Chicago Defender
Saturday, July 8, 1922
Chicago, Illinois
Page text (machine-generated)
POLICE RAID REVEALS "PASTOR" A ROBBER
FANGS OF THE DREGS A Story of Serpent Wrath (See Page Fifteen, Part Two)
Is Favorably Reported In Senate; South Would Crucify Lodge
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Washington, D. C., July 7—The Dyer anti-lynching bill has been favorably reported by the senate judiciary committee. The final vote sending the measure before the entire body for consideration was 8 to 6. Votable votes were all Republican, being those of Brandegee, Cummins, Colt, Sterling, Ernst, Shortridge, Dillingham and Nelson. The vote against the Democrat, Culberson, Overman, Reed, Shields and Walsh, voted against it. The influence in Washington and in congress has by now become franche in its effort to defeat the bill. It was not thought that it would be defeated, and now that it has, the surprised opposition has been caught off its guard and will go to almost limits in order to that it is killed.
Would Cheapen It
Principal among the weapons used by the south to defeat the bill in the senate is the charges that those so-called "warriors" so far needed for softer political purposes. This reasoning is strikingly different from that employed by southern representatives in the house. Then it was claimed that the bill would increase lynchings, deprive southern white women of their "legal" protection and make men who were not white ministers of the country cross-roads. Now, however, the southerners now to blur the intent of the measure, power it is to make it law, by making use of the sinister charge that lodge and other senators favor the bill. Moreover, did not the senators lose their seats body. To establish such an accusation would be to pluck it from the side of justice and place it on the back of justice counter where it has no business.
Not "Protective"
Senator Lodge has in no way argued that the measure should be favorably passed upon in order to allow the state to honorized statements he has made it strikingly clear that he feels the legislation necessary to the interests of the American republic or to those of the state. It is not "protective" legislation. The bill is reported to the senate is not materially different from the one passed by the house. It probably would be more available from the county in which a lynching occurs. If there he no relatives this recurs to the federal government. A modification added to the bill, one that makes it stronger, reads:
"Provided, that it shall be charged in the indictment that by reason of the laws of the state or the officers of the state charged with the duty of prosecuting such offense under the laws of the state or proceed to prosecute such participants the state has denied to its citizens the equal opportunity that the jurisdictional allegations thereon required shall be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. Such allegations are sustained by a preponderance of the evidence."
PHIL BROWN SURVEYS RACE INSURANCE COMPANY FIELD
The secretary of labor, James J. Davis, has announced that a statistical summary of the finances and personnel of the principal Race insurance companies in the United States, and the department of labor by Phil H. Brown, commissioner of conciliation, shows that there are twenty-five representatives of home offices in thirteen states and the District of Columbia. The insurance sold by these companies is the largest in Pennsylvania, two in Louisiana, two in Florida, two in Virginia, and one in the District of Columbia. Arkansas and Missouri, Maryland and South Carolina.
Capitalization figures, which were readily available for only 14 of the total assets of all the companies are $6,339,158.88. During the past fiscal year these companies paid insurance benefits and beneficiaries of the United States in a total amount of $7,027,188. The companies employed 6,527 persons, 3,066 field agents, 1,523 medical examiners and 557 miscellaneous employees, to whom was paid a monthly salary or commissions, either in salaries or commissions.
Shoot Brakeman Off Mississippi Train in Dark
Philipp, Miss, June 30—Will Winder, brakeman, was mysteriously shot and killed here while the freight train he was working on was stopping at a sliding. He was shot, apparently, at close range, with a shotgun.
An investigation held here by the warden revealed the case. The dead brakeman lived in Memphis, and left there on the Y. & M. V. freight train. Friday after the freight occurred at about 10 o'clock on a Sunday. Following the investigation of the case by local authorities, railroad officials planned a further investigation, but the belief that Winder only suffered the fate of a number of men of his race who have been slain or subdued in the railroad workers on the railroad doors here. Early last year the hidden campaign began and one man after another has been shot from the railroad. The bloody vengeance of the whites is that the Race men had become entrenched in the good jobs before they could go to work. Finding that Race men had the jobs they wanted, the whites immediately began to try forcing them out. Two score men said to have been killed thus far.
Says French Troops Bad for Germans
Says French Troops Bad for Germans
BAPTIST CHURCH. HAS
ITS 46TH ANNIVERSARY
Helenn, Ark. July 7—The Centennial Baptist church celebrated its forty-sixth anniversary with a meeting lasting three days. In conjunction with the forty-third anniversary of the pastorate of the Rev. E. C. Morris. The church was organized in the year 1879 and until Rev. Morris was called in 1879. Under his able leadership it has grown from a membership of 22 until it is now well over a thousand. The speaker of occasion was the Rev. W. H. Moses, D. D., of New York City.
Watch for Announcement of First Installment of OUR NEW SERIAL STORY
Composite Race"
By the Rising Young Author, CHARLES S. BROWN
The Tale of Four Loves—How They Developed and What Came of Them. An Exemplification of the Old Adage. "LOVE WILL FIND A WAY"
STORY BEGINS SOON—WATCH FOR IT
POSES AS A PASTOR, IS SMART THUG
Impostor Burglarizes Home After Gaining Entrance By Letter of Praise
He cleaned his own room of all its contents. He invaded other rooms in the house. He had a Bible, dad's gold watch, wedding ring, traveling bag, telescope case, ladies' clothing, double-barrel shotgun, flashlight, blanket, sheets and a pair of jeans. He forced open and cried and the saving bank on the dresser broken open and money taken. Pollock advance the theory that the skin is outside parties and is removable is looking to be Brown's Description.
Brown is 5 feet 6 inches tall, weighs about 160 pounds, has freckles, heavy furrughures in his face, bad teeth, talks always with a smile, has scar on his forehead, has a nose, has chewer, dresses neatly, dark brown complexion and straight black hair. A warrant has been issued for his arrest and is understood that he is also wanted in Boston, Mass., for a misdemeanor.
Berlin, July 5—Mary Probot, notorious white slave trader, was arrested at Foldhack, on the Swiss border, recently as she was bringing about twoyear girls into Switzerland under the guise of being principal of a girls school, she interested many aristocratic but needy Australian families with her tales that there were rich Americans waiting for the chance to marry such beautiful, educated and accomplished girls. After her arrest authorities found records of Buenos Aires and other South American cities on similar charges.
t of First Installment of SERIAL STORY
Novel Structure
—How They Developed
them. An Exemplification
WE WILL FIND A WAY"
ON—WATCH FOR IT
Gains Confidence
Brown's Description
Taylor Studio Is Now Dunbar Hospital Site
Los Angeles, Cal., July 7.—The studio in which the slain film director, William Desmond Taylor, reviewed and checked up on many of the screen stories that made him famous, has been purchased by members of the Race in this city and turned into a hospital. It is now known as the Dunbar hatchery, a formally opened. The building is located Occidental boulevard, one block south of Temple. An effort has begun to accustom such a place for the use of the Race in this city, but all attempts were unsuccessful until the Taylor hatchery, a place for the use of 15 rooms for the accommodation of approximately 25 patients. It has a very modern operating room, those who were in the lead in the work to get the Dunbar startup, the Whitaker, Dr. J. E. Porter, Dr. C. S. Diggs and Dr. Frank Gordon.
FakeMasons Stopped as Court Acts
FakeMasons Stopped as Court Acts
Nashville, Tenn., July 7—A legal contest between factions of alleged Masonic orders that lasted five years came to a close here in the Chancery court recently.
As in so many other cases it dealt with the right of existence of one group as opposed to another. This time the Tenant of Mt. Perrin, grand lodge of Ancient Prec and Accepted Masons, opposed the authority of a so-called spurious organization led by S. S. Jackson, J. Bluhe Boyd, Isaiah Hudson, W. M. Jenkins, James McClain and James It. Small, to operate.
The fight: for the Tenant of Mt. Perrin lodge was carried on principally by the clergy, a resident of Williams county.
According to Dr. Johnson, the insurgent order had sought to persuade the lodge to spread dissatisfaction to forsake it and join the outlaws, and had in every manner possible sought to spread dissatisfaction to forsake it and go so far as to seek to seize the administration of affairs. Every move made to put the unauthorized lodge as opposed to the expense of the chartered lodge.
A temporary injunction was issued five years ago against the insurgent order. It restrained each and all defendants, and was sent way with Toni of Man M. Perrin lodges in Tennessee. This temporary injunction has now been made permanent, and has the effect of putting the defendant at together unless a future court action should change the decision. The defendants in this case were taxed with all the cost of the five
Des Molnes, Iowa, July 7.—That our people in Polk county are gaining in political influence was evidenced by the fact that with only 10 delegates in the Republican county convention, which was held in this city last Saturday, two served on important committees, three were elected to the state legislature, and represent the county in the state convention to be held here on Aug. 2, and five were among the 125 delegates in the state convention which will meet here next Saturday afternoon and nominate the five Republican candidates who, in the convention, will meet here this summer. Judges of the district court this Ninth judicial district. These elected to the state convention are R. K. McCormick, R. W. Woman, Mrs. S. J. Joe Brown, the first of her Race to be so honored by Polk county. Those elected to the district judicial convention were Attila Joe Brown, Attorney George J. Woodson, Attorney Jas, B. Morris, Rev Henry McCrew and Attorney George J. Woodson, who will be the first woman of our Race to assist in nominating a district Judge.
POLICE DON'T GIVE JOHN CHANCE TO GET STARTED
Nashville, Tennessee, July 7—John Watson was caught by county officers on his farm, 12 miles out on the Nolesville plike, just beyond Wrenroe, operating a still of 100-gallon capacity last week. That he had not had a chance to make many "runs" as the still had only been set up for two gallons of whisky and two round ten gallons of whisky and two one barrels of mash, a number of empty jugs and bottles. The still was fourth of a mile from the pike near a large spring. It was situated between two houses belonging to Iace
JOHNSON IS FLEECED IN OHIO FIGHT
Former Champion Loses $700
By Peculiar Actions of
Boxing Commission
Hamilton, Ohio, July 2. — This festive manufacturing town, with its population of over 30,000 people, went to fever heat when it found that the big boxing contest scheduled for July-4th, in which Jack Johnson, former heavyweight champion, was to have exchanged punches with Tut Jackson, the present-day sensation, and had been declared off. The fighter was in the afternoon. Having several leisure hours, the writer spent them in getting acquainted with a few of the folks who inhabit the one and only city where the fight for the absence, entirely, of racial prejudice, Restaurants, theaters and all public places welcome you with outstretched arms.
We heard, on all sides, reports regarding the hundreds of telegrams, letters and other communications which had been received by Mayor Johnson. We called at the office of the mayor, but missed him. His secretary, Roland Miller, one of the most respected and venerated us and voucheased the information that Mayor Koehler had paid absolutely no attention to the communications mentioned as to his role in the fight. He handle the affairs of Hamilton without the aid of a bunch of narrow-minded, prejudiced, would-be boxers appointed by the mayor—men of standing, with reputations for fairness in all matters—and he would be appointed by the mayor—men of mission. The head of this body is a Mr. Flags, a former resident of Chicago, and he willingly told the reasons for calling off the contest.
The Reasons
Little Rock, Ark., July 7—R. E. Malone, an expert in rural education and formerly state teacher trainer for the North Carolina state board of vocational education, has been made president of the Agricultural, Mechanical and Normal School of Malone. Mr. Malone is the author of numerous articles on technical education and has published two scientific articles on the subject of education is shortly to appear. "A Study of 624 Rural Homes in North Carolina." This is said to be the first research article in a group of rural Race people. His other scientific publication, "Smudging in Alabama With Native Material," was published some years ago by the appointment of Mr. Malone to the presidency of this school has met the satisfaction of a large number of young men within the Race who have worked in the field. This appointment is considered the first distinct, recognition of that group, as he is the first agriculturist to be made the head of an A. and M. school. The newly elected president, on being interviewed, stated that his policy, with the strongest graduates of the leading colleges; to work for the immediate establishment of a first class junior college, and, finally, have the highest educational and mechanical colleges.
THIS·PAPER CONSISTS OF
TWO PARTS—PART ONE
FAIRFAX B. RICHEY, 4347 Grand L
ver, Colo., to take ch
e resigned as gener
import, Iowa, in order
e graduate of Fisk Univer
service work for seven
Enters New Field
1
Mrs. Fairfax B. Richey, 4347 Grand boulevard, this city, left recently for Denver, Colo., to take charge of Y. W. C. A. activities there. She resigned as general secretary of the local branch in Davenport, Iowa, in order to enter a larger field. She is a graduate of Fisk University and has been engaged in social service work for several years.
Imprisons Girl;Feeds HerPeanuts
Washington, D. C., July 7. —Parents of 3-year-old Geneva Wright have been arrested charged with cruelty to the child. Officers went to the home at 1857 Fourth street Northwest and found Geneva locked up in a rooftop cell at 10:30 a.m. live alone without sufficient food or water, day by day for several months. Cause for the condition has not been determined. Both mother and father of the girl work. The mother keeps a stand in the O street market. The father works out. All the rooms in the house are rented out save one in which they have lived and kept Geneva prisoner. Dad got to the police of the child's condition through the complaints of neighbors. It became generally noised abroad that Mr. and Mrs. Murphy were their daughter. None of the neighbors dared take the father or mother directly to task for their actions, so just spread throughout the district. When it reached the police station Policeman James Murphy was assigned to take care of Miss Patricia Almos of the board of children's guardians, went to the home on Fourth Street. The doors of the house were drawn. Murphy called to the child within to come to the door. "I can't" she cried. "I'm tied up in a machine."
The policeman managed to get in and found that the child had told the truth. A Jew peanut hulls on the floor, and a woman of Jewish food. The child was taken to a physician who, after examination, expressed the opinion that she was sick. The mother was arrested at her stand in the market and the father when he came home in the evening.
FILES FOR ASSEMBLY
Charleston, W. Va. July 7—Clayton E. Kimbrough, attorney of this city, has filed his certificate of cannibalism in the gin house of delegates on the Republican ticket. Mr. Kimbrough has been a practicing attorney of Charles-
---
New Field
X B. RICHEY
1847 Grand boulevard, this city, to take charge of Y. W. C. A. and as general secretary of the Iowa, in order to enter a larger Fisk University and has been task for several years.
Nabbed For Assault On Little Girl
Dubuque, Iowa, July 7—Threats of lynching were made against Hobart Holtzman (white) when the report was circulated through the city that he had made an attack upon a 16-year-old white girl. It made the second time in three months that he had been reported on such a charge. Up to the time the light was first thrown on him, various crimes of the nature of rape had been laid to Race men and the feeling against the Face lisen to almost the breaking point.
The girl is employed by the Brunswick-Ishake-Collender factory and requested that her rape be against Holtzman is alleged to have perpetrated his attack on a path used as a short cut to Burton avenue about a girl's clothing on the Fervo road vladiast. It is claimed that the girl's clothing off when her screens attracted the attention and aid of persons in the vicinity. They came hearing their approach, succeeded in escaping for a little white.
He was later captured by officers. He had changed clothing and assumed a role. Brought before the girl, he denied having molested her. Several people who had seen him feeling identified and arrested, were crying out when he was brought before her: "That's him! That's him!" Unknown influences worked to obtain his release when he was arrested, and such a clear case on him this time that, it is felt it will be impossible for him to escape.
THEATER OWNERS SUED FOR
PREJUDICE UNDER NEW LAW
Elizabeth, N. J. July 7—Louis
Moose, $29 Woodland avenue, Plain-
field, is demanding $500 damages
from Michael Counthan and Pattrick
Shannon (white). proprietors of the
National House of Law have
leged discrimination in not according
Moose "full and equal accommod-
ations, advantage, facility and
adherence at their place, not March
7." This is the first suit to be brought
her under the recently amended
state civil rights law.
