Chicago Defender
Saturday, March 11, 1922
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
BERT WILLIAMS, FAMOUS COMEDIAN, DEAD
DEATH ENDS CAREER OF STAGE IDOL
Grim Reaper Drops Curtain on "Last Act"; 7,000 Witness His Funeral in Gotham
By TONY LANGSTON
Egbert Austin ("Bert") Williams, the greatest comedian of his time, died at his home, 2309 Seventh avenue, New York City, at 12:03 a.m. m. Sunday, March 5. The immediate cause of his death was pneumonia, although Mr. Williams had been falling in health for over a year. His condition was the cause of much worry among his friends during the latter days of his recent engagement at the Studebaker theatre of Chicago, where he was also absotage collapse during the first performance of "Under the Bamboo Tree" at the Garrick theater, Detroit, Mich., was sent out, those who were in position to know of the seriousness of his death, and were sent to the end. To the world at large, however, the report of Mr. Williams' death is bound to be a shock. No reports regarding his illness had been published, and the fact that he worked up until a few days before his death all the more a matter of surprise.
Two funeral services were held—family services on Tuesday afternoon at St. Phillip's church and a second coronary on Wednesday, under the supties of St. Cecile Manson. His was a member of the only lodge of Edinburgh, Scotland. The body was interred at Woodlawn cemetery.
Great Career
Resumes Work
WOMAN MURDERED
Nushville, Tenn., March 10.—Mrs. J. W. Adams, well known in this city, was brutally murdered at her home here recently. The murderer escaped.
i'
PRINCE
Gets Final Call
EGBERT AUS
Celebrated comedian ans
career covering many years
of largest ever held in New Y
Pr
Celebrated comedian answers final call after remarkable career covering many years upon the stage. Funeral one of largest ever held in New York City.
McCormick Is Behind Lynch Bill
Washington, D. C., March 10.—Much speculation is rife both here and in the states as to just when the Dyer Ant-Lynching bill will come into force. Already the Defender has demanded that the two senators from Illinois, Hon. Medill McCormick and Hon. William B. McKinley, take a definite stand in the open, expressing their attitude. It gratifying to the Race constituents of these two senators to know that from open utterances they appear to be standing four-square on the issue. At a recent meeting at the John Wentley A. S. L. Zion church, the members of Federalrick Douglas were being held, Senator McCormick, the principal speaker of the evening, departed from his set speech and made it plain that he favored the Dyer Ant-Lynching bill and colonel Lincoln Henry Johnson, Republican national committeeman from Georgia, stands sponsor for the statement that Senator McKinley thus openly expressed himself last month for the Dyer Ant-Lynching bill as it is because I feel that congress owes it to common decency to break up the barrication of lynching. I intend to vote for it. As to the legal side I hold that I am a legislator and am not compromising my question as to legality that may arise is for the United States Supreme Court to settle.
U. P. FIRES COOKS
Los Angeles, Cal., March 10.—Cooks who have been in the employ of the Salt Lake railroad for years have been discharged.
IN EVANSTON
The Defender is on sale at the following locations in Evanston:
Dempster St. "L" Station
Foster St. "L" Station
Main St. "L" Station
Davis St. "L" Station
H. Springer, 1900 Maple Ave.
Goodellas, 1221 Emerson St.
C. R. Marr, 1103 Clark St.
W. Terry, 1906 W. Railroad Ave.
J. R. Moore, 1464 Elmwood Ave.
White Barker Shop, 1912 West Railroad Ave.
STIN WILLIAMS
owers final call after remarkable
upon the stage. Funeral one
York City.
NoJimCrow for Mr. Froe in New Job
When seen by the Defender representative, the new recorder was flanked by his beautiful flower basket awaiting the arrival of his auto. He assured the representative that he would be given a small-town quarrels. He said that he wanted to be lined up with all movements for advancement here, providing no grand meles of misunderstanding and quarrels, so common, were to prevail. He is a gentleman of splendid physique, remarkable intelligence, and really looks as if he belonged in a big job. He shows the result of years of growth and development in public life in his great home state.
"DOC" ROBINSON'S CASE
TO U. S. SUPREME COURT
As a final step in protecting the interests of Elbert R.; Robinson, inventor of the composite car wheel, the case has been carried before the United States supreme court. In a similar case, an indictment Jackson presented the case for the purpose of appealing from the decision of the Illinois supreme court. Litigation over these interests has been ongoing for years. Various charges of, theft of certain rights from the inventor have been made, and counter-charges of dishonesty in the disposition of investor's money. In... propagation
CHICAGO, SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1922
OFFICERS NAB LUTHER BODDY AIDS
OFFICERS NAB LUTHER BODDY AIDS
Capture Blackmailers Writing Notes to the Rev. Charles Tindley of Philadelphia
Philadelphia, Pa., March 10. Shades of Luther Boddys' case. With the arrest here of Joseph Brown, 1343 Lombard street, and David Jones, South 11th street, the police believe they have clipped the chain of blackmilers who, ever since they were arrested and returned to New York, brought to terrorize those connected in the capture of the convicted gunman.
The Rev. Charles A. Tindley, pastor of East Calvary Methodist Episcopal church and a minister of noteworthy renown, will have been the victim of a ringleader's plot, which, eventually, led to the capture of the alleged ringleader of the blackmailers and an accomplice. Notes of various kinds have been issued by underworld gang which has been involved in interest of the slayer. This coterie of criminals was thought to have been responsible for the smuggling into Boddy's New York cell of two sisters and with which the prisoner was to work prison. Recently, Boddy's quarters at Sing Sing have been changed and extra guards put over him. "Threats have come from the "gang" to detain the police force in both slayt and New York, and to private clans.
Blackmailers' Letter
A letter received by Rev. Tinley read:
"You are hereby requested to leave in the doorway of the Pennsylvania freight shed $500. in $20 bills. The money must be left there Friday before the appointment of conviction and sentence of Godby. If you leave the money according to the appointment, this will set you free. The money must be left in the second doorway, on the right of the warden ward 15th, on the Carpenter street side. Please put it in a paper bag. If this leads to an arrest of any of us, you will be dealt with according to the warrant of the threat had mentioned death). We are putting you off easy; even no member of your family shall know anything concerning this money, nor even any money. We will thank you if you will do according to our request (you will be free; you will be free; you will be free)." Joseph H. Collins, private detective, working on the case for two months. He was given this letter.
Plan Trap
Arrangements were made with the postal authorities for a fake package and Collins secured two men, Riley and Brown from the city detective bureau, to was sent to the minister's home at 12 o'clock. The officers all took stations in the vicinity of the spot where the money was to be left. The package was put in place and the vigil began hours, waiting, a man was seen to come and take the package. The officers seized him. It was Brown. On his person he carried an exact duplicate of the letter sent Rev. Tindley. He was arrested and later, his accusations, when he implicated, was taken by the police. While, the blackmaller has been in fall the Calvary church pastor has provided funds to care for the criminal's family. Special importance attaches to the capture of the fact that during the past year attempts were made to trace blackmasters in 33 cases in the police district where Rev. Tindley resides, without results.
SIMMONS CARRIES KANSAS
CITY IN GREAT SPEECH
Kansas City, Ken., March 10. Officially welcomed to the city by Mayor Burton, Roscoe Simmons and Burton beheaded here at Metropolitan Temple Friday night. Principal King of the public schools introduced him "as the one man who speaks a language and understand, his love and knowledge and understand, "If you are learning from things seen and heard," he said, "you know by this time that we must hustle for ourselves; that we must look out for children and trust the rest to God." "Time is not only the great healer," Simmons declared, "but also the great teacher and teacher are taken over and until then they understand. The American white must learn her instruction; if so, let my Race watch with patience for the day of reckoning. And as we watch, let policing Haiti infinitely, Brig-Gen. John H. Russell, recently appointed Haitian high commission, declared following a conference preparatory to for his post at Port nu Prince.
109 Years Old But He Never Used a Match
Hickman, Ky., March 10—If "Uncle Ned" Waler had not died recently he would have been 110 years old April 6, "Uncle Ned" was named after Waler, a culturer. A prominent among them was his aversion to the striking of matches. It is said he never allowed a fire to go out because he so much hated to strike a match, but the old man was burned out of his home and his wife and children shot by night. Riders during troubles in the locally of Reefoot Hill four miles south of Hickman. The old man's home they ordered him and his family out. They wouldn't obey. As a result of their disobedience their house was burned and amnesia lay awake they were forced out. The old man and one escaped in the darkness.
Peeper's Head Hard; Bullet N. G.
Peeper's Head Hard; Bullet N. G.
AGAIN: BULLOCK FREED
Hamilton, Ont., March 10. -Matthew Bullock has escaped the tentacles of Southern injustice again. He was the first to follow his rearrnest in connection with disturbances at Norlhan, N. C., two years ago, he was, elapsed, according to the notice made by Judge Snider at the time of Bullock's arrival.
At that time the Canadian judge had ruled that in order to extradite Bullock the North Carolina author-occupied Canada to establish a prima facie case against the accused man. This the Southern officials refused to do, contending that Canada should restrain Bullock's affidavits which were brought here. Popular sentiment throughout the province was in Bullock's favor and he was held in his honor. As he left the prison he was enforced in a Union Jack, flag of the British empire. He took a train here for parts, because he thought it best not to divulge. For some time he will remain in hiding.
NEWLY MARRIED WOMAN
TAKES HER OWN LIFE
Indianapolis, Ind., Mar. 10—Threats to take her own life which friends of Mrs. Alice Jones, 1907 North Illinois street, had heard her make, culprit when William Jones, wife of when William Jones, husband, returned home to find her dead with a revolver at her side.
Neighbors of the dead woman said that the threats had been accompanied by complaints about her husband, that she would rather die than live with him. No verification of these statements could be confirmed, and so far the motive for the suicide remains a mystery.
Mrs. Jones was 27 years old. She said she had been married only five months. She shot herself through the head.
WINS JAP HONOR
Tokio, Japan, March 10.—Distinction in the form of being the first to receive the doctor of law has come to Prof. G. A. Marcolin of the Philippine University for his essays on the comparative Philippines and the Western powers.
THIS PAPER CONSISTS OF
TWO PARTS—PART ONE
BELL BOYS ARE BEATEN; MOB KNOWN
UnmaskedRuffiansRaidHotels and Carry Away Men; Knew Too Much About Guests
Okmulgee, Okla., March 10—Leading citizens of Okmulgee raided the leading hotels, unmasked, seized a bellboy from each hostel, drove in automobiles to a secluded spot and whipped the boys "to a frazzle."
The hotels raided were the Curtis, Parkinson and Paul. The time was between 6 and 7 o'clock. The boys had been joined by John Jennings, Aaron Holloway and Earl Johnson. While the raid was be conducted, local law forces were paralyzed. All the members of the flogging party were white. All those whipped were not white.
What Was Motive?
Was there a motive for the crime? Yes, the usurper. Proven newspapers have been full of an effort to expose the high white society life of the town and all its rottenness. No effective way has been found to get at it: immoral and unwholesome. The back. Local hotels were felt to be the most many纵 relations between white society people. It was found that the bellboys in serving guests had learned secrets of these relations. Whipped what they knew, unwittingly. The attacks and assaults followed.
The mob was cool and methodical in its work. It drove in automobiles to the first hotel, selzed Bose Jenkins, saying, "Come with us, Nigra, and the manner. Once outside the city, the men were stripped of their clothing, Cowhides, buggy whips and cowboy quirks were used to thrash them with. The lashes of the whips were dipped in acid. Welts on the backs of the men were scorned and the poison acid seared its way in. . . . Preacher in Mob As the outraged men lay on the ground, members of the mob told them that the roating had been administered, because they had been too active in the private affairs of white men and women. One of the members of the mob was a preacher and the manner, because it was learned after the flogging that the wife of a mob member had sought to dissuade her husband from beating one of the boys. She would not explain the reason for her interest beyond saying that she thought she was not deserved being whipped. The husband would not listen to her. When he came home from his task, she was gone. Investigation showed that she had drawn a large amount of money from a local bank before her departure. Her husband is looking for her.
Chicago
GOES INTO MORE HOME
TEN WEEKLY PUBLIC
NET PAID CIRCULATE
ISSUE OF SATURDAY
219
The Chicago Defender
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NET PAID CIRCULATION FOR THE SINGLE
ISSUE OF SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, WAS
219,575
AT THE LOW ESTIMATE OF FIVE
READERS PER COPY, THAT SINGLE
EDITION WAS PERUSED BY
1,097,875 Readers
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this tremendous circulation; no other Racial
weekly carries one-tenth of the live news and
matters of direct interest published weekly in
the columns of this
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What Was Motive?
Preacher in Mob
Sings to Jury; It Weeps and Gives 99 Years
Dallas, Tex., March 10—During the trial of Lonnie Reeves, charged with murdering Turner Gambie, an aged ex-slave, here, the song, "Old Man," was promulgated. The murder was rendered by Noah Roark, the special prosecutor. In his argument to the jury the prosecutor praised the old man, who had been a friend of the same family he had served as a slave. Then the lawyer suddenly paused in his speech. His voice broke forth in song; he sang with both tenderness, and both sorrow, moved to tears. When it retired a few minutes later it brought in a verdict of 99 years. Gamble was murdered and robbed of $20, a birthday present, given to Walter Roark. Walter and Lonnie Reeves, brothers, were charged jointly with the murder. Walter pleaded guilty.
Called Him Daddy, So WomanSays
Called Him Daddy, So WomanSays
Topcka, Kan. March 10.—That truth is stranger than fiction is an adage well borne out in testimony and mine whether the two sons of Mrs. Mattie Nolting (white) are to share in the estate of the late James Holt. wealthy farmer.
In the charges that Holt is the father of her two children, Melvin Nolting, 19, and Oscar Nolting, 16. To prove her case she has brought suit in Judge George H. Whitcomb's case. Holt died in 1919. He made no provision in his will for the white woman and her two sons, supposed to be his offspring. A 170-acre farm in Thomson, North Carolina, three grandchildren. Mrs. Myrtle Smith, Miss Bessie Porter and Mrs. Lucerne Barber. The white woman claims that her sons should have a farm. Mrs. Myrtle Smith, saying that they had always looked upon him to their father and that he referred to them as his sons.
Very little is known in Topeka as to the truth or justice that the woman had in an industrious farmer and as such built up a reputation for honesty, integrity and rightdoing in the community here. Although she had end of his supposed relation to this white woman. Although it was known that he worked hard, it did not become evident until after his death. She was a siderable fortune. Soon after that became known Mrs. Notling began to put in her claims. It is felt that her admission of clandestine relations with her husband will put her outside the pale of respectable white society. In any case, she will be forced to leave this section of the country.
KILLED BY ENGINE
Williamson, W. Va., March 10.
Mrs. Lottie William, wife of C. L. Williams, former correspondent for this paper at Williamson, was acclimated by his co-operative. She is survived by her husband, a son, two sisters and a brother.
20 PAGES This Paper Not Complete Without TWO PARTS
KILLED BY ENGINE
PRICE. TEN CENTS FIRE
BOARD ASKS MINISTER TO QUIT CHARGE
West Side Stirred by Church Scandal as Deacons Call Pastor From Pulpit
With the announcement that the Rev. Boston J. Prince, pastor of Original Providence Baptist church, Leavitt and Walnut streets, had tendered his resignation at the request of the deacon board, which met Tuesday night, Feb. 28, ugly rumors gained widespread circulation. The entire West Side by the religious community affected by the religious influence of the church, hummed with gossip. It was divided into two camps—supporters of the minister, and backers of the deacon board. Woman was asked to answer the question reached a stage of debate. It still remains the same.
Mrs. Prince Mentioned
Several members, fanned to the point of indignation by attacks on the action of the deacon board, swept inside convention and religious fellowship to use the occasion for a discussion. Many drew the name of Mrs. Prince into the controversy, declaring she had held several private consultations with lawyers, but none was able to tell the purpose of her visits. She was also able to state that the minister and his wife were estranged and had been living apart for several weeks. Whether or not the deacon board was influenced in its decision by the possession of this information, she was able to considerable secrecy attended the action of the board in its Tuesday night's discussion of the Rev. Prince's resignation. A Defender reporter attempted to gain official sanction to the action of the board, resigned voluntarily, and without request from the board, but could get no responsible word of confirmation in this regard. Efforts were made to get a statement from the pastor himself, but the statement was not at the home of Dr. R. H. Howard, 2226 West Lake street, but information came from this source that the Rev. Prince had left town, but was expected back within a few days. She returned, no one was home when the reporter called, refused to discuss the affair.
Get New Pastor
Members of the deacon board gave out the information that the Rev. Dr. H. B. Hawkins, assistant pastor of St. Mary's, selected as temporary pastor until a permanent appointment is made. The Rev. Hawkins will occupy the pulpit next Sunday. For the months discontent has regained in the church. Individuals, bent on "seeing what was going to happen," lost the spirit of worship affairs became some talk,聊事 then wandered into street gossip. It was at this point that the deacon board became active. The resignation of the religious influence of the church on the community. Vicious rumors, surrounding the life of the leader, they contended, had begun to injure
Came From Indiana
The Rev. Prince came to this city from Indianapolis, Ind., where he had served as pastor of the Second Baptist church. Upon coming to Original Indiana, he began a church and later purchased a large pine organ, said to be one of the finest in the city. He had been held in high esteem by his members, and the Indianapolis institution in affairs of the church came to a surprise to many who knew him and the work he had been engaged in.
MANILA DEATH SENTENCE
RECALLS HOUSTON AFFAIR
Manila, P. I. March 10—Drastic punishment was meted out to members of the war in the United States Infantry regiment, following the Houston riot in America has been ordered for 11 non-commissioned officers of the Philippine consulate for allilippine affairs a plot at the constabulary barracks here in 1920, during which action several Americans were killed. Much interest throughout the island was generated in the final disposition of the case by the Philippine supreme court, which made the deals on adverse to public sentiment and supposedly under some time of the outbreak that it had caused by the arrogance of the Americans and their utter lack of respect for Philippine women. Growing resentment among the islanders resulted in their ill feeling.
A lower court sentenced the men to do imprisonment, that is, the warrant expiration, that is, the 17 years each. Attorneys for the defense appealed the lower court's defense suit. The court ruled that the suit sued. Those condemned to die will be hanged in Billibold prison here. It is not believed that Governor Leonard Good will intervene in behalf of the men.
SOUTH LAUNCHES
PROPAGANDA TO
CRUGIFY FADE
Despite the fact that Arthur Froc
sewly” appointed recorder of deeds
‘os confirmed nto office without an
shcetion by the Gaited Staten Sen
Be, it must not be presumed that hi
yath a his position Is. going to.
Nrewa wilh roses
Southern representatives in, Con
ress have already bogun to anger
rele ‘epposition and’ “to spread
Propaganda ealeuatea 1 ofeburras
Siero: in ‘the parmssnce oR
ution ana ‘to prevat the gomeiera
lon or aay otner person ot Ste Fo
Race for federal service coastivuten
aily‘open to ait Asworicas cites
‘Bilmton of Texas has fred the firs
sot, his reprencatative Si be Fe
FRembered" as" the: ous who erica
the chamber’ of tag Stoure wea.
Ss threatened with capulsion om ae
foun of obscene texneons heck af
feged' fo ‘nave "been feePSntine fo
folng into the Congreasional Record.
tie failed omy ty narrow mare
er neing wont Yack to Mis Texan con
sient
‘So fllosng these charges has
guleuuiy he queetions the Boston o
SiS'rse ite recorder ‘of deeds be:
ting he tise atte “hate wine
Somen ‘working under nim’* On th
oor of tig Holiee Ne took ianae with
fe dYons Mastin: Be Stanger “st the
Elree congressionat district in iors
Nrohaaden ig chaitman cr the bow:
ertat appropriations corannives of th
Hots thai was ovr pln in ae
quesine "an Sppeopriaticn for Ate
Stoes® office “test” Blaston Got a
Chanve so vent is spleen, E
‘ity Mladen, replving to. ques.
tion trom ‘Diaatow Sato ‘how Sunny
omen there were working: In Mee
Eiger omse: countered
"donot thine Yom ttl the gen-
tnemay bot nny wanes het Sore
bot"the’ recorder, who came: befor
byt committer Fa1d that he ceded
Bee ‘Snore revbrd writen (0 operate
{nese ignestriting machines’ that the
ont of the emee Was moma
Eisig and the retina Re has
Phat Taaston persisted,
Sihat St not ihe neki T want to
ze att ne went on. "sh nota fas
Fine ‘nee “are saine feat “han, 10
Mitte worsen tn thie aarimeat™
‘Phe veprerentate trom inte re
ried that he-did not fiat how may
That ere ‘ang: thae Me committe
tar not interested tn that, puaze of
The Station Whereupon "Blaston
Shatvese
"Eth olnt X ald want to, go. tnt
an tithe" fo mot inom new the
Shahram. of the great commitiee ao
Snnropsiations forts ont Te hut So
Ehow "thot the Ainetioan ‘people. 4°
er Wigs im having a whole dosart
ment of goed nite women: srorng
Under the deck supervision of 2 Gok
red ‘chief eer therm Phat. Inthe
condition inthe department, because
Ealoged tas, Has been Spotted aa
eect mas, fa cen sprinted a
candied, ant theme whee wornem
ome ot them I quero may come from
Ininets, hee ‘either have. work
ther aad take i oder fem i
seca oe ty hace to gee ah
jenve,tielr Jobe an@ault the governs
reane:sttvices Now int arnt a BO"
Hdeat question. Ge is'a Wiener thts
than a question of polities’ it ig 5
gusvton af what fy Fgheand rong
Sith gard to: these’ white wore!
Tanrlosees ar the government, "Go te
ease ie chalttnan wit ad out
ther donot ince It" to thems and
edt ad ‘out that ahr elutes
1S mat ike ve Ask tne people en:
erally ove® the coumntss of in Minas
Sr sin Seachestts ita Fou wilt na
Sin hat the wilt peonte. ‘of ta
cauitty ap nt ieee", pen
SSleendy Goes not make st Tighe
Mir. Eroe got his appropriation and
|, dir. Froc got his appropriation
MISSISSIPPI SENATOR
ADOPTS GARVEY IDEA
Jackson, Mise. March 30.—Senator
Metallum has introduced in the state
senate here a resolution which would
have the Mississippi lecislature me:
merialize the President of the United
Stater and the national Congress to
procure by treaty or otherwise a
Iocation where ail Americans who ore
not white may be sent to develop
country of thelr own, He says that
he wants America to be of one blood,
"Apart of the war debt would be
used to purchase the territory uned.
Unia “theae expatriated Americans
were able to govern themselves It
would ‘be provided that the Cnited
States extend its protecting arm
around them.
ALL THIS MONTH | will
treat all afflicted patients
who call, for a reduced pro-
fessional fee, of $12.50 for
any single ‘iment.
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Tee close
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& shoe
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SSPE AN I tals
‘nap 2, “OPA”
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THE GESUINE IMPROVED
Steines sano fr Wot di
le Searle tke ants
kreky, oeeaaterins Salat
IDeP eae Bae ee
Tit eSPNSS Weel apasere fot ee
Eo Factor hich mala paras
SS a ome secs
$10 X-Ray Examination $1
dha matin at i Sat mat
EARS ak je ot pes
ASTER
DR. H. G. MARTIN
a7 W, MADIEON STREET
omens
The President’s Tribute| emu mmemny | The General's Tribut
Fetes BY JOHN J. PERSHING
BY WARREN 6, HARDING mat ie Baa || General ot the United Staten Ar
President of the United States || 17g Ba eee cee ree fee a
“We ts a pleasure, which Indeed T ay ae fori) services whteh are. bela
count a duty an woh to testi my | MEE ee held to nonor the memory of th
ery high opinion and. regard tor || MMRSSp = a a i
Catone! ¥oung. "A pradunte ot the | Mess ese Re: Bate Colonel Charley Young. 1 wa
vest POINT ender e ne aces ie | fee etme) B) to commend his exemplary ilfe as
Werttalot nde: te cent Ne | ME comm ©] SSemnmend hi exemplary he as
cin the atmoy, serving with reat a hi
tzrdon. HB ecaeetin te at EM || cits tase enon ome was
ough te haa ‘heen retired some | | SP MEERE AM Hl nan or proven Intesvis whe vos
time talorg fhe Unteg Sater cre | RS@ee emer Mm || (2H oC Proce, nts who ra
Goatees setter REPENS [PE agg GMD) Sounts: "By ioe: dpitesion
reg, ayttence th hes, were | esac wt Oe | heather St Susie and
in joe of his age ‘and"| f Rtas SST Gill Hore: “ils career inthe army
physical condition.” Colonel Young | Fis 7psgaay cgay | Heeme, atlseareer fm the army 0
Bay. a crealt to the service and a |)? Suomi apaasy cog #| [ns Lotted States should ¢
dintoaated Money “tg tne cRace | oc ASPE asoeag 1g I] Insnrtion to's pete"
ieee aia Meare Naga callin in re mn ey men
the World war‘carried as full pare (fc, 2 Nigel 1 HY me co men gazed intentiy into cae
and acquit ftir with the tute | Set» liberate ra) Potter eyes, “An intermat dlusvot
mont credit It in highly Aung | HpeMmeetoore os; B|Tolowet avo the eftore wnich hs
Ee you and your suspefates should So Fase | [een ads fo ihe Gat Young
hia ibe of respect and | FS REMI SR I sort Co sell seice” The spe
ee Torrence fae nich Col Fou u
ESR eee are | forselack tide wnlch Col, Young bi
By NAHUM DANIEL BRASCHER|A oot ee ashe BP] just made from Ohio to Was!
Ghartes Young. like Crispus At=
uses ta Abraham “Lineal “he:
longs to the amos Horn in ixenitueks,
25 Lincoln, Oto elainis Youne as her
Adopted on, a ‘ilmols claims Lin:
Soin. Ohio, tilustetous in presidents
ind patriots, therefore, plages In het
sro of ualmened jewels the Rae
of ‘Chavies sVoung ‘beside ‘that of
Laurence ‘Dinbar-” Both were ons
dowed sith rare’ qualities of rout’
fe found muale in the casinontn Your,
ang the ‘other Inthe ‘volce” of ths
ows:
"Ths “dead past” becomes the “llv=
Jng Present” and they who were, now
are."and they soln’ im eibute! and
‘Salutation ot the saigier nd patsiot
Golonel ‘Charles “Young. Chars
‘Young, asing ea’ colonel instena ‘ot
maior general, is the price that
‘rack natriot pas, in silences for tbe
fostittion ot Amérlean ‘color relus
Here todas: Prosident’Farding and
Generat Pershige: the chlet executive
of the United Seiten and the general
of the armies, oin with us in tribute
Ghd Bratee for our man ot valor,
Throuehout the entire country, Sue
day, March 12, wherever there fe.an
‘Assembly of obr peapie Honoring’ the
fnemory of Colonel Young, ft ir hoped
that these tributes will be read,
‘it has been a vers touching expert-
cace'in helping” to, arrange car thts
memorial dare Ene renponts Man been
Giiveral ind unhesitating. Tt has
mn charged. with a. coutclottness|
thet adds new faith to, the. serious
Brobiems of the day. Orgnateation
After ergantzation ts fallen in hee
ind the movement: ‘person’ th ait
Tatks of Ife. tore. who have Known
Eatone! ‘Younge aia those who have
Sots soldiers of the neguinn arms.
ervien men of tne World war: ‘Wal
one. business men, college presidents
ahd “sudents, newspanermen, thes
Atrical performers, women's organs
fentions and 'souns” people every-
Shere, have hearty responded to the
cai
‘What docs this mean?, 1: means a|
sews Bith" of feradon' at meant
a combined expression. of ‘cratltnde
and determination. it means that we
have arrived at the point in ous rctal
hintory where wee Nighy resolved
tovget somewhere. @
‘the contelournces of the ponte in
simply aputtoring for dlrestlon,” God
Grant that thin teavon of thoughts
hess may devermine for all of tis
ceerywhere t rigMleous, Hattie: d=
rected course of action. iC this in acc
complished the “prayers of Colonel
Seung will. be_nmavered.
Ties dveari fas for hin peoples, tt
inspired him by day and ‘by enent
During. the timo he was in. Wert
Pointand on ane occasion while om
n furigash ‘visiting hie parents in
Zanesvilier Ohto, my mother, who 8
Cisiting her rharents, calied om ‘the
parents of Charley’ Young: Ana
Romels hoosler Hoy, 1 shall Rover for
get tho inepiration of the brillant
Foung cadets plano maxing. ‘The in
Tnirmtionay power sn Persona} MAE
netiem of Colonel Young, were the
sroret of hie mucceas; they followed
him nil through life.
‘Fae last tne T sav Colonel! Yonne|
wan in the home of Aldermen Tous
B,"“Anderson, Chicago, with, whom he
stonped when in Chicago. duriag” the
World. war. while officials stationed
at Camp Grant. ‘There. on that rainy.
chilly day, T recalled the inspirational
eect sof" the Piano. plaving. and
found tt again tn the voles of the Sole
dier in is plea for Justice, for the
people’ fer’ whom ‘he had given Me
ffe'tn the army. “The colonel sald
that he wanted far tin Sail that other
Americans enjoy." and he pleaded for
an awakening mpirit of united action
fo. get what ie justly ours. Never in
my ilte have fever heard a more
catnest ples for united action?
‘And shen fhe dled: according to th|
teatimony of Captain Tienes Oe Ate
wood, who was with him at the time,
his ant “days were” spent. seeking
Knorledre of truth for The people he|
joved, and for dhe glory of the eoune
tre he. had served ro well, evea|
Though if dented him such,
enon im, the “memorial services. of|
syarch 12, with our faces turned f0
ine Rast. while the boric. sounds the
rofemn, notes’ of “Tape” and our
mindy awl g the achievers snd
morificer of Golonel Youns, Tet uh in=
Seed. face with colon determina
lon, the rising run.
Teele. ae 1 am’ sure our beloved
ars Sead have Ue tee tho Tae
BANDITS OB BALOWIN'S:
i
two tani sneha eta
oni pani share Bee at
be Rat Sniespaortene
in HIUPER actin te Rok:
icp a got ek:
ihe ft ante ne
ee cumntanrs Raed
hci at SRS tee es at
Souctee tel a e
seer cn cae aed
Iie rat anak BIS
He Sass Ree De
ch aa
ges ra ree Sia
oie meee ea ais
ice See ae
ores erie ie
atte ets a
Sree ahs Grae
Ne‘snarpened. “Pranic Was fined $9 and
es
SLOAN'S GETS ’EM!
Aire site of Scns Ea
pouttriestheceacerpeee” "=
ig ea hg Ps ned seas
a fecing of, warmth, through, the
SSE Erigg oh: mina ences
Fine, too, for rheumatism, neuralgia,
sciatica, sprains and strains, stifl joints,
Sharotoraets
For forty years pain's enemy. Ask
Re a croegists~1Se, Te, tia,
floarns
Rrra
SS aac ae
een
oo eee
fe
Bs ay a5
ae a
POS cm AE
be eso.
ee
HERES eae cas
ee
Dy .«C
AP
Cot. CHARLES YOUNG
Born March 12, 18
Bors: Merch
in a new light and with a stronger
will, ie wo would enjoy the blessings
of liberty and justice, we must vees
fuuly realize that they” come by work,
and not alone by" falthy and that
whatever. Wwe accomplish’ willbe in
the, midst ‘of the rooted, Tastitutlon
of American color prejudice; but we
Wil and Must tise above it bs” the
Justness of our cause, the merit of
our efficiency, the “erseverance of ob
etorts; by ten’ loyalty asa falth
inod—Gole” “ng ald it
‘Azan ingpl —_o-get somewhere
ene sordler n 2 Stareh 2. both
for what he uc: cd and what he
merited but faiica ‘ acileve because
Of tho, mortgase ot, all von core
American soulg, is & star of the fi
magnitude.
INTERVIEW WITH BAKER
be Dk Beinell 2 Ee
3 am Tequesio’ to Fay & word with
remand 49 the widespread resentment
Among Colored neonte whieh Waa oe-
casioned by" Colonel Youngs rele:
nent from the army on the ove 0
his advance to a brigadier. ‘goneral-
ship. and swith respeet to the organ.
ized’ effort which was made bs" the
National Assoclution. for the” Ad-
Wancement of Colored People and
Colonel Foung’s friends te have him
restored {9 active duly. ‘Happily for
me, 1 wad 99 placed as special assist
ant to tho seeretary. of war ax to Be
in position. to co-operate with these
forces. Gt iy a matter of common
knowledge that the neonte felt that
Colonel Young's rellfement was for
Feasons other (mar those stated in the
Sadings ‘whic were publicly "ans
nounced. °
‘MundFeas of tettefs and petitions
from individuals and_ Important. or-
fanizations were addressed. to. the
War department and iiigh oMelats of
the government protesting against
Col, Noung’ retirement and ‘ailing
upon the war department’ to. restore
him to active duty: While. these ef=
foris. wero under’ way Col. Young
requisitioned his faiihtul white
charger and rode from Wilberforce te
Washington to prove that ho was Ht
for, military service. ;
‘Gpon reaching Washington It was
Col. Young's desire to present. him-
self to the weerntary: of War dircetl
Military regulations stood tn the was
Invthat ft war not possible for an
oMmeer ‘of the line to go. directly: to
the secretary of war with any matter
without the approval of the office of
of the adjutant general. Word. was
conveyed to.me of Col. Young's ar-
val in thé city. by his personal
friend, Dr Willlam La Board. There
was a feeling on the part of the spe-
cial avsetsing snd others that ft would
hardly be possinie to secure the AP-
proval_ of the aWfutant general for
Gol, Youn to present himsclt, al-
rectly to the secrotars, A “council of
war” was Neld. Tt was Aectded to ask
mie te work ont a prostam whereby
Gol. oun might direetiy" teach and
Speak with the seerstary,of war.
went to the acting chief of stat and
seclized approval of the request. that
Col. Young he permitted to go direct-
Is: fo the sceretary—not so: much to
ranke an anneal tn hie own behalf a8
fo present himself to the serrctars
that the latter mizht feara af Tis ride
from Onto and himself feq the fit con-
dition gf the-colonel,
‘Col. Young. sho Tas walting In mz
office, was ronducted ta the office of
the reeretnrs of war, Tho secrotars,
entering his large publle office for his
noonda® Interviews, erected Uy across
the room and proceeded, one by one.
(0 dispose of his visitors. At last he
came to Us,
T'eala, "itr, Secretary, T have the
honor ta, lntroguce and present. Col
Charles ‘Younr.”
"The necretary. stepped back a Dit
and sald, Are vou Gal. Young? Tam
pleased fo meet ou."
f° mpl Aca
DREAMLAKD CAFE'S SUNDAY
__Svhen the managers of the Dreamland
coe Raters Baka
soon ae nats nt
Tie tree chen ee
Sonata ar guaenns Been
ieateiiy gil cates bee
ieee
ME SELLE" Smogn magee
cging is aie tiene eines
Seis eae
Beietigh Gattis nts ata
AEPEIES nun stn er
eran a stn a
ga hacrr sae DP ths
Beret tu tale te
Say eae Gite Ue et
Hac MulldeeteP tat fe ants
HEE gait nae ainaad" Be
Beclite Sieur nites, Ste
Bey a at a te tee
Hen tine a tea
Hin ay Sedu a ae
fn See ao etytee tint,
‘A epecial ‘Chinese Chet, Charile Sing,
neh Sos tanlts Se OE SP
sattiacute ir ar ae cae
sas Bebe adn et ok
SR rne ne ree
iia, Pit tana
dolar Se Biauets csr Me
dee i Ua irae oe
Ss i ie ae estat
SC
rit tina ace Sls gees
sy aces Gah "ae
sh cteerernae ine tee ee
tas lcriaae ad alae
eine ate naan aa wi
are tt ade Mita eR
PROF. JONES TO GIVE
CONCERT IN THE LOOP
Se. Soar cease. Slongys
leading: chotrmaster and chorua con=
fuctor will appear with his big ccle-
brated Mfetropoiltan choir. 200 Voices,
at -Orchestra hall Monday, May 15
Mrs. W. D. Cook, assisted by the
ieading musicians, ‘music lovers and
friends, will preatnt vA Night. with
the Negro,” showing. the. Drogress ol
the Race’ from: beginning “to the
eee 5
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
“The Romance of Zura’
The General’s Tribute
BY JOHN J. PERSHING
Be er ee aad
Rt ae ene TEL ES eats eee
“In conncetion with the me-
fnorial services which are belns
held to honor the memory of the
late Colonel Charles Young, 1 wish
to commend hls exemplary life as
splendid example to other members
of hly Race. Colonel Young was
man of proven Integrity. who rose
to high rank in the service of his
country. By close. application to
duty te achieved success and won,
the respect of hin f0vlow army Of-
ficers. “His career in the army of
the United States should ever be an
inspiration to hits peonies
the two men gazed intently Into cach
other's eyes, “An Intormat discussion
followed as to the elferts. whieh had
teen "mado to hive Gol: Young. te
lored to active semvise." The: spec
assistant ealied attention’ te the
horseback Fide whieh Col, Young had
Just ‘made trom Ohlo to Washinton
The fecretary. then sald:
“Col, Young, In case it ts possible
to reviore you to active terviee, 1s ft
our desire. for” combatant o® non
Combatant ‘service?
“The doughty “colonel, with exes
fashing and head erect. saapping His
heels Yogether and eicking his Saws,
replied?
“Combatant service, Mtr, Secretary
—combatant service, by ail means”
‘The interview wag at an end. ‘The
yecrelary promised” that’ he woul
five earetul consideration to alto
{ie representations whieh hed’ Ween
made inthe colonet’s benale.
Shortly afterward the following or-
der, n copy. o€ which was brought to
my oes ws,tsaned by the war de
partment:
War DEPARTMENT
The ‘Aduutant. General's OMee
Washinston, Nov. 6, 1918,
From: The Adjutant Generat of the
em
To: Cal. Charles Young, U.S.
‘Aimy (retived), 19H Lath
StS. We. Washington,
Subject: Assimiment, E
"The secretary direets ay necessary
tn the military’ service: that you Dro-
ceed to Camp. Grant: Rocktord, ‘il
hole, and repart in person to the com.
handing general of that camp for a3
signment to duty’ in-conneetion with
tne Colored development battalons at
Chap Grant.
Witlam Kelly, Je
‘Adjutant. Genera
‘The colonet’s renuest. for. “com:
baiant “service” was. not. compiled
Tithe Ho was, however, restored. t
Thetive service” Tih, talents. ana
chine wat lili powerfi enough
Keep him from being rent to, France
It stag not powerful noah. however
to Prevent his helng enilst' to tener
service of a most important character
at Camp Grant, Whore Ae Was as:
signed (0 ans.
‘Ghe word more. T have tn my por-
scsjon w letter (copy of which I for-
ara to Gol, Koungy from the tte
| Theodore Roosevelt written carly
in 1917 im which he stated that It wax
iis destre, in ease he should be ner=
mitted by’ the war department to oF-
ranlge a division of troops that there
Should ‘be two reriments of Colored
men-one of which no desired shen
he commanded hy Col, Young: and the
otner hea Soughemer of ceharacter
ang distinetion.
Sotcioren ii chapter. ‘The knight:
iy som whose. memory. In. sherlshe
and honored. won und held the cone
genes, the: goodwill and admiration
of ‘knigt tiy ‘souls ike himesit. He
was Indeed the Beau Sabreur of his
Race!
Tibswibiaicet tn genet:
SYNOPSIS OF FIRST INSTALLMENT
Yura. the daughter of a macrchant
prinee and the inost besutifol ef wom:
Gn, arrives with Wer father at tie les
of, Granada, rhe ‘seat ot the Soorah
ingdem of Granada, in Spain. Her
Beauty tums the iteade “of the” Nobles
of the realm, who tell thelr Sing. ‘The
King’ pays a ist to Zura'e” father,
seeking Jewels and fhe raiment, Zura
in ‘presented and the Kies ashy for the
secret of hor beavis. which hee father
ig not willing to divulge. A great tat:
ile breaks out, sting neat ail night.
The Hing captured Uy the Sraniards
and condenied to. dle the ne" day.
Zurn, who hing. fallen in ‘love's '¢h the
King. sete out over tortuous mountain
roadi (o "ect hin excape:
PART II
Riding. as she was, through the
darkent of nigita over_an unknown
mountain road the terrors of which
Would have qulckened the pulse and
put fear intolthe heart of to braves
Warrior, Zurn gave herale over come
Dietely "to. the miresfootedners an
Henge of direction of her magnificent
forse,
‘Her heart wan like lee, as sho ex-
pected ‘every moment %o be ‘dashed
{odeath upon. the. murderous rocks
Hundreds of feet ‘below. ‘This eon=
Unwed for hours, and onty the seat
fove ‘which hud been born in her
heart Yor the manly and" courageous
ing of Granada: sustained her and
Kept hee fromm fling in a tint trom
‘Shortly she noted with sladness
that hee Norse" exercised lena care
dnd {raveled with greater speed and
more sureness of foot, The could
mean ‘but ono thing=-that they ‘were
else on. the’ outnes of the we
in whleh “mtood the. Shania!
forfrean within the walla” of ‘which
teas ihe Noung King te save whom
She Td Fiaked her ilfe. The" inky
darknens of nignt begat to give way
to the frst Nght of dawn and. Zura
savy, not far distant from her, the
faint outlines of the fortress which
wan her objective."
“When she had approached to with-
tn'a short distance of the gates of
tho fortress she, tethered ‘her ‘horsp
to a tree and préceeded stealthily on
foot toward the massive fron gates:
A°soldier was on guard. Just within
the gates; Dut aa they were secured
with, massive chains’ and tock he
seemed more intent ‘upon. snatching
a few moments of sleep’ than upon
Watching for those ‘Who might’ ap-
roach the gates.
Zura ‘was ina, terrible state of
mental unguish, knowing” that’ the
king. whom sho now loved ‘with ‘ail
her heart, would meet ‘his death in
oni fet hours were she unable to
carry. out her Wild and hastily" cons
celved ‘rescue, “Here she was, after
an ail night ride over the ‘most tors
twous ‘of mountain’ ronda, almost
within arm’a reach of her loved one,
vet without. tho alightest “semblance
ofa plan for the rescue
‘Suddenty a thought came Yato her
mind, How. often it. the ast, both
while a child and tn her tater yearn,
had she used hier marvelour and cape
rivating. beauty to gain her ellghten,
mish! How often had Jt been that
she had been able to deeulle even her
nren father who knew her even better
chan she knew herself!” Why not use
her" great. Heauly of: face,” physical
charm and ‘capuvating mace inthe
shane that she.might be able with
hem to effect the release of her ber
oved King
‘Atier uw few moments of thought
and planning se boldly: approached
the Gates, of the "Spanish tortress.
The guard. aul crane it Min prot
ected position, presented an obstacle
Sound laneep an he wat, and prob
ably “dreaming of the many. Toves|
mth hich auch Grave nolder a
himself passed away his. tcirure|
nours, he" was very bard to_waken,
However, after’ some. moments’ of|
faking ‘tn tape of the aout ustsl
WIGKERSHAM IN
THK CONDENS
SOUTHERN MO
New York, N. ¥., March 10.—
George W. Wickersham, former
United States attorney genéral, in un
‘address delivered In. the town hil
this Week, condemned lynching in no
uneertain’ terms.” He guoted “stutls-
Hes at length and voiced his neon-
ational approval of the Dyer anti-
Iyuching Lill now ‘before tho senate,
Worst Form of Lawlessness
Mr. Wiekersham said in part:
“For many years the number and ex-
tent of Iynchings In various parts of
the United States have proveked the
udverso comment of foreign observ
ers and compelled & sense of national
humiliation ‘on tho ‘part of Amert-
cans, Of ‘all forma of lawlessness,
this in perhaps the worst, for it takes
from the duly constituted authorities
of the state thelr highest and. most
solemn function, the administration
of Justice.
South Seeks to Excuse Lynching
“In 1919 there were 77 men lynched
and in 1920, 35. "These crimes are
the result o¢ raze antagonism, and
have occurred in the Southern states,
Apologists for ‘this condition. have
sought to excuse, or at all events to
palllate, “these. offenses upon. the
Ground that the Iynchings were oc-
axl ned by outrages committed upon
white women, and that In no- other
way than by sulnmary popular: jus-
tleo could comparative satety | for
white women be secured in those
communttica ‘where there Ita pre-
ponderance of the Race population.
Statistics Refute South's Theory
“But statiaties of these crimes re-
fute this theory. . Of the 3.434 per-
xons lynched from 1699 to 1919. only
570" were charged wlth offenses
gaint fwomen, nd of the 264 men
Iynched from i914 to 1918, only 28
were xo charged. The weil known
facts concerning the Iynching of men
‘und wrnen show that during a perlod
of veurs to a vert great extent they
have bren deprived af lite and prop-
erty und have not enjoyed equal pro-
fectlon of the Taws with white peo-
pie. It the stater have ‘dented "uid
deprived them 2¢ these constitutions
Privileges congress, under the con-
Btltution, may afford them reltef”
KLANSMAN ANNOUNCES
HE'LL RUN FOR SENATE
Gainesville, ‘Tex, Mer. 10.—"Come
to, Wasiingtgn ae ite next sesalon of
congress and youl mect_ A senator
Feo esa wife fs w metnber ot the
fo eux Rian.”
So bold have the Kiansinen in
‘Texas Iecomte from Tack of molest
tion onthe pire of the authorities
Lind. from the wettes co-aperation at
the “‘anthorities that Sterling Te
SGrong. candidate "for ‘the. United
States’ senate, opened his campaign
Here scith sthone wordt. ‘Tiltherto
Strong haw been one of the inoxt ne:
tive of Tesaw Klansmen Im defending
the aeUites of the secret one
Sian sitio cts weoepepeee Ue
7) - Pa :
“Zura’s omaing bean? cantivats the heart
and calling him in a loud voice, Zura
Succeeded” In awakening him, He
sprang to his feet and inquired who
fe was that had disturbed his rest
at such an ‘unearthly hour.
Zura, making use of all her. guile
and beauty, finally overcame his) an
tagonism and convinced him. that
she had important business with the
governor of the fortress and that this
Business could not wait. She. told
Rim that ehe had ridden all night,
nd that she must see the governor
without delay. The soldier departed
Trom the gate and, acter what seemed
to Zura to have been hours, he re~
turned saying that’ the governor
would see her in his chambers at
once.
"Phe rovernor of the fortress. hav-
Ing been aveakened from sound slum=
bers, liad upbralded the guard Inno
soft’ spoken’ manner, but. when. the
guard had told him’ of the marvel~
ously beautifal woman who sought
an audience with him at auch un
early our on business which she
claimed was of utmost importance
hie wrath gave way” to pleastire.
Beautiful women always appealed to
him, and they were especially ap-
pealing were they In distress and
sought his. help.
‘The, guurd, after leading Zura
through @ maze of tunnels and secret
passages, brought her to the door of
the -kovernor'a chambers. Upon.
knocking he was bidden to enter.
This he aid, followed cloxely by Zura.
The guard bowed tov, saying: “Tour:
excelioncy, this ia the lady." The gov=
ernor dismnissed the guard and bade.
Zura approach closer to the couch|
upon which he reclined. .
‘Pear had entered Zura‘s heart. but!
Man Runs After
Woman to Death
in Mad Waters
en Pranclaco, Calle, March 10
Bee ee calc, MEST ae
sees Sse ee
Pere ees mane
wee Bh a ties, eae
sees TRE: eat al
Siento Siete weaneg ‘ee ake
ens tue aenk ta the 2°
Be teen ee ae ake
ine wali auicene tr tee see
Bae cee ee
ener Tea cy)
ee EL 10. tea
junsmaciae Tee ureae ale Meee
Heraetietey, Ate Unt piesa
tect Mlsiteay Yoliowea’° Resin
Hae ate eet itkett
sea aeeling to's, art
areas, AS Tals eunsh det ies
Sere id Riverstle Cae “Soles
ee ee acs fees:
Seer orm
Ae recs ae
and Thonted iota af belog tnaee's
ee Sac eaters tee”
Sroceen Sane see:
we ealetig ioreca ine beet
es Pee ee
Be ee ceguere uae Beet
a gt
eee Seine tesla es
Sauriate
Education
SSpahingien, D.C. starch 10-— Per
peltlon So the, id aleriminatio
ent Wh eaaeauon of the Racy
EEE ate liane by in eo
{Slos of the bon onne bul nw
Sette eran Hine esau
{heShacki of tne Ht gaat ana
iee ing oar Teneo have
I reall Roh Wl be pau
selietnae Mace schools throne
the bauth touts eras etre
"Bie higy gates o theo are ha
sce federal etalon baa
obo aH fede de nate
ellie whsth ‘tou eal he ee
Ponaitre Yor the teen” Mea
ESE? als of $298 per ca
pet tea Ea oe enema
BRS capi pe Sasa or we
hire” HHO Me Santen
senha Wnngrucnate Fai
Tickers Oe thei ae son inf.
sat to th eft the pase ofc
Ria Nha spose pul
‘hog! catanion othe nace, "hat
ier Rhant te rue ne pate in om
Ceoted Bi Srey of there feel
Eat gee Stee he hl cu
TRIES FRG el onload
nana Sauls hee bes
SAUER ate Sahai nin Whom ang
ite atetntueht ts ar ae
qisue a0 rest coofagation “back
"Ris rato above spoken of obtain
init sonere ice adi the Bie
Uience'Seehda hat testers
Kost or seachent Salaries accotaing
tetace: Pa Tin Was ace haters
Conse ating ame ‘ise on he
Satie “faintadansy “Meotndes
BATE contention”, which tes
Mathie a ince’ fair ont
eh SiSah anes fe ett
site" an fener of estat
isin vedhee tnd sates!
toerings ah ol
pe ee, a SE Pe
her love for the King of Granada
‘overcame all fear. and. she ap-
proached as she had been bid. Bow
Ing tow in the most courtly manner
of the Moors, she sald: "Your ex-
celleney, T have come 2 great way In
order t ask of You a favor which,
while {t may be bevond your power
to grant me, T hope that you may
agsist. me in obtaining.”
Te waa some time before the gov-
ernor of the fortrens could find words
with which “to answer Zura. Fler
amazing ‘and astonishing beauis: had
captured his heart and his imaging-
tion tong before she had completed
her short speech. ‘In his mind he was
gasing tovhimscif:” “What a won
“Grous beauty! In all my life T have
never laid my eves upon a. woman
who’ approached the captivating
beauty "which stands Before me.
Would that she were mine!" With
that a villainous fdea entered nis nar-
“AR, in beauty! And what a it
that firings “such as you to me at
this hour of the morning? Thimy even
a6"not deceive me. this ts the hour
at Which you should. be reclining
upon your couch In peaceful alum=
“Your excelloncy, there is ttle
time In which to spare words. 1
come to plead with you for the re-
leaxe of Mohmad el Haygar. the King
of Granada, ‘who In now Imprisoned
within ‘your walls and who is con-
demned to die this day. “My love for
him, Your exceilenes. “knows no
bounds and I stand here in'your nres-
ence willing and ready: to do any-
thing whieh tp In ms. poor power to
help this great king.”
‘Tne povarnoe "een cele ob
BISHOP HURST
BRE DANGER
WM SOUTH
Palatka, Fla, March 10.—"Human
lite und property. are. too cheap in
our country, if It huppens to be
Thember of our Race,” was the dec-
Tarutlon made 'y Bishop John Hurst
of Baltimore in au address before the
South ‘Florida “African Methodist
Episcopal church ‘at the closing ses-
sion held here, “and Tam glad that
the house of representativen of the
United States congress had the man-
hood fo pass the Dyer anti-iynching
Dill, ahd now we ure asking the sen-
ate'to.do the sume thing, and there Is
Ro question about President Harding
signing tt.
“Billions of dollars and millions of
men have ‘been sacrificed by’ our
country: for the protection of human
liveg tp Cuba, and on the battlefelds
of France to estublish democracy for
the World, while thousands of Amer-
Tean eltizens huve been Iynehed with
‘ut due process of law. ‘They have
been deprived of life and. property
‘and this is open violation of the 14th
Amendment to the federal constitu:
tion. We love Od Glory. and in re-
turn we are asking for protection.
‘We want ito that-an accused ones
in the clutches of the law it would
be as easy to get him out of hades
48 fo get biny out of Jail without due
process of lave."
Following the address of Bishop
Hurat tho conference passed strony
resolutions to be sent to the United
Btates senate urging the passage of
the Dyer antl-Ivnehing bill. A com:
mittee was appointed with Bishop
Hurst chairman and Reva, R.A.
Grant, C.'¢. Simmons, C. 8. Long
R.A. Willams, Grand Master D. D.
Powell, H. ¥. Tooke and. C. Cal-
hount to present the resolutions to
the Unlted States senate.
"The conference Way addressed by
Revs, §. Morris of Norfolk, peneral
secretary of the Allen Christian En-
Geavor League: J. D. Barkadale, D.
D., Kansas City. Kan, editor of the
Wentorn Christian Recorder. and T
AW Grant, B.D. Jucksonvitle, the
choice of Florida tor the Episcapacy.
‘Mrs. K. Bertha Hurst. tn an’ ad-
dress. ‘made a strong appeal for the
protection of the: young women of
the Race. “One dress tattered and
torn.” she sald, “is worth more than
a thousand. silkn repretenting de~
auchery. Young women, dle if need
he for your womanhood.”
‘Mlaml war selected .for the next
ennunl cecum.
JIM CROW AT LEGION FEAST
Rockford, I, March 10.—Col. Ar-
thur MacNider! national commander
of the American Legion, spoke here
fo ithe “Waiter Creig "pont of the
Iegton. After the addrous a dinner
seas served at tho Nelson hotel. Here
the management wanted, to separate
the ‘members of tho Henry. Boger
Port. who “tre not white, from. the
Others.” Althourh one dollar a plate
ad been pald for the.affalr. the offs
cers of the Henry Boger. post refused
fo “attend! when “they” learned of the
proposed plan of segrepation:
such @ request, because it was well
known that all powerful Moors taken
In battle by the Spanlurds were exe-
cuted with utmost dispatch. How-
ever, knowing his power in the terri-
tory’ which he governed and. being
under the spell of Zura'a great
beauty, he paused to consider vetore
giving’ tho’ reply which would. have
ordinarily: sprung trom his lips.
‘The more his eyes feasted upon
the beauty of Zura the more perfect
Became the plan the foundation for
which had ‘entered his head’ the
moment he laid his eyes upon her
great beauty of form and face.
