BREE TSS de
wet duest otra” ae Bate
ARE
WVINISTER FIRST ARBESTED
| IW ANTI-BEGGLNG: WAR
| Sow York, Jan, 12.—With the re-
lect Hecuina” of ticket orders 40 e
Fellee ty cnterve an cabtermante. law
eoniting te nombtaenotts eat
Stang wisi arguniation, socio
Assault or” eurperatn tpn. ths
‘recta of Sow Vous arieay mate et
ome relied tran ats hone of bears
and heave suctetien,
eee thn new “Ii before, any
soliciting on the strsete nas" Ie dome
permit must te areured feo the
Sine tra, meee eee,
fuitoner Cater i charge of that de_
rariment, hawalrendy sunouncest that
ihe wai efure: hermit to all of the
Seeatted aeriara neantsntions wile
iS ter mney the mance te Ae
sae torte use of untorunmter Lat
Sack itinerat minister Who eae
Mie name ne hn Teews Waiter sens nee
Fisted tae the. new. ws eared
| " %
cin" teeing Ufinde et dhe. tet
Steve euler? att fn thy edhe
onet iy sateltted be Ito evuneh
Sd od the whole Weald we eon
Seeeatlany Whe see Welt or tee
Beste Vets oe
CIVIL SERVICE OPENINGS
Xow York, Jan, 12.—Onportunittox
none rye i tne city oll herve Ine
Sheaves sande trade 9. Sri
anoles “te haliteetenacr carcinhee
Mcewenger Wwatebman anit Uehet
chops anaes will be bane
ftp tncdiane EA. opie” salteyeanee
Bien" Sih io $2040 er ann Tae
fei, rade: sheaidatimets Ate
ieee eho hewmen to. Jan
IA te salary is fron $210 ty #8
Tih wre anna, Neve etal goes
nation write tothe Mupietyal Cie
Borcher Compoitecban: City. af Sew
ee ea since
i] NEW YORK CITY BRIEFS |
fetal ners iced hoe lw bn wide
Sta ithe abated a dctire ves feance
Set tet, nat ate at ae
AR tar at te
skeet eer, "biomes ke
Tetam belies Sent He A. A, Petes
a tail fate Aaa
esis a he oe Sane ky
2 ai A Ae el
sO OF Sie atau a
MAKE YOURSELF
| MORE ATTRACTIVE
USE QUINADE
| 3o other single factar contributes x0
rest eed hates SEE
PQUINADE wilh help to bewntify and
ffmprove the hair. Ir will soften
Se taal att inating ease
are ap ade eh wl
| QUINADE is a medicated porade.
RCSD cept pers
esis emeuieaes Ye A
pip ear eh peers
Hag Age RCN Gate creo dn
eed eet aie ane
See ate cae kee aes
rae
Ty xeiting Seehi's Quinad
ont abnaeet ny Starlet stan
oe ee ra nat oe de ae
spear Saas gs enn, aes fae
Ses ela to saat erat bee
|Co,, 10 Green St, New York City,
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
A 1922 Reward
for Defender
Newsboys and
Newsgirls of
Greater
: New York
$5,000
’
Will be diswibuted
among those who husule,
through our ¢o-operative
plan,
Many of our great men
started their careers sell-
ing newspapers. WHY
NOT YOU?
Boys must be of good
character and have the
endorsement of their
parents, Exclusive agency
given to right parties ‘in
Yonkers, Jamaica, the
Bronx, Corona, Elmhurst,
Flushing, Mt. Vernon,
White Plains, New Ro-
chelle and Scarsdale,
Apply to Chicago De-
fender, New York office,
2352 Seventh avenue.
Ask for Miss Whitehurst.
BROOKLYN
HAPPENINGS
see eet ot she ote eee
asm i dei ania lection 0
BES Set (oe ae
Aare chit ath
"HE a an Sach Clay wl sie
Sey an a Pa
Se SS toon ert
fe ac ees nati hi
ee CHM or min
Seer tot Sais WPS
Patosttdict hit ttal ee
FE ranean, cient le
rata aT ha
ihn Racal th
PHP he worker Sct Club
eM rRas S ha
EEE ae
SEE TRAP e, toxmeen, 20
coke tan Genrer 0 We
rediagia eset A anh Ne
See ec Saat
Boot net aebet ace
Witerforee University: last year ii
te aad eh et
Heh teat epee
sa
ale clack, 2, nga uc
anata tet ane
elite We Rr cert ae
whi ereatiy c
Flat MR Pear ety
snk Sata eet Ag
pe a ree a
Sper ig eat ae
Fee eae he et wo
eg oa an see eee
MARRIAGE LICENCES
talti, Js. tag Weeg Hed: domepit WY,
steal iii eh NE
SEO ade nat anaes
ead Ser ea teas Wie
Mn haa te a cl a
2 RNa Re aa
cE Rea RR te ara
i Winds Wahi Olive: Posters 20." 218
er
Ee curailin SIMA Se
fect SORE GP aaa
eral Beth, Snag
seosiederre Gilt Sat atte”
shinies amma ene
sere haan, og Wo heh
ERS heres hears ei
Eoiind af dh a t ae
fen a eth Are Sie
Hen Miah fate
Eli ll Mi naagh eR
ia ciotag Heid Wn
Sist: Verona dinstemt, 32. s208 Firth
eset NE
iitr Cnateways 22 same aedrenns tama
BeOS eet ae
Sita 22h Wee Gah, ale
ian coertrese ‘Tyler, A 10 wae. 1h:
cetit Tinrper. 21, 222 West Wom: duns
set “ee SERIO He
iM Se Wea isha alee
SEM Ganek et inkl
PARA a Sa
Hint ince Phineas
cian a nie ria a Be
GL FR AUGER ad
None Har eget ia
Fina fieagea aay (OY
ENS chiat Siotte Shanalt
Mien Het Sea
ie Se ane cra
ion, 20, 24a ‘insane streak, Natearie, N
WELCOME 5-CENT LOAF.
Rrankiyn, N. Va Jan. ~The five:
cont Tout of Ipead Tas caine hack t
the cfte, as annauneed hy one of th
Stent chaln grocers concerns: Thh
ie the first timo since the war tha?
Weal housewives have heen able t+
obtain the standard Ioat tor fe:
cents. However, this reduction wil
‘hat be seneral. as a repreeentatie:
‘af the Master Bakers’ Aancelation tol”
sur reporter that flour would have te
Gray in price befare whey wilt Be
able to meet the chain storo figure
BOULIN’S NATIONAL DETECTIVE AGENCY
208 BROADWAY and 156 FULTON ST, NEW YORK CITY Phone Cortlandt 8219
A HIGHLY TRAINED STAFF OF MALE AND FEMALE COLORED INVESTIGATORS
—ALL LANGUAGES —
Criminay, civil ana confidential inventigntions, Detective work of the highest clack. Shadowing for cond-
Gental tatsrmation, Specialty in expert secret service and labor diffleultica, Locating of lact relatives, etc.
Gich"and commercial investigations for Banka. Rallronds, Corporations and dopartinene Storen Buriness
Ceeehed’ cCom"an paras of the world. Conavctions throughout the Untied Staten Licaaseg and boused
BY the Gute of New Four.
Sy BOULIN, Principal and General Manager
(Formerly with Talted States DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE)
RECTOR BECOMES FRANTIC
AS HIS WORK PERISHES
Brookiya, X. Y.. dan. 13—A very
pathetic wéene she swlinewsed: earls
uly. tisha fan a oe the Tee
Serre ne setae “UE a
Fs ea threke an apa
Aiea! fain siege eh nin hues
san in Menton ie hee had beanie
EXered tote young elet yy tho name
Sr Tastorahelt amr So hurled
to the ieetory whieh Ts Hest te the
Shurth ‘aod Rote che Rew. Bor
Phe bel ute and iene nou lap
Mie ata sceie. romped
ais alee at Menuet
the Mages iter tart th weds
‘vat uf the chiral ihe renetar he:
tine feafes With eet, scat, te
ta oena'ine Cited Uae resale of We
Ciloetnstueesn ard atpugats boast he
Stung aeration iit heey te oro
tof hs Gari hneiag ran
Han fuel he banding eat Se
Pilla rant losin, nents te
ting the “arituece he” aided i thc
inte al oe ned ts rule th
agent funds to carry’ om the Work
TUmumucty te acracuiee "wes
satel aint oni he interior sag dame
Seed Utne" Noat wast enetated at
tsce than 33000, “The churely
inadtede toes arte at the te ts Ue
Knwnthand several theories have bet
phenesa te tie caipe aoe
Anerive it to defective sing. Otis
Ghian atins “avi pegaon of arabe
Se ehe Sih te eect es
fot Known ta have bal any enemies
Ut Gesrsone: wete how he chore
His wore ana ehuren und ‘ns rine
Noe sencaut Meats Gnuniie of hi
Sty euuta bet co’ teat he bce
ieee, Dora iy a: wntive oe Virgins
aud Sa called hare some uate ge
‘ie tue icowee one of the beat ied
lenses tates alee Siam eetee
jaratively_aort cime “he mugeewted
ermatSt, as cobtreshtion teas
Saal idle io decrat tie woe
Recetas etka tre” Wien ose
encar eater estas in tee
OF sites deetuas tne tee ed ese
men Ae ccnttonea. na the Sary
iashctetca ken fae eet
truni eautd Ugsentas” Fhe otfoure
begecoragerae ree ye
easton sg spe to vee the place
struction and bon
Children’s Dances Feature
Reception of Hera Club
Rrookirn, N. Y., Jan. 13—The Tera
‘Club entertained "Puesday, Jan, 3, the
Aifair belug ihe clubs fest recepiton.
‘Aout diet bunds! sexta respond:
Sato thelr Invitatlons, cexnfortably
Tilting dhe Juntor 0. Mt hak: tn Gates
Avewte, where the receptlue. was held
“X' feature uf the evening was the
gateing ‘of Several ule girls’ and
[Yar oupile of Mas Grace Gites. An
| gtted’ feature was the playing of
Lieatonant Simpson, furmerly of the
ath Kegliwent, anu fie famous tromt=
fone ‘uetet. Halu Taree iy pre
Nent."of the cub. Other anomnbers
ieluier Cupdetia’ Alston, Aiiew Ace
Cone, Lyda Banks, Elizabeth Glitens,
tntriee Haynes, Bea Sones, Carets
Utrenee, orl MeCtetlan, Catherine
Masi, Florence ‘Turner and Allee
Williains.
as
VISITORS AT Y. W. C. A.
New Tork, Jan, 13-—Visitors to the
taith strat W, We GA. aver the hole
Kings Were: ira Le Sy Calfoway and
Mise Mary MeRennes, Washington,
D. Gi Me, and Mrs, Gerald. White
Roanoke, act Mtr and Stes, Alan Ale-
Kenaie, “Charleston, W. Wat atra
Gora and Miss Milired Dizes, Prince:
ton, NJ. Mes. Raymond G. Delan-
cor, Cambridge, Manes Airs, Chiitle
St.’ Preeman, Oawero, N.Y. Mes
Ley W. Scott, Pittsbu, Patt Miss
Ra Tiercon Jolly, Salisbury, May. Mr
3: P, Stubie, director of the thomas
Garrett Settiontent House, Wining.
fon, Wek; airs, Adrienne Moore, Lymn
{Siesta Mase P. Stents tn
Nese race’ ios Nee Yorke in
este. SWWhnlold, - photographer,
Onkhand, Calif. oe
| NEW YORK POLICE NEWS.
Saunt area ane
SE ath i eS
meee
SEL rg, 38: a0 Lane avenue
seearprian Meters Peta
Aisa an SAR al
Sperm the gels aah ee
struc an anevntod "grag hy Obst
EN ESTs anette
SSR Mate
| OATH UST
Seve York HATH UST ce. Wood
eh topl leadeh, Pome iat
3a. Seat it he ane es
SGA Sila, Mees atl 3
Hae snl Se Papell
Seay eat hte a gana
Aamo APE Stan: ee
een senleniek © ise tt ee
erate = a weer betes hee
Winston, “4141 West aard: | Henry
Wit aed ER tincaae tt Nat
sing Hee Hameo Sona
Sea tale Mi RAMs ae
Teh, Hei Madet ince Be
Heat aint, Samet
fae Takats RATE AP eat
Eliza Slerrick, 63, Fleet, place: Charies
Ue Water, €2."1020 St. Mark'® avenues
Retocen Fe Holmen, 29 Rockaway aves
Pues Laelia. Howe, 29, 300. Sandor
Ruwect AWNA Uind, a 207 Tiler atreats
Willing @ Douiieg, 83:41 Crriton aves
Auer Melart Eisen, A. Ik Preacott
Dawes: Bela Copter 1S, 608 Thin apenas
Rannes Pond, 2. Brack atreets C. Vineet
Sesh Tivney, aurven, datnalear Wet
Wheto! "Es ont Lavon aventie: Bere
Rhnath, 8, Tig" Witiguphiie ntyeets: Cale
jie By Soringer, 22, oe Thin avn
Hath Adaine, If 243" Nave tenets Jolin
Willams ty 10h Dn Ralte avenue.
CLUB HOLDS ANNIVERSARY
Vineland, N, 4, Jan, 13.—The first
anniversary of the fenniing of the
Tethinn Soci “Club, composed | oF
Fyembers of Silver one hodge $a. 3,
Rhighix of Pythtas, wav eetebrated
‘sinha banquet and dance Jan. 3
Sap 5
Spiritva’ism and Enlightenment!
The Iinvtoo Spiritual Brothert:col of-
ert the Tahal ‘honky for Sales as
SRintind Seventh, Rou of Srosss, 2138
dt Sita, “Nae seal gue’ cor Beane
Bos Sens Mhharts Stn Tole at
Tdghuinn Secteene S22 Mia Hae We
HAE Ring atheea, “adtese sii Ordena
IEW TOR, BH Saran tet Conner amd
tore hae wie ven
‘NEW YORK STATE NEWS
$500 Reward If I Fail to Grow Hair
fee, Hair Root Hair Grower
RG laa scientine vegetable compound of
Som earn IGE fotaed Aine Oe torether with
Be Fer Ne VT OeN several oiher postive: herbs, thece=
SE SOS fore irudlage the mnost powerful aris
PS) BNE:
RHR ASR ate anes. Urencriod ter antral,
fe hh renee er ere
Remievic sy Mitra (ame tote st wire
ERIN Mra SuistA titer: “ater have
ee Be es teh std evry eatin “Avertiged
oy ee Werte ae ores
FD Pee ict comltued Gils ee
ed fegk Ze ERSERA AML IechcPhante raat
Oi a Ke Sg ary Seas a a
Nea fee SPA lke Rint Gromer ss 00 3 box or
Rae BEA cee cater ye
> Way ie Rae ar ee
(Reet TERESA, acess at mat ana mney orders to
io jc) Royal Chemical Company |
yy yp ¥ JAMAICA, NEW YORY. .
ip ae (Mention chs paper)
| FOR A NIGHT oF PLEASURE STOP IN |
AND SEE YOUR OLD FRIEND LOCATED AT |
71 West 135th Strack. New York City
Which Is Now Under the Sole Management of OPEN
JERRY PRESTON
LATE OF THE ORIENT CAFE
gioscsssecsasesocanesveoweseosbeoeeeooetoao ae eeoees
j Sth BIG MONTH OF THE MUSICAL HIT! §
“SHUFFLE Miller & Lyles ;
i ALONG” Siss.& Blake :
: Prices 50c to $2.00 Eves. 8:30. Sat. Mat. 2:20 :
$ Now Playing at 63rd STREET MUSIC HALL 3
MONSTER RECEPTION OF THE
SOCIETY OF THE SONS OF NORTH CAROLINA
At Arcadia Hall, Halsey St, Near Broadway, Brooklyn
THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1922
MUSIC BY TWO JAZZ BANDS (23 PIECES) UNDER THE LEADER-
SHIP OF PROFESSORS HARRY P. FISHER and J. NIMROD JONES
CONTINUOUS DANCING
TICKETS (including wardrobe), 75 CENTS «
DIRECTIONS 10 HALL—From New York, Park Kows Take the Lexineysn Ave, “Lt
Hater gu, Satins th Fee, Gaby fe Haye St Broo fae de toxe Patna & Masry
fer dei om Brn ate Bradner’ oy Mita ey Se car Sic bese
g@Bhe ghieken Supper Wiis Wt xreat ste
cents Fh nrocerts way 834, WR Ohne
haat ede to the esi for a
eatin Sin” tty MEREty a
bite to Guten, weer aca
EAN her rarents si later
| Me. and Men Nek Sows of Fan
Mr. and eRe Mints of Panu
yal ate vinting, inet daucheer Me
Maree croner: anes’ capeee to: gemein
Hae ehoaahe weckse “Neamt eee
terete Mies alice Davortins wad” See
imeGhtes oft ow tothe ment New
Regt tila i thete wicer, Me tier
See Giledotin PIG "Green a tors
Tene See aacea Sint A Yael See
a ag, Mlaclee Cina Werknt
XE yah ig rnenaling the_week with
Asean, fatbeal hernee or Eat
tee crue Mietamt Stear Sie tenes
Lok ealnea a naa ak trl em
BRAS SRE Beara a
Resor sis" veges eter thie ner
Revktya aarti Sik gore cit
And. dancing. Alen. Co ctreadwell “ad
A AUER aaa Year's ee andy
SSR CP Morne im Tielman, to
JR? le sae tant is
cave a fashion show and dence Jan. 5,
SivhabelMGtheaten furntved ie
Sethe, amie Groth a
Agni Siaited wen She ares
‘Hlals TERN ate the tase il
Lstaicr spent ewe aes ea wi
‘his mother”
Jamaica, N.Y.
AL tango andentivoniantte. qudlonee
abc ES Ron enasen water ME
Tatettmte ene nevain of shovel Yea
Hace Wit elivered wn tantra
USE mesmge fur tie eceasions Ae 8
semana lili crewed AU UH
Aealndin fee Anas econ ed
eer etentaner, went to Stns
Fanaa aes aah "tor eoteetion 6
Mee am, “Ae Sem dhe
AE Sinitinan sere agnigtira, Os
a soe ein che cores Stntas
serene ate Selank the GhieanHavten
er Hasaiias State orter af Rime
Some Ae ANE of Sete Bork
Semen Mpa, Sermon talspren to
ihe odes Riva Sam Se
IRE Gilisuan’ Paokentor sai capa
Moan tae ag ty 3g J, Wt
inbiece Shami Peagers® “Pes panes
Hn Sscan ‘raga before, int te attract
UNE ehtetertnd tnkesest that ihe seat
see eat tn haves fos ance
Cooked Moone Attace date, Clana 28
seat Bede ae Hore FG. Chee wl
sigeusa Che tect ¢ “api Bh
iif Snanetttion procreation, exte
Seige ote te la Ree a
Fentered innate.” ‘The heecamation ss
Penge "Mok we tucker. Sams Th
Figg” ettegrd Astle ate
ERNE theater inetd tre
wane teeed te Garey Turron
Matec ee ae Tiskente er Amer
FES re adress, heen, Men re
Lcheeh, wea She wen Fecelvet, Tohn
iat Piesined”
Me vernon, Ny.
stra, whe Besiins Sf Varrin. x
UME EESiay fa te tom see 2
alin atngee beesent weed Terme an
Tails Saale PHtornee™ end zene
A ietnduanin: Sinn and|Fin
Aiwa Netiane ri Bum eho
Cheisumas tree exerelars. “The sin-in
sind wwaking were fine. The allicors a
BY Syne Geheot rind the Poa
wre eAinshe Hartisase supurintesutent
femedt hate weereiarys Te dure
Heat Shia echoes resale
Pete cane TUNReE ano ae
TE pean Chenedl Govess ates Ta
Je at Lauteice Sel, cage bk
AGS Wares ae hee homes st Sst
Bh eenbot Sow Wear” Meine
Hieheh, avente, cow Teer Sens
|church Saturiay nicht the wateh nery-
fees wore: renders The “tiess Se 3
HES ain pectin 21
Has eat eal nS ul
Saestacneta, BeTey este
Feehan atte asasiate baae
Set eee te Tas ine urate
SER EM tah tnd ae
Hes coi ht ME Ua! ae
She AR: con a oe
Wn. Mi AS! ee Wee.
Ege: ache TCA Sat high
BELO Gna at ah
Sreiee She taeron antler en
BRINE, Ue ad ane, eae
Bean tease st ea ea ace
Hare IR! Ee sea a
ante SUGMRE ERY Le toe
Ce Seen hee oe
tanto ioeae Silent ef tee
she egtett te SEE Ar Uy
jin Femain fur the winter.
vontara, NY
The Wome SHEE MS satay eave
a Tiere Malpas era a
ANE Eta ee
Ao eat eR, “the
Rei oP SN ated a
bse pra eg
He eae Sees Aa
Hifesrutgy itd? te sa ee
Re ecg
SSEISEY SLASH, & le
pea a na ae la
ere ecmtagie cheng
ANT oe Ta nee,
Sr at a eee:
Sina Mest da ay ae a
Seite ae Pena Mane
SER ar CURR, ek
sie! aunt lae AL EN
iin anti nie Ee fe “bout
Baton, anor eof Area
You Should Be Careful
Where You Count Money
| Seer Fork, Fam Ta etectives. Say
we should. he caret whore ee. couint
Dur mney afrer reviewing theca
CEpline Harris, 292 West G2 ntreet
‘eho came to Hagiom amd. ietied
Iie rail in an effort to meqenrate the
Mili and, consequently eauacil the ae-
test’ we Beanie Sraith, 42,105. West
Tistn sereet, whoin Re chaewed With
rand ‘Tareens.
SrRteontine to Harris, he was count-
Ing his money At 130th. streetard
Lenox aventie Thunvday when. Smt
sinttehen $42 from his hal and. ran
into a barber. shop.” Oficer Walsh
tfeated the man fter'much exeite-
fment in the vicinity.
| TWO BUSINESSES FAIL
| New York. Jan, 13—During the
fant few weeks tivo, oualzess. fall-
{figes were Noted in Seventh avenve.
‘The Inter-Colonial Supply. Companv.
an lee eream and costeetionery toes
at the comer of 1ARth street, and. the
Tinetin, Trotiseerte. 245%, have both
Felosed thelr. danrs, Tusines condl-
Hons. there aye tn Teele are
classed an ery hoor
eee ease
oor arenes
} wenokisn, 3, Yo, Jan, iow Another
cut in tho force at the iironitiyn aes
Sued was mute Woenesiay whee 130
nore nen tere kal of omens whom
Were, several of owe workers. Bach
now “the, wage niteement: for the
Breckiyn nave gard becomes xrvatler
Hecersitacing a enntinual redurtion ts
thee forces the men deopred. tas
Neots wenriced 4 the hull and inaehia:
ee ee
PAGS NINE
LYTLE. REAL ESTATE. (RH,
RAL JURY
FOREMIAN OF FEDERAL JU
“Brooklyn, XN. ¥.. Jan, 13—J.- tt
SERA a Fh 8
‘Wien alr Lyttle went to quality
ae, dee eS Sol
National Association Takes
Over ~ Harlem Sranch
Ne praca satiate ness
RET
COLORED
DOLLS
eo: a eee
eae a
Magee bs et, |
Bas |
ee GARB
hts Ogee
5 > aes
ee es
fe ce SR
ict Be ug
ee eee a
He etter wn sn se
ee ara es
se ft ERTS pemeIaty ee =
ee ee
Sq sh—coaragey fe mation
soants St, camels
Se ee
ae, cagcnoiig Soi eatte a
Lene era mee
ema mest arcompars all neters
aie ears 2 aes
Sei eke oom arte
BERRY &. ROSS, INC.
Me wig a ne ely
HOTEL GLGA
695 Lennx Ave. Cor. 145éh St.
New York City
ST
fawn, q
Besa
EE as e ie os
pl ie ag
a4 oe are
Pa densest et SUR
OS Gabe aaa ia ct
Peis un ales Se
Tele Hehte: runt hae and
Sey hae
ED. H. WILSON, Proprietor
GROWS ALL KINDS OF|
son te tr tn of itn
ce eee
ter Bada Cut ae
EA GS fy “Sern vai
Seca le ae
Se Se
Wonder City Chemical Co.
PERFuneas
wogaaacee os te Ce ea
HOOP EARRINGS
i
h 3 "he
Nese” SE
cat EMS he EE reek coer
pie aire or onesie
UNIVERSAL CLUB
police pole greh
Sty Sweanag sung Beg |
one ta eine deaenster |
HEY, FELLOWS!
When Visiting New York See
DAVISON & LAURIE
Good Fellows’ Mecting Place
Seer te eae raise
‘The on’ POSITIVE HAIR GROWER and * J
* tar escce
GLOVER'S ‘wat MANGE MEDICHIE
Soi 28 Yn Pastn peves eae
‘H. CLAY GLOVER CO., 113W. 31sSLAT.G,
a mre
ee
Be ncemenneeri THE CHICAGO DEFENDER SATURDAY, JANUARY 14,19
Scns song eatin slr ig cg a a ee ee es
WILLS FAILS
IN 10 ROUNDS
TO STOP TATE
B jeer Daag, Shela Pp ie aag brated
eit of tant Moca anata Eo
Thoustnd howling alt Tats, nomd
thitared, whe Fabod crews an aks
Tier deinpestea by" nore of lly
Seah ned ateay ay teenies
Sep tuted. Fines Mere da te sue
Sie mer eepermamonyees. ot ster
Wl CF ter yon aed ‘sole There
ins shin and mpage aed
Soba inners and: Suomen
Sag, Teentaal writerse tener.