20 PAGES This Paper Not Complete Without TWO PARTS
PRICE TEN CENTS
AGE
HUSBAND IS SILENT AS TO RUMORS
Slain Sunday School Worker Put in Triangle Despite Good Reputation
Fourth of July ended in a tragedy at the home of Jessie Shannon, 33, 2041 Park avenue, when she was shot to death by Mrs. Ida Raymond at 10 o'clock in the evening following an argument over chairs and too much work. Neighbors of the Shannon woman say that there had been considerable quarrelling in the Shannon home before the shooting occurred. They remind us that she could not argue that the so-called argument and subsequent gun play was the disagreement as to chairs, referring to rumors that Mrs. Raymond had been assaulted with Mrs. Raymond with her husband against undue familiarity with each other. Mrs. Shannon, a tenant in the house, had been assaulted with having aroused Mrs. Raymond's suspicions. That being the case, the two women lived together, constanten- tion, and shared a chair argument was just enough wind to set the smoldering embers of jealousy into a fame in which Mrs. Shannon was assaulted from him that has been made public. The husband, John Raymond, was present at the time of the slaying. So far he has given no statement. Mrs. Shannon was assaulted from him that has been made public. Mrs. Raymond was arrested by Sergeant Rensal and Officer Collyphe. Chairs that belonged in Mrs. Shannon which the dispute arose. She seems to have taken one there that Mrs. Raymond kept in another room. Mrs. Shannon was reluctant to give it up, and in the talking that followed maintained that she had a right to it. Mrs. Shannon, her husband, Mrs. Raymond. Her husband did not think that the argument was as serious at it turned out to be and was aware of his wife getting hold of a gun.
Tired of talking and fearing a bodily encounter, Mrs. Raymond did get in a moment of excitement and then threatened each other, made deadly use of it. The Shannon woman died instantly. She was a Sunday school teacher, and she was a splendid reputation. At the time of her death she was living apart from her husband and is reported to have been disson, another roomer at the house. The family had just returned from a picnic when the quarrel began.
OPENS LARGEST SUMMER
SCHOOL IN HISTORY
Greenboro, N. C., July 7- North Carolina Agricultural and Technical college began the twenty-fifth annual session of its summer school on prospects for the best session in the country, both in size of student body and effectiveness of work. This is the first year in the country. More than five hundred applications for registration in the various courses have been received at the state department of education and from several adjoining states. Courses of study have been predefined at that state department of education. The teacher desiring to raise her certificate must peruse that course, complete particular credit for the certificate for which she is working. To earn credits a teacher must register dur-
OVER- DOZEN N. A. A. C. P.
BRANCHS CO. OVER-TOP
New York, July 7—The N. A. A. C. P., 70 Fifth avenue, has announced that 16 branches had exceeded their quotas in the association's 1922 membership drive. The outstanding success, which began with three banners and raised the number to 1,000 before the drive was over. Banners for going over the top in the conference in Newark to the following branches: Houston, Tex.; Gadsden, Ala.; Coffeyville, Kan.; Buffalo and New. Rochelle, N. Y.; Prince, N. C.; Minneapolis, Minn.; Huron, Mich.; Minnesota, Minn.; Lincoln, Neb.; Montclair and New Brunswick, N. J.; S. Heveport, La.; Providence, R. L.; Gary and Mount Hope, W. Van., Beloit, Wis.
ELECT: DR. ROMAN
Chattanooga, Tenn., July 7.—Dr. C. V. Roman of Nashville was elected president of the National association, at the closing session of the annual convention here recently. Other officers elected are: Dr. J. A. Waukee, Nashville-president; Dr. J. A. Lester, Nashville-recording secretary; Willie P. Nash, assistant secretary; Dr. J. H. Hale, correspondent secretary; Dr. O. W. James, Chattanooga treasurer.
MOB DEEDS
PRAISED BY -
LYNCHERS
Southerners Proud They Can
Burn Men Without Law
Raising Objection
‘There ts no situation which miEPt |
ances North or South, whieh ‘cond
ie any mmatiner_jouatbiy susttty the
Inurders "by ienehing. of men and
Scomen.” This tact, however, bs hard
Tors cerium, elask of white, peonie
So inthe Mendereaked area th
Sirthe Masui snd Txon tine to un-
‘dormtund.cc fact platsly shown Dy AW
enters cite aupeared in ~The Voice
ithe Devple'a column of comment
Sanied in'the editorial. page ot the
‘Elicago Tribune. One of the letcers,
Sent by » Texas tynchbilly, boasts ot
Theaet that “wre hang and burn Xe-
Eioes gain, teres” sind. the weiter]
Ehperentiy sigures that ticcause a
ineh at murders. oke foose in
{iter iis Kina tu “Fesas wboud, be
Iuneweat i thebe imtehertoe. Hee Tes
Sinn he wttee that Isnehing ie done
Tor rrimew gaint women. at 10 i
Stontn that tow than See cent af
theve tauhdnns ave peretintted on that
event and some slay the ants ot
OEY Eire aad the ind wit
Route: bark in a ue etch Sl
Ste the wow. Nee race pF Pronk,
fio matter. have pascive, ean te es
Nevted tor alfnse mec tevatenit fs
Meinitery” Sitheut phyxieal pratert,
Shorter it ben Pathene Tex. GF Cees
Sere Mt tn sate te may Cine when
Somes: to ertme went semen THe
Stiumaltved hw aehutes one taint
Nines our face wutmumnber the
titers a thosand te one.
‘The ether eter, seat” Oy ante
suited Jor kone named WC. Powell
BrTavate, Pinas isnenblity who dle.
Grace thee newenaber neoferaion WS
Salnging 0" he wan ald) newenanr
Ghnme es Mit stronner. i Part
Than the ene test anentione. “He atse
\rvady an the iden af “ernie szainet
Somer” ae a Ineentve vor thie nate,
fre tor whieh Farts carries a Worle
At wwtaniatss amd the ems exes!
re tile Sane are sy fale example of
hunt tor of bruten held forth im the
Tithe “Weiite murderers on alt lds,
irra ty te feom the crete, stalk The
Graves wating for a chance 19 pri
Gi Youn or tome on the sitehtest
prevention, Further comment UY os
not necersars. Hew the Fetters £95
Fourselvex und THINK:
Tho Letters
Dalian, Tex. June HH the Asso.
ciated Press reports ae 10 be be-
fieved the secemy hutehers- ot non
Salon men im liinole, snd the details
Sinnecied therewith, rival anstilog:
Sieh teva ome out OF Husa, AP
mena na Stexico,
it this guvernment fs to furctve we
snus login pow t0 Pid the COUDLIT: Ot
Siwandiy. tice holders.
Wat will hie dune to, nugtsh the
hhrutal union sautderers? Not one
durnnea thing.
When Grover Cleveland courage-
cousty cent the United states soldiers
fo Chicago muny years ago to do wht
Sour cowardly siate and ety offictals
feluned to 40, that te, protcet lives
hd property ne sowed that e was
hot. wader domination of unlon Ta;
or: ‘and that Hwa pity that United
Etateg soldiers have. not itd con-
Grol ef every fout of the state of Til
hol ever since.
Whang nnd humm Negrocn down
tone for britel erties against Our
amen, hut there if no tastance on
Mecord where there hue been whole-
Sie Shesstination of men whose ons
ronan wag working for, 2 ilviag
Scitnout, Yrke “providing hemseives
wiun union cards
Hus not the Ereat state of Mlnoky
nachod the limit of disgrace? | Wal
Rol fig ood eitlzens Row and hence-
Torth demand they its ufelals repre
ent all of the people instead of Just
th; untons ang huss?
D.C. Earnest.
Tavares, Fla, June 24—As an old
ncasepaper man L have resented the
Mitucks or the ‘Teibone aguinse Flor:
fdn und the South beeause some dirty
igaers have leen Ivmched for an un-
Rumble erime against white women.
“Again it hus been brought home to
niluols that greater ertmes are com-
ultied sight im Sour back saré—and
the race Hots ta Sour front yard are
‘ofrrreant date.
“Five nehers of he South seldom
‘sory seldom, get the Wrong man, ad
or a erime againrt the most sacred
Tidng kmown—woman: hn at Mervin
fore tives were sacrificed in a. more
Innoman manner fer almpy trsinz to
carn an honest ving, and 7a. da
‘than, hay heen charged arainet Flor-
Yaa’ in 20 years for lynching brates
T trunt hereafter the Teiune “wil
take more time correcting affairs 0
Kis own territory than tn muddling
swiur the Negro question in the South
WP. Powell.
Donatsoneite, Ga June 28-—Wher
we eunle £0 "back in our tiles anc
Search cit ‘he roams tates of you
great purer in which “appear art
les of criticiam of the South for 3F
Towing ‘mab violence. in. connection
Scion the Noaro wee can't help. be
Think ot our trouble of today.” W
fread. with horror an ‘ecount’ of |
foromer's Surg of Sour great sual
Fondering & verdict In favor of Mo
Motenee. .
‘The time Ss ripe for the Chicer
rdlbune to get down an its, knee
find ‘hg the South’ pardon for th
ingustice done it Uirough your co}
inne.
We are vorry for you,
ILL. Wanason.
Thuis Roach, wtreet car conductor
and World war veteran, plendea guilty
fo the “moving was murder when he
Sax srmleaca before dudge ohn J.
Euilicau in the criminal court on
Wednesday. Ina former statement
We had charged Mussel! Mosby. Jant-
yor in the flay where the crime. was
Stinmitted, “with Being tho” guilty
varie.
‘Nochs' himeclt had licen forced inte
atconfersdan that he has now. taken
Yack. Tn View of the tact thar he hay
Tummed state evidence, Roach ts ex-
feeling to receive x light punishment,
dossihiy Iife Imprieonment.
"Apologizing for his deel, the con-
ahigtor setid that he had been drink
‘ing moonshine, the woman came to
ie upartment. complaining: Shout her
fushang, "and that while she was
{here she became hysterical, “He mad
‘hat Moshy wan In the room when the
Sas killed and that Mosby urewted
fer roughly.
“Te nude hogy of the woman was
Jound in an empty van the following
dass Koach lived at 26th street and
Sotiage Grove avenue, ‘The sate ts
Folng to une rome. of Itoach'e text-
Shons in. an effort to convict Mosby:
“Galan es ale eee
Bichurd Scott, 3+. (05 Tart Jhth vtseet,
pan arrested. i” Sergeant. Ttasmmond
Ero wee we
Sone Phin ‘xith noneuppere.”
LIBERTY LIFE’S BEST POLICIES
| GS EQNS -
Stim oo ee
ie es Goa a Gara
oO i eee Oe
1 Kamen Nepeitcas y 9P = Cia
[oi RT
eee es
geet a MB, FS
eae eid aan a Re
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These charming young ladies are a part of the efficient
office force of the Liberty Life Insurance Company, this city.
Are they happy? We'll say they are. From left to right—
Mrs. Eleanora Johnson, Miss Mamie.Hickerson, Miss Vicinta
Jones. Mrs. Georgia Merriman.
FL WASR'T OUR
CE TH TIME
IN EAST ROLE
In order to demonstrate that it ix
not" aiwaye the “burly brute” 0
Sivieg by southern white newspapers
Thue Wommits Tape on women. the
Defender reproduces am ite pub-
[shed in a North Carolina paper.
Tnweres the Guse and the two men
uatld awwt be fn the Rockingham Jai
Under hears bends. buL would, be
Sanstine from a. tree limb, bodies
Fidddied with, bullets:
Sepray. X. Ca. June -28—Hurry
Rurace and” Buck Odell, both of
Whom are sald to be on suspended
Judement and under heavy bond to
Aypear at the nest term of court, uF@
non 4h the Rockingham counts” Jul
Charged with assualt on a Tz-year-
Std, Segre lel,
Srhe aizark is ulleged to have been
made ina path wf-woods near here.
The Negro wild, whose name in not
Known, had been pleking pluckber-
Hew und wus returning home when
the men caught and carried her into
the woods, according 10 er stOry.
“The Negroes around There have
aawayn heen very orderly and the
better element of the white populi-
‘Gon is exceedingly indignant over
the alleged outrage. A purse has al-
ready been started for’ the purpore
of einploying the best available at-
Yorney’ to prosecute the alleged as-
‘Suulters In ehut of the helpless Ne-
Fro chila. A delegation was.sent to
Greensboro today to, Investigate the
matter of getting a suitable laveser
She piri says she was. walking
Jalong the road when the two met
Stopped her-and began anaking”to-
Sulling remarka, She started 40 run,
ue was overuken and exrried tnta
the Woods afew, hundred fet from
the mnie highway, After practically
stripping her of all clothing and rev
tral attempts at assault having heer
fade, ther took the tio buckets of
ferries he had wleked and went of
own the road. "The story a8 tol
{esame Negroes as soon as the fl
could Ret away. and immediately
Crowa ret out in pursult of the al
res cron”
JAGKSOR SCORES AEA
BETS LYNCH BILL SUPPORT
Taking the teed from any oe
large American elty, the Chicago city
[Enunelt hee ane an record azcalnnt
the erine of Teaching and han ex-
pressed tacit In wdetinite terme, sent
Yo the president of the United Seater
And the members of the United
States senate ‘The stand of the
counell took the form of unanimous
ff indorsing resolution submitted
Uy Alderman Robert Ro Jackson of
the Second ward Jn favor of the Dyer
Snu-ipnching DIL It reads us fol-
ows:
“AWherean, Eleven persons, clti-
zens of the United states, have heen
Yenened in this country “during the
past sists divs without due process
ff law, all being vietins of mob vio-
ence, ané
|. =thereas, Lynching and mob vio-
Tience fx the one great stain upon the
ecuichon of the United States of
Riverien. and should "effaced by
the congress of our nation, und
‘\ehereaa, ‘The bulwark behind
which the” adversaries of federal
|uati-isnehing legislation huve en-
Trenched. themselver ts" the Tenth
Amendment. whieh ts, "The powers
nt delegated tothe United ‘States
|r the ‘Constitution, nor ronisite
YF It'to the mates, are reserved. to
the istaten. respectively. or to the
pegples and
“Whereas. Ty a parity of reason-
ing, when both the United States
And a state expressly are forlidden
to take tho Wie of any person, “with-
Sur due races of laws most cer-
fainly a nob should be forbidden to
Take the fe af any person “without
due procesn of uw: therefore, be it
‘interolwed, Thut the chy council of
the city of Chieugo herehy condemns
the Isnching and burning of homan
eines and in the sieved name of Taw
Rnd order wexently requests’ the
Snombers of the xenate of the Units
ea'Reaten te ace the Dyer ant
feching Iw ‘now Tending befor
that honorable body.
She tt further rexelved. That
copy of thexe resolutions, be forward
Sa"to the president and vice-pres!
Gent of the United States, the clers
fof the sence and the. members ol
The senate representing the varioun
rice at cur American Watin.”