Slowly he sald: “Rightly have you
thought that there 1g ilttle time for
Words. The hour of execution draws
very near. Bul my power ts great
gnough to allow your king to return
freely to his own. city: and to comply
with your wish. You can secure that
freedom ‘or him on only: one condi:
Won—you must remain here a3. my
favorite servant."
Zura was speechless, ‘The freedom
of the king meant much to her, but
her own freedom meant much, too
Finally her great love for the King
overcame her love of elf and she
slowly lowered her oxes and head in
consent to the governor's. terrible
condition.
Calling a guard. the governor n-
structed’ that the king of Granada be
brought before him. "The king, think:
ing that he was Belng fed. te’ execu.
ton, ‘wan struck ‘sith astonishment
when “he entered the povernor'
‘chamber ‘and confronted Zura. "Al:
lowing the king no time for speceh,
the governor explained to him that
‘he was to be freed and ‘told him of
‘the conditions upon which that free:
dom had been obtained,
gine, King commenced to plead with
Zura to forego her wild bargain and
‘to allow his execution to be carried
out and for her to return to the home
of her father. However, Zura having
made her bargain, was not to be de:
feated in her purpose.” The king he-
game frantle with grief and bis plead:
Ings hecame more and more pitiful
‘This the Rovernor enjoyed greatly
but he neglected to wateh Zura's ac-
tlona ‘while enjoying the sorrowful
plight of the great king.
Shortly after entering the apart-
‘ment Zura had noticed hanging upon
the wail not far from where she
Hood, murderots leokinc ‘Moorish
dagger in its sheath of Jeweled leathe
or. She now moved steathily towari
this dagger. although seeming to. he
deeply moved by the pleadines of the
king.” Nearer and ‘nearer she came
until, with a quick movement whirh
Was ‘unnoticed by. the governor. she
had snatched the dagger from Its
sheath. The king aulekly divined her
‘Purpose and approached, closer and
Closer to the governor aa he voiced
‘his pleadings.” Soon he had caused
the goveraor to turn Upon hig couch
40 that his back was toward Zura,
With a spring ike that ora panther
Zura was upon, the overnor And Nad
plunged the dager to-its ous!
hig shoulder ‘and ‘Into his heart.
Moving quickly ‘and quietly. the
king led Zura to the door of the
chamber and there, “after. steathily
opening: the curtain. ‘he dispatched
the guard Inthe tame. manner the
governor had met Mix fate. sfoving
with care through the darkened par
Sages, they soon came. to the gates
ofthe fortress. where the suard wax
Brain In ‘peaceful slumber. After
sliencing him forever, it was the mat-
ter of only a minute to unlock. the
gates and. to make thelr war’ to
Where Zura’e horse ‘was tethered.
Mounting “the herée” and lifting
Zura up in front ‘of him, the King
urged Fie steed Into a mad gallop up
the road which led to the mountain=
ous trail over which ‘thes: must nas
before the city” of Granada and per-
fect safety ‘haa been reached.
2 (To be continued next week)
PAGE THRES:
GUN AND KNIFE FIGHT
DRAW FOR MAN'S. LOVE
‘A sevlgs" of the, troubles of tes
atue” Stundors 35.2316 LaSalis
aiget, and Sieg urucy ib, 2068
Wentworth avenue, wit be "heard
Maren “te! hefore” Judge Howard
Hiyes ana a" jury. sian, Sannders
sumearcain“court with hand ban
dnged up, claiming that she Rad Poca
het ‘by ia, ibis Mire ib Was
acorated ith a threcinch cut an
her check, buiming” Sirs. Saunders
for the same. The women claim that
thes were arguing over the alfestions
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PAGE FOUR
MRS. CORA D. MORRIS FOUND
EAD: BURIED AT ROSEHILL
Mrs. Cora Dawson Morris, wife of
charles Morris, 1716 Oak street.
Education found dead in bed
Saturday morning.
Death was untimely.
Apparently in the best
of health Fridays.
Mrs. Morris had attended a club
meeting. She had
a superior
her husband, as
was her usual
day and
seemed very
cheerful.
Saturday morning he
made room
door and, when
she failed to answer
his call, he
hung
ing. Death was by pear trouble. Apparently in the best of times, afternoon, day, afternoon, Mrs. Morris had attended a club meeting to bake a cake supper with her husband, as she made a meal and custom, and seemed very excited for day morning he rapped on her door and, when he needed to answer his call, he thought her "Cora, you are joking; come on, now; get up and eat breakfast," but no answer came, and it was then he realized she was no Mrs. Morris
Maria, Morris was born in Harvoyez to Evanston in 1880 and five years later, on Sept. 5, she was married to Charles, Morris, who survives her, and her husband, the women's clubs, including, the Dunbar Women's club; was a member of the Women's Club, of 13 of that church, of which she was an earnest worker. She was a charismatic Chapter No. 61, Order of Eastern Star. A mother, a husband, seven brothers, a host of relatives, owner of the Vincennes hotel three brothers, a host of relatives and many friends in Chicago. Funeral services were held at the boneyard 2 church, Understake S. J. Fountain had charge of the body. Burial was at Rose Hill cemetery, offerings were many and beautiful.
MRS. WOODS FILES SECOND SUIT: DR. HOLLOWAY NAMED
As an aftermath of the arrest of Mrs. LaRue Woods, 458th FL, LaRue Woods disorderly conduct on complaint of Dr. Isaac H. Holloway, a prominent doctor at West Lake street, she has filed another suit against the doctor through her attorney, M. W. Burke, 458th West Lake street, the Superior Court, is for $2,500 for false arrest and malicious prosecution. Mrs. Woods says that when she objected to the doctor dividing his time with other ladies; he became enraged, threatening her with injury if she bothered him. She further states that upon throughput that she had filed a suit for $2,500 against him; for breach of promise and seduction, he was convicted. The morning of her trial the case was consulsed. Assistant City Prosecutor Alex Freedlandi that Holloway said, that he did not wish to press the charges, that he desired the judge to acquaint him with the case he was accompanied to court by a well known pianist of the South Side.
NORTH SIDE NEWS
TUXEDO CAFE
3032 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
Warm in winter, cool in summer. Catering to high-class trade. Phone Douglas 0410 for rates or write. Spend your summer vacation in Chicago.
Mrs. Dora Owens Dies
Mrs. Dora Owens, 2800 South Dearborn girding illness, she was born at Harripsburg, KY, leaving there when a child was born. She was a member for a number of years and was a member of the New Bethel Baptist church. Gwens later moved to Chicago, joining her family. She was an active member. Funeral services were-held Friday morning, Rev. James Owens later known fraternal woman and the various lodges of which she was a member. She was a father, John McAfee: son, Samuel M. McAfee: daughter, Anna Hunt, to mortor her loss.
Mme. Camille Jones to Sing
Madame Camille Cohen-Jones, soprano, and Mrs. Friedella Cassellee, soprano, for the Young Men's Forum of Mr. Zion's Baptist Church, Evansston, Montana. They are to have full charge, pastor. They are to have full charge, pastor. They are to have full charge, pastor. Zion Lycum on every fourth Sunday.
Martin Proudy Dies
Martin Proudy died Saturday, March 4, at his residence, 2926 State street. The body will be shipped to Clarkesville, Tenn., his former home, for burial.
Vitala Former Home
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lewis Richardson were visitors in the city last week and Mrs. George W. Moore, S.I. West 54th street. Mr. and Mrs. Richardson were also entertained at a lunch with Mr. and Mrs. Richardson at the Appomattox Club and were also entertained at a lunch with Mrs. Richardson at the Vernon party, followed by a theater party. Mrs. Richardson was formerly Miss Zenoya Taylor of Chicago. Joe Carter Convalescing Joseph Convalescing, street, who has been ill, is convalescing and wishes to thank the members of Katy Club for the basket of fruit sent him. Dr. Roberts at St. Mark's Dr. Carl G. Roberts be the principal next Sunday afternoon, March 12. His subject will be "The Tomorrow of Tomorrow" musical numbers on the program by the Kappa Alpha Pd Glee Club. Dr. Roberto Alumni College, Kappa Alpha Pst.
Mrs. Newman Entertainer
Mrs. Lydia Hardy Diet
Mrs. Jayda Hardy, 4535 Prairie avenue, mother of Mrs. Blaise Simmons the resident of the residence Monday, Feb. 37. The funeral was held Thursday, February 37. The office of the office of the interment at Mt. Glenwood.
Palmier House Ball
Every department of the Palmer House was given by the management to its employees Tuesday evening at the University of the affair was due to the strenuous efforts of Frank Messiah, the employee attendress, regardless of the department in which he or she is employed, common interest in the success of the Palmer House is evidenced by the fact that employees employ those of similar concerns.
Estelle Davis Dies
Mrs. Estelle A. Davis died Monday, Feb. 6. A. Ellen A. Davis had been since Dec. 30. She was 22 years old and a member of the Army. She was shipped to Columbus, Ga. Feb. 12, for burial. She leaves a mother, Mrs. Ellis, James H. Davis, to mourn her loss.
Visitor from France
Miss. Dooley Wilson, formerly Miss Cassie C. Wiltchler, for *Kay*, city but who now resides in Paris, France. In the *Kay* Wilson, 3106 Cottage Grove avenue. She is being highly entertained and will remain her husband before joining her husband in Paris.
Males Smith Vialts
Major N. Clark Smith, head of the musical department of Lincoln High School, was a visitor in the city Saturday. His visit here was of a business nature.
Prof. Williams Entertained
Prof. Frank L. Williams, principal of the Lincoln High School, who was here attending the National Educational Association at the La Salle day evening of last week by Mr. and Mrs. Cary B. Lewy, 437 East 6th (46th) and Mrs. Cary B. Lewy, 437 East 6th (46th) of the Central High school, Louisville, Ky., at the time Mr. Lewis graduated.
Nice Branch at Luncheon
Miss Mary K. Branch of the University of Chicago was at lunchon Sunny Side, where she met L. F. Barnette and their daughters at their residence, 3624 Grand boulevard.
Kentuckians to Meet
Kentuckians are cordially invited to meet with the students at the University and Mrs. Otis Glidden, 3614 Calumet and Mrs. Otis Glidden, 3614 Calumet. M. A solitude time is contemplated.
S. A. T. Watkins Returns
A. S. T. Watkins of the law firm of Warkins turned to the city after a week's stay turned matters perium to the $280,000 bath house, etc., to be erected by the K. of Warkins.
Gear to Nashville
Mrs. Fannie Streeter and Walter Streeter were called to Naiville, Tenn., to the burial of her oldest son, P. D. Streeter, who was buried by an explosion at his residence.
Out Again
Mrs. Theresa Harvey-Schmidt, 6005
S. May street, who has been detailed at home on account of illness for more than a year, will return to her duties in the city.
Gors to Alten
Miss Alpha Baxter, 450 E. 48th place, a graduate of Fisk University, has gone on to become a charge of school work for the remainder of the season.
Miss Johneil Baxter, a teacher in the N. V. & I. l. at Petersburg, Vn. who graduated from the nature of her father, P. T. Frazier, has leaving her father much improved.
Morris Goes to Iowa
Charles Satchell Morris, Jr., student at the University of Chicago and known for his work in the field of speech in Davenport, Iowa, in memory to the late Col. Young, Sunday afternoon and early evening, returning in time for duties at the university Tuesday morning. He is a politician Community Center Sunday before a large audience, and received great praise, as usual.
improving
Charles T. J. Johnson, 332 S. Washahane avenue, a member of North Star lodge who has been IL, is much improved.
CITY NEWS IN BRIEF
GUESTS AT IDLEWILD
Association Elections Officers
The directors of the Pyramid Builders State street Monday evening and elected the following officers for the year: H. Roberts, state representative, first vice president of the Hygenic Mtu Co., second vice-president; James A. Parker, 6518 Duke, civil engineer, treasurer. The Duke, civil engineer, treasurer, president of the Bailey Realty Co., State street, Anderson Richie and Terrell. The association is bers of the race more than $4,000 for the purpose of raising mortgages and
Returns to City
Mrs. Josie Coburn, 3668 Wash ave. N. M. T. St., has returned from St. Louis, Mo., where she went to attend the funeral of the late Alice Oller Webster, and to visit other relatives.
Visits Ski Daughter
Visit the City Sunday, Ky., arrived in the city Sunday to visit her family. Visits the avenue, who is ill at her residence.
Musical at Lincoln Memorial
An orchestra conducted by Mrs. Irene Galloway, pianist; Charles Settles, tenor; Mr. Stephouse, cloistonist, and musician; musical program rendered at Lincoln Memorial Church, 85th and Langley
Former Louisianian Dice
Samuel Dark, 4458 Prairie avenue, residence, March 5. He was formerly St. Rest Baptist church and a deacon for over 20 years, where he was well known. At Kersley, McGowan & Morsell, March 8, at the undertaking establishment of Kersley, McGowan & Morsell, and four daughter, a widow, three sons and amateur Minstrels Easter. At the Appomaton Club, twice weekly, into a temporary musical conservatory when amateur, pros and semi-pros for their annual concert for the benefit Monday night. With a copious intusion of new material many features will be included, and were it possible to improve the program and were it possible to improve the program the best yet providing the feasibility of securing the smaller memory in order care for the overflow.
Dr. Hale In City
Dr. John H. Hale of Nashville, Tenn., one of the country's leading physicians of the country, was hospitalized for illness. While here he will be the guest of Prof. and Mrs. J. Wesley Jones, 258 of the faculty of the University, member of the faculty of Mehary Medical College and owns and controls the hospital, one of the finest in Nashville.
Had Private Pulman Car
A loaded gun in his hand was the cause of the arrest of Clifton Purdue, a former police officer in Lynch, special police officer of the northwest of the city, special police officer of the police and found blankets, matches, pillow slips, sheets, hair and clothing of the police and having the charge of the alleged theft of the Pulman goods against him discharged as to when the goods were taken
Judge Fetzer at Harrison
In the new assignment of judges, Judge William R. Fetzer has been sent to the court room. The room will be in charge of his personal balliff, George C. Hilton, who made the decision to kill the balliff of the late Judge Hugh Stewart. Mr. Hilton enjoys an enviable reputation of keeping order in his court room, having peace where chaos usually reigns.
Family Quarrel
Alleging that his cousins had stolen the caused the arrest of Henry, Jesse and Salut Lavello. He told Officer Harry 7-year-old Arthur Lee Jenkins was caused because they objected to Lane purloin the stuff. The child denied the story. The cousins were discharged, caused because they objected to Lane caused because they objected to Lane. Much ado about nothing.
Got What He Went After
The Dayles were living apart. J. J. Wade, wife, Drusella, paid rent at 424 East 35th street. J. J. Wade to call on his wife, Drusella, who he started an argument. Henry Ellis, who rooms with Mrs. Davis, sought to elerer Blue charged with assault, while J. J. has a cut arm which required 14 training. The case was continued until March 25.
Fails to Prosecute
Chases Man's Wife
Read This—
"Though I am seven parts, white, aunt Martha," she had said, "yet I know that in the eyes of all white people, I am a Colored woman. So be it. I shall then give my life to people of color."
Taken from
"The Burden,"
The Great Serial Story Which Shall Be Our Feature Section Soon.
Watch for the date.
Read It All.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Preacher Blocks Traffic
"When you were arrested you were given a chance to graze the cloth by yearing it in court?" asked Judge John K. R. Prindville of Rev. Knight. The cloth had been arrested at Lake Knight and was charged with Officer Misher and charged with blocking the traffic, as Rev. Knight has it. The cloth was discharged, but the court admonition for the same offense.
Were Matching Nickles
Passers-by complained to the police that they thought Robert McDonald, the Thomas Butler, (white) Elijin, Ill, but the men claimed that they were only on the moonshine. They were each fined $1 and costs.
Visit Defender Plant Plant
Miss Marianne Smith, Miss Madison, Wise, who is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Bertha Smith, 3202 S. Madison, visited the Defender plant
Sent to County Hospital
The following persons were sent to the following offices: Eile Young, 29, 6481 La Fenette avenue; Harris Gudger, 19, 5403 Wabash Avenue; Decarbonn street; Marle King, 12, 1454 Decarbonn street; Marle King, 12, 1454 Cottage Grove avenue; George McDaniel, 25, 2273 Cottage Grove avenue; and Mrs. Hazel Dotson, 35, 201 East 24th street.
Has Fractured Ribs
At 21th and State streets, Mrs. Molle Dotson three fractured ribs and was probably internally injured. An autopsy when the driver attempted to stop, when the driver attempted to stop, resulting in the above injuries.
Accidentally Shots Self
The mysterious shooting of Mrs. Berkley caused an investigation to be made by the county hospital avenue station. He assigned Olehcera cording to their report Mrs. Fulmer accidentally discharged, causing a buildup of blood in the county hospital. She is confined in the County hospital.
Victim of Accident
Noble Troutman, 32 years old, 15 W. 35th street, is confined to his home gulf suite. He missed his footing as he attempted to drive a street car at 29th and State streets.
A Tenement Scrap
Who called the police was the cause of the death of William W. Wallace, 210 Dearborn street, Workman Ward, Chicago, with two severe scalp wounds. He claimed that he became involved in an assault on the son, John, about some one calling the Williams, who had with another boy. During the assault by John, the case was concluded by John. The case was concluded by John in 15 before Judge William R. Foster.
Betraux Restnacle Trust
When Officer John Gaslin saw Baker Harris carrying a basket of horticulture supplies, he stated that he was looking after his own welfare, as he sure did believe in the groceries belonged to him, and he had Baker to watch them. Baker then had their home at 2963 State street. He was placed on probation for one year.
Ernest Was In Earnest
The records of Judge John F. H. Haas, 70, of New York, changed his residence from 215 E. 47th street, to the House of Correction for a shine" whiskey Ernest engaged in a street with Andy Wilson, 53, 4943 Dearborn street, and cut him many times cuttings, but was later captured by Sergeants Carney and Hartzell.
Has Broken Leg While attacking an automobile truck, the coat of William C. H. Haas caught in the gate of the truck, throwing him under the rear wheels. Mr. Haas, using the truck backwards, and was uninjured in the leg of his father from being broken.
Hit with Gue
Whirre quarrelingly in a pool room at
the University of Louisville. Louis Sumnag, 32, $325 Dearborn街
was struck over the head with a cue by
the police. It is believed that his skull is fractured.
Dies Suddenly In Home
Mrs. Rosa Bryant, 46, 2011 Calumester avenue, died suddenly in her home this morning. Dr. S. W. Chayk, 3543 State street was called in. When the doctor arrived home, the patient died. Death was supposedly of heart disease.
Hit by Automobile
Little 8-year-old Bernice Fisher, 3242 Calumester home suffering with various cuts and bruises, which she received when she was struck by a mobile at 35rd street and Indiana avenue.
Dislocates Shoulder
Just as a horse and wagon he was
walking down the street, boulevard
an automobile struck the
Federal street, to be thrown to the
bomb. He was taken to a hospital
born hospital with a dislocated shoulder.
Willie Forest at Provident
Visit Springfield
Miss Ada Anglin Smith, who is the
chief counselor at the Washakaw
Walash avenue, and who is attending
the school, will visit her week
to visit her father, James W.
Walsh, and Mrs. and Mrs.
Walter Goodman, Harvard Park.
Joins Insurance Force
L. F. Simphinia until recently a real estate agent in this city to take up his job in connection with the Ruby Life Insurance Co.
Miss Roberta Crawford scores
Miss Roberta Dod-Crawford, soprano
the Chicago Musical College, appended
cital with Bethel choir at Fisk hall,
and with the Chicago Opera
nnesday. March 1. Miss Crawford sang
the popular walks song from Romeo and
"A Birthday," Cowan. Others appear-
d in Dickerson, organist; M. M. Dobson
soprano; Marie Brooks, pianist; L. T.
Stern, bassist; Ruthena Matsou, contralto,
and Ammette Bergman, baritone. James A.
Murray
AT THE VINGINES
Charles W. Chappelle, Secondee, West Africa; W. A. Hayfield, Birmingham, M.; Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Cates, New York, N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Hammond, St. Louis, M.; Mr. and Mrs. Swanson and wife, New York, C. M. Jackson, Jackson, Mich.; J. Jack Mason, Miller, Champaign, Ill.; C. W. Anderson, Detroit, Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Cole, Charles Farnum, Riveride, Ill.; Mr. and Mrs. Miss Cecelia Phillips, Milwaukee, WI.; Jesse W. Buss, Washington, J. C.; J. C.; Jesse W. Buss, Milwaukee, WI.; Kansas City, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. L. Kennedy, Yankton, South Dakota; Brooklyn, New York, N. T.; Prince W. S. J. Challoughlezizele, West Africa.
**Indulge in Family Quarrel**
Suffice the stomach and one ear had his ear. Joe Howard, 38, 3202 Dearborn street, was told he claimed that while engaged in a quarrel with his brother-in-law, Claude He was cut with a pocket knife by him.
Wounda Boy in Street
With a deep knee wound in his knee, he played for the son, 46 West 45th place, is confined to playing marbles out in the street and playing golf on the Federal street, without any apparent injury.
Attacked by Stephen
Falls from Car
Pedestrians in the vicinity of Star and
Square, where he was walking, found
2138 La Salle street, whom they found
suffering with various cuts and bruises.
That he had fallen from a street
can
---
No one doubted that Joe Dixon had been shot in the back, but he was unable to cut in his back, but he was unable to break the glass. He was hurt. Dixon who lives at 54 South Street, stated that he was unable to walk, but he was able to
Dr. Mullowney Here
Oliver Children's Party
Little Adela Jace Champion, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Champion, graduated from twenty-five young folks Saturday afterparty, March 4, in honor of her ninth birthday. Dancing, music and games, pictures, and many presents were received.
Club Woman Dress
Mrs. Ross Brynnn. 111 Calumet ave. and
222 W. 11th St. adjacent to the red
density building. See our website
daily.
Additional Church News
Carter's Temple C. M. E. Church, 428 Stout, pastor-Last Sunday's services were well attended. In the morning Stout, pastor-Last Sunday's services were livened a fine session. In the afternoon a platform meeting was held. Dr. J. A. Bryson delivered the message. M. E. church, delivered the message. Short talks were made by Dr. J. A. Bryson, delivered the message. Park Avenue and P. A. Bryson of Mt Carmel. A good program was reminiscent of the evening sermon. Dr. J. A. Hamster delivered the evening sermon. Pastor Stout will preach next Sunday morning and night.
Quinn Chapel A. M. E. Church—The great city and preach unto it the great from the text, "Go into Nineveh the night the continuation of the general theme, "The conflict of the world, the
St. Monica Catholic Church, corner Dearborn and 36th streets. Roy, Josephson and Wilson was opened last Sunday at 11 o'clock during the high mass. This afternoon at 3 o'clock the women's mission will close under impressive conditions. The will be blessed and created by the missionary fathers in this occasion. Sunday evening at 7:45 the morn's mission will begin the next week. The mission is in charge of two Capuchin fathers from Pittsburgh. Pa.
WEST SIDE NEWS By J. Wesley Jones
St. Paul Presbyterian church, under the direction of Prof. Foster Delaware, and A. very excellent program was rendered. Mrs. Wilhelm who is quite an enthusiast gave an interesting program at Fulton University, and A. H. Holloway presided. It has been reported that Dr. Boston J. Prince, the pastor of church, has resigned. Dr. Prince was called to Providence about five years ago and the church has installed one of the best organs in the city. Friendship Baptist Church must be in honor of their chairmaster, Mr. J. Holloway, at 3:30 p. m. all the choirs of this side are expecting to attend. Dr. I. H. Lamb, the pastor of Mangram, 232 North Monroe avenue, who is in Provident hospital sick, is attending her. Dr. Lucius Drane, the pastor of Friendship Baptist Church to be out again, Mrs. Emilia Marka, the pastor of her bed with the grip, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel M. Ames, 2343 West Monroe avenue, for anniversary on Thursday, March 2. They received many beautiful presents under the direction of Prof. A. V. Turner, Sunday, March 2:30 p. m. Lawn carel sneaker, Hayman Mills, soliloquy Fred Lett, pianist. Special male quartet from Fulton Street church. Dr. J. Holloway, in the city visiting relatives in Chicago, is in the city visiting relatives in Vienna, Tennessee, villa, Tennessee, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. Wesley Jones, 230 North-Camp
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SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA TO PLAY AT THE BLACKSTONE
On Palm Sunday afternoon, April 9, at 3 o'clock the Ferrell Symphony Orchestra, the Jerl, Jr., is founder and conductor, will appear in concert at the Blackhawk North Street. The orchestra is composed of 40 well trained musicians. Young Ferrell, who has attended college, has been hailed by critics as the master violinist of the age, by virtue of his talent. Ludwig Bocker, the eminent pedal-
Harrison H. Ferrell
gone. Not only is Mr. Ferrell a skilled musician, but has also dis- field, and is the only Race member of the Englewood High School Honor society, having won two scholarships and playing unusual talent in his freshman year. He has also been awarded a set of books by Connell, being the one of the Race to receive this honor. As this is the second season of the season, a large nu- ence of Chicago music lovers is expected to be present.
Dr. Robert Russa Moton, principal of Tuskegee Institute and president of the Appomattox league, will address the members and friends of the revived Chicago Appomattox league, held by the latter organization in the banquet room of the Appomattox club. 3632 Grand boulevard, Friday afternoon. At that time it is proposed to extend to the president of the National Chicago Association of Commerce, the Chicago Booster's league and the Chicago Association of Commerce, the 1922 convention of the National Business league in this city. A re-election of officers of the local business house and temporary plans for the Chicago were adopted. The new officers are: P. L. Gillespie, president; William B. Lawnhorn, second vice president; Ford Black, secretary; and David McCowan, treasurer. Members of the officio incumbents are: R. L. Mays, Claude A. Barnett, W. D. Allison, George M. Porter and Luther Peck.
The Chicago organization has virtually no presence in the committee of the National league will accept the invitation of the local national league to press to holding two consecutive meetings of the big league in the East, and now it is desired to hold a meeting in the West, men meet in the Middle West, preferably in Chicago. Plans for taking the league, have been practically abandoned.
SICK LIST
Mrs. Calloway, D228 Bearburn avenue,
is rapidly impaired after an illness of
pneumonia.
Mrs. Lala Peoplea, 149 Blue Island
a physician for the past month, is slow-
ly recovering.
Mrs. B. Dewberry Hamilton is able
to grip, lasting four weeks.
G. Z. Moore, 3551 Grand Boulevard,
G. Z. Moore, to his bed for two
weeks with the flu.
Mrs. Deademona Sublett, 3533 Wash-
ington, is recovering after
two weeks' illness.
Mora, Laura Meriwether, 443 E. 11st
Mora, Laura Meriwether, a very
serious attack of pneumonia.
Joseph E. Tope is a victim of pneumonia after a car accident. Mrs. Mary Winston, 4408 Langley avenue, Mrs. Rosa Morgan, 2916 State street, who was injured internally while in the car. Mrs. Barbara Kinsley, 140th Central station, 140th street and Indiana avenue, where she is employed, and Mrs. Jan. 25, is on the road to recovery. Mrs. M. R. J. Bass Convalescens, g. Mrs. R. J. Bass and daughter, 4507 St. Louis Avenue, whom ill for four weeks, are convalescing.
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JOHN R. MARKHALL
Member State Board of Fardons
WIMI BORDSON
Attorney-at-Law
U. O. DALEY
Physician and Surgeon
OSCAR DEPRIEST
Senior Capitalist
JERSE BINGA
President
H. R. SMITH
Physician and Specialist
C. H. CLARK
Chairman Natl. Bapt. Publ. Board
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GRACE LYCEUM
Dr. A. Wilberforce Williams, who addressed Grace Iyceum Sunday upon the occasion of the Pan-African Conference", was greeted by a capacity audience, which was enthusiastic in the applause and of gratitude to the crowd, told of the beauty of Italy and the suffering of its poor; of the thrift and economy of Switzerland, and of the poverty of the streets one sees innumerable soldiers in rugged uniforms begging. The suffering is so great that physicians in the city can reduce their free $2 to $1.50.
In America we have free schools, free speech and opportunity to have our grievances heard, but not so in England for India and West Africa.
The musical program was a brilliant success. Misses Anna B. Gray, soprano, and the junior ensembler, will appear at the lycceum Sunday. Miss Gray rendered a number in Italian which disbanded with skill, and was forced to respond with an encore which was very attractive. Miss Brooks is a talented pianist, and she uniquely and a thorough and gifted musician. An encore was required. The audience was hearty welcome at the lycceum, Grice quartet, composed of Mrs. Empress Cooke, Miss Blianc Hough, Messrs. Blianc and Hough, and she delivered two beautiful selections with Harry Jackson at the organ. Their voices blended beautifully and the music was evidenced in the applause. The general opinion was that it was a gala day at the lycceum and the orchestra, the speakers. The lycceum committee will expect to see many patrons at the recital of Hugh Buchanan at Lincoln center.
Mrs. Maude George was welcomed by many after an illness of la gripe and was in her usual place at the university. The grammist's grammite is pleased to acknowledge a number of persons available to speak at the lyceum and some talented new musicians. Many of them next meeting a announcement.
EVANSTON NEWS
SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1924
POISON WAS TOO HOT; HE
DECIDES HE WON'T DIE
Because he was out of work, and had been for a long time and with no prospects for future employment, Henry Jones, 29 years old, 4515 Prairie avenue, wanted to die. He had no money to pay expenses nor accumulated debts, and after brooding over his situation he decided to face death rather than hard times.
So with his mind fully made up he
thursday afternoon. He swallowed
a small quantity of the poison, but it
burned his throat. He itss its way downward that
robbed Jones of his nerve. He weakened
and all of a sudden decided he
the result of Jones' change of
mind was that he became deathly,
and he was much worried and embarrassed
because the police were called there for
nothing. 4437 Prelude avenue, who
was called in. A few hours later the
dependent man was smoking cigarels
and gild that he was still
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CHICAGO SOCIETY
SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1922
SOG
Duke Hughley, 2227 Yormen avenue, who was seriously hurt in an auto wreck last Saturday, is slowly convulsing in the South Chicago hospital.
Sail Buford, 3114 Cottage Grove avenue, entertained Thursday, March 2, with a 5 o'clock dinner in honor of Nora Thomas Booch of Cleveland, Ohio. Covers were laid for eight.
Mr. and Mrs. George Popp, 3409
Giles avenue, entertained at dinner
P. Brown and Mrs. M. G. Mitchell.
Covers were laid for twelve. Mildred
Trimble are spending the week-end
in Lake Forest visiting their aunt,
Mrs. Lenore.
Mrs. T. Hardaway and
grandson, Dave Phelan, of 4816
Lawrence avenue, are spending
seven weeks in Hot Springs, Ark. after
a visit to the daughter and daughter in Memphis, Tennessee.
Rev. and Mrs. H. B. Hawkins, Mrs.
Giles, are dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. A. T. Curtis, 2655 Park avenue.
Mrs. Phil A. Jones, 652 East 65th
friends at a card party last Wednesday
afternoon. Those present were
Mrs. Giles, Mrs. B. Cunningham,
Mrs. Edith Kennedy and Mrs. L. C.
Harpor.
Mr. Homer Cooper has returned
from Dauville, IL, where he went to
perform an operation on a patient of
Dr. Binga Dismond.
Mrs. Edith Kennedy, 3115 Prairie
avenue, last week to visit her mother at Jeancreette, LA., and to attend the carnival at New Orleans,
Mrs. J. W. Scott, 3865 Wabash avenue, is visiting Mrs. Monite Burrell, New Orleans, La. Mrs. Amy Lewis, Cincinnati, Ohio, who has been visiting Mrs. Grace Pattail, 3741 Indiana avenue, has returned to Maryville, 453 Virginia avenue, is confined to her home with illness. Mabel Brown-Bilthell, a former Chicago girl, but who now makes her home in St. Joseph, Mich. is in the city visiting friends. Vince Burrells avenue, who has been spending the winter in New Orleans, has returned home. Mrs. Charlotte Tervalon, 3719 Giles avenue, has returned to the city after spending two months visiting relatives in New Orleans, La., where she attended the Mardi Gras.
St. Louis Mo. March 10—Mr. and Mrs. Hillman marries another, Evelyn, of Memphis Tenn. to Thomas J. Prentice, of Memphis. The wedding will take place in the summer, and after a week, the wedding wedges will reside in Cleveland, Ohio.
SONG RECITAL
Hugh Buchanan, tenor-bariote, artist pupil of Hermann Dervais, in recital, assisted by the greatest organist Miss Cornelia D. Lampton, the talented pupil of Perey Granger, will preside at the piano and at the celebrated solo Metropolitan choir conducted by the impresario, J. Wesley Jones, will also be a big factor in the piano music of the Glenn McClellan, music lovers and friends are planning to make this the most artistic treat of the season. It promises to be a great experience. Oakwood boulevard and Langley avenue, Monday evening, March 13, at $30.
MISS ABRIETHUN MARRIES
MISS Willamena Arthurhunt and Frank Wade, both of Chicago, were married Sunday evening at the Ethemene Baptist Church, 4545 W. 12th Street, the bridal party ceremony was of Miss Ruth Arthurhunt as maid of honor and Misses Hattie and Odessa Hunter and Miss Eva Arthurhunt with the groom resided at 3973 Vernon avenue, was best man. The Rev. C. H. Clark, pastor of the church, the bride and groom are now residing at 4946 Indian avenue.
New and quick method for women and
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SARA PATEK, Principal 2407 W. Madison St., Chicago, Ill.
A trait is all I want. Call
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I teach the children. I LOVE
SMITH, $290.0 R WASH Apt.
Mrs. Iilla Hall, 318 East 45th street, is at Terre Haute, Ind., at her mother, who died Friday. Mrs. Julius Glenn 11301 Bishop street, Morgan Park, is confined to her mother's home Sunday afternoon, March 5, little Helen Blena, 3843 Rhodes avenue, enclosed by her sixth birthday. They enjoyed a wonderful afternoon. Games, music and plenty of goodies. 3043 Federal street, entered last week in honor of Miss Hazel Auston of Delaware, the guest of her sister, Mrs. Allie Hughes of 4037 State street. Mrs. Mabel Hickey, 4005 Calumet avenue, was given a surprise party in her birthday last Saturday. March 4. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Leck Hughes, 4005 Calumet avenue, Bert Gauger of Metropolis, Ill., and Frank Condon of London, England, Friday evening at a dinner party, with the next order for the evening. Mr. Condon left the next day for Kansas and Ossie Alexander, 438 East 40th street, will take possession of his re-entry. Mary Chalmain, area Mary.
Mrs. Josephine Webb and little daughter Linda, both daughters of Gundy, have come to make their home with their aunt, Mrs. Henry J. Smith, at 5048 Calumet avenue.
Mrs. James Williams, 3932 State street, entertained with a smoker on Monday, in honor of her birthday, in J. A. White was tennaster. J. A. Quiley of Floyd, Was, was the out-of-town gown. Mme. Camille Jones has received many letters thanking her for the engagements she secured for Law. Mrs. Quiley an envile reputation in Louisiana as the greatest tenor heard there in years.
Mrs. Orpheus Calloway, 517 East 46th street, entertained 18 girls Saturday, March 4, in honor of her eleventh birthday. Muscle and games were enjoyed and refreshments were served.
Mrs. Victoria Venable, 3290 Vernon avenue, has returned after spending five weeks in Remus, Mich., the mode of her sister, Mrs. Florence Green.
Captain Harry I. Allen, 3242 Giles avenue, was at a supper March 2 on her birthday. Covers were paid for 10.
Mrs. Sophia Head, Marletta, Ga. returned to her home three months with her daughter, Mrs. R. T. Brimm, 4521 Calumet avenue. Mrs. R. B. Mallord, widow of the late Dr. P. S. Mallord of Detroit, Mich. is studying at the Rubel of Chiropractic, 4041 Indiana avenue. Mrs. Ellen L. Hobbs, 4651 Federal Avenue. Mrs. John W. Moworth avenue have returned from Niagara Falls, N. Y. where they were called by the suds. Mrs. Mary E. Webb, who died Feb. 17. Mr. and Mrs. George W. Crutcher, 4651 Federal Avenue, week for the South. They will remain in New Orleans several weeks attending the Marrs Gras and visitation. Mrs. M. L. Purgeson of 618 East 42d street returned last week from the house called by the sudden death of her cousin, Rev. F. W. Sims. A street avenue, spent Sunday in Joliet, IL, in the interest of the Accoplato singers of Chicago, who will render a musical city on Thursday night, March 9.
eddings
SMITH-KELLY
Miss Bessie Smith, 3249 South Park avenue, and Harry Kelly were married Marcel 2. They let March 9 they will spend their honeymoon.
RAY-SMITH
The home of Mrs. Shop Miller, 600 Eust 42d street, was the scene of a fire on Mrs. Jaay Ray, the bride of C. W. Smith. The ceremony was read by Rev. Patcher. The newlyweds live in a mature home at 3414 Wabash avenue.
TO TALK ON "HARD LUCK"
AT WABASH AVENUE "Y"
A phonograph concert will precede the usual numbers of the 4 'o'clock meet, next Sunday, and next Sunday, as Swinton will share some of the choicest of his selection of classic and popular recital moments this occasion will be the Rehearsal Walden, publicist and pastor. His subject will be "Hard Luck." After afternoon the audience of men was addressed by Rev. Baber of Trinity Methodist church. One man was rehearsing for "Locky" Baldwin to Wendell lins auditorium on the evening of the third Sunday, under the joint ministry church, as well as the coming of Dr. Butter and Dr. Moorland as speakers during the month was an annual Members of the Holy Club joined on Tuesday night in a big "jamboree" downtown. This was a "get-together" of standing young followers who in all the high schools of Chicago are giving their best efforts to promote the manly conduct in school activities.
The Scout troops of the department are to be host to Scout troops in the summer and to play ball game and other regular Scout doings will furnish an enjoyable program for these wide-awake youngsters. High school and community teams will fight their usual battles around the school field on Monday, day and Saturday nights. An the season nears its end interest in physical activity, the Department was happy to have Physical Director Crawford back on the job this week after several days of training. The department is listed on the register this week: Henry Hall Jackson, Mich.: L. F. Morgan, Highland Park; Kyle Turner, Milwaukee; L. F. Morgan, York, and L. F. Simkins, Atlantic, Ga.
Shift Plan of Organization For Y.W.C.A.
Mrs. James Francis Lawson Comes as New Chairman of Managing Board
The Indiana avenue branch of the Yale G. C. closed a very strenuous month's work with thrilling results. The committee of management has reorganized itself and is operating under the national plan or organization; that of one of the entire committee rotating each year, the spirit manifesting a desire to make the community a wideawake witness to the appeal of every member. The new commit-
The committee
regulated
itself and is now
operating under the
national
organization; that is,
one-third of the
entire committee
rotating
spirit manifesting
a desire to make
the community a
bestest is the appeal
of every member.
The new committee
management
is follows: Mrs. James
ment is as fol- Mrs. Lawson lows: Mrs. James chairman; Mrs. Jullus N. Avendorch, first vice-chairman; Dr. Mae White, second vice-chairman; Dr. Mary Johnson, chairman; Mrs. H. Watkins and Mrs. Morris Lewis, sub-chairman of finance; Mrs. Louise Waller, Walter George, girl reserve chairman; Mrs. Mabel Washington, membership chairman; Mrs. O. T. Howe and Mrs. George, girl reserve chairman; Mrs. Babel Vanic, recording secretary; Mrs. Andrew Rube Foster, assistant recording secretary; Mrs. E. educational chairman; Mrs. Ophelia Hudson, residence chairman; Mrs. Miss Estelle Webster, industrial chairman; Mrs. M. J. D.aille and Mary E. Webster, honorary members
The Indiana avenue branch happily greeted at "noon luncheon" Saturday, the day before the agreement, with the Mrs. N. W. Campbell, president; Miss Sue Weddell, girl reserve secretary, and Miss Elegan Richardson, executive board of directors of the Y. W. C. A. of Chicago. The luncheon was given to acquaint the new workers with the program for 1959. Mrs. Lawson, chairman of the committee of management, successfully led her workers on site, and the committee on site realized their co-operation. The atmosphere of this meeting was such as heartily gave evidence of the willingness to challenge that was brought to them, realizing that the future of the Indiana avenue branch would be of Chicago to make it a vital force in the community for the girlhood of the Race. The branch is happy to participate in the following activities of the various departments:
In the girl reserves there are 872 girls in the department of in 1920, with an approximate membership of 405 girls divided into ten clubs. These girls club council of the officers of the ten clubs working under the direction of the girl reserves' secretary. They work past year, helping in the Armenian fund, the soldiers' base hospital, entertaining a group of children at the school, and the finance program. They gave a "vodilic classique" from which proceeds were to pay their share of the $500 made during the 1921 finance campaign. They cleared from this effort $106. The industrial department has registered 458 girls since the department opened in 1920, with an approximate weekly attendance of girls in classes in millinery, ukulele, costume designing, stenography and gymnastics. The department plays no small part in keeping up the interest of the youth and adult readers. There is future possibility of even accumulation to friends of the association. Mrs. Burgess of Grand Rapids, Mich. spent a few days here last
The Chenghe Union Charity Club
was founded by Y. W. C. A. Miss Brown, president
of the club, who brought the money
to the club, much pleased with the
gettylics here.
KANSAS WORKING GIRLS ARE AGAINST CLOTHING BUDGET
Topoka, Kan, March 10.—"Let's see those bargas," was the rallying cry of 300 Topoka working girls who invaded two dry goods stores. They asked to see the articles that listed in a budget giving a total of $87.55 as the amount declared a "reasonable head saleswoman in one of the stores testing before the Kansas industrial court, which is hearing evidence that she could fix a new minimum wage for working girls. The girls swarmed on the streets and railroad offices, factories and shops. 'What?' $87.55 a year for clothes! Let's go and see those clothes! The girls headed straight for the store where the saleswoman who had prepared the offending budget was emailed a long column and grouped around the counter where the "25 cent" litle stockings listed in the budget were
Miss Morley Called Home
Miss Madeline Moseley, 613 Chumers place, Madison, Wis., who was visiting Smith, 2002 S. State street, was called a buddy of her father, who was taken suddenly ill. Miss Moseley is a sophomore at the University of Wisconsin at Madison.
THE CHICAGO,DEFENDER
NEWS OF THE MUSIC WORLD
TSCHAIKOWSKY'S FOURTH SYMPHONY
It has been two years and three months to the calendar day since Tschakowsky's symphony No. 4 was played by the onstage audience on the occasion of their eighth concert, twenty-ninth season. To the minority group of artistic temperates who pendulate unnotiously tentatively into futuristic, futurist, choice bios of verse, old paintings, books, music and even some restful faces we see en enclosed in a solitous to be mentally revived and enjoyed when the mood demands.
So through the time spaces I have eagerly awaited another hearing of Sometimes soothing my longings by reading and rereading the score, conjuring up the orchestra sounds as sometimes coloring would permit. Imagine my joy on reading the announcements he played by the Chicago Threater Symphony orchestra at their regular Sunday morning concert. But follow-up performances of death of Bert Williams, that innable comedian, whose humor always throbbed with a substrata of his own, suited could only find solace in the work of a great master like Tschakowsky. And as a result, intensive life symbols so vividly depicted in this symphonic masterpiece, the life of his aspirations and disappointments, successes and failures, came before me as a counterpart of the musical Thakikowsky painted 45 years ago.
The first movement of the symphony, to me the most compelling of the four, is one which opposes the interval of a fourth, but so tremendous in its breadth of appeal as to involve the whole of the music, which makes Fate, that in inevitable force which makes puppets out of all humanity. The main theme—the first was a grim announcement of the futility of life, the inutility of living. This abject condition induces one to turn from real life to the future, the future evolves wistful, serile-like theme which opens in the clarinet accompanied by delicate chromatics added to exhalm: "I do believe in fairness!" The fultes enter with a song of joy and love. The soul departs from the strings like the motif, a muffled, far-away tread, insistent, monotonous, is heard in the drums which continue stronger and stronger until the trumpets peal forth in brazen notes.
Clubs
The meetings conducted by Pioneer Club are of real value. The meetings are free to the public and are held at 7 o'clock Irene Gaines, president.
The debate between the Marquette club and the Marquette Club access with the Marquette Club carrying the honors Miss Madee Deputy and Miss Madee President. The Sunshine Sewing Club met at the Calumet avenue. After business a luncheon was served. After business a luncheon was served. With S. Johnson, 4316 Langley avenue, last Thursday. A stag will be held by the Cavalier Thomas W. Johnson, secretary, Thomas R. Johnson, who is to be commissioned in the Federalized National Thomas W. Johnson, secretary, Hardwood met at the home of Mrs. Dale Hall Moore, 6534 Aberdeen street. Fri., March 16. At the home of Mrs. Emmie McDugal, 312 Ashland avenue. Mrs. Fannie Turley, Mrs. Mignon F. Watkins, secretary.
The Chi-Roamer Club met last Thursday. Parker, 4033 Calumet avenue. The club met their old members. Greg Hargreaves, who has recently returned from Portsmouth. The Invincible Dramatic and Musical Club presented their first drama of the season quite a success. Read next week's issue for the appearance of their next
The West Side Women's Club will host a club spring for 1212 Schiller street. Friday, March 10. Drink club spring. Visit club spring; Mrs. Will F. Cherry, president; Mrs. Amelia Wilkerson, secretary.
The finale is ushered in with a blare of full orchestra, gongs and a drum fated by wild abandon and mud mental abberations. The mind conjures up fantastic images of youth, strutting to be reminded of the toll time exacts by the return of the fate motif, this time subdued and menacing; sour souls follies and counters each attempt of fate to engulf him, by alternate outbursts of recurrent lapses of morbidity. Fate wins and another soul passes into that nubula of death whose velled myriad souls form a letter from a musician in Jackson, Miss. that Hazel Harrison of Chicago was well received in attendance, and that the white population did not know of Miss Harrison's ability and only a few were in attendance, and their friends, rented a hall and had her to appear for them the following day (Sunday). They have promised her a splendid attendance
Spring musical affairs under the management of J. Wesley Jones, imam and musician; by Hugh Buchanan, tenor-bartone, and artist pupil of Herman Devries, at Lincoln College, London; by Walter E. Gossette, organ; Cornella Derrick Lampon, piano, and the musical committee of Neeta McCurdy, accompanist. The Institutional A. M. E. church choir will give their first music Sunday afternoon, March 4, at 3:30 Mignolia N. Lewis, Director.
Institutional: A. M. E. Church, 3823 South Dearborn street, Rev. David Johnson, pastor—10:45 a.m., m. the pastor of the life of Elijah. Subject: "Elijah's Faith Strengthened on the Moon." The choir will give a musical program consisting of 6:30 p.m., m. Allison Christian Endeavor; 7:45 p., m. sermon by the pastor. Subtitled "The Founds Explained and Set Forth."
St. Paul C. M. E. Church, 4844 Dearborn street, Rev. R. E. Church, 4844 Dearborn street, Rev. S. Sunday services were well attended; pastor preached 12. In the afternoon will be Art and intelligent hour. Mrs. T. National Equal Rights League, will be the speaker for the 12. In the afternoon will be development of the Intellectual hour. The Epworth League holds its meetings every Sunday afternoon at 6.
People's interdenominational Church, 4844 Third Avenue and Wabash avenue, Rev. T. E. Rosch, pastor. Pastor, Subject, "Resistance and Non-resistance." $ p. m. evening services.
Zion Hill Baptist Church, 4842 South Dearborn street, Dr. A. J. Martin, pastor. Last Sunday, Rev. G. W. Morrison, pastor the pastor delivered the sermon. Next Sunday the Lord's Supper will be adored. Pastor will preach a special sermon in the special. Special music will be reenforced.
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Clinnin Will Tell of Young At Memorial
Sunday Services Honoring the Late Colonel in Wendell Phillips at 3 o'Clock
military services in honor of the late Col. Charles Young, U. S. A., will be in the auditorium of the Wonder Philadelphia School on Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. Col. John V. Clinin, first assistant United States district attorney in Chicago, will deliver the principal address. The local plan of memorial which is to be observed this Sunday about the country, organizations participating in the celebration will be the members of the Eighth regiment, veterans of the Spanish-American War, or the personnel of the Gos Post of the American Coast. These outfits will meet at the Eighth Regiment Armament Sunday the high school. In line with them will be members of both the active and honorary committees fostering the Executive Attention of the colleges will be used by the committees.
The active committee is composed of Morris Lewis, chairman; Earl Earl Lewis, chairman; Moseley Mosely, Chaude A. Barnett; R. L. Mays, F. L. Gilliespe and Mr. Bram.
FATHER OF 28: UNCHECKED
Greenbore, N. C., March 10.—Seventy-one years old and 28 children is the record of "Uncle Bob" Austin, who lives near here. "Uncle Bob" has been married three times. By his first wife he is father of eight children, by his second wife of 14, and by his third wife of 16, of six. Twenty-six of the family are living. The old man has reared his children according to old-fashioned rules and boasts of the fact that none of them has him any back talk more than once.
WINS FIRST PRIZE
Los Angeles, Cal., March 10—James MacGregor, a young West Indian man, was born in Northern California, won the first prize of $105 in the annual oratorical contest. He was awarded the prize of $25. The president of the university did him the honor of plimenting him before a packed audience. His home is in Jamaica, B. W. L.
P
Specialist in Foreign Languages
FRENCH
SPANISH
ITALIAN
will be found
in her
studio at
3672 South Michigan Avenue
Blooleard 3006
Chicago University of Music
Studying Voice Culture
A.
Princess Mysteria: I wish you would place in the United States without getting a divorce. I have heard it, can be there. There is no place where such action is permissible if the law knows of a place in the United States where course, many things are done without the law's knowledge, but for my part you either secure your divorce or do not prymary. Widowhood is preferable to Madam Mysteria: I am a young man who is 40 and love my sweetheart's mother, who is 40. She and I have talked it up, and I have told her I get know how we stand, in there any way you can see for us? We love each other. If there is such a thing as triple crossed then you have done it. I do not present predicament, but the mother I have not the words adequate to exert control on her daughter she is. She is neither human nor animal to be guilty of conspiracy or murder of a daughter's lover. A vampire has nothing on her body and is do to clean out. Don't let it be said that you, with your free love and new relationship, antagonism between a mother and child. Let this serve a lesson to you in reps. "As you sow, so they reap."
Princess Mysteria: I am just 19 and am considered good looking. I have numbers of boy friends who seem to be more interested in me than I do the other. Sometimes
M. J. McGOWAN, WHOSE DISCOVERY SKIN SPECIALISTS AND FORESHOPERS
SCIENTIST A SKIN I
Evacuates the Pores and Every Impurity
(By Willham)
THE MAYOR OF BROOKLYN
M. J. MCGOWAN. WHOS DISCOVERY LEAVES LESS USE FOR SKIN SPECIALISTS AND FOR BEAUTY PREPARATIONS.
SCIENTIST DISCOVERS A SKIN LAXATIVE
Evacuates the Pores and Purges the Skin of Every Impurity in an Hour
(By William R. Durgin)
WOMEN, give thanks to Mr. McGowan—an English scientist scarce out of his twenties. His discovery means that a beautiful skin is now mere matter of personal cleanliness; that a skin can be made beautiful while you wait! After five years of experiment, an element has been found that physics one's skin. Its action is gentle, but positive. Its use is delightful, not distasteful, for it is applied outside. Put it on; slip into your easy chair to dream or doze; in less than an hour the skin pores move.
Impurities cogging your facial pores come out as if squeezed from a tube. This flushing of the pores makes them tingle with relief and relaxation. The new bloom of color and velvety texture of skin are simply marvellous. Such is the magic of modern chemistry. It always works, because it is Nature.
The scientific name of this new element is Terriardmaxh. It is a succulent plant with an exquisite smoothness. Place it on the face like a poultice. No expert massaeuse's fingers ever felt soothing, for you feel this laxative effect. You can half an hour wipe off with a towel—and with it every blackhead, plimple-point, spot and spot of acne. The skin is two, it is well to move the skin every other day. Then once a week suffices. In the end, the skin is trained to function without aid. You can achieve this achievement, not a cosmetic or
HOW IT WORKS
M
I wonder if my looks will ever cause a man to attract, as astray, as I am. I admire by every wonder how I can prevent people telling me how pre-occupied I am. Do you think I should be Beauty, Norfolk, Va. I am no possible way to view beautiful things without admiring them. Everyone loves the beauty which naughtily adorns her face, but if you were not truly trusty both in face and disposition you would not re-verify only advice I can give you so that you will always be as you now are is to your present sweetness into self-conceived bigotry. Remember the old man does, also beauty is only skin deep.
Madam Princess: You have helped me in your please help me. I have had a very bad life and I want to do better. I am about to marry a girl. He is very strict and I would lose him if I told him. Please help me.
VERY LEAVES LESS USE FOR
FOR BEAUTY PREPARATIONS.
DISCOVERS
LAXATIVE
and Purges the Skin of
ity in an Hour
cream. It is harmless, hygienic and helpful to the skin. Women on whom Mr. McGowan experimented daily for months, show skins and complexions of stifling health and beauty'. 'Texture of one's skin—no difference no difference in the result. In fact, it is equally beneficial to men.
Unfortunately, Terra der ma la x cannot be stocked by drudgists. The active ingredient that loosens the pores must be fresh. The laboratory scans each can and dates every label. On store shelves, this laxative element would lose its force, and then the application would have no more effect than the "message muds" now so common. So the laboratory supplies the users direct.
HOW TO OBTAIN A SUPPLY
Making this new material is slow work. But the laboratory bills requests for single cans (two months' supply) in the order of receipt. With the new McGoway own, you can send a Semi-large postmum just $2.50 when delivered. McGoway says: "Any woman's skin and complexion do not receive just another perfectly astonishing benefits that she can feel and see, may have this questions?" If you expect to be out when the postman calls you may safely check or money order application, as the same guarantee applies. Sallow, olly or muddy skin will soon be looked on not as a misrepresentation. If you desire skin of purity, softness and coloring, here is your opportunity. Just fill out this application and mail it at once.
Dermatological Laboratories
229 Plymouth Court, Chicago:
Pleasant Hill, 212-755-2222. Please freshly compounded Terdermalrub soon as made, will pay postmum refunded if asked.
(30)
Address .....