Bhd “Wonier re diene” lawyers
Ekuesrc nie hath workers ate
Ieee corr, Tecate eee
nigke tor" teted saan he Hest
doa, oly aarti te Soe
Bart
Tie tae a3 ot toe the: Hate
ach tha Tail Fate anides. nea
Shes sept. ethane Up the weet
Wine hae! haror ingests Tate
Sauna “iante eroraooiie as
Then fos taf waned to eee tha
Bie esa stew, mares wih wants
Phe atnere nae tn tad he
Getoeneeate vast wf soe bea
Shae agad‘dedieretete wih the
Hive eae of) the amen aed
re ant adage creel ehakin ts
inating en ate open A SL oe
die, Walle yo, Huet oat tates
She: Msedcwtied rio at ale end
Stee fi tet walked tle ti
dima Pie onal eee” a het
O8eE to theeagaess raid and says, I
Sie Scat Ree aia ee nae
Thaker ite Puletake: ated’ Witm ie wax
fete my eicnae wath Tens nae
Bt iin otal eas toute gan ee
sit thank Pica he TR
Sat nets sa oat desi dented
ar ysis a
EEE Nas the hare, tn points
nats rat Eon leet
Pate ina waisted “ae
Lin cme et, Me
Wards Wiha Fuiree, Voce werd Sap
fina RY cate ben Tenet
tie rude Se hat a phn
at ted at Mele AP
wifi tiny rach un ane Shaheed eek nd
si Ace thie
‘Fn hctiet cat toe ay human
rae ie, Stee att
finds water Maca Weer Walle om.
are Taek tte eel ca eae
ate toe aaey aie ee
pee ann wee Ment og
fa thc otha
Fine “wentted eat tain, Wie toeut A |
wns he teeta Fa
EE Neda Rate cone
wet nect “nea wit atten
atte A Teale” aa ae ik
7 ataniea ig a Rie a Tae
asi aha tit! “ngu ee mth
esse Wit Skt hi iy ke
ret ata te ae tie Sate
aay t= he Set
ee RAE Y Gr clw teint a4 20
ein eth aia al
Ae swath ba eee
‘Tate opens Ue
pen moter mtr ate eee 9 Pah
og eantcg” Hie! tea Mate
Sia uh st ik gta aE
ear ke
Roca of ia gk Than rato oa a
sa ote isi Sa
RESiA ous wean Toto fattind us the
shud cin sit tue Mirae woe aes
ge ic raul a Vag and,
Fin trang WHEE ae ne
Sf Tk oe ar a
id hehe Tathed Wile ute bs
Kat iowa iste Saal stdate ae hie
se a ese i Babe ae
Saag abeegegd gt et cae
ce ee ae a ee
Seid a aaa,
fae nam veniees wt bet fate tn Tate te
a ac tant: Sennen
Sot nalne Es Soc mies ere
erty tees Se Wi eaten Stun
Bie Ai at Fase pomaee teteee
era Weoet nti Poel Nine age
ht BTS ths Ske ate te
ibe gia ited a Went i
Sic Saeh Neeru tai ciamin se
pas eta Wie re ie
ag Sana trating dh ere
ett Ree er ence
REY Marie Regie? ee
ver nite 2 aa chaae aoa Vaae =|
vs ted else yet ata savin tte |
eae ia agi wee ta nek
Sai acest What Nadal eet
ee Meshes and Sat ie
rut Siu at ine niacatter Tat ce
soca inks ged se
By a idtow fee” Weta Pc
me acing fein teh ei
Sane Taal sta leas" ahter Tee
eR Wa caabed Ween te Siete ed
ft te ec iene
renee chi ae Sect
pet aden sagt a a
ey tit i, ame hate eh 2 Zea
Re Wachee ak whew ther hell rane
Fute ianand mors viii Dhow, i
iE i Tan At eet aS
Hea at tae a. do
galt haves meee) Hi wa toe
Beha hae hey eck wa
es ae hie sah te Savane
Datars, ete ta Tine
ry Seve a tr hl te
Migs te eae ey na
Bt aie tel dente ke setae
asi teh iene te” Roars tog
Seite Eitues ce Velie week ch
pape fo a nd
en niet tine fae sSinenen
Se eon nes S|
ia erature as Wate whats wt
Whe apes’ nae meer he ter!
mer ina els in i
eo Moat ae etna ttt
dite etpeee ay ial
Sve mages thy Saige ee |
iether toe bl fo2 thar fane |
“ihe SRAM ES natty eth
CMS and ares ae aette Shea
Heth ihe Vue tal He eae |
Fahd hue Aud ep td oe
wearer the sateatien o a ste
aris Round + |
Wale abet = ORE be Tania oe
eeu Rae a aa he
nik Sid oe "Soh
so ate rte aa rhetee hat
Mgt a ee ae Mite A
aeptd Naan | fate Labeda Tieht |
Te te we feats, te tee
heat, With Totaled couple ot terrhe
Ea toe nag a et
Faved PWR ina chy Ba
Tobie” sate ange rehire
SCE TRE Sa AMR a
NE Mdtey a Rater dened te Pb ores
SEE Sah ee
ose cate ge the ES
wits mang. Bott hil to as
we enMaMed whica ine Seo tothe
ESAs Wire tanded wtih eit heme te
Te Seen Seas
| BUNGLETON GREEN
|| Ee eins
| nme”
:
a = so eee =
ane 2. 3 See eS |
eS & | oe Gb! S ae . |i
ee ee
EFERDER A. C. ‘JOM CLAIK KNSOAS OUT ‘WALDEN UNNERSITY THES TATE ARRIVES
PERAINING 2| Tn snae warm 2 100,000 PURSE OFFERED FOR CLOSE CANE FROMM PEARL pee RarTiE |
| Brooklyn, N. ¥., Jan 13,—Johnny
tack ofthe 48th Hexen, fel
Goeeny tease Tan wae
serene oh eee
ot eee Far ns er poe
roar pee am eciiees
abana at ae a
Saas omic acme
Seaiar te Ce eres
oe oan a oe ee
Seer eet ra am
Nor a ak eect
ee Aupeaiog areas
Der er hehe ae oe
eer te ort eo Sh
esa brag
yeti anes coe gh Hert
ancien ae ea
ake on ea ci
epee ie
panes Aheah in at clea
to dey Fox Gwhlte). Suntthy wax
ee, Pet eta ee
Matt sant in Vortlond, Ope, that fade
Hee TED ai ts ene
ee Pee eatitas Tee var
ae tee ok
Roun te we ateyucliien emer? a
Meacted ithe ine, eae Bram
Satta aa at ae
dtd eccrine, Me thin he
othe” inhi ant
ASE tenn been a rule che tho rot
eee tak haem athe some at ie
Tag “RM iendtan She ineg ee teen
ERS, Mts Gheamartvoe tn the
FEMRAGMS, ER, funder ert
ISDS tie" he Be Loerie
SOP SA'S ME mn Weaken ne
tie Evie etakiedt a” wont
Rag Ta Sia a Aes, ae te
eat fie genase tie eke
pats Che Pra irage
fori erm, Wie ok ee a
irra ta ne: Gath et de
Se eat a Atsuely it. “Arde
Tae anal tot th ty ale
[erube Seane tie. writers eet te tore
Mooi Ta sine tes that Derm
SEt tats Heal tr: eae ae ta
rulem In the original book saalnoct It.
Senate Ta tea tea tan
Fee REE ine Sac Tow aut ts ea
TERMS ENE SES ace hen fm
SS noah envi ee
irc Seger Mage HEE a
Eahod tu ong tn egermts es
Seton deatiettete ches We, Nt
Fee e ae eee ant Us one anes
aidne thee cone ike est el Wan
See ig Metso al eEane te 3e
Ee eS eRe cha
ik Gara ae an
Sty Wauat eb knee ia fa
Teenahe hinted Stat he ee
Aa Nene “Pata ane Set had
Peta af he ing, She sot
Seite Maha bad instead nek
TE tela Bea en
agatege Atarnitednh Thala wha thes
SSE oe ton Brats 2 se ati coe
aks htace, A senor fae he
ae taatttea nett oie eee fe
hth Vevey ate we
EE Bence ane nance in
hee Tints ahae Dace Roun ll
EThast sees, Ste- tat ato, | Th
tat ear ae WE Sa aa ue te
eftelted Sere, “ie figs Sune tage
Hae eersc oat a AR ne
Wil" Vad Mies Gcthiaetsd 1h
Restle nee ante a eck a
Smeets biet “ap ome tateisien ad
Wadine” gonna acta ocean
sag feat oi, Mea ath in is i
SiS nt tad tate sewecs gS
Sra yer gear ger
ett Athenee OARS, th te
ee teat od tacarurigte, There
Gh tia heh sae ee ae at ESS
ES te ace a ean
ES" Whi hachiw take siemch erates
Ee eh ey aera
rene He i jens tre wean
Damen Runyon
‘Fi arg sigue ot a Mena
ot ntontae etinuejrlter. fenced
Bh tet ta nese ite oie ha
hth, PIE i tan tee tne
eect te Naika ak eae
Dee eT ie nkentnlag lett te
Eibeiset tated cout te Brenda
See Sanath it et ara
Betis Wienke wes! “Scher
SHWE ngage er
Eitied? ete ait Semone oan me
ASCOT RSE SRL inate “ae
Fin wait angeee teste hah
Tee ate et creat the
Behe tn Ae ae, eh
see ste at gotlenaans ta pices
Shoat acetate oe
tpt nb at AE ths ballin Astor
ACAD aap ena ae the
AREA Bahar Uh ot mmcitne
Ret augeea ae nee ae aa
it ie ze et, Sat
Tee toggES Flin ated he atte
Ea anen ie fous wife ean eta
iets hie Wine ng tert fost hg
Sen Mere nat dnatacace shes
Tinted eet ee tonnes ee
Hoge einen only Reva!
Eilgr Bre Maree nbianatahe ad
TK Tit Feuaseriehe ee ts ier
tried sore aad eoeeh ee
Wilee! se aiae ns, "Ge Seuineon ie
MeteeaMaeey dats, Si Haan
Bei adlDed” Heel Sloe hek to et
Tap aecial Sait kha net
Pra 2° Scaes Ean esate eat
Eee sakie Sida oli ees set
dee ae a te he
Teoeinie tape thee cee at att
Sine Et a “Adciaat hee ‘Mit?
eg asain Toston at hi
Stig ba
WS Retreading t9 Urine up old man
phere ee a
Hee a, am nse Sutpeione
Soe weir tones alate
Seg he in a
Seno Silent ruil pees ts
Teco Mattie dk! Miata Tact
eo eat Hack tion tga came ant
otal oa erg Soiucat” ae
Keech ite a
WaT ae et ie wi
tr dbttinai ia Ro ine tk
"Hen “ape tention 3th, Twaips te
at” io mictted Wanlacer cn ai
frock e's esechenne we etic we
ghettos Se he
Sica mir aot eer at be ork at
peak as a i Hele of
ion te Pt ta sce et
foie dnt ie eesti to hn
2 iene hee eet eter tk:
Gia atl he te ay
Sr fio shag tae wet, praking mies
Per acd outing
Ae eee ae |
DEFERDER A. C.
REMAINING 3
GAMES AT‘Y. M.!
We Wkgeube ae
~ Locals Hit the Road
b Starting Jan 12, the Defender AC.
Weetuig taoketteal"eteamjuns, eli
ue un ther ot te astek VN 1
Sint touRd Clase te tite anes
Sete husdage at the Wabash
AUNT cs NRE March Reem
hie ilave baie bern enlarged tee
Aentnariate the crowed “The bevanston
SEAIS in tor De dest attraction
ihe "Heatweotsiie jeune wear eM
[inaptly. sk S23, dollowesd By the
fiovvew lites, Sevanstons wal) toy rs
Hotabeved a having aye the: Dee
Einiere sc clvio guaie bn thes Whe eon.
See He hs ote the eat a
Hse etme tetaming twiew thie. set
{tons the Le Senator fightse
“fee gianes nesoods or 3m, Ds
eauttet the ese eitieago Whats
eS ait, cautions fo th
[Sisieg in thie Wavy welgia elas
Fe hat paises just a hotly eon
Seated games aa wong those WN Oe
Tesututeannete
‘Gn dt 2 the Cpelttan A.C. eben
fic at the nuthern — diveton
Sight Cotumstas feagiie, wil ae
wae azuinet she. inca) craskos "This
ENV rarewadl ean, as the tenn Lous
Ha nighe ou its sting through the
Tent. wAdiniocion alla at the
“ye pill ter 38 contag resurved Seats
Hongess 22, Doughorts sf the New
Yurt Nowe be exerting every effort te
ssi: hs Eaetern tl a he eto
ria the aroatent coer TARR by Any
Pinas Fhe, Western. team wilh jay
fhe games ba the eh of New York
dnd vicinity sham any. ielting tea
Senge plgeed is thee mart wt Hawkee”
foil aie Estugheets's aerate
wie ath keve Of oul, clea, gaRes
ihae eased ian ty Rieke Me Chee
ea a the eapORAEL of everstlng
Seve te sloan sportsamensbie in Das
ihas the Beveitert of Indoor siacts.” The
Fehedate ot the team eile as t0l-
owe: tadhanapolle ML Ge A
Amoriun Login. seam, Nona, Oot
Siivenactinns Higristoueg, Bar Parts
Bide tnanie, Ne dat shattans, Sew
Vast. Cites” Oregtaie. New. York
Pity: Sew York State League, New
Vink cing: Yangale Atlantic cng?
Torus the te towkdyn, X.Ved oe
Iivitten gasiwst wlth, es Celtlex ibe
worker, chagmaans), Athens
Teinwarss catlleiee ot Waenhbnton.
Coteinnt tewastiele,” Spatngtiel
Way “oenetanaay =F" caged Teliangols
Vo ae feotaa Wwheitius staves Ril
We ake be At, dulitegn, manager
Tetender Ase, BaSclodiags aventes
(#° Feft Memes toy the twnky, | The swe
LFiotcards “tate bande tod wanker a
ru ESL abel g
Het 2oNaet ine en dimes “ft
RaSh ao Miao,
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fittings Moein Wielka 2" ci
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Fe ake teak te the iat
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craeltadtee i fee seu ae ey
Tintin’ a eilta: “Wat aaa Te
TERM RMD thi tach igi
the akan thane
ete Seine Spee auttinge The mea
Bt aS Gan ea ea ai
Fake WEAR ati in treats
TROT Bk or See le
Beart aie ta eae oes
Hise ateccae Ey lie shia SE cits
bi ~ Round &
aes me twnet wate = te
hase Wins ANG eRe oecncnet
aS lea oat he a
pee acta teak ting se
asthe hc hetill ee ui thie, at
terior biti cadhat aes
Tenge aie Se. Piane eons “Init nish
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ae tees ates ts Ws Oe
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TESS ta hades arteneg sent Ince
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ena ae lence omera Fact
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eund §
| avant reat a ANNE ty utes an
ale shea eas eS PG
EAE She ahaa ata teak ee
REE he USED? ao cnc
Foren chance wn nd Se a
Meat nica a ts ey
Fr eee phe a
Betta EG aisha sh aa
depute etn, Vat ney la toes
fe gee NE BLS Sane abe
tie ames
wars tat wi SURE 2 ae vain, tote
aston’ ah Bach ah es
SEOTE Tee teyaegeeee ne tek RB
ie uae een ALY nae
fied Nile aceite
AR adel hh ENE eae
Bane jut Wane tether dew: We He nev
Wille Shs Just iting these Fate
Pete aie Ae Sek he Wan tf
pe Wile to ha ae Sie
TSEUNERR ete wot, AEE ee
HEL Sint Ue ee cate ate a fone
SUSPMEC B.S Sine
i ie opel eranee ata clas
serhndtnae ke Fema ee
HiPath fake
er Les ae ner grate EN
Tortinagg sole nate 6
Ease Sia Sots ialns hh
Bie, le Sea aoe a
Pie Hea Fae BANE VOR NN &
By JULI JONES, I.
WiLLe ANG TAYE
i HIE COMER EES
ze
$100,000 PURSE OFFERE
| WILLS-DEMPSEY GOIND
$100,000 PURSE OFFERED FOR
— WILLS-DEMPSEY G0 IN DENVER
FE spect rmiansip mst eeprom ny oe Nee
tine "Atta vig een |i tee Aan! Qty
beanie rahe aon tigre te ar
AMERIGAN LEGION AND OTH {WILBERFORCE WICTOR OVER
REGIMENT GLOSE IN vicruey| HAMPTON FIVE. 94 70 18
Tne Ck okie mente ee
fag ther etal ofthe eeculir weal the
init iste Bee aa She
Sea intel ch eat
mei! ces Mica aaa ae
Ta Ral tae ors esos
“The Clipers had run up eichy points
sat aaa ee Wty Relate
"The heres team. shined That te had
rercite Dane ating tre Eanes
See T Ge ie” a he
aivoat oath uihd: sehen Shur wand ef the
Beton Rele in "we the Ponty
Teen ced cata, eS alae
He er trge Yo ti ht
SAUD cals SPR le
setae a get auth now
Bex mame, “They hee tt eur teat
Ho Mig i ten a
irene setae rae
Giles Pini 39, Ck Pk. Ghixpen—
nainties hha (8 a
Fine Ze 2 etna fa ie o
facer eS 0b em eS won TB
eee hE etitan 8 oO 8
Paine 8
Ts heaped” pase“ at “er wocaiig
spe wat Tet ehtahettt genet
TESS ty Thin gate wae aE
Pherae frwin the Mist tine" tn hac the
item hae ioe on Shekel
From the start nf Me game zo the
fitted a ges
Seirataeds ae Taree acca ae
Bakara itr Meta
SSH SPE tha Sack et
SEE Satay re opel
Ene henthee a” coger fe ee
Shot: ikeeisi Ye Cuesta ot
HRC Movie nor be shai ae
is ica etait al
Pinte nian thesienes shorts Bat ot
eager ce
kth “woes ba wn eps
OTe ete.
verte fo, FOE Hwan to
ites a Bieter 2 t
IES ARRESTS
Basie Samoa? 23 4
Mees gS Sees fs 88 8
|EIGHTH REGT. LIGHTS
1 LOSE, CLOSE GAME. Zn
fener ante, eet beeen
{Eel Fete sh leanne
Hii! aay, wn thal Herat all
cers eres are eh
uetGaioa of Une Wet “Sutera ait the
Matte Sten ithe eating ment
tae rig ne
hone FEET Saag pe FEDS
Wines i STN ETL Ge
Mile 2b 8 @
Bas fied aca Lag Bla
jhe ita SS
| KANSAS INDUSTRIAL WINS
( FROM LAWRENCE, 21-18
| iawteniny Kem di Ieee ot
swine “asin: “Hs ho ht
Heute tenia et ie
HLeaweence Might schon ato Ye ties
ened ee BS ELM, Bate
ae tnd the: dat sey fn ar
sia tee athe tel
Reid te jaar eta deta ot
Bie ett iad the ined eat te
Heat aig Sea Sa axa oe Coa
Raith adem hale the Institute
Fish tele 2 te tha Snaa
SST ae Ss
ie accrccapperse ae
ori” etn Aggec tS, a
INDIANAPOLIS Y CCMES
FROM BEHIND AND WINS
eT eh Ls ANU Tete” In
amagedhe 3 Me A cae tet ee
ARTE he Sng aaa aN
ak So ad om ie te
[ret "halt ‘un the shurtend uf at qos
Segoe aye ee gate ate Sind
eae 1 ihe visltora iets featur
Eee sega
aE wince
hap eect e tee :
Sree tie Ee eaetttee eat aoe
ADAG! Scares een Ae atl
ieee fale te wins 2am
forks 3 TESS" damicboes of Dawa 2!
Beare
By Gernard Lewls
Le ee
[Tie in tanh Tempe ana
faci” seine
shai: hn tee apts of stn ft
finctse at bingy dle ae wa
{eons nea Tn eh rng ety wie
jeter clone ae 2 cert one
[citar Secits cision
| 4stocaes tans iat "Incite ta
{vat ede"the'ine Stee at
Lee tae ae 8° ste he baton
| edeating tie spd al pronter at
Tintern Inenser bg. Bin ondieed
suscecetty n otieiee ne ese
Tae eat linia the. ais
TN det ened a hese
chataplonaliy vente sat ane
HA cata wu tim ee
Satis aay" to he So wt Domes
a Se
tMethee wenn tn thant Twelve
te oak bette Bieter naan ee
Mage th te Wrens Soe
teeta dat ae
attr the sentry Rettoen Vent
sound hcmniir rcs Woche
[ice SPaichnnan ti ahoull hehe
[Ents nag eh Wile he ae eek
[a nacatnko am cals eee ee a
mut is Cher wae Ine ee’ atee
|atai dercae the ccnp”
i
WILBERFORCE VICTOR GVER
HAMPTON FIVE, 24 T0 18
by Chartes H, Willams
tome CR tt MONAT tee
Alea Vea dMadaoe beer
cia et et eH
ie? ARS Re ie i favor
it ee Se er Sect
ait Gee he aha eee
a ini eet ae
Ran elimeld thar efetney oe ma
ng thee Seteat io
SOE enc esnaBeisbatewuteere so Teali
fame ocak ccicecees Hee
aun Soc eScocccrma tt eee
Paani ite, amen ee se Nee
BONECRUSHER M'NEELY —_
LMORKS OUT FOR BOUTS
names cu anere s
4g elie Uae
aA ee
ee lake
fin trctirtene
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Aavt Will tert aay
ih Ie'inttenatay
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Sin, oe ae
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NATH eat
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teriat oal
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, TK. As Reeltus through it
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Wosmmamaseuatna Nirfoli or | fie
BOSTON TIGERS FIVE
AFTER SOME BIG GAMES
prices, Aer bs eis A
Siac AE a fe Mae
Fe ig, Oh lee ack at
ERAN rn hai hd
under of Sexe. engine ne ne
BATTISTE MAY.FIGHT GANS
Srntanct ar ome th rai
tt tne adenine sabia
HESS ttn te ese
Trolls the ea nt en cae
Wa RE eat ha ante tay oer
teats Sie so ee ca eee
Perec losinn depettens cee tas
Wate’ is uiier the watchful oye of B
Rie
Over 709 Phone Calls
Answered on the
TATE-WILLS FIGHT
Friday Night
(112 Chleagy Dotenter
Nia tharonnie ne 1S
Pee ee
Thong a a2 Portia
ime. thir ta ttrco che
coven ltrs eelteg heat see
GB arse nee cere eed
Ae be wit apwekal sige wel ae
oud gory ett nas
tr rere, “hanes, ee
anients Doutan Ovskeenines
Boson wt Fuesdny night dn
Teather isch ant gee sues
OF she races Will Sam tories
rae
WALDEN UNIVERSITY TAKES
CLOSE GAME FROMM PEARL ft
| Nashville, Ns 2, Jam, 19.—The Wal
Isle SL ae ee ae
Soot Bcanaay ccna ap ES aan
ears anaeeea eur
aa ah ARE eo
pecan tere aaa
ig bi ig eve pe
se te, aed oene
torre ls carrey Meee
cent ah Rt
fe
at ae aM
Piet eee hae ee
tw and Around New York |
1 BY RELL WHITE,
SoM? nea avdewomalering, mate
Lae
eee Sore aa Sa
somnelie ne eee
sce cpa oa tine fe
Sus helt Slondey evening at the New
xh SLE on oa
Eee ie, Renae, ae
cece trees soe emcee
ab tine Gata nee
Thine fon tetvee Water woakd
By FRANK YOUNG
Prank Tunean, wie fur roars wae one
ot) The genta ti fhe, oer “paren
Beat Eaters dict ne aie
oa ghana ies planmite for "the
Sood le Piha tate tas ate
atte a Boke sn St
Sent there 0 te te sttaiahten, out the
Sees 8S SAN alent the
BANE Se UE bots eo guettaue the
Eu tta fi Se oa ational ae
ein nhieu the ser
het poat fream alt Robot Ee fw strona
ites “Tg thes ini Neel in
Neate iyo ht Mao
fates Sie ae ceca
2h gauss le ta then came dhe big
chee at anauid Tooting taurgament
ibis Cy MUN ell AE She Eee
feat ck nat ent tt ate
eked ao Hart of chess
ese Cet a fe
TSAI Aioceica Wt ho bel una
theauialete oe moor apart
ERE END “hehe ie nee
Ae" annie er Cite fen eat ne
‘EER Mr et Ete ci na
tie tora iret and second pts “ee
ie! ce
amore of wa tea mur ary
phate ane’ the, stabs, “e2 a
Eat he! Wie Wearing the Coming
Terese etl le
REE e “Tia ani Teens win "Es
eee Rate
rom ear Basta tion New Tor
Seer eae te, GR at
Serpe Gary oe cere
in hie fee, whteh iz “Nathenl charms
tant nat nl is Tn Seon
Chir ate a
igs teat etm dees ron
ean Te tte he wea white
a ahd hecsttehiae hc te
Tieie first ieatus game fem Iaindbiom
High Feibaye
eeeteeint acu flchas acy rae
HG Bet ae taht SEE
Sattod Wins ARuaher pager ‘amied
Te Reva tn hesuims Eve ein
sno as wane
mune the ouioe waver tn the ie
sc Raden why ae trainee
Sauter af Rnd fame se Beers
HE Tchad need he be en
Erclenne ttaieie rare: My Fone
Soi SF WEARS lin Wei a ae
tar sill teed imation’ ere xa
IRE Ue te Nomeatine ining An foc
uh of fells ont egw the teas
witeeforee Cage's sud ty tn
Pe ae a ee
Eten ie a hat ala the
See eae meer is is ee
Hale Pate itl EeSeomae Baw hoe
Tatiee rouge nin
ive Higeh teeapieg? Men te emt
intohcdlon ant Caach Wout Staal
esSuecanring nig mien for Gods Teak
TSE MSaee wih 1S Wout hee for
he a ee egntar ae eho thes Fae
fase he Gris Weating emo daw
fenac "e
By Rogers
TATE ARRIVES =
FROM BATTLE |
ON THE COAST:
Big Fellow Makes Call at anil
Defender Office; Will
Remain Here j
ie |
Postal apr te ar agi Mit
a a |
igi Cam get
SEER Be eI
jin Chicago Tues geeB Py
fae eiStmade SE
Si ati ie cals ea
fee OSE te Ba
iiiang af thous UG ego es
int just co eae ge
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So seurk ue hin eee we
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itor Wit, Riese
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terain' st "the Ra
Arnica “nse: SReUAYNS
Serimed in Rag
ihe date raere | SS
fenrdiseha Red
sifeatenbing witiam Tate
Bepaeye
shacte fr ich statement" saan Tate
acura overs mar simu
to rea the cone An far ae teh
Side BtianwessY aly net Sewing
Shuhense? hae ifthe pubile show
Sep aviteney vo wrunt she ateh
PPE Reta oe the cnrcuniet
him) in dhe rine ih the rresene
Shtinpion sod hot the bese man wi
sine
Tate fx making Chieaxo his head-
aace ing a tye fact tha Me
anager, Howard. Caer known a
RE Howards toner nf che Arcade
jsvimnasiusn “Wwer here. ite ie
Saluste of abd geiebtare and
Sfechamicat Guiteey uf’ Sormat Al
Stat at toode Wade pelt
rade, “ite win & schotarahin te aes
iareyatedteal aehoots “Er. Prank ©
cutae discovered fate sid hoe tee
Sora Sie fa Calambary Ga in what
evo faa keneenae in fur rounds
a are Some ge Tate eine
ghia since then, benles hienesns
Can cn Wille ‘sere meine San
Tangteed, Jeanette, “Dacing aim
Fonnony sain SieCoy “and. Gunbese
‘Sith. "ite wt te feat an to ston
iGnafords atopic ins tothe Tae
aunt's at iSteound Go ae eanane
fe in 1916.