$dee Check Cashed
‘| Although she Rud nu moner in. the
nant Ste ran dacs Soe La sale
| Frown, 380) Federal etregi. 16, cath
| thei tor er. Suey fasion “wae ar
| Fenda E Seicer te De Avian ana
| Tia ein coniidenew amen
! me
| Siilcangcepetender
; Roane! Say & U0 by
| nomen 6 ABBOTT iE” s,
| earNe. Sas
: TSE
| nace aomear'e Annes? rvazimmwo
‘ °BUiET ANY tinerperteal
SERED = 9 Nae Ae. Te, Tower
008 at eee Seater to Cucage. THC doues
5 | Seer hae ee .
| Seino STE TTON arabe ag
| geateh ae gant SOUT wie 48:
; Ja eur se te 8
SANTO DOMINGO
MAIN POUT 1N
RUM SMUGGLING
Norfolk, Va. July %—Thet there
has been more or less indiseriminiate
smuggling of intoxicating Mquors inte
the United States on bourd vessels of
the United States navy ta Indicated
In orders Just promulgated by Rear
Admiral Hugh §. Rodman, com-
Mandant of the sfth muvatl district.
These orders aro Intended to stump
Out the pructice or any attempts ut
Smuggling In, the future on vessels
entering the United Statey through
Hampton roads. If any liquor ‘is
Drought in tho responsiblo -partics
Shes pppronceded wil Uo dealt with
veverels.
‘The general orders trom Admiral
Rodman sounding this warning were
fgsucd from (th district ‘headquar-
ters here at the naval base. They
fare the outgrowth of the conclusion
Of tho frst. phase of, the naval in-
Sestigation being mage into the at.
Xempt to smuggle 87 cases of high
[grade Iquors into this country, (rom
Saote Domingo on the naval trans:
port Sirus, “Fhe Inquiry bas run tt
fourse here but will be- continued 1s
/Sunto. Domingo,” where. Important
ight ts expected to be thrown upon
Uke Hlelt Hquor trame. The $7 dozer
Dottlen of Whisky were put aboard
the Sirus {rom a lighter in Santo Do-
mingo harbor, done up in four large
acking boxes, al
“Tho Roard oC investigation is head:
ed by Commander B.'T Bulmer, U. $
IS. and Includes Captains W. 7. Gul-
Hiford and R. Le Nelson of the mu:
tine. corps, with Lieutenant WW. C
Carey, U.S. N., as recorder and Cap-
tain J. G, Ward, mariné corps, coun
sel for “interested particu” Litth
Sus brought out here suifictontly
Ax guilt upon any officers or en.
Meted men of the navy or marine
corps, but the Investigation will ft
Seep, st iy declared, and the gull
parties properly puntshed. " Severa
Rave men tavolved tan attempt
smuggle intoxicants from the Wes
Indies on the mine sweeper Rea Wins
fast winter and tried at the nava
fase here, are serving terms in th
naval prison at Vortamouth, N. 1
This fe the fate awaiting quilt
eethon tk thie. Mirek Guue.
+ SHOT: DEAD WITH "HOOTCR"
oe thing wsuay fends t another.
a opr ails mets take ites
eck ee toe cee rete ng Fe
eae see Serres
on Reeled socae Rattan?
of eee at Ce, Ae
pc soon Sale Se Seaton
Berwed tee pele Og Neat
Bea Near AN ane Ses
eur
Fes race, i ed OS
Reger a
isa al,ara a
ieee eee cal aes mene fet
Sree al tnd ine ook
Pec coe one ee,
eas, drcrinn, (chet seer
fe Sd asl ee eee see
Se condiies ea ate
uae peng, es tia Sune
street. There they found a still. 3
Fhe ee oe ES an
near ean Sue Matar ne
ere eomn Rael tae oF ee
eer co ee ae eine eo
une, mee saberatno cunts te
Saad
Hoe 3 Wee se ee ae
sed nerd wc ree aaeeet
eee ee wend Sehr
Serie netentnbceg gah
Stat Moo Seta hay ae
SES
ow”
BURNS SELF FoR Love
wanlseton, Dec, Sune at ate
iteemnten OS are es
seers Grn ae ete oe
So See, tere sarees et
Se a ee ty
Sere ota ae
ibiee Soe cae tt tie earn
2S ge een ee teeny
fore ae vee see, ae
Soo hee tte erate, te
eR at
EUS a
ana
neome, to, Rapes. Meta,
ogg T?,, REM Idlawila Hotes
Soe aes
LET THE
||| cHicaGo DEFENDER
FOLLOW YOU |
|i] ON YOUR VACATION
||] sena_name and address 10
cothuah Sanger Wen cane
||} Siwtara"e iatn's sinste con
A} artnet nea eePtne etente
iI] Bester” here "se that your
|] sster ergs thal Soar
||] She"storoing.
A New Treatment That
Really DOES Beautify the
Hair and Give It New Life
Recent Scientific Investigations Bring to Light Method Which
Positively Gives Soft, Fine, Luxuriant Hair to Men, .
S Women and Children With a Few Applications
MS, GHURGH DIES
IW WASHINGTON,
ef
Washington, D.C. July 7—The
death Monday of Sirs. Sallie VP.
Churoh, wife of Tobert re Church,
famous: Memphts cayttatist_ and po
Mitieal figure, plunged the eupita} in
selet.
Mra, Church hax been. il at the
Chureh “aportments, “1318. Q “atreet
Northwest, for more than two
months. She underwent 1 opera
ton at Johna Hopkins hospital late
in tho whiter, and never recovered
from tho effects of It.
‘The Church family. consisting of
dra. Church, Sri Str. amd Str
Ghuren, Je, dilsn Annette B. Church,
toxether with Roberta, the young and
‘only daughter of Mr. Church and ts
Sead weite, uecompanied the. younger
Sire. “Chureh from. her Meinphts
home early. in Janutry aad rematned
with Ber constantly.
The devation of Mr. Church to his
wife wus xtriking to the pubile but
Feally beautiful to. thoxe. who. en=
foved Intimate felendship with them.
Min grief broke hin down. ‘The
Church. faally. fe Noted for its at-
tathinent one for the other.
‘As Sallie P. Johnson, Mrs: Church
yas one of the most beautiful girls
Wavbingtan could over boast. ‘iter
mnarreige Mn TUL to Mr. Chureh at
the old 1th” Street. Preshyteriun
church wax w social event stil fresh
fn the recollection of all Washington.
The Rev. Francis J. Grimke offct-
uted. :
‘The courtship of the, Churches
date tack tothe world's” fale in
Chicago, when he wan 4 Lor fn net
breeches and sho Junta little gin
holding her mother’s hand.
‘AS son ux yhe and Mr, Church
score married she went wlth bint te
the rand old homestead tn Mevo-
this, whore tw few Years after. Rol
briny named for her father and the
Gnig. child, wan born. She xuw he
hustund suecded co the fortune a
his father and maintain Whe poxtttor
is father tong held ax frat elttzer
of Memphis,
‘She save him rise to politteal pow:
er ind topk Keen interest In all i
contests, ‘The elder Church, who dle
fn'zei2, war very fond of his daugh-
ter-in-iaw and she and Miss Annette
Ghuren were more like sisters thar
Sigters-in-lave,
Rho will miwayx be rememberee
‘and her memory cherished ss Wash
fneton's favorite daughter.
She fe survived hy a duughter, sis
tere Mis Atinette. B. Church: he
husband, mother, Mrs. Chureli, Sr.
And. the great, Charch-Wright con
nections in Memphis,
ALL MEMPHIS IN GRIEF
Mampi. Tenn, Jule T—News a
tne death uf Mew. Sallie P, Chureh
Wife of the favorite yon of ‘this city
| Robert Te Church, Urournt sorroy
[to every heart of this elty and tear
to many eves that knew her,
| she” was considered Mempht
| girl, for abe had endeared herself t
| fie peopie teense of her grace, he
charltg and devation to hee nushin
| Scho hud Ted every attack tha, Tue
fax made against political ticker:
singe 1912. a
[She was one of che most peiutttu
women thly elty of benuthfvl some
[ever sat, She nisintained tho tra
| Sitionat interest” In the poor. anc
| ike her sister-In-tuw, Misa Chureb
|] wis the soul of modesty,
| “Me. ‘Church deserted business, an
| polities during her ilinesx In Wash
"| Inston and could not be induced t
| Teave ner bedside. "He his not bes
s| home sinee he left with her int Janu
Arrangements are being mgde by
the American Woodmen to welcome
TH Lightner supreme clerk, Den~
Yin Col Mr. Lightner hax heen In-
Milea to Citeago sind will he given
public weeleome on ‘Thursday. July 13,
Rt the Community center, 2130 Giles
Avenue. ‘There Will alsy be a demon-
Stration and mass meeting at Pilgrim
Baptist. church on Friday" ovening,
Suly 14,
Don't earre chewing gum back of
your aa When yon fave used
Snes throw it away and avold dis-
ee corti:
Probably there is no one thing
bout the human hody that 1s more
noticed and spoken of by our (cichds
and acquatntances than the hair.
You, ‘yourself, know kew often yon
dave heurd “the remark: “What
beautiful hair that woman has."—or
wert ish my Rushand had hair ke
that ‘man."—or—"Just, look at. that
chitat What a wonderful, head of
fair” 2
"There Is scarcely a huroan “being
who docs Hot envy “a wonderfully
Tuxuriant, ‘brinfant, soft” and. fine
Read of hair in others. Few ¢olks
have such a hend of hair. but those
ho, do have are the ‘coratanh envy
Bf, wren “frends: end “alt whd ree
Sem .
‘There “is very little necessity of
velg envious “ot, folie who, tinee
‘rongerful hair because nearly every-
‘ne can have a fine head of hair 1
they “eal Jost do. cervaln tng
‘which are necessary: to glve life and
health tothe senip'and fiair, sthere
things are very easy to do, but hus
nan belaga wet carelexs and Toreet
to do them,
°xmother thing Is that never Before
In the history of the face has any
‘one offered e complete treatment fo
the Shale” Before’ now i nan er
necersnry £0 get the various parts
fof what might be called treatment
from various places. Even thet
these tings could not be called a
auceeastul treatineat hecause thes
Rave been made by different. people
At different. pluces and were 101
thade to fo together in one real and
complete ireattnent, OM
Recent scientific inventization ns
proved bevond doubt thar there ar
four thingr” which are absolutely
-Recersary for the beautifying of the
{hair of every member of the Race—
men, women and children, “rhe frat
is @ sbampoo containing ‘oils of the
Imperial Wizard
bare
Has Conference
With Mr. Garvey
“According 4 a eeport pamtahed
ig BOSOS Sek Swe Pune
eee Real et fe Daneel
Sere inmeowsncet™ casectaton
ry caper meter ae
oes ent hat eoetnests a
Seda inact Selene ehahac ot
oa ei
‘So fur tho creator of thé tlter-
ing seca Sucreniee ot ea ete,
Che aed
alls of the conference sshich. tx
Sead wate sented teat
Me os Feat aati
ehsitonele campaign tole ie
teresa or ble uty ronnie ioe
‘erprptart te tee anreat mete
TRB RNY a ch
It. is not known that’ the Ku
ides Hen steed ance
Tee erates ce wat ata tas
Hsia Joti te cies
wee eda The any pelt
Speer macs teaeeh grt Sie Teas
Sey pry and tha bain 108 Oy
ERE tt be dha aa
ee Uattey dain the
Dine fag and Clarke the white.
Mushingten. D.'G. duty tA fee,
feo ace ies a
et ee ate" Tae
SEE la wt tla a
iaect cue of th ltartanse
fons had xought to impoxe himselt |
a a
Ree na at RSet ak ake
See aN et Cote”
eR NR eo Ra ate
scenes
Snir tianed the rumpus. ile
a Seng at
See tif
Fert tees hae eae Se
Buhay atin of Ali” £o
ea!
ee
ATLANTA PLANS GREAT
DAY FOR COL. SIMMONS
eared \o aive Vestas Siumannn
preparing (0 give Kescoe Simmons
Revere Scoudon ne eer aed
He ees teeters july Ske Cok
Pe tions ad ake hualio®
See asters of che fork ot
Tan Mee, osyai Se Brown, Sues
wale ETL Aetneter, tre Se
Sach aw aha the eis” eoparaioss
sreoeat denomioatiss cit Join
Se ee tat Homan
Fe secon hat Sl een ak,
Seniis at up and take notice
ater aa anat mentoecr of the!
att ce istenrt wothe crest Sd:
[Aros of the country's greatest ord
=
Ghicage ary emirates
| aie MUSES SISA, wae
arse Mee tad ini AEe Sons
Sree sete nat ah tees
Ee crnthe batotete ee
ek tas Pere ne shot Se eee
tnventiene._ Chtrerractin , Woes:
se wacthea “at Ghugtecs heating See
edhe pact ene
gent fe wae ese
eta tae eet) Seu ai
Set eS Re, BEE
isa. Be
The Rubel College of Chiropractic
1041 Indiana Avenue, Chicane, I
vn Aveone,
gorgnnut and the olive the second:
ferent” Grong nck
foe Satan a tea a
te tts NAF gta, Sah
BAS uses, han ee
PoaSAe we uk ER
Easiest ey ae a
sree a Sts a Ce
i Beha hci, BES
eee,
RE Sienlse tgvenaton, ad
sacra tae erence at
snare ee om ae ee
Bahra a Mert aa
PLT ian ae
Sea tat ae tg ee
Ee Romane Rene Be
Sea Fa, a
mere tn, Peat oe a Se
Secey yee rove te
Berra Mobete Rte ore
Sorte, oveae ae Ors
Seema rraerat Seren
sees ratad bli erste
ofthe OHNE yaaa
nie Se SRS Sata
feanea 1d Bat mah More eRe ie
Sane HR Sh MeN
ieee mcs Sea ae
eset or taste at Mote
acct en eared
Tarte Macon ie aeeeeet
Sntis RORMCTE A da
Bnaeaiecciane 8 Sa
Hee ae Bee ae
feetent ke Ses, cl, eae
Saige erate Wt Mae"
ig Maser SES waka
a
en
poeta 1 Rieti ths
ae soe a
meee Basaran
Roan td Be Sat
Bea sare eee oe areas
eaediden New! Miata
nents ORDER NOw. ‘Aeente wane
ENROLL NOW!
e
SUMMER SCHOOL
- June 27 to August 7
MISS HAZEL HARRISON
FLORENCE COLE TALBERT
‘CLARENCE CAMERON WHITE |
X ante seacher |
CORNELIALAMPTON
~ MAJOR N. CLARK SMITH |
CHARLES WATTS
ANTOINETTE GARNES |
__ HAZEL, THOMPSON DAVIS
_ + MARY_E_ JONES
/*— CARRIEBEL COLE PLUMMER . ©
GEORGE DEWEY LIPSCOMB
__ ETHEL MINOR GAVIN
33—ARTIST -INSTRUCTORS—33
ri’ els! certence_ forthe sumemes srt
- > CHICAGO
UNIVERSITY OF MUSIC’
3672 S. MICHIGAN: AVENUE ¥
eee EEE
NATIONAL BANK.