PAGE FIVE
A
NOT ON SALE
The Best Plays’ 7 \. > “The Best Players
DUNEAR Prana. | es Starting MONDAY, MARCH 13th > The Best Players
EVELYN PREER J. L, CRINER , : - RETURN ENGAGEMENT OF THE - ~ A : 7 :
SUSIE SUTTON CHAS: OLDEN . . . a ‘
TONE MONAGAS ARTHUR RAY . T. wD ;
bead DUNBAR PLAYERS
Under the Direction of CLYDE ARMSTRONG s = a : *
: / IN THE SPLENDID COMEDY DRAMA ~ ‘
“THE GOOD LITTLE BAD GIRL”
: \Which Ran for Eighteen Months on Broadway and. Nine Months in ‘the Loop
Presenting the Most Efficient Group of Dramatic Stars Ever Assembled se . ,
— - : * THE HOME OF REAL ENTERTAINMENT ——
NIGHT SHOW AT 8:30 SHARP RAND THEATE Make Reservations Early -
SUPPER shaw Art's awe MICH sHiOW AT 9 G . - R Box Office Open Daily at 1 P.M.
: . State St. at 31st Victory 0066 *
Billy King Co. Closing Grand
The Billy King company is closing : 5 feud
its four weeks’ engagement at, the|{ The nner side, of every el
Grand on next Sunday nicht. Twolly therefore turn my clouds about
distinct shows And always wear them inside out—
have been pre ii To show the lining.
two duya brought Joyner & Foster,
being B. B. and Clarence, and they
literally ted: the bill up in knots at
every performance with their songs,
talk and clover footwork, This act
fa progressing nicely and is bound to
he heard from In good company in
tho near future, GriMth's “Dream
Street,” one of the most sensational
photoplays ever thrown upon tho
acteen, {5 the pictorial feature for the
five days ending on Friday night, and
five acts of vaudeville are being
shown in addition.
THE MONOGRAM
One of the best bills seen here this
season ig pleasing the large audiences
this week. The feature act is that of
Costello & Snowden, a turn full of
class and distinction. ‘Thero are but
few dancers and character workers
as efficient a8 Costello. He tmper-
sonates Bessie McCoy, the late Aida
Overton-Walker and others with fine
results and does a few of the classic
dances for which he is famous.
Snowden 3 2 planist of remarkable
ability and he rendered a couple of
high-class selections in regular big
time style. Willams & Williams
one of the: best teams that ever
graced this house, are back for a re-
turn engagement and going great
with 2 new routine. Cornell & Rus-
sell are-also playing a return with
fine results, It is an act that, goes
over at every show. ‘The bill is com-
pleted by Jack Taylor, a novelty sin-
ele which is far above the average:
LETTERS
you and wishing you lots of success, I
femal, respectfully,
SARAH VENABLE. |
Loew's State Theater, Buffalo, N.Y
care ‘Three Clltfords.
‘Okmulgee, Okla.
Friend ‘Tony: Just a tine t0 let you
hear from the bunch, “We aro ail well
ey thle dime and at, Ncking, but ‘nat
igh, ag everything else 1s hh enough.
Well, “Fong, we had an old-fashioned
storm here, Tuesday, Of the ‘snow va
Flety. which tended to take one back
to the daya of "98 along the lake front,
and the attendance at the show was
large one, “I think he welghed nearly
280 pounds, However, te sun ‘shone
ut the wext morning and sre are doing
fair. “Would send. route, but that. ts
aiment_as Jmponaible now a nding &
“jim crow” sign ina South Side "Li
train, aml, of course. there {9 no need
of wasting time and thie trying’ to ex
Plain why" thie condition exists, as You
gud’ every. other” sound-minded man
oe. 5
TSuppose that will be about alt for
his time. Slee Ta Marr-and ‘the en
tire “pang send thelr best regards
to you and wish as T'do that you may
enjoy the very best of continued health
and success, ax Well as to warn YOu
tg remember to Dut_on your rubbers
When you go out.” Your pal
‘Tack Corer.
e ‘Un in New Jersey.
Hello, Gen. Tony: ‘Old Pal, here Tam
away gut in No Man's Lana with the
Southern Dixie Lassies Co. and 1 am
Very glad to nay. old ‘boy, the show ia
Roing each ‘night with & ‘une Say
ony. we have a fast tle show, We
are ia the plate of New Jeraey. Tony
thie fa the line-up: De Caste and Mad
tlin present Southern Dixie Lassies Co.
‘Fons too mueh can't be sald about
them: ‘They both are old-timers in the
show world. ‘they have been playing
thle "wame sides the carly, days OF i5%8.
chen this game was Teal. They both
Are well Known to tho members of the
rotession in and out of the show world,
Say, Tony, Davie and Fleming, one of
ihe ‘attractions with the Disie’Lassles
Go. area fast Mite team. Say it
rigiit here for you, the Jonngon Broth-
cra are two fast Ogre “Marten, Claudo
ins, bie with “Long Gone” song.
sec rony vig nue’ the whole show
will run into Philadephia over, Sun-
Jay. “Twill tell sou more dope. in my
next letter, “Goodthy ‘and good “luck,
old. top. All ‘the bunch send a hello
fo the ola dope man. afatl will reach
te if addreseed cate De Costa” dnd
Madelin Southern Dixie Lassies, Co..
March 1a. Clinton, “N. Juz March 14,
High Bridge, N. a.” Bye-bye, pal.
JAMES MARTIN,
Stage Manager Southern Dixle Lassles
280 with best wishes from =| Edgar Martin's Joyland Girls com-
DAVE & TRESSIB, pany, one of the most ~~ “‘ar travel-
‘Two Fast Steppers. jing over the T..0. B. playing
_— a return engagement it the 8] thea-
Buffalo, N. ¥, | ter, Atlanta, Ga.
Mir, Tony Langston—Dear Sir: | Will SERENE
u kindly forward the letter for Sarah} Lulu Coates and Crackerjacks are
nnble to Loews State theater, ut: | laying of thin week “After <A” most
OTR. Se ad once, ne se Wil be there | strenuous season In which they” had it
i Gt Starch 6, We just finished ie | consecutive Weeks. New contumes. are
Ske in Canada, “Ruth Cherry sends | being made for the act, whieh starts
sr Fegards to te general, ‘Thanking | over another Journey in’a few dave.
—_—<_—$ = —
I e O. B. A.
(Theater Owners” Booking Assoclation)
ALL ACTS, COMPANIES and THEATER MANAGERS
“Communicate with the
Suite 442-3-4 Volunteer Life Bldg. CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
SAM E. REEVIN, Manager, Suite 442-3-4 Volunteer Life Building,
Chattanooga, Tenn,
or S. H. DUDLEY, 1223 Seventh Street, N. W. Washington, D. C.
PAGE Six.
The Billy King company is closing
its four weeks’ engagement at the
Grand on next Sunday night. Two,
distinct shows
have been pre- tA
sented ana bon Re |
of them have
proved to be right
Bp to the minute Faas |
in overs was, _—
“Hite and Bits" 2 a
4y what the prea-
ent. production is ketaaeam
called, and it Qo
comes in the form ‘sag
ofa musical com- Raima: hy |
edy review. Prac- © eae
ucally every hit, 3 es
vocal, comedy and . ts
otherwise, made
by any of tho
members -of the ony angaten
ee eer ve
have been pre- tA
gented and both By
of them have
‘proved to be right ’
Up to the minute ae
in covery way, s
Site. and Bits" 3
4s what the pres-
ene production is Renae
called, and kt onan
comes in the form ‘Wear.
ofa musical com- Magan chy
edy review, Prac- © Ae]
ucally every hit, [3 es
vocal, comedy and ¥ ts
otherwise, made
by a, b= the
members -of the
King agereration Tony Langston
dn any of their past shows is re-
vived, and the results are as gratify-
ing aa might be expected. ‘There ts
mot a single dull moment and there
4s enough comedy offered by Billy
and his co-worker, the clever Mar-
shall Rodgers, to keep the house in a
constant uproar. The singing and
‘dancing are of the most pleasing sort
nd all hands have a chance to show
why thelr names are on the program.
‘It is a good show, and those who
haVe not given it the O-O had better
Be getting busy. Tt will be replaced
on Monday night by the Dunbar
Players in the dramatic production,
“The Good Little Bad Gir)" ”
THE AVENUE
Cy Williams, starting off with a
girl partner last week, ended doing
a‘single, and, to tell the truth, he
‘did better by himself, proving a very
good singing monologist. The last
incon, Ga.
Dear Tony:, Just, 2 ting. t Yer Fou
mow 1p got dead gets ate, Masing
Sharacter parts inv stock at the Douglass
heaves, Enown by repute and fact to
fe the ‘amen’ Coldred theater inthe
South, walle awaiting for the iaunching
of te wood_old silss Green Go. Band
Rembet afg areiing from aii parts
Gvery daz. Soon evessthing: wit bein
Shape Sn we will be on our way. OUT
Tuntdgers: GSaries Gollest te span
“Reiter time nor esnente to havo every
things modgra fot, the, eamfore” of hs
deoplennew “parade “uniforms, “stare
Netrorobe, gent atage, in fact everythin
Honpariet Stocks Go. are: Mildred Cote
onpate are: Nilare
Souls Shale Ada Chapmane Sehs
Jehinton, Heset’a Lane. Piede Babi,
Sapa Faylon Doll Gray.” stay tawaras
Bnd. me writer Stale, membea are:
Fora "Wiggins. (Sins Green), Harry
Erag,, Juunes 6. “Hudson, “Sies, Prank
am, Sidppy Kitmoall Lawrence Boater.
ham, ips ference Boater.
‘Rua Lockhart Hooker would ike to neat
Hom Brent Sparks ang Clarence Davis
tate. ef Ade” Becker's dase Sudeles
Ehtincss “ot tmpartages: “Heeaids 1
ile Ome’s bunch, ours tutte
"ADA LOCKHART HOOKER,
Ft, Wayne, Ina.
Dear Sir, Langston? vA per enclosed
slontaga, inysait and. ly Grimes. are
Stocking "em a, curve at vers par
formance here at tie, Templa theater,
Ender sy original tilling, “Cloud &
Millers” eines i way Handed’ some
dretty rough deals Uy tho agents there.
Sie Teen Sa clea thew West wih
}root that my act hind been a winner at
Eeery ‘atung; I'am now ‘making at ef
for ce" work independently, with faz
Ganapous,Ciovelana,‘Clncinnatl and
die blades dn view, Sith a. posse
Sista date here ater" by public de=
Bund at the yest house
“xc. 1 hlsted in another letter to you
tule “Aother" song ef maine ts certale-
G18 wonder, ag we are stopping shows
Sith Ye anes recitation. it ia Sertaine
Be too tad that ‘we have to eunter the
Hosnventences ‘we. do: on account vot
Enck'oh the. over, management. for
Ereryone Who as seen us here sxy we
Sto the. Dest theyve_acen lately. and
Sur deine nothing out our gwn melodies,
Brice ata arenesuations the atk ot
the town: Besldes, Eort Wayne is wild
Sier “Sweet Mother
"Thanking you for past kindness, Tam
secven =
~ ROBT. #, CLOUD,
OE iS Le.
erie an Sine ae
Dear Friend Tony: Just # line or so
to let you know we are still ta the land
of the living, ane truly hope you are
well and enjoying the best of health.
Ola Pal, we opened March 6.for Loow:
Freely Square; March 9, American. and
‘the first half of ath at the Orpheum.
‘The act is still going over in great
gape: Quite a ult nere In Red Hanke
Close with best wishes from
DAVE & TRESSIB,
‘Pwo Fast Steppers.
Buffalo, N. X,
Mr, Tony Langston—Dear Sir | Will
you itindly forward the letter for Sarah
Venable to Loew's State theater, But-
falo, Ny Ye. af once, 28 we Will be there
‘week of March 6. We just fintahed tive
Weeks in Canada, Ruth Cherry sends
Dest regards to the general, Thanking
RPETUCN DATE
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"QUEEN OF SHEBK”
“Queen of Sheba,” a William Fox
super-spectal, which enjoyed a, sen-
sational run on Broadway, New
York, {s booked for the Owl “and
States theaters beginning Sunday
Te Is described as a stupendous spec-
facle and a great love story. New
York eritics hailed it ns one of the
greatest, photo-dramas ever pro-
duced. 2t showed to crowded house:
throughout the run, until taken, of
to make Way for another of the Fox
specials,
It is declared that the pageantry
of “Queen of Sheba” is unsurpassed
for magnificence on tho screen, and
that few, such thrilling spectacles a
the chariot race ever have been pre-
sented In motion pictures.
‘The filming of "Queen of Sheba”
under the direction of J. Gordon Ed-
wards took an entire year. Through-
out the period a huge force of work-
ers in many lines of endeavor wa:
employed, and fn additfon evers
member of the Fox organization of
the. west coast—actors, clerica
workers, artisans and alt—took a
personal interest in the progress of
the etupendous production and tent
their ald to it, Tom Mix, for in-
stance, yolunteered his services tn
rendering the chariot race thorough-
Jy_ realistic,
‘The construction of massive sets,
the designing and marking of the
elaborate costumes, the perfecting o
tho dances, meant a vast deal of I.
bor, and the difficulties In tbe way
‘of competing the production on the
scale planned . seemed insuperable.
They were overcome, however, and
“Queen of Sheba” ‘given to the
screen.
Betty Blythe appears In the rol
of the aucen; Fritz Lieber, the noted
Shakespecrean actor, is King Solo-
mon, and Clatr de Lorez ts Queer
‘\marath, wife of Solomon.
Department of Justice Will Give the
Florida Mob the 0-0
Columbus, Ohio, March 8.—From
all Indications the mob of red-necks
Fesponsible for the outrage nerpe-
trated upon the members of the How-
ard Orehestra, who were lured from
a hotel and beaten at Miam|, Fla,
some time ago, are in for some inter-
eating scrutiny. W. N. Woodruff of
Cincinnati, Department of Justice
agent, waa here late Jast week tak-
ing the depositions of those most
directiy ‘interested. An example
should be made in this case. ‘Tho
high-handed manner in which the
neopie of that section of Florida are
Treated ‘by the “white Americans” is
& disgrace to elvilization. For « long
time a tourist from the North was
hot allowed to bring his chauffeur
into Miam{ unless the man was
“white. Tho redenecks claimed that
if anyone was entitled to use the
streets of the town by the use of the
fine touring cars brought into the
place it must be the “white folks”—
this despite the fact that a large per-
centage of the taxes sre being bald
for the upkeep of. tha streets and
roads by property owners of the Race.
Pepe geet
MAIL AERO
‘Well, as I live and breathe, here
wo are again. ‘Tell ws something and
allow us to perambulate, in a way of
putting it. At you: Andrew B. Clay,
Billie Young, Edward Goodbur, Reyn-
olds & Jones, Ethelenc Jordan, Ida
G. Brown, Lottie Harris, E, E. Pugh,
Grace Steward, Leslie Freeman, J.
Loulx Johnson, Spencer . Wilitume,
Ethel Watts, Baby Munir” Rossiter.
Ed Tatum, ‘Pinkle. Walker, Harry
Tate, Mary Bates, Maxle & George,
Helen ‘8. Atten, Ralph Brown, Kittle
Brown. Anite “Wilkins, C. Jackson,
B, Granata, Mme. Fulrfix, Robert
L. Edmonds,’ Frank’ & Dennie, Char-
He Mart, Mable Bowhannon, John
Mason, Gertrude Collins, Mary Link,
William Pugh, Salem Tutt Whitney,
Allen & Stokes, Kid Thomas, George
P, Moore, Dad Howard, Sonny Brown,
Freddy Lajoy, Lulu Whidby, Clarence
Dotson, Wilifé Juckson, Emma Jonn-
son, A. P, Potts. Esther Bizeou,
Billie Bradford, Henry Gang dines,
Hugh ‘turner, Panella Jackson. Mose
Robert C. Burke, T. S. Grice, Dudley
& Dudley, James F. Godman, ida
Berry. .
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
[Rochester, N. ¥., Post-Expross)
The, constantly recurring rumor} those, who saw “In Dahomey," “Al
that Charles S. Gilpin, the actor who} sinia," “Bandanna Land” and ©
is to appear in “The Emperor Jones” | musical comedies of about 1900,
at the Lyecum for three days com-|tiamy had a rival in Ernest Ho
mencing Monday night, Feb, 6. has] who played for years at Ham
been offered a chance t6 play Othello] stein's Victoria, billing “himself
In London with Mrs, Patrick Camp-| the “unbleached American."
hell “ag Deslemona, recalls the Ne-| In 1916 Robert Edmond Jc
gro who did play the Moor In Lon-| scento artist, estabiished with the
don “and other European | capitats|ot Smily Hangood, his Colored P
with Ellen ‘Tree ay Desdemona. Histers. Ridgely “Torrence, one of
name was ira Aldredge and he was] few American playwrights who |
a Maryland Negro. After the usual] seen the dramatic in the Negro,
Stage experience of his Kind in this|him nls “Rider of Dreams,” a ¥)
country he went to London and was| sympathetle comedy; “Granny
taken up by Edmun Kean, who later| mee," a tragedy of voodoo, and
brought Rim back to Amieriea. An) “Simon, the Cyrentan,” a dram:
attempt to play In Baltimore met| the Negro slave who played suc
With & compicte failure and disap-|curfous part in the story of Ch
pwinted and chagrined Aldredge re-|Jouey gathers his players from |
Uurned to London for good. | it was| York's Negro quarters. “The pla
then he appeared In the Shokespear-| of Opat Cooper and Alex Rogers
ean role and met, With gtcat success|long be remembered.
4
as ay
. . n
a
ee |
nD
yy.
in every city in Europe. It is sald he
represented himself as a Senepalose.
His daughter, Montagu Ring, still re-
sides In London and {s a musician
and composer of note.
‘The Negro actor seems to havé
found his best expression in_ this
country heretofore in minstreisy_ and
the like. Callender’ Original Geor-
gia minstrels in the ‘70s had Charles
Frohman in their box office in a
Brooklyn theater. Many Colored
companies were put out in song and
dance plecea by such white man-
agers as Sam T. Jack and Bob Ish-
am. “The Smart Set,” 2 famous Col-
ored organization, ‘stilt tours the
country. Rosamond Johnson and
Bob Cole were a talented pair ot
composers who wrote "The Bamboo
Tree” for the Mask and Wig club of
the University of Pennsylvania, Bert
Wiliams still holds forth as the pre-
eminent comedian of his day and the
memory of him in his association with
Walker fs still fresh in the minds of
: CHICAGO'S CLASSIEST
Ss unset Cafe PLEASURE PALACE
Corner Thirty-fifth Street and Calumet Avenue
. Birthplace and Home of Jazzaway Jazzcopation
___ Birthplace and Home of Jazzaway Jazzcopaiion __
New Entertainment Each Week Patan Wah aug 7 7 ay aN
Best of CHINESE and “CLEVER ae
AMERICAN DISHES FRANKIE JAXON S 5
of Attnntle Cy, aad His oy
All Styles and Kinds Joeraway Tunels 2
oe MAE OLDEN N Bor
ALL TAXI AND can Lines YLADELL, BRO er”
LEAD TO THE SUNSET — CATHERINE .
———— ELLISON
BERTHA RICKS
Your evening of pleasure Is not racy artiste Man o° War wi
complete withoura visit to Cal. “orien! Ohne to
Omer Avenue and 3th ‘Street ‘Can yortent that iineun? —- FRANNIE JAXOW
/Dance by CARL DICKERSON’S “SNAPPY” ORCHESTRA
-RIFAS & FOX, Proprietors, BUDDY MILLER, Manager
PICKFORD THEATE
35th Street and Michigan Avenue
PICKFORD SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Selected Photoplays of Class
0. C. HAMMOND OWRND VENDOME THEATERS.
thoso who saw “In Dahomey," “Abya-
sinia," "Bandana Land” and other
musical comedies of about 1990, Wil-
Hams had a rival In Ernest Hogun,
who played for years at Hammer-
sicin’s Victoria, billing himselt as
the “unbleached American."
Ta 1916. Robert Exmond Jones,
seonte urtist, established with the ald
of Emily Hdngood, hls Colored Play
ers. Ridgely ‘Torrence, one of, the
few American playwrights who have
seen the dramatic In the Negro, gave
him hig “Rider of Dreams,” a richly
sympathetle comedy; “Granny Mau-
mee," a tragedy of voodoo, and hiy
“Sinton, tho Cyrenian,” a drama of
the Negro slaye who played such a
curious part in the story of Christ.
Jones gathers his players trom New
York's Negro quarters. ‘The playing
of Opal Cooper and Alex Rogers will
Tong be remembered,
Masterly work ts being done atong
dramatie lines by Howard university,
in Washington, D. C, In thiy Negro
university of about 1.600 students, a
dramatic department equal to that of
Prof, Baker at Harvard, may be
found. ‘The department 1s in charge
of Montgomery Andrews, n graduate
of the university, aud includes com-
plete courses of the history of the
drama, dramatic technigue and play-
writing, acting and producing. Cleon
Throckmorton, technical director of
the Provincetown Players and de-
signer of the beautiful settings of
“The Emperor Jones.” has charge of
the classes In stage design. On Dec.
12 the Howard Players assisted by
the Howard University Glee club
gave a speclat program for the dele-
Fates to the conference on the {im-
ftation ef armaments. ‘The delogates
attended en masse and were inter-
ested Rreatly and entertained, Com.
positions of H. . Burlelgh, Cole:
Fidge ‘Taylor, Montagu Ring and
other, Negro ‘composcrs were given
aud Torrence’s play, “Simon, the
Cyrenian was staged. This’ per-
formance’ was repeated the following
Frida” afternoon in honor of Mr.
Glipin, who was unable to be pres-
ent af the night performance. ‘Tw
Howard students appear In support
of Gilpin in “The Emperor Jones.
fiernard Pryor as the witch doctor
and Matthew Shields, Jr, as Lem
oe cation cniel,
NEW SHOW
Billy King & Co, will have a brand
new show from beginning to end,
starting on Thursday of the present
week. “It will be replete with novel
features and from all reports shoul:
Be one of the finest entertainments
cver=presented at this nopular thea-
ter. ‘The engagement ends on Sunday
night,
—_—.__
GILPIN IN BOSTON
Charley Gilpin, in “The Emperor
Jones," in playing an indefinite en-
gagement at the Selwyn theater, Bos-
fon, Mass. The press notices are
Heht up to the usual fine standard.
2 DAYS ONLY—SATURDAY and SUNDAY, MARCH 11-12
SS
co eee THE CELEBRATED $50,000 COMEDIAN
est RO BEG
Pose eae ee ‘ ’
bon saee ‘SUNSHINE SAMMY’ MORRISON
cos ME MMS] © © IN HIS FIRST STARRING VEHICLE
ee pea |
| @ “THE PICKANINNY”
Boa ee
or ee. Me Pad a Re
als ae : REPLETE WITH
aC «JOY and PATHOS-LAUGHTER and TEARS
Ee. = ‘T WILL MAKE YOUR HEART THROB WITH PRIDE
ro "ALSO THE GREAT DRAMATIC PRODUCTION:
ie ra F. oS a =
(Sea “THE FORGOTTEN ”
ce te rN WOMAN
Re eed a — Kita
See ees) ee) BIG—5—ACTS
2 ee poe
MIG ee ans
Lee Fg ties THE BIGGEST AND BI
ae gis ae pya8 SHOW IN THE WORLD
DA sa Pia FOR THE MONEY!
. ee : ATTEND THE SUNDAY
RV ee GR MATINEE IF POSSIBLE
ALWAYS THE BEST IN ENTERTAINMENT ;
A \ INDIANA AVENUE AT 31ST STREET R
HAMMOND & SONS er.
VENDOME THEATER
1500 Comfortable Seats Mammoth Pipe Organ
a eel
ERSKINE TATE'S SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Garninueus. 2 selene = pincer SRERAE HEB icago
——————
s 3507 STATE STREET R
The Home of Great Features
Finest Pleture House Outside the Loop. Continuous, 2 P.M. te Midnight
E. M. WYER'S STATES ORCHESTRA
A -
°o STATE, £ NEAR 47TH STREET R
inert Equlpped Theater Outside the Laon. 1200 Roomy Senta
MUSIC BY THE BEST ORCHESTRA EVER ASSEMBLED
THE MOST POPULAR THEATER ON THE SOUTH SIDE
ee ot a re Lath Qhigu: Starke an 01866:
“TAAVELIN' ON”
A man hard as iron, who belleves
only in himaolf, a man who doesn't
even know his cwn name, but who
has the utmost confidence in his own
powers, in depicted by Willlam 8.
Mart in his new Paramount pleture,
‘Travelin’ On,” directed by Lambert
Hillyer, who’ ajso_ scenarlzed the
drama from Mr. Hart's own story.
“J, B—a attle brand—is what
the hero calls himself. lo rides into
town and makes everyone respect
him. Even the Itinerant preacher and
his beautiful wite learn to feel that
ho Is a,man among men, but they
eninot Induce him to admit his be-
Hef in a higher power than: himselt.
How finally he comes to reallza
that man alone cannot always con-
trol human events, how love softens
his heart and resuits in a great suc-
rifice—these things are told in a
drama that ts one of the most com-
pelling ever shown on the screen.
‘Ethel Grey ‘Terry 1s the wholesome
and lovely heroine, and there ure
many other fine actors in the cast.
Undoubtedly this is an ideal Western
drama of the type that has made Mr.
Hart famous and endeared him to
picture fans. ‘The picture comes to
the Vendome theater for three days,
commencing Monday noxt,
ae
VERY ILL
Mrs, H. Dudley, whose home {5
at 5237 State street, Chicago, I, {a
reported to be very ill, ‘The letter
containing this tnformation came
last week, too late for publication.
Ree ee ee ea
BRE Seg Slog
STATRS—Lone Star Ringer, two
days each of Two Minutes to Go and
‘Sake. Sunday, Queen of Sheba starts
By ames
ringe. Bucking the Line. Sunday, Law
ge begun
Se ak i cies te
ie
VENDOME—His Back Against the
Bee ieeareiee
OWL—Two Minutes to Go, Hell's
meee tad Nfl tg Hatt
one AE ne
patie stam, Tot, SOE ke
pttas seman, SOE, 3
pet dg ies tor aa anf. hs
iat eg ge rs
Woman’ und ‘Grand Larceny, Tol'able
acai
BLUES HITS
Paul L. Specht, leader of the Ad-
dison Hotel orchestra, Detroit, Mich.,
{s playing a few vaudeville engage-
is Blovios a tev caaertle nears:
by him to the Frances Clifford Mu-
sic Co., Chicago, states that “Arkan-
ale ay, Chea tates U5 ATH
mendous success and that his or-
spends, eer on hats Or
mechanicals.
“SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1922
“THE PIGKANINAY”
/"Sainmy Sunshine” at the Avenue
| Sunday—Star in Feature
| Sunshine Sarainy” Morrison, the
greatest of all juvenile motion picture
Stars, will. bo seen in his Seat steliar
Vehicle, “The. Pickaninng:" at the
Avenus’ theater on. Saturday -and
Sunday, This is sald to be the
sreateat production from every views
point in which the famous Ute
Comedian has ever worked, it is 3
Seream from start to finish, with a
few pathetic spots-whlch are bound
to make sou alt up and take notice.
‘There will also br the real feature,
“the Forgotten Woman.” on the bid,
as well av five aplendid. big-time
Vaudeville wets, Tt'is advisable (oF
thoso who ean to attend the Sunday
matinees as Sunday night 1s bopnd
to bring large crowds.
ee eas
FILM CO, ADDRESSES
Root Productions Corp. 1:6 West 46th
strecy, New Fork, Xe" Yer Micheaux
Elina Corp.” 628 ‘South Dearborn attest.
Ee Esreeal avenue, Los angeles, Cal:
General avenue, Loz angeles, Cats
Beinwood wets Core SIs North
Bien street, Baltimore, i.e Fite Ple=
fuss’ Con “abot Cottage Grove avenue,
Ehieoge hs Angiater ‘Plecuree, a3
Suark ‘Bulge’ Kansas Chey, ‘Mos Lane
Siar Sc ESGor sis Dawson pureet, Sam
Antonio, ‘Poxas.
re
Joe Shettell_ and his Creole, Bronze
Revigws aro sitting the secek betwee
fee Srpieuni theaters; Galesburg an
Guicep iil” tho ace ne ow Shaft,
sam Davis, Fred Dayls, Dewey Jones,
fi” Brows, Chetle Kins, Slille” Dear
Se
THE PLACE TO SEE
“REAL” PICTURES
bear the Famous Allan Oren
a
FIRST CLASS PICTURES
CHANGED DAILY
————
‘310s STATE STREET
SELECTED PHOTOPLAYS
CHANGED DAILY,
‘Benlamin, Turner, Musical ireetar
rn EE — —————— a, a's
Mil AC
= , MING DIRECT FROM THE LO¢
= THE PICTURE YOU HAVE WAITED FOR! [pune nmzer rron me 10
= " 3: ’ WILLIAM FOX Presents “8 ¥ ;
= A_STUPENDOUS SPECTACLE of 66 ‘ 99 THE SUPREME MOMENT
= LOVE and INTRIGUE in the COURT i L THE LIFE OF A GREAT RU
= of the WISEST KING IN HISTORY AND A BEAUTIFUL QU
= THE TRUE’STORY OF QUEEN OF SHEBA AND KING SOLOMO
= THE LOVE ROMANCE OF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL WOMAN THE WORLD HAS EVER KNOWN (mm mmmrremnnee———
=|ONE WEEK HERE: rnceo wn cor. | ONE WEEK HERE
= | oun, Mon, Tues, wep, THURS. ERU cae GAT. | COURS SEAL DOME NOTICE! cEOUSNESS oF Two | SUN» MON. TUES, WED. THURS, FRI. and SA
= * UV MARCH 12, 13, 14015, 16, 17 and 18 TRIUMPHED OVER A} owing to ENORMOUS RENTAL PRICE OF THIS | GEOUSNESS OF TWO MARCH 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18
= eee 06 ease PASSION WHICH PRODUCTION, ADMISSION WILL BE GREAT KINGDOMS € P.M. TO MIDNIGHT
2|STATES_ THEATER | Sietenonos | . ADULTS 33 CENTS tareaceo wm |QOWL THEATER
= STROY THE WORLD'S INCLUDING TAX ——— aes STATE STREET
= S507 GTATE: STREET GREATEST LOVERS TENDER ROMANCE
eas asponnoguepuangopapaungnnygnagnpanngapaepangaanggpaag gan agagagnnaannpnacgangeaneaayeananaaragggangaggangngnntangarded gna gana gaQtpQAtGONGaTAROOROTATERORLOGROOORDRAGDEET TUREITEREDREVAEDRIGDOTIRADURETIIVERRRLOLTONVOQORUTRUDOOOCOREODELIGREDURUDEAULUDONILOLLOULANTUOHIGHLG
ee E
eee THE AT E Ree
NEW SHOW THURSDAY, MARCH 9th
BILLY KING’S
SUPREME VODVIL
PROGRAM
~ SCOTT-THOMAS-RAY BILLY KING & CO,
SSoeRN MANSTRELS NUnF SED
Nene DANGERS SHAMAYIC SOPRAND
SARAH_MARTIN DINKS-COX
ved Or THe “BevEse two WiKD WOMEN
HORDE’S INTERNATIONAL | BILLY KING 4 CO.
AEVIEW iN
SUPREME ENTERTAINERS | HUSGANDS—wives
aa DAVE PEYTON'S “JAZZ” BOYS
BRRORTANED NOS EET THE GRAND THEATER PATRONS
SATURDAY MATINEE 2:30 P. M.
neem eal gia SIE ESE 5 a RN
SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1822
TUL AGUUAUA UTTAR AAA A
z COMING DIRECT FRO
= A_STUPENDOUS SPEC
= LOVE and INTRIGUE int
= of the WISEST KING IN
2/ONE WEI
= | SUN. MON., TUES., V
= MARCH 12, 13
4 2P.M.
= | STATES.
i AMIVUUUUUU LUTE LULU
Beardless King Solomon in
“Queen of Sheba" Is
Cause of Talk
‘The beardless Fritz Lieber. playing
King Solomon in the William Fox
film’ spectacle “Queen of “Sheba,”
‘which comes {9 the Stites and Owl
theaters on Sunday for a one, week
run, has given rise to much discus-
slon whether Solomon wore a heard
or not. J. Gordon Edwards, director
of the picture, has received many
Iettera. ‘questioning , the historical
accuracy of Lieber's clean-shaven
countenance. :
“I have always pictured Solomen
with a beard,” wrote one man. “L
don't ‘know why, but it strikes, me
Utat he would Rave worn one”
‘To hi Mr. Edwards replied:
“Dore's . famous painting, ‘The
Judgment’ of Solomon,’ shows Solo-
inon beardiess, and’ indeed very
much like Fritz Licker in features,
We discussed this matter of a beard
for Solomon lon before we began to
make the pleture, and we found just
‘as many authorities against a beard
us for it." And as the modern {deal
of a hero-lover demands that he be
clean-shaven, we decided that the
Solomon of our picture, who is Tep-
resented as a king with an eye for
& beautiful woman, as he undoubted-
dy eas, should not be bearded.”
‘At_certain times ‘in history the
\peara, ‘has been held in bigh honor,
it there, fs no Tecord that it_was
so in the Ume of Solomon Solo-
Ynon’s father, David, took great stock
in beards, and when a heathen king
ut off the whiskers of David's am-
hhassadors, David declared war on the
spot, considering it a great Insult
fe mereifully gave tho ambassadors
permission to stay away from the
court until thelr beards were grown,
fo. that they’ might hide their
“shame.”
‘But it fe well known that Solomon
was not such a stickler for conven-
tion as his father had been. His
commerce with other nations con-
‘xtbuted to hia wisdom and broadened
his mind, beside making his kingdom
itch. ‘There 1s good reason to believe
‘that his intercourse with the other
‘nations may have given him the {dea
‘Of the clean-shaven warrior.
‘The Greek and Roman’ soldiers
wore no beards, for the reason that
halr on the face would have given
an enemy @ purchase hold in close
fighting, anda beardless face was
considered mot incompatible with
‘manly dignity, but on the contrary.
Ree comer for a. man of ection.
“MUTT AND JEFF”
satutt and Jor.” wagh an all-ta Ra;
fai Gh ‘Mended "vy "Baz Connor and
Sain Vavehners eames. to tho Avenue
UoPng tee af afarch 20. he show
Weuang ‘some erent pres, notlceny he
HStowing being’ from Bgnily nevenpaper
Tables We Nenarie gy where the
Tapany le inte
PEGE ahd ete" in Dopeite ahades
tt Gartooai ad Pisner ntanded
ois to ber atarted © weekra voyage a
UeSeuedia Thester taee mish
‘Por’ the Curio hunters the show, 8
ood’ one, It fa recommended to those
So age‘iured ot, seeing vaugevile, mu
Bed Soaedy ata wariceaue tm waiter fe
WSSiasee gf new ata versed on the fut
He Ridne!"s" auee it in'Kew Yeric
i ‘nlong in Kew Yar
Hom this conversation, in the Jovy
Teiween"ine’acin trough, Wwe didnt
RGEPS*Boot inunimtir Anvil Peparaing
2Shaparinoy af the ro anaes La which
the Gilored folk do the entering.
‘e“aaervea ‘aa. thourh an eartnauake
rested’ the aingioe of ‘halen Tiawieao,
EReeah erowrh the nay anete “were
Shecker-Searé plaudits for John Vaueh:
SRG and the aiminutive Pagar
Seager Clea,
TAG Ghd Tom" fe a traventy of the
punta comedy ip vo acta founded on
The edrusons of Hlaher, “Saw Boo Free
WesCegS Esa “AS itugvel, Soe Hes-
Tatand other metohern of the cant were
igpopnse favor the ehow in clean:
SoeTaR he atorésalds te went big Tesi
sige SOE
—-_—_
GOING FINE
Roy White's Stvllsh Steppers are
having ‘ine. sucenas’ in. the South.
Eiim Jim austin fe acting as. man=
ager of the aggregation. His ren-
didon ot “Wang Wang Biues™ on tho
trombone is a distinct hit. This week,
‘Mar theater, Shreveport, La.
en, Biragenars
Brown & Brown, the Whlelwind. Dan-
serra lavigne weeks a the Cap-
fernare playing tho week at
LETTER
FROM
EGYPT
: Seay ne Ae
Eire oes (gunn? yours of some
Ore tees (a enee yours of sor
months “ago. ‘0 doubt ere tong” be~
fore, thio sou have thought that We
Ine forgotten you, oF elsg We had got
tp Palesine way ‘and fad mot in mie,
Up withthe. Jews and. ‘Arabs “and
‘Mu Kot our “ates 10 go West, Ro.
‘We, are all In the land. of the Pharaohs
ina being wel carded by he Spine.
although wecanouid how be fy etn
Pateotine. “Sve signed a contract for
there. {0 have opened, ihe ist of De-
Comber, but, we found out afterwards
that we ‘bad ‘made a mistake incur
date here. Weare Stopping here Un:
yas, after which our movements
in be ncertainn We ape aending the
Edie fame an letier an album of vlews:
‘also’ some postcards which wo, hone
Pehpilgzee, Before, you read etter
in thar case you may, be put tn a bet:
ter frame of mind. We've been very busy
And we've been ‘writing tomorfow—the
Tomarow has just turmed up. Out
gkeuse te surety) tome exeure,, right
Encurk, “up te a tee aay apo. We fs
Been in “bar from b wrt, irom
3530 pom unin Za. m. in a’ danco
hail, dnavery often in weuween Works
ing ates.
‘Bye the uy, we've, read, tp the. Do:
Stee chime of iP the past summer and
they were ranning thelr shoes cockeyed
Shaking aeons Hers you, done, want
agente pel, foo. daten. ay can
Bist them wor ihe ground: It theres
Roe-any Wing around you, cin knock
them oft the ‘trees with chub.
‘By the: time wer Fench “homme, have
some chewings, a few drope of earsle
Sind a pipe full, it In" o'clock or iter
o-you Kaow, “all pro's want at least
ine houra to ‘Tecunerate, and when
wre do leave our virtuous couches there
Isinot much tirme before, it te the var,
‘You, must not lote sight oF the fact
unae Ungre vio ihe, Detender fo read and
a Wundle of reading ‘matter weekly to
fin in our overtime, gent by ove friend,
Cobb, Kansas city, Mo., Once or ties
Week necessity” Sompels ue to Ect a
Prove on aarlsy For’ instance: Bvery
Monday" ati2’ noon. we have to £0
Jo the captain'n offs for the salary.
Xo ‘necessity to ‘have a motor’ lorry
to cart it hemes cam stort Tt all tn the
hen Dhe'binch gets together by the
shen ‘the bunch gets together, bY. the
time they" get. dono ‘throwing thet
Belghe 'ABouf iy “hear ime" co ge
mange 5
We are having a glorious time at
present beer bela reduced 40, ner cent
WeerSil noe Rere inte on the thea
lucing propensities ef tho Esyptian
Rest, fies and mosauttocs, sumer It to
£83," maken ‘cold beer taste, real 600%.
in’bo/monguitocn” fg, We are goth ts
famble with ‘you rigke here, and that
that one of our skecters’ can put a
Heraey axester, auyen and “ght th the
iirst rounds. We bet you 4 big’ arpie
iG nul our morguitoce hava. a Fee
Seoming. feature, They tet Sou ‘know
Shon they are coming, You wil hear
Shes coming singing. i'm coming, Um
Soming, and my ead in bended ow.”
Shem they net muck into ‘Sou. Skeeter
Ret om a bed is not. much good. They
Ret on the fogr and clime up inside
Wize auckers, these skeeters,
Eoynt, ty Good, piace 10, prow fat
‘and‘lany. No one bute in more time at
Work than they cam posalbiy help. ‘Phe
only ones that have to. work overtime
‘Srlecd “io"ace How the ‘people sreteh
Prised ‘to ace. How tte ‘people atre
Themselves out before ‘cafes with hel
Clgaretten ana’ cold drinks: the women
Steins bad as the men. Owing to. the
Heat ales ana shettors, snytging, Yep
So" tor ‘comfort’ In. overlooked. Bust
fleas houses and officen ail glose irorm
Te (Protec for, lunch: bank are
Enis open irom, 6:30 to 12, and clo
S1 hotles, ana Fou ‘can take it trom
$3, there. aie more holidays, tn Eevee
Fibs ‘comes’ the “Bevptian ollante™s
Firat ‘com 3 Sena
Hair ‘nondred ‘ot them=benides having
pro, Christine and (orty-eleven Net
‘cure, Sultana birthday. | Pharaohs
Tieng and no, one knor'a ow any
fore birthdays and name dase. Thes
We have. the English Pronch, Syrian,
YWenlan “and: Jew holidays, AN “cates
dad Hrs are open from @ 8. i, to 9
fm One month every" wear thoy are
Shea, ait niet Bais Leino Yast
Rom, Henle ia called. Rarodany
Fou cin" es that’ there (9. plenty of
time for, 04 fo"Swerea: vourtelt from
Your penntes.
TAS Trev rote yon fm aut lat hat
since leaving. Atierica In Q8ts, wwe haves
Haveled neatly, two-tnires of the globe.
{aveled nearly two-thirds of the globe.
ao
wi
Seo eey ee Aeeree 208 ae
Sther places too, numerous, to mention,
Sere the ‘limic but. there Is something
SSouy Best that’ ts cnchnnting. mote
eppectallf Me being Heroin 1a, ai
wash the iferenée in appearance at
that’ tme" and now. ty" something. like
What Adantie City Tooked Su years ag9
we ew “York Clg" the present. “All
Egypt, ts deitentrol, but Care. is an
cacention, “Sit "fa, Pmore aiverting
front one’s bad thoughts, more romantic
or exhilarating than to, go ut inthe
Sountry and fe nile ne aha ertes
‘ha look over the fields at, the farmers
orking? CZ halt hous wale feo any
bart of the (own and you are i the
Bouncy, ‘and thera arose many Mla-
torleal places to wilt: ‘Phe church and
place, where, Chat nid for suo. years
fo the gulde espa): the Holy tree une
der “when ne Virgin “Mary” rented
When “ane fed into Egynis the, Vitein
Nelly the palace wnere "a. shiek iived
With Mie wo wives, He is" dead. Je
Has Icky enough to take. Mis. nerial
Aight before buttoned-up blouses came
Into fashlon, and a hundfed more places
Yovace. One of the greatest Is. where
Moses’ was" found in the. bullruahes
Werhace peen here, Many times
Toming. noon and. night. We have
Riwasae'scen “the ‘buliruahes Sut m9
Sones. stave each ume we went it ns
his’ day off. “Mark ‘Twain wrote: “See
Raples and dio.” If be had como hers
he Would have written: “Seo Beypt and
lige forever" Werte, been’ opiten
Across ‘the, Bridge of Sighs at VEnice,
Ad shave vecn in the dungeon “where
Lora ‘Byron siege. one mien cand. ‘his
Rafe turned cron Wo order to get an 1a.
Spitation “IF he had, come to. best
FR souid have got sal Thee ineptration
Re ‘wanted and samo to spare. ANY
fone wanting inspiration’ need only. to
fool, ‘out the window=-mare especially
In’the native quarters, If not, Wait for
full moon, HigRE to Go out to. the
Byramids and ‘take avcouple of boutles
Efibeer, candwiches, some dowdcops in
small bots and & pipe and tobacco.
‘After having chew and'n-garsie ight
Gp sind ie Gown en the wand, look at
Efe Nights’ einkiing dn ube tae-dintant
yi ear the dogs basing and Neat
the boktmen ‘singing. if Uhere sno
Inspiration. forthcoming, ‘then | your
faee ts Ropelenn, en passant, If the
Sphina® frontispiece’ pn’ Defender Is "a
eopy et our Spins Mt itust: have been
tho’ Sphinx ‘when she ‘was a young
Bin, “The old lady "doesn't toox Hike
Baas. nav. “the Nook hows at thoveh
Sack Johnson, oF some of the same i
had. thelr traning. quarters thers. tnd
Dractleed on her nose: ‘Or fe mas” be
She, pearing se. many loving ‘couples
fishing “under her shadow vowing
that they "had never loved. or been
Klssed. beforo, haw caused part of her
Rose to fail oft tn disgust. "Whichover
Say Ie ig sane has only halt of her
Seenter lett. Fou aro wade dotigrs. ta
Athen youean ‘stand or lie goven inthe
shadow of the Sphing and ‘kid Sourset
{hat you've never broken any’ of tho
Ten Commaniments. Sou ‘know Sou
Rave, but your leave ft,go at that.
"We've mentioned we'Ge a bar Fo, look
after ‘that "caters, “only “to soldiers
When we get the Irish troops in. (tl:
Says and Saturdatay and” they pet
Sales, UBey “get aclighetlly, Misrious
when they’ ~£ woolly’ horses to. curry.
Ieis'a wonder wo have not heen mashed
% ‘bite, but somehow or other ‘ail_the
Soldiers seem to like us. “We've never
hnd'‘any’ bother, ‘although. theve “have
Been, taien ‘whieh the whole tot, would
Sevachting “everyone, “aversone's ea
Now tnen. 1 Je vou now how we
are Juctiag’ We have, ape mixed, Up
With tour Greeks. We afe caltea the
Bevis Jazz Band." and itis devi
Hebe "enougn. Ht sou heard. “un “no
oubt “would. say ‘that. Wis Santante
majesty wan the fullng apleit. “Yen, we
re all the name implles., We are seven
persons and we ean kick lip. more
Ralietojan. than anyother eeven Jaze
Bands put tonether. ‘We have a. big
Concert grand ‘plano, with, double. forse
Pedais-on Tt big” drum, small drum,
Rio “aud drums, \two" tamboutines,
Sones Whistle, bein, ator, elaxonn
motor horn, vcistagnets, a screecher
thorteneck banjo, trombone, a whiss-a:
Mansy amd_ to make things" more bing=
ing we've @ big thy tamlourine with 20
Sikn init, each JInk double, the. alze
ofa trade’ dollar, “This. instrument. of
fortore ty manipulated by belo banged
Onthe wide of'@ chair, Tf you could
Sais Near us when we get down oF Up te
do Sup extemporancous sini, Yon mauld
Say. 'iord, love ® duck.” "We have
enough “iniuruments {it we ‘ean call
fhem® thuriy) to Al out an” orchestra.
There ie sone talk of by going to Greece
ext aummicr, on. tour” We have’ een
To Grecee ‘nd ‘We know just how Ie is
there ‘and how much ‘tho Greeks Wil
Mand before, they get Wise. if we do
fe ad they Turk come ile we. re
in Grecee, Lard have mercy Upon Us.
‘pills Farrell ls rexponsible for thls
Jazz atuft. Before he stuck Eeypt We
‘Shiy Toad about ass, Now cates and
Silanes have Gqurht on. You have
nig’ to-pet @ couple of drums, 2 bit of
Moga tor bangcon anda penny swhlstte
and there Sou are det them tell H)
Base “Bata” Farrell is" very"mucn fn
Wldence here ‘working with his" Sass
Tetthe ‘towne ihe, Shepsray and. the
the town, the Shepards and. the
Serairainis: "Ho haa only 1,300 persone
to contend, with on New Year's eve, it
fou hear teil of hima. buying up Cairo
Zon berstrorised. "Weare" playing In
suigancing palace, Why it hese “fret
Galied patuce, an it Js th a back yard
Of a garden, we don’t know. “What we
26 Snow is'that it is on its way" toa
Palace and will surely’ be ‘some. tt all
the plant are carried out. Te-has been
Inu coverea ‘up. Up to a short, time
ago it ‘was in the open air, “Te ivasa
Efand. signe at night, to tee the “moon
Enining” through the branches of green
treca'$o fect high for & background. =
A fine letter arrived from Bojangles
Bil Robinson, who. Is a_ headiined
aingle on the Orpheum tima, There
were a. few" pictorial clippings. In-
closed, showing “Bo” making a hike
through the streots of San Francisco
dlongaide ‘af Georse N. Brown, the
Worlds champion. heel and”, too
Nalker,, You just can't keep old “Bo-
Jangies" quien The famous. per-
former will play to weeks in Los
Angeles ‘beginning Sunday.
peeling, Suncey
BOUTTE DEAD
George Boutte, late of Boutte &
Carter, dled in Buflato, N.Y. on
Siaren’'and was buried ‘on March 6.
‘An effort was made by his widow to
ineate 0, D. Carter. ‘She would ke
to hear from him tinmediately. Ad-
Gress 24 Vino street, Buffalo, N.Y.
pecs
A ay
tone Saati Se bon
OLD “BOo"
BOUTTE DEAD
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GENERAL PHONOGRAPH CORPORATION, 25 West 45th Street, New York City
Famous Aggregation Opens at
the Grand Theater
on Monday
A girl sat in the Greon Cat facing
tho future without a vestige of hope.
She had’ fought the battle of Ife,
striven to remain’ decont, and faced
the one thing she had dreaded, ‘The
game of living, in the sphere in which
she had been cast, way tlehtentng its
Ret about her. She faced the choice
Qt cling Ino ending. everything.
She made her decision. It was the
Jatter. “Then the man came loto her
ite. "A man from the other world
‘she’ had dreamed about. " He offered
jher everything, Af sho would pormalt
Jim £0 perfori® an operation, remoy-
ing a pressure on her brain. He
ranted fo do thie in ofder to prove to
humanity ‘that thousands’ of bad
women could be made good. Thou-
sands of vultures transformed into
proper home-makors.
‘Thavs the starting point of “Tho
Good. Little Bad Gir" the big. sue-
jgesa that 1s to be presented at the
Grand theater by the Dunbar Players
ail next Week. A. famous critic who
saw the original performance, wrote
afterwards: “t's the most intensely
Buran, ‘splendidly dramatic, conslt-
jently funny stage offering that I can
remember io years," And it 1s. the
combination of these elements. that
jhas made it the great play that It ts
One moment the audience tg rocking
In its chairs with Iaughter, "Tho next
‘a tear trembles on the eyeitd or there
fea situation so tense that your hands
Etlp the arms of the chair in which
You are sitting.
Ot course Youll, laugh, love, and
ory with Ceclly Griffin, You'll tearn
{to Jove and admire Dr. Courtland.
‘You'll chuckle and rear at the quaint
humor and loge of Stella and Mac-
Gumber. You'll be fearful of the ends
that the smooth, suave, crafty Plegle
may reach. There len't a character
In the play but will prove of Interest
{@ you.” And the love story will reach
jevery heart because it's a real love
story.
I'm be directed by Clyde“Arm-
strong and in the cast will be Evelyn
Pree, Susie Sutton, Allce Goreas,
Lionét Menagas, J. Lawrence Criner,
Gharles Olden, Charles Moore, Arthur
Ray and Clarence Hews, It will be the
firstrot a serles of high-class pres-
entations, all of which have been se-
Teeted swith the most. discriminating
care. This company has had avery
Successful rip Bast, having played
Philadelphia, Washington, Newnort
News, Richmond and Baltimore with
splendid success, Lovers of drama
Will find more than ordinary eatis-
faction in the offerings of the Dun-
‘oon Sincere.
W. H. CULP DEAD
‘William H. Culp, formerly of
the Standard quartet and Cor. sev-
eral years with the Dudley Smart
Bet Show, died of pneumonia at
the Cook ‘County hospital, Chicago,
after a brief illness on’ Feb, 2%.
He was born In Nashville, Tenn, and
his Chicago home wns at 2421 West
Lake street. He belonged to the {a-
sonie order, being a member of Ce-
lestint Lodge No, 80. He ts: survived
by tis widow and two children, two
sisters and three brothers, onc of the
Tatter, Albert W., being a fesident of
Chicago, Interment was made at
Mt, Greenwood cemetery.
2
BROTHER KILLED
Azbery Ea:l, brother of Earl of
Earl & Lazzo, 0 years of age and
‘an employee of the Southern rall-
road, was killed by a switch engine
at Dothan, Ala., on Feb. 28. At the
time of the accident tho “deceased
was living at the home of his mother,
Mra. Caroline Earl, 710 East Burde-
‘abow street, Dothan.
ICKEY’ ae eee
Music by a REAL Jazz Band
=/NN= CHICKENand FISH
DINNERS Featured
Wickey Thomas, Prop. CALL UP, BEFORE, STARTING
3889 Penna. Ave, Indiana Harbor, Ind. 3~ grey rom asin. shrevt
Telephone INDIANA HARBOR 1496 Ask ‘Tas! Driver“ KNOWS
Popular Comedy Team Werke All
the Year Around
When James Earl and Petrona
Lazro “doubled” as a turn four years
ago, it brought as clever a dancer
and ns nifty a character worker as
could be found in a long hunt to-
gether. Earl, who 1s recognized as
a comedlun of much more than ordl-
nary ability, was born at Dothan,
Ala, and was for many yeass con-
pected with the ‘O'Brien Georgia
Minstrots. He was Known as Origl-
nal Alabama Sitek and played an ex-
trome end. He later uid a single tn
vatideville and it has been said of
hin that he never knew the mean-
Ing of the words “lay off." "He has
‘a pleasing tenor voice, but dancing Is
Be th
cy, ing ad
Palit
2 as
NB
his forte. Miss Lazzo !s one of the
famous Lazzo Sisters, of whom there
are three, and all in the show game.
She Is a native of Key West, Fla, and
has heen in the, business, Using het
orn language, “umteen years." She
was a member of the Williams. &
Walker, ‘company’ and also trnvele
with Bert Murphy's — ogsregation
Sidney Perrin’s.. “Polley Players,
Billy Johnson's “Creole Belles,” Lew
Peyton and many others, She is at
exceptionally good singing and danc.
ing comedienne and ts famous for
her character work, this latter cov-
gring “the widest angle, Cohen '&
Dusey are the agents for the act
The present list of contracts, “how-
ever, Were Ilned up by Carrell’s office
Mali will always redeh them if ad-
dressed to the Chicago Defender.
Jim Stevens, late of the team of Cook
g-"stevens fy ith owel now He hae
an accident. breaking nee
white playing New Beltuin, Conn. Nal
will reach, him at 4% 2," tala ‘street
we ie sow work. a,
dACK JOHNSON
Jack Johnson ts known the world
over as the ex-heavywelght cham-
pion, ‘but there are few who know
that’ the intmitable Jack could eusily
make a comfortable living as a dnre-
devil auto race driver, ‘said R. E.
Wortham, who ‘personally. euper-
vised the’ direction of Jack Johnson
In hig first starring vehicle for the
movies, “or His Mother's Sake.”
Me. Wortham and Johnson wore. in
Phitadelphia and Johnson, in his
anxiety to get baek to the studlos in
New Jersey, asked Mr, Wortham to
step into his racing Franklin, As
soon ag they were seated, Jack, in the
face of a blinding slect storm, opened
up and, according to Wortham, that
machine must have gone at an 80-
mile clip. "I just held my breath,”
sald his director, “and it was hard
enough holding on to that, for John
son forgot all about traiite. regula-
tlons and the driving slect. That ma-
chine must have had Invisible wings,
for it practically Mew under Jonn-
son's steering, My hair stood on end
all through the trip and I, for onc,
want it emphatically understood that
while [like Jack Johnson, he will
never again entice moe to’ take an
auto ride with hima."