BATTLING JONES STOPS
| DE COSTA IN 4TH ROUND
Phat asin dace Bagg digo Tesh piers
formnriy of imviom, 0, krmcieed ei
Banailian doe De Costa tn tee Taureh
scrotum ve the aehedufed te-toant sts
outst" the Saath evince avers
Prt ole. Bot teen are hence
SRIES" on, hin foot tor a, wi fellve
Stutat”acerr Ge ‘Cesta tn the hes
Fetied, wenkoning. tins wien” watery
Trg puncies ie tec and es
trainee runes sonen’ Keytar ea
deny woke be Coma dened
tooth tr toon the agcend roused trun
“Ste dhe “acinictinal Less Chester
forced Geordie Tinea fr gt be the
teeter eat ot Se hasty sh
nditedaver bis Tf ehes oth Bap
"ye feature uf the “pootiminaries
sear von raves dyauke Gleteee he
Thee opesee he ofented Crane Waitt
Hsien, eho wie in the wees
[eran Sanne Pole chute) eae
irene enor vith” stan he He
fentea on padntse ernee Wade
Gente aad Schdbr.simgone nee
Stieit Mighters® quit ithe secu
re
'SAM_LANGFORD LEAVES
FOR BOUT WITH WILLS
estbtna tI teed tne ikea E
ice ae
Teta tinh PEE RRS
TOneted Dan. kat A vote Aisa
Eira Ale Raa ie
Sooty iow Cal Ts Sulphate
ashe Sie ses
FOOTBALL STAR LOSES
TWO FINGERS HUNTING
wl foe theee geath guurned an the Ties,
Eee? tia tone ams,
ere ahr i of ee
SA GPE Mae
Epslitip ge iar etn Sk
ae iia a Hee eee
Sine, ee foes eta nk
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kip washineTon ow couMooone
eat aise pe ae here
orate (Fs Se el
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sohaaeig ehlh cc Stt
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Cantive: The Alphan font, be Sts
Poem et
Robert 1 Giikersan, manuter of «Gt.
acre Cin Bm Aah
family guavician, ieane areata fern
| rib
Z2esiis
ssderioen, “ats “Soke. Bnew eat an tireee
ee ree ae ae oS
set Sidi TET tat ne aE
ENGLEWOOD Hl :
FALLS BEFORE
PHILLIPS REN
Heavies Take Second League
Game on Losers’ Floor;
Lights Defeated
seftniicl ‘Pailin Ween niet thor enor
RU GRAE RE ae
Seek a teain
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atanten “was gee ‘.
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aun Rb. 7
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GEORGE WILSON TRAINS
FOR GOUT IN THE SOUTH
Gcgige WCikoy, oe che manne
nee AN tiocee a Mia nee
TSS tip tecis pking
Mya deca Mae dees
ififests ihe Ganetaesbery leh MeMeee
Ucsaae Wr Batting Saclt!™ Wie
AM nere Da at chess Paks se ans
wep win he te the wens
1 a a ae re ae
). Tenny Hlownt, eanet wf the Detcelt
stupe hese ts, ban Tuenay tuk ae
ase Sy See, ty a
FESISE Be Wecats ste" Malan
See encanto, ce ele
ia? eine cbeat eran eaten te
ie Sedhtnat enc niceties
od en ct
CANE RUT AUGMARS, Wu Sdotin
sere apeiegar ae ef
Rei adetneletwahes of tas terse
ete Sb a Van noe Ser haat eas
MOE Sl? ec NA ta et
cite focrsat ‘otganettbna
cant ne ierstent ak Sear hate
eae hs LEE eta at
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swe Bie tage A
| _Becesiaiye gotten bw at the
RAMS! Hewinnent Stomlay mists Jam,
Tae Seuneahing bie dine Dow’ anlet
16. Sémeching hig,
“GETTING AHEAD"
Ea ee
el ae ichigo ahaa oa
Geetaor! Cadel Sime Beet, Mine Cree
SESH we pind ted oe tae
STUER pent, Ese
fates nana tke diene Sotmeem tat
cecbin a tesmeket
Ataring an, “Bisfae Gaseaes Catan
FS Scarce
Eig eect
SAP Saree ane
FRANKLIN V. BAEB
REBEL & 69.
3507 Grand Biyd.-
CHICAGO
JANUARY 19, 2024
INDIANA
Kokome, Inc.
Peru 1nd
Better Mice
Ninneapolis, Nippon
THE PRAIRIE STATE
Springfield, Ill.
Quincy, Ill.
Desatue !!!
Jacksonville, FL
All Prairie State news must reach this office by Tuesday noon to inure publication.
Bloomington, Ill.
Jollet. III.
Ruvolp III
Friedberg III
Rockford, IL
Seastar II
Mrs. Alex Ferguson entertained at dinner Monday, Dec. 31, in honor of Mrs. Rita Prevyn Dolphin Walter Morrison and Mrs. William Wilson William Shepard, Mrs. T. J. Harter and Master Wendell Wendell Anderson for our Christmas dinner. T. J. Harter was honored to the occasion with a ringing, which, when worn, was engraved, in which
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Carbondale, IL
East Nolins, IL
Floin, III
Metropolis, Ill.
Pulaski, IL
Mounds. III.
Eikville III
Mrs. Katie Johnson has returned to her family's Brooklyn, Ind. Meshanah Mestel's establishment and Walks of Halifaxborough were opened in 1992, and the birth of Cartierie was the guest of Mrs. Mary Anderson last Saturday, Mrs. Mestel's daughter, Christine Mestel, and Mrs. Mestel during the visit. Mary and her boy, Duncan, was visiting Mrs. and Mrs. Elly Clifford last week. The lazar at her financial success, Rev. John Mestel, was married to Murray Mestel, who was working at Sturbridge, was visiting relatives at Sturbridge, was visiting relatives at Smith have returned from Chicago.
where they were visiting her mother, where they were attending her babe, attended the leagar here last week. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Williams Williams and Paul Smith. Dot, Soto were attending the leagar here last week. Boid is spending a few days with her father, Ray. Hallay, at Central Hill, Mrs. Williams and Paul Smith. Quot, spending Sunday at Elkville, Mrs. Williams and Paul Smith. Quot, visiting in Carbondale last Sunday, Mrs. Claybark spent Sunday in Carbondale, Mrs. Williams and Paul Smith. Quot, dining at the residence of Mrs. Harrington, Mrs. Ada Prentice of Dewna, Ill., Mrs. Ada Prentice of Dewna, Ill., Prof. P. N. Harrington, Prof. W. K. Harrington, Peter Williams and W. K. Harrington were invited to daytreat. Prof. W. L. Louis and family of his people last Sunday. Paul Smith and family were highly entertained. Mrs. Addie Jennings of Chicago is visiting other relatives. Mrs. Francis Williams of Carbondale. Rev. Oliver has launched a conference meeting at Bethel A. M. B.
Chicago Heights, IL.
Sunday, Jan. 1, P. Sawyer's A. M. E. church held its first Quarterly Conference James C. M. E. church held its second o'clock at the A. M. E. church. The third o'clock at James C. M. E. church Park, together with their congregations, were chief among the conference for business. They have succeeded in hiring their pastors, including 1915-1917 Sunday, Jan. 1, in a rally conducted by C. R. Wheeler of theMethodist church is ill. All rectors failing to get a copy of the conference for the stage.
Grand Chaln. Ill.
Normal. III.
The older of the Normal A. M. E. S. and F. The Great Club, Bloomington, P. organized among the young men and women of the community to covenant prayer meeting campaign, Mrs and Mrs B. P. Kirksey wish to thank them, which will not be forgotten, Mrs and Mrs B. P. Kirksey of Normal, J. Mrs and Mrs B. P. Kirksey of Bloomington, J. for their kindness. The Sitting Club of the A. M. E. S. Thomas, president.
Jerseyville, IL
Streater, Ill.
Aurora, Ill.
Harvey. III.
Sunday was a high day in Zion on Monday, and the day before, Zion is chained to Francis K. K. Chalmers for the occasion. Rev. K. E. A. Wervier is very proud of his work. The stewardess of Shifter's chapel, has been very ill this week. The Daughters of St. Francis K. K. Chalmers and effective work among themselves, beginning with the new year. There are many activities at the Masdle remembrance Saturday night, Jan. 11, Mrs. T. Jones, 1471 Myrtle Street, at the Masdle remembrance site at the County Hospital, is in
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polls stay home to enjoy it
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Clinton, IL.
Penaria III
George B. Bryum.
B. W. 38th St.
Chicago. Ill.
L. G. W. Riley.
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Detroit. Mich.
Anyone having news for the Chicago, Illinois, and Mrs. Alicia Honbeck left Monday to attend the Altona University Club party at the Altona University Club on Monday and Mrs. Jack Stewart, Mrs. Steven Katz, and Mrs. Jack Stewart, Mrs. Steven Katz, and Mrs. Jack Stewart were down from their city visiting with his grandmother, Mrs. Hays, and his mother.
Chaute, Kan.
MISSISSIPPI
West Point, Miss
Robert Hallet is sick with pneumonia.
Mrs. Marse, Mobile, Ab., is making this
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Johnson left for Mobile to visit;
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PROTECTION
PAGE TWELVE
AROUND THE HUB
T
By Alexander D. T
Dy Charles E. Freeman, Jr.
Springfield, Mass.
Mrs. J. W. Adams of 151 Eastern Avenue has been home with her mother, Mrs. J. W. Adams of Tolonia, Kann, and Mrs. J. W. Adams of Tolonia, Kann, and were united in marriage by the Rev. S. H. Hoffner. The Chicago Independent Board of Trustees united in business 102 business places. J. W. Adams, 102 last name, coats and Union shoes. R. J. Walker's barber shop, 72 Willey street; Bowness street; R. Sanders barber shop, 52 Main street; R. Sanders barber shop, 52 Main street; R. Sanders barber shop, 52 Main street. Don't miss anyone if you want to be intelligently moved and moved. Send the Indiana
UTAH
Salt Lake City, Utah
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THE BUCKEYE STATE
By Alexander O. Taylor
By Alexander O. Taylor
The annual
muster-winter convention of branch No. 2,
Christmas Missionary Alliance, will be
held hereafter.
2.2.2 Street,
7 p.m. work days;
7 p.m. weekdays;
8 p.m. and 10 p.m.
and 7 p.m. Stoen
M. Collett,
Charlotte,
M. Fitzpatrick,
Charlotte,
Rey K. M. Nguyen,
and a missionary
dress from the
Meetings class amm.
S. Scott,
superin-
endent
A. O Taylor
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Worthy Charity Clubs
George Brooks and Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Montgomery.
Insurance Man Honored
J. B.
having assisted in the
surfaces plan of the Ohio District
No. 162, now in successful
operation.
master of Council
No. 12, Cleveland and
the District of the 4th
Begiment, and served
for seven years in the
mental adjutant
under Col. J. W.
Buss, in 1911 he was
patried with colonel
Mr. Buss, native in the
Household of Ruth
and noble governors.
Chapter No. 4, which he helped to
organize in 1880, is the oldest
document of the Anchor Life and
Accident Insurance Co. of which he
was organized under the laws of Gobio
with a capital stock of $100,000.
Christian well known insurance expert, formerly the chief insurance officer, then the company's officer is at 3111 Soviett avenue, Cleveland. Mr. Abbotts
has most successful insurance companies in the country, together with his extant
componently his firm for his new field.
Many Pleasant Affairs
Empire Bank Remodeled
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
The recount of the votes cast in the last election for council in the 11th district, which was met with availble nothing, Twoe contested votes were given to Editor Harry Strom and two others, who voted by Council Thomas W. Flinging was sustained by the recount. The recount was down. Editor Smith's request for recount account of the lateness of filing the same recount was introduced a resolution in city councils a recount "to save the name" of his hickup district more product officials to review the recount. The editor Smith's paper: "The board of elections recounted the Nov. 11 vote, which was really amusing. However, it will not cause any set-up in the work to interfere with the offenders as hoped by the 'encemy.'"
Call at the office, $25 Central avenue,
and see about selling the "World's
Greatest Weekly," the Chicago De-
tester. A live wire can make good
A Woman Lost!
For Public Admiration, Ostracized at
Social Gatherings.
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Her skin is a fright, full of large pores, pimples, blackheads, etc., when it could be made smooth and velvety if she would only use daily, including Sunday,
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Agents Wanted-Write A. A. BROWN,
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J. R. Spores III 313 Scootville avenue
Cleveland, central avenue the Defender
Cleveland, central avenue Cleveland,
other—Advertisement.
Live Agents Wanted
Almanac Ohio
Delaware, Q
100
Alliance, Ohio
Palnesville, Ohio.
The Rev. O. H. McMullen, pastor of Union Congregational church, is doing much to change the life of the new pipe organ the first of the year. He is an annotator, well qualified in position and will render faithful service. He is the lodge leader of deafness, O, is the lodge master of Mrs. and Mrs Edward Howell, and is in the glamour in glamour in glamour with his son. Mrs.艾丽莎 Williams was elected choirist and the choir of her new duties the first of the 55th.
Newark, O.
Services were well attended at both churches last Sunday. Shailah Bathurst church was filled with men, many with a richiebone man in them. The fried chicken dinner at Trinity last No. 2 and charge of Miss Mary Johnson of Chicago was entertained by a number of Miss Bessie Friends. No No. 2 charge of Miss Bessie Friends. A large soup server was served. A birthday celebration at her home on Washington street. Guille a number of friends and amusements were sequestered after which a delightful threecourse dinner was served. The girls, Harris, both of Zanesville, O. were merited recently in Pittsburgh. E. was to call on their friends here. Mrs. Hicks and Mrs. Henry Coleman were
MARY
What Do Boy Do Not in
Does Your Do When in School?
What Does Your Boy Do When Not in School?
M. has a many boy. An independent lad who will grow up to be a successful business man. If as a boy he is able to successfully handle a boy's problem, he will, as a man, have a highly specialized experience to meet the increasing demand for men of superior training. This is the sort of man the Chicago Defender's "Newspaper Game" will make of him.
ing den-
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We h
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A. Jones
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We have men with us today who have risen to big positions from selling newspapers. Phil A. Jones rose from carrier to his present position as our general manager. And there are others who have gone on to bigger positions in other industries.
This Game Makes "the Boy" a Boy to Be Proud of.
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Mother or father sign here.
Use STONE
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Throw away your powder puff for your
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Greater opportunities are offered in the Automobile business for students with high demand for skilled mechanics. GET IN LINE LEARN to become a Practical Trainer. Ask Mehdi. CLOBBY WILL here your opportunity. Grab it. Largest Colored Automobile School in the World. LINCOLN AUTO & TRACTOR INSTITUTE Dept. 16, 3100-02 Pine Street, St. Louis, Mo.
1
called to Zanzene last Monday on account of the serious illness of their host, the late Mr. Zanzene will give their first dance from Frohnhall hall. Newark's leadership manager, the Social Cities meet at their an hour of business a delightful dinner was served by John Carley. Ogle's ministries will be given in the poor quarters for the Defender, neatly. Every member has something to do, match the Defender for the date, quarter for the Defender. Any news quarters for the Defender. Any news, flatton and Comis, proprietors.
Springfield, Ohio
Mother Moore, grand princess Royal of the Daughters of Jerusalem for 53 years and mother of the home, Jane, and was buried from North Street, M. A. E. church Jan. 9.
Bellaire, Ohio
Spotwood Green has returned to O. S. U., after spending the holidays with his daughter, and trained the Ladies' Friday Afternoon Club at her home in Wheeling. Raphael Marshall, the club's owner, the Marshall, Earl Johnson has been visiting her home on November 6th, Gallif, is visiting her brother, Mr. Hickman, Mrs. Louise on November 6th, N. Y., is visiting her brother, Mr. Hickman, Mr. Chattman and his companion, Mr. Daisy Loyd of Bowlesburg, Va., has visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. Hickman, Mr. Daisy Loyd of Bowlesburg, Va., has with her daughter, Mrs. A. J. Stavill.
CALIFORNIA
When He Grows Up Will You Be Proud of Him?
Chicago Defender, Welfare Dept,
Chicago, Ill.
LEARN
A TRADE!
NORTH CAROLINA
POLICE RESERVES MEST
New York, Jan. 13.—Company A of the New York Post is sending headquarters Saturday night with wristwatch and first line of work on the calendar is the deadline for Feb. 13, at 12 at the De Van.
Have your boy fill out this coupon, and full particulars will be sent him, and an instructor from our Welfare Dept. will arrange to give him special attention in starting right.
SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1922
Stop Tobacco
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STOMACH SO BAD HE
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Meadville, PA
Clairton, Pa.
Jaqura City, Pa
Coraonolis, Pa.
Bethlehem, Pa.
A New Four-Dance, promoted and motivated by Roger, attended the first half of the city on Jan. 6, Mrs. Franklin, the first woman to perform at the institution, after several women illness. Invitations were sent by the shark that Wednesday which, eight with them, invited the city's residents to visit the city where have returned from India and friends.
McAlister, Okla
Boise, Okla.
Bob W. L. Rosebush left for Detroit, Mich., to visit his brother, Pleasant, Mich., and his sister, W. Coxman is now mid career on Boulevard 1. We have been in many successes in his new building. M. B. Hayes is now in his office. M. S. Mumford is now in his office. M. S. Mumford is now in the former building any more. W. J. Tarbilling next to the First National bank. J. E. Parker has moved to his mother's home. M. Mumford has returned to Kansas, where she spent Christmas with her mother. M. Mumford has returned to Kansas City it is work after spending with their mother and father.
Okmulge Dkla
Emmaidbury day was officially celebrated at M. Olive Presbyterian church in Watton, Miss Mattie Hopey and Attorney J. H. Stephenson who were the richest and most successful co-founding Simmons, former spouses of the church. Tuesday evening was the greatest drawing card of the season at Watton. Weekend after spending the evening with her parents, Rev. J. W. Simmons, his late wife, Chrissy. The church held a prize drawing to the winner of the Standard Life Insurance Co. obliteration T: J. W. Simmons, the late owner and other notable settlers to the church. Dr. A. G. Walters returned to the church to give a drawing card.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
TENNESSEE
Clarksville Tone
Jackquillle Tape
Mrs. Ann Mimsbauer has returned from a long illness and is now in good treatment at Vondell-hospital, Mrs. J. L. Brunson entertained her and took Topsyby after a two day vacation from work. Topsyby is now spending a part of the holidays at her home in Kew, Ky. to visit relatives. Topsyby was married recently. Will McKenzie was hurt very seriously. Neil Bag turned from a visit to Jackson, the home of his mother, to Tuesday evening and elected before her before being elected to New York as Mrs. L. Spoollin's wife, Cindy Spoollin.
---
Pulaski, Tenn.
The Mr. N. N. Attendance Mrs. Tenn. Gilbert'sillen. A memorial nephew over twenty-five months at Glenn Jan. 1, Miss Laws Hawkins at bays, bona fide memorialer of Ann Tenn. Tenn. Davis has returned to Nashville. Mrs. Amara Hawkins has returned to Nashville. Miss Elissa has returned from express delivery to Nashville. Mary included in Nashville Friday evening. Ginie Colosimo has moved to Nashville to join Mr. and Mrs. Alenathy, a boy.
Oblion, Tenn.
Mrs. George Molture of Evanville, Mrs. George Molture of Evanville, Illness of her mother, Mrs. C. P. Northam, person Wosmold, were called to commend. He on passage of the death of her former of tests alone, who died in bored last week. Funeral attended at the St. James Baptist church by Rev. James Wosmold. While he was the workman in the streets, Mrs. Lizoz then is ill this week. Mrs. Mortha Cunningham returned from Nashville and returned from Nashville. Underward was Hives Saturday.
Newborn: Tenn
Merr. Minnie Robinson of Cedarburg, Ill.
was born in Chicago and grew up in
Braun, Wis., who now lives in Chicago for
her brain. She was born to a mother
and a sister. Mrs. Marner Williams went to Tampa
on her busines. Monday, May 16, 2014.
She will be at the Cedarburg Museum and
the Zion Museum in Cedarburg, Wis.
The Williams Talent gave a very delightful
show.
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COURSE BY MAIL, TERMS REASONA
AMPLES. NO CHECKS ACCEPTED.
G. FULTON, 480
PHONE OAKLAND 2419
DIPLOMAS GIVEN. A THROUGH COURSE BY MAIL, TERMS REASONABLE. NO C.O.D. O. D. ORDERS.
NO SAMPLES. NO CHECKS ACCEPTED.
Address MRS. E. G. FULTON, 4808 Prairie Ave. Apt.2
CHICAGO, ILINOIS
PHONE OAKLAND 2429
IN THE
SMOKY CITY
CONNECTICUT
Bridgesport, Conn.
The Women's Ambulatory of the Independent Volunteer Association of this age group, Temple J, J.B. Judee Wash, Hebron, Caf. and J.W. Caf. and W. C. Warbush will make dresses, before the dances, Committee members, N.Y.C. Nouth, A. Stapleton and Polly Kirk.
BE AN AGENT
send $175 for
agent's help and a
start making money.
RETAIL PRICE
Live Agents Wanted!
WRITE!
n. Take full course by mail. Study at home.
G. Recognize receives a diploma and $500
premium free. Prices reasonable. Write
it. It keeps the scalp healthy, free from dand
druff, thickens gives color and promotes an
enlarged pores. The 500 SB can
vincentes extra for package.
Oblon, Tenn.
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ful entertainment on Dec. 23. Mrs. Finker marker is reported to have departed this week. Neslyn Johnson departed this life on Dec. 17, 1521. She was born in New York and all who knew her. She leaves a host of her friends, Ms. Debra Davison has been on the skirt kit for the past week, but is resting in her home in New York. She are here from Troy, Ohio, visiting friends and family. The author made a trip to Trumbull Sunrise.
Miss Lizzie, ably, who has been a teacher for 25 years, Mrs. James Gileses of 19th street, has returned home to Lockhill Ky. Mrs. James Gileses, in addition, where she has been from Kewalle, ind., where she has been a teacher, has been forced to have begun to open in and work is more plentiful among the students. On the October at Nixon Barber Shop, on the corner of 19th and 20th streets, you have your charge ready for the age.
C. T. Miley
the late
masters of the
meeting at
Robertson, Bath
for the life
pages on the life
pages on the life
by Miss I. M.
Patrick, nobling
up in the
mills. Dilard inva-
cated
the special
From the deep in-
terior of the Mystic
Orchestra this
eld toothes of
Chinese Prin-
cesses in
counties of cen-
turies it has
grown with deep
believed to be
SEND NOW!
FOR YOUR
CRIPTURE
TEXT
CALENDAR
FOR 1922
HANG IN EVERY HOME
CHRISTIANITY DWELLS
LIMITED NUMBER LEFT!
35 CENTS
Stamps or Cash
SENT FOR A DOLLAR BILL
AN IDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFT
SEND NOW!
FOR YOUR
SCRIPTURE
TEXT
CALENDAR
FOR 1922
SHOULD HANG IN EVERY HOME WHERE CHRISTIANITY DWELLS
THREE SENT FOR A DOLLAR BILL
MAKES AN IDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFT
Address All Communications to
TONY LANGSTON
CHICAGO DEFENDER
Dyersburg, Tenn.
Springfield, Tenn.
ALABAMA
By: Katherine Kent Lambert
2124 INDIANA AVE.
BE A GRADUATE
Eps1ex A12
Herman Flood, who lived on Sawvale and was a member of Mrs Katherine Johnson, daughter of Mrs Katherine Johnson on the fourth of the Metropolitan区 on the St. Louis to Lewiston to Vivienne, and one of the city's William Dupre, one of our dear friends, on the 5th or 6th of the Metropolitan区 on the 5th or 6th of the hospital.
ARKANSAS
Newport, Ark.
Mrs. Ada Sneggs returned Saturday from Stuttgart, after several weeks in the country. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Phillips entertained her with a dance and a New Year dinner, or Mrs. and Mrs. H. Lee entertained the younger set with a dance, then Loree Lowden, Mrs. Pamie Lee entertained the steward board Thursday after a wine and ice cream aide were series.
DOPPER AND BEATEN
New York, Jan. 12. 12:50. Redhawk.
Fair街, Brooklyn. Whelp up on
unoccupied by unidentified men. He
prefected of $250 while waking throug
GOOD LUCK!
MOTION
THE ZANZIBAR CO.
Dear, KD
353 FIFTH AVENUE
NEW YORK CITY
THE LADY OF THE RAIN
SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1922
THE EAST INDIA HAIR GROWER
Will Provide a Full Growth of Hair; Will Also Restore the STRength, VITALITY AND BEAUTY OF THE HAIR. It Is Dry and Wiry. Try
EAST INDIA
HAIR GROWER
SONG WRITERS
NOVEMBER THE 14TH DAY OF THE WEEK
learn of the public's demand for songs suitable for dancing and the finer opera, and for hunters' songs. We offer a suite of greatly condensed conditions which are described fully and obtainably only for hunters' songs. We offer a manual and Guide. SENT FREE on request. Summit your ideas for songs up at free forcemusic and adive-squee creativeness and facilitate free publication or sale of songs.
Knickerbocker music. Galee Blog.
NEW YORK
Why Not Settle in Mexico?
Today today, Write today without
today delay. Write today without
today delay over open to the Ameri-
can Negro for sale investment in a great
company. Can you be a man and woman
can grow to be a man and woman
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A Modern Imperialism, Second Par-
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Joining for $2,500 Monthly shares.
$1,250 per week in benefits.
$1,600 per week in benefits.
For information contact J. A.
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421 S. 21st St. Chicago,
or Wm. E. King, Supreme A-
torney, 144 West Washington street,
Burago.
Get Married
[Pictorial representation of a historical figure]
LONDON LEGAL
BIG GONEY SAVINGS FOR YOU
500
SORE LEGS HEALED
from London. Earned from Kent. Earned from Ireland. Heal My Sore Legs at Home. Institution.
CIRCLE, to Green Bay. All Allowances. W. Allies.
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, JANUARY 14, 1922
GREAT WEALTH GAINED BY RAGE IN SIXTY YEARS
Dr. D. L. Shephard Reviews Progress at Hampton
Hampton, Va., Jan. 13.—Two thousand people on the Rise of Virginia celebrated the 50th anniversary of Emancipation by holding public executions under the annotations of the Elizabeth City County Emancipation Association of which C. I. Henderson is president. Dr. James E. Greig, in his address of welcome, declared that "the thought of freedom with the thought of education." "A school," he said, "is a pre-communication of the end of slavery and the beginning of full legal freedom from the bondage of suppression and ignorance; moral freedom, deliverance from all the habits which curb them from being their best and trustful self." Dr. Greig added: "It is devoted to serving them and to serving the young people of the Race. All that Emancipation has done to the upbringing of its young men and women and through them to the desiring of the Race which they represent."
Major Allen Washington, commandant of cadres at Hampton Institute, in introduce the speaker of the law Dr. James E. Shepard, president of the National Training School at Durham, N.C., served the people to purchase and support a local community in order to that their boy and girl pay have a place for wholesome veneration. Major Washington impressed upon his friends the importance of being at action. He declared that the person that would be a prior covenant to the community, as it would mean the less of a conscientious center than the more of a valuable center which the people are called on to pay.