TO PEN SOON
SOUTH SIE
Tho forthal opening ‘of the new
Douglas Natlonst bank. of Chicago
weiistake pico on Wednerdag. July
ie ana’‘ute voecasion will mari am
cock fe the banking wctivitles of our
People, Ie'vcing tne fret Racial Instle
Tution of the fort to operate through
a charter tsa by ine Uatieg Sites
Government. ‘The Douglass ‘National
Sank has already openei for business
ana. the volume oc banking which has
igen done slace July 1 speaxe well (Gr
the interest sing taken 1m the an
bythe people of Chicago.” Members
8f the Race and the. pubile tn gen:
eral "are cordially invited to. ation
the opening on. the date meniloned:
‘The present location; corner of Stats
and Sea stegats Is a temporary. One
is plans will apecificntions ato al
fends" eing’ incorporated for’ 4, fine
fatidings at Soin piace nad State
sireel the bullding to ue ready for oc-
Ennamey about the endof the Weeseat
sone
Pie oftcers ofthe Doustnws Na-
tional Wane of Chieugo tnefude. sot
UP ie “most proiningne. members.
the elts's nrofeastons tnereantito 2
isis Ife, "Anthong" Overton ty bres
Slont amd ce members of the board
titwctors re Sek. F- Watkins 1, We
Shavers, Say, ie yackion, Ree 4
AP Nehincon, ‘Oe, HS. Stitler, Geeks
Rambo and" Anthony” Qvortge. Th
tain fe aptulived at $2000, wit
$10,000" Surplus. and tig “connectto
Siti the Continental and Commarcin
Rational hank of Chicago—one of th
reatent, banking concern in. th
Sonidis ax tine'« guarantee of sta
Titiyr aw any that coud be. offere
Dyre uanking towtieution of ang” sor
‘There ie every reason to expeet tha
iho ‘Bongiten Nationa anit of Chi
age wilt in the near future, take Rig
fank Incinanela einctes. f'n a
Soncern and one hie show ge
Sunport of exe people ag well as tM
St'ait'who fee dotng buinens on th
South Se. Complete information re
Rariing lanw of operation. ete ca
fered fa caling pergral Sr
taking un engugement by phone. Ca
Victory sagt.
eae ee ee:
Dougtus, Aria, July twits, Sel
Ye Withinins, 60,_Yorneriy of, Tupelo.
Mix, but at present living at) 321
Green street, hia city, wus arrested
and found gullty of violating 1 elty
‘ordinance, “It wav claimed. by ‘the
rrenting oficers thut a white: man
Meus found In her room with her at
the ume of her arrest.
SOE ee
Fines on woman's Charge ~
Sohn "Wooden, 2 38eh“Coutaco
grove uvenue, who Wax -arrented “hy
Oiieer Foley a complatne of Sirs. Sue
Reynoits, sont" Bie Park, wan dred
He nn coms ty Judge Willara
eh
ALY. BRANCH POSTOFFIGE
New York, July 7.—Alexander
King the veteran. postal cleric sho
wri n short time ago made asalatant
superintendent :
ar College, ste
tlon, “Vaoeh
fas teen’ mus reed
"Coetistendene CES
‘veo an ame 2 5
‘plexes “or “the ee ,
omic or a ag
‘emcered tne ace Wee
partment when ;
Boy. of it
Years “and han
Ehren ectent ,
= co reaped «Mr, King
at Collage sta
trong
see and Sage”
sine atone
ae teen eas
ESperiatendent MESS
a
suerte” Bea
Sie? iis hae fae
Ween un em ae *s
Moses “or “te Cem
Poche tor ts ead
Pon ie eli
tniered’ ne ace ae
patient es
ry ONE
Fouts Sand ne
ronan eineeat
service “reseed te Ki
the ‘reware ho ME King
Cin taily decetven. He waa, frat
még an astigtant supetingendent Te
Toor at te Watt tet sere en
Fears ‘ter, during the Demers
Ramfoatacion Hee ws. etneed ts
Bogtcencr nt he name mrancks with
fallreharge OF No Male’ es, “ie
te now: the ‘only wupeisteateat aid
the’ ign SA Nas Sole te
oy wanes,
BTN” mupernie the territory
ouaed tm the South oy" auth ret
team Hide on tne north 2 ar
Sa tl Setue an esto
Sehactinbe Scene "uh ene ewe
atacomenc athe saoth ages. Soe
Tan's hope ne emattoes
ets tame at oe actin
"aceite meee ourteoue oat
Irene tn patcoon” “Alcea ‘Rens
Fairy ene oy mie nylons
fin ananoutens ate hie aie tr open
i24uhe pub at al timer And oa
1 Weebaelte Soak Great npenns
Mont te" cohere Stiton ‘Bete
Tiaetand roldes S06 Want fan
sieee
BERT WILLIAMS’ WIFE ILL
Sew Fork, duly Totten, Catt
wild Se athe ine Bore WH
Mane Momecce a Sian atte 9
Marna ak wet At present a
Bereltg onioeantr Sot shoe
i Feeting comfortably ane phi
bt Heatate Yo Acept This Ofer
At capone Boon
Pay the Postage
ays. serie’
ae TH oS Fonte
See ape tae core orm
Foe ctr ae ee ee
somite cite os
telling others, who immediately write
tee
a mrt Jo
eek ee
gee ee aa
Risa lair rt
Seis See pirar Greet
Suen ae’ & BS tai
Bei eee Peace
ESAS asa algae Sh
Te eee Ae wo
Shin pent gard will do, "hae Lexcen-
Sas? Pp at fo, Chuan Leaner
SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922
ae ee
« ? j
Say “Bayer” and Insist!
‘Unless you see the nume “Bayer™
on net deer on tablets Sou are NOE
Seating’ tive genuine Gayer, product
Sree hae thsricians ser twens=
Pre“pears und proved ute’ by tll=
tions tor
Colds > = Headache
Goothacne — Lumbare
- Barache'®. Rheamatiea
Reuruisia” Pain Palm
~ Accept only .-“Bayer” packare
jentchPeontuine yroper affections,
TRS) Sovee ut iralve. tablets cont
fiw Cente rugkiata also sell Sot
GX, SESE und tue aspirin ta the
USte mark ot Rayer Sanutuctuce ot
See ae ot eater’ ot selicylionck
Big Army Sale
TODAY
5,000 Pairs of all Kinds:
RUBBERS—50e aPair
2,000 Pairs
Hob Nail and Field Shoes
$2.50 a Pair |
PLENTY OF HEAVY ‘WOOLEN |
eee antee
HEARD'S ARMY STORE
3602 State St. Chicago, Il.
Open Every Night
"THE ladles and gentle-
men who seek the
connection of a growing
concern affording them a
splendid. future and per-
manent employment as
district sales managers in
ene cteretouon. of a well
jown toilet preparation
will be informed of their
opportunities by address-
-ing R. B., Dept. 103, care
of the
WAVO PRODUCTS CO.
3053'S, State St. Chicago. IL
UVING IN CHICAGO
MUST BE PETWEEN THE
AGES oF 40 “AND 20 "TEARS
TO JOIN THE GREAT
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SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922
HOUSEWIFE SLUGGED BY BOLD THIEF
Unknown Man Enters House of Mrs. Sanders, Beats Her With Stove Lifter
Lawrence, Mass. July 7-Found by her daughter lying in a pool of blood on the kitchen table her home. Mrs. Louise Sanders, wife of Warren Sanders, Chandler street, did not regain consciousness until the following morning when she told police she had been sent to investigate that she had been saulted by an unknown man after taken from the top of the stove.
Mrs. Sanders
According to her story she
was alone in the house and was sitting in the parlor about 6:15 o'clock when she heard a noise in the kitchen and going there found an unknown man standing inside the door. He said, "I have got here ahead of you." He said he had noticed me his best suit of clothes to take to the cleaners."
Becomes Suspicious
She told the man that her husband had two best suits and asked him which he should wear, both. Mrs Sanders then became suspicious and refused to give him either suit, whereupon she told him to arm and take something from the struck her several times over the head. She remembers nothing that happened, and regained consciousness 15 hours later. Robbery is believed to be the motive for the assault. The intruder was frightened away before he could steal anything because a watch and some jewelry in a bureau were found. Her daughter returned home about 6:45 o'clock and found her mother lying face down on the kitchen while beside her was a stone lifter.
Badly Bruised
C. M. WHITE ENTERTAINED
Kansas City, Mo., July 7—The business men of this city, headed by M. T. Watkins, Hon. Nelson Crews, H. Payne, entertained Sunday evening, July 2, in honor of C. M. White, head of the American Woodmen. The affair was one of the most brilliant events in history, and the address made by Nelson Crews will go down in history as a gem of oratory. N. S. Atkins, formerly of the American Woodmen, was sensitive in this territory for the American Woodmen, was given a grand ovation and Kansas City's business men, always with a keen sense of humor, to be able to please men, requested Mr. White to permit Mr. Atkins to remain in this field and locality. Out-of-town guests were Phil A. Jones and Leslie C. Johnson, the Chicago tourist, respectively from the Chicago Defender, and the Heiden Motor Car company of Chicago was president; Jack White, vice-president, and A. C. Wilson, secretary.
ENTERTAINED
Kansas City, Mo. July 27—Phil A. Jones, general manager of the Chicago Defender, and Jack White, vice-president of Chicago, were the house guests Saturday and Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Folix Payne, 2622 Woodland avenue. Mrs. Payne, at a dinner given by the Paynes, followed by a motor drive over Kansas City's beautiful boulevards. In attendance but that the heart of their president, C. M. White. They returned to the "Windy City" Monday morning.
SHOOTS SELF, WIFE, MOTHER Evanston, Ind. July 7—In the presence, security, bystanders, National Guard for the Army (white), whipped out an automatic pistol at Prairie boulevard and Foster avenue, this city, and shot his mother-the-law and himself. All are probably fatally injured.
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SLAIN IN AUTO BY MAN WHO HAD BUMPED HIS CAR
White Man Goes Home, Gets Revolver and Returns to Commit Murder
Loganport, Ind., July 7—As the result of a rear bumper on Tom Knox' Ford touring car being scratched by the accident, it is dead and Glen Moore (white) is lodged in jail charged with murder. He is accused of having shot the dead man twice.
Details of the story of the tragedy and the accident in it has been impossible to establish the exact truth. All that is known is that the white man handled the gun that killed Hughes. He admits this himself.
According to the story receiving most credence, Hughes and some friends were sitting in Knox' car, which was parked in West Madison street. He said he had driven by at a rapid rate and to have struck the rear bumper of the car in which Hughes was with the front of his own automobile. The Moore's near stop to
Wanted to Run
Seeing he was about to get away without an accounting, Hughes and his friend came near to his home, then ran in the house and procured a revolver. Some time later he returned. At that time the Ford car has had a market street, Hughes' companions, Tom Knox and Robert T. Posey, had left the machine and he sat in the rear seat alone.
He charged that he saw Moore leave his house and come back toward the scene of the bump-in. In the shadow of some trees, he looked at the latter seeking him. Moore is then said to have crept up to the Ford and dropped to the ground, ostensibly to see if he showed up behind the car and began firing. The occupant of the car was struck twice, one bullet struck the other, the other sterkling on the left arm.
Cigar in Lap
Other stories to the effect that there was a fight before the shootings are discredited in view of the fact that the gunmen were in the position in which he was found indicated that he had been shot without a chance to move, a cigar stub in his mouth having fallen to the ground. When police arrived Moore still hovered around the automobile and readily gave himself up. In the story Hughes and his companions had sought to maltreat him and that he procured the gun as a means of self-defense. A charge of charge against Hughes is not believed by most people in the city because of the general good name that he bore. 60 was killed in the attack and served in that capacity for a number of other people in the city. He had no relatives in the city. Word of death was sent to Hughes Munton, KY, presumably a brother.
Birmingham, Ala., July 7—Widely different reports are current here relative to Louisville and Nashville train No. 3, Nashville to Birmingham. Hayes was put in jail here on a criminal charge, but he was prominent young Montgomery white woman, who was a passenger on the train, and account of the story, given by the conductor, accused Hayes of following the woman, who was the last person to leave the dinner, to her compartment. The woman was there. There he is said to have been captured by the conductor who heard him scuffling with the woman. Police are not investigating, and the woman in question was a refend of the waiter's. This report has it that the woman in question was a waiter talking to the girl in the dinner and that when she invited him to her compartment, the conductor followed her. The young woman's name is in withheld because she is a southern white.
PLENTY OF WORK
Corner Police In Raid On All Night Cabaret
Washington, D. C., July 7-When police raided Jazzland, a cabinet building in the city, on clock in the morning, they found nearly 200 patrons, waiters and what-nots scenting over the floor and through the air. Holding the huge crowd at bay were three officers who had seen in them a man with guns drawn and are alleged to have dared the drink-cranked bunch to come on. The information reigned supreme when the bluecottie reinforcements arrived. A Chinese restaurantaurant in the city of the place is said to have dove head first down a dumb waiter shaft to his place of business, and attempts to escape. Only one arrest was made, that of James Edward Biggs, the manager of the shop, chipped with selling and possessing liquor.
Lincoln Did Not Start Civil War
"Chicago, June 27." The action of the Confederate veterans in seeking to place the blame for the Civil war on Lincoln will be regarded with indifference in the South, as well as in the North. The great majority of the people of the South have long hearted friend, whose triple and untimely end only served to increase the horrors of reconstruction. The Civil war, in my opinion, was caused by the war, not the Davis, but by extremists on both sides. Perhaps if there had been better means of communication in the early "08s and the preceding years, then the Civil War Illinois would have realized that the people of the South, having come mainly from the same pioneer Enlightened settlers, the same racial characteristics. They would have realized also that shareholders were not as cruel as pictured by the agitators, that the people of the South were abolished, voluntarily, and that its existence in the South and its absence in the North was due to climatic, and economic conditions that prevailed in the father of the northern Anglo-Saxon and the southern Anglo-Saxon.
"As a southerner of the younger generation, who has resided in the South for many times feels keenly the unjust criticism leveled at the people of the South by those whose hearts still tremble in the wake of prejudice, I earnestly hope that the day is not far distant when our school histories will be written jointly by northern and southern authors. BRADFORD L. THOMPSON."
SLAYS HUSBAND OF WOMEN WHO USED TOO MUCH GAS
Because the wife of one of his roomers consumed too much gas while washing school clothes at 3602 Lark avenue, shot and killed Johnson Singleton, the husband of the woman, Monday morning a little after 8 o'clock. Singleton, according to witnesses, was at work on her clothes when she was intercepted by Clay. Singleton resulted in his being shot by Clay. As soon as he had fired Clay sought to leave the house. His wife is said to have been involved in the police investigation in his shot by Clay. He was not strong enough, and he made his getaway. He was arrested on the South Side by Sergeant Rensel and Officer Collype of the Warren avenue station about two hours later.
SCAN RECORDERS OFFICE
The police immediate investigation into the district recorder of deeds office will be made by a joint congressional committee. The deputy prosecutor was best suited to the District council committee that the office requires much more space and probably a new building. Records are now so congested that damage causes considerable worry to schools.
One public school system under the United States black and white funding schools together. Abolition of separate schools.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
TER
HEADEN BREED
RECORD RUN
TO KANSA
In "The Headen," C.
Make and Design,
Previous Auto
Completely covered w
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urday at 8:56 am. Nest
of the Chicago Defender
from Chicago had been
made with a running
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GIRL, MENTALLY UNSOUND, SENDS BOY TO DEATH
Jurors Convict Farm Lad on Weak Testimony of Crazy Child's Mother
Columbia, S. C., July 7—South Carolina will send a 17-year-old boy, Bradford Boyd, to his death July 20 to give evidence of an old white girl, an euphelic, whose limited mental capacity should have made her a ward of the state secreal yes. The state itself, according to primus, believes in the innocence of Boyd, but satisfies itself with the verdict in order to quell the intense feeling against the recusant.
Girl Mentally Unfit
The crime is alleged to have occurred on June 14. The mother of the girl was about 160 yards from where the child was playing when she heard screams. Judge Townsend called the girl to the court, who mentally unfit that he excused her. Asked to tell what she knew about God, and if she knew what it meant, she said she was stunned blankly at the judge without answering. The mother attempted to prompt her. Answering the girl's screams, the court and saw Boyd running in the opposite site direction. She gave alarm. Boyd took the stand in his own defense and denied any wrongdoing. He decided to walk away and was trying to take a holt from the little girl when she screamed. He said another man on the farm and caused him to leave the scene.