‘When Jack was asked what he
thought of the trip, ho just smifed
good naturedly and answered that It
Was only one of those, emersency
trips that had to be made, and that
he did Mot realize that he was colns
at the fast rate described by’ Mr.
Wortham. Whon further interviewed
about his racing abilities, the former
{dol of the prize ring sald that he al-
ways admired the daredevil racers
who took racing. as a matter of
couree, and that he hoped some day
to show the world what real racing
is, “*Right now,” sald Johason, “I am
too busy appearing in the movies to
do anything else, but the time will
Soon come when the World will know
mie as more than the former world’s
heavywelght champion.”
‘Jack will be seen In the great, ple-
ture, "For His Mother's Sake,"- on
Saturday of the Present week at the
States theater, Final chance to see
‘this feature.
; INJURED
Charles Moore of the Dunbar Play
‘ers, which company opens an engage-
{ent atthe Grand theater on sion-
day, tried to catch a flying street
jean’ ‘Three stitenes on. the. frontal
fone: of ‘his coco -and a allon oF
Sprudel oll with which to anoint his
Toft wrist. upon ‘which he. skidded
Gharles ‘declares that a man. must
fave ‘a ‘fine. constitution to buck
Against a Stato street car when it's in
motion, “You sald ft, Charles,
‘Word has arrived that Jim Stevens
of the tear of Stevens & Towels did
S'Sroale down a fight of stairs while
playing an engagement at the Palace
Theater, New Britain Conn. during
the Weel of Feb. 18, ‘Result, torn
Igaments in the right leg, necessttat-
Ing a long fayofe. “Jim sends rerards
forall friends and saya that mail wil
Tach him at 45 Bast. sist street
apt 45, New York, N. X. ‘That Gon-
necticut brew must be a whang. Jim,
Page Seve
ee a a a SL Sl aA EE SA EGTA =
| MOST SENSATIONAL PICTURE OF THE YEAR §
| me. > WILLIAM S. |
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Pat ;
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He Had Neither Name Nor Friends— b
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( So He Always Kept f
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TRAVELIN’ ON’
| "Till He Hit the Worst Town in the West— |
| AND THEN—— '
Come and See 5
| ‘The. Greatest Fighting-Love Picture Hart Ever Made i
MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, March 13-14-15
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AGE EIGHT
GOY HERNDON'S NEWS
I will no doubt be surprised to know that Tuba, Okla., is representing the publicist field in full blast and the some known fighters have an appalachian heisman Langford. It is ary Wills Kid Norfolk the most experienced fighters area a drawing card in ginnamassim on the corner of Detroit by the streets, is it a headquarters for the colored price fight. Britt Sims gym equipped with all Cov Herndon
Coy Herndon
HOWARD THEATER
Dudley-Murray Theatrical Corporation Takes Over Famous Playhouse
Washington, D. C. - A deal was consummated last late week whereby the Howard theater, one of the most famous theaters in the city, turned over to the theatrical corporation headed by S. H. Dudley and William Murray. This is one of the most important business made in years and it places in the hands of S. H. Dudley one of the finest theaters in this section of country. The theater is deeply interested in in half dozen houses. He is a prominent official of the Theater Owners' Booking Association and is largely interested in the preferred sections of the city. The policy of the Howard, under its new management, will be announced
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Dear Gen. Tony, Reforming is a sort of disease. All of us are more or less affected by malnutrition, contagious malnutrition and malnutrition's feature of the disease is that those who suffer most are those not affected by malnutrition, their soliditude that deserves one's sympathy. We our husbands, our children, our neighbors and sometimes ourselves. Just making the other fellow over to suit ourselves, to conform with our ideas explained, to conform with our liquors, to conform with our liquors, censored our pictures, dictated our sports, catalogued our reading, educates, and now they are trying to abolish our liquors. Reformers seem to be convinced, and now all reform must come from within. It is like conversion, one must reform before conversion is possible. The best reformers can do is to outlaw certain individuals without that individual's consent. We now claim that jazz is iniquitous. That it is the main cause of the present moral decline among young people, that it is the main cause to abolish jazz. Dr. P. O'Connell, one of this country's most brilliant music inspirers, We jazz dispensers say, let the jazz alone and minister to
But there is one thing that should be cut out, and that is the "blues." Not the Blues, the Cabaret Blues, nor the dance hall blues, but the hard luck, hard work, hard being in the past year. We have been so busy singing the blues that we have not set out and do a little extra hustling, or practice a stricter economy, or do a little deeper thinking, or try to open up their inferences, to excuse preoccupation and to disguise their non-desire to work. All we have our ups and downs. It is the follow who keeps eternally striving; we all have our ups and downs. His shoulders have touched the mat; who bounces up with renewed vigor and strength, who has quickened up the quickest and stay up the longest. The blues are written in a minor strain, and upon the spirit. We cannot sit to sing the hard time blues and enjoy a season of prosperity, the common people would start a song of prosperity all business would receive the common people would start a song of darkness of depression would be dispelled before the golden-throated harlingen of all business would receive the dainty violets to walken from their winter's slumber.
Wartfield, of Sims & Wartfield, is in
side of his mother, who is seriously ill
in bed. He is the son of Benton
Benton, Mahl. Mahl will poach him
1016 Irish street, at 4500
1016 Irish street, at 4500
Chicago, Illinois
Motion Picture News
By U. Ireland Thomas
There are many in the small town of Dugasulah, La. One is a man who has been watching that several attempts were made to burn down this Colored man's business. While he was watching his theater the other night his residence was made and doing a good business. It was me that in its still running his business and I am hoping that he will be able to any more trouble.
Sammy Morrison has a good part in Both Tarkington's famous "Tendon." Practically every younger student at the college at the time the picture was made was summoned by the producer and it was done. Sammy was one of the first selected. Among the others selected were prepared with Mary Pickford in "Little Lord Fauntleroy." Baby Peggy Montgomery comedies, and other popular movie youngsters.
The evidence will be the title of the first release of The Cotton Blossom Film Corporation. It will be made in and around San Antonio, Tex. from Warner Bros. films written from Motion Picture Co. as follows: "I wish to make a film, a collection of the 100 Cavaliers, which you have sent us. The biography, filming and arrangement."
Public Life, Pittsburgh, Kan.; I do not know where I am, but movies other than in a news report of the Lincoln Motion Picture Co. I agree that you make a race horse out of a gentleman you mention is not an actor. He is a real estate dealer. You cannot make a Race horse out of a Talktative, Tampa, Fl. If you can make a race horse out of your fortune is assured. Write to the producing companies and enclose照片, me, if you have written me the truth.
STAGE DOINGS
Jimmy Marshall writes that mail will
be delivered to York, N. Y. He is just finishing up
a long route. Mail sent, last week,
Joyner & Foster, very busy, are
spilling the week between Danville,
Anniezle Richardson, wire artist, is
reselling this week. He opens at the
theater, New Orleans, LA, , next
Monday.
The Mamie Smith Co. is playing the Pennsylvania and having fine success. Norma Thomas' Modern Cocktail is at the St. Paul, Minn. The Olmsted Orchestra, St. Paul, Minn. The George Minstrels are playing Bowie, Chevonne and Casper, Wyo. this week. The Chevonne and Casper, Wyo. this week, fine business at all stands. This week they are dividing between Huntington and Blenfeld, Wa. It is the K, and K, Affiliated Books. The line-up has Harrington and Hope, Cross and Jackson. George Bell and the great Mamie. Tocoy Street, New York, N. Y. W. 135th street, New York, N. Y.
Pa. and the Washburn, Chester Pa.
Young & Peel are organizing a tent
girl dance in the city of Pa. Pa. they want to hear from chorus
girls and jazz band workers.
They want to sing in the
classic city of Hagerstown, Md. She
from Green and Queen Price.
Watts & Stinggold, with a large lodge
the week between Centralia and Allon.
COAST DOPE
I begagine in my hip, How's
How's your hip, in the Windy City?
Mam, am I, I suppose, in the
Windy City?
it, it is still run-out this way. The way they made such an impression on the folks on the street that they are booked for a return data exactly the same as they played here at it the Philharmonic which just goes to show that, this is to town, for ministral shows you see them show you or they wouldn't be able to double down. They are bringing and a new last act.
made such an impression on the fans. Lies that they are booked for these returns, each one week a foul they played here on the monte Auditorium which just goes to show city is a "regular town" for minstrel a boy you must have a show on or they wouldn't be a show on "Ragtime" Billi Yucker "Doubled back here soon They are bringing a new first part and a new last act.
Eli Reynolds, a popular movie artist of this city, after making in his career the promise that he will go all the way to Chicago to spend it. He will leave in June to take a job in New York that he intends visiting his sister, who has a restaurant down in Georgia."
Thurston Briggs and Buddy Brown are still at the British Armed Forces station for some time to come. This is an act that never falls to "get em". The popstar, the popular movie star of this city, has returned to start work on his latest Lincoln Film Co. movie, which picture he will be featured. He has covered every city of any size in the United States from Los Angeles several months ago, and "areamre" that he is glad to get back to "willow" of the original movie in town where "a man for a" that. Buck & Bubbles are do here next week. Nazzro & Co. at the Orpheum Theater. I hear that Harvey's Greater Minneapolis closed on Feb. 11. Is it a fact? I hope.
Now that spring is approaching, the
snow will be melting. The demand will be
even greater than ever for types of 'ebony
wood' that will be needed. The
der to be prepared for any and all
emergencies. Billbrew Quartette has
been held over at Graumann's Million
Dollar Store. That looks good for one of our
quartettes to be held over in a house like
Sense and Nonsense
"SIMMS THE GUN"
Give me the guy who throws a smile,
And always ships you on the back,
And always throws the white
Your heart could crack.
When other men are want to groan,
Give me the guy whose gentle voice
pulses the white tone,
Jes, he's my cliché.
Regards to all friends. Wish you all
mere write, everybody. Country, with
mere write, everybody.
PEARL TELLS IT
Los Angeles, Cal.
Dear Tony, J. M. Busy Minstrels closed, but not on account of bad business. The show made money and I was happy. J. Culligan and Walter Pugh. Manager Culligan backed out; reason unknown to buy his interest and assume all debts. Just before pay-day a mystery night, this burglar overlooked watches, chains and other valuable rescues. He then went to the with a diamond stud, went in the office and took the manager's pants with all the company's money. Rescued, he went to the safe. A few days later manager disappears; not even seen him. Persevered. A burglar. Anyway, I hope I got my diamond stud back. I know the three guys. Walter Pugh is dead. Funny things happen out West. Yours truly.
PEARL MOPPIN.
Al. G. Fields Minstrels, with Doe Blair in front, are away down South, Jacksonville, Fla., St. Augustine and Jacksonville, Fla.
Hooten & Hooten, who played an engaged role in the play, are stopping at 3299 State street, Chicago, Ill.
Hooten & Hooten is slowly recovering and is still connected with the James Crescent Players. Her address is 1136 W. 12th Street, Chicago, Ill.
Frank D. Parker states that mall will reach him at 107 Foote street. New York, N.Y.
Carter & Cornish, going fine on the Palace Theater, are sitting on the bridge between Edmondson and Great Falls, Mont.
Kell, Kell, going along fine, with fury in the cast, is splitting the week between the Palace Theater, Norfolk, and Colonial Portsmouth, N.Y.
Siren, Siren, going along things up in the South, are at the Aldridge Theater, Oklahoma City, O.C.
Cones & Crumble, real comedians, are splitting the week between the Palatine, Jamestown, N. Y.
Moss & Frye, champion heavyweight Orpheus Theater, De Nolles, Iowa.
Glen & Jenkins, legitimate big time Orpheus Theater, De Nolles, Iowa.
Miller & Anthony, properly placed in New York, N. Y.
Miller & Anthony, properly placed in New York, N. Y.
Grand Open House, Philadelphia, Pa.
stars are at the Columbia Theater, St
ars are at the Cleveland Route if you have it.
Ibera Springs Ohio.
Earl & Lazzo, character artists, are
Wilkace, and Rockford, ill.
and they are
dividing the week between St.
Thomas and London, Canada.
Adams, Saunders & Robinson, a real
tourist, will be at Vancouver at
Avenue B, C. this week.
Moore & Fields are dividing the week Hollyvoke and Springfield, Mass. Sequit. Norma Thomas' Modern Cocktail will be at the Ornmeh Theater, St. Paul, MN. Wilson & Wilson, with Gentleman Cole, between Peoria and Crawfordsville, Ind. J. B. Norton writes that he lost his car accident, and he is not a cent fire. He is in need of assistance and would like to hear from his friends. Address Box 456, Bradenton, Pa. Nuggle and Evie Johnson are in New York. He will be back from their friends in and out. Address 1402 Harvell street, booked until the sun shines on both sides of the street, at Billings, Mont. Fantances will reach him if addressed to the Lyric Theater, New Orleans, La. this week. He will be at the dervan, will open in Jacksonville on May 1. Odell Robinson will be at Billings and Jim Anderson, write.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
TENNESSEE
Kingsport, Tenn
Winchester, Tenn.
We (THE MID-CITY REALTY CO. Gary, Ind.
Have Tried to Show You (CHICAGO DEFENDER READERS)
"The Handwriting on the Wall"
If You Fail to Read It or Heed It
Don't Blame Us!
Since reporting to you that the National Tube Company, a $25,000,000 concern, will soon break ground in GARY, INDIANA, and put about three thousand men to work constructing their plant, the National Spring Products Company has decided to locate in Gary and are now installing machinery and equipment. This means many more millions invested and hundreds of new jobs for men and women. Add to this the big steel industries now employing thousands and you will readily see that
Gary, Ind. The Wonder City
Is Booming
Of course, if you are satisfied where you are with living conditions; if the public schools, churches, theaters, parks, restaurants, etc., are open to you; if you have political and economic rights—in fact, if you enjoy every right enjoyed by any other citizen, we would not suggest your coming to
Gary, Indiana
Except
For the fact that Gary is the fastest growing city in the world and you owe it to yourself and to your family to get the most out of life. Real estate in a live city is always a good investment—and unquestionably Gary is a live city. We are in a position to help you help yourself. You can secure from us choice building lots near a street car line as low as $475. And you can make a first payment as low as $25, balance in small monthly installments. Or we can sell you a home, flat or store building in any part of the city on terms equally as advantageous.
THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY—WRITE TODAY FOR FULL PARTICULARS
Mid-City Realty Co.
2201-2203 BROADWAY
GARY, INDIANA
Friday for St. Louis, Mo. Miss Outina Miller left last week for Matisse, with her aunt, Mrs. Emma. High-tower. Mr. and Mrs. Hanna of Chat-tower. Mr. and Mrs. Hanna of the death of their brother. While here they were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hanna, and attended the sheibiville wale, but last week attend the funeral of her husband. Nathan Hanna. Miss Alta Gillespie of here, is visiting relatives here this week.
Dyeraburg, Tenn.
Miss Frances Harris, 1135 Sampson avenue is seriously with bronchial cancer, and with the bronchial Tancel of Union City is the guest of the University of Chicago at Street Hall, Hailey Littleton and Buster McPadden of St. Louis, Mo., were in attendance. The clementine Club was entertained at the home of Mrs. Alex. Saunders, Thomas Clementine of Dyer was called to the home of Mrs. Richard Clayton brought the remains of her husband home from Springfield, Ohio. He was accidentally killed in a steel plant where he was ducted at McCalla's Chapel. C Church Sunday afternoon, Mrs. Mattea Clementine of Cagou, ill, after spending two weeks at the Whitehite, K. P. Brewer, Sr. has gone to Rayhill, La., with Mr. Polly Clementine of work he followed at Menglewood.
5ayangah, Tenn.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dixon are the proud parents of a kid son who arrived last week from M-Klinner, better known as "Pat," who Will Tatum last Monday. Tatum was on vacation, but died Tuesday morning. Will was the second youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. Dixon, and Irwin of Memphis are spending a few days with relatives and friends.
WEST VIRGINIA
Sisteryllie, W. Va.
Farmville, Va.
Miss Annie Reid has been ill, but is able to be out again. Mrs. Jannie is in town, and Mrs. Jennifer will ill while in Lancaster S. Fitzgerald's store. The doctor was summoned her home, Mrs. Martha M. Harris of Prospect is spending some time with her husband, continues to improve. Miss Rachel Greene of Sulphur Springs spent Sat. morning at the mock conference given at the First Baptist church by Rev. Leffert was in town. Her friends delightfully entertained her Tuesday night at a card party. Mrs.
Natural Bridge, Va. spent Friday night in this city attending the Y. M. C. A. nadoah, Va. passed through this city Thursday morning on route to New York City, where this city was called to Shenadah, Va. Saturday on account of illness. The Chicago Defender is on sale at J. E. B. Warner, in Shenadah, and nursing and Saturday morning. Mrs. Ia. Morris, who has been ill, is improving, and, who has been ill, is convalescent.
YOU CAN NOW
RU-CO
IN THE 15c SIZE BO
RU-CO IS QUARANTEED
TO RELIEVE
Malaria
Chills and Fever
Bad Breath
Headache
Earache
Pain Between the Blood Disorders
Shoulders
Weakness
Faintness
Four-Stomach
Constipation
Loss of Nature
Rheumatism
Infamed or Irritated
Kidneys
Ringing in the Ear
Loss of Appetite
Lumbag
Pellagra
Neuralgia
Sciatica
Kidney and Bladder
Trouble
The Clyde Col
Mobilitee. The
Geopleome: To
RU-CO shall
ask in bed
two days if I
want to
knowing of it
RU-CO.
The Clyde Col
Mobilitee. The
Geopleome: To
RU-CO shall
ask in bed
two days if I
want to
knowing of it
RU-CO.
N NOW BUY
U-CO
5c SIZE BOTTLE
Webber Falls, Okla.
The Clyde Collins Company.
Memphis, Tenn.
Greetings.
YOU CAN NOW BUY RU-CO IN THE 15c SIZE BOTTLE
I want to tell you what your neighbor wants me to do. I ask her to sit in bed for more than two months when I get a battle of RCGD. In a room with a bed, you may get the eighth bottles of RCGD, as eighth of my neighbors' bottles of RCGD, as eighth of my wife's bottles of RCGD. Sheenfully.
PEOPLE SAY
The Clyde Collins Company, Inc., Memphis, Tenn.
The Clyde Collins Company, Inc., Memphis, Tenn.
Gentleman, let me day for you when your representative, Mr. Blume, gave me a sample dose of RUCO. I had been suficient by agents in the world as though it would develop into Satellite Threatening me the one dose that was very few more doses and today feel like a schoolboy.
Representative, W. G. SPAIN.
IF YOU WANT TO MAKE BIG MONEY, WRITE FOR OUR AGENTS' PROPOSITION TODAY
The latest site option of RUCO are selling so far our agents can hardly keep them in stock. Over 7,200 bottles were sold last week. You can make big money selling RUCO and we will apply you with plenty of cash in which you can get the territory in which you live in given to someone else.
The CLYDE COLLINS C
MEMPHIS, TENN.
ARDUX
Will Make Your Hair
Straight and Soft
COLLINS COMPANY
MEMPHIS, TENN.
B
Try a few applications of ARDUX
and watch the effect—simply rub in
a little and brush before retiring. It
will make you youthful of your friends.
It will make you attractive to
and instigate and preserve your hair.
If your dealer does not now carry
ARDUX, send us 60c and we will
mail you a jar.
AUGUST GUENTHER
WE OWN AND OPERATE OUR OWN
EXPERT CLEANERS
OF LADIES' AND GENTS' GARMS
CARPETS AND DRAPER
Office 316-18 East Thirty-fifth
AUTO SERVICE PHONE
TELEPHONES—DOUGLAS 5445
AUTO 74-190
CHARLES S. JACK
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
FINEST EQUIPPED UNDER
ESTABLISHMENT IN AMERICA
3315-17 State Street CHICAGO
QUENTHER & SON
OPERATE OUR OWN PLANTS
ERT CLEANERS
GENTS' CARMENTS, RUGS
AND DRAPERIES
East Thirty-fifth Street
PHONE DOUGLAS 3274
8445
74-190
DAY AND NIGHT
SERVICE
S. S. JACKSON
AL DIRECTOR
QUIPPED UNDERTAKING
MENT IN AMERICA
CHICAGO ILLINOIS
Use EX DONE for Beautiful Hair
EXPERT CLEANERS OF LADIES' AND CENTS' CARMENTS, RUGS CARPETS AND DRAPERIES
THE TRUMPER OF THE CHEMISTRY ART
This scientific preparation makes kinks, course, obsolete hair straight and silky; promotes healthy hair; enhances the appearance of eyebrows and eyelashes. Gives the hair that charm, fascination and luxuriousness so you can wear it all day. Gives your hair troubles. Garnitured hardness and satisfactory. Order your box TODAY and enjoy the benefits. Box postpaid. Booklet on hair and Beauty Culture, contains valuable secrets and formulae. MARK TRAIN LABORATORS No. 100, Hasselblad Me.
Buana Vista, Va.
OR MONEY BACK
READ WHAT THESE PEOPLE SAY
The Lyle Colby College, Memphis, Tex.
The Lyle Colby College, Inc., Memphis, Tex.
Gentriment: I used daily for me when your
representative, Mr. Blurrens, gave me a
meal with Hilary trouble and it looked
fitting with Hilary trouble and it looked
fitting. The one dose came very
near making me well. I have taken a
meal with Hilary trouble and I
schoolboy. Respectfully.
THERE is no longer any reason to regret that your hair is not straight, soft, smooth and lustrous. ARDUX—a new preparation of pure ingredient—is bringing thousands of men and women the great charm of straight, shining hair, free from dandruff.
TALMAGE MANUFACTURING CO.
719 N. Walk St. Chicago, IL
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SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1922
LOUISIANA
Batterson LA
Shreveport La.
R. W. WASHINGTON.
PHIL. E. WEINRICH.
RU-CO
BASIC CLEANER
CLEANING
CLEANING
CLEANING
CLOTH CLEANER CO., LTD.
HUGE NEEDS PP,
IVER'S WARNING
TO EM ORKERS
New York, March 10.—What was
charaterived us one of tue mort Is
Doriant events ig the history of out
Froup: and the ‘Natlonal Association
{or the Advancement of Colored co:
Pie Was the antclyaching masa mcet-
{hg at Town nah Svedeatday” cveniog
Mirch "2" ac which Representative
Leonldas' C2 ‘Dyer of Missouri. rpons
20 of the anti-lynehing bill as the
Prinelpal speaker, Moorteld Stores
president of the N, Ava Cy Py wis
hhas been one of our stanchert friends
presided. ““Etve ‘undead persons of
Toth races were prasent.
‘Under the auspices of the assocla-
ton ‘the ‘meeting was held for the
urpore of emeriaiaing the United
Ruates Senate, urging tio enact the
Dyer bilt-that. was’ passed in. the
Houre.ot Representatives Jan, 26 by
a sole of 388 to 48, Because oft
Teoent Passage by the House and
Mie azouiment fo, dhat, direction i
At wte heat ‘every effort ia being
Hut forth to nccure the sanction ot the
Senatorial bods President Harding
Has promlecd hie nignattre. to. the
An aulllyachlog memortal, among
whose: alghere were governors, mate
Sra. blahops and solfege.prosigents,
Waa read anda vote taken tat be
sent To ‘the Senate, “Dee Wee B
Dubois, the ‘Arm speaker ‘related
any" incidents “and harrowing ‘ex
pariencey of ha tips below the Be.
rome, Cogcluding his remarks, Dr
Dubois said of tyaching: “it ts Up
Ig’ ake people to wee that this crise,
thetworst ot ob civlztios fe wiped
‘James Weldon Jonaton, executive
secretary of tho association, told of
‘ho actual work of the Nv" AT EP
In°ts fight against Tynching and of
he! faans invertigations isto "mop
murders “and” atrocities. perpetrated
Yoon our people. “Summing up there
facts, ‘fie ayerrea: "We cannot cal
{hie a eheiized country ‘unt Te gives
fatal protection to weak aad stFonr
‘Sha cgmmon Justice 10. black and
Shite” "Ar, Johnson stated that the
Savoelaiga hap pent $3800, in Ta 1
{ours caropatgn against. Iynehiae.
YSSELs0-ot wien hos been contrib:
ited by sir. Storey? ang that $100,000
could he. expended. now in obe Seat
ecause use Ashe te harder.” Should
the Senate fall to pass the Dyer bil,
he declared, we will not have an OP:
ortunlty again In years to fight “At
ere distriuuted, foom whe & lange
were ‘whlch w lane
Summ was realized,
"The, principal speaker of the. eve:
ning. Representative Le Co Dyer, a3
inueauced and prevented amid a huge
oration. ‘Sir Dyer urged the People
towuppori the NA. ACG. Pe and ald
‘reak on th alpnitieance ot the pase
Tage of the bill before March 4 bext
Sear, 9 the majority of the person
Bel ‘of tho. pew Congress maybe
Bgalaat st.’ Since the Heepublicans are
‘Dow In power. he intends to held tern
Fepansinie for the enactment of the
ogiagion, he conunued,
‘During the course of hie epecch he
codcavored to impress gh tis ear
ere the necessity of unl eo.
Speration. ale, ‘Dyer asaalied. Sur
Spathetie atuitude towards the conde
ion of tous Sacaher Routh ee are
In’ Constant. danger of mob violence,
‘Bid winwented tat we eee Dusy. od
‘Write to our senators telling thers We
are expecting them to carry out thele
Picasen. Inasmuch an the Oil was f=
Trodiiced ,carit"in' the ‘easton, hone
seit not ie taken. ag an excuse, and
there wil ne. Bo. chance for Alibuys.
tering, ald ‘dhe representative. “if
they to" Re tell tem to took up rule
Locking over the, special guests
seated on, ‘the platform, Ste.- Dyer
iia tino nove ean reachery
‘Neve:prerent Observing that only. sie
‘archos were represented, he assert=
saat Any’ Colored pretcher in he
purple ‘cho Ya ot preaching. on” thn
Bi ouphe te. be. drives out of ‘the
Pulpit ie” went on to ‘raise, our
People for thelr loyalty to the coun=
Terris ‘ie, resent’ war, ‘mestiontng
Mow our hose fousne “and. dled “in
Order to Kelp thelr Teace ang hopteaz
Syiso. dole that thelr people weuld
ie etter treated.
"in conclusion the Missourtid em-
mnunied the fact that we should gel
nove pep. fata. us and. stop sitting
around wailing for soracbouy to do
Something. for ua. He wants no re~
Nard for what the Ras dove! he has
hot recetved @ dollar or penny; and
thers is nothing se can do for Nit.
‘Won ‘George W, Wickersham, for-
mer, & attorney Reneral, who was
Fehedied to spade was unable to at
fend because Bf flinese. A telegram
as reselved from Senator, Willam
Gilect stating. that Jegisiauve mate
fern of greatest Importance at Wash-
fers of greatest Ienportiince ot ee
“ MOTHER ZION CHURCH
soe ge aie Mette eet
Serena aren ties
manne eee Gee
Hiss Pe dats inky eae
Be, dt erence
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Sane hans eras
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capa S rae gra gO
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inal 8 Jay oh Oi
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Rene iene
be
ENJOY LECTURE ON AFRICA
Suge LecTune on Armes
bee eda iy Beet ts
Bere aat Ue Sealy
Hey Pas gear ea
primar eeeemare
MORE ATTRACTIVE
USE QUINADE
geist acs content
apeaeseepateostnge
picks Sr eaelane dats
SERRE oa asta
went Aine ea at
dee ea nematic ast
eRe Laer
Btiiane wa aetined onas
contatning ingredients which Are cal’
spines herdisi raya
Savarese tamer aan
Reiser
Ly enamel
crake es Sail
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ERs gene Sats Guna
cof Matstone Seb Suede
wi senet curs Be
Rice nerstcaes eae
Sie, Se caer Beets
Ril gen ‘thera to, you, Seeby. Di
For Reliable and Prozyt
Wiles Cc ad Seg oie
X. GORDON, 31. W, 135i S
ua lon frat
TO THE PUBLIC
wig Yas eas ah a
aay Zoi Se eres
geigataen Gala oe
Fee etc colt
Ee eee cent
heed aed cre pont one
Bence a Sie
ores oe eens
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Reteier aay arr!
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sence of imagen S.°¥, ‘woke quests
sete cea Say sea
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rely OK akewond, J. vst
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Mra Ide W. of Jersey City,
Noe ha returned name alte Wiaties
Nigtivce hs ena ie ited
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Bee ang TN” dear Wie seas
SE" water © Grate, 488 ancock
auect, Brooklyn Soietiathed “never
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tes oarenhe” ab reas, Va
ihre. Pearl E. Gibson, 35 West 3tet
sine, Snintoed the’ valance dak
sieges ‘Beem, are a
See ea nanos Petit mane
nied aes Se party’ tonlghe fees)
sh Satta Praia ts Moana
i ge ee, Taha AS et
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deanecr letae Clinton, man
age ihe ten mee, ats
RE eagete natant
“prince B Bawocds. vice principal of
aibrnssae indueitint school of Manassa
SE le leah oe fae
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atee, Wearhinagm, co west 00 sree
irs, Douce a Freeman, 35: Went 13ist
street, paraident of the Ladiee Ald eo.
Se distanercice im entenatnet
Be Ee Ce wey sem
site ae ton 19 ine lon rene
street. was host to
CHAUFFEURS TO HOLD
~ _5TH ANNUAL RECEPTION
rosinn Nay Sten 0st
het Sal ica ies
ess UE SRL Ream
ers ee Re eal a
hs Shriya
Ep Rena eae Pans
Betis cttad penastien ty tie
SU Pe ge and hat eee
SES Se ada he
SES is Fe cand
fet cade acai ee
teseeay commie ers
BORE Sa atte
Scere als ite
pees SL
INOLGTED FOR MURDER
seo rere Sn aeaes Nar
Sieh Wake Pata Na
get We ae eh
Bite Te wlan EP Te
die Heart ath ae
seed acaets aoe oe
Sees i det Gate
Saat Oe tO
Bs Bie ale Sena
EPS alee
eae sae
rc ae
eae Tag eee yeas eae,
Because: Preto eicue 65 een:
Tosta ‘streets and lua Scott, 248" Weet 2361
diets Sica shemage ase Wet Et
George Sensny, ut ‘Want htt. tert god
Het omecisey Ren Tinth ners tale
Liege Ss ta Sects cal Sarr A
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Bik eure Rene new ‘Soe!
BOWS Minot ah NenMntt treet ota
ASHE Santor Meg Suds nate uate
Teese ey Ria Sie eet ase Haas
Hierro then Ge Stet tka Hf chene
Lea ec cee, ED mea” Whites
32 Wis ett inet int
Mowe ta ste tae Sting Gres 3 Wet
Hats eld Sie lhe NE? ae BEE
HER MSGS Basra Uae Figg ea at
Ee Gitar lier 30 wear sere
Ste eke ae Weak He SSE
Kost detta Sie Died hint
Etats ha Wet Bie ete tad tat
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Mane yah West Say Aiea ants
BNE, oval taik tc Anta,
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secr: Gate intend, isha wert Hatt
Crm gett ear Sebago As
Diets Shue arty Wo tals tee
Shi Meet jaiet beree ase Sterearet Leki
Sane 3, aaa
Brooklyn List
Jo Coane. 21.621 Valen eet, and
wiebbaCeseees i A Utes st 3
Uittanae is este SN a a
wares, SS SE'ST eta mane
HSA tad ceaceine Wana’ BG
Siseas attaee trues hateer: 2 oh
Webetea tse Gat ine Wels,
Srnitine face” Meyaata oro. kee
set tas seein Sita $8
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adres? aickigies, Uiravin, 3, Si totes
finer ofsraa "iil, 2S Gateat aad" Wit
tena Hageman, sis Gate aeete Wh
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Bt. So urtioh iret Mattber ‘Desay.
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BAe: Wllce Sarper, 4 Wn ee
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BONS God Dimes SR ae Wegt fot eet:
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Sincets yiieteer tant ts aig Wong 365k aaa
WHITE MINISTER
FNS AMERICA
ON MOB MURDER
| New, York, March 10—Dr. Charles
FE. Jofferson’ (waite), pastor of the
Broadway tabernacle, threw a broad:
‘side inte the enemies of the Dyer
fanti-tynehing Bilt Ia an. interesting
Address ‘at the Metropolitan ‘Baptist
church, 226th street aud Soventh ave-
hue, the Keer. W. W, Brown, pastor.
‘Tiniraday evening. The Tev, Dr, Jet~
ferson took as his subject, “God and
the Ant-Lynchiog” DUll” and” told
how these atrocities Were hurting the
prestige of real Amuericans In Europe,
Tnjpart he said:
“Kothing” in America has, brought
more disgrace upon Its people In the
G3e° of have across, the excan than
the: fynehing “atrocities “committed
against the Negro Race tn this coun
Uy. We Americans do not appear a5
Me think. We do tn the opinions, of
Evropeans. We are exhibiting too
much of our atlunal conectt.” The
Upper classes in, Burope take ttle
Interest {n-us, and, in most eases, look
down on us. “It is the eemmon people
‘of the foreism countries that can force
Seo the benefits of corning i better
iiverthoods hut: the average man ta
Borope is surprised at the lynching
practices of eertaia scetlons of thls
country.”
"The testing was presided over by
the Tov, A. C. Garner, pastor Of the
Grace. Congregational ‘church, and
Was held in the interest of te Easter
Tully’ bullding fund to erect an edi
fice for hls enurch,
WAR VETS ARE OPPOSED
TO COL. LITTLE'S IDEA
Drockiyn, X- 3. arch 1 Ser-
gerne Otate A sonits Doge No. tat, ¥.
EW. This Gist made te none an
eee igh sheys are. appored 16, Cok
‘Antur Litue’s lacs gn the bonus prop:
Bilion spat torch. bs" hin at Se
Siri af a churchy New York Cit,
“Tue ‘mujortty of the members of this
Pfau Fipeeera’= ands gan of hem
saw servite directly under Colonel 1t-
fie witen ho ean captalh commanding
Company, F, “Colonel biter We acre
ieee hares
Tesjee tbe Bonin either fista or te
Rai’ However Seepeagt Sesar "X
Stn, Pomp Se Get ies $5" i
Fetora ae deciivas' favoring Ore hon
hii now pening in'the atste Sad
onal congress
=
CAINE IS INDICTED FOR
MURDER OF JOHNSON
Xow York, starch 10—Wilam
Gale, who It fe alleged shot am
Killed’ Charies Jonnwon, Janitor, 16
West, oth stvect, Yan’ &, the, same
ey nat Becetens ier apd Back
ey were murdered, in am attempt
fob “con Beton a. Font colecta,
‘as Tnoleted by the grand Jury Fr
day for murder tn the frst deere
“Arralgned before Judge ‘Nulnuces
In general. sessions, Caine pleaded
ot ult an ray commted to the
‘Tombs te avalt lal. "At the tne 0
Hig. arrest “Calne. was” shot" by “the
Pollcenan. in question, and he Mn-
Bored bettcen life and death for c2¥-
Sral eaye tn the Traviem hospital.
LOANS CHURCH $5500
Sew York, Starch 10—<A8 © reoule of
ane Soean uae AP a eation Inman
Bopces AS cteditdec‘o Rantae“Rempie
{55 Went Sadnasrcet, une. chur has
heen advance. a. fan of 48200 by the
Fag WoW arnm peor of Metre
Pepe. Rew. Htrown. father of the, Tem-
ple pasta hea Alteran
Beet deserted'"in “the petition sas
leat and el eldare te 2 take
2a Ws, ieee ise
Sent tnterent ¢hrguet the erlaston of
Suetice Sonn Fort Tue haideaer when
detapics aot with a costoot frontage
oceuples a lot with a 20-foot frontag
| WILL LET “LIKKER" ALONE
Riverhead, [1 March 10.—Willtam
BANS ede ee Fst ebay
setts Seer chiara" aortas
ESET nung es eens
to serve ate, moni, in fal, "WW lars
See dings oleae
Beinn aed tele, owe he
Rost ont ott tthe ae ae
EE, "ota need aie i
En
DUNBAR CONMUNITY CENTER
saat, Sp ta yen Tae ee
anes utile hOb ty as, ho
Bassa! ShimganeSote eure
BEST fot Reon tas face rea
Heat Wr gaye Eas
Fri My SMe het ct
HSE pr Signy gl ae
gresned he retin. mses, ES
ERP aR AT REA mene
DISCHARGE PRIGoNER
“xept age sash Jeosemen Barer
Dehedeia iat eects tape:
ESSN cee sae
Het gone aad at
rei Jeans Neo acitte
Dee EBetenatuch et React
Sinha? suse Wien CAs
ESR ar Saat ce
BRON Bath tats, Sa ae
Toa Mh Sa Sel dt
Fe acasial a Sad il ss
BE?
ee
FORM NEW CLUB"
Broan See pte OT Aen
Ree ame eS a Poaet
SERRE CE SI lie
Exe th meri itine Slt
of Upper Brooklyn. Ernest N. Tarrin-
Seay Bae sae
MRS? citar nian Trae
rer, “and. S. by Shivers, eergeanteat-
ns
seams enee canton eermmmenen!
New Tork, March 10—Joha 2. Kerr,
inventor of & mall catcher, recenUy Fe:
occas ore, mete
Rovernment for tho disposition of his
pit Baer ase arce
Ese tialis cevanaceees ©
Read This—
atary tents ana
lit ane
eat aoe ic oy
Senet ne,
ee eta Ook
Bhat aie
ae ae
oe, Me ies
Soul ied!
‘Taken from .
“ ”
‘The Burden,
ae, Great rll aut
ot
ae Aaa oe
money
inl
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
BROO! VN} PORTO RICAN SENATO
| one re HOME AFTER VISIT 1
By T. A. PATRICK. | eoNSe aX orks, Maren 10.
The Monday Night Club was snter-
aloe, “Monday ght Gy "sah, Pater
Sona hin Tenidence,av8 Eiberey ave
Wiliam ike Fletcher, 1744 Fultgn
Fete, Beoulions stsfiea “ens
iksicin #Geady evening.
statics iting sa aL ts
‘improved ‘atter w seriods itness 0
three eat .
“Kudam Fhomnten, 4% Yan Sicken ave;
Tikal Jee yi igtagese at
Wattan Walier J. Stevens sg. New
Fork Guten: ramacted whe, det
aan we ee Boum ty presidents
How located fn ite now -Readguatiery
seed Ride avenser
‘rhe Brookttn clubs Nawe ceased thelr
activites aurine: the Lenten: season
‘Rovere Thomas fs. Yery nick at, the
hme’ nis dauentze, Hi Liberty ate
"Fe Athiaza Place Glee Club wil ere
‘Sord‘Baitist ehureh: Sunday uftergoon
ihder dhe direction of Meer Daisy une
‘irs. Josephine Pinyon, Holmes, for:
er’ eperal secretary ot the. Axhland
Bisco PTW, Ec epoke se ahe Sun
ag Seater services of tho,
cag mec, hed JaSalem Tanti
BOW. G."A. proceamm. way. dlsciaard
‘tea lot among the. Founger girs of
anisea,“Tutkgs ere riade hy Mra. oh
Srook, Area" Warningvon pind Mise Ta
Of thé board of manngerfent. also, Sten
Glagmer and sflas Suck of the nat
"Fhe committee for tho sarong anna
ET Sapan le Eat tet
Tact orueatay” evening’ tocpiin for, the
Ghent. Stra BO Cole is chairman. Miso
Sine dies ‘wut be tn" charge of the
Sirs Fannte Boone, 23 Lexington ave-
ayers ranula tom a-aevere attack
of ASTintercnting pracraes was elven by
pease as Te ang
Betatt? Seenante SB Pook ae, und
Muster Eashis. Shani) at siloum Tee
Selcrlng hur nents even Ev
Tin Christian ‘reader: heath P. Harall
fon, locationtls ‘Frederiek 1. ‘onan
Si “Seswese "Winsor Esnanesnearean
Eeadera in” costumer: Muriel heroes
Sicitinies planiat” Serta Tate alley
Reprano? Emma 'E. Grace, Hanis, a4
Bincorin "Grace, vie asd a
Pere, Re ations torments of 17
Dean “eteiets awho tidy heen severely
Bethy tine Count? Regi lao
eh is Sethe ge bate
ac Hoty inns uotiee church ErIany
Benin’. "Strat others Joined the
Shehe Hampton Institute quartet, of
yeeros ea Thad
PREPS cctitsalet’ Mepiteopat hunch
Gite, Sinkay hist
"The wanders Meta club met. a the
TORS. ttendag event Such uot
eet. coertanta nee trameactel.
Fn, ew vRK LS ,
ANEWSIES
COLUMN
Cs hi
Xow Fore, March 10.—Aa a repute of
an Spica covoperaten shot bo
Rewalos, we Sto printing the names of
Uienine hove who. were One gueats of
iss fender’ nyt "Saturday™ matinee
Foeersinee, of Bbunte Aang” Site
oven, Hagar, Taplor, dawiett White
Winn, Sided alse Reginald Sones
ai ifolin Proctor i
nrenine oat boys Reet tara’ be
EEsehing them the vale of makin and
raving fponey, “Our satan Tr ciilea~
{on depends’ upon. our coming. genera
Hen, “therdtore owes must teagn the
Founesters te" Mure "on dolias ana
Eonie Many a tilfoaire Stared a8
WerRéve a treat in etore each wee,
for ue “Recents nd ‘Vor “and, Bis
Teed? Latent “Reena "Agee for
{fata ‘Beit of Ren Wnieehirsée
SHOTS (FOLLOW ARGUMENT
ac” att, Sane RWI, pe
Grand “Geandeloccene. stores. te Wen
Taree Satsrany ‘atternogn, Cine
nent Wilts: w shiping ees in the
ore, shot Robert Henn’ another cme
HShS, the thine foosing sh eres
*Adlitauns nitempted to math hi, set~
anvay’ by darting vorough ihe reat of tvs
Sac giing chase” Vive hours later
Sas Caughe within a block anda halt
BE theatgee uy beetiten Frekbeyn ant
Hall Bnd taken te police hendawarzers:
Bhete ie, tae exid” that ‘he. sumer
WEE meent's Meental Uns erica
conditions
enave mi Punee GF CHOIR
aw York, Tarek lee
pldeg’ of the chile at qe evening nczv=
Re EAR ao ait lintor Bier Saye Cire
288 5F Se sein SOE” cure made 8
SMetoid shoseng. NSuhna Eheim "Bean
Tein Mtawent ae Geepee Unig, inate
tered perfectly the organ. which ix said
IPS PHfenca Wo eaeale “te ofisere
St tie ‘Senior Circle were instaing
Bee EE cooks” che pastor before
Reaching The ie liver Witson
BAER Spear ofthe evening.
seer od een
HAD STOLEN TWO SUITS
News Yori March 10-—On_ complaint
of Wlaot Wigonettumting ewe” otk
Glucilne eatGtshevene “ak SIs” Nae
AAusuee Bagene’ Andrews 0's, Cooke
‘eho ave ge adarems "Sa West “Ia8i
Bree ncae Seventh Siento Nae hei
Indo Ba eras pine having
Be malking out “of eWindoger'e. store
Mol Wot salt of Cather valued at
HO? which “he dsopped while ronnins
froin the owner
ESS
JANITOR MURDERED
New York, March 1O—Ritehle Grant
asa SS Wear seas, Greet
Sieh diled Foibretg” night ae he "wad
Weaving an ‘anarement in the, round
Hoomrfenere No had coicetcd 134 rent
Be°Gin" unknown "man.> hepa’ Ba:
ice"ai slayer Intenaed to" rai him,
BoE im hs chet they Tose’ s3ha t=
Bldca” dhe, $35 ho. nad Sunt collected,
EASralenaned Sof “the onge ere
Helencg, "in tne were, uth street
Satna” ‘No Seeente nee been made
se serese Save Sees
HELD FOR ROBBERY
Now York, March 10.—Sfentay Brown,
[22.204 West 13st street. was held 19,
Tetons tment hs, ae ai Se aes,
Hit robbing John Simore (white) of 1
Ei ogy surest’ Sinope cate the: meh
SeTUceatana the point se 2 euro:
Heved hima of $17 and @ fountain pen.
eee SH ge eno
SECOND JUNIOR PROMENADE
ew Fork March 10—The Cosmo
politan S2hbor af Shiconractts cave Re
Eecand junior gromenade at Niwa
Exang, Wedneciay’ evening, March
Pinal We’inege audiences Bes, Breet,
nan OUD. who has charge of the school,
Saeared ne adress
NR
ser LF. Sis Maat Je
ihe by tie “Satie, Shane Ataeet
SRR sibel att an
HES Aare eee ee
BS al Poti Oe Ta
aes :
ee
i qe Bevan
phigh Teed gees ate
Be aie wat Meese aoe
Grown: Me: crumn, ‘Tom Carters Wk,
Eee Umar Me aco
Haar oat dis
Sintec Gian
oizaseartatn pt
ee
ges Gree, Mem at
wegtersee Haute athe
Sart cori aa ses,
Tene ce aaa aa
what eal te
SEE Cattaee, Be
ariment, “Chicane Dafender, 2882 }
BE CHARMING: Beauties Are Made, Not Born!
USE GLORIA PREPARATIONS |
PATNI Reatt ne HEMET ee
CHAIN) AHS ese &
SINS, Fine a ere ee
qi SY ire prepared by beauty” apeciallnts:
CMEC MM) Welsh SS hala at
Care te svete!
ERIS cor erora mye gone teas te
PSSON Mim? ELSES tore Peete toy,
Ke y oes gyomta mak eres fa,
op The Secret RING "ecranss masse cae sie
Soca: CB) Ses BAe oe,
Y Tiiarete beau. AR) PHESUEB terme,
ful head of hair CY air sd Fate, 188 grows... ae
Gh Meh! cen A witiocehab aa eee a ae
% ened Gans Q) cide Sst wac!
posits ieee Ee ee
B “complexion. We ‘DER GLOREA Beyer for sel’
2 Gy Ca he
B seeders
eo ee
PAG fH DE ‘OEE. goons any) RARKtCaS
sarc OrEER-pon tira hacer EEL ETEACNTERING CO
PE cones aes
Renee ek. ep
SORE MUP 06 eee TEBE Re Ss RE
NUTSHELL VARIETY SALES CO.
fal orer Bop Go” “ae Seventh Avenne: NEW-ORICEITY
New York: March 10—Returniag
fo Porto tlco after visiting Washe
{ggton im thevinteren’ of wornery. of
the"istand, “Santiago, ‘Isiesias was
Elven, ‘according to the San. Sua
‘flutes, “the ‘greatest "eceptton ‘ever
defended a hote-coming Inner by
{cing finpsltonea tor Rip touthe
‘gleslas (ea. Porto ‘Rican senator
American Federation of Labor eran’
iter and executive ot the Porto Hoan
trade unon “He is leading tre gmt
zalhet monarchinty who would fe-
eStabllon their Ieesie” in the tain
fond he has aroused ‘Porto Hicans to
ihe danger controning therm.
‘Spon hy “arrival Nome, he was
rected, bs" delegations, Yromn every
Eke ‘ana Vintage of the taland. Great
rojetcing was nrevatent and the Blace
‘as decoratea for the occuslon. lales
sins was ilterauly catried though the
siesta the overs for whem
fos a rican tavorablo 10
the cause of Srganieed labor
a oc Sean’ Taber
meer ances ta noe
| NEW YORK CITY BRIEFS |
lg The Be meanest oe Bee Sess
Brak ade eee aia
eh ata emt ae
oe set ut eae, RO
SIPLSIEC HAIRS, pet waa
Bise Mohamed All, Bet, Me
torture Spoke “on “tart” ana "ihe
Mei Ene EER Sten
Ptah eatigt rah She
coher ae a OS
Sear rete
TARA oe Amat
sehtletel naa ane et
SkeriGe 2 ine Abaca
pene
Br Been Pecneretad, pi
oe tact at PRED a ae
Ear cee nce ot Bt
SERRE che Goth cage
Fens Oi ea a
Ser buranienti oll ya
ified ae tae Tae Ea
petits eteaiee ar at
Tee ceria tt tae
Soba Ui te et
ie ae cet tha pe
car i Bes epoch ee
Ee eeanerniea Whee k
Hee dinate is, EER
HEE eG ee Wek
Ee APS ES
i ieotnat tangs an ede
ghee coh eetas Re
Pere epaulets
ES Se, Ragin fen
Paredes Mierke
Pane ati Mt hy gy
ra ee uaa Ne
er RPGR Sag Hae
saay Sgn,
READERS URGED TO SIGN
FOR SUB POSTAL STATION
Hem in now a commercial center, and
tem ie now a commercial center, and
Community ‘service property tepres
ented tends to Increaco the value of
‘Sour property, we ask Fou. to co-
aperate with ws in our effort to place
a subepostal ttatton inthe center of
‘ur business istset, 36th strect and
Seventh or Lenox avenues. Harlem
Afforda at present oniy to stations
pisced thin Is blocks ofeach other
oth of which are weet of Eighth ave-
ruc populated: mostly by White peo:
Dies “Arn result we are. greatly in
fonivenienced and much valvable time
igtwasteg. Ae cam Rave this suns
Siation if sou wil co-operate. “Mil-we
ask ‘you to-do ty fo, wien: Your name
forte petition on this page aad e-
(Gen fo'us at once, "if Zou have any
fonds. sho want, form "send Us
{cir names and addrcssox
PETITION FOR SUB-POSTAL
STATION
We respectfully. petition Postmas-
ter fale Mi, Morgan to open a sub~
Howat “sadion ne 1asth, street and
gmox or Boventh avenue, Now Yop
Addrose ssssscsssgsssessarsveereetes
seaeasaaageeensense
| MOONLIGHT IN DIXIE
ow ops Sars 19 -"Stoonight,
phitland cas te "ize ora ei
Banat niamtauon atts preted by
Site Mondnee Sle of Saute Alene”
snhasemaletashantat ect
in ret) tomar tn the ha
exclusive society ‘Thursday, night. The
Sarg intet close cathe nabhe
Sled tothe Tu
OLD CITIZEN DIES
Nowburghy Ne, More 10-—Thin sity
ig OR Bachar He
Hee So fae dea OF Shalt GE
ron ai Tale hey. Wiliam,
FeBecite” fle Waa yes ol ana
Hig ‘aieStorg haat been fn Wewbarth
Bese aR Rtceee es be
| Newburgh. re
> dete SAaRn OAS amines
ow Tork, March 10--William I
Hunmbersy addresved a Tarre audience
at the -publle library: dg) Mendota
mireet. Thurrday evening: ‘Starch 2,,on
Ancient Atrigan clvilation.”” Dr
Carter Woodean of Washington, D.
editor of the Journal of Negro, stor
spoke a€ the meeting on Feb. 2%
we
aniston oy mae
New York, March 10-—Heary Suitt
oh Toca acres savannas
eked a one ane
sietsii f"ine “beatae tere
Shee haber Se Ror, wes
EES ae tate APs Eat
BS Skitaam ade
ine tee
TWO WOMEN ARRESTED
rey Yorks Maren SeStaenle Davis
agi Talat ah Mec ara
Ee TAR oa dette
Seu aE woth see Wal
deal Cec,
ue
oe
RELEASE” SPANIARD
ner oor aren Page, Ber
rau Set apaiish Par, Bet,
Bite ePatia gata Sete
See rat nara a a tn
Hear af agate! Noe
SSen ant GE Sapa Wa Oe
ctaiming
NEW YORK STATE NEWS
srvices Sunday. ‘The ite. Boyd, Mrs.
sevice Sanday; they sv. Biya, Sieg
Eee etal oth eae
aie mee, etka
cater’ Ae arte acs
Seo eae tia te:
ne ta ea ee
Ee eae ieee
So Ee
samen Sian fie
Seach hash et
Se ae oa atria et
SG greece ara
He LAR Se ee ea
ees Ae ae
somes ge galt Bea
neon Oe Sao
feo eet uee wane
roar fa amie
‘Ut Neran’ Fourth “avenue, ip very sfck.
ISSUE ti
ie DUR Raa
Ao he tas te
seagate ease
Sede Sees, ates tare
Hara, mah eine aii
BS Slagiediaat Ng eae
reuse tha a
sch Sea aha
(id Aa ae ee nee
eye Ao sate gee Stee
Seas sia chs pera
iat i ane Reta
Re Roe ay ey
seater Dsl nea eta
Sah ancy waoat wlaae mee
EL gt Sirs
Ebiec\e deuce iat ae
saratlis Sey ati, Wescre
Serena iat ae
Gr ShSit too ul res
ts Seat it tear Bak
Gramatta ose freee
Bee Paes MEN ht
BOL anal Maat
eae he aes Sat
Bote, Ue Pate
Sing’ Bods who has bee nick for zen
Surat ieee ash ae
Sey Rao si et
Ease eset aes
ional or ett eet
Beatie ea ese toe
eer anamea neers
She Sie 8 ac a, a
si lat OS Mea ald Ma
fe eta Natoma ah ach
Soose Mae ei eaah Bete
anes ica gi a Par
SSE hate Hie oh weet
ARES Sere ie toy
sueartnd ar deena
Brainerd ie nd
Hiatt bettie eo
She Sitod ates dan
oe one acta eBial
sey gat et mor
ait peas ee me
deeenaetate li a aa:
Eb Marie Gale Par
iad Seats eB
ath, le ted
Seer nk dada
Sie Meee Geteats ae
Sallccion to'itre. BoA, Jackron. The
Now York, March 10.—Harry Shep-
patent of Garden court, et St
eholas’ avenue, was arrested Sat~
urday’ in, his apartment, accuted of
Healing #80,00 worth of copper In-
goin from ly employer, the Balti.
fore Copper Smelting and. Rolling
company” 328 and 180 Fourth 20
Bue. and disposing of the Goods for
fino a
Sheppard was a trusted employee
of the concern he ‘robbed. a. his
care "were entrusted Keys of store-
foueey and supply varia. Last sur
mer, he told the police, he formed
the habit of olng to the plant earls
in’ the morning: Shorty alter his
arrival there he. would pack several
boxes with ingote, call ay cxpress-
fan and haverthe boxes taken to &
funk Sard. This continued unth ‘ast
Gctavers when the expressman be-
came sisplclous and refused to cart
for him avy Toner.
‘Samuel Jalfe, the proprictor of
funk yard at 2256 Filth avenue, Was
Hamed by Sheppard am the recelver
of the conner. The Police took Jaffee
into custods., He denied that he had
ny ind inthe theft, “He was held.
charged with belng the recelver of
the stolen nods.