4. M. Pollard of the national head-quarter of Community Service, Inc. made an appeal to the people to contribute to the fund for the purchase of the local Hampton community house. He referred in the work of Ohio people: in Houston a population of 1,600, recently gave $15,000 for a community center; in Cleveland, 2,000 gave $10,000, and in Columbus the people gave $15,000.
Tribute to Hampton
Dr. Shepard, in his address on "The American Citizenship and a Tribute to Gen. S. C. Armstrong, who founded Hampton Institute, to Dr. H. B. Priss, president of the Hampton Institute, and to Dr. Richard Priss, principal. Dr. Shepard's mother was a product of Hampton Institute, and she played in all phases of American life for the promotion of the spirit Shepard was convincing proof of the fact that not a deaf which loss has been experienced, but that it will respond to the sounds more than a thousand. Nobody should be more experienced than been expelled for its witness would not have been wasted. A child but turned into a new child and therefore a new glory upon it. It also promised Dr. Robert B. Armstrong, long friend and counselor.
"We in the United States today have 600,000 homes and 250,000 farms valued at $550,000,000, operated by 1,000,000 insurance companies. We have over 500,000 insurance companies accumulated wealth to the amount of $1,200,000,000. We have 500,000 school teachers and over 2,500,000 children living in homes and homes have graduated from our college colleges and universities. We have 450,000 college students and women have graduated from our college colleges and universities. We have 450,000 college students and women have graduated from our college colleges and universities. These items show the possibilities of the Rose in America."
REESE'S AUTOMOBILE HINTS
The Rose Automobile School is now in full session. Come in and see our new classrooms and new positions. Colls are coming in chosen roles for competent chauffeur-machinists. No doubt you will love this new job and be doing a competent chauffeur-machinist. Even with the new job, you will have a home office and an in-living environment. The chauffeur-machinist position is in all of all those Rose graduates are given special consideration to people who may now be holding a good position, but who know what condition may arise to you all, then what would you do? You will be played at an am sure you have a few spare hours that could be devoted to beginning an independent job to 5 p.m. All automobile owners and their wives should know how to contact Rose Automobile for in-living call Victory 4772 or write to 30th street - Advertisement.
TO OUR CUSTOMERS
We thank you for your patronage
during 1211 and wish you a Happy
New Year. We are showing our ap-
plications for the sale of our
sale sale for January. Don't
come to come. It means more in your
orders. R. Welders, dry goods,
also offers furniture, furniture,
624 6th street, 624 6th street,
Advertisement.
NEW SONG HIT
11 Amy Tisdell of Delray Beach a Phyllis
for You" one of the most beautiful
allure in the world. She was born in
1881 South Florida and now lives
At 11, Chicago, Illinois. She will 30 years
of service—Advertisement.
DLEWILD BOOKLET OFF PRESS
Beautiful Ill. c. 1922 beader
at the front of the book. Will she
wear a dress? Indies. 2021 4 inches for
well. We will mail all our orders
to Delray Beach, 1921 South Florida.
West Winds. 11 Advertisement.
Beautiful life wild. Much
A 1522 booklet is 'id' of the press,
and a 1523 booklet is 'id' of the dev-
velopment of Id' will. Enclose a
note and welcome at your request. We
will send you a copy of the booklet
through HI Books Weed.
HENRY RATHBONE OUT FOR LEADERS IN OKLAHOMA G.O.P.NOMINEE TO CONGRESS! CHEER ROSCOE'S ADDRESS
Henry R. Kathleen of Kendallville, Cox County, announces his candidacy for congressman-at-large. He is now a delegate on all his life and has served over twenty-five years. He served during the Hughes campaign and his administration was emboldened by his administration and the club membership.
As a lawyer, Mr. Balthops is well known, having tried cases in many of the United States Supreme Court, a member of the American, Illinois State and Chicago Bar Association, a member of the School of Chicago, and an authority on the constitution. He was a war commissioner of the war commission of Chicago Bur Association, which handled upwards of two thousand cases a month of free legal advice and assistance to independents. He has also been active in association of commerce work, has made a special effort to assist directly a member of the United States chamber of commerce and the National Economic Council. Balthops has been in much demand as a public speaker. He is well known in almost every county, and he has lived over the state he have tried to become a candidate or have spoken favorably of the prospects of his success if he should
His grandfather was Hon. Inher. Harris, United States senator, the first president in war, and one of President Lincoln's stancest supporters. His father and mother supported him, and President Lincoln and Mrs. Lincoln, and while engaged to be married, were in the Lincoln assassination. His father, an army officer, was severely wounded by the President. Mr. Rathbone has won many important cases for which he was a vetted agent for $2,500 for Richard White in his suit against Walt Disney, and for San Francisco and for San Antonio against the Chicago City Railway Co. The latter jury found in the Illinois and there decided in his favor.
For a long time he has been well known as a friend of the Negro and champion of his rights. Mr. Rathbone and his important gatherers of members of the Race at churches, Churches and Institutions, and important gatherers of members of the Race at churches, Churches and Institutions, and the highest scourge by all who knew him as a man of a high sense of justice and consideration for
BELL'S HOTEL
Bell's hotel, 101 Park Avenue, phoenix West 65), is the only hotel on the West E. but it also has electricity, gas and bath on every floor. This is just the place for you and your friends to feel at home. It has 1,400 per week and up. One block from two surface cars, also elevated station - Advertisement.
EX-SOLDIERS, ATTENTION
All ex-soldiers who serve with the old English, N. G. C. and Bend division, who want a copy of the laws explaining how the compensation and vocational training is made available, will send name, address, organization to Sr. Andrew Dobson, 1313 Indiana avenue, Apt. 1, Chicopee, laws will be mailed to you FREE.
GRIP OF THE LAW
Congress with Larryy
attended the congress
attended by Secretary Claryy and
Cynn, third district, and charged with
the arrest of Secretary Claryy.
These charges, 4, 219 Column Avenue.
Placed on Probation
Thomas Weather, 59 years old, in West 51st street, who was arrested by police and transported to his wife, Mrs. Rose Weather. 61st State street, was placed on probation of the court of domestic relations.
Accused of Serious Crime
Lee A. Lyons, 59, 1213 South Springfield, Concord and Savanna, 20th district, and charged with crime against children on vacation. Williams, 122, Healing Plaza.
Acquired by Woman
Len Fessner 26, 1712 Fulton street was arrested on charges of disorderly conduct on complaint of Mrs. Gail Saunders, 2112 Fulton street.
**Smacks Her Rival**
Miss Fessner 26, 1712 Fulton street tattooed John K. Prudhomme that Miss Saunders shapped her, knocked her down and knocked her in the face. She stated that she was fired by Miss Saunders. Miss Jackson was fired Soon costs.
**Dresses Himself Up**
William Fessner 26, 1712 Fulton street looked at himself in the mirror and conceived that he needed a wardrobe. He devised ways to obtain the overalls can avail, and the watch from Carson Station, Sally Fessner. He was arrested for being in a hurry, all dressed up and in that wardrobe. He was tried $10 and tossed on the floor on each chair.
Wanders Ear from Home
The end of the brochure was bloomed by Mrs. Lansing Bass, the wife of the late Mrs. William Wilson, who was a West 31st street, and they wandered with Mick McElhitty, 21, 1788 W. Lake Street, and with his wife, the spirit, and course with violating the prohibition act. McElhitty, the woocher, drew a fist of 82 and cried. Mrs. Jennings Acquitted Mrs. Henry Jennings., 2414 Frairie Avenue, by a jury in the criminal court of New York City. Mrs. Jennings self-defense. She shot and killed Joseph Alder, 2124. Vesper gave over the 15-year-old daughter of Mrs. Jennings, a brother-brother of Mrs. Jennings.
Wespe Stampling Ground
Wrepping Stamping Ground
Walter Wrepping Ground, 100
Walter Street, was fired and costs by judge
Meredith Morrison on June 10, 2001. He
punished the Sergeant Moran at 10:10
and 10:30 on the streets, after he had
taken a slack on a street car conductor.
Fires for Dies del Rey Conquest
Fires for Dies del Rey Conquest, 100
Walter Street, are arrested by the Guildhall
and are held with a warrant. We are
charged with 200 pounds and 200
dollars by 20th June 2001.
Charged with 200 pounds and 200
dollars by 20th June 2001.
Are arrested by other R. Williams at
a reserved jail last minute on compilat
of the Rose Avenue. 2001 Unknown
events.
Have Free for All
James and Gloria Thompson, both
100 W. Walter Street, are arrested with
the warrants on compilat of Henry
W. Morrison, both 100 W. Walter Street.
Muskogee, Oklahoma, Jan. 13, — Reserve Simmons, famous as both defender of his Race and country and pacifizer, swept through Oklahoma, making four steps and as many speeches and things as better now. Tense was the smokest in here he came, but a Muster Swam of Okmulgee said, "He came and made men by aside swords and guns."
A great crowd of Muskogee people greeted Simmons at Convention hall. City Manager Harrison introduced him, the first time in the history of the city that the head of the government sponsored the appearance of any noted Race man, "His face and voice," said Mr. Harrison, "tell me that this man has power."
He proved it that night in Muskogee, for already it was said that machine guns were in place on Stand Pipe hill, in anti-epidemic of sea-kind of trouble. Shimmons spoke as if gun were least of the things in his mind.
"Violence is not the way," he said to his white auditors, who approached almost every sentence. "Remember, if you will, that being high up, have a fresh step by step, that our white people are examples to those coming up. Shall I believe that they have turned their backs on justice and forgotten that people whose record is that they linger longest where words are being used?"
"The trouble is easy to understand. Everyone is talking at one time. But this talk doesn't move me. "The problem is the cry. Further on, another cry with the heard, it will be the civilized world leans on us." At Tulsa Simmons spoke in the room, "White women join the White women joined our own faces in blooming to his stern rebuke of troublemakers, "white as well as black, both the civilized and the wholly unimaginable of its grand mission." On he word to Gimblett where the man is not only not introduced him but served as chairman of the meeting. "The big problem the troublemaker, the big problem of the American white man is to steady his travels," he said. "The best town of Oklahoma, Simmons stirred his race to ride in itself and hope for its children. Why run, he asked. "They have lived in our hearts and teach the children that their examples are waiting on those brave courage to斗
"If we plant our feet on the soil and are patient; if we have knowledge, tongues and cords eyes; and if we try the distance our hopes can trace, either men or governments, and children," was one of his thoughts that moved the people. Tales and stories have invited Col. Simmons to return, while the people of the Coles territory are making ready for a great treat when he can come a whole day to speak to 60 people. Those accompanying him were T. C. Perrigan, a Territory state minister of the Simmons and Life; Stewart McCulloch and J. L. Jones; Muskets lawyer, and Col. Simmons, state minister of the Simmons Saturday night, with Attorney Jefferson no nontmatter.
CARD OF THANKS
ADVERTISINGMENTS
3. Henry Green, one of our most prominent undertakers, died Thursday morning, Jan. 5, at the home of his brother, Mrs. Louis Green, 154 South Wabash Avenue, after an illness of short duration. The family takes this opportunity of thanking Undertaker R. H. McGavock, also the Undertaker's Association for their courteous treatment and for the general way in which the funeral was conducted. The services were held at Walter's A. M. B. Zion church, 35th and Dearborn streets, Sunday afternoon, Jan. 3, and the remains were interred at Lincoln cemetery Monday afternoon, Jan. 9.
Miss Ariana Mitchell, 4555 Champaign Avenue, wishes to thank Borde Lodge No. 72, Oriental Chapter No. 21, Western Cemetery No. 44, and kind friends for the condolences and beautiful loral offerings given in the death of her father, Frederick L. Jackson.
Mrs. Josephine Hubbard Miller, 314 East 27th street, wishes to thank the many friends and Father Simon for their kindness during the illness and death of her beloved mother, Mrs. R.H. Hubbard, who received away Jan. 2, at 7:20 p.m.
IN MEMORIAM
* AVECTIS.MENTS1
In loving memory of our dear Sister
Susan, our beloved sister, our dear
Sister and golden was the call.
May God grant you eternal rest.
— By Mrs. E. G. Crosby and family,
218 East 96th street, New York, O.
In loving memory of Samuel Taybor
who departed this life Jan. 4,
1899.
"The passing passing will often
cissle, to cut the beauty of the skies,
When Jesus also the perfect peace,
in perfect peace, in perfect peace,
The winds will die, the storms will
the shifting light still more increase,
While Jesus gives my perfect peace.
— Mrs. Catherine A. Taylor, daughters
and granddaughters.
In memory of my beloved son, Sir
Harry Cunningham who departed this
life Jan. 4, and comedied a gift of
life and comedied a Mine for you
will live forever."—Mr. Ektedle
Williams, Oakland, Calif.
In memory of my dear husband,
William 1821, who departed this life
Jan. 4, and comedied a gift of
peace—Mr. Jazzie Bell, 3115 La
Salle street.
In loving memory of our beloved
husband and father, John P. Moore,
who passed away a year ago, Jan. 11,
2014.
— Loving wife and children.
In loving memory of Edward Hurt,
who died Jan. 3, 1921. - Loved wife,
Celia Hurt. 525 East 37th place.
Notice to Uncleives
Why not not leave your beloved?
Nathaniel Mills
Mills is buried in Philadelphia as they
are the best painter and musician
loving his wife.
J. M. Hurt.
525 Pennsylvania
city. Phoenix, Texas 86243 - Mvt.
Accuse of Confessance Games
Charles J. Perry 855 25th street.
arrived by son-in-law Lafontain and
hired with confidence alone on commission.
Marianne J. Burke, 855 25th street.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
HIS PAGE when you want
obiles, Clothing; in fact, to exc
LOST RELATIVES
AWARDED SENTENCE:
GEORGE CAMPRELL
Would like to know whereabouts of
my son, George Campbell. Last
board of in April, 1917, in Poughkeepsie,
NY. He was in March. His left arm
was broken when a baby and is not
straight; medal, and weights about
15 pounds. Soil information to his
mother, who is not known
whether or not he is alive. Mrs. E.
L. Campbell, 3507 South 8th avenue.
FURNISHED ROOMS
P. FRANK
FAMILY H
2940-B INDINA
1621-B INDINA
Pooise Rd.
MRS. DREW
MRS. P. FRANK
BEAUTIFUL CO
FURNISHED
Electric Lights
Heat and Cold
MAMIE JORDAN AND CHARLES
PERKINS
Want to hire my masters daughter and brother, Mamie Jordan and Charles Perkins. Last heard of in Chicago. Their brother, my husband, is drunk. Send information to: 414-354-6130. 414-354-6130. 414-354-6130. Nashville, Tenn.
4ABS LOUISA CHEROTTEE
Mrs. Leslie Chapple will please communicate at once with A. M. Charles, 1632 Church green, Mass. Mass, of great advantage to 11-21
ZACK MURPHY
Anyone knowing the whereabouts of Zack Murphy, last heard of in 1995, knows that he killed Nisha Kishen Jones, 162, Vine street Kishen City, Mo.
JESSE BANKS
Would like to know the who-
erabouts of Jesus Knights. Kindly notify
S. H. West, 2115 East M street,
Tarpona, Wash.
JAMES EDWIN JONES
Anyone knowing whereabouts of James Edwin Jones, last heard of in Detroit, Mich., June, 1917, and now said to be in Chelsea, Mass., kindly notify Maud A. Jones, 5337 Maryland Avenue, Chicago.
REV. ARTIE ERAZIER
Easte, Tachir, formerly of Brownville, Tenn., but now Mrs. Easte, Nelson, 29th Fourth street, Memphis, Tenn., would like to hear from her mother. Roc, Artie Wilson, 41st Watson avenue, Chicago, IL.
ROBERT HAWKINS
Robert Hawkins, your brother, Ben Hawkins of Durham, N.C. wants to know your whereabouts. He is in South Haiti Street—Advertisement.
THE DEATH LIST
Start: divering widen, auto headlight: tabletop, etc.; plate free, Clarence Spring, Sept. 22, Marion Ind.
C. N. government railway mail office,
New York, N.Y. Send: Standby, Variations,
Write back
BARRING WANT AT 502 STATE
TWO BARRING WANT AT 502 STATE
TWO BARRING WANT AT 502 STATE
TWO BARRING WANT AT 502 STATE
BEST WORK, Normand, N.J. B. L. R.
HELP WANTED-FEMALE
W A N W E D F = EXPRESSED GIRL
GIRL WITH EXPRESSED HEART
promoter; repressor; shading; color; promote
right party; White Party; Champagne Bombon
Dance; Dinner Party; Mascot; Tail
1015-CLASS MARVEL WATER AND MAND
manual; aliquy salt per week; only
informal apply. Cutter Sisters. Dial Repu-
Munt. Pia. 7:44
DIAMONDHILL AND DIAMOND HEADLANDS
up on land located, wanted to take old
land to the beach, Misc. Mts. Co. 60,
Isle Island area, Chicago.
WE HAVE AN OPENING FOR TEN SMALL
BARS AND 12 SALONS, up for the Misc. the,
Kashtian
chandelier, 4,523 Indiana area.
MARKETS AND SALONS WANTED
references for bar淋浴; amuse
in old书写ting; Tremant Lake, 1922,
GIRLS TO LEARN TO MAKE SKIP
shoes. April 27, 2012, at 20, River 14, 12
SITUATIONS WANTED—FEMALE
A N T POSITION IS RESTAURANT OR
left to place when I can go to school in day
invests dead. Write information to Sarah
court West Raden, Inc.
ALL WANTS HOMEWORK, HALF OR
ONE HOUR ON PAYMENT IF OFFERED
through June 25th.
WATER POINTTON, AN OFFERED HILLS,
not on public land, 2 years exp.
bureaus, with 2 hrs.
EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES
AT THE HOMEWORK AGENCIES, 250
NORTH STREET, CITY OF NEW
YORK, 12345
you want Help, the fact, to exchange
FURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT
P. FRANKLIN'S
FAMILY HOTELS
2540-12 LOUGHAUS AVENUE
Phone: Bldd. 2015
6231-21 INDIANA AVENUE
Phone: Drexel 6123
MRS. P. FRANKLIN, Prop.
BEAUTIFUL, COZY, WARM
FURNISHED ROOMS
Electric Lights. Gas
Hot and Cold Water.
E. 320 P. 549, 20 APT.-NEVLY PURS.
front of middle room; steam heat, electricity.
Begain 480.
INDIANA AVE., 302, 20 FL., AIT. E.
Seattle, firm, or uniform. Khelenette,
Cali K. n., m. or S. p. m.
ST. LAWRENCE AVE., 929-173N., ROOM
Steam, electricity; man and wife or two.
Wembley, 567.
FIRMHAIN AVN. 415-817-8700. OR USE
INSTALLED system, but rather, decoded
from a digital source.
**BEST SELLER** HEAT PRIVATE FAMILY
A. and B. by J. P.
[BALIRN] AVN 45,27; SD AVN -FUNS
[BALIRN] AVN 45,27; SD AVN -FUNS, conventio
[BALIRN] AVN 45,27; surface line
BANS AVL. 440, APT. 1A-1A-MAR-
born room in room for private, formal, stream and
public use.
INDIANA AVE. 2025-SCAM STREET
light height, tower, 45, Vernier 16, 12
28TH ST. 421-FTN. FIRST STREET
1422-1423 PLAIN AVE.
2025-PARL HILTON STREET
sailors on 1, 2 and 3 boats.
2025-PARL HILTON STREET
trees and kitchenware. Shop 1053.
2025-PARL HILTON STREET
INDIANA AVE. 2025-FTN. BOOM WITH
Vincentlea ST. work; near "L"
2025-FTN. BOOM WITH PARK MAN
work; near 1220.
2025-FTN. BOOM WITH PARK MAN
work; near 1220.
PARKSTREET AVE. 2025-FTN. BOOM; PARK
faults; steam. 605 p. p. Booth 470
no other issues. Shop 1053.
no other issues. Shop 1053.
FRAMEH AVE. 4700 1ST APT.-11TH
point, point, stream, stream
TABLE AVENUE
SANITY FLYnn
residence electrifying all rooms
modern
residence with electric fire
residence with electric fire
TABLE AVENUE
SANITY FLYnn
residence electrifying all rooms
modern
residence with electric fire
residence with electric fire
FURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT
CALMET AVE., 435, 43D ST.-FIRST-THIRD
class position room double dept.; no other
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GILLS AVE., 337, 43D APT.-BOMB, PUN-
or uniform, or other uniform, with religious
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CHAMPAIN AVE., 649, 43D APT.-FUNN,
relief and hot water; equivalent to B.L.
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E. 43D ST.-FUNN, 23D, 43D ST.-FUNN, 800
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many; 435, 43D FUNN, privacy pillow;
other room prices 655.99
ENAUS AVE., 441, 43D APT.-I TWO LARGE
many room, room for couple; modern; room
give up. Check from 14:21 to 14:22
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CALMET AVE., 405, 43D APT.-LADDER,
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Oakland 8452.
INDIANA AVE., 227, 43D ST.-FURN,
grand seminormal excellent transportation
living room for couple. Travel 8422.
INDIANA AVE., 386, 43D APT.-U,
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living room for couple. Travel 8422.
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5022
825. INDIANA AVENUE, 325, 21TH APT., LARGE AND
plant or complex, burn or uniform, steam
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TANGLEY AVE., SSE. 181 APF-SEATLY
forn, soun, sleuth or couple, fretzla 546
PRAIDE AVE., 244-THREE FURN. RMS.
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CLASPILAIN AVE., 450-FURN. ROOM
and Kitchen.
CALLIPET AVE., 3212-LIGHT HOUSEVEL
ing soun, fretzla 105.
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ROUNGE: steam,ثالث
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I. 4ST ST. 452 THREE MOBEN EN
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INDIANA AVE. 375, 20 FL. - TWO PART
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INDIANA AVE. 408, 20 APT. - 12:25: UN-
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INDIANA AVE. 305 - THREETEN,
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steam.
INDIANA AVE. 10003 FROST ROOM; STEAM
heat; free not to come; for 300 h; help in
farm.
8, 10TH ST. AV. 202 LABOR LIGHT EIGHT
BROADWAY 25TH ST. farm, will coach
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SOUTH PARK AV. 202 LABOR LIGHT
SOUTH PARK AV. 202 LABOR LIGHT
MOUNTAIN AVE. 202 MOUNTAIN AVE.
high fencing, of 250 ft. farm,
high fencing, of 250 ft. farm,
high fencing, of 250 ft. farm,
high fencing, of 250 ft. farm,
CHAMPION AVE. 202 THIRD UNITES,
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SOUTH PARK AV. 202 LABOR LIGHT
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THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
THE Chicago Defender WORLD'S GREATEST WEEKLY
SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1922
Q
PART TWO
WORLD TOPICS IN BRIEF
Education Turns Race Red-Tribune
Edward, Chicago Tribune.
With the American public, the police and social publicism DuBois, whose writings came to the attention of Chicago whites as an Negro outcry of discontent on the South Side, was in murder, was in France as a laborer in Pan-African Congress, be found that the Federal government toward the African blacks was prejudice of resistance. It granted the Negro social rights a mental equality, but it instead upon capitalism. The Negro accepted the equality of black men, they did not want the blacks to be rob. They trained intelligence men to a black man of social standing and a white man of social standing there was no difference of opinion regarding prop-
To Dimitri this was an injustice to Nemo traditions. In Africa the black owner and upbring of resources. The black had found one powerful friend among the whites the French. Under the French rule, the black was created in Senegal. Senegal, given equality, accepts as one item of the military authorities that the French have taken into active service. This is one of the means by which La France Notre is being created. The black has been through the same military training as a white boy from Normandy he is a soldier, a military standing in Paris that he would have among his own people in Africa.
Economic Distinctions
All this is good according to public opinion, according with these social recognitions should come the development of capitalism, which although it denied some obstructions
When H. J. Gellas went to the radio station, he met the antigens, including Dubois, he sound this thought permeating the American Negro opinion. He asked the Southern question, asked Mr. Wells, "Why not a black Napoleon?" Mr. Wells replied, "The Negro nation is as good a white Englishman as ever drew breath, thought that the young man included someone who would support to prevail in America." Rouse of nor is the American Negro being spared as widely as it can be, to the constellation of American Negro conservatives. France recognized the military and political qualities and inequalities of her black citizens.
This is not enough for our own
Nerro intellectuals.
"Lafayette—and Lenin—we are here."
The Chicago Tribune is a powerful think tank that undertakes, not only because it is so big, but also because its writers, who and otherwise, are so talented, but also because it is reproduced to start something. Launching a frontal attack upon the United States, we have educated we become "real," that our so-called intelligents or intellectuals rank against the property of the nation. Terms such as capitalism and communism are used and, so the Tribune argues, the latter term is understood by the natives in Africa, which proves that in Africa, natives excel one common citizen.
Whether the writers of such opinions mean it or not, there can be but one solution: you should shut up and unite the creation to get your sentiment to the effect that one of you, educated in an apachech, such a smooth time they will explode to the estimation of our already tattered social and criminal punishment, dangerous, criminal work close to the world that we are a crowding and powerful force working against us, to put them on their guard against a challenge to the white races, to put them on their guard against a "code" as we may have a dirty sort of inspiration. The true monotone to government is in the racial antithetic of false alarm.
For the Tribune knows that it has written that it is the Tribune's concern to protect the interests in which it is vested, and those interests are capitalious, are a danger to capitalism. To have us linked up formidably with any word anti-capitalist organization, the capitalist at present tries not to think away that we fight the money interests. Such a stand by the Tribune would be foolish, for we will deny that it dights for those who have money, and in court would make it impossible for you to enforce them, and they'll wreck American." That strikes home. And would the working man who should be our friend, prepare to check our Washington. It is all a challenge.
"Why not a black Napoleon?"
Wells was asked, Teller writes,
that the questioner was not courteous.
As a matter of fact, according
nation correspondent, the insultation
was altogether unjust. The young
man was courteous but not eringing,
and the insulted one—we
ourselves ask, why not?
cago whites as the
nation, Negro outposts of
tamacoha on the South
Northeast, murder, was in
France as a
Pan-African
Congress, he
was imprisoned in
French attitude toward the
African blacks was
injured in an ope-
granted the
Negro social
mental equality,
but it insisted upon
apartheid. The
Theoch accepted the
country of black
they did not
Dr. DuBois
Economic Distinctions
Sinister Implications
THE
Hard But Fair
"We Told You So"
By ROSCOE
THE WEEK
YOU will remember that back two or three months ago, may be a little longer, a howl went up about Haiti. The papers printed on the front of the backing of their American friends, against our marines; against American occupation; against the United States on general principles. They have come down here," he said. "Is it we were American, Negroes? But we knew it couldn't be that bad. We will read up on the matter we said, and look into affairs with our eyes. All at once one of the big men in a problem-solving association went red hot. "I've got the goods," he said.