Jury Brings Verdict
Boyd's testimony seemed to have little or no weight with the jury, and he was heard the case was closed. The jury deliberated a few minutes and brought in a verdict of guilty. Boyd stood in a verdict ofOWNER and stood in a verdict of HUMAN and death sentence. His eyes never blinked and he stood motionless through the darkness. He was hurriedly taken away after the sentence was pronounced. Additional weight, paying the way with Boyd, the latter told him the testimony of a man of Boyd's Race. He declared who a prisoner with Boyd, the latter told him the witness was highly praised by the whites and given a small purse. Boyd in an interview told newspaper reporters and that "he would leave in the Lord to punish those who had sent him to his death by lies."
URGE M'CORMICK TO HALT
LABOR BATTALION PLAN
Following persistent reports that the war department's plans to deploy 24th and 25th infantry regiments and 9th and 10th cavalry of the regular army into battle battalions, the Children's Army ruler to its source and if proved true, to oppose such a dastardly plan with all its strength and power. Edith McCormick wires to Washington to get authentic details on this rumor. The following telegram was sent to Senators McKinley and McCormick by Editor Abbott:
"I beg to call to your attention the rumor that the Twenty-fourth and Twenty-fifth infantry regiment of the United States army will be turned into labor units by the war department. Letters and telegrams are being received from the ruler if the rumor has any grounds. I know that you will appreciate the importance of an immediate history of these regiments is a story of bravery unparalleled in the history of warfare. I do not want the administration would disgrace a record as glorious as these regiments have made for fifty years. Please investigate and inform me of intentions of the war department.
Mr. Abbott received the following reply from Senator Medill McCormick: "War department advisors rumor false. No change in 25th infantry and Tenth cavalry, 24th infantry, ordered to Camp Bunting to combat the 25th cavalry ordered to Fort Riley."
The Defender believes that such a move would be a slap in the face not only because it would not lie the entire army as fighting organizations but to their Race, and its proven loyalty and patrolism. This rumor comes on the heels of the recent Emmanuel arrangements for our people at the recent Lincoln celebration in the nation's capital when the representatives of our Race were set aside in the Senate to honor the great Emmanuelator. The end is not yet.
Tuskane Looks He Ow
Hickeyce Looks Us Over
A. L. Holley, secretary of the
Cluckee institute, was a Chicago visitor over
the course and an absence of seven
year. At the time was the guest
Claudia A. Barnett, director of the As-
sociation. N.P. Rey was the guest
Appomatox and at a showing of "Trilby
at the Avenue theater.
Indiana Physician a Visitor
Dr. W. H. Armistead of Indianapolis,
north of Chicago, with relatives
relatives and friends. He paid his
respects to the Defender office
Wednesday and was shown through the plant.
HEADEN BREAKS RECORD RUNNING TO KANSAS CITY
In "The Headen," Car of Own Make and Design, Shatters Previous Auto Marks
Completely covered with the mud and dust of two states a sturdy, silent, and robust automobile engineering, rolled out mechanically into Kansas City, Mo. Saturday at 8:26 p. m. Under the auspices of the automobile engineering, the first automobile to be built from Chicago had been successfully made with a running time of 204.4 hours. It was the Headen, a new car manufacturer, leaving company to help day with L. A. Headen at the wheel, accompanied by C. Thomas, mechanician, Alphonso C. Wilson, assistant manager, C. Wilson, executive and representative of the Chicago Defender, the Headen pulled out of the city limits and on the Dixie highway at 12:46 p. m.
With a total of delays amounting to 1 hour and 32 minutes, caused by detours and "log-tailing," the car rolled out at 165 miles at 6:07 p. m. Gasoline and water were taken on here, while the party made itself content with the hotel restaurant at 6:28 p. m. Cylindered marveler stretched out again, determined to eat up 172.8 miles in distance into St. Louis, Mo. before noon.
In spite of read delays totaling 3 hours and 42 minutes, the front wheels rolled onto the big bridge entering St. Louis at 12:36 p. m. While dinner was being eaten by three of the party Headen looked over his motorcycle, as it was 12 hours previously. Oil and gas were taken on, while hundreds of inquiring spectators flocked the painting, dust-covered machine.
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M'CORMICK SAYS HAITI GOT ONLY GOOD TREATMENT
Marines Were All Right Down
There, According to
Belated Report
Washington, D. C., July 7—American military occupation of Haiti was completed by the Senate of the Senate by a committee which visited the island republic to investigate serious charges brought against the rule of United States marines.
The report, made by Senator McCormick of Illinois, declared American occupation of the island was "absolutely necessary" in order to prevent Dobroin and to prevent military intervention by Germany and France. The committee urged retention of marines in Haiti but asserted military courts should be allowed.
Ended Chronic Anarchy
The landing of marines, the report states, and chronic anarchy in the republic, and brought law and order to the island for the first time in its history. The occupation, it was conceived, should be imminent until the natives were capable of self-government.
Charges of illegal executions by marines were partially supported by the committee, but the natives were capable of self-government.
The committee also declared there was evidence of innocent Haitians being shaken in marine attacks, which were placed on the nature of the fighting.
Exonerated of Torture
Touches on charges of torture and cruelties, said to have been inflicted by marines, the committee exonerated the American force, declaring there was "grave doubt" of their
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There were, however, some few expe-
tion cases, and the complaint is
compulsory, reviewed at length
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the history of Haiti, disclosing that although it is as large as Cuba, internal conditions were such that the country would still be as large as Cuba's. Special praise was given the American force for its work in rebuilding roads, establishing a national system for shipping foreign industries for the island's industries.
Does Business too Close
After a bolt of cloth and been stolen from E. A. Kender, 3033 Cottage Grove and into a store next door to his place and found Eugene Smith, 2908 State street, cloth. Smith asked for a continuance.
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A drive for a five-year budget and $250,000 additional endowment will make the Mansassae Industrial School for Colored Youth of Mansassae, Va., an institution to design in the history of that institution. Other cities like Detroit, Cleveland, and New York will be included at later dates. It is hoped by the friends of the Mansassae Industrial school for Colored Youth of Mansassae, clubs, associations and fraternal orders will assist the institution. In the process of organization, which is designed to include the most progressives members of the ITEs in this city,
Prince L. Edwoods, vice-principal,
is the school representative who has
been appointed to the board of trustees as principal to organize the campaign. Similar driver
experience has already been conducted. In the former city the "Shuffle Along" company gave a benefit at the 63rd Street
business in a new credit of $1,023.75.
BINGA STATE BANK PAYS
BANK DEPT DIVIDEND
The report of the directors of the Binga State bank for the half year ending June 30 shows gross carrying amount of $100 million in expenses providing for the interest on deposits and allowing for all bad and doubtful accounts. The bank also accompanied its disappay as follows: Six per cent. dividend on the capital stock of $160,000 and $100,000 in taxes, the balance to be used as a reserve fund. For the benefit of these public funds banking opens to the public the explanation that an unusual thing for a new venture in the banking sector is an the banking efficiency of the officers and board of directors, justifying the confidence of the public and the bank for entertaining methods in banking.
SIMMONS ON TOUR
NORTH SIDE NEWS
GRACE LYCEUM RECITAL
at the Grace Presbyterian church on June
15th was held. The following persons
are responsible for the splendid pri-
vate: William J. Kelly, secretary;
Maude Roberts George, chairman
of the entertainment committee. The
first Sunday in September is the
first Sunday in September.
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CITY NEWS IN BRIEF
Entertain G. H. Smith
Visits A. N. Rolling
J, F. Clark, Onaha, Neb., is visiting A, N. Bolling, 4835 Evan avenue, Mt. Clark will attend a concert at his home. On his route will friend in Kansas City.
Sergeant Fitzgerald Dies
Sergent William A. Fitzgerald, for two years, grew up at Grove avenue police station and considered the office man of the capitals, where he worked away. Merge hospital, Saturday morning, he obtained a ninety-day durability, to tour the West on an automobile to regain his health. His condition improved, and he had become so serious that Sergent Fitzgerald was forced to take a train. He was one of the best-liked men in the city, and he met with Sergeant Joseph Plerich in closing up Vie. Cap. John B. Enniston, a man of his man, declared that "his place was his man, and as Bill was dependable follow."
Child Inlured
While riding a swing at the Union Park playground, Alcacey Cooley, 1865 Frank street, fell to the ground and suffered a fracture of the
Blinded by Blood
After being struck over the eyes with a bullet, the blood to flow freely down his face, David Johnson, the officer, identified the two men who robbed him of $2 as he was walking down the street, not tell their nationality, but was only able to discern that there were two
Goss, Grace, Isa, Cell
William Johnson, 72, 218 West 38th street, was taken from a townhouse in the Psychopathic hospital for observation to a sofa. Dennis Smith, 72, 218 West 38th street, was returned to the hospital pending an examination for attention. Parents
Few parents seem to realize the seriousness of their ignorance and lack of self-identity that such a lawist, or their caricatures regarding which intuitives a penalty of not less than $50 nor more than $100 on the streets after 10 o'clock in the evening, commanding the Second district, has issued orders to court and a fine imposed on their children being out on the streets at night. If any orders are disallowed, they will be courted and a fine imposed on the streets between the hours of 10 p. m. and 6 a. m., unless a guardian. One warning will be given if this happens, and the consequences
Visits Chandlers
Net Always Uplucky
The number 13 is not always unlucky. It is often the case. Ilines, who is 23 years old, had a party at his home, 5224 State street from mossyhollow liquor filled the air. S-portman James Burns invited Officer James to make an investigation with them. They found a party in progress at the home of the chief dispenser of the homebrew. Judge William N. Gemmil fines Hines guests to judge on their way relocating.
Bee Pardon
J. L. Lawrence, 3216 Walsh ave. and her husband, Jessie M. Wathews, who married him in 1925, and Mrs. Levena Cobb, 2250 Walsh ave. and his residence, he resided in his home. He declared that the misdirection of their arrest, caused him much embarrassment and caused him much embarrassment and caused him much embarrassment.
Unaware of Injury
The spores of *weeping man* atrocity *Weeping Man* were found in a mud-bound Green as he was passing the Alamo. His friend, a law enforcement investigation he found *Booker T. Washington* in the ground in the rear of $125 Indian land, cut into a piece that cut inch on his wrist, which was bleeding productively, he was unable to tell the police what was going on.
New Use for Last
A show lash is usually used for a scar. He found a new use for it by elevating it above his wrist. Mrs. Rosalie Thomas, with his wife, Mrs. Rosalie Thomas, he grafted his show lash and stitched it.
Woman Shoots Man
Mrs. Josephine Anderson, 20 West 44th street, is locked up at the Wanda building with assault with a deadly weapon. Andrew Williams, 17, died 52 hours after forming with a broken leg, whose bone was broken in the bullet wound in his other leg. During an altercation with Mrs. Anderson, he fell for his child, and him智言.
Assault Escapes
Fallin True Stories
While playing on the larch porch on the ground floor of the South Suite, Bustie Rose 10 years old, suffered a contusion of the chest while playing on the porch. A roll of the porch had given way.
Landed by Truck
As she was attempting to cross the streets in front of her home at 469 West 45th Street, William was knocked down by an automobiles pointfully injured. She was painfully drunk. A High Priest Drunk Aawning the man who went to the courthouse, William Falls 42st East 45th street, was introduced when William Falls 42st East 45th street. He is confined at the County jail for a sustained infirmity with a contract. Stabbed by a Demented Man man, alias the name of George William Pound, was accused of being demolished, was arrested by the public of Richard Moore, 46st State Avenue, coming down the states of the hotel at 469 West 45th Street about the fire and stabbed in the breast by Williams for no apparent
Sent to County Hospital
The following persons were sent to the County hospital this week. Sam Holmes, 28 years old, 15 West 27th St., Holmes, 28 years old, 15 West 27th St., Fulston street, Mrs. Jesse Smith, 23, 334 Rhodes avenue; Mrs. Melanie Johnson, 23, 335 Rhodes avenue; Mrs. Johnson, 23, 336 Vernon avenue; Mrs. Johnson, 23, 337 Vernon avenue; Mrs. Vernon Hail, 23, 249 Fulton hard drive; Mrs. Layvena Moore, 46, 334 Treliffe avenue; Hery Wilson, 13, 249 Treliffe avenue; Hery Wilson, 13, 249 Treliffe avenue; Trout, 47, 12 East 31st street; Trout, 47, 12 East 31st street; Mrs. Mlainne Powell, 25, 231 Wabash avenue; and Mr. Crump, 62, 235 Wabash avenue.
Struck by Auto
Whether it was carelessness on the job or not will be determined in the case. He was a nurse, who ran down by an automobiles driven by Cardinalia at 35th Street, who received various injuries, shell, who received various injuries, Monetey to represent him at the trial.
Sent to Psychoopathic Hospital
After an examination by Dr. Charles Cooper, 3171 St. street, New York, found to be demented. She was sent to the hospital, which kept under observation. Walter Wood, 25, 3218 Dearborn street, was also car-
Thomas Newby Inlured
Throws Lxcel in Face
Accruited by Unknown
While engaged in a quarrel with
the police, he was shot in the
streets. Mack Armstrong, 35, of
Dearborn, Michigan, 35, of the
death of his back. The man was
armed with a spring-back knife. He
fell to his death.
Fiolesha Burnside
Miss Ruth Jarion Jackson, daughter of Mr. and Riaa M. H. Jackson, 4222 Wahalah avenue, graduated from Burnside school.
Falls With Scaffold
Blae Stelkes Him
Edward Willingham, 514 Indiana ave.
and his wife, Marjorie, were alightly injured Friday when a pipe broke and fell striking him on the left hip by the Englewood police.
Birthday Party
Mr. and Mrs. Willingham, 514 Illinois ave., entertained with a birthday party in honor of their daughter, Miss Marjorie. A number of the younger set were preset charming hostess. The evening was spent dancing with the delightful dance partner,黛拉·艾格曼.
WILL Sing at Grace
Lawrence Lomax, dramatic tenor, will be soloist at the Grace Presbyterian church, 50th street and Vinecrest avenue in 1645 n. dr. Dr. McKinney will preach.
CHINA
Use Men's Tactics
St. Mark Lyceum
At the request of its many patrons, the University has closed its regular season, will hold two programs during the summer. The program, Sunday, July 16 at 6 p.m. The speaker will be Dr. Robert Davage, president of Rust university, Holly Springs, Miss. In addition to this program, a number of other programs are arranged. Details of the program are in next week's issue of this paper.
Controlla Guests
William Walker and family. Centralia,
Maryland. Morning over the Bible highway. Miss
Sarah Walker accompanied them to the
Mrs. E. C. Carr, Mia. 4198 Fvnns avenue.
The party left the city on the
Mrs. Carter and Mrs. Doften.
Mrs. Estes Takes Trip
Mariella Moriard Cohen Kiss, sister of the late John Lawrence avenue, let the city Wetland Lawrence avenue, let the city Wetland day for New Orleans, La. She will be in New Orleans during her stay there. Walter Cohen during her stay there.
Appeals for Protection
Kshifting various bruises over her head, she was forced to be her husband, Tremis Thiam, 112, who was killed in a car crash. 5175 Cottage Grove Avenue, amended to Officer James Cates for property he had, and returned to her home from a visit. She had returned to her husband had shared his room with a husband
Loop Workers and Visitors:
THE CHICAGO DE-
FENDER can be bought
in the Loop early on
Thursday mornings at the
following news stands:
State and Van Buren.
Wabash and Van Buren.
Roseburg and Van Buren.
La Salle and Van Buren.