Hee ae
DR. MORRIS RESIGNS
Little Rock, Ark. March 10.—Dr,
F, C. Morris, who has been president
Of ‘the trustee board of | Arkansas
Baptist College for 30 vears, resigned
at a recent meeting, stating that his
Health and religious duties would not
permit him to serve. longer. | Dr.
Eaton of ‘Mlssourt succeeded him.
ff sick List.
Now Tork, starch, _10.—Jamen, FR
gocdwin. a8, Weap Tasik Meee BT
Gray ae, Went Voeths Alma Wilsons 12t
West gay Bane Whltheld, 21, West
Yiet, who le qe tho, Woman's hosrital:
Bra Gareies Spencer, 9. West i2ist:
ire, Porreter, gs Weat, eth: Mee
Ressiie Stevens, 04 West asd: Mw
Wiihemina “Alexander, °4% West éird:
Sina ‘Alice: Grancitl 550, Weat 22nd,
Geen, ep ewe
SHOOTS BROTHER; ACCIDENT
‘Treaton, N. J, March, 10.—Thomas
youn, 10 years ‘ola. nccidentally amet
Ms brather, Dector Brawn. 19 years 4,
FMturedays “bile, examinise a revolver
in thelt home, at ‘Ronedale, nese here
Hoeorslng to, te. Polen irks. insured
Boy nas carried fo MeKintey hospital fn
a erltleat condition. where. tt seas salt
{hin hig chances for recovery are slight
senses Keene *
POLICE RECRUIT GRADUATES
Brooklyn. N. ¥,, March 10—Fawardt
seaman, sou gf Ste and Mex Ws A,
Seaman, Seo Si Fiukin,aeetie ts
Among the folice recruits that graduat-
gaat the Zine Regiment Atmory, New
‘York’ CRS. Wednesday evening.
Five-story triple fist: three 4-room
apartments to a floor: all improve.
ments. Possesefon ean be had on all
apartments, “tnqutre 200 FiKth ave.
from 410, Phone Longacre 8535.—Adv.
ae *, -:
FM Hair Root Hair Grower
it = Is a scientific vegetable compound of
: Ime rats seins consent
a sec crcans is Oe ieee ee
fg | Re
a eee cori tt eae
ae Serie Geer sca
4 Ieehing, Sore Scalp and Falling stair.
3 tase raion act neers
sag RulSERe Mines oe sowie
cae ira. Laetts writes: “After hav-
oN ets ee
ep Bh, ings een Aa Sete
a Be sti Mat
PA er escent
AF RD ae oe eer ai Se
' RO ir Gi ccowes 3c a tax or
a | ND SioF ser ee ttn Wess
% RE
SMM eeice eco net Slt ites
nt Bs EN ‘Adareaa all malt and money ordera to
ay BARBRoya! Chemical Company
} QI enica.ntw vone
Bs Qe ‘GMention this paper) |
FOR A NIGHT OF PLEASURE STOP IN
AND SEE YOUR OLD FRIEND LOCATED AT
71 West 135th Street, New York City
(Peemarty CONNOR'S
‘Which Is Now Under the Sole Management of OPEN
JERRY PRESTON} itt
NIGHT
LATE OF THE ORIENT CAFE
63rd STREET MUSIC HALL 22" Shats4as
TENTH BIG MONTH OF THE MUSICAL RIOT!
“SHUFFLE ALONG”
With and By
MILLER AND LYLES —SISSLE_AND BLAKE
“Evenings at 8:30 Matinee Saturday 2:30
SPECIAL MIDNIGHT PERFORMANCE Every Wednesday at 11:45
Best Seats All Performances 50c to $2.00
Sppenring were Sire, NM. Carnes, Sire.
BASE se a MEtialy Sineha he
PI a
BER arian estas
fee Sidra ihe ned eel el
Rage eaters Mea
SPAR RE tid Teciet Gas t=
ShGE tM eae Peed. ster
Bea eT ltt Noten ice Ge
Ring ehertt ae i speat at Mat
Bera wits late ae etl
Bae thd ia tread herioatng
Bee
Flam af SE eGietn Stay wih
FESR War ech ast Sn
ll eee Na ea
BAtie Wey age ania abe
Ee ete a see Wines Et
Bees sea
the Wedneaday afternoon eoniing
oR GENS, eterno, Saene
under the direction of Mrs. A. E. Smith.
este rahe tet oe eatin
Alo a Ry tana
Reta” Wuiiee ie eabetag Wolk
Beer Hoc ota
jcoal Yar now. Mrs. Norman Williams
SRY AKT Stic easter eres S oueee
Bence etal gmat fe eke
Bede hast tne ache re
Side, Hose mathe Soames of 1
seal setttart at ante cane Sr
Borer apt ee a ar
SRA i cepacia,
EEG? aeMemeens “cA ta a
BO ae ae int ae
Sates Ain, neta Renee wet
Ete 2 eh hiiai on ie ah St
fone ag Surat aah Ses
ae atl “Bae oe
Er eget Pa a Athenee
Ragtiatsmurenvon the’ isthe war the
Be are lee ate atne
Rae Ora fal Nendo ee
Marlette takes a ott Ais
isthe Mae lh a
Fee ser Crane Wie RGN ans
Fathom enenca ie ens Str
Eile ackn SET abrat Vemiton
jtreet hail a very nieasant dirthday
HSE PL nied 2S ot et
EG, Maton! ol oft hae MNS
favo aben'ia wohl? St ats geen
Et ot Coates totlen utine ek
Retna oheeet ane ate
BeMine' st "Nin Fellito eae
tome et dence of use uf ak
Biome SHedcon" ines He wear
emg et etiads 38
Ramage Sher hag hades
Sens of te Sara oe
Frond onion of rain atenae
Bars SS" eathcea a oa re
She eaten MOU of ern
Sas ek ae ticn ashe et eh
SoReal crises tn Sawonr.
'5 CABARET, PINGH 23
WILKIN ;
New York, March 10.—Detectives
Kaufman ‘aid’ Runtman of police
headquarters, ralded Barron Wilkins
Cabaret last’ week. and arrested 20
white and two girls of color and. 10
white and one mun of coler, charging
them with dlsorderiy. conduct. Helen
lice and. Hana Wilsoa, who are en-
terials at the caugrat ere
cused of vulgar dancing, ete, whic
Spititam. Adams. manager of” the
places was shared With metotalnins
Kiipullie. quisance. AN were. Uls=
Charged herore Stagistrate Corrizat
nthe. Heights court, Who elalmed
Gore war not ‘wuiMielent evidence on
Which to hold them.
JOHN NICHOLS BURIED
rook. N; Yu. Match 10-—Funerat
services for Sohn Nichole, who died
Sendai, Heb, See"ae Mevroholltan hos.
Blink iecre nani eanesaus eventing
Siatey \"from the funeral nations ot We:
He Wallce Bra'3 Pec ereee fer:
Faraday imomine. Nichols sour ana:
erin a eae dt Sas
Ther dvecaned fa sareived OFS Wife
and sever other relative,
BIRTHDAY DINNER
- Brooklim, N.Y, March 10—Mr. and
MAR Duals 180 Mono rent rae
a Siethday hiner tn honor of Sew
Gurnle Weinkt of. Manhattan. “Sunday
Sera, APE BS aad
Winlte of Attanta, ‘Gar ri
Grace Congregational church, Rev,
A. G. Garner, pastor, ¥. W- G. An 173
SS Harare ‘Mae ss
PAGE NINE
=
New York, March 20.—Jullaa
‘Townsend, 26, 2194 Seventh avenue, te
under arrest charged with the ror=
der of Frederic Green, 40 owner of.
the tenement house at the above ad-
dress. "The murder occurred on the
third’ door of. the premises Friday:
morning. Townsend was arrested om
‘the roof of the tencment, A revolver
‘wae found o& the stairs Heading te
the rook. f
“A "moment after the shots were:
fired Chaunces" Hooper, stenographer
in the homicide bureau of the office
of District Attornoy. Banton, called,
pottce Readiquarters Crora la) apart
Inent on the floor below. While. he.
Mice (lephoning three shots were
fired at nim through a lacs panel
{aa door behind him. The bullets:
‘which were of a different caliber trom
those: which killed Green, went wild.
Larthee Townsend, brother of Sultan,
Was “questioned by” the. police, Bu
denied ail knowledge of the shootng,
Townsend was hela without Ball.
MRS. JOHNSON DIES
Brookiyn, . ¥.. March 10.—Mra, Sale
tig Johnson. 402 Throop avenue, passed
Away Wednesday, Feb 22. The funeral
Ras hed Sumiay. Beh. 360 at ‘Beldger
Eitect A, MLE. church. ving (0 the
Hines of the pastor, De. Spencer We
Garpemer, (Dr. CP. Colt. presiding. ele
ier of the Long iatind dlaeriet oMetate
fd. “Ghe waia 6 past seorthy matron of
the Daughters of Sphine and a member
of ake Exatern Sear otermese wam at:
‘Mrs Johnson, iw surcived by a huge
tans tichard Johnsons aumhter, Steg
Ouleria: sleter, Sire Georgia Hines, and
fibrother. Albert, Sigman of Bleminge
Ramm ‘Ais’ ‘The aleten Sica Mary Sie.
fan’ Lipscomb ‘nf stitrminghar, and
Sirs. Only Dewan sof Stempnin, Tan.
ilecen, attended. The fallbearsrn Sere,
Romie Sterriwvather. Robert steNeah
oma Grant, ‘Thomas Jeiterson, J. We
deste Grant, Themes Je
POLICE COURT NEWS
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1
PAGE TEN
HOWARD CARR AND TATE EYE CHAMPIONSHIP
By "KERNEL FAY"
A visit to the Arcade gymnasium was a wonderful treat. Saw Sailor William, a boy of eight, of the noted boxers going through their stunts. Saw Bill Tate work out four fast rounds, punch the bag, skip the rope and do some show jumping. After the show jumping, Alicia Howard better known as Kid Howard, owner of the Arcade. Carr looks like a midget alongside of Tate. He came down for a little confab after Tate had emerged from the showers and dressed. Of course the subject was the "world's greatest flicker." The public is flicked." went on Carr. "Because Tate trained Lempsey they are not taking Tate so strong, but they are still very strong." The public will get his chance. Now that Wills has put Kid Norfolk away the press will demand that he fight
"By virtue of the fact that Bill Tate keeps the other fellows from nottingham. Say what you want to, and feel like it, too, within the next two years Tate will wear the belt. He's a great boxer and can hold his own against anybody. Memphis the last of this week, where Tato boxes Sam Langford on March 13. Tell all your readers if they want to see Tate in action at any afternoon when he gets bored.
---
At THE RINGSTE
RILEY WINS FEATURE BOUT
New York, March 10—Edwin Riley
died at the age of 10. Joe
Joe Scappatone of the Glencoe A. C. at
the end of three rounds in the feature
game. Joe Scappatone of the Glencoe A. C.
club's boxing tournament staged at the
Commonwealth Sporting Club, Feb. 28.
The boys started on Monday over
seven preliminary contests going to St.
Christopher boys. The boys started on
Feb. 28. Willur Cohen stopped Young
George Dixon, unattached. In one
addition to J. Falkenstein of the $2nd
street Young Men's Hebrew Institute in
C. C. was beaten by A. P. Parker, Young
Men A. C. in the 132-pound
over E. F. Herdala, unattached, in the
118-pound class. The final of the 110-
pound was won by Art Johnson, Glencoe
GAHEE K, O's SIMMONS
B. Cox, Herndon
By Coy Henderson
Tulsa, Oklahoma打架了—Bradford Simmons was knocked out by Battling Gahce in the seventh inning for the jaw that sent him to sleep land for the count. Thurday, Simmons beat 15 pounds, had longer reach and strength seemed more powerful. Gahce sent-swindup between Ben Miller of Oklahoma City and Harry Lindsay of Gahce for 10 rounds. Miller won the decision. Of the other 10-round scheduled shots, Miller, who weighs about 250 and Lindsay, who weighs about 250, Bug hit Bug, Bug hit the hoop, all the lightning extracted. Young heavyskys. At the sound of the gong Bon Ton rushed Langford and met Simmons. The assymmetry seemed to be Bon Ton's destination; his mind left him him. Starlight won the decision over Murphy. They are wellweighted. Attendance: $500. Promoter: Britt Sims.
Wills Watching Referee Count Norfolk "Out"
THE WORLD WRESTLING CHAMPIONSHIP
The sudden end of the Kid Norfolk-Harry Wills bout came in the second round. Wills is seen standing with his right arm resting on the ropes. Referee McPartland is bending over Norfolk as he vainly tries to regain his feet.
DANNY EDWARDS KNOCKS OUT KID SNOW IN FOURTH
Right Cross to the Jaw Sends Harlem Man Out of Ring; Referee Halts Slaughter
New York, March 10—Danny Edwards, the Pacific coast flash, made quick work of Kid Snow in the 12-round semi-windup at the Commonwealth Sporting club Saturday night in the fourth round. The referee was on hand to help Snow from any further punishment. Snow had the better of the first round, and danced around Danny, at the start of the second round in the second stanza Danny uncked a hefty right to Snow's jaw that he had to carry back, ring and he had to be carried back, where he managed to outlast the round. Harlem boy again was floored in the third round-for counts of six and eight, the bell saving him in that frame. The end came after 88 seconds, the bell weighed 175 pounds and Snow 118.
Beats Friedman
Boston, Mass., March 10—Danny Edwards won the decision over Abe Friedmann here Monday night in 10 rounds.
SUBURBAN A. C. BOUTS
AGAIN ON SUNDAY AFTERNOON
The Suburban A. C. will hold four games for Parkland, with kayed Boulevard Kid, will be pitched against Judge Davis in the windup. Kid Green and Kid Brown, with kayed Boulevard Kid, Joe Spellman will try to stop Harold Sanson in four rounds. The other pre-immediate call will be arranged, with particular calls on the sport editor, don't phone him.
SPORT EDITORIAL
HARRY WILLS
Jack Dempsey did not see the Kid Norfolk-Harry Wills bolt. Perhaps he didn't want to sitter heard he didn't want to sitter heard he hit him with one of those quick, unseen blows. Jack was showing at the Hiprodome and the bout was held before he fell. He hurried to his manager's house with a "Well, who do we fight?" Kearns made no answer. Leo Flynn came clean: "Norfolk was game, but big, too heavy—too EVERYTHING." "Few realized what kind of a blow was hit," wires William White, our eastern representative, who was at the bar, said. "And Wills said it was a "short right." Whatever it was, it was put Norfolk out
Chicago, Ill.
Dear Mr. Rogers:
I notice that Brungleton Green is having a hard time finding a wife. If he must marry, why not have three ties up with a woman who has plenty of money?
Please Mr. Rogers, let him marry an heresy. Dimerely Lillian Preston.
GOLLY, I'M IN LUCK--HERE'S A YOUNG LADY, AGE 26, HEIR TO $500,000; WOULD LIKE TO MEET NICE YOUNG MAN WITH GOOD HABITS' ETC. — I'M GOING OVER AND CALL ON HER RIGHT NOW. IT'LL BE GREAT IF I CAN LAND SOME OF HER MONEY.
IS MISS TURNER IN?-TELL HER MR. BUNGLETON GREEN IS CALLING. — I NOTICED HER AD FOR A HUSBAND IN THE MATRIMONIAL NEWS!
I SHALL CALL HER, SIR—
OH, MR. GREEN, DID YOU COME IN ANSWER TO MY AD?
H----NO!-IM THE TELEPHONE MAN!
Tokalons Defeated on Tcpn
The Tokalons, class B champs of Ohio, were defeated on their trip through the state, to 12, and the Springfield Y Triangles, 29 to 21. The Triangle-Tok game was won by the Springfield borough and the best team won after a hard struggle. Mitchell was the big, Tok star, while Williams, Seneca and Triangle's triple Brock played a fine game.
John, Trice to Enter Case
John Trice to Enter Game
Bill McCarthy, who turned out of Fast Tech high, will enter Case School of Applied Science in September to compete in the Senate and all-scholastic tackle on the Cleveland mythical football teams.
Henry Graham, Great Cage Player, will enter the merger basketball team, playing in class C, is proving to be the sensation of the season. Graham will point in every game he plays. Graham is known by boy wonder in the fifth grade.
---
Stoc for Central High
Capt. Peter Willett and Harvey Fann are the bright lights in high school basketball on the Central high case team and are the only players of color at the Colored player in Cleveland, and we don'tould such predictions.
GRENADIERS BEAT EVANSTON
The Grenadiers' heavyweight basketball team defeated Evanston Arrows in a gymnast's Saturday night by a 26-18 score. This was Evanston's first defense. The sensational basket shooting of L. Wilson was the feature of the game. Line-up:
Grenadiers
B. F. P. T. T.
B. F. P. T. T.
G. Wilson rf.
B. F. P. T. T.
Nelson rf.
B. F. P. T. T.
Johnson c. 3 00
Vern ton c. 2 00
Bhattacharjee c. 0 00
Fletcher i. 1 00
I. Adams, fg. 1 00
Adams, c. 1 00
Totals... 10 22
Totals... 9 022
PHILLIPS CANDIDATES REPORT
Phillip high baseball candidates have played in the school in the lot behind the 30th street institution. Chapman, star on the baseline, made a good showing in the league.
of the running and made those who have been trying to beltleil Wilts, hatten Paly at the notice. They claim it did not travel over six inches. But—oh, boy, suppose it had gone an arm's length! It might have knocked the Kid into the Brooklyn graveyard. The New York Tribune hit it right when it said: "Norfolk's eyes looked like a pair of poached eggs tied to a pinwheel." Now bring on Mister Dempsey and bring on the dough. Enormous to a point where he must do something or shut up. Dempsey must right Wilts or come clean and say he afraid to will he whipped. That short哭 is enough to make most men scared anyway. Where do we go from here?-FAY.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Norfolk "Out"
e in the second round. Wills
Referee McPartland is bend-
ain his feet.
BY FRANK YOUNG
FACULTY STOPS BASKETBALL AT WILBERFORCE U
Scholastic Standing of Players the Cause; Track and Baseball Men Report
BY TOMMY WRIGHT
Wilberforce, Ohio, March 16—The largest number of athletes that ever turned out at Wilberforce University has reported to Coach T. R. Pettjohn in answer to his call for track and baseball candidates, following the announcement of the ban placed on the boys' basketball team by the faceless coaches, who were declared intelligible because of their scholastic standing, and it is doubtful whether there will be an appeal. For the present the track team is the center of attraction. Every afternoon the team is preparing for a fervish activity and the prospects for a winning team are exceedingly bright. The coaches call the call: "Captain" "Baron" "Banks of Orange," N. J., and Claude Demons who covered all the white boys with dust in the meets last year, are among those of their speed. "Loot" "Roberts of Dayton," Ohio, and star tackle on the weight events has also reported for the
Howard Intercollegiate
ST. MARK 24: ACORNS 15
St. Mark's five defeated the Acorn
Metron (white), formerly the Harrison
Metron (white), and the Washaback
at the Washaback M.-C. M. A. 24, to 15.
in one of the clearest games ever
gamed by the St. Mark's quintet. About one
game was featured by the team play of
the St. Mark's quintet. About one
and fifty witnessed the contest.
St. Mark's 24-21
Acorns 15-15
Bligele, 3 0 1 1 Bligele, 1 0 0 0 0
Pliner, if 4 0 0 0 White, rr 0 0 0 0
Gilson, rr 4 0 0 0 Merkita, if 3 7 0 0
Gilson, rr 4 0 0 0 Geit, rr 0 0 0 0
Washin, rr 0 0 0 0
What Is Money
GOLLY, I'M IN LUCK--HERE'S A
YOUNG LADY, AGE 26, HEIR TO
$500,000; WOULD LIKE TO MEET
NICE YOUNG MAN WITH GOOD
HABITS' ETC. — I'M GOING OVER
AND CALL ON HER RIGHT NOW—
IT'LL BE GREAT IF I CAN LAND
SOME OF HER
MONEY.
What Is Money Without Beauty?
RT KYOUNG
HARRY WILLS
KNOCKS OUT
KID NORFOLK
Dempsey's Challenger Sends
Flynn's Man Down for Full
Count in the Second
---
By WILLIAM WHITE
Quick Knockout Cheats Dempsey
Jack Dempsey, who is doing an act
that he has been doing for a long
his one desire, "to see Willie" perform
against Norfolk," by the quick ending
of the game, and to quantify the main attraction. Jack had made arrangements to hustle over to
the Garden, where he had engaged a
girl named Kate, and his act which was through at 9:45
o'clock. The main attraction under
the Garden would have gone on at 10 o'clock.
At 5:35 o'clock, -10 minutes before
Jack was through, the big battle was
over Norfolk, followed by Leo Flynn and several other handlers, was first to enter the ring. Wills followed shortly afterwards and both received along with equal amount of applause. Wills and Norfolk and Khl Mertlandt, the third photographer, the Finger posed for the photographer when was then cleared and the fight was on.
Round One
After shaking hands Kid Norfolk rushed Wills to the ropes; they toyed with him; Harry backed Wills into his own corner. Harry was smiling as he hoved a knife in his hand and ripped the ropes. Norfolk, who was seemingly dazed and sort of incensed at being just in time to stop a lightning right in the air, and saw a vicious right to Harry's jaw which had little effect. Harry right swinging as the bell rang.
Round Two
Wills beat Norfolk around the ring with telling kidney blows, and it was Norfolk's strength. It was at this period that the "Kill" ran into a clench. Before and even before he cried and happened, and how it happened, Norfolk was lying on the floor and Wills backed to his corner for Norfolk to roll. Norfolk rolled his head from side to side as he gazed at the referee count. Norfolk rolled his head from side to side as he gazed at the referee count. Partland said "nine," and struggled in an effort to get up. As the final count ran out ring he was ushered to his
As a result of Wills' easy and decisive victory it is now apparent that Boyles will be able to sue any longer. It is possible, according to those well informed, that Boyles will be able to sue either July 4 or Labor day.
BROOKLYN Y W BEATEN
New York, March 10—The Jolly Seniors of the W. Y. C. W. a cally deceived team, will play at basketball at the branch Friday night by an overwhelming score. The team will play at the Y. W. C. W. a Calendar Club team the same evening by the score of 10 to 10. Closes from Salem church visited the "Y" Saturday evening and defeated the Entro nous girls to the "Ume of $ to $.
SEMINOLES GO TO LAKE FOREST
The Seminoles, 145-pound quintet of the guidance of Kaleb Brown, will leave Saturday from Adama street over the exclusive north shore district. It is hoped that a representative group of our people will go with the team.
WABASH Y. BOYS IN A. A. F.
The Oroles (125) and the Lincoln's Club (125) will play at Young Men's Club of that city. This is the first exclusive north shore district. It is hoped that a representative group of our people will go with the team.
WABASH Y. BOYS IN A. A. F.
The Oroles (125) and the Lincoln's Club (125) will play at Young Men's Club of that city. This is the first exclusive north shore district. It is hoped that a representative group of our people will go with the team.
WABASH Y. BOYS IN A. A. F.
The Oroles (125) and the Lincoln's Club (125) will play at Young Men's Club of that city. This is the first exclusive north shore district. It is hoped that a representative group of our people will go with the team.
ST. MARKS IN COOK CO. PLAY
The St. Marks five is entered in the College
(125-pound class), which starts March
4th. The team is led by As far as can be learned this is
the only team representing our group entered
in this tourney.
PHILLIPS IN INTERCHOLASTICS
The team is entered in the intercholastic basketball
tournament, which will be staged at Bartlett gym
university on April 3, 4, and 6.
Without Beauty?
IS MISS TURNER IN?
TELL HER MR. BUNGLETON
GREEN IS CALLING. —I
NOTICED HER AD FOR A
NUSBAND IN THE
"MATRIMONIAL NEWS"
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NATIONAL LEAGUE NEWS
American Giants Leave for South Monday—Hilldale Hops Back Into Association—Ben Taylor to Lead A. B. C.'s—Tates Announce Players—Season Opens in Chicago April 16
The scores of the American Giants he had by calling Douglas 0697, local seven, after 10 o'clock in the morning.
The American Giants, champions of the National Negro League for the 1921 season, will board a rattler over the Illinois Central at 8:30 Monday morning, March 13, on the first day of the season, which will cover a little over a month, landing back in this city on April 15, opening the baseball season at Schuyler's park. Tom Sawyer, April 16, is fully prepared to make a determined effort to cop the championship again this year. Rogers Park will be their opponents and Catchers, Dixon and Brown; infolders, Marlarcher, De Moss, Grant, Green and Beckwith; outfielders, Reese, Gardner, Lyons and Rush, Williams and Dave Brown.
Indianapolis or St. Louis will be settled.
Hilldale Joins Association
Ed Bolden's Hilldale baseball club has been admitted into the National Association, making three associated teams. This means that Hilldale has decided to join the National Association, making three associated teams. No one wanted to see great ball club with Bolden had but could see their prides pitched against great Western clubs.
Giants still will win with the outlaws. They almost had Bolden. Thirty years Nat Strong a white man with a blue shirt, he has during that time formations of white teams and built park players. He had during that time formations of white teams and built park players. He had not been for the player of choice there would have been no white semifinal anything. Bolden was farsighted enough to see his mistake.
Ben Taylor to Lead A. B. C.'s Ben Taylor to brother to the late C.
Pitcher Owens, secured from the Caulfield Ads of New Orleans, will join the club after the close of this season. He will join the Harbary Medical College at Nashville.
**Play Cubans a Series**
The American Giants will play the Cincinnati Reds, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 27, 28 and 29. Then an eight-game series with the Cuban Stars of Havana, Cuba, will start.
Participant will join the club at New Orleans, coming direct from Havana, where he has been playing in the Cuban winter league. With Ed Ridle and Pitbullwork in the line-up Poster league clubs. League clubs. Rile is predicted to create a sensation in the league this year. The absence of Bobby Wilson has created the line-up has created a surprise. The league's president, Andrew R. Foster, left Friday for St. Louis to play in the league. The question of whether Charleston, the crack outfield, will play with
IN THE SQUARED CIRCLE WITH JULI JONES JR. DEMPSEY AND WILLS
BOXING LEGAL IN CUBA
BOXING LEGAL IN CUBA
A public spectacle was made legal in this city on March 4. The mayor, who has reversed his decree, has reversed his decree and has accepted a revised version of the Mark. The mayor has accepted the boxing code. A national commission, named by the department of the sport throughout the republic.
ST. MARK'S FLASHES WIN
New York, March 10—The St. Mark's Flashes defeated the fast Lehigh. "The score of 44 to 16. In the preliminary contest the St. Mark's Juniors beat the Alpha Juniors by the score of 23 to 18.
Play Cubans a Series
---
Indianapolis or St. Louis will be settled.
Hildale Joins Association
Ed Baldwin has been admitted into the National Association of Colored Professional Baseball This means that Hildale has decided to remain in baseball. The move is a welcoming step for the great ball club like Bolden had built up wrecked. The Philly fans will again be pitted against great Western clubs.
The Lincoln Giants still remain with the Chicago Giants. Thirty years Nat Strong a white man, has made money off of Colored ball leagues of white teams and built parishes, but none for the darker brother, yet if there would have been no white semi-pro baseball in the East to amount to such, he was farsighted enough to see, pick, mistake.
Ben Taylor to Lead A. B. C.'s
Demney has had trials with Norfolk and Surrey, and surprised man when he got the news that Norfolk was knocked out in two games last week. Norfolk didn't have a chance from the kickoff. Let us repeat, again-Dempsey and last fight Wills was called down for breaking too fair from elites. Wills was knocked out in two games, and seems to us had Wills knocked out Norfolk in Portland. One the way he had it a foul. It's a case of 'They don't want to win.' Norfolk was given a raw deal out there. No referee has the power to change one game in Queensbury. No umpire has the power to change baseball rules. Today a lot of Norfolk in such an easy manner, tried him unbeatable, saw Wills dispose of Norfolk in such an easy manner, tried him unbeatable, saw Wills dispose of Norfolk stay longer. It happened not to be Wills' way of doing things. Carr was the only thing our thing for anybody. The knockout inflicted it seems that Wills should have called their attention to the blow. Had it been the same way every cartoonist in the country would take up a page showing him up against it now. For the one hundred and fifteenth time, this column has been written and win to be champion of the world.
IN HIGH SCHOOL INDOOR MEET
Albert Washington, running under the colors of Englewood High school, clipped a fifth of a second off the old record at Bartlett gym Saturday afternoon and made it a good day by winnings. He self as individual winner. The day before in the trials Washington broke the high school record in the three jumps, and second in the high hurdles and fourth in the low. Old Sexton and Vernon second in the high hurdles and fourth in the low. Old Sexton and Vernon added a single to the relay, adding Hyde Park to win that event. William Watson of Lane Tech placed third in the 440 and winning the high jump. A Chinese boy placed second but dressed and went home, not knowing the semi-finals were to be run Friday night.
JOHNSON REMEMBERS MAHER
New London, New, March 10—While playing back at Johnson, paid a visit to old Pater Mather, ex-prize fighter, who is confined to a hospital, and when he got home, he sold a hundred dollar bill in Maker's hand.
SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1922
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PHILLIPS HIGH BOWS TO LANE IN SEMIFINALS
Missed Free - Throws Prove
Costly to Red and Black;
Loses by One Point
The Wendell Phillips basketball quintet was shoved out of the running in the semi-finals of the Public School basketball game the afternoon by Lane Technical at the Hartlson Technical High school's gymnasium. The hard game to lose and many feel that Phillips should have won. Their one big weakness of the entire season proved their undoing—poor on free-throws. Phillips had a two-minute lead in the two minutes of play, but missed a free-throw. Then in the closing seconds the ball was under her oppo- nents and she jumped up towards the basket, and just that many times it failed to go in. Both Phillips and Lane were fighting desperately and the ball went out of the basket. The possession of it the whistle blow.
The winners started off with five free-throws as the game opened, and then with one final foul. Phillips came back and made a free-throw and then got one basket. Two of Lane's men kept the ball in the basket, and the ball led at the end of the first half, 11 to 7. Coming back in the second half Phillips tried to even the count and within one point Lane got away, and the ball came back to the floor, outgressing Scott, the only man that stood between the man with the ball and the basket. It was that man, Lane, who had the good, Phillips caused in a basket and the score stood 15 to 14 and the game ended that way when Phillips scored a free-throw chance. The losers made several frantic efforts in the closing seconds to pull the game out of the fire, but none of them did. The victors realized they had won a hard game and gave Phillips the credit of having a wonderful team. The fans feel that both teams were very good, which caused long shots to be of no consequence. The gymnasium was overcrowded, contrary to fire rules, and they would have been in big loss.
According to expert opinion, Harry Wills drew down around 75 pounds in the Garden fight with Kild Norfolk. When Harry was reeled in, Norfolk laughed and said "I got a nice little chunk all right." Norfolk got little chunk all right. The 77 cents was "you don't know."
Earl Johnson has found his class, the five and one, as a runner is universally known, but in my opinion he would not accept a five and one, rather than a three and two runs and compete against Johnson. He is perfectly contented to run any distance given to him, but three miles. Johnson (a champion) should be perfectly contented to run and give handstands in the five and one mile runs. If he should take a handstand on another circumstance he has run under those circumstances he has all to lose and nothing to gain.
GEORGE J. GEOSSON,
Boston University.
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.
With the mind filled with thoughts of all forms of brutality which entail the main children, yet not mossing enough courage to face a jury of 12 men, Lorey Butler, alias John, before Chief Justice Rickie Scanlan of the criminal court and was sent to Joliet, Raymond Givens, 324 North Hermitage avenue, who was indicted with him, was also found guilty of murder and emprusted justice with mercy, and will recommend that Givens serve one year, while he was a little 6-year-old boy, Harvey Coleman, the son of Butler's common-law wife, Mirea Coleman, 23 Ease, with his 11-malmed hand handed in bandage, and in a firm voice told the court that he was burned by Butler. He identified a picture of himself, taken at the time of Butler's arrest, and declared all the years on his little body.
Butter lived with Mrs. Coleman and her children at 2241 Fulton street. Mrs. Coleman started her career life, and it was through fear of him that she was afraid to tell the price of her lover's barbicide treatment. Her story around the ice of despair was around the ice of despair that he asked her why she did not kill Butter. He
could not conceive of such a situation, the brute who had subjected her and her children to such fandish torture, and the abstinent States Attorney Edgar Cook.
GRIP OF THE LAW
Matthew Thomas, 17, 722 15-511
street, was arrested for
drinking and charged with dis-
orderly conduct. He was fired $200 and
courted by Judge Laurence Jacobs of the
Southern District of New York.
Placed on Probation
Know His Radios
Surrounded by a large crowd, Joseph Blyson, 314 State Street was telling Daniel Haynes, the attorney for Daniel Haynes, approached Haynes armed with a knife and his reputation for stabbing. He furgot his badness in court, but was given 'gift' and costs for indulging in dreams.
Suffice with Pipe Dream
Although Charles Taylor, 481 Mercer Avenue in his pocket, he claimed that some one else must have taken his pipe. Roscoe Johnson, Judge William K. Fetzer thought differently, for Taylor was wined $10 and costs.
Wanted to Dress Up
Crawling pretty things, she was in the house, in the lobby, in the Walsh Avenue. She was sentenced to 60 days in the House, but when Officer Howard Vale testified that it was her second offense of stealing dresses from a department store.
Strips Automobiles
A $25 bill and 30 days in the House, out to George Allen, 125 Walsh Avenue, with the minor under off of an automobile that was parked on the street.
Fined for Being Regular
Before Judge John K. Prindley testified before Judge John K. Prindley that he regarded the police as the 'motor under off' of an automobile that was parked on the street.
Fined for Being Regular
Before Judge John K. Prindley that he regarded the police as the 'motor under off' of an automobile that was parked on the street.
Wields a Mighty Wallop
With her eyes closed entirely and
Hurry, she ran across the court to prosecute
Hurry appeared in court to prove
sufficient for her condition. Both of the
women live in the same apartment,
unaffirmed until March 23.
Armed with Knife
Because he could give no reason for walking along the street, Burr Barrings, 3241 Prairie avenue, was arrested by Officer Shechan. He was fined 4 and costs. Visitors Armed with guns and police have caused a decrease of gun fights, and the police felt the "Grip of the Law," this week for carrying guns, assaults, or being armed with guns. The men were Asbury 1651 Anderson street, Norfolk, Va.
Must Bay Wife
Ernest Hunt, 24 years old, 45 West 53rd street, who was arrested on charges of assault and robbery, 512 La Salle street, and clarified with non-support, was ordered to pay her $4,000 in damages of the court of domestic relations.
Held for Shooting Wife
Although they both claimed that it was her husband's fault, the wife of the South Clark street court held Walter Len, 247 Federal street, to the charge of shooting his wife in their home. Lee was arrested by Officer Gaskins, whom he identified as the wife of Augusta Martin, a roomer in their home, stated also that it was an accident, after a quarrel between the two.
Wife Plays Sleuth
The "stern triangle" has disrupted another home, according to the Merrill Avenue, James Perry Blue and Mrs. Lillian William Brown, both of which are district at 4142 Merrill Avenue, on complaint of Mr. Blue, who charged them with fornication and murder.
Hold to Grand Jury
William Patterson, 20, 3228 Dearborn street, was held to the grand jury unconditionally. He was arrested by Officers Ridley and Johnston on complaint of Stanley Finley, 4423 Indiana. He laterLife Savings After spending his life's savings to stock up a second-hand clothing store, he returned to his Solomon opened up his store in the morning to find that his stock had disappeared. Ellis Park, was arrested by Officers Nokes and Cunneen and charged with the grand jury under $3,000 bonds.
[ADVERTISMENTS]
ROSIE HOUSE CAIG
Will Mrs. Hose House or Rosie
Hose House. H. Verhoven, route G, box 223, Indianapolis, Ind. 7 Or anyone knowing the
name of Mrs. Verhoven communicate with Mrs. Verhoven.
MILDRED C. DUNGAN
BRIAN M. CUMMER
C. D. CUMMER, your mother is dead. Communicate, at once with "Attorney, Tox 1254, City Hall postoffice, New York City,
TAYLOR FAMILY
Want to know whereabouts of
Johanna Taylor, a graduate of
Chihuahua College in Chihuahua,
Tenn. Send information to Mrs. Georgia
Taylor, 2623 Patrick avenue, Guanahua.
GEORGE GARNER, ARTIST
GEORGE GARNER, ARTIST
One never thinks of George R. Garner, Jr. as a tonor outside of his working hours. Whether or not this is considered a compliment It is so intended that when it is a great deal more than can be said to men who have achieved far more in the classic world, Mr. Garner's work is too known to need summing up. His remarkable concert field are too recent to need recapitulation. Geo. R. Garner
compliment It is so intended. All of which is a great benefit than can be made of man's singers who have a great less in the artistic world. Mr. Garner's work is it is known to need summing up. His remarkable concert field are too recent to comparison and his three years with the Affiliated Musical bureau has placed his name indeed before us as the distinguished American organist.
But George Garner, the man, the teacher, the well-read man, is every bit as interesting and important as George Garner, the successful author, possessing intelligence and skill in the use of it. He is keenly interested in everything that pleases his plore life and the people who make it, the analytical gift to turn his objection into a persuasive reader and the self, the wit to transform his analyses into charming conversational journeys, acessorian reader of good books and ever makes an effort to know men and things other than his own—the clergy, real estate, medicine, dental, painters, and others about their work is his pleasure. Certainly the individual's ability to communicate effectively to the development of his cultural mind. And naturally the artist cannot make a look. And a sense of humor is not incompatible with artistic success; still, he prefers to talk with an artist, high up in his own particular sphere and finding him able to discuss them easily. And so one always gets a bit of a shock when he meets George Garner, the human-not temperamental.
HAVEN INSTITUTE GOES IN HANDS OF M. E. CHURCH
Meridian, Miss, March 10- Haven Institute and Conservatory of Music, Meridian, Miss, March 10- from the white people at this place by the board of education for our Race Foundation, Meridian, Miss, March 10- the education of youths, was recently dedicated to its new purpose. Concerned with the future of Daming of Cafnin university, Orsange, S. C., had the following to say:
The Reese Automobile School is now in full session. Come in and prepare yourself for the course. Cuts are coming in almost daily for competent automobile men. No doubt you will fail to receive "even" even with the scarcity labor the chauffeur-mechanic succeeded in finding employment. The school has a good reputation for all of their troubles and demands a good salary. Reese's graduates are given special admissions. Even you must have you a few hours that could be devoted to learning an independent profession. School houses from 5 to 15 years old are admitted and their wives should know how to drive their cars. For further information meet 16 at the home of Mrs Cassie Thompson, 218 F. Perching Street. The Get Together Club will give a Saturday, March 1, from 10 to 15 Mrs. Jones, president; E. K. secure the El Progreso Social Club gave an entertainment at the Phyllis wheat anthem meeting will be at the home of Willie Bishop Hillson, president.
Read This
"She is here," whispers her all right for she is reading a book, "and she has a hand placed over her mouth. "Not a sound, cut your throat."
The Great Serial Story Which Starts in Our Feature Section Soon.
POLLARD TO TRY FOR A GOAL AS A STOCK BROKER
Fred D. "Pritz" Pollard, former Iowa University football star and 19th American basketball champion. Camp S. Clever has entered business for himself, having opened office at $307 Grand boulevard where the speciation in the sale of high-end listed bonds.
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in order that he may handle the highest character. Mr. Pollard has made con- ditions several large La Salle street invest- ment houses,
sociate and adviser Charles "Chickl" Evans Jr., famous golfer and Lauren Mc. Parkard is a Chicagoan by birth. He attended Eugene Field grammar school and the Technical School, where he earned versatility, where he attained national fame as an athlete, graduating from Fordham University. Fred is honest and conscientious and his many friends predict for him great success in his new enterprise.
CARD OF THANKS
ADVERTISEMENTS!
The family wishes to thank the many friends and lodge members for their kindness and death of our mother, Mrs. Dora Owens, 2900. South Dearborn street, Feb. 25. Also for the beautifulness and death of our daughter, Samuel Davis, son.
Garvey G. Thomas departed this life March 1 at his late residence, 6553 Langley avenue. For more than 20 years he was a resident of Chicago. He leaves to mourn her loss a widow, daughter, father, two brothers and friends and friends. His widow and family wish to express their thanks to the many friends for the beautifulness during the illness and bereavement.—Mrs. Abbie Thomas, wife, and family.
We wish to thank our many friends, both in and out of the city, for their sympathy shown us in the memorial service.—Susie Clayton, who passed away Feb. 25. Also thank Dr. Cook and members and friends of Metropolitan Park, on Bosley, daughter; John B. Bosley, son-in-flaw, 7654 Prairie avenue; Mrs. Nora McMillan, Miss Lotte McMillan, daughter; John B. Bosley, Cincinnati, Ohio, and Robert Cleenny, brother, Dayton, Ohio.
W. L. Brown. 3560 Giles avenue,
wishes to thank his host of friends
Q. R. P. Co. for their courtesy and
true friendship shown during the
period of his illness.
We wish to thank our many friends
for their kind remembrance in our
house and in the street of our
husband and brother, Daniel D. Davis, who died Feb. 25. We also thank Dr. Cook and Rev. Stewart for their
work with us and the bravery of our
Gown and Morsell understarks.
Ella Davis, wife; Will F. Stewart,
brother.
Mrs. Butler, 3336 Dearborn street,
wishes to thank the Masons, Rev.
Stewart and our kind kindness
during the illness of William Rath-
borg, who died Feb. 24.
Miss Hattle English. 3565 Giles
avenue, wishes a thank her many
friends for their kindness during the
Dr. Thomas Officer, for his kind
attention. She is able to be up again.
LOOK. MEN
The latest invention for beautifying Pressing and Waving Cap, used with JAPO SOAP and POMADE, works by applying the natural effect. Gives the natural effect. Complete cost, $2.55. Soap and Pomade, $2.55. Drugstret or send size of hat and $1.25 for Cap to Tryer Chemical Co., $4.25 for Cap to Tryer Chemical money for agents. Advertisement.
MEN HAVE WAVY HAIR
Dr. Pryor's CAP Pressing and Waving Cap, the only cap on the market with waving pad. Price. $1.25. For sale by all druggists, or order from the Chemical Company. 3422 State street. Chicago. Agents wanted—Advertisement.
PERSONAL
Mrs. Runaway, your birthday,
March 11. Shall look for you at my
office Sunday, 4 p. m.—Mr. Runaway
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
THIS PAGE when you need mobiles, Clothing; in fact, to exert
IN MEMORIAM
(ADVERTISMENTS)
In loving memory of my mother, Mrs. Nancy Irineaux, who died March 8, 1921.
"God are the hours of that unhappy When God called my dear mother away.
A mother mother, so good and kind. Ne friend on earth like her did I find. For all of us she did her best!
May God grant her eternal joy.
In memory of our dear daughter and died March 7, 1921.
HELP WANTED
MALE AND FEMALE
WANTED TO HERELY LOVE MOMMY WHO ARE DESIRED TO SEE YOU.
Write it up to Sarah A. Brusaux, address Picture Production Co.
HELP WANTED
WHEREIN DEATHS
RAINIEN, BRUSAXN,
and trainers; enlisted in
The days are in mining into years,
And we count them each and every
one. On one day now has passed away
And you miss me each passing
It was a and ind. and aunt to the
father of John and Jennifer
Ulysses Alcorn, John and Charles
Lizzy. In loving memory of my wife, Lizzy
Young, who died Feb. 27, 1918:
In loving memory of our dear sister, Mary l. Chappell, who passed away March 9, 2017—Jillian Barnwell, Frank Barwell, both in-law.
THE DEATH LIST
UNDERTAKERS
OFFICE PHONE DOUG. $255
KERSEY, McGOWAN
& MORSELL
Undertakers
3515 Indiana Avenue
FLAT6 FOR RENT
HOUSES FOR RENT
SWAN ST. 122 NR. 4774 ST. SEVENTH
mount outlaw store, 4774 space for garden
birth, month. Colonnade Realty Co.
4725 State St.
FOR RENT--MISCELLANEOUS
GARAGE-HOLIDAYS 2 BIG CARS
STORE OF STORE FOR RENT--EXCELLENT
HOME OF STORE FOR RENT--EXCELLENT
location. 64 E. ST. SEVENTH
FLATS WANTED
WANTED-FIVE OR 6 HOME MOD. FLY
50th of S. S. or Call Victory 577.
WANTED-TO BUY FURN. FLAT OR
house if免押. Douglas 2014.
FLATS FOR SALE
CALMET MET AVE. 4520, ACT. 2-NINE-ROOM
fun, hat, complete. 11-14
BOOM AND BOARD
STOP AT HANDLTH MIDDLE PLACE,
1436 N. Wells st. hotel, plaza, rooms
by the hotel, staff, wives served at all
hours. Phone: Dliverey 1204.
BOARD
WANT FOR MEN OR WOMEN TO BOARD
in private home; everything up to date
responsible. Reqd 1954.
CHILDREN TO BOARD
WANTED-GIRL CHILDREN TO BOOM AND
BORN; 8 to 15 years. Call Douglas 1054.
FOR ADOPTION
FOR ADOPTION—BABY GIRL, LIGHT COMPLEX,
from G to 12 months, old good
girl. Address M, B. W., Chicago
Detlevor.
WANT TO ADOPT A GIRL, AGE 7 TO 10
years. Call Graveland 1906. Ees, M. S.
Lewis.
SEWING MACHINES
HAIRDRESSING
MARASAGING. MAMICUBING. OO HAIR
short, short and short hair a business; clippers
short, short and short hair a business; clippers
attraction gives. Work by appointment. F. H.
phone area. Park Place. 3125 South
Park Place. phone 3025.
FORO PRESIDENT WORK-PIONE KEN-
ward 1980. Mrs. C. Morrison
11:18
DRESSMAKING
REMODELING AND DRESSING OF ALF.
120 West 42nd St. 420 42st.
Oakland 6150.
FORMULAS
ONE DOLLAR BRINGS YOU THE BEST
market today! start a money-making
business. Send $1 you to George Sales Co.
448 Pole Ave. Jersey City, NJ. mar11
FURNACES REPAIRED
FURNACES INVESTIGATED. LA FURNACES FURN-
BALLED and installed by experts. Exchange.
2001 N. State at. Phoebe Oakland 2041. mar11
NEW YORK CLASSIFIED
LARGE FRONT ROOM. FURN. OR EN-
form. responsible business people. Call
or email: 212-555-4000. Gift area. Broad
near Fulton 11. Top floor. 12:38
W. 13TH ST. 217-PRIVILEGY ROOMS.
$8 and up.
in you want Help,
in fact, to exchange
HELP WANTED
MALE AND FEMALE
WANTED-MEN AND WOMEN SPENING-
rators for the government service; common-
eous every Tuesday; candidates needed for
this Woman's Club, Southbelt $400.
WANTED-Women, medical practitioners,
of many wards are desired to become members
of the Women's Club, Southbelt $400.
WANTED-TO HEAR FROM 200 MEN AND
women who are desiring to become members
of the Women's Club, Southbelt $400.
Address: 171 W. 12th St., Dept. C, 201 C, 501
Male and Female
RADWAY 3141, ANH 30929F6F CLINER
WILDE WATER, Qr. 241, St. 3, 1600
WILDE WATER, Qr. 241, St. 3, 1600
HELP WANTED-MALE
FIREMEN, DRAKENEN, BAGAGENEEN
elektronische commutatoren, shopping
cars, kraftwerk, kraftwerk, kraftwerk
63, kraftwerk Bureau, N. B. Loisel, M.
BE A 1057071 C - £45000 WERKHA
täglich verfügbar; expoßelbe unexercu-
sionelle agenzyme 1024, locat. 1,
Louisel, Mb.
SITUATIONS WANTED-MALE
JUWNSSN OUAGANZER, AT FIRESHIP EMERGENCY
in high BASHFORD, former officer of淋水,
fire brigade, and fire station. Req's
give bank references, also references from
Chicago, Illinois. Address: 212
Chicago, Illinois.
PORTION: WANTED 100 BASHFORD, EMERGENCY
cell furnished 470 for write 3424 bashford
cell furnished 470 for write 3424 bashford
education; a reliable "Bilboago corporation doing business" here for 230 years; a successful campaign on a new product; sales and contribution. Can also the one and only source of money for the Lake Fountain. d. Shattuck Lake Fountain Hout. 2000 Lake Park are.
WANTED - SALESMEN TO LEARN
SUMMER SALARY and goal accomplishment. Applicant
b. in. Ph. 414. N. Stake 11. Phone: Backdraft
GIRL TO LEARN THAPE, PAID WHILE
bearling; only those experienced with 2
years of experience in backdrafting or
& Januance & 80. W. Rowley, Stewart.
GIRL TO LEARN CHIPFET BEADING
& State at. 20, hour or
beadled 80. State at. 20, hour or
beadled 80.
WANTED - OPERATORS ON POWER M
arrows. 2100 lbs ave.
GIRLS TO I SMARE TO MAKE LAMB
shades. 75th St. sale. 32nd floor.
SITUATIONS WANTED-FEMALE
SITUATION WANT EXPERT MARCEE
baker, all around equally partner operator.
SITUATION WANTED-FAMILIAR
president to lay or home. Deng. 2007.
TREASURES 100% of sales.
dental's dedication. History 1764.
AGENTS WANTED
AGENTS
31 THE FIRST IN YOUR TERRITORY
light for 8 hours. Cure sample in
basket 10 IN YOUR TERRITORY
10 IN YOUR TERRITORY
International Specialty Co.
DREW, W. KELLEYLE, N. J. 1115
THE GREATEST DIVERY EVERY
MAGNETRITE LIQUID POWDER
in bottle 10 IN YOUR TERRITORY
bottle 80 IN YOUR TERRITORY
Mail orders 20 IN YOUR TERRITORY
BUYGROUND, INC.
243 Indiana Ave. (Chicago, IL).
212-265-2655
GOOD POSITIONS FOR YOUNG MEN
and WOMEN in spain time the fastest hailed
bottle 80 IN YOUR TERRITORY
all information. Address E. Buster
P. D. Chicago Defender.
BUSTER'S house-brewed sahne forte; an-
nual winner, big infiltration. 200 R. S.
FAST SELLING HOUSE TO HOUSE HOLIDAY
labor preparations and household ar-
ticles. Articles. Ibison Laf. 200 Laf. at
WANTED—LIVER AGENT TO SELL MEN
Call You Miles on countryside. Mary R.
Call You Miles on countryside. Mary R.
FAST-QUICK—EASE EASY
Neon-lite washes clothes without rabble-
ing. Influenza. Influenza. Influenza. Co. 182-
182-265-2655
**WEEKLY:** 3 TO 6 HOURS HOME
**WEEKDAY:** 6 TO 8 HOURS HOME
**GARBURKARD, J.** Chicago
**GARBURKARD, J.** Chicago
PERSONAL
Dr. W. E. Hiblaum, the world's pitted medium and astrologist, sits in his great armchair, telling you life's story. She tells your life's story; when you will be old, she tells you that you may be around that day or that may be around you. She shows you how to do everything seem to go wrong if you do. If so, consult Dr. W. E. Hiblaum. If you do, she covers postage and mailing expense. She covers a reading that will be posted in W. Hiblaum. 12 Williams St. N N W D W THYSELL - FULL HORSECORDS readings (not trivial) 3 question cards 12 Williams St. to cover postage and mailing expense. She guides instruction books. 41. Williams 664 LEFT HEAD READING - COMPLETE HORSECORDS character reading to seminar; read month's reading. 127 Broadway, New York City. 114 MAGIC WIRES - SECRET METHOD of obtaining anything you want; price one item. Secrets. 116. Booklet. Mar. 25. 1 ROWS FOR 25' AND 27' - SENIOR ESSENCE farmcarrier. 247 Fulton St. Chicago, IL.
BUSINESS CHANCES
ALL THE CLIENTS YOU WANT
MUST HAVE A MIDDLE-EDGE
MAKED MADE-to-make and be geared
agent in spare time; big points; Write quick
comments; Tailoring Talking. D. Dee, Litton
Park, NY.
PARTNER WANTED WITH $500, OR TWO
partners with $250 each to take interest in
the wedding of Dalloughe 7188 evenings at 7 o'clock.
FOR SALE: $5,000 OR ALL OF A FIRST-
class clutching, tailoring, crainat and
tuxedo apparel. Asap. Act quickly.
Dalloughe 7181.
AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE
1018 Bury St. Martin FOX 84223
1018 Bury St. Martin FOX 84223
Special built "all" 84223, 500 sq. ft., 4.500 sq. ft.
will make 90 miles an hour; cost all of
$7,500. Will sacrifice.
INSTRUCTION
LEARN CROCHET BEADING
The present demand for crochet beaders in
equipment practical operators can easily be
trade complete at a reasonable rate and
trade complete at a durable rate and a
complete composition of work. We can
work for experienced needle and crochet
ACME READING AND EMBROIDERY SHOP.
612 E. 39th st.
Douglas 3566.
Electric Lights. Gas. Hot and Cold Water.
STATE ST. 501- HURNS, ROOMS; MAR-
riest couple; use of lifebraes; reasonable
Dresel 6017.
4-11
PRAIRIE AVE. 428, APT. 428.
PRAIRIE AVE. 428, S-LIGHT.
Modern wooden transportation. 44, 16.
PRAIRIE AVE. 428, FURN. ROOM, CON-
temporary lighting. 428.
Conventional lighting. 428.
E. 25D ST. 355, APT. 11, H-2WOOMR. ROOM, heat, heat.
Call overnight for 6. Douglas Room. 428.
WARAH AVE. 425, APT. 2, S-NEATLY available for age of two men.
Bourdillon 258.
E. 25TH ST. 320, 15T APT. -2WOOMR. ROOM, heat, heat.
Bourdillon 258.
FURN. ROOM surface层: men prefer.
FURN. ROOM surface层: men prefer.
Call Supervisor 5440 after 8 n. m.
PRAIRIE AVE. furrow. front room: running water men or couple.
PRAIRIE AVE. furrow. front room: running water men or couple.
PRAIRIE AVE. 428, FURN. ROOM for COUPLE two men: modern near "L." Call after 6 n. m. or woman. Travel 355.
WAHAMH ATR, 325M-LARGE PRINT ROOM
(2000) 212-722-2222, wahamh.atr.com,
inform. WIRELY.
INDIANA AVE. 3743, 242 APT - FLAT
Brown, dorm. modern, nicely furn. 64,
1948. dorm. modern, nicely furn. 64,
1948. dorm. modern, nicely furn. 64,
CALMETT AVE. 4417, 3D APT - NEATLY
brown, near 144, surface, skin, 920.