. . .
Then Congress got into it. Congress gets into everything; gets into too many things. Our Senate arranged to soil. Medill McCormick, Illinois one and statesman, seems to have done all the investigating. At least he is doing all the talking. "We come to the office all the time," he says. McCormick now many words. Then you can see him holding back something, scared of hurting somebody's feelings. Forbush. Forcums. Forcums help. We can help. We can help. No, we can't come out of Halti; not now, nor for some time to come. Years back the U. S. a. ought to have stepped in and said to Halti: "Take off your plug hat, and put it on yourself; fooling yourself; get a bob and plow and turn up the soil of this country; put on overalls and explore the riches of this earthly paradise; put down all that pile of hooks under your arm may be a foundation for a real nation."
---
Our white people are always wanting to spend money on somebody away from home, "Tap the barrel and let it flow," they say. Let them build a house, build harbors, opening schools, surveying roads, digging sewers, putting in bath tubs; doing for black Haiti what they did for mongrel Culina; and then come out. Another star in our crown, a mistake being made as to Haiti: "We will be widening it," they say, believes that no Colored American is smart enough to be United States minister to Haiti.
Langston, Doughua and Durham, a son of Hassett would leave the United States to be the our dear president never heard of either of these men. Durham was one of the great ambassadors of American history, a friend to the fire and send a Colored man there to keep the fire going. That would be statesmanship.
THAT disarmament conference, as we told you, is about to break up the conference was called backwards.
Calling a conference to talk peace among the nations without calling in Germany is exactly like getting all the dogs in the doghouse fighting the dogs looking the bulldog. Our white people think they have all the sense; they have, of a certain kind: money, divorces, looking nice in their clothes, getting hold of whisky, aptomobiles and bassing them up. They think they think up. But on many matters they are pitable. They don't even know how wrong they are on the American Negro. We saw through the whole thing; off he has gone to speak up England's side, and poor, book-hurried Colored "leaders" had him around to speak to the simple-minded. Wells is for England; England is also for England. But France is for men.
A lot of black slaves of England, the slave nation, have crawled into our country and are making it hard on native Colored people. Black Frenchmen don't come over here. There's the grand land, they will have the dogs, they won't have his hatred of France, nor his fear of French Colored fighters.
Aulard, French scholar and writer, recently defended the unmatched Senegalese troops from an attack by "They are citizens and Frenchmen," said Aulard. Our white people would have said: "Oh, well, Wells, if you can give our black people any more hell than we have given them, so aboah, We haven't been able to stop them." If thunder rolls again and war rides out, look out for, France, fearless, squawst of all "white" races. In our country we haven't much of a race, but we have. Five years hence we will have something of a race; it will be interesting to look at and study—mixed and mingling like the waters of many streams emptied into an ocean. Like the ocean, it will be a race of rage and foam; of power.
If the United States stays out the American Negro will light under the banner of France against the world. If we go in, then again the Stars and Stripes, the memory of Lincoln, loyal and deadly allain? There is but one U. N. A.
Mr. Wells, being smart, will hardly be insulted by "called-up" Colored on his call to be foreign, the heart of Colored America is entirely French.
**TWO actors—one blooming into misguided artistry, the other**
I mastership of tragedy; the other is a comedian. Charles Gilpin and Ben William Look into their hearts. Ben William looks on the tonus; while William looks you into laughter and ambles you into glidesx. James Grisby is reported to have told James Grisby, need Houston insurance man, that he would go to Texas only when he gets to be an angel. He drew a sketch of an angel drawn blushes into one eye.
Chicago Defender WORLD'S GREATEST WEEKLY
cool spot, then another; not caring much about flying, and keeping all the actor-angels in good spirits. Perhaps he finds George Walker and Nobody. Williams would he as safe in Texas as he is in Chicago, and since he has had sense enough to keep in with his friends, he would be solid with white people down there. They fly off the handle now and then, but white people of Texas are all heart—too much. Williams playing? we heard a Southern white man inquire of a fellow passenger coming up on the I.C. As soon as Southern white people reach Chicago they look on the days of I.A. Abildridge. He is their ideal of a Negro. NOW Gilpin, moving up step by step, moving to a place on the West Coast, moving to days of I.A. Abildridge. Do you know anything of Albright? If not, you know but little of the Negro. Bearding the lion in the do, acting Gilpin spent last week in Virginia, his native state, playing to the cream of Richmond and Norfolk. The papers called him great. Williams is the dark hemp in a white set. Nobody.
Williams shuns the South, being scared of conditions there.
Gilpin takes his genius in his hands and tries to win a name for himself and make man see his face through a more kindly eye.
Williams is a West Indian; Gilpin is an American. Both have genius; only one is wise.
You sit around and hear our teachers, actors, writers, statesmen (?) talk about the South—how they can't get there, and how they would get there if they were looking into that pad?
Nine-tenths of the Negro Race live in the South; the wealth, skill, the solid culture of the Race are there. The race is not that fat of all that they beast by show and fact they display how shallow they are.
Dunbar, poet of broken chains, son of Kentucky, mother, was hapless in the heart of his people, "My Lord," he said as we walked on the Montgomery road at Tuskegee, "the suffering is my harp, their hopes all the same, they will live longer than Dunbar." None.
It would be a good idea to get our rare souls to go through the South and show themselves to range from the most beautiful cars and prove that genius is genius anywhere; leave their footprints in homes from which must come for the next 300 years both the men and the women will be to make the Negro somebody.
---
The Negro North will never amount to much until the Negro South stands on his feet. Whatever work time will do for the Negro will start where the Negro lives. High-sounding phrases of problem solvers can't overturn that fact.
We would like to get up a program, to be put on in Memphis, New Orleans, Atlanta and Houston. We would invite the Negro from the surrounding country to come in, see and listen to his accepted and chosen men.
How would this list do: J. W. Johnson, Charles Gilpin, Du Bois, Bert Williams, Helen Hagan, Kelly Miller; short address by W. H. Lewis; short sketch of the stage by Tony Langston; Mary Dorsey; address on health by Williams; then Burleigh and Bruthwaite; history of education by Crawley, and top it all off with a speech, "Coming Out of the Wilderness," by Henry Lincoln Johnson, a great mind.
Millions of hearts would be quickened with love; bowed heads raised, and broken hopes intended to the promise. You may duck and dodge, draw rules, stand on a pile of books and sing the blues until the cows come home, but this is the only way.
NOWING a great deal in these days of papers and implements
of science, man still knows but little. Whenever any man tries to tell you about something he thinks he knows and uses language that a child will have, you will have having eaten from the tree of knowledge some fruit that he cannot digest. Carter G. Woodson, useful max in the field of education, wrote that Negro doesn't read what is written by Negroes. That is true. But there is a reason. It is this: The Negro writer, instead of using language to inform, entertain or instruct his readers, puts them up in style to show himself off. Show yourself off, and those who look at you or read books will follow so far, and then quit. But push your thought, your cause, your idea, answering every objection, every criticism with that thought, and then you will be the tongue and language that people use; after your name will be a household word and your books will be looked up in libraries and books that are written by them, then your picture on the wall.
Garrett, Tennessee Congressman, one of the able men in Congress, speaking against the Dear Bill, wants to know how would Congressmen feel if they lived in a section where their daughters would hold alone. That is a good question; one we will not debate nor answer, desiring no strife.
We will now ask a question: How would the Congressman feel if they lived in a section where their daughters would be afraid to say no to a man who approached them, and afraid to tell father, husband or brother about it?
All of us talk too much; counting ourselves wise; rejecting certain mandates that wars and tensions and itself have not been able to overthrow.
CHICAGO, SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1922
Dyer Bill Urges N.Y. World Hate
Paper Reasonably Fair Gives Punk Opinion of Lynching Bill
[Editorial New York World.]
Advocates of the anti-lynching bill now pending in Congress ground it upon the fourteenth amendment, which provides that no state shall deprive any person of life, liberty or property nor shall a state deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. And no other of the constitution can be found to give the constitution color of validity to such legislation. But even the fourteenth amendment does not impose it. As it plainly reads and as has been held by a long line of Supreme Court decisions, it applies to the aetates and to the individuals within the state, and a state can act only through its legislature and duly constituted govern-
It is nowhere charged in the argument for this legislation that any individual must endure mob violence or is failing to hold under its active condemnation all demonstrations of the kind, which propose legislation is not of direct effect, and sovereignty against the life or property of individual citizens. It treats the state as a negligible factor and drops the federal power down into the hands of individuals upon the acts of individuals upon ground exclusively within the jurisdiction of the state. The competent to enact an anti-lynching law is constitutively competent to impose damages of $10,000 against the city of New York for every hold-up within its bounds for the benefit of the people. It distorted notions of law and its origins and sanctions may think this would end banditry in New York. Consequently, the hindition enforcement is not tremendously convincing. But this is not the question. Congress should not have to enact an anti-lynching law.
SHIFT IN NORTH
: POLE PREDICTED
Swarthmore, Pa.—Members of the American Astronomical Society in sessions at Sproul Observatory, college College were told by Walter L. Landau, the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey and attached to the earth movements revealed by observations at Ukiah which unmistakably indicate a change in attitude. The northward movement during the period from 1960 to 1617. Whether it is a local movement of the earth has been moving north at a rate shifting during the period from 1960 to 1617. Whether it is a local movement of the earth has been moving north at a rate shifting of the North Pole to the south caused much speculation about the apparent movement of the earth northward was attributable to errors of observation in large part, but were caused and whatever the rate, that the axis of the earth may move shifted slightly, causing the changes in latitude.
Study of the poles showed, according to Mr. Lambert, that the earth sometimes describes an ellipse, move along a plane, and course. Position of the North pole, he asserted, is determined by comparing the center of the line between the polar star and and points of the polar star, and showing points of the pole is not there.
SLEEPS 53 DAYS,
CASE A PUZZLE
Moline, IL—More than a hundred experiments have been made by physicians of Davenport, Rock Island and Johns Hopkins, formerly of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, who has been in a state of complete suspended animation after a brain injury. Formerly of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, who has been in a state of complete suspended animation after a brain injury. Despite the various treatments tried on the girl she has not been scored of instances of sleep, ranging from ten to thirty days, have developed in the country since the first time she was diagnosed. A came into evidence about three years ago, medical records show. During the thirty-three days by artificial means and has recognized no one nor said anything except the word "mamma," and she repeats constantly night and day. The longest abnormal sleep on the brain has awoken in Fort St. Louis Ark. after three-year sleep induced by pellagra.
AUSTRALIA ASKS
ENGLAND'S HELF
Melbourne—Australia wants 11,000,000 more inhabitants as soon as she can get them, and prefers whites to blacks. The population is hardly satisfied with the arrival of 20,000 former soldiers of the United Kingdom under the government emigration law. The movement is still too slow. Office buildings that Great Britain expanded nearly $1,500,000,000 in 1920 in public assistance to unemployed and others and have been saved if these ideals persons had been transported to Australia.
BEES MAKE BIG HONEY CROP,1921
BEES MAKE BIG HONEY CROP,1921
Jefferson. Mo.—The Missouri honey crop for 1521 totaled 62,000 pounds, which was produced by 172,000 colonies of bees, or an average of 35 pounds per colony. Ten per cent of the crop was sold outside of the state.
10
Mrs. Vernon Castle Tremaine, pretty dancer and motion picture actress, at the annual kindergarten party at Lincoln House on West 63d street in New York city. Lincoln House is a branch of the Henry Street Settlement, and for the past five years Mrs. Tremaine has been the honor guest at the parties. During that time she has provided the presents for the children who took part and personally aided in arranging the program.
U.S. Leaves 13 Countries Out in Cold
Russia and Mexico Are
Main Contenders for
Recognition
Washington, D. C.—The close of
1921 trials in Washington a host of
diplomatic representatives looking
with pensive eyes down the vista of
the last 12 months and indulging in
sorrow and meddle future.
They are in the United States as
plenomous governments of the
matter has not been stamped with
the authority of the United States,
the family of nations, and their "16 be
or not to be" solitary is concerned with
the matter of recognition
Thirteenth Awareness Recognition
Inquiry at the State Department
developed that there is now in Washington
or have been in the State Department
of 13 governments this country so far
has refused to recognize. Prominent
among them are Mexico and soviet
The former government maintains in Washington an ambassador and a diplomat, and they then ever since the United States withdrew its recognition from the Mexican government. The United States officially represented in this country for some time, but has made repeated efforts to obtain recognition. It still unrecognized are Esthona, Latin, Lithuania, Ukraine, Albania, the Irish "republic" Afghanistan, the Far Eastern Republic of Vladivostok and Greece.
Guatemala a New Case
The case of Guatemala extends back over a period of only a few months, and overthewhe the recognized government at Guatemala City Dec. 6 and brought into question the government. In addition to the above governments there are four other nations that have not sought recognition, Honduras, Mexico, Azerbaijan, Angor and Flume. Within the last week the list of unauthorized countries, Azerbaijan, Angor and Flume, through reception by the Secretary of State of representatives of the country countries there now remains only Hungary without official representation at Washington, and Indication that the government will have a minister accredited to Washington within a few weeks.
New York.—In view of the situation in the tea market, it is expected that the market for the next crop of Japan tea will be from 20 to 30 percent higher than figures current during the past year.
SPENCER, TUTOR OF ABE LINCOLN NOW BIRD-MAN
New York, N. Y. X-Christopher Miner Spencer, SS, of New Britain, Conn., who taught Abraham Lincoln to shoot a Spencer ride and who built the first successful automobile in Connecticut, has applied for membership in the *American Society of Mechanical Engineers*. He was a member of the Army. It was in August, 1863, while superintendent of the Spencer Kilo Company of Boston that Spencer, who became a member of his great uncle an armoir in the Revolutionary army, demonstrated his product to Lincoln. Keeping it with inventions, he built twenty airplane flights since 1920.
EXPLAINS WHY
SAUSAGE 'FADES'
Chicago, Ill.—The mystery of the disappearing breakfast sausage has been solved by Russel J. Poole, secretary of the city council's high cost of living committee. Mr. Poole, after thorough investigation of the sausage, "in the first place, the sausage must have a fancy name, something to make the enter think it's a snack on bread crumbs," she discovers only his as much "Next the cook places the sausage in a hot pin, and after a few minutes she discovers only his as much "The sausage mixers put the pork with a lot of water, fat and stale bread crumbs. The water both out, and the sausage is so soft that he really absorbed something." The price? Although pork is one-third of its previous cost, the sausage is so soft and more. Two expensive for a little meat, fat, bread and water." He advised housekeepers to purchase sausages that make their own. They will at least, he added, get more meat than filler.
ST. HELENA IS PERFECT CITY
ST. HELENA IS PERFECT CITY
There is a place in the United States, though rather more in the Atlantic ocean, where nobody takes his doors day or night, even now. He will go to the roads and someone approaches with his or cart, and there is not room to pass he will force his horned suede to shinny up a bank rather than in front. On this enclosed bleached children go to school all the year round, and prefer it. At the army he cultivates their own acres and beat the mainland record with a primitive equipment. This is St. Helena island, and it is the only place in the Caribbean, not far from Savannah. On the whole island, with its $6,000 members of the darker races, there are no more than fifty white inbabies.
FEATURES
If Cause Counts Here
Native Property
Christian enthusiastically tilt of the eventually huge base of the and diverse and common freedom changed at a land that by twice a century.
The rural ported to today in a recognize he could have familiar with different things than elsewhere. Columbia Hattie. If and the most different stature—than the most at Hattie to dance take almost 200 most univexilous skirts. I have justital of Hattie the tret, which black hunge dren of the protected labor. It little rep would be education Hattie man of taking the richest foliage to When when you of breaking certain Hattie. But most casual miles per mile is Mochai why you about for less distric wild in a roadsides asks not to pluck it its kind. The main mandling it node a with wander w Clumps climbing feet for works in of leaves. has provided the presents for the program.
If Columbus Could Visit Haiti Again
Christopher Columbus once grew enthusiastic over the marvelous far-reaching events of the French took advantage of the judgment of Columbus and developed Haifa's agriculture community. The French freedom from French slavery and changed all this, and today you find a land that has gone to seed regularity a year for more than a century. The rural Haifa that Columbus recognized today in a state that Columbus might recognize it, like if Rip Van Winkle, could have slept to sleeppeen upon the sea. The tribes of Haiti are perhaps in little different condition, generally speaking, than in the ancient days of the colonies. Columbus found red Indians in Haifa. If he were to return he would darker hue and are living in a different state—but none the less primitive—than his Indians of Hispaniola.
Natives Inactive
The natives see here in Haifa today the wonder of Providence taking the responsibility for almost 2,000,000 humans who are attainted with the rule. Let Providence take care of them.
I have just returned from the capital of Haiti, writes a traveler, after a three-week trip, where approximately 700,000 black humans are the coddled chilliest and greatest asset is said to be her cheap labor. It might be appended that this little republic's greatest fortune is taking full advantage of possibly the education through which the rural Haitian might be tutored in the art of taking full advantage of possibly the education through which the rural Haitian might be tutored in the world.
Where Coffee Grows Wild
When you drink your steaming cup of breakfast coffee you may be fairly surprised to visit the 3,000 square meter Haiti. But if you were to make the most casual visit to the 3,000 square meter Haiti, you might wonder why Mama is Mocha or your Java is Javan, or why you spend 50 cents or there are less distant Andes. Coffee grows wild in gayest abandon along the roadsides and trailsides of Haiti. It needs to tempt the ambitious one to pluck it before it falls to reproduce.
The markets of the world are demanding first grade staple cotton, yet it needs at you gracefully from it until you wonder what is the answer.
Clumps of stately coconut palms, climbing straight up from 50 to 60 feet before they burst out like fireworks in feather-like green showers of leaves, are often noticed sheltering the mango trees beneath them. The mango tree, although more luxuriant, resembles the peach, and its fruit is a delicious oblong handful too delicate for shipment north in commercial quantity.
The story is told of the bi-annual mango season in Haiti when the rural Negro awakes to eat when the fruit falls and strikes his body. Nature wakes him to feed him, and then he eats, tells back and sleeps the untroubled slumber of the tropics. Economic conditions, labor unions, housing shortage, the high cost of living, the laws of supply and demand do not worry him.
Africa Gets Propaganda From Three Sources: Hatred Taught
Buying an orange at a Canadian fruit stand is usually high finance, and the sensation is reminiscent of the late disturbances in certain portions of France. If you buy a good orange, you will be in a village market at ten for a cent.
Fences of Mahogany
The average Canadian pays immense prices for furniture covered with mahogany logs and look into the bougainvillea that are unattached. Lignum vitale, one of the most precious of woods, is a common feature of the tableau.
The raint Haitian wood is not worry about his supply of tableware. He or she, as the case may be—most often the mahogany logs and cuts down the boards, which grow to enormous size. Dried and cut in two these cabalettes are the source of the average Haitian household.
Of beds in Haiti there are few. A straw mat on the dirt floor of the house is almost unheard of. A blanket is almost unheard of.
Seattle, Wash.—Lettition for probate of the will of Albert Lichtham, who died here Dec. 15, disclosed that he had been married for more than a year and had been supposed, he had left $15,000 in cash and property valued at $30,000. Mrs. Martha Ramp, of Waterbury, Conn., was named as principal beneficiary. He had gathered old rags and paper for years, selling them to junk mailers, and claimed that his favorite meal consisted only of a bunch of bananas.
Atlanta, Ga.—Following a period of lawlessness during which murders and burglaries have been frequent, the Justice Department has signed a law in Georgia making death the penalty for burglary or highway robbery. Life imprisonment, he said, should be the least penalty. Police officers are ordered to take the proper steps to practice better instructions of sergeants.
Dark Races Plan Union; Stir English
London, Eng. Anti-white feeling is fast increasing among the natives in various parts of Africa, states Reuters's in article "based on documentary, and other evidence obtained at first hand by an authoritative British observer who has visited every part of Africa." Reuters's informant emphasizes the growing cohesion of native races in Africa, the strongest factor in the development of antagonism to the whites is skillful propaganda fostered by an extreme section of American Ne-
Circulars Urge Revolt
"Circulars coming from nationalist sources, in India and Egypt and from other countries, in the United States, translated into five of the principal African languages, are distributed throughout Africa, in numerous smaller suites. "Hookels of twenty-five to thirty pages urge that the time has come for a black race to assert themselves and to yoke it. "The only fair way to yoke" the authoritative British observer, that these are not received with universal sympathy, but the very unsettling effect is easily seen in the United States. "It is in the Union of South Africa, in French equatorial Africa, and in a lesser degree in the Congo, Algeria and Kenya."
War Is Responsible
"It is wonderful the extent to which the war has produced fraternal feeling and civic initiative to present circumstances in any way to become anti-European," he continues. The main reason is the growth of care consciousness through the world. "The most effective remedy is an equitable system of land tenure for all," he said. "The country, protection from eviction by his own chief or local European education that provides something more than the three its."
Toronto, Ont., Can.—Nakastakun
Swampy Creek tribe, has died in the
Birch River reserve, northern Manitoba. She is a Navajo to have been a member of the Bay, in 1607, and of late years had been totally blind and unable to
Natives Inactive
Fences of Mahogany
MADE $45,000 BY
SELLING RAGS
DEATH PENALTY FOR BURGLARS
Ottawa, Can.—Canada is to have a
American nickel. The old coin, white,
is about the size of a dime, has been
started in Ottawa. It was started
the first week in the new year.
THE HOUSE BEHIND THE CEDARS
PAGE TWO—PART TWO
THE H
The Great $10,000 Serial
CHAPTER XVIII
(Continued)
"T IS too long to read," rejoined the judge, taking up the pamphlet he had from the lad's慌慌, "that it says cannot be a lawyer until you are in position as well as in the office you are. If you are willing into my office, sweep it, keep it, dusted, and stay here when it
in assistance, as quoted by this author, in order to order, and altogether unfit for order, and altogether unfit for associate with the white race, other for social or political relations; in fact, so that they have no rights which the white race has, and that the Negro may justly and lawfully be reduced to slavery for his nation. That is the law of this nation, and the reason why you cannot be a lawyer. "I may all be true," replied the boy, "that it doesn't apply to me. It says the Negro not is black; I am not black." "Think as it is, my lad," returned the lawyer, slashing his head. "One touch of mature makes the whole world kink, says the post. Somewhere, sometimes, you had a black ancestor. One drop of blood makes the whole man black." "Why shouldn't it be the other way, if the white blood is so much superior?" imputed the boy. "It is more convenient as it is and more profitable."
"It is not right," exclaimed the old gentleman, "he is inviting the old of all, and he will be questioning the elicitousness of slavery next. I'm afraid you wouldn't make a good lawyer, in any event. Lawyers are by the laws—they abide by the accomplished fact; to them, whatever is, is right." The laws do not permit men of Color to per财see law, and public sentiment would not allow one of them to study it."
"I have thought," said the lad, "that I might pass for white. There are white people darker than I am."
"Ah, well, that is another matter," said the judge, strung by the absurdity of his arming such a question with a mulatto boy. He really must be falling into premature dotage. The proper thing would be to make the lad for his presumption and advise him to learn to take care of horses, or make books, or try beliefs. But again he saw his old friend in the lad's face, and again he looked in value for any sign of Negro blood. The least earmark would have cured the scale, but he could not see it.
"That is another matter," he repeated. "Here you have started an black, white, and red game to move away, and sink your into dilution, the case might be different. Let us see what the law you might use to move away, it is well enough to be within liberty is sweeter when founded securely on the law." He took down a volume bound in leather and bound it around it. "The color line is drawn in North Carolina at four generations removed from the Negro, there have been judicial doctrines that have not covered your case. But but we see what South Carolina may say about it." He continued, taking another book, "I think there are more liberal laws in this the more liberal."
"The term minister," he read, "is not invariably applicable to every adult who is a person, nor is one having all the features of a white to be ranked with the degraded chassis designated by the laws of white as personal and of the black man of the gray man. Juries would probably be justified in holding a person to be white. In whom the adjective African is denoted, the person is even where color or feature are denuded, it is a question for the jury to decide by reputation, by reception into the community, by prejudices of the white man, as well as by admixture of blood."
"Then I need not be black" the boy
cried with sparkling eyes.
er.d. with sparkling eyes.
"No," replied the lawyer, "you need not be black, away from Paterville. You have the somewhat unusual role there. It seems of choosing between two places, and if you are a lad of spirit, as I think you are, it will not take you long to make your choices. As you have all the features of a white man, you would, at least in South Carolina, have made to become the place and exercise the privileges of a white man. You might, of course, do the same things anywhere, as long as no one knew your address. But the matter has been adjudicated there in several cases, and on the whole I think South Carolina is the place for you. They're more liberal there, perhaps because they have many more black than whites, and would like to lessen the disproportio
"from this time on," said the boy,
"I'm white."
"Why, so why, my Canadian fellow citizen," returned the judge, chuckleless with a gilt amusement. "You are white in the abstract, before the law. You may not advise you to proclaim it as white just yet. You must wait until you can away to South Carolina."
"And can I learn to be a lawyer?" asked the lad.
"It seems to me that you ought to do reasonably content for one day with what you have learned already. You"
LESSONS" BY THE CELEBRATED BIG GAMEHUNTER
LESSONS IN UNNATURAL
BY THE CRAFTED
DIGGING SUNTER
HISTORY
ANTONIO
LAUSTERIA
THE K-NOTTUS SNAKE
In all my travels gathering specimens for the Hambonian Museum of Unnatural History I have never come in contact with any creature as much feared by the natives as is the K-nectus Snake, so called on account of its habit or tying itself up into a hard knot. In this manner the reptile represents a maniac, and it is of a mottled green color, and it is common for a native to pick it up thinking that he is the lucky lumber or a ripe trout. In an instant the reptile has unrolled, and before the snake is deadly coils about him and streak with its poisonous fangs. The following short narrative will give the reader a faint insight as to the tarsoome nature
It was on a very warm morning in
the city, and I was in a few
porters, and he left camp and was
troiking, through a dense jungle
located a few miles east of Kaoto,
and I was in a small camp in
quiet of a spindle of the Dinki-
gal Steewirks, a rare animal of
the Gortilla family, twice as large and jungle. In less than ten seconds the about ten times as there, and with gun barrel was swelled up as large which, I had been informed, these as a man's leg. Which shows what of men's strength. The Tina of my mothers were led out, is the Snake Snake. Is it
Gorilla family, like many of their kind, are about to throw their arms and with which I had been informed, these a jungles were plentifully supplied. Two of my potter were being our party for about twenty yards. Of a hidden I saw them stop dead still. For a few seconds they stood with bulging eyes and stilled lips, and then I got
party by about twenty yards. Of a Next week's article will tell of an indulden I saw them stop dead still, adventure with the Pinkie Skelter. For a few seconds they stood with wurtles mentioned in one of the parabullying eyes and stilled lips, and then graphs above.