Wells and Van Buren.
Wells and Van Buren.
Adams and State.
Adams and Dearborn.
Crawford and Clark.
Adams and La Salle.
State and Jackson Blvd.
Chicago, Illinois.
La Salle and Washington.
Randolph and Clark.
State and Seward, S. W. Cor.
State and State.
Clark and Monroe.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
white woman during her absence. According to her耳, Thirgen had threatened to kill the boy about to tell his mother that he was a domestic relations. in the court of domestic relations.
一
If a stone were able to slip perkmann James G. Parker, 26, 2027 South Park avenue. Parker was found in a daze. He was 10 years old and had been hit on the head with a stone.
Arque Oyer Money
Arguus Over Money
William Stuart, West 31st street, stated to the police that when he was going to collect some money from the police he was told La Salle street by James Duley, same address. Patterson has a deep inception and where he whorl he was struck by bullet.
Accultured White Adolescent
Susie Boone Injured
While attempting to cross the street, Boone, 26, 2008, Wabash avenue, became the first automobile and ran directly in the street. Boone was later suffering with a contusion of the leg, suffering with a contusion of the leg.
Leavca for Home
Mirr Gerridge Dixon of St. Louis, Mo., and his wife, Katherine, the graduating exercises at the University of Chicago on June 13 at which she will be awarded a degree upon her daughter Melba, left for her home during the week she will be her son Walker M. Farner, 4781 Champaign avenue, Walker M. Farner, 4781 Champaign avenue, with friends at Cumberland, Md. Hairy, Ferry, W. Va., and other eastern cities.
Sehr to Shle
Gees 65 Ohio
Nice Lakes, Ohio 3272 Elem
wood avenue, left the city a few days
for iron, Ohio, where she will
spend some time.
Charity Club Entertainers
Cherity Club Entertainers
Kristine Club Entertainers Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas is president, met and was entertained at the residence of the late Mrs. Elizabeth Thomas. Friday afternoon, June 20. A splendid meeting was had, much humbled by the audience. A great work for the community.
Moves on Boulevard
Mrs. Grace Patilin, most excellent queen of Vidhya Council, U. A. K. and U. S. College, has moved to 3741 Indiana avenue, has moved to 3810 Chicago boulevard, where she can meet her husband.
Mrs. Graves Realed
Mrs. Leopold Grawe, 18, Worth 36th
officers and members of the Virginia
officers and members of the Virginia
university, attended the meeting and entertainment
of the faculty and students. She was
under the auspices of her chairman,
every third Wednesday night of Bellevue's
every third Wednesday night of Bellevue's
are cordially welcome.
To: Enter Eaglewood
Alvin Rusel Delaney, who graduated from the grammar department of the University of Englewood high school in the fall to Rav. Jameson Visits City. Rev. H. W. Jameson, national grandfather, gave his flying trip to the city during the past two years, and his ordeal, his home. He spent two busy days in the city and who will here in
Settles at Luncheon
Mr. and Mrs. Hillard Sisters of Mar-
sas. Mrs. Hillard, a graduate of Mira-
la. Alice Johnson of Hippey, G. to
Mirala. Alice Johnson of Hippey, G. to
the funchion guest of Mr. and Mrs. Gri-
venne. Mr. and Langley the grove-
daughter afternoon.
Leaves for Kentucky
Women Flight It Out
A fat iron and a knife were the irony of the scene. Mrs. Johnson was an Annu Belle Harris and a lover, Mrs. Laura Johnson. The little place took place on the corner of a street. Mrs. Harris is nursing a large patient, who is while the scene of Mrs. Johnson has been argued was about who should use the argument was about who should use the
William Stoutmeyer Acoultte
There was no one to refute the testimony of the victim. She was a 65-year-old Dorberman street who was charged with murder. She was charged with an act of murder known as Rassting, who died from knife wounds, police said. She was also a Stats street. Ninmuntger, who was responsible for acquiring a b jury in the criminal trial, was acquitted by a jury in the criminal trial.
Granted Diverse
Through her attorney, W. E. Jollilow, she married a born streetman, granted a divorce from her husband, wakesa. Wls Mrs. Randonel stated she was a Crown Point, Ind. Inst. Sep. 12, 1922, that she was living in open adultery with Chelle Scout, from which she child was
Rose Morgan Entertainms
Sunday evening, July 2, the pretty
Sirius star was the subject of
652 St. Lawrence avenue, the
city's second-borough of bar
twelfth year in the millennium
present during the hours and tiny
houses of the city.
Mrs. Stewart. Returns
Mrs. Theresa Stewart, Denver, Colo.
was born in Denver and attended a
month here coiling. Mr. and Mrs.
Stewart went to Champaign avenue. Mrs.
Stewart's functions during her stay in
the city were to attend a funeral.
Wies Elct Prize
St. Monica's branch of the ladies' baseball league will host a prize at the last induction class held at the St. Monica's baseball club branch and the largest number of new swimmers (white) of Chicago. The Vernon branch will host a prize at the St. Monica's baseball club branch.
Nab Laverne Dorsay
Laverne Dorsey, 3180 Traffic avenue, New York, NY 10019. Root and Halsted streets Saturday night by Officer Delancey of the Stoops that Dorsey was intoxicated and was fired. Dorsey was fined $10 and costs Monday morning by Judge Lawrence Jacobs in the Leaves for Mission Work. Leon D. Smith, 4977 Walsh avenue, prominently in City, in where he will take up ministerial work, assisting the Rev. R. Mr. Smith has scholarship appointment City, and will enter there in the Hall.
Crowd at Bethel
Last Sunday night a splendid music man was presented at the Ballet of St. Louis with spoke briefly on music. The Asthetist Enthusiasts splendidly. Mr. Berth Wright offered an easy Lannax rendition of Gustavus McCurry song with a flexible hand to help complete her studies. Kleesers Cashmere and Chattienne were enjoyed by the audience.
Mime. Nunle Adams and Clarence
Brown, who are the stars of the
audience. The chore, under the direction
of James Mundy, with clie Dicker-
kens, with clear diction and good phrasing.
Miaa Hunter In City
Miss Jane Hunter, founder and executive director of the Home for Young Women in Cleveland, Ohio, visited Colorado Springs. She was a visitor at the Defender office. After her vacation she campaigned a $200,000 campaign to enlarge her home and attend the Sunday school school convention at the University of Colorado campus and the luncheon club meeting and his staff at the Chicago conference.
Ehneszer, Biscpic
Guests of Mrs Abbott
Mrs. Halee McClill, Jacksonville, Fla., and Mrs. Eathen, Johnson, Thomas S. Abbott, and Mrs. S. Abbott, their sister, for the summer, and their sister, for their respective homes. They have been so-called largely with home owners, for driving for a gain time while in the city.
To Renat Recital
So urgent and abundant have been the requests to repeat, the dramatic Walters Zion church he has decided to build, and the assistance he is asked by other noted artists. This recital will be given under the auspices of our great Walters building fund.
Entertain Club
Jackson Move
Mr. and Sirs, A. I. J. Jackson have
women, where they will be glad to
welcome, where they will be glad to
speak English, and their two children,
will be their guests during the months
of July.
Solid Home
Officer Palmer J. Walker, 3532 Palmer
avenue, was called to his home, Louis-
ville, Ky., to attend the funeral of his
friend, suddenly, who passed
suddenly.
Attends Conference
A. B. Lovett, instructor in printing,
W. A. Phillipin high school, is in印第安
conference of high school printing
instructors, under the auspices of the
University of Texas. Lovett is the first representative of the Race to be invited to these conferences.
Mrs. Duncan on Visit
Mrs. G. O. Dunnen, 458 N. Lawrence
gvenue, let me show you how to
visit her mother during the
month of July. In mine home she
colleagues, I am invited to Colle-
Colo, to visit friends and relatives.
The Barlows Entertain
Mr. and Mrs. J. Barlow, 4734 Landry Avenue, gave a reception Sunday of the present and most officers of the household at the welcome rendered. *George Keeney*, state artist, welcomed address rendered by *J. Barlow*, most名师, devoted Ruth for having as their presiding officer realigned real bank boards in the city in the early school teachers, gave an address. A number of nonfiction real bank real estate interaction was Mrs. C. Smith, who extended an invitation to all present, to join the orchestra in an artistic tribute by foururelle girls.
**Bearean Musical a Success**
**Song:** by Vineen, Monday evening, June 26 at the chorus, under the direction of Frost, T. Y. Tarbush, director of James A. Weathers, soprano; Latrin Barbone, and J. R. Milchbauer, were solos for the occasion for Jaceline C. Bond's, pianist, gave赞助 spend and Jaceline C. Bond's, pianist, gave赞助 spend for the concert will assist in paying for the organ, recently installed in the church.
Glaze Basett Dies
Mrs. Cain Bell Watson-Barrett,
mother of Lois, Louise and
Gerald, her parents Gwen and
her wives were among the early settlers
of the area. She began her
education here in the public
laws and Fisk universities and for a
number of years she worked at Bone,
she leaves a husband
and a sister, J. Johnson, and host of other
friends to mourn her loss.
Miss Mev Coyen Graduates
457 South Desert street, has completed
Lily Flower high school and received
mochelled in fine needle work.
Grand Opening
Grand opening of South Side pharmacy
Complete list of fresh drinks, toilet
articles, sodas and sandwiches. Dr. R. E.
Brown, M.D., H.P. H. L. and F. L. Campers,
Souvenirs in the fares. Phone your
orders to Boulevard 6151 - Adv.
Attends Convention
Rev. J. M. L. T. F. D. of A. convention at St.
Paul Muni, which closes Sunday in
New York. The convention will
meet in Boston.
TUXEDO CAFE
2012 Indiana Avenue
Corner of St. Street Upstate
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 based on None
THE RISING TIDE OF INDEPENDENCE
For the benefit of those who desire to maximize this institution or transfer their funds, please send all donations to the following address, beginning IU 1, on all deposits made on or before the 1st of July:
Plans are being pushed rapidly forward for the selection of a queen to represent the district bounded by St. Mary's south and Cottage Grove avenue and State street on the east and west, in the Chicago Business league, with the Chicago R. L. Mays, general manager; Gloeus E. J. Fouche, executive secretary; and the Schedule for South Side parade in the exposition calls for a field day, coronation of the queen July 24, and the grand parade in the loop July 23. The feature of the entire elaborate queen to represent this district in all of the coming activities. She will be able to perform any role she may not, as she chooses, represent any organization, church or society in the parade. That she must be no younger than 18 at noon Monday, July 24 will close
Mayor William Hale Thompson will the North Side Sq. queen at the Eighth Street building at 11th Street, July 24. The method of voting is very simple. Each merchant, restaurant, markets, drug stores, banks, insurance companies, barber shops, restaurants, supply with voting certificates and coupons which will be distributed to customer. The certificates will each contain 100 coupons to mail the certificates to the Fageant headquarters of this district. 3451 will detach the certificate as the holders of the largest prizes. The voting context has been arranged so that if will prove a great prize. The voting context has been arranged so that if will prove a great prize. Any lady, regardless of color, who wishes to enter the popularity contest may do so by sending her name to the Fageant Business league. Fageant headquarters. participation in the downtown carousel July 29 will be confined to the floats designed and designed by the committee of management. These regulations and are to represent the last word in the progress of this business district and of our group of people.
A reception at the Hotel Vincennes will be held by the Chicago Business学会 and her retinue immediately after participation in the downtown parade. Popularity and not beauty will rule in the selection of the district queen.
Morris Thrills Audience
"Our unfortunate position has been unfortunate to complain. It is well to recognize our disabilities, but it is better to recognize our abilities. The team has been able to take that they have been able to take what they had and make what they could do. We prove that they have been able to press us with resouled force. This was the stirring assertion of Charles Koch, a scholar and orator, in his letter address Last Sunday morning in Carleton Church. Young Morris is the gospel of self-heal, mutual inter-dependence, mutual juty he will speak in Columbus and Troy, Ohio; Rockford and Kankakee, Illinois; Iowa, Iowa, and Milwaukee and Indianapolis. Chicagoans are preparing to meet to be stained in the Bheenzer Baptist church, 45th and Vintner, and will speak on "The American Negro in the Larger Race Problem." Invitations from every section of the city, 4:45pm Prairie avenue, Chicago, 4:450 Prairie avenue, Chicago.
REV. STEWARD HERE
**Fifty Years in the Good Ministry** in the title of a book recently published by Rev. T. G. Steward, author of *The 25th Century* and *Boy of the A.M. E. church*. Rev. Steward served sixteen years as chaplain of the 25th infantry, is at the head of the 25th infantry for the past fifteen years has been a professor in the theoretical devel- opment of the Bible, is the author of "Genesis Reread," the "Hamilton Revolution" and "The American Revolution," and recent publication contains an account of over two years in the Phil- ladelphia and two trips to Europe. Rev. Steward has four prominent sons, Dr. B. G. Steward of Chicago, Chap- lee and Dr. C. G. Steward of Pittsburgh; Prof. T. R. Steward of Paducah and Dr. C. G. Steward, who is visiting his son in Chicago.
Appomattox Smoker
A smoker will be held at the Appaloosa which the guests will be Major N. Clarke Smith of Tuskegee, Charleston, which the guests will be Signer of New York and Roy Tibble of Washington. Charles Settles will charge of the musical arrangement.
American Legion Notes
It is now definitely announced that one of the leading representatives of the American Wooden Business office at Denver, L. H. Lighter, has a special mission to Chicago. He is the chief executive officer of the office and will spend several days in Chicago next week. He will be shown the city by our business leadership team, and there will be some tail guessing about the location of the American Wooden Business office from Denver. The Negro Business league gave 21 reasons why Chicago will be an attractive destination. This will also be an opportunity for persons dealing employment in the main office or in strenuous work with the representative of the supreme council. Property owners are able to benefit from the competitive concern. The Wooden are loaning money on gilts-age first mortgages to the Wooden Business office and a dither points can testify that this makes it possible in many instances to obtain their holdings. The present resources of the American Wooden is now far overdue. The Chicago office is at 5103 North State Street Kenwood 7230J.
CORONER DEMANDS THAT
JURY SHOW NO PREJUDICE
"I want you gentlemen to remember that justice has no color nor rank according to the testimony, if there is any gentleman on this jury who cannot prove his innocence in this case, I want him to excuse himself before we offer any evidence, as evidence, that he was guilty under the course of justice." So declared Deputy Coroner Michael Jackson, who is 23 years old and has been arrested and charged with manlaughter after Dave Greenberg died of injuries received when he was struck by an automobile driven by Jackson, who was charged with Greenberg of Coroner Walch was occasioned when mutterings were uttered by some of the Jewish men in the incite metal feeling in the case. Jackson was discharged, as from the evidence, to him responsible for the accident.
AT THE VINGENNES
Disclosure Property Right:
How our people are robbed of their property by clever methods of their theft, we have told at Metropolitan Community Center. The meeting was in the interest of the Binsa. State bank. The governor whose subject, "The Riding Tide," was condition of our Race. Other remnants were made by Robert J. Other. A memorial Owatlock Defierst and Col. Otis R. Dunne was appropriate musical program
Hit by Auto
Morris Thompson. 18. 4025 State Street. Inside by a Cottage Grove avenue car and the Hogan Bro. auto truck of Gillie and the toy and his bicycle were thrown under the head and bleed freely from the nose, broken. Fissenger on the car were thrown inside by the hospital. The youth was
SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922
SUNDAY AFTERNOON MATINEES
CONTINUE AT THE DREAMLAND
Hundreds were turned away at the Dreamland cafe, 3520 State street, July 4, while on the inside seven hundred patrons enjoyed the patriotic diner dance given by the management. Wesley. Botome. Walker. and Williams. It was indeed an enjoyable affair. The high-class entertainment and dancing were enraged by all.