MICHIGAN AVE. 3253, 187 FL - NEATLY
brown, steam heat, electric light, 850.
CALMETT AVE. 4611, 2D APT - FLAT
brown, metal or concrete patio
brown, dorm. 1658.
CALMETT AVE. 4611, 2D APT - FLAT
brown, metal or concrete patio
brown, dorm. 1658.
INDIANA AVE. 4508, 3D APT - NEATLY
brown, metal or concrete patio
brown, dorm. 1658.
INDIANA AVE. 3563, 2D FL - NEATLY
farm, front room. Douglas 1052, 11-19
INDIANA AVE. 3563, 2D FL - NEATLY
farm, front room. Douglas 1052, 11-19
CALMETT AVE. 3551, 2D FL - NEATLY
BILKIN PARK. 2664, 2D APT - NEATLY
farm, closely light, light. Douglas 1052,
11-19
CALMETT AVE. 2662, 3D APT - NEATLY
farm, closely light, light. Douglas 1052,
11-19
VERSON AVE. 2518- LARGE FRONT -
back room, reasonable. Douglas 1033, 11-19
farm, first-class people reasonable. 11-19
FURN. OR UNFURN. FURN: FIRST CLASS
ST. LAWRENCE AVE. 4620, FURN. 1000,
modern: sleek, freest. 1007, 11-19
FURN. OR UNFURN. FURN: FIRST CLASS
ST. LAWRENCE AVE. 4620, FURN. 1000,
modern: sleek, freest. 1007, 11-19
4TH FILM. 616 APT - 2 FURN.
E 45D ST, GS2- TWO UNFURN. ROOMS,
room, electricity: self. Kerned 1020.
GRAND ROOM, suitable for BEAUTIFUL
room, suitable for BESTFURN.
GRAND BLVD, 5250. APT. 4- FURNISHED
room, modern.
GRAND SDA APT.-FRONT SINGLE
room, private entrances:
ONE ROOM WITH LARGE SANITARY
kitchenette; need, else, light, Bldg. 8277.
SOUTH ROOM - LARGE FURN.
Bungalow 0423.
NELLY FURN. FURN. STUDIO MED.
modern; no objection to children. Bldg. 8274.
AVENUE FURN. FURN. ROOM AND
SANITARY ROOM.
CALUNET AVE. 2020—TWO PRONT BUS.
bike or bike; room rooftop; wine bar
NEWTUY TUTIN. ROOM ALSO ENFURN.
with kitchenette; strictly moq. Drexel 4914.
PURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT
ORLAND BLDV. 3812-PLUN. ROOM. CON-TEST
room. all room news. Boulder. 2461-
RIDGES AVE. 3842. INY TL.-FURN.
room. steam not water. good transport-
al. 60TH ST. 32. 3D APT.-FURN. OR UN-
FURN. room. steam heat. electricly. more-
INMANA AVE. 3741. 3D APT.-NEATLA-
turn. room. steam condition. bouncer. 11
WARMSI AVE. 4542. 1ST APT.-ROOM.
assemble or man. no other rooms. 11
WARMSI AVE. 4400. 2ND APT.-LABE-
room. room. suitable for com-
plies. reasonable.
ST. LAWRENCE AVE., 421; 3D APT. 517,
or light house lighting, cheap, cheap.
INDANA AVE., 434; 3D APT. 5-98,
room, light and air; quiet home. Dream.
SOUTH PARK AVE., 505-LIARGE ROOM
and kitchens; steam, electricity and
GILLS AVE., 505-PIUR. ROOM: MAN AND
wife or two of two or man and woman;
steam. LANGLY AVE., 505-PIUR. ROOM: SING
woman or couple. Call in 5 p. m.
GLAND BLADE, 57TH BLOCK: ROOM: PIRL
lake; parram family; retirements.
PRAMIE AVEL, 3412, 3417 PLU—FUN,
Corrente, for single or double men,
Mrs. LAMLEY AVEL, 4114 LAMLEY AVEL,
Nanoville 2555,
LAMLEY AVEL, 4114 LAMLEY AVEL,
Nanoville 2555,
LAMLEY AVEL, 4144 HOWELL, 1003,
LAMLEY AVEL or help employees—Drake 8901,
8:48 PLU, 45—MORRISON BOOKS; MN
50TH BARK AVEL, 3299—LAMLE KITCHEN
pacing room; painting room,
LAMLEY AVEL, 3412 LAMLEY AVEL,
stream room and size; for couple,
INDANA AVEL, 402—TWO LABORS
E. 40TH ST. S. ALPT. S. P-PEURS. ROOM
for couch, easel. E. 40TH ST. S. S-PEURS.
front of room. S-NASTIA PLAN.
front of room, light; modern; all contigures.
E. 40TH ST. S. S-NASTIA PLAN.
front of room; modern; P-PEURS.
BRADHAM AVE. 2542- TWO FIRST BOOMS
furn. ornamental, modern.
INDIANA AVE. 2542- FIFT STAR NORTH-
ISE BOOMS, modern concourse, Bond 2541
E. STITH 352, 552 AUT- MAIL- OUT
BOOMS, modern concourse, Bond 2541
CALMET MET AVE. 2517- FURNISH AND
MIBER; fireplace, electricity, Douglas 2520
CALMET MET AVE. 2517- FURNISH AND
fireplace, electricity, Douglas 2520
GIAND BEVL. 2518, APT. 1- LARGE
furn. from room; modern.
INDIANA AVE. 2542- TWO FURN. HBKING
POOL; stream, first class, Bog. 1974
INDIANA AVE. 2542- TWO FURN. HBKING
POOL; stream, first class, Bog. 1974
INDIANA AVE. 2542- LARGE FURN.
GOALS POOL; good transportation near "A."
INDIANA AVE. 4010, APT. 1- SINGLE
FURNITURE; stream, first class, Bog. 1974
MICHIGAN AVE. 2512- LARGE FURN.
room; fireplace; also small room for man
UNFURNISHED ROOMS
FURNISHED FLAT3 FOR RENT
PAGE ELEVEN
household Goods,
ning you can use.
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
ARE YOU GOING TO START
PAYING HIGH RENT AGAIN
THIS YEAR?
GET SOMETHING IN RETURN FOR YOUR MONEY
DESIRES A RECEIPT
FOR SALE
A 10-cubic house, above front, from: stream heater,
10' x 10' x 10', $12,000. A 10-cubic house, above front, from: stream heater,
10' x 10' x 10', $12,000.
A Sifat building, containing 4-3-room
system, 2-bathroom, 2-room heat; cem
building; bath room; room heat; cem
building; brick framed with stone; $2,000.
Sifat building in an ideal neighborhood.
Price $2,000.
A Sifat building, brick and stone front;
2-bathroom, 2-room heat; cem building;
throughout. Prefective ave. near 20th st.
an attractive garden building. Price $2,000.
A Sifat building, brick and stone front;
2-bathroom, 2-room heat; cem building;
throughout. Prefective ave. near 20th st.
an attractive garden building. Price $2,000.
A Sifat building, brick and stone front;
2-bathroom, 2-room heat; cem building;
throughout. Prefective ave. near 20th st.
an attractive garden building. Price $2,000.
The calender ave. near 43th st.
JAMES B. MCGWIN & SON
123 INDANA AVE. DUCK, 404-3354
FOR SALE
TWO-SHOT BRICK HOUSES, 32nd and 33rd
floor, luxury interior. Bargain, $2,200
house; laundry, Bargain, $2,200;
bedroom, Bargain, $2,200; all
two houses for $3,000, $1,200 cash.
TIN-ROOM BRICK HOUSE, 32nd block, Forest
acre; furnace heat, gas light, baths; grass
frost, $2,200, only $1,000 cash.
TWO BUILDINGS, 32nd block, dorm
for $3,200, 33rd and Forest acre;
Bargain, $2,200; only $1,000 cash.
TWO LOTS, 34th and Prairie acre, $50,125;
you can build to suit yourself. Why not
not lose your money?
SIX-FLAT BUILDING, 42nd and Calamite
bought modern. $20,000, only $2,500
TWO Houses AND FOUR LOTS, northeast
20th st. and Prairie acre; 15 and 8
rooms; Bargain, $2,200; all two
houses for $1,000, $1,200 cash.
STEWART & NEAL
3522 Michigan ave. Vc. 0592
3522 Michigan ave. Vc. 0592
first-class condition.
$7,900. $290 cash. Brant ave.
first-class condition.
$7,900. $290 cash. Brant ave.
first-class condition.
$7,900. terms. Foreclosure and 30th.
right-floor; else. W. H. w. best of cop-
eign.
Tum-but, 7 and 8; summa, elec. M, H, W. 10, 12.
Tum-but, 14 and 48h. $10,500. B, Z. ternas.
Tum-but, 48h. $10,500. B, Z. ternas.
born in Wisconsin's largest city. Fritz
Portrout, vursy tursy ihlawen. awe.
Portrout, vursy tursy ihlawen. awe.
WANTED
Wanted from owners, for sale or for rent - housekeepers. Dear friends, thank goodness and honour with considerable cash waitress results list the four property with us.
10, 20, 40 are trac in Illinois; new
schools, towns, and good neighbors; well
served communities; 50 per acre; vary easy terms. Interstate
50 per acre; vary easy terms. Interstate
formation. SVINT Land LAND. 5, 125S.
First National Bank Building. Chicago. 4-11
for SALE! - SALDEN 12 HOME STORM
and collent house for patiagnt; can be seen by
between 52nd and 53rd sts. $245.
IF YOU WANT ONE OF THE BEST BISTRO
stores from front store on Calvary arc,
south of 47th st., modern in every respect, for
food, wine, and ales. call 212-745-2222,
www.bistrocalvary.com
FOR SALE: SPEED-BOOM HOUSE: RATH,
RATH: 1100 sq ft. lightweight structure must be equipped with
a fire alarm system.
FOR SALE--TWO-FAT BUDGE; MUST BUY
4,500. 4-lane lagerette. Kenwood K500.
FOR LOSS NEAR THE LAKE FRONT AT
Douglasville, cheap easy quickly. T
Douglasville.
ADA ST. , 917-503-FOUR-BOOM HOUSE, $1,600
$900 down. BOWLER 9277.
FOR SALE—MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE--DRIELX 0100, 3947 COTTAGE
Grove area. Drive to Cottage. storage lots
will furnish room house; must be sold
will furnish room house; must be sold
POOL AND BILLION TABLE. CHAPS
good condition. Private Ugr Store, 29.
32th st.
HALL FOR SALE--CIGARS
candy, soft drinks; first-class place for
right man. Kenwood 2320.
SKILLER HALL FOR SALE--BROAD APT.
subsequently furnished; first-class condition.
4200 column apt. 497. Kenwood 6005.
FOR SALE--FOURBILK FLAT AND KITCHEN
and cooking. Box 69. Chicago
Defender.
GIX-CHAIR HOUSEBLAZ STAND FOR SALE.
4200 column. $400. Chicago
Defender.
PLAY FOR SALE. SUITABLE FOR LODGE
tranporter, each tranporter. 331D street. 18
DINING ROOM SET. BUFFET. CHINA CAR
3200 column. 3200 street. 18
DINING ROOM SET. BUFFET. CHINA CAR
3200 column. 3200 street. 18
PLAYER-PIANO WORD BOLLE FOR SALE
for each. 3115 State st. 12.
REPAIRER: BREAKER, 4115 Portside st. Phones 006, 005,
palleter 4115 Portside st. Phones 006, 005.
FOR SALE - COMPLETE FURNISHING OF
8-month apt. Portside st. Phones 006, 005.
FOR SALE - COMPLETE FURNISHING OF
8-month apt. Portside st. Phones 006, 005.
UNDERSTOCKED. 815, 2210 Fillin ave.
2822 Flinwood ave. Phone Douglass 4533,
Broadway for electric light or power. We are
wired for electric light or power. We are
wired for electric light or power. We are
placed to estimate your work.
We handle all kinds of repairs, construction
AS GOOD AS THE BEST AND
- GHEAPER THE HIST-
FOR DECORATING
WALLPAPER CLEANING, WARNHING
AND FLASING PRICE, CALL 2605.
ANY BOOK YOU WANT AT CUR-BAT-
prices. Don't buy until we offer our bargain
Book House Dept. 22. 88 W. Washington st.
Book House Dept. 22. 88 W. Washington st.
EEN 410 DAILY SILVERING MIRRORS,
plating and corunding metalware, autos,
Walter Dee Laborteurs. 288 Fifth ave.
New York City.
NAMES LIST FOR SALE 600 HUNDRED,
Washington, HI. names J. Nathan,
Washington, HI.
CLEANING
And ask our perseverance to call and give you a chance to be your best guest at a house store or office. We are in a position to give you the best service at the lowest price, all ways guaranteed.
WINDOWS WASHED
NO JOB TOO SMALL - NO JOB TOO LARGE
WE CARRY LIABILITY INSURANCE
THE DOTSON SERVICE,
260 PRAIRIE AVE. M. C. DOTSON, MGR.
CHICAGO DEFENDER
EDITORIAL
PAGE OF THE
The Southern wh
THE
Chicago Detende
WORLD'S BEST ESTATE 100D WEEKLY
Founded May 6, 1805, by ROBERT S. ABBOTT, LL. B.
E ROBERT S. ABBOTT PUBLISHING COMP
(INCORPORATED)
Published by
DON=11 Green St., Charing Cross Road, London, England.
CHICAGO=243 Indiana Ave. Telephone Douglas 0697.
Chicago Defender WORLD'S GREATEST ODDS WEEKLY
Entered as second-class master, Feb. 1, 1906, at the Postoffice in Chicago, IL, under act of March 0, 1870.
LONDON—17 Green St., Charleston Cross Road, London, England, W. C.
CHICAGO—3635 Indiana Ave., Telephone Dogs 0087.
DEFENDER'S PLATFORM FOR AMERICA
DARWIN'S THEORY
is not such a difficult thing to believe. Darwin's dops that we sprung from an ape, gorilla, a monkey or wild chimpanzee, for they all are built much on our shape, can you look the bunch over they call civilized. In your mind this one thought will prevail—at a whole lot of people could well pass for if they but had four paws and a tail.
"NO DANGER" GOV MORRISON
GOVERNOR MORRISON of North Carolina hastens to assure the people of the United States and Canada as a whole and Matthew Bullock in particular, that there are no grounds for the fears expressed—we might add almost universally—for the safety of our people. We must characterize the reports that there would be an immediate latching if this "suspect" were brought back for trial as "infamous slander of the state." Maybe so. Who knows, and what sane man would be willing to take the chance. We must be in North Carolina and the mob spirit is far from being squelched in that state. As a comeback the governor is quoted as having said: "I challenge the entire country to show any state that is doing more for the intellectual and moral development of our people than to educate them, to promote their health and make them efficient in industry than any state like wealth and population in the Union. In that challenge I include New York, with its murderous gunmen—white and black—and Illinois, with its race murders, than any four states in the Union."
NOTE THE WAY we are distinguished from the white morn class—"ilgners"—note also the inference that we are getting exceptional educational advantages, and then turn to the annual educational recitals, which are about 10 years and over is about $8, while there is only a slight difference between the voting strength of the white and the black man. There may never be another lynching in North Carolina, but the governor, as powerful as he is, and as willing to do the right thing as he appears to be, is not even with the public. He is not with the public sentiment. AS THERE HAS SELDOM, if ever, be anyone punished for lynching, it seems evident that public sympathy is with the defenders of the law, and hence it is hard to believe that any local public officer, who, faithful to his oath of office, protected a prisoner and lynched him, would not be retired promptly to private life at the expiration of his term of office. This self-protection at any cost accounts largely for the many instances of "overpowering the sheriff." Gov. Morton undoubtedly well and would give Bullock every protection he could, but why take a chance when proof of hasn't been forthcoming of his absolute guilt?
SNORBRISHNESS IN THE CHURCH
IT WOULD be a difficult matter here in America to single out any one religious denomination as being less fettered by racial prejudice than another. The "welcome" sign displayed in glittering letters over the doors and over the altars of so-called sacred edifices denotes the fact that the church brother if he enters on the assumption that the church authorities inadvertently omitted the prefix "all" to their sign, he will find in most instances no glad hand of welcome but a cold spirit of resentfulness for his intrusion.
M. P. BURNS of Philadelphia, speaking recently in Chicago to a body of Methodist ministers, said: "My soul is distressed and humiliated by a church professing to love God with all the heart, mind and strength and its neighbor as itself and at the same time absolutely refusing to allow people of a different social group or speaking a different language to enter the church. The doors of the church were thrown open to all without class or racial distinction, freely welcomed with the consciousness that the church membership would meet them on the platform of sympathetic fellowship, the last vestige of unbelief on the part of the church members. IUST HOW MANY of the two hundred and fifty divines present saw the light and will carry it back to their present congregations remains to be seen, but if there be one among them who denies even to the least of His children that right to worship in any temple erected in His name, they should be stormed out and the doors of their churches closed in their fences.
WE AS A GROUP, have been compelled to build our own church north as well as south of the Mason and Dixon line, because the average American white man is so much more comfortable enough to embrace other than white men and women. The doors of the black man's church are open to all. Little wonder the soul of Rev. Burns "is distressed and humiliated when he sees his brother clergyman immediate his worship with the teachings of their Maker. Perhaps the ministers who listened to the words of Rev. Burns are all honest, just God-fearing men. If so, what a world of good they could do if they were the gospel and护护 the church they preach. When in the church, can we look for moral and religious support? It is high time the American church paid more attention to the saving of human souls and less attention to the color of the skin or racial identity of the man to bow to the atlar and weep their way to God.
OLD STUFF
AS A RESULT of the activity of federal probation agents "moonshining" and carrying hip life becoming so hazardous that only the brave at him play the game. The homes and clubs of the have been raided as well as the homes of those life spheres of life. Whatever is law she respected and the justice guaranteed once remarked that the best secure the repeal of a bad law is to strictly and finally enforce it; but under no circumstances late or evade it.
UNDER OUR FORM OF GOVERNMENT no probation can be enacted or remain on the statute books if it has been enacted. The conviction never could have been established by a national amendment or legislative enactment if he had not been demanded by public sentiment it were an experiment and the people should be convinced that the experiment is a failure he be changed, modified or repaired in the same manner with the same processes by which it might about.
PROBHIBITION has not been in existence
AS A RESULT of the activity of federal prohibition agents "moonshining" and carrying hip liquor is becoming so hazardous that only the brave at heart can play the game. The houses and clubs of the rich are not protected by the laws in humber spheres of life. Whatever is law should be respected and enforced whether it be wise or unwise. Gen. Grant once remarked that the best way to secure the repeal of a bad law is to strictly and imitively enforce it; but under no circumstances to violate or evade it.
UNDER OUR FORM OF GOVERNMENT no law can be enacted or remain on the statute books if the same is not supported by popular sentiment. Prohibition has not been the same amendment or legislative enactment if the same had not been demanded by public sentiment. If it were an experiment and the people should be convinced that the experiment is a failure, it can be changed, modified or repealed in the same manner as the same processes by which it was brought about.
PROHIBITION has not been in existence long enough to enable the public to accurately determine its merits or deremnity. Many of the arguments used in this case are imaginary than real. It is unsound, for instance, to assert that any law is unwise because in some localities and by some persons the same will be violated. Any law, it matters not what it may be intended for, but unquestionably will be.
THE CORRECT VIEW to take of the matter is to determine what is best for the public interest and the needs of society. It is also to make the best interest of society as a whole should be crystallized into statutory form. Since prohibition has been thus crystallized it is safe to assume that the best interests of society is best calculated to meet the wants of the people.
OUR WEEKLY SERMON
[This space is devoted to the use of ministers throughout the country who desire to send a message to our readers. These sermons are available on our official notice.]
THE EXISTENCE OF GOD
Wm. McLleven, Dallas Texas
In the Beginning God * $\textcircled{1}$ * $\textcircled{2}$ * $\textcircled{3}$ * $\textcircled{4}$
You will turn to Exodus 3:14 you will words: "I am that I am." This is your name, "Jehovah," and signifies that existent. If God were not self-existent not be the Creator of all things; it is the athenistic God who the athenistic denies the existence of the ways that the universe is eternal. But prevailing skepticism is void of four we consider the following facts: the world is original God; the world and could not form a whole which is living. It must, therefore, be the world's great first cause or agency. The world and a beginning and is the work of a quick to respond fully and satisfactory inquiry. Her inanimate works, the buildings, the wonderful solar system, the mountains, the broad expanse of occidental nature, are impatient of the existence of God, but they are more suggestive.
We could come from no being but an existing eternal being. Atheism teaches that God is the creator of matter, but God's word tells us that the creature into man the breath of life and a living life in man the breath of life and a
If you will turn to Exodus 5:14 you will find that Moses, the prophet, has His name, "Jehovah," and signifies that He is self-existent. If God were not self-existent He would have been self-existent. God is creative power in a strong proof of His existence.
The atheist denies the existence of the Creator and says that the universe is eternal. But such widely prevailing skepticism is void of foundation because it is considered the foundation of parts which had a beginning, and could not form a whole which had no beginning. It must, therefore, be the work of some great first cause or agency. The universe has had a beginning and is the work of the Almighty, and is the work of man's mind and quick to respond fully and satisfactorily to the inquiry. Her inanimate works, the beautiful constellations, the wonderful solar system, the majestic mountains, the broad expanse of oceans, the restless fury of the tempest, are impressive and animated by the tempest of God, but animate works are more suggestive. Life could come from no being but an infinite, self-existing eternal being. Atheism teaches that life was originated by the chemical action of matter upon matter, but God's word tells us that the earth could be made into man and the earth could and man became a living soul; the second only life and produce life.
BERT WILLIAMS
HE SAID come unto me all ye oiden and I will give thee rest," and the of six and forty, tired, weary and had been his to travel from place, but this old world, spreading sunshine and his deep fellowship, sorrow and disappointment, T WILLIAMS was more than the comedian. He was intensely human and, thoughtful and ever ready to do one less fortunate than himself, he was not only a friend and that they were not confined to r nationality but embraced all? DEATH is not only a national but a calamity. It is not only a serious grave and great loss of humanity. All recognized his supra line. His rise to fame and rates the fact that those qualities aments incident to talent and genius to any one race. Bert Williams pla Silver Lining" in life's drama, "Dark
RESTLESS MEXICO
THE HABIT of starting a revolution every time the wind blows the other way is one that seems to have fixed itself on the Mexican people, although under the leadership of the government up have quickly been suppressed and the central government has been able to function without skipping very many cogs. During the past week the border states have been the scene of miniature revolutions and the central feeling of unrest throughout that turbulent land.
MEXICANS resent the exploitation of their country by unscrupulous, convolving, money-seeking foreigners and secrecy as the hostile towards the central government and the central feeling of taking this attitude. Rotten politics played by the men higher up in Mexico's political life has aided materially in the overthrow of many of their governments have been turned over to foreigners for a more pittance by the ruling powers against the wishes of the proletariat. Naturally they became resentful and riotous.
METHER THE MEXICAN PEOPLE feel that they have something in common with the American Colored man or not is a debatable question. It is nevertheless true their treatment of him is far more friendly than the other, and their appalotic movements to start colonies in Mexico, and although the pictures drawn were of the brightest hue and the reports of the emissaries were punctuated with golden opportunities, the fear of bands and the availble element of Mexico kept hunched.
RECENTLY a sect known as "Mennonites" left Manitoba, to take up their home in Mexico. In the colony there are some $0,000 people, a portion of whom are uneducated, and others they are unwilling to submit to Canadian school law, especially to compulsory teaching of English, preferring to stick to their mother tongue which is Russian, and because their young men were called upon for war service in the face of the fact that they are not educated, they are taking themselves and their wealth—which amounts to more than $20,000,000—from kindly, law-allying Canada to the land of revolutions.
THERE IS SOMETHING SIGNIFICANT in this movement. Something more than merely have the power to make people have courage of living which they religiously observe and are willing to go to the end of the world, if necessary, to find a place where they can have absolute freedom of thought, speech and action. Mexico, they believe, offers that anyone can live in Mexico, and they are willing to go there. The Mexicans are restless people, clanish and vindictive. Their love for foreigners hinges on how much they can give, not take from Mexico. We, as a group, are fortunate in having the friendship of the Mexican people, and unless a sign fall, there will within a few years be leaving the South, not for the North, but for Mexico.
NOT DEAD BUT SLEEPING
KU KLJK KLAN is dying hard. So much occasionally runs counter to authorities, and the press that a few columns and even whole pages now give them an inch or two on so the board of city development of San Diego, for example, declaring the citizens law abiding and that the Klan would be last interests of the public, socially and DISTRICT ATTORNEY at Denp on the officers of the Klan to explain the reasons for the attack. And from all sections of the count text is made to uphold the law com to wipe out this organization that for evil second only to that of the demon who is supposed to reign in
THE KU KLUX KLAN is dying hard. Some small town branch occasionally runs counter to the constituted authorities, and the press that a few months ago had been calling for the deluges now give them an inch or two on some inside page. The board of city development of San Angelo, Texas, passed resolutions opposing the organization in that city, declaring the citizens law abiding, the offenses unlawful, and the need to the best interests of the public, socially and morally.
THE DISTRICT ATTORNEY at Denver, Col. called upon the officers of the Klan to explain a letter threatening the Ward Gash if he remained in the city. And from all sections of the country where he was a member of the Klan, reports to wipe out this organization that has a reputation for evil second only to that of the horny headed demon who is supposed to reign in the infinal regions. The American people sometimes are a little slow in striking at an evil that threatens to uproot the very foundations of our government, but the demon is not the real threat the secret of success is found in unison. When the Klan shoe plains the foot of the Jew, Cathele and foreigners these worthes combined with the "under dog" who had been suffering for years, and removed the pinch. There are more ways than one of killing a dog, an the bounty said after putting his canine in the sauce grinder.
CONQUEST OF THE AIR has the answer, but the flaw in it is that there cannot be conquest of the law of gravitation, a fact recently demonstrated by the death of a man who was killed by a mighty gun that not a Colored man has been hurt in our government's aircraft, for the simple reason that the members of our little party are not permitted to join this part of the army service.
THE THREATENED STRIKE of the coal miners does not ruffe us so much for the reason that old Sol is getting high up in the heavens and we are saving all of our extra energy to fight the ice man.
AMONG OTHER THINGS in the movies that are not true to life is the never-failing promptness of telephone connections. The line is never busy, nor is ever a wrong number given.
"FINAL CURTAIN"
BERT WILLIAMS
THIS AND THAT AND T'OTHER
A BIT OF NEWS, GOSSIP, FICTION AND FUN
A Kissin' Fool
"Kiss me, you fool," she bid.
"Was he a fool? He was. He did."
—The Pirate.
Ladies Who Have Entertained Me
The Brown Swan Troubadours featuring Miss Pearl Lepo, the "World's Greatest Blues Singer." She has recorded: "When Lovin' Henry Mary Miles Liza Jane" and "Scoot, Miss Lazy."
"Miss Queenie Nile, the "World's Greatest Blues Singer," and her Scalding Syncapitors. Miss Nile has enthralled this mundane sphere with her vampirish rendition of "I'm Blue Miss Blackenwhite, the "World's Greatest Blues Singer," and her Hot Dawg Howlers in conjunction with Nobby Saiser's Hambone Jazz Orchestra. Miss Blackenwhite is remembered for her entraining effusion Johnson Monkeyed with the Dare."
Ma'mehelle Sadie de la Satin Skin the "World's Greatest Blesse Singer," and her Howling Honkatonk Hounds The Columbine Phonograph Company The Columbine Phonograph Company spasm, "Baby Blue Rubbens." On sale anywhere. If you can't purchase it from your dealer, send them a reliable homebrew recipe and they will
Pricoless Gems
Misled, deluded soul, why feel disappointed and sad because the rabbit does not smile and speak well of you? Would you want to be so spiked, so catholic and hobbied of every person you mot? Such an individual's personality is lost in his futile efforts for an ideal—false popularity. Why not feel pleased because those of questionable principles are not so important that you are able to retain the loyal friendship of a chosen few?
So Different from the Best
Concerning Race leadership, Mr. Free, new incumbent in the recorders of deeds office for the District of Columbia, said upon assuming his position, he would be ingent to give the Race. I do not feel that I should assume self appointment as a leader. I am simply a lawyer and not a politician, and I am not a lawyer of my ability. If I can serve in my humble way I will do so, but I am not coming to Washington to assume leadership. I feel that our leaders should be sought out by the people we serve and not be self-appointed."
Trying some on Southern white women who have been assaulted.
Giving a little to Russell, Mississippi governor, and Harrison, senator from Arkansas.
Making some Chicago dandles tell where they get their swell clothes.
Forcing wives of Pullman porters to tell "daddy" what went on during his absence.
Awarding "Jason" a portion.
Editing all newspaper editors.
Treating Wizard Simmons of the Klu Klux Klan.
It would not be needed for such sputtering effervescenes as Marcus, do you think?
How could the "slimmy" be on its last legs? Absence of legs has been its drawback from the start.
Other Papers Say
From New York Prologue
Of the man who Lincoln left to mankind nothing has been more increased by time than his sheer personality. He was greater, more powerful, more intelligent. He is more than a dramatic reminiscence—has done vastly more than to save the lives of millions of slaves. He had a unionism in his character, a balance of qualities that links him both to earth and sky, to men of humbleness as to those of man.
And what, if one element was more dominant than others, is the central message to consider? It is that in his name of things morality was first. He was not a materialist. His calm pressure made a god of the stomach. The world is now filled with a loud clatter about economies. Lincoln was not primarily an economic statement, but a spiritual wealth, but not as an end. Spiritual values were to be the only ones that really counted. Would that more of intellectuals were Lincolnian? Another quality it is well to remember is a bold innovator, but also a conserver. He saw there was no place for revolution—that all improvement was repentable of nature; that disregard of this law pushed mankind backward. Would that this also were the case in the light of advice concerning social progress!
JAPAN'S PRESTIGE INCREASED [From: Farm Commercial]
If the prestige of France at the Washington conference was diminished that of Japan was certainly increased. The Japanese were to be under Washington at a cloud, so to speak. It was regarded with suspicion. It was reported to be opaque. It was reported to be under Washington in the minds of some people it had been dragged to the national capital to be made for Japan for Japan. But the Japanese had with dignity and moderation. They maintained their national rights while they were made to be made by those who opposed their policies. They made friends and enhanced their moral credit. They gained their moral gains they won because the facts were on their side and they were able to present them lusciously and convincingly. The Japanese won she won on her merits.
From Day to Day
A painting by John Singer Sargent, in the Boston public library, depicts the body of the part of the Jews. The picture, "The Synagogue," one of a series of allegorical studies, represents a Jewish community law tablet and in the other a broken scepter. Near her is another female figure, radiant and upright, standing on a platform. The first character supposed to represent Judaism; the second Christianity.
Mr. and Mrs. William Poteet of Brownville, Ky., have been the parents of 12 children in five years. Following four pairs of twins, the stork brought around a quartet.
Trial in a Massachusetts case had to be postponed after the prisoners had been locked in the jail. The eight 27 barrels of confiscated liquor had been stored.
Seven lepers in Cook county. Illness to the government leprosarium at Carville, Iowa.
SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1922
DR. A. WILBERFORCE WILLIAMS
DR. A. WILBERFORCE WILLIAMS
PREVENTIVE MEASURES, FIRST AID REMEDIES
HYGIENICS AND SANITATION
WHAT TO EAT IN COLD WEATHER
creted and poured out into the stomach and thus the appetite becomes stimulated, increased, and a great appetite is made for food in summer.
Dr. I. H. Kellogg, in Good Health,
says: "Eat more fats, less salt, enough
water." This is his prescribed winter
women. He that we
vise that we
should not fear
cold weather, but
that we should
know how to
believe, as we
do, that cold
weather is a
good thing in that
simultaneous
activities. One
should be kept
comfortably
Heat production
and all forms of
vitals.
M.
It is good to expose the body to the influence of cold, dry air. This leads to an increased production of enzymes that enables the stomach to tolerate and digest a considerably increased amount of fats in winter. In this fact we have an explanation of the cold food that is rich in potassium, rich pastry, griddle cakes, fried pork sausages, pork chops, rich gravies, chilleters and various fatty foods, and should such food be taken in summer there would be an exhibit of the stomach in the form of aches—headaches, billions attacks and stomach derangements. We often hear of people who complain of being billions in the spring and winter when their stomach is to rid it of "spring fever." This is due to the fact that there has been too great a consumption of fat foods or fat-producing foods for the stomach and digestive systems to greatly digest, assimilate and eliminate.
tivities are accelerated. This fact is announced by the intensive demand the appetite for certain foods. His interest in natural reversion to fats and a craving for farinous and saccharine beverages. The significance of this demand is that it requires fuel or heat-producing material. In winter the body makes a greater demand for one of our chief fundamentals is fuel or heat-generating material.
Persons who spend their whole time indoors, heavily clad, live in practically a summer atmosphere. They require the same amount or quality of food as those who exercise in the open, dry air. If they consume the food they need, the ing food they will be troubled with sick headaches, gastric stomach dearrangement, bifidiousness and constipation, up the amount of fuel taken in the body, and hence it becomes as too much gas in the automobile, too much coal in the furnace; it has a tendency to burn out, and proper functioning of the machinery.
We all must have fuel, all must have shelter and clothing. In winter we should consume more fats than in summer. An ounce of fat at a quantity of dry starch or dry albumen as a source of heat. To be exact, Dr. Kellogg shows that an ounce of starch has only 44 per cent of the value of an ounce of fat as a source of energy. In winter weather than we can utilize in warm weather for two reasons—there is a larger amount of heat required to keep the body warm in winter, and cold weather produces a greater amount of heat required to keep the body warm in weather, which naturally encourages the desire for more fuel or food. Dr. Kellogg shows that instinct teaches in cold weather that we should make a somewhat larger use of fat and fat-containing foods, such as nuts, and cream, than in warm weather.
We should live outdoors as much as possible, sleep with our windows on the balcony, and may have a current of fresh air passing through our bed chamber, so that we, may constantly breathe the cold air, and may be able to ache in the morning feeling all out of sorts, no appetite, drowsy and grouchy. The amount of food required in the winter is the amount of exercise one takes, but as a general proposition, the amount of food required in the winter is one-third of that which is necessary in summer.
The amount of fats may be increased one-fourth or one-third without injury and generally with benefit. Cold weather is a natural gastric acid that helps to soften such and digestive organs to such an extent that more gastric juice is se-
THE ONLOOKER By A. L Jackson
commerce and railroad rates and a federal board to adjust wages of railway workers, another federal bureau to watch the forests and waterways, why not a strong department with power to speed up and make efficient the training of the citizens who will be asked to serve in a federal army and navy, to pay federal taxes and to travel out and sleep under federal protection, government has the duty of regulating the life and slaughter of the cattle we eat then why not the responsibility for training and educating the future citizens? As for the cry of political domination of education, how conditions than these which prevail right now in Chicago, New York and many other cities. A strong federal department of education means a new freedom for the Negroes of the South and a better all round citizenship, how the enforcement of the union of these United States of America.
SUBSIDIZING EDUCATION
CURIOUS division of opinion developed in the recent conference of the National Education Association with reference to endorsing the fight of that organization for a strong federal policy and program to aid educational progress throughout the country.
One camp wants the federal department of education put on the same basis as the federal department of agriculture, with a ranking position in the cabinet, large apportionment for carrying on the work and for aiding weak communities and
A. B.
---
A. L. Jackson states to put on an educational program that will bring up the standards of education and methods to a level that would be deemed another in the country. The opposing camp seems to have no objection to some of these features, but does object to the federal government financing education in one section of the country with the need to debar them. The uninstalled Harvard professor holds that such aid will take away local initiative, which in the last analysis must be responsible for the training and education in any local community, everywhere if we egest such a strong central agency with power to dictate and relieve the local communities of the responsibility they ought to assume. This sounds all right in the sense that we are not convinced that the facts as far as we are concerned need to point the other way.
MEASURING SKULLS
EVER since Darwin put over his E "Origin of the Species" idea mankind has been busy measuring it. Since apparently the shape of the frontal sinuses can be made to mean almost anything so far as nearness or remoteness to the gorilla is concerned, everything seems to depend on the shape of the Huns showed the mark of the beast, even though they possess the Heldberg man as proof of the fact that they had an early start in the race from the ancient Gorilla family tree, not the Arthur Boulange's theory to the contrary.
Now since the efficiency days of the draft army, where you were instructed to tear off the right hand corner, accustomed to whether you would accord yourself as an American or not, we are being surfaced with psychology and mental tests to find out if we deserve Twenty-four college and university admissions and an annual test at Northwestern university and the announcement says that these gentlemen scored five points under the record made by the freshman class. At least the college presidents were same. This method strikes us as having possibilities even though to date it seems to prove very little bioscience are not what they are always supposed to be as tests. We suspect that the present student generation would be unanimous in voting for teachers and professors like a little more of the medicine prescribed for them.
Speeding Up Education
It is the same old argument of the state rights crowd versus the strong central government supporters which the Civil war is supposed to have been fought against. The States ought not to be a problem of education in Massachusetts and another problem in Alabama or California left to the merces of sectional prejudices and traditions. If the children of the state should be less weak, that is no good reason why the children of the state should suffer a loss in their schools and colleges. They will be called upon in peace and in war to meet the standards it is useful and helpful citizens. The more accident of residence ought not to be allowed to determine whether or not any particular child shall have the advantage of the best that is available. Moreover, local standards and prejudices are apt to deliver to the country an inferior product from the group most in need of training and help. This has always been true in the ideals of American citizenship and the use of the poverty plea a justification for robbing the children of the backbone of the country of their rightful heritage, thorough training in the ideals of American citizenship and the life of the country as efficient and prudent members. The Harvard professor is theoretically right, but we have been working contrary to the theory as a little study show. If we have an Interstate Commerce Commission to regulate
SUCCESS
BERT WILLIAMS was a living example of the theory that any person of talent and persistence can make good against the longest kind of challenge only by the American stage but by the entire country. His winning personality and peculiarly successful and skillful artistic ability on the stage made him an ambassador of good will as well as a tremendous educational success. The British subject he became more American than some Americans. He made of himself an interpreter of the great capacity of the Race for humor to those who least understood the tap-stick sense until the team of Williams and Walker made those sorry limitations ridiculous.
: . h ee ee i
PART TWO ; J ica Ue. - yy rfende | Features and Correspondence |
fol Wortpe MSilGkearEestial weexty Ra
WORLD TOPICS IN BRIEF 7 CHICAGO, SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1922 . . STORIES INTERESTINGLY TOLD
Bachelors, T H E Ww E E K Year Gets | ChickenHas Abyssinia’s Protector Reformers
Old Maids, 13 Months, | Best Food Continue
: ! 7 = : .
Attention! || Bert Williams Chesnutt, Novelist Start 1927| Ingredients | (gemissy sere CR Reformin:
—— Ship of State Why Hays Quit — | —— Piece 4 J a eee! —
If You Have Any of the|| 224» Cops _ Cool Down, Governor ||New Calendar With 13] Scientific Probe Shows| 4/3 sie ae Pee Ss ee | If New Law Is Passed
Symptoms Noted Waking Up in K.C. The First Year Months of 28 Days | Favorite Fowl Best pe Le é aM EN RES Sk Will Be Crime to Shine
Below You're Old Geer eee eee eee Each Is Planned for Dinner Meal Re cg eee RR PPE! © Shoes On Sunday
Gentle reader, this Is really an aw-
fully embarrassing question to havc
to put to you. Dray overlook. ovr
Diushes, and pardon the liberty. hon
ered air, adored madam, but—er—
when did you-it you ever dld—that
Invunder what clrcumatances aid You
{rst notice that You were—aher!—
Frowing ola?
Mt you haven't noticed it yet, of
courge you needn't give. the mutter
nother thought. Some people never
Go notice ft. For our part, we ra
noticed it early in Tite, when a Itt
Firl who wore a pink tam ohanter
nd ‘who went to the same Sunday
schopl a8 ouraciven, moved. aay
from the neighborhood. "Although we
had never spoken to her, “we. felt
older when sho éisappcared than We
avo ever felt wines.
"But that was sheor precocity, and
ic docan't. Indicate. what ie. really
meant by this delicate question. A
Vienna paper has been propounding
{Uo ita renders, and the London pa
ers have been quoting somo of the
Forponnes. “They"are grouped in two
Aivislons, according to nex.
‘Over on the other side of the AC-
lantic the lords. of creation always
come first, but in thie paradise. ot
women” thelr ‘answers. shall. have
precedence. When did you first d=
co that you were growing old? Here
is.a rather subtle reply:
“When J was told, “You are look-
{ing 80 fresh and Younst"™
“Ah, that will aweaizen an echo) tn
\geany 2 matron's and bachelor mald’a
‘heart. What a poleoned stab Tuvkn
in those: artless words, "You are
ng a0. fresh and young!”
‘Breathes there & man ‘with no more
tact than to end a chill ike that
Gown the pine et a wroman? | Or
was It some supremely catty apeel-
men of her own sex that launched
the barb?
‘When the Women Get Old
Here are some of the other an-
awers?
When men stopped turning round
atier passing me on the road,
“When & Woman friend of the same
age as myself became a grand-
mother:
When I noticed the first gray hatrn.
When a gitl offered me her eeat in
the tramear.
‘When ata dance more attention
wan peld to my dauphter than to
"Which Thad to play the plano whi
en T had to play the plano while
the other women started dancing.
‘When I begea to noUlce that all
acaarations of jove are similar.
“When the old men ceawed: paying
me compliments and the very Young
"When feceived an invitation to 2
suiver wedding from a couple whose
frat wedding { attended.
"When J came to the conctuston that
1 had never been Young.
‘And the men? Well, it can't be
said that they sirike a very different
hote, except the one of two that date
the aad reallzation from some symp=
tom of declining” physical strength.
Berhape the moat gubile 1s tls one!
Stwhen a mother asiced ‘me to see
er young Gaughter bore.”
Old Age for the Men
Reg'lar old Uncle George fellow,
xrhnow, eafe.and steady, broken. t6
ihe plow and Kind to flappers. IU
dite eloquent. that one." Here are
Some others:
"When T met my son for the first
time walking with a eich
‘When a gil frend told me that
sie was fn love with some other man.
‘When at a party T'was asked to
Join the table occupled by the elder
"When I lost. my frst tooth.
When I Jon my breath while going
vp ah
"when the presence of many people
began to bore me.
"When J found more pleasure tn
maying at home in the evening than
Soing out,
‘ehen Emmet my, frat sweetheart
after many years.
‘When? frst noticed my head get
ting bald,
When ‘my aughter said to me
sPather, that ts, tho old way of
spelling”
“Perhaps in this America, with ita
razors and short skirts, one. never:
doen have the feeling at all™to say,
ee ee eee
Bird Flies -
From Japan
to America
fvetiie. Wamh-fiarting: from '¢
soul neiitry island nent Japan,
Mine Reaued.albatzone followed the
Nonmahin. Wenatchee ‘acrors the
hth Pacific tor nix days and =~
Aigtta, until i berame ‘an weet.
timunual Interent mong hot passe
ert and crew and neveral Bik wagers
Ss'to ts fength of flghe and duration
of xrensth
A Tou hearts Breakfast tossed tc
ich a nasnenser at the big 'ndda end
Gra nagers cored the athatfons t
arn back on the meventh moraing.
‘The Weaatense te a nes tinal nd
in the one ‘sea’ averaged. neventecn
hots per hour, but the kori bled
dint not fire. At times i freshened
‘iy somewhat and flew: tn great clr
lee “around. th steamer. ‘Beeaua
ot ies peculiar back Road, Im con:
frost’ tothe mnraealailver whit
Thumnase, the allutroas ‘was cantly
Tistinsuiahed trom others aivo iat
Ske ot tho big. ship One very
Stormy" aay the wind rosred_ tnd
Enver Beating the, ahip wetdy aco, hal
find’ rain, ‘but tarosee the troubled
‘Sloman te albatrors Rem alone rise
St the Wenatchee, sometimes wereato~
ing Sheil. Many om boar batieved
the bird. siiented. in ahe-rigxine” at
Tight, ot the crew. at the watches
Ueclared they" obnerved. the albatross
finding at intorvale through the Ta38
of the cabins ight.
seat and presd foamed to the Died
ashing the day wan picked from the
aver without the gyeat wings. hes
Ing forled. "For aix dave and seven
nights the race Kept all at fever reat
Min" exeldements and when | 3.00
Tries from the Japanese inn? and
Foowing s greedy breakfast of meat
snd tah the nivatrose turned abrupt:
iv'tnd wan fone inthe distant hot!
don. ne Wenatchee wax 1.00 lle
from the nearest Alaska paint but
the great torm: bird ia believed. to
bave'gone straight home
Bert Williams Chesnutt, Novelist
es of State Why Hays Quit
Lady Cops Cool Down, Governor
Waking Up in K.C. The First Year
‘By Roscoe Simmons———————————_——
Woprtebt Chleage Defender by 1
age EGS, cae See
es a renee oe
ee fee, neat sen ee
agigst os
eis Seer: sie, sho Si
ame Sastre tide
east ett, b es mcr
ees coeatt sete re aa
aes eee aie So cee
a
te ac ois a a a
i enone
crams omen enn a
ae eee
moe sea sue st esd
a eae cee a
eee ete sane
eet ee ee ns ee
Senay te cate a eae
eRe Geen os ee
Ree eae ea
sien tate WR
ai sui vise woncibn at
herons
ie oe on aa
Bees te ee
on ‘casy terms with the familiars of
ene
as ee eee es
lek tet ah i a
eee tg eee ae se
fetes te ei of a
meee rage am
i ei
est re a ae
iat eae tee an
eke es eee eae me ae
So ee es a
ra oe
Si se Sos ee
te ear aren ea
si oe ones oe
and Se oe a
oo ca
stl dam og esa
Aiea ek some
Se gend he Be aes
ee eer
Sie seers oe a
Fe ies sole am
ores ei cae Suet ae
iene ar ee
ae eee ee oa
=e ace
i Silico A ti
iin Seats et
a oe es ts roe
meee ares tal Perey a
cae eee ee
Ser in Mies i a rh
poo oe ot eee
ae
A Hite And
eon nets aes aa
get berets ears © se
Bis tho Yack es ork ern
oe eee ieee
gee are cote tet Feet
ie ae eee ge ec
ve Fae eg wine ee
pe ee
rE a iin ‘woe
wae ss sis eos oe
iy arses
ee oe ee
“3m
teats Oa iar a
ee een ee
poe Caan Soe ra
me ota ee eee Se see
peers ine in eon ee
ze, Boron Raat et
st Pat Oa Se oe
aby dear Se ee
i a Gd
sie Sa ee eas
ie aan oie tai
pis ae es Oe Seo
Bohr tare ea et
‘Mrs. James Shelton, Indianapolis,
nis oe em Coes aaa
ge see Soe ator ast
ilar arent
me
NORTIUESE ben ward mes
Eee pees
a el cade
cee orate shauna
Kamae A eae ied es
oe on
SE tw asnitink Gi
areas tiie a eerie
ea cae Pe te ue
pases Pees Diy meats Sa
ek Sees ee
ae ree, ates eee eee
set vena See ae
caput teh
_ Riley ought e come out a Hehe
Riley ought to come out af! right
Colored peopl. despite the Star, wil
certainly come ovt all right. "The
Star might ask them to help out some
Gay. Already they show signs that
they know how to take care of them-
selves,
But tholr progress te pot more
striking than that of the Democrats
of Kansas City. Pat Harrison and
Thoma F. Watson should take no-
tee, and get up an ultimatum to the
“rabbits” ‘and “goats” of Jackson
county. once headquarters of Mis-
sours Democrats
‘In the coming Democratic city con-
Chesnutt, Novelist
Why Hays Quit
Cool Down, Governor
The First Year
© %. 5. Abbott Publuhior Compesy)
vention, which wl name a Democra
for the‘oftes' of mayor, Negroes. wil
{actually alt as delegates, with vole
ana voter serving on committees De
YOU" think that progress?
A tow years ago Negroes in Kan:
| a2 city tere admitted to the Demo-
fratle primarss today they’ aro elect
a dsicgnten fa Democrat conven
| Non. “Wnten shorn that even Dem:
rats will come to thelr senses
Siven ime. “Let us bo patient ane
| fatto.
=e
OU have been reading Chesnut’
| Y sersi"rme Mouse ‘Behind the
Eedara" The heart of mun, the
starilt touch of love, the common
genius of human hopes and amb
Scns, tis tan sertng with pen
fiat even Dickens could not improve
fou has unfotded to you., Now get the
Book, and put it on your brary table
‘you have no liars, get i and
put it on the table in. the “front
Foor.” “Gat his ‘other books; read
{hemi tel the eilaren to read Uhem
SScna’oft and get his pleture and hang
ion ‘the watls-o¢ your home:
Gheanutt tn the only: Negro lving
who sola his genius to fame naa man
[Others traded on being « "Negro":
Sn tradings
“Look at my pep," sald Chesautt:
examine. my” manuscript; Inga
Into duch local touches ag have lal
upon my workay and then forget my
Race”
Bowens sald Chesnutt was one of
te great novelist. All great writers
re fot novelltat all great story tell:
rs are not novelists, Tell the chil
dren how Chesnutt Non his spurs
A itute record for you, Chesnate
was bérn in Cleveland, OMo. His
Darents were free. ‘nat means he
as born free, They came from North
Earolina: "After the war they 100k
him back there
le tabght school, and rose high
being prinlpal of the State. Normal
at Favettevife, ‘Thats the schoo! of
hich EE. Sinfth, mater Tie
Deria, was prlocipal long ater Chee:
mutts day”
He got tired of what he saw, and
returned to Cleveland by way of New
Fore He is a inwyen Between
[caves ho wrote tories for margarines
Sis geatuy opened doors. He became
zoclebrated ‘itisen. Lawyers. and
Sudges in Cleveland say that het
frentest living court reporter: ‘That
reans: he igs accurate: reliable; of
arpest tntelect: thorough: up and
aotng and got a hold on human 3a
fre :
ou can't know a book wnlens you
iesow the man whe wrote the book.
‘This saformation ‘you should have
nd tong ago. Read Chesnutt. Study
Bim. Ho occupies @ fine homes Nis
Fite te llving and he is father of three
Shtlarens two” young ndles—ono 2
noted teacher, and a son, 3. leadlog
Chicago dentist
Tenow ment nothing else is, Im-
portant, for through men at work the
Torta moves. Whom dla Goa create
in Hla Imoge?
a
ONGRESSMAN Willams of tt
Coots jumps on Wa He Hays re-
riog: postmaster general “We
is mugweurap erie Willams: That
tiene Nave is a double-crosser, His
fends Know better. Afr. Mays 1s
ound as parson and (rend,
Mr, Winams has the right gun, but
Ines bunting in the wrong Meld. Sir
Faye “autt the. cabinet Because ‘he
couldn't weep a tot of promiors ne had
fades ‘Me (ted to. be. truthful lke
Hanna; wanted to remember nd re-
ward his friend,
“Tre men stood in the way: the at-
tomey generat and Nr. araing. Nir
Hays found It bard to ook his frlends
fn the face. Stn, Willams ough to
find ut-who appointed” tho Demo
erat “manager of Senator Unier-
‘rood's campaign Dentmaster at Sel-
Ina Ales Lat hr. Willams get Up
“pem™ on that.
‘rarewel, Hass: don’t grieve." e-
publicane know why you ult. They
fade sow quit." Your misiaie was
in going Into the eabiaet. Dut there
Jcome atime some Gay. ‘Mr, Hardiog.
our ainato abd religiogn president
srt min your sizo the trench boys of
ihe G0. P. |
‘says gave up when no Negro was
appointed register of the treasury.
That is. melnteaw that broke the
amore back
~—
HAT Canadian judzo, Snider
"Toavoue hom vo told "vou last
sree, Jet Matthew Bullock go:
Bullock fe the Colored man Gov. Mor-
sen’ of" North ‘Carolina. as’ Deen
trmning for trough the sate depart
trent. “Ehey may atrest sou again
Salter tena Bullock, “but it they oT
eit be around.”
Gov. Morison wired Uncle Sam
that ihe treaty with Great Briain
Jourht to be looked inte, ete, Uncle
Sain dita’ botner ruck about the
matter. One of bis dark ehiéren, had
fot away fom some angry men. “Let
Em tee Uncle Sem mide "am
paved another tynching scandal”
| ‘The reports said that Colored
women warmly and excitedly waved
the Union Jack at the hearing. “Union
See mesno. the British fag. ‘That
ought to make our white faiks not
ve know now they feet. What thes
ay fa, Well it that Uston Jack ts 80
fot, why do to. many Colored sub:
eas Sieg ae Se ee ee ae
(Continued on Page 20, Column 6)
Year Gets
_ 13 Months,
Start 1927
New Calendar With 13
_ Months of 28 Days
Each Is Planned
Vanacuver-\ ter 3057 the soar
to be divided into 13 months ‘of 28
days euch, with each name day al-
ways “ail on tho same date, ae-
cording to the. plans of Mosca B.
Cotsworth, F. G,'S, a worid famous
‘slatistclan of Vancouver. For over
BT years Mr. Catsworth has been a
‘work perfecting hts “Yearat” calen-
Gar, which ts designed to do away
With “the present. contusing system
of dividing’ the sear tnto 12 months
unequal lengins.
‘Thie new calendar will almost cor-
tainly receive the Indorsement of the
International conference which meets
In ‘Rome next “snonth Immediately
aiter “an Important. conference of
/Gathoe churen dignitaries, which i
iso expected to approve the change.
‘Leading sclentitic socteties the
world over have already given un-
qualified approval of the proposal,
hile among tho first stanch sup-
Porters of the “yearal” were such
Bell known publie men as Cami
Flammarion, the French astronomer:
‘Lord Avebury, Sir Norman Lockyer,
Sir Ollver Lodge, the dean of York:
Cardinal ‘Stoner of Tome, President
Hadley of Yale university’ and scores
‘of bankers ‘and business men in
America ana Europe.
Endorsed by Canada
‘The “yearal” calendar was in-
dorsed by the parliament of Cartada
in 1312 and was under consideration
by tho ‘British Imperial authorities
when the war broke out, making Im-
Possible an International ‘conference
Sehich was to have heen held in 1914.
‘The original plan nad been to have
the calendar Jn current use by 191%
but naturally this was impossibis
owing to chaotle conditions.
With 23 months In the vear every
eek tel Begin with Sunday and
every month will end with a Satur-
day.” Bvery Saturday will be a 7th,
th, 2ist-or 26th: every Sunday a
Lat, sth, 35th oF 224, and so on with
the omer days forever.