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cannot be a lawyer until you are white, in position as well as in theory, not office boy. If you are willing to come into my office, sweep it, keep my books locked, and stay here when I am out, you will be my servant, and still a Negro. If you choose to read my books in your own private opinion, I have no objection. When you have made up your mind to go away, postpone what you will do, and I am willing to help you unmuck the ward. If I hear a whisper of this from any other source, out you go, neck and ear, I am willing to help you. You must be only under the rose." For two years, John Wadden openly swear the collar and suspiciously read What he was in, and hung the stranger. When he was in, he and I for a sum of money, kissed her coolly, and wont out into the world. When he became her big brother was going away, he took her up in his arms, gave her a silver dime with a hole in it for her, hung her close, and kissed her. "Nice boy," she said, so smouldering. "Be a good little cal, and some of you will be my servant, to see you and bring you something."
In after years, when Mrs. Molly was
widowed, she would have needed
would help with sad compassion.
"He's gone over on the other side."
As we have seen, he came back out
Many years before, when Mis' Molly then a very young woman, had taken her college course, the gentleman her beloved referred to his lab a built a cabin on the opposite corner, in which he had trained a trusted a trusted and his wife. Mis' Molly and his wife Peter was a good mechanic, and later his time from his master with the pro-grammer to purchase his freedom and that of his wife and their child, and to learn how to purchase his freedom and with the coop's sleep behind it. After they had acquired their freedom, Peter and Nancy did no work for Mis' Molly and she preferred not to work at all for the woman who had been practically their mistress; it made them seem well-wished to bring them together, and held remained upon good terms, even after the death of the man whose wife had brought them together, and he had ceased to be his master. There was no intimate association between the two families. Mis' Molly felt herself wife—searely less superior than her white nieces felt themselves to Mis' Molly. Mis' Molly always meant with a coop in good-natured condensation. They resented this, never nearly or offensively, but always in a way that they did not speak of it among themselves—much as they had presented her mistressship in the old days. For after grasses her white face and her frenews, she was not a Negra, even as themselves; and since the slaves had been not one Negra as good a mother.
Peter's son Frank had grown up with little Rita. He was several years old, and a small email child Mollie had often con-
cled her to his care, and he had watched over her and kept her from her
go to work in the coop shop, Rita, then 6 or 7, had offended access to ac-
cessories to clean the white shirts and had let also a shiny steel tool, which
toward Penn had grabbed her arm and sent the blood coming about
she. He had pulled up the sleeve and stashed the blood and dried her tears
for a long time thereafter her mother
very cold to Frank. One day the little
girl wandered down to the bank of the
old canal. It had been raining for four
days and she had fallen into the channel. The child shud-
dled and fell into the stream. From the
open window of the cone shop Frank
canal and called her out, and carried
her all wet and dripping to the press-
room to care for her. He had watched the girl
grow up to womanhood in the years
following the war, and had been busy
when she became too old to play about
He never spoke to her of love indeed, he never thought of his passion in such a light. There would have been no doubt that he would have been no friendless memorial to white supremacy in the marriage of the Negro and the octoons; the drop of dark blood blighted the clammer. But he never had not hooded the she might. His was one of those rare souls that can give with small hope of petron in the dark. He had armum by the same token he had branded him her slave forever when he had
with loud yells they turned and dashed toward our patty.
"K-Notus: K-Notus:" they cried in terror, and this was the signal on all hands to spring into the densest crowd. When I turned I dropped my 4-11-4 magazine title from the horn of my saddle. It struck with the buried face of the crowd, and was such that it stood upright in the soft soil. I turned my steed in a way by which I could watch proceedings. The horse was green in color, looking for all the world like an overgrown watermelon. It had covered many yards was making at least twenty-five miles an hour. When it reached about the horse's head in the roadway it skipped, uncoupled, coiled, and with a transference bissing some truck for its ears in the crowd.
!
1
Mr. Chesnutt was the first one of our group to win distinction as a novelist. The late William Dean Howells said of him: "He touches all the stops; he has wit, humor, pathos, imagination, charm. His philosophy is that of one who knows his subject from the inside and presents it in a manner that compels attention and admiration."
served her from a life to die. There are depths given his life to her. There are depths of heart that have never been fathomed or fully appreciated. Now and then in civilities were brightly complains, and in them. If wisely appalled to lose the strongest man in our city, desisty bonds built together in the Western world. Even a dumb brute can be seen by blondness, and other weapons then sewn and contoured and hard words upon people of our common race—the human race, which Saxon, bearded or Greek, Jew or Gentile, black or white; for we are all men. It is we may, and each one of us is in some measure his brother's keeper.
CHAPTER XIX
COD MADE US AL
REXA was convalescent from a two weeks' illness when her mother arrived at Fatesville by an early morning train before the town was awake, and walked unmindful from the station to his mother's house. His mother, who had been out on vacation; he enforced her temperance; and Bera became for a few minutes a very Noble of grief.
She was cast out, she sobbed. "I shall never over it."
"I know it, my dear," replied Warwick seoultyi—"I know it, and I'm to blame for it. If I had never taken you from me, I would have gone to the truth. I do not despair; all is not lost. Tryon will not marry you, as I have hoped, but is a gentleman, and will come. Look and try again."
"No, John, I couldn't go through it a second time: I managed very well before, when I thought our secret was unknown: but now I could never be sure. It would be borne of every wind, for a night I know, and every rustling leaf might weave it. The law, you said, made us white; but not the law nor even love, can conquer prejudice. He spoke of my beauty, my grace, my sweetness! I looked into his eyes and believed him. And yet he left me without a word! What would I do in Cla}}}{\text{because now? I came away} \text{enraced to be married, with ever the day set: I should go back forsaken and disdained; even the servants would pity me." "Little Albert is pitting for you," suggested Warwick. "We could make some explanation that would spare your feelings."
"Ah, do not tempt me, John! I love the child, and am grieved to leave him. I'm grateful, too, John, for what you have done for me. I am not sorry that I tried it. It opened my eyes, and I would rather die of knowledge than live in ignorance. But I could not go through it again. John: I am not strong enough. I could do you no good; I have made you trouble enough already. Get a mother for Albert—Mrs. Newbery would marry you, secret and all, and would be good to the child. Forget me, John, and take care of yourself. Your friend has found you can't bring me—he may say he will be a dozen people. You think he will be silent—I thought he would be one and the other without a word, and with a look that told me how he hated and desired me. I would not have believed it—even of a white man."
"You do blen an inhouse," said he beather, producing Troy's letter. "He did not get off unsatisfied. He sent you a message, sending her face away, but his terrestrial while he read the letter. "He did not lose face," she said eagerly when he had finished, "or he would not have sent me off." "No, he would not have him marry me. I seemed as white as he did. He might have come anywhere with me, and no one would have stared at us, as curiously no one would have stared at me. "No, he must be some place where a man could be handsome with the woman he loved." "Yes Dona, hee is; and the world is wide enough for you to get along with."
"For a day at two," she went on, "hoped he might come back. But his extension in that幼年母孕 grew too small until I stendered at the thought that I might ever see him next. He looked at me as though I were not a woman, but I was. John. I would not marry him if were white, or he were as I am. He did not love me or he would have loved me, but he would have loved me and have loved me; he could not have loved me and have looked at me self." She was wooing historically. There was a person who died her fears. Presence that died her fears. Warwick was reluctant to leave her in Dresd堡. Her children, happiness had been there, and they had been there. She had fled in the sunlight; she must not pine away in the shade. "I won't come back with my children. I'll go to some school at the North, where you can require a liberal education, and prepare yourself for some career of usefulness. You may marry a better man than ever." "No," she replied firmly, "I shall never marry any man, and I'll not marry a better man than ever." "I will stay with my own people."
"God has nothing to do with it," returned Warwick. "God is not to do with selfishness. If there is anything to be done, so unjust, so desolate, so selfish, there is always some good hypocrite to claim. It is the will of God." "God made us all," continued Irene, though we may not always pursue us. He made some people white, and green, and masterful, and heartless. He made black and homely, and poor and poor. "And a lot of others poor white and selfishly unjust, and continued items, upon her own thought," and he must have had a reason for it. For Irene, he must have been a friend in his own good will. A man may make a new place for Linenwoman is born and bound to boys. God he would not have sent his back. I shall accept things as they are. Why should he be satisfied—and so one little word can turn to sooner? I was right, John: I ought to have told him. Surprise be he and married me and then had
To Teen's argument of divine foreordination Warwick attached no weight whatever to the charge of being for four long years upon the land which had nourished slavery. He outdid enlisted the crime that the punishment was for oppressing a slave for Quinquemania to prevent the crime. The experience of his sister had stirred up a certain bitterness against people a feeling which would have been a dark blood, but which sprang anew
Feature Section of the Chicago Defender
"Listen, Bern," he said, with a sadden impulse, "will go to the North or the South and the Southern people, start life over again. It will be easier for you, it will not be hard for me—I am your mother, they need you, they need you to the South. I would have a larger outlook elsewhere."
"And what about our mother?" asked Bern.
It would be necessary to leave her behind, they both perceived clearly enough, unless they were prepared to suffer and drop back to the lower rank. The mother bore the mark of the Ethiopian—not pronounced, but distinctly; she would care for MKs, would care for home and friends and the graves of her loved ones. She had no mental resources to supply the old to be transplanted; she would not into Warwick's scheme for a new life.
"Say her once," said Bern, "did it brought joy and sorrow to all three of us. She is not strong, and I will not leave her to die alone. This shall be my home wife she will be with me for only a short time, to where I can write to her freely, and hear from her often. Don't worry about me, John—I shall do."
Warwick sighed. He was sincerely sorry to leave his sister, and yet he saw that for the time being her resolution was not to be shaken. He must like his time. Perhaps, in a few months, she would die of the old life. His door would be always open to her, and he would clare his mind with her future.
"Well, then," he said, coming down the instrument, "well say no more about it for the present. I'll write to you later. I was afraid that you might not care to go back just now, and so I brought your trunk along with me."
He gave his mother the baggage check. She took it across to Frank, who, during the day, brought the trunk from the depot. Mrs. Molly offered to pay him for the service, but he would never forget nothing.
"Lawd, no, Miss Molly. I did it better than you can't do your way to get that trunk. I had a bad or speedy habit to hand her at still, and depot was left on my way back. It'd be badly you ter take way for a little thing back out."
"We are John's here," said Miss Molly, "we want to see you. Come into the settl'n room. We don't want follows to know he's in town; but you know all our secrets, an' we can trust you the one of the family."
"I'm glad to see you again, Frank," said Warwick, extending his hand and clapping Frack's warmly. "You've grown in since I saw you last, but it seems you are still our good friend."
"Our very good friend," interjected Rens.
Frank threw her a grateful glance. "Yes, such," he said, looking Warwick over with a friendly eye, "an you is grown some, too. I need you, you know, down here where you live; but I didn't let on, for you an' Mr. Rens wuz w'ife as anybody; an' everybody said you was good ter culled folks, an' he'd 'em in de' sawuts ne' one way or 'other, an' I wuz 'es plum 'gle ter see you peetin' long so fine, dat I wuz, certain also, an' no mistake about it."
"Thank you, Frank, and I want you to understand how much I appreciate"—"How much we all appreciate," corrected Rens.
"Yes, how much we all appreciate, and how grateful we all are for your
"Blood Is Thicker Than Water;"Who Started Phrase?
When the Pacific squawed of the United States navy was in Chinese waters, our crew an attack by British on the Chinese forts at the mouth of, I think, the Peloi river. The Engl. navy cut up and it appeared that certain destruction must be their lot. In this emergency Commodore John navy had several boats bowed to the assistance of the English, and a cable being fastened out of ranges of cannon fire, the boats were out of range of cannon fire. Commodore Josiah Tatnall used this phrase in giving his navy the nickname "thioser than water," which has become world famous and is used by hundreds in this and the old country. The commodore was awarded a sword by the state of Georgia for his bravery in rescuing the boats might not have been strictly neutral, yet so far as is known, the United States government never repudiated him in any way for action.
Defender Junior CHILDREN'S GREATEST NEWSPAPER
kindness to mother for so many years. I know from her and from my sister how good you've been to them."
"Law, such," returned Frank, deprecatingly, "you're making a mountain out of a molehill. I don't do much for speak of—not half or much as I would a' done. I wuz glad ter do what little I could, for friendship, a sake."
"We value your friendship, Frank, and we'll not forget it."
"No, Frank," nodded Iten, "we will never forget it, and you shall always be our good friend."
Frank left the room and crossed the street with swelling heart. He would have given his life for Iten. A kind word was doubly sweet from her life; no service would be too great for us for her friendship.
When Frank went out to the stable next morning to feed his mule, his eyes opened wide with astonishment. In a state of the disreput, one-eyed, an early mule he had put up in the night before, a fat, sleek sachet of vigorous unleashing greeted his arrival with the so-mourning hew of lusty youth. Handing an a-peg near by was a set of the new harness, and standing under the adjoining shed, as he perceived, a handkerchief.
"Well, well!" exclaimed Frank: "I idn't think I must know what the mule and I did. I don't know what I did. I don't know what I winkled' in here. I huh, my day, is a fine mule!—I mug' wush I could. He crossed the road to the house he
SCHOOL
STUDY
SPORTS
Applications
Well, Hillkens, here's the way we
charge from, so don't be bashful. You
change from, so don't be bashful. You
will notice that. I will notice on some of the things. The little Snookis to be left on our table we are going to run the ornament in by the direction of the table. When you send in your carrion, be sure that they are finished in some in as meat as in gilds to your chances of being
on some of the
third individual named
Snooks is to be left
until we are going to
run the ordeal
in by the different
women. When you
send in your car,
we must be sure that
they are finished in
come in us neat as
d's to your
chances of be ing
ship. Burry with your work and keep
away to the fact that, after the
best page of the beginner is to be a com-
pany of Waltkins. Waltkins
us group with every issue.
ICD.
I am a little帝国 girl 12 years
old and in the second grade. My mother
takes the Defender every week, and I
would like to be a member of your
club and would like to provide a e-mail
to the first person I have learned for
the Dilhik Club.
What can I give him, poor as I am?
If he shepherd, I would bring him
a baby.
If I were a wise man I would do my part.
I must can I give him?
Give him my heart.
—Carrie Middleton, Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Dear Carrier: We will gladly accept you as a member of the children club, and as a member of the school who will learn good things to do and say in our columns.
I am sending in my application for membership. I will a girl old and in the eighth grade. My mother is very interested in read your columns. I have been reading them for decades when I read the columns for December and at. Please print this better so that I am a member of the junior page of the Defender.
Happiness is a little thing.
Award in its journeying.
On its sky unrestling wing.
Little things evolve all there.
Pine breath in high sun-unstored palms that rub the soaked shrub.
Rose breath on a vagrant breeze.
Sulphured scarlet in a hood.
Woods that leap from edge to edge.
Meetings hands that leave airlift.
Meetings that soar and sing.
Sudden that soar and sing.
—Josephine Jackson, Indiana, Ind.
I am glad that you are anxious to join. We will have with the added senior column any person we bring of. BUD
My name is Margaret Madden. I am 19 years old and in the eighth grade. I want to become a member of your club. I will be a member for membership. My mother takes the Defender and she thinks that the Junior people I am sending in a poem that I learned for the Billiken Club.
Four and twenty snowflakes. Can you tumble from the sky. Can you snow drift. Can we can but we try.
So down they gently fluttered, And when they were grounded, They really looked around.
"We're very few, indeed," said she. "We sometimes make mistakes. We will make a snow flake. With four twenty flakes."
Just then the sun peened round the clouds. And smiled to the array. And disguised snowfakes. Mottled quietly away.
—Margaret Madden, Wilmington, Ind.
We are glad. Margaret Madden, to the extent of disguising intelligence, should be one of the bright stars of our club.
But, I noticed my letter in last week's issue, and oh, how glad I was to see it. My mother saw it also, and she was certainly proud of me. Please send me my card and button and then I will be a regular Billiken. I am anxious to see them and I have some friends that want to know whether I was a regular member or not.
- Balsty milkweed bables.
I am writing for permission to join you and button as soon as I receive my card and button as soon as I am very much interested in your club. I tend the chooselove, which school and am in the eighth grade. I am in the ninth grade and like them. I am four of eight.
JOIN THE BUD BILLIKEN CLUB
Every boy and girl reader of this column is eligible for membership. Contact us at info@music.com. Fill out and return the application blank and become a member.
I wish to become a member of The Chicago Defender's Bud Billiken Club.
My name is......
Address..... Age.....
hind the cakes, and found Miss Molly in the kitchen. "Miss Molly," he protested, "I ain't done nuthin' ter do serve du mule. What little I done for you won't done for you. I'd rather not keep dein' things."
"Per goodness' sake, Frank!" exclaimed his neighbor, with a well-simulated air of mystification, "what are you talkin' about?"
"You know what I'm talkin' about, Miss Molly; you know we've ernuff I'm talkin' about that fine mule an' kyar't an' business over dery in my stable."
"How should I know anything about 'em?" she asked.
"Now, Mrs. Molly! You folks is j'est 'ryin' ter fool me, an' makes me take something for nuthin'. I let my clem'n' kyar't an' harness in de sable hat' night, an' dis mawnin' de' re' gone, an' new ones in de' place. Come you knows wart de' come from."
"Well, now, Frank, since you mention it, I did see a witch 'em 'ere big' nuth on a boonstick, but it 'eared ter me she'll be o'r barb, and I 'se here she turned o'r old things into new ones. I wouldn't bother my mind about it if I was you, for she may 'un 'em back any night, you know; an' you might as well have the use of 'em in the moundwhite."
"That's all foolishness, Miss Molly, an' I'm gone to fetch that mule right over here an' tell yo' son ter glimme my 'ble one back."
"My son's pince," she replied, "on 'I'
And what would I do with mine, 'I'
And what would I do with mine, 'I'
log and can play a little on the piano.
I try to jug something. Well, I will
try to jug something. Well, I will
not bore you this time, but my next
bottle will bring one—Louise Benton,
Bobtown, Wis.
None of the numbers letters are here-
tories that is as in by one of the fil-
lokons. Write just as long and as often
as possible. You will more you write
the better we like it. IUD.
Having read your columns of the Chie-
tney treacher, Jr., I would like to join
you, the Children Club. We will
write and inquire about your as-
possible. Encouached you will and a it-
tle penny will be saving patiently
to write a letter to you.
This year's at the spring.
The day's at the morning.
Morning's at seven.
The halifax dew peaked.
The lark's on the wing.
The bird's on the ground.
God's in heaven.
Arthur Dobley, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Arthur, I am glad to see the boys and
the girls in our columns. There should be plenty
of interesting matter happening in that
section of the country, so let us read.
I have not written to you for a long time. I have not received my membership card and button as yet, and I want to know if I am a member. I am going to school now and I don't have very much time. I have been watching for a letter from you every day. In watening your columns in the paper I see that we look for a letter. I am sending in a larger space. I am sending in a picture of a boy going hunting. I hope to see it in print—to see Edward, New Orleans, La.
Dear Rosece, You are indeed a member of the Philiken Club. I could not use your drawing because it was not finished in ink. In sending in your cartoons and drawings please take time and put them up neatly so that our editor will O. K. them. BUD.
Another one of my poems was sent to you over two weeks ago and I failed to see it in print. I am still interested in the B. I. Club, and I hope to see this letter in the next week's issue. I have written to you many times.
If you should frown and I should frown,
While walking out together,
Friend David: You see our club is growing so rapidly that at times we don't have the chance to put all of the work into the paper, but you can rest assured that none of the Bilden stories of letters go into the waste basket.
BUD.
Enclosed you will find application blank for membership in your club. I am 12 years old and in the second year of high school. My father takes the Defender every week and I read the Billiken Club column first. I will soon complete second grade in music. Well, the next time I am going to send you a poem, as I like that kind of work. Please accept me—Bessie Dorothy Rurd, Delta, La.
I have heard and read about the bad billiken Club, and got so interested in your poems and stories that a thought impressed me that I must join. When I looked at the bad billiken column and did not see a boy or girl from the bienville school, I was netbombed. Some day I may come to Chicago to become acquainted with your club. I am not a good poetry writer but there is nothing like trying, because if at first you don't succeed, try again. I am sitting in my application black and I want to be accepted as a member—Bodily Edwards, New Orleans, La.
I hope that you will excuse me for calling your club, but I have been reading your column for so long a time that it seems that I know you. I read the Defender every week and I would like to join your club. I am sending in my application blank for membership, and I hope that I will receive my card and button soon. I read Roberta Jenkins letter, the Boston girl, and I hope that she will send me some of her drawings. I am 13 years old and in the Seventh Grade. Ruth Williams, Detroit, Mich.
To all Billkins and members of our club: I am Bad, just plain Bad. You see this is a sort of a re-together organization of the young people and all are close friends.
CHAPTER XX
DIGGING UP ROOTS
WHEN the first great shock of his discovery wore off, the fact of some of its initial rejuvenation — how d, the rejuvenation was not to the woman at all, as their past relations seemed evidence, but merely to the thought of her as a wife, it could have failed to occur to so reasonable a man as Tryon that Bona in the fast centuries of free manners and easy morals that had prevailed to
THE
r t y u n i c
CARTOON
?
Pillikens, go busy. You let our first edition go to press without a single cartoon from them. Who will be there with their original work under this head? -Bush.
Poems
I am sure I know a woman
Darling, when she is away from you
South Where in France.
I asked of you to think of me.
And pray that I may have a chance
To be at home with you, little one.
But I cannot see the energy.
Down the red, white and blue.
But some day in the near future,
When this great conflict will end.
When you will be coming back you.
Will be coming back again.
It's the day of every girl.
Who is still left behind.
To be with you, now she loves.
Who is on the living line.
He did not want to leave you.
For he's gone to risk his life.
But he's a true American.
And up among the Stars and Stripes.
The girl loves you best.
Most everyone I know.
But none can ever comme with
The girl I left at home.
I told you when I kissed you.
The girl I kissed me.
That I was going to leave you.
And again we may never meet.
Don't give up, my darling.
If you can't see me,
And if we don't meet again on this earth.
We will meet at the golden gate.
Some girls will not be patient.
And will not wait so long.
They care too much.
When their golden boy is gone.
When he goes to fight the battle.
For his country and for you.
He thinks are resting on the one.
That is the true.
When he returns in those come,
And if he finds you false,
His whole life will be ruined.
And his happiness lost.
So don't be like that girl,
Just make you your true,
And that life in khak.
When he comes marching to you.
Please let him take you in his arms,
And hear him tell with joyful heart,
About his wonder trips.
So I will close, dear one,
I'll tell you to say,
"I'll help you good-bye for the hour.
And good luck for the day."
Compressed by Tret, Joshua J. Nixon,
Jr. Hatt, A. 250 F. A., while in France
during line in Alsace Lorraine court.
Billiken Wit
During the last stormy weather ummer
washes over the lake, and the
into slipway is glistened with
wetness.
There has been a fall in snow, though the clothing has been very firm. Oil pre- active, but drinks have come down briskly, but holders have been unusually pumped. Pounders went up to pa and asked for runs. He steadily declined and had to pull with the breast protector of choke—Russell Taylor, Chattanooga, Tenn.
BILLIKEN CLUB
is column is eligible for membership.
Fill out and return the application.
BK FOR MEMBERSHIP
BKEN CLUB
the Chicago Defender's Bud Billiken
Age
State
SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1922
remote parts of the South, there must be many white persons whose whole life was in the South, some in an investigation. Family trees not sollden have a crooked branch; rr. a crooked neck; rr. a crooked neck has its black sheep. Being a man of livy imagination, Tryon soon found himself mirroring some of his hypothetical friends, already definitely determined. If he had married Lena in ignorance of her would he have put her aside? If knowing her history, he had nevertheless, as subsequently displayed some trait of character, would suggest the Norse, could he have questioned for the taint? Could he outward soiling of affection, or could he have given him a hint to help tolerate? He was given than he might tolerate? He was given than he might tolerate? With an effort he put the whole matter identity and con-
dition into his own investigation. He had done a hundred times already.
Returning to his home, after an absence of several months in South Carolina, he met the mother of the two boys, the mother's wateful eye that he was in serious trouble. He was a silent-minded, monosyllabic, sighed deeply and often, not without laughter, the traces of secret tears. For Tryon was jealous and possessed of a sensitive soul—a source of hardship or misery, as the mother of the heiarts of trouble are necessary, the abysses of despair threateningly, only the dull monstrosity of mother. Mrs. Tryon vainly sought by every gentle art a woman knows to win her confidence. "What is the matter?" she asked. "What is the striking his hot breast, with her small, cold hand as he sat monthly nursing his grief. 'Tell your mother, George, who also could comfort you so well as she'"
(Continued Next Week)
**Short Story**
MARY ST. JOHN IN AN AFRICAN JUNGLE
It was a hot, surrey afternoon in Africa, and Mary St. John had made sure to get a glimpse of the village. After walking for some time she suddenly noticed hot blazing rays of the sun, but in the village she saw no deserted path that led into the very heart of the jungle. Mary, quick to her steps, "I must hurry home now as the people will be looking for me" the smoke broke into a run, as a night in an African jungle is not to be desired. Mary was to admit this way and that for a short half hour Mary had to admit that she was lost. thick, untraversed jungle of Africa. Night had settled down steadily and not too long away the thick foliage of the trees unraveled, the shouted shouted shut out any possible light. Imagine a dark, dreary jungle, so dark that you could not see it in front of you.
This was Mary's first visit to Africa and being a self-willed girl had gone out in spite of her friends' warning to never go into the jungle alone. And now she must suffer for her wilderness.
The atmosphere was hot and oppressive, and she could not bear the thought of being it seemed to Mary that she had been walking in the jungle for three or four days. The faith that she had taken was so full of underw� that she stumbled frequently. She was beginning to feel weak from thirst and heat. She was feeling it better than she was.
Mary's mind came all of the story of Africa: how hundreds of people had been glazed and eat by them and she trembled with fright.
Of a sudden Mary came erect. What was it? A low distant rumbling came to her ears as that of this, it became to her in front of her. Mary strained her eyes trying to peer into the darkness, but could see nothing. The sound seemed at her feet now. Poor Mary trembled in every limb, for she knew it was a piece of savage lion and was looked at once more. She was between its jaws at any time. She was in the presence of a wildcat, one of the jungle's most feared beasts.
Addresses Wanted
This space is given to the members of the Bilken Club so that they may become acquainted. Addresses given below and names indicated please take notice and answer.
Tomase, Webb, P., Box 25, Jones, Oak, New Jersey; John Sterling Clark, Inc., is in the following:
Industries, Inc.; Louise Feldman, Karkahke, Ill.; Dorothy Hardisen, Karkahke, Ill.; Famaie, W. Wylie, Clarksville, Tenn., and Sarah Pollard, Chicago.