The regular Sunday afternoon matinee, starting at 5 o'clock and ending at 7, is the most popular. The strenuous efforts of the management to please are bringing the matinee to a new level. Go's most beautiful cake. An appetizing bill-of-fare, courteous service, good music, besides the best of entertainment, await the pleasure of the guests. Again on Thursday the doors are open from the regular Thursday matinee to the Thursday afternoon matinee the "one beat bet." No matter how hot the room, properly ventilated, the pleasing and tempting music cause one to shake a "meal foot." Enjoyable afternoon? Well, yes, and then
For those who do not care to end
themselves, please join me in
migrating, the management has
an 'all-night cubaret at 48th and
56th Street' and we find Oilee Powers' jazz band with plenty of pen. Remember this place
where we met the Dreamland, catering to the same high-chair patronage. Out-of-town
advertisement, especially welcomed.
Advertisement
FOR MURDERING HUSBAND
A jury in the Criminal court of Chief Justice Kickham Scanlan found her guilty of murdering her husband, Luther Pearl, and sentenced her to the pententhirty-year a manslaughter charge, with a penalty of from one year to life. In a quarrel in their home at a nursing home, she was last. Mrs Pearl shot and killed her husband. She alleges that she found some love letters in his pocket. She also alleges that Miss Fields, who resides in Owensboro, Ky., claimed that her husband slapped her when she continued to quarrel about his alleged duplicity and threatened to kill her. She also alleges that her possession of the gun to keep it out of his way. He began to choke her. She opted to defend herself.
HOTEL SWIMMING
"111"
cigarettes
10¢
They are GOOD!
RESERVE YOUR TABLE
NOW
VINCENNES HOTEL
DINNER DANCE
EVERY TUESDAY EVE.
6:30 P. M. TO 1 A. M.
Table O'Hole & A la Carte
Service
No admission
Cover charge 25c per person
Alphonso Young, Director
Douglas 0410
SPEND A REAL VACATION
AND WEEK ENDS AT
THE HOMESTEAD
CEDAR LAKE, INDIANA
A Beautiful Summer Resort Near Chicago.
Large sandy beach and camping grounds,
with picnic tables, lawn chairs and
parties. Room and board by week.
CHICKEN DINNERS A SPECIALTY
Full instructions, call at Geo. M. Porter's,
3310 State st. or, call Victory 6150.
HOLMER BROS., Managers
DR. MEL WEAVER
CHIROPODIST
Formerly located at 3246 Indiana Ave.
has moved to Roadville Bank Blvd.
3507 Grand Blvd., Room B. Where he
is prepared to take care of this many
patients.
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Ter aeand Sire, Te aichen,
$cli Meide avenor, a-porer peste
Sas citen” ether Sonor. on the
Neane ot Whe Foams any
Soi Phas Sander.
Sica Bomex hanatie i Gauenter
og tr ane Mee Wk Sx ST Baad
aa ape, rnaaaied from the Coie
Sabo Seema eaten Peta ane 35
Sie wi teachin the “chy schools
‘next September. -
ee oe
ick tae
cae eps
Fae ZZ
as
bie” COLGATES
i
APY ce nc oor:
CaM es aulighe
Bey aicuedt:
el are
re
A eee
EAS Le
ee ee, See ae ere
Sones, 3417 Vernon avenue. members
gg ng ges
Saas Somer beers Sit
fees eect tee nee
set Gore aes, crea
See, Gece Gave Ase
ise eh cerns wa Se
ma
Springs, Miss. who have been visit-
eng pis cP wage Se
ioe cence os ae ot oe
Popcorn are erases
pabiarerttieg tae eek nat
Serene
en cas
ee Ree te tc et
Sree ae hs cre
eee Rear tr tne Sear
ine Presse Dela, iinscapel
saan mee Bela, asset
eee oes
eae
sce ee oer ee te
coe eee ee
ae
Mra 5. AL T. Watkins, 3712 Grand
eliens eee see Sit
as a BPE ee
ye
ese mee eee
eee See
acer eae a ee, se
eat ikon tenant
eo a ee oe
seth att etic i
aeeee
ae oo ete ates ci
fie Ponds setae ve
neces
i on
oan Ste Sieh
sees oe
can er meee A
ee
en beh eee ecu te
aroma J capereng, i
es
hhe'witt alto visit his ‘brotne
INTERCOLLEGIATE: CLUB
~ PRESENTS DANCE PUPILS
pis SP'Sie Hiasal hompean. davis
Tota tne cemer or» aelntal eve
Raga’ Ghicstnment tendered the
Buiter susbents of ‘Chicago schon
ity Saat Evang might. "Tho progam
eetetan atthe Americas Gon:
Reuaty ar hose: la Nannie
Top ina Spanien momer: Corti
HE" Graf chitton presenting & ers
Preity tor dance” ang itn’ Aureus
Rosanne “Chase Dance of
*Avpreclative applause recalled these
conPenae secrets" fas agent
ing” the “scarce ot tudents Broo’
Tayo Nowe lasing” the" foundaciont
re chanain more aext Suadase TO
Binet Sock atthe Rabash seme
PRS ea ar Ininesting pros
Epuig af vaing ate ie
IMT, PILGRIM TABERNACLE
ADDED TO TABOR RANKS
dughters of Tahor, international
Dauhers, of Faber, Intermationa
BREN state ater an a
Pee tanita ae it a
Hane Semen mal
ene Mare ase Me
Sieg ae STE
gee at Beha Sr Sak
Tipe Bates wrt se
"Ae cele WR ces te
punter hte aan ee:
BRENE atte ince ®'S, Bou
Deena ane baa
one eee as, Buu
SENT IGT cS Bias
BEE RES ooh Shon 2
Bide el fe ae
Sicihes ee
Sat Wf eens econ
pete oe beat
BER earache
Sa rare coma
Bikes daa Sach
Serine Soke Seat
ies Sea eee tee
Hebe gf Daath Tse
el ek cet ou:
si tan
icy cLUB VES FaRry
TEE ITS AT
Poca eases
Se iets a LMG
Been eat ehcaee
Si saaie eae eee
Rese neta eaneny
Rete of on the
Segue mevean a tee de
Seanteaan ie eat
Bid Bet colans tn at
Radeon ane
Bebb tars delet ier ae
Basta ras deaay tap
ection saerans i
Pacis cone se Gack
‘chats ram So Seen
Hei har alae
TS dhe ie Steno” a
a leat (ce eh
BRU at a co
toni dt eatetiaula
seat Cea ties Si
ind Thad ee
Se a
|, Newark, N. J~ July 7.—Misn Laura
Av Smith; aughier of the late Aira
Stamie’ Odom.
graduate from
Eenteal High
renoot Mier
Sure was born
and "reared -in |
Ghicasa, vat {ims
fince twe seat (AS
of “her mother
fa resided with Pe
fee once ane Ae 7
unt. De ana [RRs
Bie Robert (SY
Gonper of Sew ‘
Fork" and Bam [hy
Orange XT
Oeuroh = lass
Shien waa the
2
colorand was Mise Smith
pean Aig ios = Smith
rraduate from | a)
gaa fem |
rsnsot, wr
tio men iy
ee
Pee ee
se tee
setae .
her unto oa. re Whee
Te rece [ou
He rile |Z
srt Ser jh
cee
Se Sas
aiie be ge
a
Sea ie nn
eat oat
eco case her ens
Set ce St Mi Set
notes Sis ive id
tak ESAS wera
nt Sarre sets
seindown ‘show
Parks, Dances
Not in God’s
. Kind of Life
St. John’s Pastor Asks for
Complete Divorce From
Earthly Pastimos
i eee
Providing anybody docs, the mem-
ser sane AB ere
peace ne Set
Pe Pea ieee
ne tae sree orice
ea Pc cea
aris Teale ase nee
per ee sien eee Re
Re fr cuca aa, Nea
is werent, eet a
Bane ries nena
pon eyo ae
ieee See er a
piber, Sees, <2 Pea
Ee a
Semen eras, eaten tt
ever nrc oo ay dea
Sori mee sei
Se eh
en ee er
ramraer te Bt re
Reema gn arid
Taracl’s fatth made him give up
Era i re ea tat
earings et cha ane
Seinenae: Sekar ts
Se Siren, Senet
Se renee a tee
ico Cran Nene
mt See iy a a
ee tae tac ede
Se os ene as ee
eerie guts dat
Serene arene
Giver cigar ome oa
Si erence
eae
oT ana nn, beng toe
action hss ht
Beker are eee
Skee amuses ons
Sic aay he Hees Ge
Seam ate Se esc
Eee re
Eee rare Gr et Re
Teale orice re Ru
Sey i es nae eee
see tae a, Sete
fe sarees te eee ane
ie eigen eee See
eet
eee ee
mi cannes ce
Ss Se Gi toes te
i oes cea ee
fee cael Sr it ae
Severe Bete, ne
Freie eee
oceans tre meena
Grete tae eae ars
Sides the Gaal
Ear cries re
Sees tener tne Tia ole
ter Wht ne att
Set ee eatin
Hees “pina ae? poe gate
Settee eke Ge ooh Be
sarod Sarat canes
en
RE een, tat
ering marr eran
syrmete arash
fo See Shara ae
Bae veg pom, ores
fhdar We wil represent
“Through their abilides Im the arts
the Colored people have an oppor
tunity of taking a position in the
modern world. fira-andunascale
aie that dynamite wil Not beable
to.Biart them ont of Te"
"amis was the Kevnote of a speech
made by Prof: Perainand Schevi of
the derartment of Minory of the Unl=
Sorat of Chieazo at on of 2 eeres
of mectines held byt the All-amer=
fean ‘Theater savociatlon tn aponsor=
Ing the movement for ahh
iSheerade” theater foc Tce a6ter9
ome the Routh Side this cil
Prof. Sehevil pointed out thatthe
contrinutions to eivitsation be whieh
the ancient. Prypilane, Greeks and
Romans ‘wero measured were" thei
srt contributions. He sala that white
meevieans hed ‘contrinsted.itle. to
ihevaria fut thaf the Race conto.
Mone ‘erpecialy in musics am Tet
denized thrgushout the wort.
‘One of the great wsmnvonken of
the wotla, “Ene New Word Syme
shone bie the tamed Banning
Eomporcr Anton. Deora, waa wit
fem after that. compnarr Wad vietted
emerieay ‘We wan Weed simost ene
FAfefy on racial songa and’ stra
TAP the ‘next mecting oF The. aes0-
lgon Sona uly 10. atthe Ane
fpomal fox cul 38 Grand boulevard,
Bear oe Chane wil hve tecture
Paine Set theater, movement in
netics. The meshing Ts open to Ne
aie
Te ee ca
gee. eo can gunen ths
urn ia Headarton anneunes, the
ee Be WS Gate
Raabe, abe it Get
Erect tachi
iearea eres wits Sieh Sea
Be ace errata
2a Res series Pet
Be orca aeten chert
erect ieee
ie entrees aiue™ potent
therm a ber ate" Presa
Rectan area at get
a ad
Riera, lieth etter
Peat eat st Tah te
Heke mane amy Sr Bask Vas
See ae ote
ive nabio congenr
ee WE ARNO CONSETT ey
Stee aes ae
roast a ere as fore
Hear heat
es sates, Mea cate
ioe ae re ie nine ae
serene omy Manes
Bea neues Sanrat dees
Seria, Maier name oad
Pees sala caked
oe, |
wing eueven Ae"
onal RIE Aa ot
saat ata wa tas
ceomecenies Ga te ae
eee TLE oo ee
Biiate bie and We He
Seale gf Saou Be
weed fie eta ia int
iat oA ere eat ae
Pasar Made ce lie Soatet
RAG ace es cer aa
was, KEYS, &, oles
ont YS: PEE ae
near, one or ie de SE
Mensch acd Rate Ske
teri ne uate uty he
Hana oes ofan sna ees
NEWS OF THE MUSIC WORLD
ree ee as cae.
soraty of Stunle characterised {het
Stent itt the pfotersinal and tor
aioe of chlcuge tanning
Std Senta consomating the
mot urdatie pany ever piven bere
fetamanateY ee Sen
tora Inited one, 2 8
sokee Gretta, Withee set
THRE ae aahteas ara us iostng
Seta 68 facies meer and put
sriha na imperinoer ara”
teat arlgu opera" Sach art
{Seen “Httul Tanai we tne
Franeen cnet aac fpneuue-
ilanege Sine echamaeter theyre
semtednn thes seated neues:
Ui’ Gefne eer hex“ Bo gare te
Hove a Se asia colons” btm ot
tong pentcunearaing fon ara
te nets tla the agent com
Wath’ asin have ever
Fear eons ey. nove alas
Been aS mately Yom freien
Cisne Guay unermnecredie ard
soli ugmment wih ee
ese Su cach chem
iacek'and Somme ws Gel ont
Sitting wind peomitng the ord
tending oma Stra who pee
Mtapgtat woke Sonia Saree nar
we Beitc etn and is aceome
niet ie GoSre: hartetert rom
Farlow oncran Fenresented ny” the
TSEa ES a art coum
Peon icant auton es
sent ne, as
con Ee con
cnet Hebd Senge ot me
cote 2 ren
tte Pe etm
(ate rer gt
ee
ne ta gon
conte Fae tna
dene Tg i ot So
i Sie A
orate $a
Harrison Raomanvel....:.Hiedetto, Ruoctback
(net Pate ae
tare age SS me,
ten te re tet
te ec a ne
sieorge Dewey Bost, pelea
Mer ga A ete
Sean ar
rent! Sah tat
ronan ogy eo Cnr
we emse
say 6 ean
ontrve Teg, he cen
sete Boa SIRS th Sere
poses tpatk peat
eR
ae) |
lie PURE acces
Seen ri dad te Tet
pe, matte (een Scie
ogee ene bee
sod Sr ev ee ee
zee gee ae eee Sk
pono es cma eo ae
Roce
ere
ean conics scart hee
Se cans sets wy ee
EM Peale Saar eeet en
Beet
raWeLt ASANONA
anes ARTE CRARANOA
ee deul Bt Ec nce
meme oe ee atk
Feces ite ite
sie ARE CERT ERS
ah mis cece Sree
oh tee ee ee oes
Set arise tears
apie Aexew
sent Es ni
ages omg ete
George Askew of thie cle
‘Tarboro, N. C., July 7—Miss Annie
yay Lintay’” of Princeviie. N.C.
sige fuera, Foe
Seti oe Se
Sea |
“Dyan aig aaa ve
Greg caret ts
eet tot nat eee
Ineet'on the last Friday’ a cack math:
oe ee
meen creiay mee:
cesee cheese
Bee Pee ea aes
pelea Stee oe
Bin Fieger
See AE aa a
‘The Hon Vivanis entertained “thelr
iat tar tact te
Saeed
Poe savciar ania Ge
coreg Se te et
ToN orparcws woes, see
wittis uegiaw pies
salettne urs oie
ace et aa ue Bes
Sect ies cates tet
ep
Se ea eee tee ee
Siege Gece teats ee
cri ie ees eae
Ste ae ae a
3 ones arian
ie eng eg
Bereta tance ee
wissi0Ns' 70, EET
wooSRONS TO,MERT 5,
pieetiree Bay cee
SS pete yet
sett Aen grates
eee te ae ae!
Bhai Gouna Satay
Sh pe
Sete cernes
urged to attend ~ . e
ROYD.BURTON.