‘Holidays will always fall on the
samo definite days, | Christmas. will
always be on, a Saturday. | Easter
will cease to be a movablo feast In-
Sead of subject to a seven weeks
fluctuation due to lunar variations,
All chureh festivals and national
Rotiaays wit similarly be definitely
allotted to a certain. day.
‘Every month will have four Satur-
days, hence four paydays. ‘The ad-
Vantage of this will at once be ap-
parent to business men and. workers
Allie, for It wilt greatly fend to sim-
piify’ both bookkeeping and expendt-
ures. “The difficulty of financing to
meta fcth payday ‘in the month
Wil be a thing of the past, On the
other hand. men who are paid by the
fmonth will receive a. falter reward
for thelr labor, instead of getting the
fame amount ina December of 31
Gaye and tn a February of 28, a9 Is
now the case.
Tnstend of ending on the day we
now designate ax December 31_ the
SSearat™ will close on tho. shortest
day of the winter, the Present De.
33> nature’s year ‘end. Until, Pope
Gregory “reformed” the calendar in
3862 the year closed on Dec. 25, and
this date Is sull adnered to by the
Greeks and Russtans.
Extra Monthe
‘The oxtra month will be inserted
between June and July, and will be
known as" “Sol,” for, strangely
fonough, the great luminary has been
‘overlooked In the nomenclature of
‘the year.
"Aa 12 months of 28 days cach total
only’ 364 days, and the year, sclen-
Ufeatly speaicing, 1g 265 and a quar
ter days long, provision Is made for
the extra, day by. tnserting ft between
‘the Inst day of the old year, and the
frst day of the new. ‘This day would
‘bot have a day name, but Ue desig.
fated simply as "New Year's day."
nd sould be Indicated on the modet
calendar by a star, It would be a
sengial nolidass ana im legat crctes
Similarly, evers fourth year an ex-
tea day would he Inserted at mid.
summer, to be known as "Leap day”
‘This also would bo an extra hollday,
without a day. name; this. being the
only wayin sehich dislocation of the
eT ee ear can be eel,
Leopard in
. Death Fight
With Indian
rina, ioe account af
eset eee seen
Sr ee Tee en
Uefa Ane ane A
BeOS wae Tanmee Ey" neat
eee Nee cee an
ates cee ene ee ae
ithe Veet Bl ad
eee
"eee ining. the gle) the. leopard
ost, Uae awe et ies
ese eA at Sear or mac
eperit tee ta ra ct Pane
Ses Oe ae te er ga
BS Smeg ‘and asad
“Then ‘the champfon hunter of the
suing? Sota eae
Teg, ee Gees dee weit est
See otis sortpess Se, Sie
aay igs te wnat es
grouhe leper, fe ceares
ABER sien Ma ERC UTM a
a
PRS vera risen ke wa dls
octane eae Stee ae te
sae cee tae aha hace
Pere een Ue ts ee
een re te sae oe
sis te, Foire ae be se
the’ nee, eovered the leopards jugu-
Eos ionetd' elit iver deat, aa
aot eds nea
Some cans os
[eee
ale oa Snes bel hg eae
wa ees ee
Sree
Hist retogeey. OP
London—Spring walking sticks for
women resembling . bridesmalds
crooks more than the serviceable Blud-
eon of the average man, already have
fade thelr appearance’ In Piccadilly
and Bond street. "They are tail, ele-
gant and usually painted In, ‘vieid
Solors. A crimson crook “worn” with
fa Diack ‘tallored suit, carved stick
painted orange, hung’ over the arm o
E’soman in nisy blu, ana an con.
‘fated polo with an emerald” green
Randle were among those new fash
fon surprises observed in one after:
noon,
Chicken Has
Best Food
Ingredients
Scientific Probe Shows
Favorite Fowl Best
for Dinner Meal
Chicken dinners are after all the
very best toad for chickens ia, the
{esgon thrust upon the lay mind by 3
study’ of the Rockefeller institute &x-
periment In maintaining life tn chick
Embryo tisiue outside the. organism
‘The ehick tissue celebrates the tenth
anniversary of fis rebirth ay a selea-
lite problem. To say that tt Is ally
and Kicking woulda't do because i
Wouldn't be sctentifie or atgnitied, but
At any. rate tho cells which have str
‘ived all these Sears independent 0
ineie organiam ahow all the aright
Hiness "that is expected ‘from tel
ehlek ancestry.
Theive as Cannibals
‘Their entire diet has been cannt-
balistle. “"Phey “have survived. in
medium coraposed of chicken plasma
Mixed with chick embryo. "On. thi
dict they huve Prospered and thrived
‘and Kept thelr youth tn an almost
Unseemly fashlon, which recalls hor:
ble. ghoulish tatea of wicked "old
Princes who battened on the blood of
Fresh young serfs.
Ten’ years ago Dr, Alexis Carrel
Isolated trom a fragment of the lieart
of & hice emibrga a strain of cane
hective tissue. The cells composing
his connective Issue Are now -n thelr
fAfteenth generation and growing
more encrretie every minute, The Use
sue ‘hay doubled iis mass. genorally
Svery 48 hours during ail these Years,
and had to be. divided. and sub:
divided constantly. "As tts original
has ‘consisted, however, of a spot
Jabout a9 big ag a pin head, the eel
structure hasn't vet overflowed the
‘Walls of the inatitutten.
{From the: very beginning the cell
structure hag been helpful as Wwell-as
expansive, From the frst. Scar, Dr
‘Carrel has stated, the culture made tn
January, 1912, was able to furnish a
the tissiie neéded for the Rockefeller
Institute experiments In the mechan-
Jam of growth.
Roport Ready Soon
Dr. Carrel Is preparing a report on
the experiment of maintaining tissue
permanently outside the organism as
Gemonstrated by his ten xears’ ex-
perience with the chick cells, but is
Eonclustons won't bo reached betore
many weeks, itt waa sald. at. the
Hocketeller thstitute,
As outlined by Dr. Carrel to his
medical contreres, the experimenta~
Mon is a tong, long affair: “The pur-
Dose of the method Wag ‘not only to
Study’ tho mechanism of the growth
of tissue, tho cleatrlzation of wounds.
Dut other problems such as-the pre-
Sention of the: senescence of a tis-
suc. it Was algo intended to ascer-
{ain whether conncetive tissue cells
{eolated from the organism could live
forever.”
‘Old Father ‘Time has a terrifice
blow In store for him in the future
Ie-zetence ean find away of adapt:
‘4g Dr, Carrels methods of keeping
Ye and south in chick lissue outside
{us organtom to the needs of the hu
man family. °
“It appears," sald-Dr. Carrel In a
gontribution ‘ton. sclentific work,
“that time haa no effect on the tissues
Isolated from the organism and pre=
served by means of our technique.”
‘White tome contribution to the ae-
feat of senescence may bo among the
Birthday honors which ‘willbe. ise
tributed in celebration of the chicken
cells tenth anniversary, when Dr.
Carver's report 1s ready, more imme:
diate interest inthe experiment cen-
ters not #0, much inthe hope. that
People will be helped to Meht of old
ge_and death through the. experi-
ments with the chick strain as that @
Knowledge of methods whereby life
may be falntained fn tissue wll en-
able surgeons to transplant live. {it~
sug and tt efectivel’ renal broken
And crippled humanity. Dr. Carrel
hag been one of the most enthusiastic
Investigators of ‘methods whereby
Ussues Isolated from thelr organisms
could be preserved and used atter a
few days or weeks as crafts,
‘An Aid to Surgery
“L wished to find a method.” Dr.
Carrel has stated, “by which tissues
extirpated from the amputated limb
of a patient could be stored. during
{he period which clapsen between
their extirpation “and. thelr” trans.
plantation on the patent, it would
fevers” convenient for’ tie surgeon
fo keen In store pleces of skin and
tone, cartilage, blgod Vessels and fat
ready for use"
‘The possibilty of the active Ife of
a tissue outside of the organism was
demonstrated by Harrison at Johns
Honluins anatomte laboratory in 390%.
Vater Carrel and other” selentists
demonstrated that human tissue
could be preserved-in cold storage
and. used fm surgery.
"The technique of the present ox-
periment ‘with tho chick ‘train con:
fists im including ‘smal trazments of
connective. tissue in a nutritive me-
dium containing certain. activating
substances and” tn permitting the
cllmimation of. the metabolle” sub
stances, produced by growing cell.
The small fragments Of esse are
cultivated In a mixture. of two parts
plasma, and one’ part of embryonic
juice. ‘The tissue is allowed to prow
for two davs, then extirpated, dteided
into two parts, washed in n solution
and transferred to 4 tresh medium,
‘Constant. experimentation. iaices
piace in the prenaration of the me=
Alum. Dr. Pbling describes the cuz
ture medium as consisting of ental
parts of chicken plasma ‘and ehiek
embryo extract. The asin ts Ob=
tained. from healthy” adult chlekens
hot more than two years old. ‘The
chick embryo, exttact Is “obtained
from. seven to. eight days chick
erniinye,
“SPIRITS” KEEP
MEN IN PRISON
Lynn, Mass—Twenty-seven men,
arrested for gombling, were carried
inte, court, .
“Sour honor.” the prosecutor sald.
sve faust nk for a continuange Unt
these men are in condition to plead.
Some one focked them up ever ‘night
in the bullpen, ‘where 21 barrels of
Confizeated liquor were stored.”
BRITISH KING
SUES HARDING
. Fort Worth, Tex—King George of
England. through his attorneys: has
fied a sult dn dletrict. court here
Against President Harding asking
Gamages of $1019 for the alleged
non-delitery bythe Rock Island rail
ond of €4 cases of cored beef Gur-
‘eche wane
Abyssinia’s Protector
EFS ee
a eae ee
" es "RE aoe
a se ky Saree Fee
eee eS Shee
Ng GS Fhe pe Peo
a ar eS irc
ie an Seles
ay hes Meaet#, 5
fe oes > as
Ape AN a a a aes
Been eS s poe.
ee ee
pAN Sees a eee
peecestes | Bee
ee ee Fees
oe g peace ~<
lon ne e Re ee
Re a E pense i
non ae es eRe eS
ee od Regs Re
ae ae Pe ace
eA G
De € o0's ok :
PPX a SC
GEN. ATO H. M. PASHA
Armed with credentials from officials
| government, General Ato Heik Mariam Pa
| military forces, is now in London, Engla
| charges published throughout British, poss
sinia had deteriorated to a point of slaver
" Yigorous in his denunciation of the British
| for the rumor and declared it a vicious atte
| the white races to discredit governments «
_Taces, He is seeking public apology thro
Armed with credentials from officials of the Abyssinian
government, General Ato Heik Mariam Pasha, leader of the
military forces, is now in London, England, to refute the
charges published throughout British possessions that Abys~
sinia had deteriorated to a point of slavery. Gen. Pasha is
vigorous in his denunciation of the British press responsible
for the rumor and declared it a vicious attempt on the part of
the white races to discredit governments controlled by dark
races. He is seeking public apology through King George.
Japan Cities India’s Plan
Imitate Little Is Followed
Old New York by Evybtians
;Tecoma, Wash.— Six cities of
Japan are, Undergoing. a wonder(u
derethetleee ERE heater tae
in progrens thee iy We wdes tee
tncloni streets Gontart teen tate
Basdets craton ives usa ears tn
a wot ticekc
whe elles are Tokio, Osaka, No-
sorte yousome Hite ae ithe fa
Beak el ec Nonate scutes tae
Shasleionses aco" butdine a sect
WP Meek wae. Stralght Meough ise
Heart SE ube Waatnens tate Steane
Ing eversthing eu of the: ay ik
Perini Hubba Go taen ala ot
iRe' aie busincsn Scone Rate Set
eussgbvsrament monty got enet
reaped, Sensramete money f° es
eee et uae thts one ot
SRE oly ll Cu BS dn aap ay
Seensee come Aradidenst pase bes
TURENSE sibs ingot wil be thus
Capondea"tn fen yeara in’ siz "elles
eee eA eT Bae cated ace
preceiented demand. for Northwey
Rese caapane “en stinfonss
St ul rot Piet Sonata a
ae ge ee TE
iil fading now tor Japan ooree
iA saa alrenicec 1h Fae sama
wnat al hoses mast bet raed
Shovel‘ ground and et Son tS
BUA ave Ethan one took neh
Shanalee. Wow tect vel" Shige
Rae ast attest have oon ex:
Porte
tsca in Japon are bull largely
ot Re and ‘selon, 0° pane ot aay
Had anneal Tig Neadeare ty
Sess" Ge iping with dampeced
Sea a SNES al aracene tne
Retboe kas os agloss Anish Hol
Hee aia cadats
"arte ie ibe exported:
sabia the stave ot Seat Woes
Hse she as Snow by
ihe ittae ne sapanese nauareas "The
iat ic than entied te
scene a Se there ae
See adiha daendel by the ar esl
Siepenters :
ng to last inonthts’ record
nfs Saet fo et an Reet
this year's exportation of Northwest
NOTHING'S TOO
GOOD FOR HIM
The Kentucky Senate passed
unanimously" the folnt” resolution
Providing for ‘the appointment by
Governot, Sorrow’ of a. commission
of 100 elilzens for a "Henry Walter:
fon memoria" ‘Thurvday’ was. the
$24 anniversary of the veteran’ cdl
tors. birth. After stating that Dr
Watterson” wa a, “Kentuckian, to
hom othing wav too good for Kens
Luckdy" the resolution “fet out that
the entire state should. Be ‘a party
tovdo him Nonor.
ede ee eee
WATCH FOR THE 1
7 OF OUR N
"= I he I
WATCH FOR THE FIRST INSTALLMENT
7 OF OUR NEW SERIAL
5 ”
“The Burd
e€. puraen
Which Will Appear in Our Feature Section Soon
A VIRILE ROMANCE
—— or tae ——
. NORTH AND SOUTH
A story full of sensation, gripping situations, love and
intrigue. It tells of success attained through
self sacrifice and honest effort.
| Don't sass iT. READ IT FROM THE START
India’s Plan
Is Followed
by Egyptians
Alexandria, Heypt—In declaring a
Boycott against ull goods of English
manufacture, che Egyptians ‘have
adopted the tazties of the Natlonal-
Ista of India. “They. hove heard that
the Indians have been successful In
thelr “attempt to. boycott British
goods and are endeavoring to. use
the same means ¢0 bring the British
government to terms.
As vot the extent of.the boycott {s
not clear. "However, many Bayptian
merchants are refusing to buy Eng-
lish goods, and salesmen calling on
Egyptian “customers are promptly
told’ they wish no quotations on such
merchandise. But the great major-
fis" of impurtera and exporters. are
foreigners who desire to continue to
Duy nd sell in the best markets.
If tho Egyptians are able to hold
together on the hoycott propram. and
force the Importern to quit. dealing
in English cotton piece ‘goods, iron
nd steel products, the result may be
[serious for English factories in Lan-
cashire and Birmingham.
British banks are included i the
boycott. It ls #all considerable sums
of money have been withdrawn from
English banks in Peypt, and placed
Im other foreign hanks.
‘School boys have boseotted the
schools and tho native bar asgocla-
Uon ented to suspend all work,
it hag. been proposed also to re-
strict the cultivation of Egyptian
cotton. which would be of interest to
the cotton growers of the United
Staten, Ie has even been suggested
that. the Egyptians should refuse to
jexport entone to England, which now
fakes’ 60 per cont of the. Eeyptian
ontan crop.
‘Certain "members, of the Effend!
class, Egyptians of Ielsure, have an-
Rouncad they Wilk cease’ to. drink
English whisky. and retuxe to wear
short-cropped murtaches an'the Eng
Tish do. Various other boycotting
Taené Saves Wreces imaeed:
INDIAN NATIVES
ARE VACCINATED
Jn 1878 an outhreale of smallpox in
a certain district of India. in. aa
to have carried eff $8,000 natives the
aia not believe in. vaccination. Pinal
isy one tribe, the Thakers, who prac
ticed Infamicide, allowed “their. fe-
mate babies to ie vaceinated, thine
ing tran easy wes" of getting Fld of
thelr surplus oitepring.. Later cnet
a second. vieitation of smallpox ani
tilled nearly all of the unprotected
male children, leaving the vaccinated
mem coboren, te
‘Photo by International
Reformers
Continue
Reforming
If New Law Is Passed It
Will Be Crime to Shine
Shoes On Sunday
New York—Another perfectly new
erime—having one's hoon shined
atter 1 oclock ‘on a ‘Sunday after=
noon—is propowel Inn bill Introduced
at Albany by a hishminded tesislator,
nd the news has been recelved with
mingled feelings in this city. Some
commentators thought © we had
enough crimes already,” others
thought we couldn't have too many
new ones invented for us.
“The extremes of xentiment for and
against the criminalizing of Sunday
“Shines” Were sxprewsed In vigorous
terms by two earnest citizens—on
the one hand by Obadiah Bluenose,
President of the Killjoy League: om
the other hand by Sigmor Amadeo
Eruneheschettl, 2. prominent. boot=
black in the vicinity of the Nathan
Hale statue.
“The presentation "of the antl
Sunday shine bill Is a step In the
Fight direction snd T can pledge the
Killlloy ‘League to work tooth and
hall for its passage.” sald Obadiah
Bluenose. The suppression of the
Perniclou practice of having the
Shoes polished an the Sabbath will
50 far toward curbing the vanity that
fakes for godlessnese and redueing.
tho people ‘of this state to a pious
level of doyediness and subservience
to the {ron hand of moral reform.
My only rexret is that the pro=
posed Inw does not also prohibit
Sunday ‘morning shines. 1 consider
a Sunday morning shing Just a3 im~
moral aa a Sunday’ afternoon shine.
TeT had my way no pair of shoes or
boots in ‘this broad ‘land should be
polished during the twenty-four
Bours beginning at Saturday’ mid=
night.
Has Small Start
“But we reformers munt creep ber
fore We can walk, and the evlmmingle
aing of the Sunday atternoon shine
will be a good beginning. Tt will
aur the Bones of the godless young
men who stay up 0 lato carousing
on Saturday night that they Wo 1m
bea on Sunday instead of going to
Sunday sehool and church, "Also It
Will discourage people in New Jer=
ney, Long Island and other places
from coming to, Manhattan on’ Sun-
day to attend the movies and secular
concerts Instead of remaining at
home and readins thelr prayer books,
“Lam. rellably informed that the
majority of these malefactors have
their shoew ahined on the ferrvboatn,
of at the railway terminals. Living
fn the ‘suburbs “they naturally Ret
their shoes dusty or muddy In colt’
from thelr homes to thte focal ral:
way" station, trolley line ‘or ferey
Rouse, and they are ashamed tobe
seen in the city streets without £0
ing through the sinful performance
of having thelr shoes polished. If
the new law I passed, aw I devoutly
pray that it hay be, this will ne
Tonker be possible and thousands of
suburbanites will remain away from
thia wleked city on Sundays, much
to the benef of thelr souls.”
What Amadeo Said
In strong contrast with Obadiah
Bluenose's views were those of Sig-
nor Amadeo Francheschetti.
“Dose retormas dey. maka me
seceks” he complained in musteal Ine
ections as he piled his brushes
Rracefully on the shoes of his Inter-
Tocutor. “What harm 7 do with shina
aa shoe on da Sund—hey? T go to
Borelock Tass on da Sund morn, ant
den wot Ido?” Playa card? Getta.
@runk and fight? No, T taka my box:
fan’ go out_in da sun and shina da
shoe like ROnest fell. maka some dol-
fur or two for da wife an’ da bam=
bin, An’ dose reforma, dey say it
is crime? Dey maka me seeck!™
High Silver
Prices Cause
Coin Changes
Because of its monetary use in
subsidlary’colnaze and ia the orfent
silver, of all the metals, has respond-
ed in the most eccentric way not only
to the process of world inflation but
also to the deflation which Is now
taking place. “During the war per-
Hlod silver Was the last of the metals
to rise In price, thus reflecting a de-
layed appreciation of the Importance
of thiz metal asa war necessity. Not
Until the silver erisin In India arose
Was the value Of silver as'a war ce
quircment fully realized when BOR-
fand petitioned the United States to
release the only. avallable reserve of
sliver to satisfy’ the pressing and ab-
normal requirements of India. Ar=
Fangements Were fade to accommo
date Great Britain under the contract
Inetuded in the Pittman act, and that
nation has expressed its gratitude for
the loxal assistance of ite ally In am
hour of critical need.
‘Sliver could mot resist the general
Iinercase in prices which accompanied
the post-armistice Inflation and. In
1530 reached the high price of $1.37
per ounce. While this fact may: have
Reon regarded at the time by the
producers of sllver ax a henent, expe
Glalty as costs of production’ ‘were
continually Increasing. Wt may prove
fo be one of the zreatost misfortunes
that’ has ever hefatien the silver Ine
dustry. IU became Impossible for na-
Hons to maintain thelr high grade
sliver correney in circulation heeause
Of the profit that could be made at
this price In the converston of cols
inte bution. “The demand for sub-
sidiary curreney wae at that time bee
coming greater, Ax a result some
nations enacted lav lowering the
sliver bullion content. of thelr ening
Seariy half of thelr nreviows content
nile others adopted the supbstitus
Hon of bare metal colnage. This
Wholesale debarement of silver coln=
age ts an act of intation which Dag
Ereatiy Impaired the monetary se 0!
Sliver, “A computation caunot be
hased upon the estimate of silver
Coinage circulations. for the reason,
that some of the cola inay have ten
destroved, some may have been con
Serted Into bullion before the law be~
camo enacted and still another pots
tlon may be hoarded.
ITALY SPEAKS
THRU “ENEMY”
washington, D. Coitaly t rerees
ee
Boreas ces * are
EES GSS Sa ze ho
IRTEEN . ‘ “ THE CHICAGO DEFENDER . __ SATUROAY, MARCH 11, 192:
| <<) CES SONS sot
Delight in -
Brazilian
Breakfast
Great ‘Morning Bite’
Gains Favor With
French Tourist
‘The French obet reigns with cock
spray hewn a eanker
Cienega eo
Sento oss
eee
ere rc Ma
ats Seer Za oe
SEE Ame ada
Beate reser ae
ouristetna ans
Seed isaate bhe 2
seer ae a
Set oe ils eee
set cata Soe
fae
er ee ae, heme
rhe are
See oes a
Seco whee ote
RE sitive saa
Se ub ereacema
teeta eee
ee rt ls ae
Be Sie ne oe Se
Sages wider dds
Soca tee te
Seen tee oe
Pogue tatters i
eee as
ae ee
Sy aacmatat oe
tors eens ae
aod Soho ge teen
Sarees tt aie
eee
Lari a aes Se
giieapnann ora tae
Sapa Sree tar
Be Pe pees See
Be heres cnr
Sib ees Sta
moremac ne ah
Sri ene oe ee
Si edee ia Sas
ies
etn! mar ig
ony? ae rns
See are
Sere eae eee
tts Ta ei dn ah
Seite a metas
et can sae eee
Bit Si ste Se
EE gg
Sea, cae oe
=e
meen, MEE ASML
Hides Beata a
ieee beg oan fe
Ee Goa ahaa whee
Sia seria er Se
Pinta seen ire
REP Sedat
It wax in the winter of 1909 that
the: Happenings herein’ vet down \be=
farmed sea locate,‘ the. eeu
ince of Ker=Choo, In Northern Sion.
Holla, ruled over "by the. famous
Funge Yo. ove of the, most fntellt-
ent Chinaimen that it has ever heen
inv hard fuck ‘to rin up agatnst
Beople who. have not. mide loss
suds" of. Pooteronomy” ‘wil! never
enon ow cola it oe tn tht ee.
fon of the world, "At the time ol
ii eria the ehermoicter ena
Reeistering 76 degrees yelow zero
iis temperature trout have 10 be
feen to be appreciated, but just te
five my. readers an fitustraiion. of
Bhat Ie means f wil cite the follows
‘ne incident: :
coh Ree et rvet ar, headed
for the ety hal: where Iwas to get
icense ehiowing te to Yoo (or fi
Fame roushout ihe province” We
Fad eraveted bur a hort ‘sistance
‘when the ear eame {0 dead. step.
Pheted Sound an of penblos tt:
ing the frozen ground. s0"l Fry
‘ft une car to foventignie” A Chinese
polleeman’ drew me auichis” away
From the car traclt and then 1 imew
fhe the Station wa nore eras
than appeared on The surface,
‘leetrie lant. hag. frozen end All tho
Surrenix’ were falling off the ‘wires
‘hae mecounted forthe pebbly nose
inentioned above. "On ‘the naive day
P'wrent into: tea. shop to. et" cup
‘ot tens It ywan to cold that all the
‘ahaa ltrvsen Te her cea pole,
‘he, Chinaroan who owned. the. shop
had sowed ft into ‘equare cir. ine
ficad of giving you cup. of tea he
Sroula rite you a cube. Tt froze,
Tent that the cttben were atill so hot
fhat ‘yeu ‘nae’ to’ blow on. them fa
2 —
a
=o
2s
TLR BPS ag ten com
inameaes Go aati a
iabriten Gee re a
xillage about five miles from Hock-
iis ears a ea
ARR le
BEDE iit Se ores
tein, ee ea
iSight
UA Theta, ste
Toute are ‘wabeltevably ‘thick, and I
St ds See ae tht
Uc Et tal
ii aah ace ei
ie atari aaa
gotacMea ier gett
egy tae:
a
ERR tae
ERerce alate iat
UP Betameue thaten
isla iy Fa
eM ematoe ot
te a a ata
Se ENS Se
26 Si See te
ar esraieitiar ar A
ie i ete Bees
SRSA aa
Shae te ee at
et a a 8
cei Wi saa a
iced dhreay aa ba
i caenari alah tant
EERE a en
iad rant Wet ati
‘a att Sane
ie yarmmihese oe
Se arden are a
Be
on eras, om
pear SE
mpiaieiary ie Dae
eee Ger ieee
Sees od Geet
ergs end @ oan of Borden's “Eagle
Maran, French Novelist
Winner of. Goncourt Academy Prize
Tells of His Achievements
or ‘By Alvan F. Sanborn
Paris, France—Iene Maran, the
winner” of the Goncourt Academy
prize, with “Batouula—Veritabie Ro-
mman| Negre” is a very clot ap.
prone to a fl bloaded Segre, Bu
arin fa\no ued 0 acelng Usk} faces
In itw. umiveralty: “quarter und «the
habit" of ignoring. the ‘color line in
{is Invsicctual elrclen ts 80 fngruined
that"un announcement Which ebe-
Mitre might. have proved: 10. be
Neritaple bond ehet"hus caused Ut
{ie commotion~the less that the pre-
Skcion rumor that Rene. Sarah
Sn uplexiored ‘Senegatian hag turned
our Yo be tales. :
an Eventful Babyhood -
As a mater of fuct the Goneourt
laureate"ie-a bigmy cultivated Went
‘He vas born at Fort de France, the
adminlatrative center of the French
Possession of Sartinique, on. Nov. 5
TBST bie fauner, whe wean” attached
19) the Island “aaminiotration, being
35 and ie tnother” ca" Gundcloupean
Sith a ‘sonpon of Survpean blood)
Gly 18 St the time.
“qdithoubh Rene Maran passed omy
the Arsttheee years of hib life tn the
West indies, he clatens to recal viv
digg number of things that. hub:
poted, here, ““r'remember™ We sald
in u letter to Bla friend, Leon Boe:
uct, some Lime editor ot Le Beftre.
Se'cyelone in whieh my mather and
Tnierowny cecaped geatn. tate
a palais aa if ie happened Sester-
das" mp father come out of the de-
aeial rain At the. very Instant he
Eronsed the shresholg a urid fash 6
fighusing zigzageed, through» the
Ieekness and tie. thunder crasbied
‘Pout night here. waa a. format
Earthquake, followed by @ tdal wave,
{ind the ea fnvaded the second story
‘Shere my nurse, my mother, the dogs
fand I were quaking with fear ‘The
‘Water rows og Taplely that we. were
Shilged to. pile the three. Debs che
fon another” and, “although “on the
top bed, me mother was in the water
Up to her hips. She help me sn her
‘Pm alt night long.
ech, Benth later Are fron
len we caceped bya mlrae. an:
Millated three-quarters of the eli.
Introduced to Africa
‘Toward the end of 1680 the father
was transferred toa. post. in the
French colonial service at Libreville,
{a Gabon, West africa. “The voyage
Hla Saint Nasaife was an exceeding:
Ty"strenuous experience. for the, ti
family Fire: broke out, uboard ang
the hip cncountercd terrible storm
which ewrene awow {tg etecring sear
Ed delaged tt a full fortnight,
out of the threo venta I paraed at
Librevitgg” sald’ Rene Maran, in an-
titer letter fo Bosque, t remember
file ot nothing. 1 was sick five days
out of ti And 1 became sn anueme
and Grostrated that the doctors, pre:
scribed Prance. “|-wia ee Sears’ old
‘Stas gent to the Lvcee of aleve
which team abner of the Lycee ef
Bordeaux for the ‘petits in the open
country.
“in 1894 a Negro was sta rarity
fp Ut part ot France and. from the
das 1 entered the sehool, 1 was mae
fo Featlze But after a tte thanks
tb ar dak 5 oes, aren rate
£
Miran." and proceeded on my way
Uearrieg with ane tos tatgous t-Tte4d
Adains ISxpress riffe and 3,000 rounds
Of sore nosed. bullets, although, a
Sou wilt sen, L didn't need iv at all
fo"Gar ag the Cinnamon Bear was
oneayned,, Target, the lage
aU Ege p.m, which way making fair
‘ime, al "capaitione considera.
Sas met by the magor of the town, &
Tittle Weagened-up fellow, whose. age
night have been answhere betiween
60 "und ‘G00. He made a Breat fuss
over me. and after teeing. that. oy
Torso Wax wel stalled and fed. he In
sicted that I have a bit to cat, stich
1a, ‘not having had ‘Susthing. all
day except the fight vreakfast. men-
tioned above. “T wasn't very: hungry,
so Iwas glad that all ho served Was
& roast ple. a” couple of peeks, ot
faked tweet potatoes, a pot of chill
‘con carne and: some excellent cream
Pane Daag ‘thoushe oat cher
Tezonting the taking of the giant
hear alive, and shen T told ie ca the
favor he. waa s0" tickled that "f
Thought fora, whe ‘that be, would
Inugh hlmecte “ack. At. “frst t
Ghote ‘hae he! lant ced seat
E-gun way making light of my. ideas
Hut f soon found that f wax’ wrong.
He was. Just delighted atthe an
lcination of Deing'ria of. the. dan-
‘geroun man-eating pest. 1) zot hitn
fo secure for tea Bunch Of pepner-
‘iat fozenges, tome horsehide (hans
and acpalr of heavy sclsors.. That
ight 1 went out tate, ihe woods sur=
Founding ihe iittio village to. recon
elter and Yo see ir {could ‘set a
Biimne of the bear. Hie must have
Seen’ hidden clote by: he seemed to
have 'ponped ght Up out of the
Eround, for all ofa. modden 1 heard
great Soort anda loud roar and
here he caine tearing along at. a
great rate through the small clear~
fhe | He was the. Digest. rpecimen
that 1 hd ever seen and he appeared
fore ahout the same ase aa a alle
grown elephant. “We caught sight of
Sieh other at_about tie same time
ihag° promised the mavar 1 would
hot stay out. fate thal wight, sof
‘Signe see any need of my. hanging
round, <T headed for. Dendauarters
stout a muile away, and, believe ine
ireatly “headed. 'fdida't stop to
suite Into "second speed, ut thiese
Directly Into. high. OF Zouree, the
ear having “Mad a Ayton tare
seemied to have a hilt the advantage:
fiat sehen T got inte mi stride f
hauled it 29 fant that tad the race
igen "unlested as to dtetance tn tes
un ten minutes would have fost
old,Cinmamon, $418 to have: reached
mre‘with a posteard.
1 started selling when I, started
ronaing, so 1 saw much ‘gratited to
See that the mayor had the door wide
fonen forme i shot into the Rouso
Sng Ne nated ie, door ng se
cared it. We heard ihe. Breat. Bru
fear by'and then Watched im from
x emalt ‘window a3. he. dlsapneared
Into the woods at the other side of
the village. <
“Scloste shavee," remarked the
mayor.
*You sald a-tacetul 1 replied.
All" folgwing. day’ ag the
cynonute of all eyes, Every Chiat.
‘Shan in the town called to see ine and
{fo wish ‘me good luck, Tt was a reg
lar recelsing line ait daylong and
Was ectually glad to sce darkness
‘coming on. stuck my thermometer
cut though 2 hole fa the door aud
[Rimont frote the end of it; $1 below.
Ht'indleated. "That was sure some
cold "aise. 1 took, the peppermint
fovenged, Rorschide thonex end scls-
sora and went Out to renew my re-
SERt Tupning aeatatneanee with th
ar, fere Is. anything. fa_the
orld iat a Cinnamon Beat ts exazy
oe, Hes, peppermint. Knowloe
fine E took te losenges and went 8
Foote ‘distance Into. the woods.
romped a lozenge every few feet for
Shout 80 yards. ‘Then 7 placed about
A Gozen of them at the foot of a tree
Seiieh wens about seven feet four aed
Z quarter in. circumference, and, the
Lord only knows how ‘big tn diam:
eer. Reaching high I tacked a tor
fenge om cach side of the tree and &
\. -E Menenes $0 saad oh 8 mpath, and
can alinost alsraye near the head
my claus, T wax what is cominonly
siied a brant pup, but was ver
eapeicius,
“Re were ten cotonlals. Each one
in. hig “Tepnective. class, obtained a
Drize in’ French, "Tt wan @ point. of
Nonor with us-our revenge for rail
‘eels, and he petty nasing of Ou
jootmates,
Sin the fourth class 1 put_Into
modern French versa the chanson 0
Roland, and attacked that of Guilla
imecu-courtsNex and that, of Un
GhevallerGrise-Gonellen durin, the
Soriy part of that year. I vead
Volumes a week on an average. “i
Sevoured “Lombard, Meuparsant. and
Zolas sell ae vduea, Lenartne
[Gautler and especially’ Ai 6
Vigny. an tact, read fanatisticaly.
‘SBut T pata for i inter.
A conlunctivitie—ihich_ tl re
appears "at “regular fotervals—camn
Before ne. end of ane, Year Then
the neat year, when ‘was th
third ‘clas came. cerebral anaemia.
4p se second clas, her, We, wer
poplin, my dear, ny excellent pro:
festor and friend, Larmbinet,_ seemed
to teach “nolels for_my beneht. In
the ‘irge class 1 worked verg dite
Mis professore—save the Spanish pro:
fessor—doplegsed tee T was wears
of the Lycee" =
‘Almost a Suicide
3a June, 1205, Rene Marun’y mother
died, after a protracted death agony
throughout witich. Coa well as In mal
Ing the arrangements for the funeral
She e-year-ola bow Wan gblired
Feplace the absent parent. ‘The stra
Shattered “his nerves ‘badly, and
ade ah ottompt—iuchlls, unsuccess
foloat ailelder
ST resumed redding turlously—Roi-
briat epectatls,” he has commented
Fecarding thie Painful episode. “Ant
then, to make @ bed matter worse,
hhecaine enamored of a young womar
febo recarned ty: affection, and thi
Joung womun, entie, tactful affee:
Honate, remarkably educated, appear
constardiy in ny. writings.
"Zour families quarreled. My nar.
eat retured his consent to our union
fm ‘consequence. ‘The young. womar
eventually martied another man, ane
vo "months ‘after the marriage, i
eit, T returned to. France, But a
the ‘tine of ‘the rapture. was
Affected “that @ few dats Detore 1
fSaccataurcate, t had an attack of par-
ch cerebral amnesia, and for & Feu
fend ‘a half thereafter 1 wan unde
freatment..f got better, but even non
fine memory often falla te"
‘During. his varlous ‘sofourns_
France, and more particulary at Ror
Geaus ag student. fest in the L¥ce
pd then, it 1 malstake not. In. the
School of Law Reno Saran contract:
fed warms Celendship ‘with a. number
Sf Budding poets ahd men of Totter
ud he contributed poeina to Le Tet
frol (a review of les Jeunen edited by
Loon “Bocayet), wherein Louls Per
aud, the Goncourt nize winner
Hioalge made hs debut “Later Le
Bettrot Company’ gathered, these oc
[canlonal poeins into two volumes and
femued them under the ‘Utes, “Le
Matson ‘dy Bonheur” and "La Vi
eeeieieetbenen Temaion
couple behind It, Getting by thongs
in areadnens 1 Salted. decclonments
"Soon C hearh wusseeking sung
rerembied, for all the world, the olve
aude by sna with 2 tatftp‘eatiag
‘Bean soup. "Neaplng: om febing the
ice catia sce the great beast Blk
In the logeagen, one at @ tine and
igus cowards ina manet
thle phowed that’ he! hate es
that I ar about clacet ang “tsi
he camo unt he'sinaiy reached tne
ee behind which ees planted: Se
Sood upon his haunchee’ end reached
ir tho tov lozenges which Thad Dut
On either side oF the weer {hea The
nay of the thongy al reas “a got
the eee lozenges all ght ant ‘en
he renchad clue argurd's 20 quest
‘ich 1 had tacked on the back af the
free and thats whore got Sue
With cule “morerseat Tonagtt
tach of ni forepaes in m moose Sea
Bit rk Pade the thong tae
i nit denperate eon ‘to tole
Himecie Re’ dvew his hie icp Sssut
the bare “ot the ‘ce "Agsia fest
busyvand fn, tem tine die ht tat
{otal it I'hd' that Wear at hele
foam am a vans.” You noses sat yugh
clita aha “heer” ora” Puch
Rowling’ in our a Pts “tle
eterward that fi avakened the pees
Breck ie eilagae thas he aens
feaeShanever and fon, at Wut
Sith the aelstors ‘menttoned as en
of my outfit. ue
T'xtarted teimming the hale trom
te Bens ae the of hus en Sad
Woe unt Waid he nent a Jow
Tanvertag’ae you woug et 2
tnd in een than an hour he ‘at
ve Sng ore Balt on Bin tha as
QV)
+e BGS
&
rie F’ %
=
sel's got shoulders, He certainly ap-
Prated very mush embacstnced when
Ths ‘nished. yr thi thee wa
‘ehintng and ersing 4a manaer (hat
‘ould fave: meant trouble fore i
& member ofthe for the Voor Gt
A."ihtd appeared upon the scene.
IGoked. mg Ingerson. and. it wat
exactly 1am. Mleking my scissors
inp" pocket ssended fy way Baa
to “the” viliege, ‘where. T found. the
Teaver waiting’ for me: He hada pot
oi bina’ ene coup’ ail ready aad)
ioe tian ‘half am hour Iwas In bed
{xt een.
it seemed to me as though hadn't
batted an exe before. dasfignt ‘came
und with {¢-came the wilagers But:
ing x aulek treaktsct_ of cea” foo
Sore" and geeche nuts put ine’ fine
tpl and ina fe faes more
Was ready: todead the villagers to tay
Fietim. “There be Ming, Fgh where
Trad efe ita, cand "Be ‘was: fposen
ds hatd as a rocket est the thongs
and allowed the Bear to fail to the
Eround. Bringing ,sietah. some. of
the viliagers”Folied biim aboaed “and
oon he was reposing ina large room
inthe basement ot the efty ball, This
oom tad barred doors and wisdows
Sad had evideatly been sed as a
fail, before’ the Volstsad “Dill went
through, The Boor Was made of sheet
fron "Y hed ssormo ot the’ vilagers
Bring a tot of srood anda lire was
Bulle beneath the ‘oor, whiet’ soon
Ueeaime good and hot, “The. Dear
Soon saried thawing out and late
that afterngon he Was thawed to such
ah extent that he was abo to sit Sp
tnd tae notice of thing. ‘You never
Savr a bear so humiliated in Sour life
Fie’ erfea ike, » baby and 7 teamed
flerward he became so tame that he
frew to be a favorite withthe vii
Frrera who “turnea ‘lin out ‘every
ight’ to pralect them’ from others
ofthis kinds Wien goes (o show that
Kindness means much to the welfare
ofthe people, n'a manser of speak:
of
+ Taming
A Chinese
Cinnamon Bear
Gandhi of
India Stirs
. White Races
U.S.Sees Grave Danger
in Success Against .
British Misrule
Edlorial, Washington Herat.
‘The “Now.Co-operationtst™ move-
‘ment of Mebamviay ies Gandhi, ‘called
Pashia! on ated Soult eae
acting a great deat of attention tt
America.” Beubttexs twere are a 600d
many Aimerieans who re approving
So anmiscding Casdht. Thiele par
Heutatly true ef thove who azo anti-
British in thelr views and who. arc
peased at any attack, upon the ite
Rh empire ‘or any mistortune ‘which
‘uy’ etal {e. Ie woud be wel Coe
thote tho approve the Ganahl move:
ent, whether they are antl-Weitish
‘or noi, o consider Just what such ap-
Sroeal scant Ue matter of fact
Ymerieana. who take tho” part 0
Gandhi angie, ob. Conostration
iste” against Britain are adopting aa
atiuudé of condemnation not ae ‘Brit.
ata atone, but, open more forelbly, 0
Americas *
‘Not Aasinst British *
“The Gandhl movement Is, I Ite oF
rence, not directed. against Britain
Bat sgainst Western eielizatton, i
Ie" difeeted againat that of which
America, not Srltala, ig tho neni
Gana wants to arive Wentern el
Aston ott Mala. wants Taal
tov retumn fo ite” ortental natu
Sauirclss "Not winse. Dritsh 80
dives. and the Britch governmen
Swonla irave india tt Gundh succeed.
Ei but. Hrltuh Tmsthods, -choots
Sut, factorien,sauchiners” social in
Stitutions, Americans, shout. cement
ber that ait these" are Wentical with
‘Ametiean things of the ranse. cate
Bors, except that American methods
Shoah cotta tactic, machines
‘and’ insitutions “would brobabh
considered one degree. more, obsee
ionable. thi the ritish. "Gandhi
fights What. ie calls Westerg_ mate
lism” or “industrialivm.”" Machlo:
ery, upon whieh the econom(e fife 0
fhe Went in haved ty condemned bs
Gandhi and his adherents. le con
emotion. of machine-made clot
‘nau Wis reintroduction of the epi
Sing wheel exemple his creed. Stn
hiner, he belleves, destroys the soul
Sten’ Wécome. slaves ‘of tachinery—
‘hele own creation.
"The Gandhl movement ts the East
gato the Werty Gandhi thinks of it
Se sisting materaion,
Americans who approve and applaud
condemn Ameriea and. themclves
Sow it ts right-and_ healthful and
Just to criticize Weatern elvittzation:
that In the sray of improvement, We
nay well cian ond steve for ella
fnation of our faults. it fs rigme and
healthtat amd Jost to fn good tn the
ant Co, sock to. bring that. Rood.
five Wests “But to auvatt the ‘sever
Fuperionity of the Bast io the Went
ef" india Yo Brhtain nnd, ‘thereby, 0
hala to, America, In néalr and wh
Imac. We have a great deat to tears
foom. the Bact, the Bast posseave
enuing sages worthy Ideals, clea
‘Rarperes, but iow few are the sages
Eompared with “the, multitude. 0
ignorant. Uy what w tine percentage
of the hundreds of wallions are. the
Sworthy “ideals “and “elearpurnoues
possessed! 3
Machine Slavery"
te ts amentably true that too great
a. ereentage of Wanernera, ot Aer
fcans au well ay Burozeana, ate slaves
of the: Industrial machine. witheut
Spiritwat purpose, without mental ana
Moral ever "They" ge, without.
Feeting, the, ‘going They speed
{Through the beautiful miracie of ex
Istence, blind 49 heauty. or costemp-
| uous of ites They" puraue, azd per-
apa win, 2 surly pleasure that (rns
Iovate, Fetusing” t/ accept the
Preme joys wwileh ite offers, “it ts
{rue that) Western civilization. fs
faultyy It ta tre. that Wo are. too
imiieh ruled by ingistraltem, our ovr
Jereation. "Hut to abandon mackiners.
fo toss away" tho matertal powers and
[capacities we hive nequired, a, no
Re irue way of advancement. ‘het
Would bo a cowaruly surrender, The
WestAmreriea=ean and should con-
tert. industriaiom into comething
fontier and brizhter, juster, and more
{foyous, correcting cconamic. and. so:
stat injuatices, eliminating. tho ett
of congenten centers ot arom llven
fof Smoke or ‘noise, introducing: more
St spirituality, more” of mental. abd
‘moral purpose and order, more of Jo
ut Gand rung away from the bate
tle. He rerases to make tos of the
pocsthlities ‘of improving ‘humsnity
Fearing the dangeey tat come ‘with
tore ‘prospects.’ No true American,
tn reflection, can enprove, such &
"Amedicanswho reflect on thie mat-
tor of the contact of the West and the
‘Set yl on thee to ‘conclude. that
the ast—indie=wroma de batter 10
make se of What the West has, {0
Greer in orter ty improve its candle
{lon physteatis, and mentally as welt
rather than to fsfure and conderan 1
fonr and perhapa superstition. Amer:
{cans'are not pronared to.a0mit that
Line primitive eevt of existence Gandhi
‘tuvocntes in superior to, ote Own OF
‘ine snrituants te exeentaly: income
patible wlth taceriat well-being.
<Doctrine Stern
‘Turning’ to Gandhi's methods, one
may say that those who. so. giibhy
Menuify bis action and doctrines With
the actlons ant dgetrioca of Jesus
Christ are “aretching the. (ruth
dhe Soccine ts not hat of
fealstance at all, as some are stating
So freely: Ills in'a doctrine of vers
Norm an powerful resistance. ip
‘Against, stoloner. hot aaainat_ roast:
heer" ‘Conteast ix nititade on taxi
on with that of Jesus Christ “Ren.
Ser “unto. Cassar that” whieh i
Caesar's” ty totally diferent att
fade than “Aahatma” “Ganante tn:
Sinuetloms to Mi followers mot to Pas
faxes Jone Christ-dig not concert
Hiimeeie with “3” poilteal campaten
Against. the Homan empire jor seh
{Srestabitsh an earthly Kingdom.
‘Meith rule ta. Tndke may be open
to some criticisms. The Gantt move-
‘ent may erult- {mam accommodn-
oa of tnveresta thteh maybe am ft
provement. “ut Americans tinting
Sf Gandhi and. his, movement. and
dhectiing would do wet fo have
ir thoughts sorte of the bigger as
poets of the matter, en
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Bahri Ser saa bo
SEA ce RAR ET a
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Heat Uesagares OF shea
Hasty Hate Greatest
Etec Rtenmona, a,
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Eh eh baits Menriara
Srtctie ein A ee Sa
aoa han a et Qa
ia atest geet ane
er dite SERA ae
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Ter han agi te eo oe
deseidta 4 Mgmnt? Is
tiscali
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We Ae cba ae eee at
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es dat aihe i Tq
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Fhe a oat a a
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Haaeetca Se ee ara ON
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Tptee dag coe seg, oe
seca SEE SREP
agicemahy Sie aa Pce pee
esate, aaa tea a
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sat eater anette
Bay Goa |
Hug aN some, the 2
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Nite yom some storion. {Have tloped
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ee aati ioe ata
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see Be Sh seat 7 ree
Gait eh ole acer
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ihe Renee teat es
pest week “—“Seseph "Collins," Youngs-
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Milk and Ink From Sweet Potatoes and Peanuts
Dr. Rogers
Prof. Carver and his wizard wand at Tuskegee. From the peanut and the sweet potato he, the South's greatest chemist, has fashioned a modern Aladdin's lamp, the wonder of a million kitchens. For to the great American stomach he has introduced a hundred new and cheaper foods from the great money crops of the Southland. The American housewife has but to wish and her wish comes true. Carver is the magic scientist.
6ATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1922
Prof. Carver and his w potato he, the South's great der of a million kitchens. F new and cheaper foods from wife has but to wish and her
I
BY ROGER DIDIER
NE of the questions which Edison left out of his famous list was, Is a peanut a peanut? That is, is the vernacular which has it that "Peanuts is Peanuts" proper or merely colloquial? It seems as though it would be just about as hard to tell that as to figure with any sort of definiteness just where Harding stands on the so-called race question.
For peanuts are not only peanuts—they are goobers and ground nuts and monkey nuts and earth* nuts and oodles of other things which don't make sense to the inventor go along just as well leaving this trick question out of his lot, just as well as he did by failing to include. Is sweet potatoes sweet potatoes? for here, too, they could be proved to be yams. Such queer queries are the order of the day.
But, more seriously, these two plants have been forcing themselves to grow taller. They are waging a winning battle against our established foods. Their penetration into Friend Housewife's kitchen has been so successful that the victories of the sweet potato and the peanut have been well-carned and lasting, for their sweetness, their flavor, and, incidentally, they have reached our hearts. Under various guises they have intruded, and those of us who have been forced to get rid of them.
King of the Peanut
He who might be called the generalissimo of the plant forces that are making such a mark on our ration tables is Prof. George W. Carver of Tuskegee Institution, who went to the great Washington school some 27 years ago. looked into his people's larders, and saw that they were not good, and he forthwith set himself the task of bringing about a change. Hence his world-famed studies with the plant forces, and the advent of the fruit of these plants in a hundred hitherto unknown fashions.
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When it began to be whispered that there was a man down there at Tuskegee who "could make anything out of a sweet potato from bread to ink, or out of the peanut from milk to meal, housewives and farmers cracked many a good joke about this book—far more new—fangled idea—just something to get talked about. Such things made nice parlor talk or even the Ladies' Aid might comment on them at their weekly meetings. But, just think of it—a man making real milk out of peanuts? That had never been done before. Bosh!
Before everything else, Professor Carter is a student, so, although he may have heard of some of the talk which the wilscares were indulging in about him, it did not fease him a bit. Yes, he was working for the people, he was rendering service to science. But if the man who was going to write eventually with his sweet potato ink was not convinced, or the woman who was going to make peanut bread eventually spread her heavy doubts about what he was doing, he, Carver, wouldn't worry. With a kindly smile he would admit to himself that the doubters must come around. He continued his studies and the apathetic public continued to hear about him.
War Alarms
Then, kerkplunk! came the war. Impories were cut off from the United States. This board and that board sent out their reports. The United States was going to shatter the short of beef; we couldn't dye from Germany; our milk cows were dying or being killed off. We looked into the face of a long war and saw the nation facing famine. Even the man in the street comfortably relieved of the necessity of going to the front, saw themselves fighting a battle with starvation and privation right here in the good old U. S. A. Jack Johnson was cruising around in the Swift, and most of the
THE COTTON GARDEN.
A specimen of an experiment station at Tuskegee. The scientist is shown in his field togs. Not only is he a great agriculturist, but a fine painter and a good singer. At Simpson College, in Iowa, he completed courses in art and music before taking agriculture at the State College. His father and mother were both slaves. The father was killed at work. The mother was stolen by the Ku Klux Klan. At one time in his life Prof. Carver lived an entire week on ten cents' worth of food. No, it was not peanuts.
Race leaders at home were rather quiet. Why shouldn't this quiet and kind old gentleman down at Tuskegee show out to represent us in the public eye? Here was a new sort of Race champion. The critics had said that the Race could sing, that Providence had more or less women in the service and ethnic group, and that when it came to hard work, that's where the Race found its mission. Countering these admissions of fact, they had then declared that this was a scientific age and thus would have to duce a scientist or two to measure up with some of theirs, that they would take their scientists and work overnight to prove that "the Race" was N. G. So, those old hardheads got to lisp and then to sing his praises. Everybody became anxious to tell who he was, what he was and what he had done.
Today—Professor George W. Carver has come into his own and is recognized as the most valuable agricultural chemist the South has pro
"Up from Slavery"
Two of Tuskegee's great men came "up from slavery." One was Booken McGraw, an officer in the George W. Gore, Washington was the "Wizard of Industrial Education"; Carver is the "Wizard of Scientific Agricultural Exploration."
A specimen of an experi- togs. Not only is he a great College, in Iowa, he complete State College. His father ar- The mother was stolen by the entire week on ten cents' w
mond Grove, Missouri, sometime near the end of the Civil War. The place of his birth was a little one-roomed log shanty, on the plantation of Moses Carver, a German by birth, and the owner of his mother.
His father belonged to a Mr. Grant, who owned an adjoining plantation. Little is known of the father, except that it was voiced around on the plantations that he had been killed while hauling wood with an ox team, falling from the load under the wagon and having both wheels pass over him.
During his early life Professor Carver lived a hectic existence. At the close of the war, the Ku Klux
Klan was at the height of its activities. They pillaged the plantations, frightening and carrying off the owner as being of the more humane type of slaveholders. He relates how when the Ku Klux Klan had raided the Carver estate and taken away a child, the lighthearted child, the kindly slaveholder sent one of his men with a horse and a sum of money to purchase both backress and a lighthearted enslave and the slave thieves, a detachment had gone on with the boy's mother and they were unable to locate her. Prof. Carver never saw his mother and more than one exchange him for the horse, worth $300, and he was carried back to the plantation. About this time his two sisters died, and he and his brother were left on the horse, worth $300, and Mr. Carvers (the German farm.
Thirsted for Education
Professor Carver says: "When just a mere lot in short dresses my very soul thirsted for an education. I literally lived in the woods. I wanted to know every strange stone, flower, insect, bird or bruit. No one could hear. My only book was an old Webster's elementary spelling book. I would seek the answer here without satisfaction. I almost knew the book by heart. The age of 19 my brother left the old home for Favetteville, Ark.
iment station at Tuskegee. The agriculturist, but a fine painter and courses in art and music before mother were both slaves. The Ku Klux Klan. At one time in worth of food. No, it was not
Shortly after (I was 10) I left for Noosho, a little town just eight miles from our farm, where I could go to school. Mr. and Mrs. Carver were perfectly willing for us to go where we could be educated the same as silly children. There followed a struggle for his education. The fight was one familiar to many boys and girls in the South and North—of making ends meet in school and in winter; of finding encouragement and of overcoming obstacles on account of color. Young Carver bagged passage on a ride to Noosho. So he left, Noosho.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
the scientist is shown in his field and a good singer. At Simpson before taking agriculture at the father was killed at work. His life Prof. Carver lived an peanuts.
Sweet P
Cultivating cotton is no longer Mexican boll weed to the terror of Díaz is only one thing potato, which the most marvelous pl
Peanut milk. at work in his lab understand how nut a new sort of of the cow variety oils, fats, proteids the peanut. Its po you can do everyt milk.