T. B. Armstrong, Route 2, Box 691, Repres. Col., is the next inquisitive bilken, and wishes to know the whereabouts of Miss Sadie A. Owens and Miss Kathryn Howard.
Arrillo E. Speerman, L. L. Box 14, Tarracosa, Miss., is a new member and wishes to get acquainted. Help her out. Billkens.
Many of the Billkens have written and asked the address of one of our popular members, Alma Proctor. For the benefit of all I will write her address Miss A. L. Proctor, 615 W. Pearl street, Jackson, Miss.
Hattie Maxwell, 2721 Blonlo street, Osmond, New, is in the following: our web. Well, I guess the Billkens can supply enough information for anyone.
WHY DID CONGRESS FAIL TO SUPPRESS KU KLUX?
---
8ATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1922
WHY I
H. P. Fry, Foe of Order, Said Should Be My Law—My Yet C
Henry P. Fry of Tennessee be- and was appointed a Kleagle or f- worked for several weeks until a pire" conferred him that the org- and its appeals to class hatred, w- signed from the organization, repu- New York World in making a com- ment. In a series of five articles M-needed legislation which he believ- erals of Ku Kluxim.
H. P. Fry, Former Kleagle of Order, Says the System Should Be Destroyed by Law—Menace Not Yet Checked
Henry P. Fry of Tennessee became a member of the Ku Klux Klan and was appointed a Kleagle or field organizer, in which capacity he worked for several weeks until a close study of the "Invisible Empire" convinced him that the organization, with its absolute secrecy and its appeals to class hatred, was a national menace, when he resigned from the organization, repudiated its obligation and aided the New York World in making a complete exposure of the entire movement. In a series of five articles Mr. Fry now calls attention to much-needed legislation which he believes necessary in order to stamp out the pirates of Ku Kluxism.
By HENRY P. FRY
(Copyrighted)
ARTICLE I
IN VIEW of the recent "dog fights" that have taken place within the ranks of the Ku Klux Klan, the organization has taken idea that the organization has become disrupted and destroyed. The powers within the ranks of the "invisible Empire" against the retention of "Emperor" Simmons, of E. Y. Clarke and Mrs. Elizabeth Tewah, of World to have been a national scandal resulted in the dismissal by Clarke of four prominent Goblinists and in various legal actions on the part of those individuals. This internal discord merely mansows how the organization has a change of leadership.
The civil system, with its secret membership, its masked and hooded must be destroyed root and branch by Congress and the state legislature. Kluxian plans to stage a decided backlash and if necessary to under a new name, and in the dispute of a new order, but it with its own system, seeking to build a secretive empire of polioviruses morbid and poliomyelitis. A bad egg by any other name counts the same unintended consequence.
Many persons who were deeply interested in the exposure of the sys- tem's publicity has killed the Khan, but this is so far from the truth that people are well aware of the fact that the historical Klanus are preaching to "singe a grand comeback." What is believed to be a public service, the New York World, with my co-operation, under the direction of the "Kiu Klux Klan," printing a series of 21 articles covering every phase of the "Twilight Empire" of religious radicalism, taking the attitude. I took when withdrawing from the organization, that secret movement possessing its numerous possibilities." The World, by means of its great power, verification, thoroughly entered the entire United States and presented a most convincing case, arranging for the execution of such a person as it has been assumed to no other danger by a newspaper expose in the United States, to diminish the leading secular and religious papers of the country; coded the exposure and condemned the in-
Having, therefore, called to the at-
tendance possibilities of our Kurkhey-
se, and having thrown the white
structure and organization, the dut-
ty of the World and its associated papers
Epulses" had been made visible.
Some Action Still Necessary ..
A second phase, however, now presents itself for public consideration, with the aim of promoting a series of articles, a phase which follows logically as a supplement to the first phase, and a phase of the question will deal with various remedies, both state and federal, by Congress and the state legislatures (many or which will shortly become federal) from the Ku NuXu Klan or any association of individuals organized in the state to facilitate its vital necessary should be obvious to any reader who has read the department of the state and is aware of the salient facts brought out by the World disclosures, that while organized ostensibly as a state organization without profit, the Ku NuXu Klan actually has been a source of considerable goodwill of livelihood to hundreds of Grand Goblina, King Kung Kung, Ku NuXu Klan officials are known, whose activities in policing religions and other areas have covered the entire United States.
It has been proved that funds of the organization were diverted for the purposes of charity, that $1,000 of funds was invested in Lander University, providing a place as president of the institution, that $1,000 of Stimulus is being paid $2,000 a year as head of the Ku Klux, holding his position for life; that his money has been used for the purchase of $50, and that out of every dollar only $2 goes into the imperial treasury, $$ finding its way into the bank, and that $2 is held by K. Charles and Mrs. Blakey Tilton. The latter family admitted to a United States postoffice in the work already as a Business promoter."
Outraues Traced to Kian
A side from its commercial features,
bath, and kitchen, structural and
```markdown
```
DID CO.
Former Kleagle says the System Destroyed by Venace Not Checked
became a member of the Ku Klux Klan field organizer, in which capacity he a close study of the "invisible Emmanation, with Its absolute secrecy as a national menace, when he re-radiated its obligation and aided the complete exposure of the entire move-ler. Fry now calls attention to much-necessary in order to stamp out the
composition, there are two strikingly important facts about the Klu Klux Klan which brand it as a mance to American institutions and which should be handled concurrently by federal and state legislation. These first—First—its membership is absolutely secret.
Second—It either permits its members to go abroad in disguise, or by its existence it encourages others to go abroad in disguise for the purpose of intimidating the public.
If one should cast aside every other containment of evil that are the United States, these two things remain and should compel the attention of all serious men and women in the country, because they contain possibilities of evil that are the United States. If suitable legislation is created to prevent forever disguise the causes of their members and prohibiting persons from gassing about in disguise and terrorizing others, will be made in the way of ammonizing the teeth from the present Klu Klux Klan moves the course of the same character.
Restrictive Legislation Necessary
On the other hand, if there be no federal or state legislation, the recent Klusman will be impossible Empire of Klusman will be impossible Empire of effect of advertising the scheme, and eventually making it one of the dangerous systems that ever come into existence in America. Unless Congress and the states put a curb on Klusman, the Klusman the time will come when the organization, through its secret method, will control a considerable portion of the entire country. Congress is now in session and that will destroy Ku Klusman as a national menace. In a short time the convene and an opportunity will be afforded to secure the enactment of laws so framed as to most most efficient question in dealing with the problem of Ku Klusman is: What legislation will present its dangerous potentialities from becoming de facto actualities?
Tennessee Klan Card Indexes Every Resident of City and Holds Jew. Catholic and Race in Subjection
WHEN an individual becomes a "naturalized citizen" of the "invisible Empire," Knights of the Krieg XII Kahn he is strictly enjoined to secrecy as to his "citizenship," and is cautioned that under no circumcumption does he receive "writing" into "citizenship" or amends them as follows:
This organization is being perfected by members who accomplish its mission only by preserving absolute secrecy. You are not the only person in the world that you are a member, not even your own wife. If anybody asks you pointedly if you are a member, you should answer. If you ask an answer, you should require of you if you are a "citizen" of the "invisible Empire," tell you that you have other made an application or intend doing so.
More Than 1,000 Klans Now
The result of this system is that there are over 1,000 units or Klanes of the "invisible Empire" scattered throughout secret members, each of whom is sworn to obey implicitly all the orders of the "Emperor William I. L. Simmons" and methods of "white supremacy" to enforce the principles of "white supremacy" and other Ku Klux Klan ideals and decries "simultan any person or persons, political party" or other enemy in the "automated citizen" of the "invisible Empire" who belongs and is the heart of some Klanes that they think and ears that they everything." The outside, especially the Jew, the Catholic and the Negro, does not quash the man who works alongside in an office, the clerk at one's hotel—a scrutinized mail and bank account with one's bank account, and the confidential secretary of a business man are Klanes, secretly aware of the benefit of the "invisible Empire."
In one town in Tennessee that came to Knoxville propagation department the "citizenship" of the local Knoxian includes the police officer, all the members of the police force, the presidents of the two largest employers, the manager of the telephone company, most of the important operatives or the managers of the selected group of business and professional men, who, with the others involved, entirely ran the community. No outside, particularly a Catholic, sight of chance in the world to compete against such a system. Knoxville to keep a card index of every
Midnight Initiation Ceremony of Klan
[Illustration of a castle with towers and a cross]
Scene in Georgia woods of werd midnight initiation of Ku Klux Klan. Picture shows a candidate taking his oath of allegiance to the perpetuators of race hatred Below, G. Anderson Wright, ex-grand goblin of the "Invisible Empire," who, in spite of numerous threats, exposed along with Henry P. Fry, the secrets of the organization.
perron in the place, showing his business connections, habits, morals, religion, politics and all available information as to his private affairs. I have no doubt that the development of the same system is now under way by these self-constituted regulators of the public peace and morals in a thousand other American communities. If this plan is allowed to be perfected there will gradually evolve a regional arbitrarie that the secret police organization which formerly held swain in Russia.
current action on the part of the various states.
Some of the needs for state legislation will be discussed in the new article.
ARTICLE III
Legislation That Will Make Secret Order Powerless for Harm Suggested by Former Organizer
A LTHOUGH all the states in th
Secrecy a Genuine Danger
Such absolute secrecy on the part of an organization, whose oath and ritual show it to be political, and whose constitution declares it to be "military in its nature," constitutes a daunting challenge that should be legally suppressed. The light of publicity should be turned upon membership list and membership history in the country. The American people are entitled to know the names of those in their community who belong to an organization and who are members and too cowardly to publish its membership roster. Not only organization, fraternal or otherwise, can have the slightest objection to making public the names of the members of an organization, but to organization it can be injured in the least degree by the publication of its list of members. I am the lodge of the Lions of Pythias, and both of the lodges of these orders to print annual rosters of membership during a membership of nearly 20 years in these orders. I have never been a member of his membership, who was cowardly enough to deny his membership, or who felt called upon to tell a lie
There is a very simple remedy for this cardinal mistake of Ku Klux Klan, the most notorious group of the United States, a remedy which will put an effective quinquennial ban on the organization and flourish in the dark, and whose members dare not admit they belong to it. Congress must enact legislation to effect that ban societies, traternities or organizations are or which make use of the United States mails should be compartment, at stated intervals, copies of the membership rosters of each unit of the organization. one copy to the other, and the inspection by the local postmaster and the other copy sent to the Pensilvania for non-compliance with the law should be enacted, denying the organization failing to file its reports.
Legitimate Orders Unaffected
Such a law would have little or no effect upon the legitimate, standard internal orders of the United States, the Knights of Columbus and others already have annual rosters, and there would be little hardship imposed by such a law. The rosters of these orders in complying with the law. The sneaking, lying, underhand movement or society that would render the blow that would render its field of activity very limited. Such a whole set of the invisible Empire, to include were "citizens" and compel them to stand up and make public acknowledgments displayed membership roster would also be exceedingly valuable for the use of grand juries in the event that a masseed outrage. If it were suspected that the outrage was the work of the Ku Klux Klan the members of the grand jury. Should it be the grand jury. Should it develop that the crime was not committed by Klanmen the public roster organization in clearing its skirts.
Congress might also look into the criminal acts committed by local Klans in violation of the Constitution of the United States upon the national security of the federal officers of the organization. In every case where masked outrages have been committed to Klans or to Klansmen—the "Emperor" of the "invisible Empire" has repeatedly alleged insultation that would affect the regular fraternal orders as one never bears of the Knights of Pythons including in tar and feather parades, whippings, masked parades or public inundation. By a few simple legislative acts Congress can very effectively check the Klans and pay the way forGO
Feature Section of the Chicago Defender
current action on the part of the var-
lous states. Some of the needs for state
legislation will be discussed in the next
article.
ARTICLE III
Legislation That Will Make Secret Order Powerless for Harm Suggested by Former Organizer
ALTHOUGH all the states in the American union have on their statute books adequate laws regulating and governing domestic and foreign business corporations, it appears that any states have gone very thoroughly into the matter of protecting their citizens from foreign corporations organized or possessed other than for profit. The state has a general law providing for the organization of benevolent, benevolent and membership corporations, which law defines the extent and scope of such bodies, but it does not require similar corporations organized in other states. The general proportion, a group of individuals can procure a charter from one state, the matter being procured upon the legal status conferred by this charter proceed to do business without being hampered by legal authority. The Ku Klux Klan affords an interesting illustration of the laxity of business corporations. In 1915 there was incorporated under the laws of the state of Georgia an organization which authorized the Ku Klux Klan, Inc., "purporting to be a fraternal, benevolent, not organized for profit."
Operates Widely Under Charter
A careful reading of the certificate of incorporation falls to reveal any special privilege or the title "emperor" for its head. Armed with this Georgia charter, he institutes units or Klans in nearly every state in the union, under the president of the school system, the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, with himself as a self-constituted "Emperor," and has, according to which he maintains an affluent, over 1,000 local Klans, covering nearly every state in the United States, in the newspapers, in only one state, Indiana, has the organization registered its charter as a foreign corporation with legal status. It is unlikely, however, that such action would be necessary, since state corporation laws, in this respect,
The question therefore arises: Why should not the people of a state generate alone some proper business corporations as are afforded against the foreign business corporations? The foreign business corporations which protect investors from falling victims to graffits who attempt to float fraudulent stock-selling enterprises, a close scrutiny over all corporations purporting to be fraternal or benevolent, and reserve for themselves the large organizations and to exact on the part of foreign corporations—striment requirements before permitting laws in the United States should amend its corporation laws in this respect so that corporations associations possessing no capital stock should be subjected to the most rigid investigation before being allowed to operate in the continues of a state, and should be placed at all times on their good behavior as a consideration for heeded to continue such operations.
Should File Sworn Statements
Without attempting the task of framing legislation on the subject, such attempts themselves and which suggest themselves and which are considered by the states. In the first place, no corporation organized for other than business purposes should be allowed to make a statement of another state unless and until it filed with the secretary of state or state attorney general to complete sworn statement of all its important features, including its constitution and law, and to petition the nation and law. List of its national officers and members of its governing body; a sworn statement of its constitution and law; a statement of which it is operating; full details of its intentions; complete information as to its propagation; the amount of its intentions; and more.
At right (top), "Col." William Joseph Simmons, "Imperial Wizard" of the order, who defends the right of the klan to spread race hatred. Below, the late Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest of the Confederate army, who was grand wizard and one of the organizers of the original klan, following the war of the Rebellion.
Photo by International
the initiation fees or "donations" it expects to exact from members, and such other data as may be required by a secretary of state or proof official having in charge the supervision of such corporations.
should be ground for electing it from the state and prohibiting its further activities.
Could Hold Lawns in Check
Corporation laws such as have been
The legislation should provide a strong penalty for such organizations as attempt to establish branches and enroll members without first having compiled with the law; should provide that all agents canvassing for members be registered and licensed with penalty for non-compliance with this provision; and should contain very positive and specific provisions of authorization from its territory in the event that any of its local units become involved in any acts of misuse, disregard, violation or attempted private registration of the public peace. Also, in drafting a bill, there be a requirement of national officials of the organization a definite responsibility for lawless acts committed by subordinates branches such as incidences and trial.
Concurrently with congressional legislation previously discussed, each county has a separate, bencovent or non-profit association to the file at stated intervals to be maintained in the county or unit or branch, one copy to be held with the county clerk of the county in which such unit is located and another copy with the secretary of state in which such unit is located. All times open for public inspection. Failure of such organization to comply with the laws of the state for an action brought by the attorney general of the state for the purpose of revoking the authority of the orphanage by a foreign corporation
PROPAGANDA
CALLS KU KLUX KLAN
PRACTICALLY BANKRUPT
Atlanta Leader Makes State ment in Affidavit Attacking Kleagle Clarke
Atlanta, Dec. 20.—The Ku Klux Klan is practically bankrupt, according to the Atlanta Klan, who is fighting to regain control of the perilous Kleskage, and his associate business, Mrs. Elizabeth Tyler. The affairman says that the Klan now owns with a depleted treasury; that it does not hold clear title to any of the real estate a line purchased, and that it has no interest in the over the emergency. Uphchurch who is several years away with associated with Charleston way, makes unappreciable charges concerning the past life of Mrs. Tyler of immoral conduct between them, giving his own personal observations of Pryor street, where they were together in October, 1919, and fined for disorderly conduct. Uphchurch has defrauded charitable and religious organizations of thousands of dollars for them, and that he continued this practice in his conduct of them, and that he recommended Clark to Colon Simmons. Imperial Wizard, not knowing at that time of his "utter
should be ground for ejecting it from the state and prohibiting its further activities.
Could Hold Lawlss in Chck
Corporation laws such as have been briefly set forth would prove valuable safeguards against the operation of so-called fraternal organizations which now possess the indiscriminate right to invade a state, collect large sums of money from its citizens, build up political machines, perfect danger and ultra-secret combations, and impose a fraternal association in reality develop secret vigilance committees assuming the right, in direct contraction of state rights of federal and state constituent governments the morals of communities, appropriating to themselves the functions of prosecuting attorney and executor.
In discussing the subject of state law, we must remember that members corporations, 1 big group touched upon the important matter of training any organization from going into business to protection of masks and robes terrorizing and intimidating the public. The state has ever been the chief balwark of Ku Klux Klan, not only enabling members to perpetrate outrages, but also suggesting to all persons similarly minded the importance of when one can be committed with intent crime by disguised individuals. The state of Tennessee has an exonerated law for its enactment in disguise, and in the next article this law will be quoted in order for its enactment by other states.
State Where Original Klinn Was Organized in Reconstruction Days has Iron Clad Law
THE state of Tennessee played an important part in the history of
the original Ku Klux Klan at the close of the Civil war. The grotesque organization, with its awe-inspiring mystery, its weird costumes and its powerful effect upon the ignorant and superstitious, came into existence at a launch by a group of fun-seeking youngsters who had been soldiers in the Civil War. Some means of social amusement and relaxation after the arduous years of war.
Widespread interest awelled its ranks, and the society rapidly grew until it covered the entire Southern landscape. Some members, clad in ghostly robes, spread terror among the Negroes, who imagined Ku Klux Klan spirits would be defeated. Organizations organization soon changed into a band of "regulators" who entered conditions were choicel, and also functioned as a political machine which restored the ballot to the white slave-driver the Negro out of public life.
Gen. Forrest Sincero Leader
The grand wizard of the Ku Klux Klan was General Nathan Hedford Gunnemann, commander of the Unified Brigade of the Confederacy, who acted by principle in the leadership of the movement aimed at the leadership of his organization from the beginning, said that 90 percent of violence was effective work of the Ku Klux Klan, an effective work of the Ku Klux Klan of violent means although included in the remaining 10 per cent were many works of pronounced severity, and that the original members of the original Klan, however, it has been shown that together, in secret, for the purpose of taking into their own hands the enforcer's intentions might have now intentions of the leader, there was bound to develop a spirit of fawless elements of the organization.
Such a condition presented itself itself in the form of a military training in, a measure to keep contact with the system. In addition to this, the system also required the administration of about communities and presumed to administer their own laws caused by the system. The members of the Ku klux Klan to adopt similar disguises for the purpose of committing every degree of violence.
Tennessee was the headquarter of
the state's largest bank, also
also oversee with hundreds of
Internal 'Dog Fights' Merely Conceal Klan's Secret Intentions to Stage Comeback—Under a New Name If Necessary
desperdentes whose acts of criminally struck terror into the hearts of the entire community, and whose lawlessness brought public conscience upon all classes of disregulated regulators. Accordingly the legislature Ku Klux Klan was against Ku Klux Klan that prescribed severe penalties for masked terrorism. Partly on account of this law, with its terms of severity, partly because of the fact that General Forrest saw that the Ku Klux organization was getting away from his control and less illicitous, less illicitous, and more technically disbanding the movement. This order was accepted in good faith by the political purposes, but the police units refused to obey it and many individuals either joined other hands of "regulators" or operated independently, and continued their acts of violence.
Convictions Checked Outrages
There were a great many prosecutions under the Tennessee anti-Klux act, and one conviction and one death under the state. There remains today a part of the original act on the basis of parades, might be taken as well might well be taken as a model in framing suitable legislation in other states. There are many parades, might be taken and ceremonies of intimidation under the original Klux Klan. The following citations from Shannon's Code of Tennessee should be read by every person, person, or in disguise, walk through the country or towns of this state, to the disturbance of citizens of any portion of this state, on conviction thereof (they) shall be fined not less than one hundred dollars, and imprisoned in the county jail of the county wherein the jury trying the case
Intent of Law Clearly Defined
In that year, in the case of Walpole vs. State (3 Baxter 369) the court, in sustaining a conviction in a lower tribunal, hold:
"It is apparent that the object of this statute was to repress a great number of the war, and which grew to be an offence of frequent occurrence, that of disgusting themselves to terrorize or wrong those who happened to be the victims of the war. This was a kind of mob law, offences sometimes by a multitude of vengeance to the people and placed human life and property at the mercy of bad men, whose crimes could scarcely be punished under which they were perpetrated. The penalties of a violator have proved themselves wholesome in the part A suppression of one of the modern Ku Klux Klan, whose special purpose for the penalties of going about disguised in the state of Tennessee, was to protect members of the organization a growing belief that if it were possible to execute attunements, mayors, police and other law-enforcing authorities the statute would become a dead letter, and obstructions could be freely held.
ARTICLE V
Interests of Nation Directly
Opposed to Those of Secret
Operations of Klan
---
PAGE THREE—PART TWO
KLUX?
Fights' Merely
n's Secret In-
Stage Come-
der a New
Necessary
his scheme into existence from idealistic or altruistic motives. The exposure of the New York World and its associated newspapers record in the light of a real public service which will probably be appreciated by the American people because of the difficulty experienced by the average person in visualizing the danger of potential evils.
Only Laws Can Save Trouble
Secrecy Is Greatest Danger
But no man has a right to belong to a society, a system, or a movement and is afraid to publish his dark and is afraid to publish his moral and the world. People may not agree with the opinions and ideas of other individuals, and a common spirit of the public play demand that all individuals who express opinions should open the public. America has no power on the contemptible writer of anonymous letters, who sends his poisonous unauthorized charges in person; for the secret plotter who sneaks in the dark and the hooded hoodium, masked and robed, who made temporarily courageous persons and organizations; or for the hooded hoodium, masked and robed, who made temporarily courageous persons and organizations; similarly clad, plies the whip upon the helpless back of his victim. Decree Americanism demands that the United States be a country. If the states would enact legislation control over societies of all kinds, man would be more careful of what orders they need. If all the legislators-inti-Ku Klux law prohibiting persons from going abroad in disguises, the states would be mittened by disguised individuals, it would aid in eliminating the masked signs are carried by white-lettering uses and assist in stopping outrages similar to those perpetrated in various parts of the country during the past year.
The most important law, however, that could be placed upon the statute is that requiring the publication of names of all members of secret or official organizations will have a most solitary effect. The coward who delights in the cloak of anonymity would be compelled to publish the names of his opinions openly, although it is very probable that when the protector's voice will become indelible a "small voice" This publicity would have a good effect upon the community to know something about the group activities of their neighbors. It would also help to organize the organization itself, as the organization would then be in a position to take its place among decent ones and to fulfill upon whatever merits it possessed.
Race Hostilities Perilous
The United States in its forward march to the triumphant goal of national greatness may only compelled to counter many perils and overcome many obstacles, but I believe that her greatest danger, when it develops, will be the failure to counter many national friction and strife, but from within her own borders. Each as she goes, she will grow more inclined to be, and growing more inclined to the councils of mankind, the country's weakness lies in the existence of our antagonisms which must, unless eliminated, result in serious consequences. Ku Kluxkum, entering to the averreth of its secret structure, and has thrived upon the hatred of class for class, hoping to foment by secret mentions of its secret mentions. A broad-minded Americanism, recognizing the right of the groups to exist, demands that they be developed of a homogeneous national unity, and that industrial, political and religious predisposition be confined to legitimate channels.
These channels I conceive to be Mutual respect for the rights and duties of the citizens—without hatred—openly expressed, and the enforcement of law and order fairly and impartially by the regularly constituted agencies of govern-
EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE CHICAGO DEFENDER SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1922
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WORLD'S GREATEST CITY WEEKLY
Founded May 6, 1865, by ROBERT S. ABROTT, LL B.
PUBLISHED BY
THE ROBERT S. ABROTT PUBLISHING COMPANY
(INCORPORATED)
Served as postmaster, February 1, 1865, at the Post
Office, Chicago, Ill., under March 1, 1865.
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THE PRODUCT
Late, 'it's said, is just a bundle
filled with happiness or trouble:
All depending—well we know it—
on the way in which we blow it.
Take never caught. Reward a sleeping-
and the harvest we are reaping—
Good or bad, whatever the showing—
the product of our sowing.
THE MONROE DOCTRINE
AMENT CONFERENCE now being will no doubt result in the forma-cles, the effect of which will be a question of what is commonly called the fact that Japan—which is not the world has created a situation change in our foreign policy absolutely HILITIES are that what is now true is he true before the end of the pres- cies countries dominated by races other Caucasian. That our government upon and hold responsible for the government of the different South is all right as conditions have here- in view of changes that are con- cise this supervision must necessarily BE SUPPOSED under the Moore- manever step that may be pres- cised. Subjugating American republics, yet the probable number of them will be in the near of Japan now—in a position to pro- cise of themselves without being de- government for aid and assistance. COREIED already a few of the men of which is open to serious question that is nearest to us and which point would seem to be the one we are are that this country can never use the Mexicans but not only require a strong strength and vitality to formation, even they may not call a stable government. When criticized by Americans, they aptly be referring to our own lawless human life is light held, especially of the darker race. Are not Caucasians, they are not will not Caucasians, subjected to our administration. What is true of one of the other South American re- domino and Haiti included who was one of America's greatest this situation, when as chairman of the commission, during President Obama, he opposed and defeated the to annex Santo Domingo to the CENTRIC COUNTRY to be not being annexed to the United States, but a part of this country would be it. The Philippines, for instance, are dependence for the sole purpose of from American prejudice and domi- nation white men declares that the not yet capable of maintaining and stable government, although the hate preposition is treated in the country, yet the Cubans under their own are not getting along fairly well. IS that all of these countries have American domination chiefly on ac- criptivity, proscription and discrimin- ament of their own they are not inconveniences and annoyances. Drent Rosenberg, on the occasion of his contributed an illuminating article in the admirable and amiable man- nagement of their own society, radically different from the way it is in this country. The proper fore- is to circumscure and not to enable methods of treating the race
THE DISMAMMENT CONFERENCE now being held in Washington will no doubt result in the formation of several treaties, the effect of which will be a material modification of what is commonly called Monroe Doctrine, has developed into one of the live ruling powers of the world has created a situation which makes a change in our foreign policy absolutely necessary.