THE BROTHERS' CHEESE
gan. He worked in private families as a cook and did laundry work. After nine years of it, he went back to mother and brother and Mr. and Mrs. Carver. At the time was so small that he was able to ride on half-fare. The conductor feared that he was too small to be riding old folks, then went to Minneapolis. Kan. where he finished his high school work. He took this time that his brother, James, died, and the young student awoke to the realization that he actually alone in the world. He education was not stayed. Through high school
he decided that he must have college training. He and passed entrance examinations to a college in Iowa, but the college president, on seeing him, refused him admittance because he was not white. McCay was low, so Carver decided to enroll the knowledge of lumbering which he had gained. He did not run away from this town, but opened a laundry for the patronage of the student body. The business venture was highly successful. In the spring, when the college closed, he went to Winterset, Iowa, and engaged himself as the first cook in a large hotel. It was while working here that "the divinity which entered our eyes" came to form. On evening while at church he was no longer by a couple who were guests at
Cultivating cotton at Tuscan cotton is no longer the king of Mexican boll weevil has come to the terror of Dixie land owls is only one thing to do—a potato, which the great cherries most marvelous plants in existence.
Peanut milk. What is it at work in his laboratory. The understand how this man nut a new sort of milk destiny of the cow variety. It consumes oils, fats, proteids, carbohydrates the peanut. Its possibilities are you can do everything with it milk.
Cultivating cotton at Tuskegee. Prof. Carver says that cotton is no longer the king of Southern crops. The deadly Mexican boll weevil has come and spread its destruction to the terror of Dixie land owners. In their dilemma there is only one thing to do—accept the peanut and sweet potato, which the great chemist describes as "two of the most marvelous plants in existence."
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Peanut milk. What is it? Prof. Carver is shown here at work in his laboratory. The world has found it hard to understand how this man has squeezed from the peanut a new sort of milk destined to largely take the place of the cow variety. It consists of a perfect emulsion of oils, fats, proteins, carbohydrates and some of the ash of the peanut. Its possibilities are practically unlimited. Yes, you can do everything with it that you can do with cow's milk.
the hotel. After services, these two, a Mr. and Mrs. Milkfield, told the chef cook how much they admired his voice. They had heard him sing in church. Thenceforth, they were his staccafast friends. They encouraged him to go to college. The chemist said it was
"It was her custom to have me come at the close of the day and rehearse to her the doings of the day, such a recital and say, 'Whoever heard of any one person doing half so many things.' She encouraged me to sing and paint; both of which I had a passionate fondness for, and I had a very valuable凑 money to take me to Simpson College at Indiana, Iowa, where I took art, music and college work."
"Lives Week on 10 Cents
In this way he went on, working and studying. He finished at Simpson College, and I went with that he bought 5 cents worth of corn meal and 5 cents worth of beef suet. Off these two things he lived one whole week. He says, "I would never have had no matter how badly I needed it. I wanted literally to earn my own living."
Three years in the laundry business and in agriculture, he was the Iowa State College and the degrees of Bachelor and Master. After graduation he was elected a member of the faculty, and given change of the greenhouse, bacteriological office and work in sys-
He labored there until Booker Washington sent out a call. Washington said that he needed a man of Carver's training. That was thirty years old and gird himself and went to the famous Southern institution of learning. Prof. Carver does not tell how he chanced to hit on the sweet potato and the peanut as his hobbies. Perhaps they are not. It may be a case of the peanut, but he needs he serves than in other plants. He says himself that the more he
studies these two plants and unfolds the wonderful mysteries hidden with the knowledge that God in His wisdom gave to Southern agriculture two of the most marvelous plants in existence. In Kentucky, he planted in Denmark, S. C., last year, he announced it as a blessing that the Mexican boll weevil had come to destroy the South. It was a blessing, he maintained, because it broke up the erroneous and stultifying conclusion that there was but one money crop for the South. The imagination can feast on the things which have been made from sweet potatoes and peanuts that grow marvelously when hearing of sweet potato and peanut
skegeee. Prof. Carver says that of Southern crops. The deadly me and spread its destruction owners. In their dilemma there accept the peanut and sweet mist describes as "two of the existence."
? Prof. Carver is shown here The world has found it hard to has squeezed from the pea-ined to largely take the place exists of a perfect emulsion ofrates and some of the ash of are practically unlimited. Yes, it that you can do with cow's
ink, but the actual value of the plants has come through their values as foods, their ability to displace some of the more ancient articles of the average diet. A common misconception among unstudied persons is that synthetic and newly discovered foods are not nutritive. It is believed that such foods are not nutritive, something else, but it won't taste the same, nor serve the same purpose. Professor Carver has disproved one of these arguments in placing his new foods on the market. He first chose beans that as between the first and second parts of peanuts and other staple articles of our diet, there is little to choose, with the peanut having the advantage. Baked beans have 22.3 per cent of protein and 25.8 per cent of peanuts, 25.8 per cent for peanuts; 59.6 per cent carbohydrates or fat for goobers, and the beans have a quarter more of an even more favorable comparison and with cowpeas or "black-eyed" peas.
Similar tests prove that peanut hay is as valuable for stock as alfalfa or clover. In fact, students of dietetics have been astonished to learn that peanut hay is the most valuable foodstuffs in the world were destroyed, a well-balanced ration could be made for both man and boat from peanuts and sweet potatoes.
The Sweet Potato
Professor Carver has listed the good points of the sweet potato as follows: It is a crop the Southern farmer can depend upon for satisfactory yield one year after another. It cultivates easy to harvest and easy to keep, if the fundamental principles of caring and storing are carried out. It does not draw heavily up the fertility of the soil like some other crops. More bushels per acre of sweet potatoes can be produced any other way. It is South Africa's
FIELD
W. CARVER
NATIONAL GOAL
CHAMPION
For over thirty years Prof. Carver has rendered distinguished service at Booker Washington's great school. The above cup was presented to him in February of this year by the Negro Farmers Conference held in North Carolina in token of the esteem in which the farmers of the South hold him and his service.
fair crop of potatoes can be produced on soil that would mean almost total failure for practically any other crop. It can be made one of the great money crops of the world by judicious indulgence. It is said that if factories
For over the rendered distinguis-
ington's great school. The al-
in February of this year by the
held in North Carolina in tok
farmers of the South hold him
would put up the flours, meals, bisque breakfast, foods, dehydrated potatoes, vinegar, stockfoods, molasses, video, chicken, similars, baking powder firms and millers for their special grades of flour, the consuming public could not only get the potato, but would know how to prepare it, as it can be prepared more than one hundred different ways.
A few of the things which Professor Carver has made out of the sweet potato are flour, meal, starch, library paste, mock coconut, breakfast foods, preserved ginger, vinegar, cheese, shoal bacon, compound, blaque, powder, candies, rubber compound, stock food, molasses, wood fillers and caramel.
It takes a long stretch of the imagination to figure out how to shine one's teeth with a toothpaste, but what is the Tuskegee wizard has done. Both shoe paste and ink are made from the skins and vines.
Ginger in sweet potato is an assortment which is an important prefer to the real ginger root.
Similar statements are made about sweet potato coffee. There are two ways to make it: in mixed coffee the same as chicory, and the other an instant coffee. All that is necessary is to stir a, half-spoonful or more into a teacup of hot water, sugar and cream. The result will be the result, absolutely free from sediment.
Sweet Potato Flour
By this time everyone is acquainted with sweet potato flour. At Tuskegee they recall how, during the war, they saved it and made it saved. There was a real necessity and all the chemical and physical powers at command had to be called into action. As a result the potato was taken to the one of the very best conservers. The Tuskegee Institute boarding department saved two hundred pounds of wheat flour and the potato was used as the sweet potato in breadmaking. In connection with corn meal and wheat flour. Professor Carver has made clear that it is not intended to be used as its products displace entirely either of the former, but to intimately and admirably blend with and conserve sacrificing the taste or attractiveness of the product, by adding a delightful pliquency to, the taste without materially changing the nutritive value of the potato. There are four kinds of flour, three made from raw potatoes and one made from those that have been cooked. Available breakfast foods number three.
The first is a rich brown, flaky or granular food, resembling grapenuts, only being superior in taste and more is a compound in a peanut sauce, second is a compound in a starch has been reduced to dextrose, a sort of sirup, and the third is a by-product of the taplacen manufacturing process, which cooks and tastes very much the same as cream meat, being much superior in flavor.
Of Goghers in General
Of the peanut. Professor Carver has written: "A careful study of it and its possibilities convinces one more and more the universal, civilized and uncivilized man and many of the lower animals are passionately fond of peanuts and eat them without any harmful results. And future usefulness he bases on the fact that: It is a legume, and like all other members of the pod-bearing family has the power to bring nitrogen from the soil to the soil, thus becoming a soil humidifier, than a soil robber, which is true of all of our other farm crops except the pod-bearer.ounded peanuts contains a little of the body-building nutrients than a pound of sirloin steak, while the heat and energy-producing nutrients are more than twice as much. It attracts a dietary or medicinal effect upon the human system that is
eanuts very desirable. Aside from the ordinary constituents, a number of astonishing products are being isolated, aside from the oil which comes in several very attractive grades, ranging from medium yellow to almost or quite pure white. All of these oils are attractive, palatable and fur-
thirty years Prof. Carver has
quished service at Booker Wash-
above cup was presented to him
the Negro Farmers Conference
ken of the esteem in which the
m and his service.
nish the body with heat, fat and energy. There are also the proteins in the dough, the protein-pressed guenne, lysine, myosin and amino acids, each and all of which are strong points in favor of more peanuts in our everyday menu. It has probably more water soluble proteins than plant together with oils, fats, gums and resins more easily emulsified and more stable. In addition to the protein, their various soluble forms, giving to the peanut an additional food value. The clean cake, after the oils have been removed, is very high in muscle protein, with which the meal and flour blend with wheat flour, corn meal, etc, makes it of especial value to makers, confectioners, candymakers and ice
The Peanut Army
The number of products to be obtained from the peanut seems to be limitless. A partial list of existing commodities follows:
Salted peanuts Worcester sauce
Brittle Sprouts
Fudge Relishes
Cream candy Breakfast foods
Bar candy Axle grease
Oil sap Oil sap
Salad oil Quinine
Butters (3) Lnolemole
Meal stock Nitroglycerin
Flour Butter chill
Cereal Lolem compound
Cracker jack Oleomargarine
Caramels Gerns
Butter Scotch Cheese filter
Wafers Milk
Kisses Pomade
Ground hay Int
Hulls hay Stalns (9)
Dyes (19) Sauce
Instant coffee Stock food
Peanut Milk
The most talked of of Prof. Carver's concoctions is peanut milk
Peanut milk consists of a perfect emulsion of the oils, fats, proteids, carbohydrates and some of the ash of the peanuts. It is one of the most fierce and stable emulsions in existence. If you make peanut milk, it be made from the peanuts or from the peanut cake or meal.
Generally there is a question as to the relative value of the peanut product to the food values. A comparison of the food values of peanut kernels shows everything to be in favor of the peanut kernel. The latter contains only one-tenth as much water, 3 times as much ash, 3 times as much carbohydrates, and 12 times as much fat. By controlling the quantity of carbohydrates and proteids used, many different grades of milk can be produced—it can be made as individual needs or fancy dictates.
In looks and physical characteristics some of the grades of peanut milk are practically identical with that of cow's milk. If you did not know that one cow's peanut milk and the other cow's peanut milk would never detect the difference.
Its keeping qualities are about the same as those of cow's milk. The fewer fats and protels there are in cow's milk, the more soures the clabber or curd is about the same in quantity and physical appearance as that of cow's milk.
Its Possibilities
The possibilities of this milk and its products are practically unlimited. Professor Carver mentions a few that stand out more prominently than the others. "For culinary purposes, both the sweet and the sour milk can be used in the same way as cow's milk and makes a very satisfactory substitute. The curd can be converted into maize, but sage, tutti-fruit, chocolate fillers, cream bonbons, etc. "Many fancy salads can be made from these curds, as well as a superior body for mock meat dishes. The curd can be made on fruit, in coffee, on breakfast cereals, etc, and makes the most acceptable substitute for the cream from cow's milk that is known. It also makes the most delicious ice cream, smooth (Continued on Page 22, Column 1)
AROUND THE HUB
By Charles E. Freeman Jr.
Pittefield, Mass.
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Stewart, Linden
and the proud parents of a baby boy,
William, patient at the House of Mercy hospital,
at the House of Mercy hospital,
gave a concert and supper at the Second
Congregational church Friday evening,
of Ruth concert and dance Friday evening.
Jacob has taken a job at Mandeig
g's grocery store. Mrs. Alfred Forrish
makes Ruth Van Buren of Robbins a
bridesdale. Arthur Oystenhur, who has been
duties at the Wendel Hotel.
WISCONSIN
Beloit, WI.
THE PRAIRIE STATE
Ottawa, Ill.
George Chamberls is selling autos as well as serving as a porter at Mitch's Ransom, Ill., to work on the farm of the late Robert Ransom. Day, Feb. 25, J. H. Black of 383 Langley avenue, Chicago, came to our city on Monday, the day, who for the past month has been visiting the Illinois avenue. A five-course dinner was served. Mrs. Black, in company with the chef, came to the cage, where the latter will spend a few hours with the cook. Harry Jacob, who was operated upon last week, is much improved at this time. Mrs. J. L. Saunier, with a heavy coat, which he contracted in some unkown place, has returned from Ransom, Ill., and is now visiting the Shop. Mrs. Perry Sugg has a heavy cold, but is much improved at this time, called to the bedside of her sister, who is on Married Rock trail, is being remodeled and will open for business that Robertson of Spring Valley, where that Robertson of Spring Valley, give a dance in that city Friday evening, March 17, Mrs. John Reed of 3250 Lakeview, Ill., children are visiting at the home of her sister, Mrs. Harry Jacob, for a few days.
Mauada !!
Dugueln, III.
Willee Woods, who was cut by Tom Lester, was born in Holden hospital in Carbondale Tuesday. The Coterie met at the residence of B. Webb was called to Calre on account of her illness. Mary Eykeens of Jackson, Tenn., is visiting Mr. Salle Jones of North Linden. Mary Eykeens was a success. Mrs. Owen of Coterie was a success. Mrs. Owen of the death of her brother, Willee Woods, Mrs. Kilpatrick and daughter have lived with her. Salle Jones, Lizzie Lame, Josie Jones, and Paul Baptist church was on fire Friday, but little damage was done. Mrs. Eykeens end with her parents in Lavenderville, and will be drowned in Dewalt is visiting Mrs. Eykeens.
Coulterville, Ill.
Mrs. Taylor and son of Hartlambus were the guests of Mrs. A. Brown Montgomery, Mrs. A. Brown Miles Fern Brown. Robert Clark is visiting in Mumburghy for a day or so, and Mrs. A. Brown Smith visited with Mrs. Maggie Williams Saturday and Sunday. The Maverick, Ill. Initiated 10 candidates Saturday night. Mrs. Maggie Smith and Mrs. A. Brown Smith initiated Mrs. Maggie Williams Thursday on their visit. Entertained the Circle last week, Mrs. Maggie Smith on the sick Mrs. Mrs. Margaret August entertained the Circle last week, Mrs. Margaret August on the booster sale in Sports Thursday.
Jacksonville, FL
Pittsburgh, Ill.
Harrisburg, Ill.
All Prairie State news must reach this office by Tuesday noon to (nure publication.
Centralia, III.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayborn made a visit
to the Chapel Sunday morning at the home or Mrs
Clayborn Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock.
Second Baptist church Wednesday.
Second Baptist church Thursday.
Bluff Mo., is here visiting her husband,
Rev. Kandjolph, pastor of the Ames
Corner, Cornel East street, entered
Corner, Cornel West, entered
Gradele Corner, and Miss Adela Willey
A. M. B. church was a success, Mr.
S. L. Burrell led in class observation. Oliver
is in jail for bootlegging. Rev. Meko
day at 5 p.m., guiding Star Lodge No. 90
to the order. Mr. Hamilton of Mounda,
Ill. grand lecturer of the Masque fraternity,
annual visit. Mr. and Mrs. Eman Hair-
day evening in honor of Mrs. Randolph.
Grand Tower, Ill.
Master Charles H. Handlund of Chicago is taking a long visit with his wife, Marilyn, and their children, Mrs. M. E. Booker were in Murphyhorsboro attending the quarterly meeting in Murphyhorsboro on business. Mrs. M. E. Booker was shopping last week. The Golden Seal Club was organized by Leonard H. McCormick, a benefactor of the community. The Golden Seal Club gave a Valentine party on Friday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. Adams.
Streator, Ill.
That it pays to be written up in the news recently when mention was made of the death of the man whom he admired. The following week Mr. Barrett received a letter from his brother, who was born in 1924 and now beorn heard of in 46 years. William Barrett received a letter from his brother, who has been working at a white, wet factory manufacturing company, who has been working quite a while, with family members. Mrs. William Walker of East Aurora, Mrs. William Walker of East Aurora, Mrs. William Walker of East Aurora, is seriously ill at this writing. Albert Simmons of the St. Louis street street of the family home, 509 Coal street, San Francisco, Spruce preached at the Second Baptist Church in Chicago was called by Mrs. Wm. Thomas to be for daughter Mrs. Wm. Thomas to be for daughter Mrs. Sterrett died and Rev. Harris was preached having been bantled by him deceased. The Second Baptist church in our city.
Clinton, III.
Cairo, III.
The Uniform Hank, K. of P. gave a walk to Brickley General H. of H. Biga, commander of U. R. K. of P. of Illinois left Saturday for Metropolis, ill. Mrs. Biga returned with a breakfast party in the fort of Jordan near Milton. The fun Feb. 24, from Ward Chapel A, M. E. McCormick, 200 S. 2nd Street, is in Rua Sawat Rua, $20 rd street, is in Finis Cavitt of Locust street is better and her daughter is ill with pneumonia. Her grandmother, Mrs. Anne Jenkins, was on vacation last week. Henry Lee, who underwent an operation getting along fine. The fun of Mrs. Ela Graves was held Sunday night at the home of her maids were taken to her former home Hattie Williams of Seth street is in
Metropolis, Ill.
Bloomington, Ill.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Carbondale, Ill.
Kankakso, III
The B. Y. P. U. gave a book a social library. The social was largely attended and a lovely program was given. Varnas. Light refreshments were served. Zion church, was a Chicago visitor last year. N.W. Waldvidge received a telegram that her son was dead. Mrs. Skirin, being unable to make the trip, being unable to make the trip, Mrs. Sute Holmes, 919 S. Dearborn for two weeks. Henry Howard was living in Judea, cutting wood last week before he goes to the eye. He is able to go out.
Quincy, Il
Robert O. Cook, who owns and manages the Robert O. Cook, Inc., street, near Vine Street, has announced that the patrons of his shop and to the patrons of the Elim Streets Baptist church will not be open on Sundays. Eighth and Elim Streets Baptist church will have a fund of $1,000 to decorate the church, which was retarded by the continued illness of Pref. A. E. Malone, is now able to take on the work again to be out and come to Quincey to take up the work where it was left off.
Harvey, III
Jerseyville, Ill.
Rev. Monnes of Alton preached a sermon at Mount Olive Baptist church in Louis, Mo., returned to her home Sunday to meet the family of Louis, Mr. and Mrs. James Waddles, Mrs. James Waddles is quite improved in her appearance, all llamas of Carrollon spent Sunday in our city. Rosace Clois is ill at his home and Kirk-Cring returned to her home in the city. Kirk-Cring returned to her wives at the home of her father-in-law Jefferson King. Mrs. Nollle Wells of Jefferson King, city last Sunday. Frank Thurman of city last Sunday. Frank Thurman of Mr. and Mrs. James Waddles Harvey Hare has returned from Jack-King part of the winter there. Herbert's Greater Minstrels played at the new night and were the hit of the season.
Brockford, Ill.
East Moline, Ill.
Mrs. J. H. Fulton, and daughter, Magdalena, spent Sunday visiting in Home Missionary Society and home of society Sunday evening for the benefit of their
Joliet Ill
Urbana. III.
Sparta, Ill.
The play of 'Urcel Joan and Aunt
Mary' at Uncle Joan and Aunt
Mary high school Friday night, March 3 was
a celebration of the return of a
ridge has returned home, after several
Women's club meetings. The Women's
club mat at the home of Mrs. M.
Douglas, who has been
lain is able to be up again, Mr. Mitchell
is able to be up again, Mr. Mitchell
family in Satura. Charles Ridgway, who
convalescence, Charles Kayler, who has
convalescence, Charles Kayler, who has
convalescence, Mrs. Lille Madison is all. Any
leave it with Tom Smith at Main Street
leave it with Tom Smith at Main Street
he Helen Bibby, Mr. Margaret Penny
attended the funeral of their brother.
Galzburg, III
Springfield, Ill.
Herry King, 1128 South Pasadena
club member in their weekly meeting with
Walter Conyers at the Brown hotel
up after a few days' illness. The
club hosted a Thursday night and played to a full
hour of music. A state board convention held a two days' session at the Pleasant Avenue Baptist
baby of Mr. and Mrs. Holt, Canceller
confined to their home. 300 South Hintz
street with influenza. The Union Baptist
church celebrated its seventh anniversary
Kathryn McHenry Friday night for Mrs.
and Mrs. Pearl D. Face were married
at the A. M. E. paragonage Wednesday
Edythe Hardy and daughter, Edythe
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Rich-
inger, mother of Roy. Roy inked to Chicago.
Pulaski, III.
Canton, IL
Eiain. II
Edward Newsome, Levi Tenant and Mattie Kearney were Chicago visitors who attended the Wheeler Volehier has returned from the hospital. Mrs. Mary Wheeler is ill. Elk Kelly and nephew spent Sunday in Kentucky and his sister has gone to Kentucky on business.
Monmouth, Ill.
Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
The Colored men of Cedar Rapids known as the Appomattox Club. The officers are Edward Carraway, president; Richard B. Hancock, old Price, secretary; Orin Simmons, assistant secretary; W. H. Beanhans, treasurer; H. G. Handal, chaplain; treasurer; H. G. Handal, chaplain; committee. Chester Waters attended the relay at Iowa city at the S. U. I. prizes. A few days ago he attended the meeting at Ames and won a medal. A few days ago he honored the sons of Cedar Rapids. He is the son of B. M. church.
Bayport, Iowa
IOWA
Miss Gladys Brother and Miss Ida Jasper church at the white pier in church building in Alameda, 218 Myrtle street, is tilt at this church. Miss Constantine Doney is improving a slowly convoking, Mrs. Eileen Bartel of St. Louis, Mo. is at the bedside show, known throughout the state of Iowa, is improving her writing. Mrs. Eileen Bartel returns home after an operation.
**NEBRASKA**
Alliance, Neb.
Mr. and Mrs. Jasper spent the week end visiting old friends in Allington, Col., last Monday. Roy Shores just returned from a short stay in under the auspices of W. M. M. S. of a success. Miss Marita Horn is called to the bedside of her father at Archimede again. Father Dudley is ill. Wm. Batt, move to his new location next week. Clevie league will meet next Monday
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MISSISSIPPI
The stork visited Rev. and Mrs. V. H. Murry, leaving a little daughter, Mrs. J. Murry, buried from St. Paul Epistle church. Colbert entered the church. She leaves her mother, Potta Patia, and her sisters. Mr. Sharp dial last Wednesday, buried from St. John A. E. Church.
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Ensley, Ala.
The stork visited the home of Mr. Mitchell, and left a fine baby boy. Mother and baby are doing nice, Otsis King, member of the vocal choir of Ensley, is dead. He leaves a wife and two chillies. Mitchell was called away to the bedside of Mitchell, and he lumbus, Miss, Miss Mary, Elizabeth Sinclair, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Willingham, to John Scott on the 26th of February at the First Baptist church, Fairbairn.
MINNESOTA
Minneapolis, Minn.
Dukuth Mlan
An enjoyable affair Monday evening was the first wedding anniversary of their home, 225 East Eighth street. Jonnulls and pink roses in silver standers were used in the other rooms. Hours were from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Hours were from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Many valuable presents were received. The second in attendance was a musical program will be given by the St. Mark's A. M. E. M. at 1 p.m. A musical program will be 4 o'clock. Mrs. Marie Coles, who has been at the St. Mary's hospital for 20 years, will appear for a new trial for Max Mason, convicted of criminal assault on the appeal for a new trial for Max Mason, convicted of criminal assault on the appeal for a new trial for Max Mason, according to word received from F. L. Barnett of Chicago, one of his attorneys, according to word received from the attorney. The case was to have come before the State Supreme Court March 11, 2015 to make preparations for their third annual Thanksgiving Memorial Sunday, March 11, 2015, to the Calvary Baptist church, April 3.
TEXAS
TEXAS
Charles Johnson, former of the Khan Loving company, has gone on leave from his work. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Thomas returned from the United States, his sister-in-law a federal. Rev. G. W. Anderson, with the assistance of Rev. H. W. Anderson, closed a very successful revival at Allen chapel. Miss Inez Johnson, with the assistance of Rev. W. Rev. J. D. Leonard returned home last week from St. Louis. Rev. H. W. Anderson returned home March 2 from San Antonio. Rev. P. H. Jackson will begin his re-creation as the weather permits. Rev. G. W. Anderson returned home from his vacation and friends. Waco, visiting friends and
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THE BUCKEYE STATE
By Alexander O. Taylor
Cleveland, Ohio, March 10.—The following named officers of the Royal Drill Corps No. 1 were installed in: Captain, Mary L. Nelson, Neptune, G. grievant Martin; secretary, R. Hairston; first sergeant, Lena J. Madison; third sergeant, C. M. Midge Madison; third sergeant, W. Word Capt. L. Santee the beautiful overnight traveling ful services and Capt. L. H. Gray the hard bag for, a A. O Taylor
Supports Anti-Lynch Bill
Mrs. Robert T. Gates Dead
under the auspices of the choir this evening.
K. of P.'s Install
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hackloy and Mrs. Parks.
Anchor Life Makes Good
Bcplamin Dunn Pies
Phyllis Wheatley Notes
Charles S. Morris Jr. Coming
longing signals
Garrett A. Morgan came into
the limelight some years ago, when he
Portsmouth, Olea
Delaware Ohio
Mrs. Elizabeth Green has returned from New York with her children Mich. and is now confined at home with the children. She will be away with data with relatives and friends. The relatives of Bleech Aeford gathered information about him, as it was his birthday, on his visit, as it was his birthday, a pleasant visit with friends in Colum-
Newark, Ohio
The deacon board of Silhou Baptist church gave a church enterance ceremony in improving slowly at the home of his sister, Miss Charley Wilson is able to be out again after a few days of illness. Her Miss Eilee Douglas and Miss Brooks of 200 Monroe street are married. Miss Lewis and brother, Charley Sims, have moved to ill. Miss Marie Payne is visiting her sister, Mrs. George Johnson, on Bucchin. After a few weeks of illness, Don't forget the Defender is always on hand at
Mary, Mary Moore, evangelist and lecturer, died on January 14, M. E. church, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sanders of Monroe street, a delicious dinner last Sunday, Ms. Georgia St. Grace, the death of her uncle, George Gillett, of Lancaster, Texas. The day before, Rose street, Miss Nettle Quinn of Quam, Texas, and Mrs. John Cable were in Louisville, Ky., a few days after a nervous breakdown, and had to shorten the cooking in Columbus, Ohio, for the last few weeks, returned home and self-serve restaurant, Orville Coryt continued to impress M. E., diner car, was in Newark, Ohio, last week visiting Mrs. Harris, on Buckingham street.
Capton Ohio
Mrs. Charles Striner, 429, Sixth Street, with an attack of pneumonia. James Burton was called in to care of his father. Progressive class of St. Paul's bazaar in Fraternal Hall on March 30. St. Paul's conducting revival services at St. Paul's Sunday church, speaking to an overflowing house. Miss Evans is one of our pleasure to hear and the large number of her effectiveness was a testimony of her effectiveness.
Welleville, Ohio
The Perfect Health Culture Club will be hosting the clubroom Saturday evening, March 11. Mrs. Rebecca Hines was surprised to learn that she and her friends in honor of her 59th birthday. Mrs. James Miles left for Cedarsville, Ill. Mrs. Rebecca Hines and Ed Oliver were invited to a birthday by Ernest Redmon and daughter. Out-of-town guests were: B. C. Prisby and daughter of Alliance, Ohio. Prisby and daughter of Alliance, Ohio. Mack Turner and David Bethel.
East Liverpool, Ohio
The Young Ladies' Auxiliary of the Young Ladies' Church, Mrs. T. M. Baldwin of Third Street Tuesday. The "trot jarty" given by the Willingwood church was a grand success. John church was a grand success. John days with Harley Palmer, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Tennier of Eightieth Street where Mary Moyle Memorial Terlover street have returned from burying her son. N. Y. The J. W. Ladies' Syracuse, N. Y. The J. W. Ladies' Temple. A large crowd of out-of-town guests were present. The Sunbeam cemetery has a certificate at their home on Third Street you don't get your Defender call 2282-M.
Troy, Ohio
The relatives and friends of Misa Kawaguchi were greatly surprised to hear of their marriage Thursday evening, the cereal shop at the paranormal. Mr. Irvin is a guatemalan Crowder is one of Troy's leading young ladies. Mrs. Ameta Murphy of Dayton, William Turner was severely injured by a place of business. Little Betty Louise Goens is ill. Rev. D. H. Huggans, who quite ill, is reported much improved.
Scholas Ohio
Under the auspices of S. M. Council
A. M. Pryor, president, the city
celebrated at Fraternity hall, Rev. S.
W. Weller, pastor of Walter Memorial
A. M. Pryor, president, the speaker
of the day. Mrs. Lydia May, formerly
of our city but now of New York, spent
weekend our city including Mrs.
Jacklin Jack Johnson, after applying
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of which Science says you must have to be strong. They ban pimples, boils and skin eruptions at the nerves, build up the body with firm flesh at the joints and with white matter. By getting in this concentrated tablet form you run no risk of the stomach and can be sure of quick gratifying. If you are this thin, pale, badgered, drawn looking and yourself and measure yourself. Next take Mastins tablets and continue taking VITAMON regularly until you gain in weight and energy. Your friend says and measure will tell their own story.
IMPORTANT! While the remarkable health of VITAMON tablets has been clearly and consistently lack of energy terrible troubles ailments, indulgence in food and energy and continue taking VITAMON regularly until you gain in weight and energy. Your friend says and measure will tell their own story.
IMPORTANT! While the remarkable health of VITAMON tablets has been clearly and consistently lack of energy terrible troubles ailments, indulgence in food and energy and continue taking VITAMON regularly until you gain in weight and energy. Your friend says and measure will tell their own story.
MASTINS VITAMON TABLETS
THE ORIGINAL GENUINE
YEAST VITAMON TABLETS
If it isnt MASTINS it isnt The Worlds Standard-Use.
"CLIMA"
(REG. U. B. PATIENT OFFICE)
KING OF HAIR STRAIGHT
X-RAY HAIR SHINE—the finish
Will straighten the most stubborn, coarse, or kinky hair. Both Preparations, $1.35
Special Prices to Barbars, Hardware, Agents and the Trade in General.
GEORGE B. BRYN,
Chicago, Ill.
1317 Orleans St.
Detroit, Mich.
GREAT SALEHOUSES
Roy J. Elliott and Weak
Bain, St. Louis, Mo.
1317 Orleans St.
Detroit, Mich.
AGENTS WANT EVERYTHING
of which Science says you must have to be strong well and fully developed. You must have the patience to keep the pressure on the nerves, build up the body with firm flesh and tissue and often completely refruequire the whole system. By getting the precious yeast vitamins and nutrients you need, you can get the body up and are not upsetting the stomach and can be of quick gratifying results.
to be strong well and fully developed
from fresh flesh and tissue and often com-
bining the precious yeast vitamins
gratifying results.
moking on simple energy and endure-
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take Mastas's VITAMON—two tab-
s of the same weight until you are satisfied with your
only a question of how much better
say and think—the scales and tape
health build values of Mastas's
indication, constipation, ackup-
sion and postpartum depression and the
any who OBJECTS to having their
and snailing are the results that suc-
cessfully nothing. Be sure to remember the name
and genuine yeast vitamins tablet-
sets at all good drummers.
If you are thin, male, baggy, drawn lookout or lack energy and endure yourself and measure yourself. Next take Mastis's VITAMON—two tablets with every meal. Two weigh and measure yourself again each week to gain in weight and energy. It is not only a question of how much better you look, but also of how much strength you need to say and think—the scales and tape IMPORTANT! While the remarkable health-building value of Mastis's VITAMON Tablets have been clearly and positively demonstrated in cases of poor completion and a generally weakened physical and mental strength, poor completion and a generally weakened physical and mental strength increased to normal. So rapid and amazing are the results that success is absolutely guaranteed or the small price you pay will be promptly Mastis's VITAMON—the original and genuine, yeast vitamin tablet. Now call Mastis's VITAMON tablets at all good drugs.
it isnt VITAMON
hard-Used by Millions
MAX"
PATIENT OFFICE)
ESTRAIGHTENERS
—the finishing GLOSS
coarse, or kinky hair in five minutes.
less—Guaranteed!
"CLIMAX"
(REG U. S. PATENT OFFICE)
KING OF HAIR STRAIGHTENERS
X-RAY HAIR LENGTHS: 10.000
Will straighten the most stubborn, coarse or knit hair in five minutes.
Absolutely Harmless—Guaranteed!
Both Preparations, $1.35—TO STRAIGHTEN
Special Prices to Barber, Hairstress,
Agents and the Trade in General.
Manufactured and distributed only by
BROOKLYN MFG.
18 South 13th St., Philadelphia, Pa.
MARKS BREAKERS—
George S. Bryum,
8 W. $10th St.,
Chelsea St.
L. O. W. Hilley
L. O. W. Hilley
Detroit, Mich.
Nev. Parker,
Cor. Zillott and Wash.
St. Louis St.
Arkansas Pharmacy,
1131 Orleans St.
Detroit, Mich.
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE
Use STONE-
The Marvelous Skin
"Throw away your powder puff for your skint's a
these goods that have caused so many to
clean, smooth, white, white, white, WP, opaque
HANDS. Stone White Beauty. Wash. 815; Ft.
Cream. 60 cents; Face Rouge. 33 cents; Face Soap.
extra for each article. Agents wanted everyw
STONE-WHITE MFG. CO.
1813 Jeff
"Throw away your powder puff for your skins' sake," and begin the use of
clear, smooth, white, volley skin. WE SPECIALIZE ON THE FACE AND
clear, smooth, white, volley skin. WE SPECIALIZE ON THE FACE AND
Cream, 60 cents; Face Rouge, 35 cents; Face Soap, 25 cents. Postage $ 6 cents
STONE-WHITE MFG. CO. 1813 Jefferson St, NL, Nashville, TN.
ver, Colo. that Mr. Wiggins is able to win. He is also a nice mama. Mrs. Phoenix introduced them informally to Danvers' younger set at a game in Cleveland. Earlier Cyrus of Cleveland, Ohio, spent last week with their parents Mr. and Mrs. Danvers. East Avenue, school closing was the great success Thursday and Friday night, with one graduate. Prof. I. W. Polnard, Dr. J. W. Polnard, Mrs. Emma Dixon, Corydon, Ky; Mrs. Emma Dixon, Corydon, Ky; Mrs. Emma Dixon, Evansville, Ind. Mrs. Betty Milton, Evansville, Ind. Mrs. I. A. and J. W. Wardera, Chil-
Bridgeport, Ohio
Mrs. Nina Lillard is still confined to her home in Chicago, where she will be improving cold and la gripe. The stork villed Mr. and Mrs. Williams is improving cold and la gripe and made them a present of a fine bamboo chair for her home with la gripe. Leon Heath is confined to his home with a cold. He played at Yorkville, Ohio last Saturday and was a member of the church organized a club. The following officers were elected: President, William T. Treasure, Marshall Wiles; by law commissioner, Marshall Wiles; by law commissioner, Marshall Wiles. This club will meet at the home of Hugh Feldt Tuesday evening, the treasurer, Marshall Wiles; by law commissioner, Marshall Wiles. This club will meet at the home of Hugh Feldt Tuesday evening, the treasurer, Marshall Wiles; by law commissioner, Marshall Wiles. This club will play in all the towns of this state.
Cincinnati, Ohio
The girls of Madisonville, defeated by the Bulldogs, played the single men, score 2 to 7 in the first half. The Bulldogs flinch in the. The N. N. A. A. C. P. Prep. team, the S. Cavainville and Mrs. Cobb went on to Moppsing baby in convalescence. See Burchamiana, be a Chicago football player.
Toledo, Ohio
Frederick D. Allen, the cartoonist, was born at Warren A. E. church, Miss Myrle Darty, planitist, and Mrs. Lola Golls, a choreographer, and Mrs. Rachel rended. Honoring Mrs. Amanda Janen, her friends met at the residence of Mr. Janen, evening and after serving coffee, cream and cake, presented her with a useful presents. S. Highwarden is ill, successful baby show at Warren A. M. church last Friday. Third Baptist church gave a twilight musical recital at the Warren A. E. church, piece orchestra contributed a number of well-worn memorials to the late Col. Charles Young memorial to the late Col. Charles Young day afternoon.
100
CONNECTICUT
Tblm or run down
quickly get some good,
firm, solid flesh on their
laws and sunken cheeks
laws and sunken cheeks
tissues and build up
increased energy and
vitality
two of Mastine's tiny
tissues and build up
with their muscles
Mastine's ITAMON tablets
trated yeast vitamins as
trated yeast vitamins as
still more important susti-
mient
Water soluble oil
Mastin's VITAMON
Tablets Are Fully
Guaranteed in Every
Respect
---
FREE!
A Beautiful Aluminum Case
TEST
YOUR OWN
EYES
YOU CAN TEST YOUR OWN
EYES WITH THE SET OF
SAMPLE GLASSES WE
SEND YOU
DON'T SEND ONE CENT
We are going to mail you a pair of
the Latest Style Extra Large,
Round-Eye
Shelrim Spectacles
You don't have to look over the
tops of them or squint your eyes
until you see the wearer wearing the old style small-eye spectacles.
With every one of our Shelrim
Spectacles we will send FREE a
beautiful Aluminum Case with a
customer's printed on a Gold
Plate in the case.
With each Shelrim Spectacle we
send of a sample glass of different strengths. You can
return with glass and return the sample glasses to
Fill in Below and Mail Today
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24.5
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FREE
while Don't
Blue
free
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don't send a penny! We
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don't send a penny!
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LESTER-ROSE CO., Dot.
2062
CHICAGO
THROW YOUR VOICE
Under the table, into a
cave, we see a man
away here. Our lessons
in PENTELLOQUIS
teachers W. With
VENTRILLO
(6ft in the mouth and
cannot be seen) you
intake a drink, a meal,
milk, etc., without
moving. This useful book of
400EM by mail for 10c.
— P. R. B. Blankford, Gt.
Box 196 blankford, Gt.
AGENTS: $8 a Day
Selling corporation, on global food
sales, in the United States. We
are a large, well-known food
company. All flavors, all sizes,
all types of food. All flavors, all
sizes, all types of food.
MEN OR WOMEN
Selling corporation, on global food
sales, in the United States. We
are a large, well-known food
company. All flavors, all sizes,
all types of food.
AMERICAN PRODUCES CO. 06.1818 American Life, Carnegie, Gt.
Use Madam A. L. Parker's
Great Hair Grower
for Best Results. Price 50c.
Write for Testimonial.
MADAM A. L. PARKER
292 WEST 47TH STREET, NEW YORK CITY
SATURDAY, MARCH 11, 1922
UNDER THE
CAPITOL DOME.
By LORD JEFF
Personal Profferings
HER BOY HAD ALWAYS BEEN WEAK AND PUNY
Now he eats everything in sight and romps with playmates
"My 4-year-old boy had been weak and punny since birth, and had constipation and Indication. Others did him grow taller and treated him like a child. Since using it, he can't get enough milk to drink. He growled with the children now, and he was unable to do that before."—William Heart, *Milk and Milk*. Weak, aging children usually start eating and getting stronger from the very first bottle of Milks Emulsion. Milk Emulsion is really tasty good. A trial costs nothing.
Emulsion is a pleasant, nutritive food and a corrective medicine. It restores healthy, natural bowel action, doing away with all need of pills and quickly puts the digestive organs shape to assimilate food. As a bladder of fresh and strength, Milks Emulsion is quick and skinless has weakened, and is a powerful aid in resisting and repairing the stomach trouble and constipation are promptly relieved. It produces remarkable results in colds, coughs and bronchial infections. So solid emulsion made, and so palatable that it is eaten with a spoon. No matter how severe your case, you are urged to try Milks Emulsion under this guarantee. Take six bottles home and use it if not satisfied with the results. Your money will be promptly refunded. *Foose and Foose* and *The Milk Company*. *Foose, Horne* Inc. *Ind.* by druggie everywhere.
Organization Offerings
Good Morning, Judge
Theatrical Thoughts
Union Station Notes
J. R. Thomas, assistant foreman of Red Cans, was given a well deserved Mrs. Julia Robinson of the Miles Memorial to his residence, G. Acker street Northwest. Thankfulness is due Digers has proven himself a most wonderful promoter, and his widening relatives in M. Clair, N. J., Mr. and Mrs. Clair evening Red Cans, arrived home after a visit to their home town to relatives and friends, Mrs. John P. White in recovering births of the Week **Heary W. and Hattie R. Coxe, girl; Hankey N. and Neilie Nandell, girl; Charles A. and J. and Selena Baldwin, girl; James Fallee and Selena Baldwin, girl; Golden N. and Evelie Thompson, boy; Henry and Jamaica Boy; Alfred and Alberto Saraka, girl; William and Courtier; Bernard and Jattice Boy; Glover and Adele H. Jones, girl; Pauluel and Cary Lorna, boy; James J. Cassin and Javier Johnson, girl; Benedul and Jillie Hampton, girl; A. and Chara R. Lundy, girl; Sailor J. and J. and Selena Baldwin, girl; John and Sarah Dove, girl; J. and Jattle Cocke, girl; Sarah Lurie, girl; Samuel and Ellen Weaver, girl; John W. and Bessie Franklin, girl; Spurgeon and boy; Erwin and May Crawford, girl; Ciarne and John Sethgun, boy; Ciarne and John Sethgun, boy;
Deaths of the Week
Charles Williams II, 6, 8, 9, 11, hospital; George Moore, 35, Fredressa hospital; Mary West, 16, Tuberculosis hospital; Milden Gue, 60, 61, 61, 168, Sergiev street Northwest; Sam Rummenville, 65, 1885 323 street Northwest; infant of George and Eileen Hill, 2 days, 64, Harry Carter, 64, Sergiev street Northwest; Sam Rummenville, 65, 1885 323 street Northwest; infant of George and Eileen Hill, 2 days, 64, Harry Carter, 64, Sergiev street Northwest; Jenon Jones, 22, Tuberculosis hospital; Christa 2, sweet; Moses Thingen, 65, Water Reed hospital; Mary Hawkins, 65, sweet; Ezekiel Tisley, 9, 9 days, 2111, street Northwest; infant of Joseph and Eileen Hill, 2 days, Mary Hawkins, 65, sweet; Ezekiel Tisley, 9, 9 days, 2111, street Northwest; infant of Joseph and Eileen Hill, 2 days, Mary Hawkins, 65, sweet; Ezekiel Tisley, 9, 9 days, 2111, street Northwest; c. 20th, 1744 11th street Northwest; street Nouhe, 2, June Montgomery, 21, 1242 Half southwest; June Montgomery, 21, 1242 Freedressa hospital; Sarah Baugh, 24, Tuberculosis hospital; Batteries, 65, 1468 13th street Northwest.
Marriages of the Week
Hotel Happenings
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
INTUCKY
brailleies, Ky.
basketball in the basketball
the Frankfort Normal
night. A very interest-
able, the marriage. The
house. Mrs. Maggie Sadler rendered
the James A.
E. Church Friday night.
illness of her aunt, Mrs. Nannie Ray-
ford, Miss Augusta Myers and Eddie
united in marriage Feb. 25
Daville, injured last week at the tobacco ware-
house. Mrs. Maggie Sadler rendered
the James A.
E. Church Friday night.
Frankfort, Ky.
Mr. and Mrs. George Green and niece, Miss Mary Sheed Robinson, motored to Miss Hazel Waldner of the K. N. I. faculty has returned to her home in Lexington. Miss Jones spent the week with friends in Lexington. The funeral of John Wooden church. Mrs. W. N. W. Wilson and Miss Lone Card spent the week at the Basil Harvey Lanier, are convalescent. They are at the Basil Scott, are at the Basil Harvey Basil Harvey's direction, will be conducted at the university at the M. B. church March 14. Mrs. C. W. Anderson has finished her course, Misses Marianetta Hunter, Ruby Martin and Zedelma Patton are the
ARKANSAS
AMERICAN STUDENTS
Newport Ask
The remains of Rev. Walter Harmon of St. Louis, Mo. passed through the church in 1881 and was commanded by Rev. Walter DeArmond, Dr. W. Cason, W. R. Christophen, Ph.D. Dr. W. Cason, W. R. Christophen, Ph.D. the bedside of E. P. Christopher, Rev. D. J. Johnson is on the sick list.
OKLAHOMA
Dr. and Mrs. R. H. Waterford, who were the guests of their daughter, Mrs. Pine Bluff, Memphis and St. Louis Moody night. They will make their appearance given at Mt. Trumph Baptist church and treat. An appreciative audience greeted the comic performers. Miss Justice, Mrs. Alester, was in Oklahoma City on business last week. Nearly all of the teachers State Teachers Association, which consisted of James Turner, manual training teacher, and Miss Jackson, domestic science teacher, stopped over on route from the State Teachers Association Saturday. Prof. James Turner, school in Paris, Texas, a spent a few hours while he was the guest of Dr. and Mrs. G. T. Gray and of Miss Fannie Mae, who attended the city schools. Dr. R. H. Waterford, McLeese Business League Friday evening. Feb. 24, Vow. A. L. Branch of mother of Mrs. T. H. Howell and W. W.
"Now My Skin Is Like Velvet"
FOR DARK SKIN ON SKIN FRECKLES AND DRY SKIN
NEWYR'S
BLACK = WHITE
OINTMENT
FOR EXTERNAL USE ONLY
PLUGS CHEMICAL CO.
MERLIN, IRELAND
MONER SKIN DISC
THE COMPLEXION
Price 25£
Newyr's
BLACK = WHITE
SOAP
Premium powdered
cleansing
and balm
NEWYR'S
BLACK = WHITE
SOAP
KENTUCKY
The unbeaten high school basketball team will play the Frankfort Normal game in game is expected. The marriage of Mary Wieser Benjamin and Joseph Wieser will be celebrated Wednesday right at the home of her father, Ellian Thomas. The Missen turned home from Chicago, after a very long road, to wife, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jefferson, 3706 Fruitie avenue. Mrs. Ammie Lamprey, covered nicely from pneumonia, Mrs. Mattie Thomas and Mrs. Marceline musical program and country store entertainment was held at the St. Paul game, night, given by Mrs. Melissa P. Bruce.
The musicale and country store enlisted a group of students to church was a grand success. An anron social will be given March 18 at the church. An entertained a few friends for Mrs. Margaret Penny is house from Crittenden Ky., where her school closed last
Sebrea, Ky.
Garnett Robinson went to Basket Station Saturday, Mr. and Mrs. Otha Blanch Osborne and children of route No. 2 spent a few days in Shaughnessy, the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Thomas. Those on the slick list attended the courtroom on Thursday, Bell, Mrs. C. H. Wardera, James Archie and James Pingera. The public school is located on the courthouse on Thursday and Friday nights, March 2 and 3. Prof. of public school here is planning to render a commencement program for one of his students from the common school here Friday evening, March 3, at the courtroom.
Medicareville, Ky
Miss Ethel Porter of Chicago, who was called here to the bedside of her mother, was a graduate of her weeks ago, left this week for her home her parents being, much improved, spent a few days in the city last week. She spent a few days in the city last week. W. R. Nielsen, lecturer on "Co-operation of Colored Enterprises," passed away in Clay, Ky., to see his brother, Arthur Hardin, age 26, of Mississippi, died Mildred Rush, South Franklin street. Charles H. Hill, manufacturer of Hill's Curtains, died a few days in the city last week. Mrs. Charlesidean Johnson (Borus) entered the night, March 2, at the home of her mother, Mrs. Emma Norris, South Florida's two courses luncheon was served.
Parla, Ky
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Long, West Seventh street, entertained were laid for forty. Miss Gena White was the house Prof. F. M. Wood and E. J. Martyn were in Louisiana, M. W. Steele, E. J. Martyn and N. V. Wood and Miss guests at dinner of Mrs. C. D. Garth was the house Prof. M. W. Steele, M. I. Miss Pauline Warren, 85, died March 3. Funeral from First Baptist Church, Rev. M. J. L. Porter, Charles Roy. from Zion Baptist church, conducted by the pastor, Rev. W. J. M. Price. from Zion Baptist church, conducted March 7 from Zion Baptist church, three survive. Burial by Masonic lodge No. 34. Col. W. W. Jackson is at home in New Orleans and Hot Springs, Ark.
Lancaster, Ky.
Mrs. Grace Dunn and daughters,
Misses Thelma and Raynette, also
misses Cleveland, Ohio, Cleveland,
Ohio, Mrs. Willie B. Brinton
has resigned as cashier of the First
Standard bank of Louisville, was in our
week, Mrs. Annie B. Saunders and
son have returned to Cleveland, Gibb
killed in Madison, Ohio, John Dunn
has returned to Madison, Ohio John
combined Bright and Virginia Wood of
Stanton attended the entertainment
day, Mrs. Susie Fergus and daughter,
Louise, returned to Cincinnati Sunday,
Mississippi, died the death of her brother, Gibb Perkins.
Miss Jenie Doty was called to Cincinnati.
"Just a few lines to tell you how your Black and White Ointment and Soap have improved my complexion.
"At first my face was full of pimples, and was dark in spots. Now my skin is like velvet, and everyone is asking what I used."—Mary F. Pettigrew.
You, too, can have a bright, velvety skin, be admired by everyone—if you will use this wonderful home beauty treatment.
You wash your face, hands, neck and arms with the fragrant lather of Black and White Soap. Then mix and apply, according to directions, Black and White Ointment. After a few days' treatment, your skin will become shades lighter, soft and smooth-admired by all.
You can buy Black and White Ointment, 25c and 50c packages-Black and White Soap, 25c the cake-at all drug stores, or both will be sent you postpaid on receipt of price.
FREE-A copy of the new Black and White Birthday and Dream Book sent on receipt of your name and address.
Pasadena, Calif.
Stockton Cal
F. Harrison of Linden was the week's guest. The little son of Mr. and Mrs. Brasen, who has been ill with diphtheria, in imminent danger of life, celebrated a postponed owing to the close of the season have been closed indefinitely owing to much sickness. Edgar Reese, who returned home this week, Mr. and Mrs. Brasen, and Frank Harrison were entertained at Mr. and Mrs. J. Hamilton's munch at Patterson visited Maryville last week. Patterson visited Maryville last week and Frank Harrison was now a morning choir as well as an evening choir. Much in attendance were Memorial services will be conducted at the Church of St. Mary church March 12. You can
BLACK AND WHITE BEAUTY TREATMENT
Fulton, Me.
Edgar Brunner died at his home on Northwest Eightth Street. He was born in 1871 and Joey Voum has been very ill, but is convalescent. Mrs. Brunner captains of the $5,000 Club, gave a candy pulling at Calvary Friday, March 16, 2014. Nelson Collin, Collins Moore and James Austin motorized to Montgomery, Mo. on Wednesday. Kingdom Club met at the home of Miss Arebelle Wilson. The Sewing Circle of Montgomery home of Mrs. Cordle Bailley, Feb. 23. The hall on Wednesday, Feb. 22, and a banquet on Monday night, Feb. 27. Johnson and family and Dr. Gray of Jefferson City motorized to Fulton in Bowens, pastor of the Christian church, was ill and unable to appear Sunday. Dr. Gray of Fulton Sunday from Kansas City, Mrs. White is ill; also, Mr. and Mrs.
Brunswick, Mo.
Rev. E. M. Choron, pastor of the First Baptist church, has returned after a long absence. Laura and Elizabeth Morehead spent Saturday and Sunday at Dowell. Mo. Barrie Ewan, who has been very ill with the cancer, will prove at this writing. Mrs. Mary White of Excelsior Springs is at age 11, the sole guard of her nieces. Mrs. Barrie Eavire
Clinton, Mn.
Memorial services will be held at the Charles Young, the Lucky Twelve Charles Young, the Lucky Twelve at the home of Mrs. J. T. Swindell, entertainment was given at the Bap. Charles Young, the Lucky Twelve has been ill, is reported better. The Bap. has his bed for the past few weeks, is able his bed for the past few weeks, is able to outburst Charles Young, the Lucky Twelve sent an early hour March 4 at his home.
Poplar Bluff, Mo.
Mrs. J. J. Redmond, one of Poplar Bluff's citizens, has returned home after a long illness at the bedside of her husband, who has been seriously ill. Mrs. S. S. Smith was hospitalized for a few days. Mrs. J. O. McDonald was guessed Mrs. J. O. Kyatt and Mrs. J. O. McKay. Madame Robert Jordan, Madame Robert Jordan, chiropistolist and nuturtist, is doing a successful business.
IDAHO
Rochelle Idaho
Rev. Davie and wife are recovering from the flu. A play called the White Man, A. M. E. church Wednesday evening, and the Black Man, A. M. E. church Wednesday evening, in the Jap church down on North Fourth avenue between First and Second streets, following are on the slick list: Mrs. A. G. Green and Charles Jones, Mrs. Annie More of 241 Second Street second week, where she was called to the bedside, where she died in that city last month.
PAGE NINETEEN
THE EAST INDIA
HAIR GROWER
WITH
Pam-
mota
a full
Growth
of Hair
Also
Restore
the
STRENGTH,
WITH TEN,
AND THE
BEAUTY OF
THE HAIR
If your Hair
is Dry and
Wrily, Try
EAST INDIA
HAIR GROWER
If you are bothered with
Falling Hair, Dandruff, Itching
Beauty, or any trouble, we
want you to try a Jot of East
Indian Hair. The cream
contains mixed properties
that soothes damaged properties
that soothes damaged properties
lifting the skin, helping nature to do its
work. It is being made to do its
furnished with a blend of a thousand Powers.
The best known remedy for Heavy and
Doubled Hair is its Natural Color. Can
be used with any hair coloring.
Price, Sent by Mail, $00
R. D. LYONS, General Agent,
316 M. Crawford St., Nebraska City, Omaha
He calls for postage.
AGENTE OUTSIDE
1 Hair Growth, Temporary, 1 Shampoo,
1 Preserving Oil, 1 Fax Credit, and Directions
for Selling. $200. Extra for postage.