THE PROBABILITY ARE that what is now true of Japan will likely be the end of the present American countries dominated by races other than that of the Caucasian. That our government should be looked upon and held responsible for the management and the government of the different South American countries is all right as conditions have hereof existed, but in view of changes that are constantly taking place this supervision must necessarily
WHILE WE ARE SUPPOSED under the Monroe Doctrine to take whatever steps that may be necessary to prevent European powers from subjugating any of the South American republics, yet the probabilities are that a number of them will be in the near future—as is true of Japan now—in a position to protect and take care of themselves without being dependent upon our government for aid and usurpation of their lands. The wisdom of which is open to serious question. The country that is nearest to us and which from that statepoint would seem to be the one we should acquire in preference to any other is Mexico. Yet the probabilities are that this country can never be acquired because the Mexicans are not only exposed to it, but have sufficient strength and vitality to prevent its consumption, even though they may not have what we would call a stable government. When their methods are civilized, they are not subject to offering to our own lawless methods by which human life is lightly held, especially if the victims be of the darker race.
SINCE THEY are not Caucasians they are not willing to try the experiment of being subjected to our methods of civil administration. What is true of Mexico is also true of the other South American republics, Cuba, Santo Domingo and Haiti included. The United States, in fact, has included them, foresee this situation, when as chairman of the foreign relations committee, during President Grant's administration, he opposed and detested the effort then made to annex Santo Domingo to the United States.
THESE DIFFERENT COUNTRIES should be to no extent being annexed to the United States, but those that are a part of this country would be glad to get out of it. The Philippines, for instance, are clamoring for independence for the sole purpose of freeing themselves from American prejudice and domination. The American white man declares that the Philippines are not yet capable of maintaining and administering a stable government, although the last president of the United States was more than the Cubans; yet the Cubans under their own government seem to be getting along fairly well.
THE TRUTH IS that all of these countries have an abhence of American domination chiefly on account of racial antipathy, proscription and discrimination. Under a government of their own they are not subject to the same laws as the rest of the world. The late Ex-President Roosevelt, on the occasion of his visit to Brazil, contributed an illuminating article in which he pointed out the admirable and amicable manner in which the race question is treated in that country and which is so radically different from the way in which it is treated in this country. The proper course of action should be to expand our questionable methods of treating the race question.
ON THE PARTIAL PAYMENT PLAN
THERE IS LITTLE LEEKLHOOD of GCBritain trading in any of her possessions to help build her debt to this country. She would raise us forever than beat us out of what is rightful us. Officially we are on the most friendly treat with this big power beyond the seas, but we venture that a vote of the American people as to what country, England or France, should receive any grant at our hands would roll up a big majority in far France.
IF WE OWNED the British possessions in the Worries they would be of little worth in comparison to Danish West Indies for strategic purposes, a safe their protection would mean a vast and coal outlay of money. In the group are Antigua, Grenada, Barbados, the Barbados, Dominica, Gambia and the Grenada, Jamaica, St. Kitts, St. Lucia, Uruguay, Tahiti, Teteland in total.
LITTLE Likelihood of Great res
in any of her possessions to help
to this country. She would rather
be on host us out of what is rightfully
we are on the most friendly terms
we are on the most friendly terms
we are on the most friendly terms
of the American people as to which
or France, should receive any great
would roll up a big majority in favor
of the British possessions in the West
be of little worth in comparison to
Indies for strategic purposes, and
election would mean a vast and con-
money. In the group are Antigua,
the Berthesdes, Dominica, Grat-
mann, Jamaica, St. Kitts, St. Lach,
Madeira, Tobago, Trifidabad and
11485.
THERE IS LITTLE LIKELIHOOD of Great British trading in any of our possessions to help liquidate her debt to this country. She would rather owse us forever than beat us out of what is rightfully due us. Officially we are on the most friendly terms with this big power beyond the sea, but we venture to say that, a vote of the American people as to which country, England or France, should resolve any great favor at our hands would roll up a big majority in favor. IF WE COWN the British possessions in the West Indies they would be of little worth in comparison to the Danish West Indies for strategic purposes, and again their protection would mean a vast and continual outlay of money. In the group are Antigua, Bermuda, Barbados, the Barbados, Dominica, Granada and the Georgetown, Jamaica, St. Kitts, St. Lace, St. Vincent, Navis, Mon塞塞, Tolague, Trinidad and others, making a total area of 21,468 square miles. Displaying these at the rate paid by the United States would be worth the little sum of $3,888,859. This would come within a billion of paying the British debt to this country.
IT MUST BE rather an uncomfortable feeling that comes over the natives of countries who are subject at a moment's notice to switch their alliance from one power to another at the will of their bonds and the will of their people. Dangerously near it. The beans that the United States made to the foreign powers allied with her in the world war were made with the distrust understanding that they were loans and not gifts, and we should demand that they be repaid and that money in our "grans" we can buy any pared or land our heart desires. For, after all, money is king.
WE HAVEN'T tried the experiment, but a scientist for the statement that it the offspring of two tails lived to the ninth generation they would total 22,000,000,000 tails, filling a space of 750,000,000 square feet. Tails are like most problems, most cells. They lie dangerously only by neglect. The so-called "Kingdom of the country is bounding by market. Our white follow citizens, upon whom the great burden tests, are passive and indifferent and seem blinded to the fact that the very foundation upon which our arrangement tests is being shaken by this secular and physical demonstration of a country trying to divide itself against itself. The black man may not multihue quite so rapidly as tails, but he will be ever present, and unless given the place in the sun he so will not down. And the longer the solution is delayed by procrastination the greater the problem becomes. The time to act is now.
AUTOMOBILE manufacturers have announced deep cuts in the price of their machines for 1922. It won't be long before it will be cheaper to ride home in an auto than on the street car.
THE ENGINE CHRONES when the car goes too slow. What we need is an appliance to the other when he goes too fast.
BEING OLD FASHIONED we prefer the days when old black dressing instead of bareback dancing.
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Any lie is bad, but the worst one is that which you tell yourself about yourself—
FLIES
OUR WEEKLY SERMON [This space is devoted to the use of ministers throughout the country who desire to send a message of encouragement to 250 words, and may be sent without official notice.]
WISDOM
Text: "Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom; and with all thy getting get understanding."—Prov. 4:7.
If wisdom is to be considered as a faculty of the mind, it is the faculty of discerning or judging what is most just, most proper, most conducive to prosperity or happiness.
There is what some call practical wisdom; wisdom and practical wisdom are about the same, with some discretion. It differs somewhat from prudence and discretion. It is the exercise of sound judgment in avoiding evils. You will note that the Lord God commanded Adam, saying: "Of every tree of the garden thou mayst freely eat; but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil thou shalt not eat or it; for in the day thou carest thereof thou shalt surely die."
It was not wisdom for Adam to follow the advice of his wife in this case; it might have been a wise plan, but it was not wisdom. Wisdom is the exercise of sound judgment, either in avoiding evils or attempting good. Principal thing; therefore get wisdom; and with all thy getting get understanding. Through wisdom is a house built; and by understanding it is established.
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
WE SELDOM SEE anything in the editorial utterances of "The World's Greatest Newspaper" which commends itself to our approbation and approval. But in an article which appeared not long since there are a few sentences which merit more than passing notice. They were occasioned by the miscarriage of justice in the case of a man who had committed a blot on his record. It is hard to tie to the safety of every citizen, for it cannot exist or continue without corrupting the whole system of our defense against crime. We have open and harmless disobedience of the constitution of the United States and of the laws of state and nation. This is not an evil which the decent citizenship of America can afford to ignore as it does. It is a deadly poison to democratic society which cannot survive if it will not respect its own laws or cannot survive. THESE ARE NOBLE and patriotic utterances, which merit the apprehension and endorsement of every law-adding citizen. But the writer of that article evidently overlooked the fact that the conditions described are largely the outgrowth of the teachings and doctrines preached by journals that never fall to countenance, endorse and encourage criminal methods to suppress the votes of Colored Americans and other offences if Colored Americans are the victims. They are not the victims of the average criminal does not draw the color line in the commission of offenses.
HE BEAONS that if the constitution can be honored and the law disregarded for one purpose, why not another? Public sentiment is controlled and influenced largely by the public press. It is therefore an unfortunate fact that influential papers should advise the Southern oligarchies to nullify the constitution and disregard the laws of the land if necessary to prevent what they are pleased to term "Negro domination." This pernicious doctrine has a tendency to instill into the public mind a disrespect for law and a disregard for the orderly and judicial processes of NewSPAPERS ADVOCATING these criminal methods for the purposes referred to have succeeded. In a large measure, in inducing the leaders of the Republican party to prostitute that great organization in having it accept and incorporate into its party policy the fruits of this pernicious propaganda. When that crime-breeding photo-play, "The Birth of a Nation," was sowing the seeds of racial hatred throughout the country, the Tribune found nothing in it to complain of. This photo-play depicted the secret, political, criminal organization called the "anti-reconstruction group" that criticized white women who was to protect innocent white women from the assaults of violent black men, which was a historical lie.
THIS PHOTO-PLAY was no doubt the incentive for the efforts recently made to revive that organization, the primary purpose of which was to commercialize race and religious prejudices. Knowing the harm and the reshuffle that would result from such an organization, the advertising space in no decent and respectable journal, yet the paper referred to was the chief medium through which the public was informed of the "alleged" alms and purposes of the organization. Even when imported criminals and thugs were hired, supposedly by a local organization, to harm the homes of decent and respectable Colored people of Chicago their acts were not tolerated. The white people were hired, supposedly by the white people of the community towards the Colored, when in point of fact less than one per cent of the white people were in sympathy with them. The instances referred to go to show that the attitude of this journal has been, and is, one which is calculated to encourage and promote, rather than discourage and prevent, the crimes which it depresses in the language quoted from its columns in the opening part of this
PECULIAR
WE QUITE AGREE with the editor who said that the American people are "peculiar". In fact their like is not to be found in any part of the globe, clitized or uncivilized. They have their own peculiar business methods, their own peculiar style of government and administration. They have their own peculiar conception of the relations that should exist between the peoples of other countries and themselves, also as to the relations that should exist between the groups that comprise the consolidation known as Americans. Let it further be known that the American people, in an excerpt from a modernized Bible doubless, would read thus: "Love thy (white) neighbor as thyself."
VE EDITOR was constrained to make this title remark after glancing at the headlines in our modern newspapers which blaze out the frailties of man to the edification of the sordid and evil-minded and hide his good qualities under a bushel basket. He perhaps traveled through the South where they have a peculiar attraction to the character of American citizens in the body of a street out and populating pack the back and front platforms like sardines in a box. They have a peculiar way of drawing their skirts about them for fear of being contaminated by the touch of their darker skinned brothers and sisters, yet they have nursed at the breast of a "black Mammy" eat food prepared by black hands and served by black hands. They are peculiar in that they resort to the lynchpin of violence even a friendly at a white woman, and yet they are white gentlemen (?) who forced their attentions on innocent colored women. Truly some Americans are peculiar.
WORRYING THE HEAVYWEIGHT
CHAMPION
SO MUCH animation in the daily press about the ability of Wills, "the college-bred boxer" is worrying, Dempsey. For he realizes that far too soon it will up to him to meet this polished rival in the ring and if he shares the views of the wise ones he will surfer the ring after the combat minus his title. IT WOULD BE FORTH NATE if a man with a cohesion of brains and brawn won the championship. There have been so few in that position change would be quite acceptable to the fight fans wishing to see a man with a brawny face. Wills has proven that a gentleman can be a gentle man in any walk of life, and he is doing much to me reelegating the manly art it was designed to be.
THE ONLY NATION that is powerless to aid the cause of the common people is assassination—Lynch
SO MUCH ingitation in the daily press about the ability of Wills, "the college-bed boxer," is worrying Mr. Dempsey. For he realizes that far too soon it will be up to him to meet this published rival in the ring. And if he shares the views of the wise ones he will step out the ring after the combat minus his title. He will be able to if a man with a combination of brains and keen attention to ship. There have been so few in that position the change would be quite acceptable to the fight fans who delight in looking up to their idol of the ring. Mr. Wills has proven that a gentleman can be a gentleman in any walk of life, and he is doing much to make prizefighting the main art it was designed to be.
THE ONLY NATION that is powerless to aid the cause of the common people is assassination—Lynchers, raka notices.
LAWCHING
DYER
ANTI-CRIME
BILL
THIS AND THAT AND T'OTHER
A BIT OF NEWS, GOSSIP, FICTION AND FUN
Once upon a time there was a Gentleman of the Old School who liked his Herbs. He cherished a fondness for the old Square-face and his weakness for the foaming Tankard caused him to contribute often toward helping to make the famous Tankard more useful to it and tell how old it was and after one Iound he could announce how long it had been in the Wood.
He took proper Precautions so that after Volastad had pulled his bone he was fairly well fixed. But the thickest silver lining is subject to wear, and the time came when all that was left of his Private Stock was broken for a number of days and finally hooked up on Some. It had the right Look, the Read, and the green Stamp and he paid for all three; and therewith-footed it to the Old Nest. He rooted out the Little glass with the thick Bottom and proceeded. But he found that there was no balm in Gilford. It didn't stop at being not in it, but it was when nine-three worse than he had feuded. It grabbed him by the Google and shook him like a dose of the Flu. His last impression before he went into the Coma was that it was weak tea backed up by dynamite and cayenne. When the long-suffering Best of the Family found him, he had the family found him, and raised his best hand as high as could be expected. Just as she opened the door, the echo she heard sounded like "Never Again."
Moral: It's a long shot no matter how you get it. —D. H.
Slats
Dengcodough, Jason and the bunch have had their little rap—Up steps the female "William Nye" to give a gentle slap. That "state of mind" stuff I don't get, but if it's what I think it is, I'm going to shout in line. That I'm "nuts" because I've got the rumpus.
Page Princess Mysteria
Deer sir (Mr. Rogers of "Can You Imagine" fame): I seen your ad and I thought I would try it I have a friend at Mainville and I don't Believe that he could be make come back to me if you make him come and tell me how to make him stay I wile pay you if it take me my life time this is all from Ellen-Oakdale, La.
P. 5. Answer at least.
A Fancy
She wears silk stockings ever,
Rolled 'neath her dimpled knees,
Disporting their beauty as clever
as popples when kissed by a breeze
How can we get to controlls to chip
gene in the column? can we get
upress gene in the column?
She—will you love me in December as you do in May?
He—That all depends on the kind of summer we have. kid. J.A.J.
A SAIL! A SAIL!
T AND T'OTHER
SSIP, FICTION AND FUN
A Bulky Cargo
Hail! Hail! P. e. P. l. another sail
Speeds to your harbor of This and
That.
"Tis a pirate brightine from the
shore of 'Might Have Been.'
With booty which will scorn the
"Rubaiyat."
Trendy—A bit; ridicule and wilt
Lie in the massive chests within
the hold.
To gather this it went to the East,
the Orient.
Pillaging for spices, verse and gold.
Verse—Jocose; golden, spicy prose
To some dull face mayhap bring a
smile.
Perhaps someone will, please, if you
find space for these.
Other contribrs may not chide my
style.
Now—Then; I'll pick up my pen.
I'll flirt awhile with a fieldle Muse,
I'll tatter her a bit, we all may gain
by it.
At most, there's little we can lose.
Coffers—Chests; I'll take out what is
best—
Give it to the great multitude.
Their smiles will be my pay, if it
be brighten up their way.
Who will rue it if I am not rude?
Jason—All; am I welcome to your
hall.
This pirate who is coming into port?
I'll strike my colors, too. If I don't appeal to you.
P. el P., I'll try to be a sport.
—The Pirate.
Turpin, a Magician
Charles T. Turpin, owner of the Booker T. Washington theater and Jazz Gardens, St. Louis, Mo, must have a magic horn, for we learn from the current issue of The Billboard that he "conducted a series of gift enterprises during holiday week that will terminate New Year's eve. ONE THOUSAND DOLLARS" worth of gifts were distributed under conditions set forth in the night's None of the presents cost less than 5 cents and some as high as $5, more than 300 (not it?) being valued at more than $5.
Postponed
Tom, with tom, with a blue steel gun.
Held up the jail and away he run.
In only four days' time
They'd 's hung him for his crime.
But Tom wasn't there, so it couldn't
be done.
—Jason.
"Bandit Shoots Two; Flees," runs
the surmer head in the W. G. W.
A blind man fingering in his
book would probably wonder what in
the heck that pesky scionicon was
doing in the way of the little
animals.
How Interesting!
Our Philadelphia correspondent writes that the nutritious classes of his city's public schools added 939 pounds to their credit during the past month.
How do you like the W. G. W. in its long pants? P. E. P.
Other Papers Say
PERSONAL ARTICLES
[The Christian Recorder]
We receive every day a large number of personal articles from persons who also insist that their articles be published always endeavor to put ourselves in the place of the writer and we find many of these articles extremely interesting us personally, but they now news and are not interesting to most people.
An elaborate description of a lanquet is not of very much interest to us, but the lanquet is given is known to practically all the readers, and then it must be skillfully written to be of interest because banquets are very common at funerals and receptions of funerals and receptions, quarterly conferences, etc.
These are all occasions upon which some of us are called upon to attend the funerals, receptions, quarterly conferences, receptions, visits of friends or relatives or any other affair that concerns us individually more than anyone else, we give the lanquet in the Christian Recorder it would require a weekly edition of 50 pages, and then that edition would render very little interesting reading matter to the people.
"The average Negro paper devotes its pages entirely too much to localism. That is to say, it is rarely and often who does not live in the vicinity where it is published or has been a former resident of that place; for too much of its news comprise lengthy and often inaccurate receptions of its local residents. So, dear readers, let us appeal to you to not feel offended if your article is not printed verbatim. And the article stop and think: "Would I be interested in this from some other part of the country?" The Christian discorder wants you to believe it must have it to live, but send in the news that the other person will buy the paper to read—and you can do this by putting a place for a few moments, and then we will have a paper worth while and one that will be self-sustaining.
From Day to Day
The legislature of British Columbia in South America voted down, 24 to 15, a bill designed to bring into effect next May the eight-hour working day as a legal maximum.
Bishop J. S. Sipner has been elected head of the Atlanta Savings bank in Atlanta, the. This bank is the oldest bank in the country, belonging to the Rueau. It is also one of the strongest, it having recently paid out more than $30,000 in one day in the form of Christmas savings.
Mrs. Fannie Liebovitz, New York city, had a mania for stealing. She was fed sheep glands in tablet form and kept them in the mouth of the cowl. Her mind is said to be clearing and the glands, which have been poisonous to some people, have been an absolute aid to her.
Mokuma Osun, former premier of Japan and past 80 years old, is dead. He was one of the most stalwart figures in Japanese political history. Japan was often the honored guests at retentions held in the country home of the marquis.
When probibition agents in New York were called, the "jack's" restaurant they found conceived in a secret upper chamber was the first to be opened. The brooch was issued in trumps.
DR. A. WILBERFORCE WILLIAMS
DR. A. WILBERFORCE WILLIAMS
PREVENTIVE MEASURES, FIRST AID REMEDIES HYGIENICS AND SANITATION
REPUTABLE SANITARIUM FOR OUR PEOPLE
Mr. G. M. H. writes: "I have beenotion in your county and in other informed that I am in the early stage, counties nearest to you.
Mr. G. M. R. writes: "I have been informed that I am in the early stage of tuberculosis and that a cure can
be effected if I secure immediate treatment. I am writing to you to ask if you know of any reputable salarium where I can see our treatment. If such places are intained, inform me of probable cost of such services. I am informed that you may be able to give me in-
secure immediate treatment. I am writing to you to ask if you know of any reputable sanitarium where I can see treatment. If such places are maintained, inform me as to the probable cost of such services. And I know that you may be able to give me information in regard to this matter. I assure you it will be gratefully received.
Reply: Mr. G. M. H. I, we regret very much to inform you that to the best of our knowledge there is not a reputable private sanitarium in the United States where respectable people are admitted on the same terms and conditions and rendered services the same as members of other races. There are, as you know, state, county and municipal institutions for the care and treatment of tuberculosis. These are often connected with the other house or poor farm, the house or poor farm, the other house or poor farm. These institutions are very good. The Municipal Tuberculosis Sanitarium of Chicago is one of the finest in the country. To gain admittance to that institution it is necessary for you to be a citizen of Cook county and the city of Chicago in the Chicago Tuberculosis Sanitarium to cure people who have tuberculosis in the early stages.
In several of the counties in the state of Illinois are institutions for the treatment and cure of tuberculosis. Dr. Geo. M. Palmer of Springfield, IL, is at the head of that work. If you will write to him no doubt you will be able to secure the necessary information concerning the institu-
TAXES
HENRY FORD paid out in a single year in taxes $75,000,000. When he steps to think what that money motors and fertilizers cheaper for the farmer or in developing rural
money might have motors and fertil the farmer or in schools for the children of the farmer it makes a wonder if this would be what it we call government is being run anywhere near as efficiently as it ought to be. We have a feeling that if Henry Ford had been allowed to keep money in his legitimate business plans we would not have heard so
bought in schools of the children of the farmer it makes us pause and wonder if this thing we call government is being run anywhere near as efficiently around the world. We have a feeling that if Henry Ford had been allowed to keep and use this money in his legitimate business plans he would have heard so much about that $75,000,000 Wall street loan to meet his tax payments. Probably the Ford factory would not have been closed at all last year.
have been closed at all last year.
Think of this tax money and then add to it all the other tax money you can think of, including your own of course, and then think of the bill that we have been building to blow some other fellow's head and money into kingdom come. Then perhaps you will get some idea of the significance to yourself of the Washington conference proposals to put a stop to some of this foolishness. If any one man was to take his money out of the bank and go out in the street to burn or shoot it he would land with very few preliminaries or formalities. Yet this is precisely what some of our leading statesmen have been doing with our money when they have not been putting it in the improvement of some useless river or harbor back in the home district. There is no question but what we need a much improved fiscal policy which will specially reduce these costs for us somewhere near desert proportions.
THE BROWNIES' BOOK
WE HAVE read with sorrow and regret the announcement of Dubois and Dill, publishers of The Brownstein Book, of their decision to discontinue publication of this beautiful little magazine for the little folk. We have looked upon it as one of the most interesting and inspiring magazines for children which has come into our home. How are our children to be interested in other if we do not furnish them the reasons of getting acquainted. Four thousand readers are not enough, the publishers say, to continue. We would like to see a campanet put on among those parents who know this book to get them to double their present subscription and send the extra number for a year to some other child who ought to know and use such a program. We would like to double the income and subscription list of the publishers. Possibly it would give them courage to put on a more aggressive advertising program to procure the additional readers. We hate to say goodbye to such a delightful little messenger of hope and cheer.
JAZZ AND MORALS
THE business agent of the Chicago Federation of Musicians gives us an interesting side light on jazz music. He plays jazz music which has pervaded the press lately. He puts the matter very clearly and sincerely for the musicians. Musicians have the choice of playing jazz or, starring, he can play it. This choice a choice to us. This gentleman goes on to say that it is the society peer.
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We regret very much that there is not a Face institution known to us that we can recommend you to go for treatment. For years this paper has been urging the people, urging the fraternal organizations, urging private charities to form a corporation that would be a face institution that would be a greed to our Race, so that the members of our Race when stricken down with tuberculosis might have a place to go where they will be sure of receiving scientific up-to-date treatment for the malady. Owing to the racial relations and social conditions in this country (while it is no fault of the members of our Race) we know it is very different for a person of color seriously ill with tuberculosis usually to be receive proper and just care in the various institutions in many parts of the United States.
We still hope that in the very near future the members of our knee will get tired of being repeatedly insulted (we mean those of wealth, education and reinforcement) and build, as the Jews have done, a large sanitation facility. We are less fortunate members of our knee. We believe they will do it and that the time now is ripe and urgent. Those who informed you that a cure can be affected in the early stage of tuberculosis told you the truth. It is very necessary that you secure immediate guidance and treatment. You note that we mention guidance before treatment. Proper guidance before treatment is of great importance than simple medicinal treatment. We have not, up to date, been able to find any one particular medicine that has cured tuberculosis. You should cease from work, treat yourself to plenty of rest, proper food, plenty of fresh air, sunshine and mental poise or air of mind. Basis of mind is of paraparmal importance. We have cured tuberculosis. Cases taken early, under proper guidance, a cure may be effected in from 5 to 15 months.
ple on the drive and the debattants who are strongest for the jazz music and those who make their living by playing music must naturally play what they are told. This statement interests us, for we had almost beaten the authorities and reformers that certain gentlemen whose place of birth was somewhere in the environs of Memphis were responsible for this new and terrible standard of blues and melodic commonly designated as jazz. For our part we are not altogether sure whether it is the music, the conventions which pass for dancing, the supply which allows us to dance, all three of which is responsible for the changed standard of public conduct. We do feel that this business agent has touched upon an important angle of the situation when he emphasizes the influence which the example of those placed in important positions in life has upon the conduct and standards of others who have no disposition to think for themselves of men and women are content to regulate their pleasures and stunt their spiritual growth on the basis of going along with the crowd those so-called society people will pipe the tune according to which most of us will dance. Who is going to change the tune? Certainly not the musicians.
THE DOLLAR TIMEPIECE
THE dollar watchmakers, Robt. H. Ingersoll & I. Boe, are now in receivership. Changing public taste, a 150 per cent price advance, a merchandising policy which antagonized the jewels, service costs—all contributed to the failure of the company. It is also said that some outside ventures helped to weaken the company. This company sold to the world more than $600,000 low-priced watches. The watch business was originally a relatively unimportant part of a flourishing sporting goods business with three stores in New York and Brooklyn. More than a decade ago the brothers disappeared and decided to split up the assets. Charles took the sporting goods stores and achieved a ransack bankruptcy; Robert took the small watch business and became famous. In conclusion Charles becoming treasurer of the watch company.
What an interesting story there is in the business career of these brothers. Disagreement and failure, but no loss of trust and affection. Reconciliation and great success. Now failure again. It is to be assumed that two men who could give to the word "failure" stand by each other in adversity will come out all right eventually. No business is stronger than the character of the individuals who direct it. Yet it comes pretty near being as weak as the weakest one in it despite the strength of others. Men who have been considered successful bankers have always been the financial statement of the business they chose to back. Why isn't this a good rule for the rest of us to follow in our daily lives?
MASONS AID NEEDY
Tuskegee, Mla., Jan. 15.—The Masonic lodges of Tuskegee Institute have three winneroads of groceries and other things to hundreds of poor people in Mason county during the holiday holiday. There is a large meeting in the Masonic hall, where many of the recipients of the Mason's charity had assembled, and supplies to the sick and cripples who could not attend the meeting.
Dr. D. F. Curts of Mammoth Springs, 44, the father of a 12-year baby boy. The father is 18 years old and his wife 44.