TING AY.PIPEN
Gesth Sie: Cemaian._ nisineaas, aunenier ot Hine:
Dune ducon opt ena
Neate McCann oe ee. rtrd
Tat aeogee a
Bite Moo Bo eas
peat meet ee ee cr
tama ig a mt
Ce tw in i ste
sn Dr Su
oe ee ae
sealer ner ane
eae Dm Sars
wae oe
sonia, ly a Sa tse
Ake Dag in 0 Tr
tn ae i
ames Ata RE tae
Je J i oe et
ra a
we Sn re ne
Ming Wanzer of Charleston, We
wath WAS Sey egal
Reve“arana
The, puns fs Vilna John
won Wabltefon B.Sc ee
setial fete nt Se, Senate Sceney
‘nS Garth Shiney tenis
Sina'se Getfietan at eevtucion
Wee resented te Stary Wet nt
soe Aivante clan plan. Dorothy
Siren a tty at ots
Rebimwr: Intermediate cite, nant
Hat Roth Whelan
eH NGindas nrmeatsses
Sole aan Burke
ih Perey Se reseed ne d=
pons ot eden Tam the Te
fae ethesl of Snes. Bowra,
Sicha dn 1s
Jaca, Lose, bane, anpeared In re:
oie Peasy ete Hane Si
Sesame bait Fane and ata
Stove ‘S. Lowe naman Rvolce
ae Uiinal ange and fee Tis
Wad"sinted MF i Stone
‘mhe Chorus and Orehestra Stuy
ci ha ae Sree at The Ce
cus Misiones under the
Tieton Saste Nan Slt
Gnesat ant“ iRee scores lf he
SPEECH "in Whe sporancs wih
sta Scfomantncnt A ite
ee Sumer of eokerslal singers
8 aE, OE pretbetoesl: Ainbee
Quinn, Chane! A.M, €. church, 2h
and Watash avenic. Rev. HE. Stew-
Ait pester AN Set Sekt
Mall Neneh eat maths aa
{ee of he Yorunn’ 'h "hieeraphical|
skeich of ong of the ently ‘oncera a
ian Shana eh Ss, Mee Ba
Se td ta tart nei
Senn, Suny, ath, analvereny
Silvers delivered iy" De Rw Weight
at 8 o'clock. “
Walters A. i. E Zlon churih, 2500
pongee dt facet eae
Wii'take place Suny ae 8 BT
St. Monicss Cathie church, 36)
ait Aoi Ups sure, en
Hee Whe eat ft rath ation “hee
ee AGE at
ieee Rated rae eel
Bede alte Saat aren a
Haale eh ae, eee
Silent ine eS ate Soy
Ste
a Psoie, tneestalnatoat_ eter,
peel Rema ae
Fenieteacy ane ata Geese
Maitosh aeensel nga Sise Mariat
tick
Sth" harcer"snd' Watt venti”
2, HI agtioechargh, 4312 Dear
kare, GRRE eS ft Rete
Serh eSter pecane ala ae ona
ecesal ot Roti Eoin
uh Ey so
Carters Temple GM. 6. church, 8
land. Champlain avenue, Rev. damen A,
Rance Here Saas ts
Hits Renting Chante Sel sees
Sng, tamneae Ghee Sate
eee aacreaateae’ fehas
PEGASUS 2 STAM lates
SURRY sem to Spor
Columbus, : Otic, Jute 1. An
neuncement is made at the selchen=
tion ‘here by the: Supreme Lite and
Caaualts" company of tho Ast anl-
Serrary of fs orgaitation ‘and p-
tinique and interesting program
neem arranged covering te ful
tags, Sule bfSand ia nnd many
prominent peopte from diercat parts
Sf the counter wilt atiend ana ‘pare
pate: Promicent among the noted
fpeakers will ber Hon Ina W Gears
Neart, superintendent of famirance of
the iste of Onto, representing. of
tially the ate “insuranco denart
tment: Harry If, Pnee, founder and
Fresldent of tne Blac‘Swan.Phono-
Eroph compan, New York elt!
SE"Ronay cashier of the Solvent
Savings banks Memphis, ‘Tenn. Nite
fee, eset, resident at the. Pes
andar tank, Loulsvle, 3: and
many others.
Tho ‘public anniversary exercizes
scl no held in the anditeriom ot che
Sumner ‘of commerce and will tne
Glude the annual award of gold
prlacs fo the agente who have, prov
fiuced #10000 worth of business
THOMAS -CRUMP DEAD
‘Thomay #1. Crump, 3584_"Yernon
avenue. lcd Manda Jig 3./at the
Sout: hosnitay emere ne deen
{ken Sarurday" upon ‘the advice ot
Hie tngaiclan, De Bionenard, tte
fea heen iit for over nix month
“Crump was a soled Inventor, Rav
tng een Elven Crit ay the father
GF me aeropions Hes. ig company
Sti his counine Thomiaa Sterritt no
ecentit mada 5 trip to, Washington
{ovdemonatrate anather davice whieh
teas inter patented He waa married
ieathe E Naor ob ep
fai. ong of the original Juullee
singers.” Funeral services, were held
Thursday’ afternoon at Lstlock from
ihe: Metropolitan Community, center,
Bist street ‘and ‘Giies venue. "Rew.
Goak‘oflclated.. Kersey. Aorsell and
SiSCowan hed charge af the funeral
Therdeceased wan 62 Sears old and
was prominentiy known in musical
bag
Says African
Art Deserves
High Ranking
Recent Discoveries Indicate
Africans Differed More
Than Europeans
Dr. James Hardy Dillard of Char-
Jotteaviie. Va, rector of William and
Mary college, as well as president
of the Jeanea and Slater’ boards,
‘oke-tn Osden hall, Hampton tnstl-
tite, before the ministers and texch-
eee recently on “The afeantng of
Progress
‘DE Diliara referred to the dlscov-
‘clea’ whlch. investigators have been
Makiog throughout the continent of
‘Rinieay Me stated that investigntors
in 'Atrien have: Feached. the, conclu
ston that thera sere more different
Kinda ot peopie on tho. continent
‘Afsiea ant that ‘they aifered. mors
ftdels in language. inate, and. fn
[government than the peoples, of u-
ope "He also stated hat invest
ravora have glscorared. "that" ‘somc
ations In Atriea had achieved, a de-
velopment far preater than had beta
Rencralis. imagined:
Bre ilra usted Clive Dee
statement in. “Since Cezanne.” that
Hace art, vaccordiag to. judgment
from avaliable data, was entltied to
evniace amane he great echool
ial tayar "On, the whole -T shout
to inelined ¢0. place West and Gen-
eat Aarennagt st, any. rate, On
level with the Egyptian. Such oweep-
{ing classifeations, however, are. not
to" how taken too" seriously, AMT
‘ant to sya that thous ihe ea
{ta} "achievements "of the -grcatest
Schools do seem tome to be supe:
lor aver the Negro art t have seen,
Sot the Gnest lack: sculpture, fy 36
iriginal tn artistic qualfes that, i
nite to & piace beatae them.
‘Br. Diliard made. an earnest plea
that’ tinisters and. teachers alike
‘oud "engage. actively in. trying. to
‘nae te world tthe better mates
atiy, Inteliectualiy. and apiritually.
te rocerred-t0 the mow growen
teligion, i the relations af men to
men, sad tn the improvement. 6
overnmentae” That eiviteation
oilow which dons not neue he
improvement of ail people he ea
"the" chriotian. {deal tr thae evecy
cia arn nko ane orld shoud ac
sx gong, an opportunity, for the de:
Weigpment of ail that is tn lt as
sing ether chita."
‘be: Diliard closed hs cloquent a4-
snes ethene wondss thers
{ing other argument that we need {0
ining morte to.” that avers ody
should ‘have in this world un, abeo-
Iels ae chance and a_feccdom {0
ream. met ony the dream of hls
eee Et ics ean vo cont
SUMIMIER MUSICALES PLEASE
AUDIENCES “AT - WABASH ‘Y’
the workers and" thele’ faraiiies Jour=
Heat raveday to emiey the fest Se ioe
Yoline btda's ad the Foun Womea's
Sn ee are
SE A Sacer nee
Ene eee Eee
iiewtone bs Tear ae
SEN tate, Sask eee
ieee jeer cite meee
pop he hal ea
See eae tae
mond “companys Swift nad company,
Bee, eat mae tad ae
Seay et wien ae one
fame er, aa at
AE SADE, cin, hfe
oc essa meinen, he
gocenrat ame er
Seay Seaway So
Be ee seer ar ate
Seber cet acemre te
Sere Sameer
ehh «ocean eae
fn, oie emai
‘cly’s fraternal circles, was the orator
Sieg toteae eae rent ot
Sei See he mney
Sete or Sree, ae
Tie att a ar hc
(Taree members of the religious
cormtigg oe tines eee
Green, are forming ® ‘racious for 2 0s.
Sloane teaint nei re te
Beis Ge maameae Bth
foe Ane th earer ese
ieee va arite
pa
oie athe Sanat Sete
wnhertineren seach
Shine haere
kere cam This in che see
ag ibe Sie
Dera greater te
Seema ae ie eee
She aie iia Sth
ee rye a ee
See aide ter ee of
Bah ae Sie eet
ie Peete Bee oe wears
imei features! ‘for the bay" general
IRSeMTR Ccce im tere cp
ee OS woth helene re
TE aia dae
Abeer. “Champaign, IM; Thendore Rak-
Sa amie rere
Seat ee eG Ae
si eng te OH PE: We ae
Bier een ts been
ie: Qi Saag at So
ire Rea cone cee
Ee Rernanie settee
a a ae eo
HEE ceeme & cate
Fae rad aeaiions
SCRUTCHINS IN DULUTH |
paluthe Stiamy. Juke feoktre and
aire Gharler Eerutehinn, ‘Bemidi
Minn. viatted tase wash Rr. ang Stem,
Charles “Coiny, 825% Bast Second
siveets, They were. Rucnts of NOnOr
at afoner: party even by Aen Fe
i Sconsome® Ther were’ also en=
Trained be, By Kelley at Wun
Steonatier whieh they toured the
foctevards, "The. Seratehine. veere
Rin guents o€ Sew, Luther Dawson.
hex Yet” for their "home. Fray
covering.
WILLIE WAS NOT-THERE,
altanian Ga, auig ae me We
Brown 2, Swak arrented) in Carey
pane Sacufaay afternoon. in connec
fiom seth the kbooting of Wiley Phil=
lips (unite): @ conductor, ase Octo™
hee ‘Brown’ claims that he was not
fnvatlanta last Yea
MRS. TYREE IN RECITAL
sumo, Sa July 2-the House
hold’ ot Muth,” prevented.» Madam
Gniesspy laa concert her aamisted
SF hee wennews ‘Emerson ‘Tyree.
Rooms, To.:Rlagt—dlewitd: Hota,
Gea ean we ec eee
AdvicE2B The Wisee Othe? wise
GREATEST DISCOVERY EVER MADE a
MARGUERITA LIQUID POWDER
IN SI SHADESALSO “COMES IN ORY POWDER FORM
KEY TO. Sa re ree
PERPETUAL ce
YOUTH Fi ee
AND BEAUTY f i Bae
Makes the ero -G e
Skin Clear om
and Charming aed ow
TT REMOVES ie meage eAeS
sticKheass ae Sarena
Romoce | ke OSS
AND LEAVES id , hed SARRED Yer ttony
THE SKIN FRESH Beg Re as
tthe VELVErY aii eer!
Marguerita Pad Bed,
Liquid Powder 9 ant penis
ee Pn Cte las ee le
raaag, ABE Bs asa
ise Fe ene
an‘teter We wie fee: An Re ES:
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DRY POWDERS, ROUGE, CREAM, 50c A BOX OR JAR
| FESAPS UP SF EN
THE MARGUERITA COMPANY,
--retephone Douatas 6080 Sis tninne Aves CHICAGO, ILL
GLOSS-O—A MARVELOUS [ReaiGre ieee
DISCOVERY THAT GROWS [ee at nena
HAIR IN THREE MONTHS [ig ro NG
Gluss-O wilt positively promote the |#ay Neg
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THREE GENERATIONS AT
WILLS FAMILY REUNION
‘Winchester, Ky. July calon of
generations. attended the ceunton of
fhe Wilts family, ene of the oldest
Rnd. beat known familien tn the state
or Kentucky, at the residence of Miss
Carrie Ne Wills, 10. North «Maple
Sect he meeting. was planned In
Ronor of the. marriage of | Prot
Rharles'S. Rokertm Tulsa, Okta., vo
Siiss “Eitan. Davia which took
place in Lake Charles, Ea, June 7
fast”
‘Oiner members of the family whe
tienda were. Sex. Walter’ Speci
Syd son, Walter. Je, Chicago: Orval
Ate Gatlimese,. Cinelanatl, Ohio: 3.
and Sira J.C. Vivion. Sir, and airs
fmtne Brammer and son, James.
Many accial agtater were plven
honor o¢ the visiting guests.
DEDICATE HOME
(On ‘Tuesday, June 27, the Friend
snip home Wan dedicated as a. home
No our eirin, The dedieatory addeeas
nd Brager were made by Sing ML
Wootrult, corresponding secretary of
the national bourd of managers of
the Woman's Home Msstonary soct-
ety, Other Inapiting addresses, were
‘nude by noted philantheopisis, min
{eters tnd ayeakers The, chairman
‘ne the committee prenented the Keys
Of the mullding to" Sits. Woostrutt in
Sn address that set forth the puré
poses and plans for the Erlendsnip
Rome. ‘the ontire services were deeo-
Ty impressive.. The musical selections
Uy South, Park gospel chole and, the
solo by Mrz FB. Johnson added
Tauch to the solemnity of tho occa-
Sion,” ‘The committee. whlch had. the
furchasing and hax the direction of
Erfendahip heme purchased two ad-
Joining three-atory ‘stone front rest.
ioneen, Jott Fraiie avenue and
converted them into one. spacious
Building. with two. front. entrances
‘The vaiue ot this ‘beautiful. home
‘hen ‘completed wlll be over $45,000,
‘The abolition of Sim Crow cara and
‘eins eane
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|crown LOCAL QUEEN IN
1) JULY 24 “PAGE” PROM
‘The: Chicago Businens league an>
ounces that arrangements Rave Deen
Srmpicted co have the date Inceely
Feovesented ty the Second wana i
FRET een aa oe the Warne ot
Free tte nod nthe tos
‘Field day exercises will be held on.
aeriet ete meet
Geeee district in Chleago fa "to be
Sais PoE ake le
Fae cect i at tne capeaition: She
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Feends Sareas bg lhe Thome
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RS ae net ese ease.
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Camille Cohen Jones
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FRENCH | ena
7 SPANISH |" 2. F
ITALIAN | SBS]
3672 South Michigan Avenue
seine er
Chicago University of Music
So ee
Beaks, eis
"Trilby" Being Presented at Avenue; Simms & Warfield Group at the Grand
MOTION PICTURE NEWS
PAGE 81X
"Tribly," one of the greatest of all
commercial artists, he remarked this week to large
"Truly, one of the most important the Avenue theater and appreciative audiences. The manner in which he does the cast gives this group of actors of being one of the most efficient ever seen at a large theater. As is usual, the time of the performance, E. Muso is the outstanding feature, his portraits of Svengeh heig letter perfect in
and appreciative audiences. In which the piece is being done by the capable cast given by the players of the mark of being one of the most efficient ever seen at the theater. As is the fine acting of Clarence E. Muso is of the best feature, his portrayal of the part of Swangall being utter perfect in the line-up, his support is of the riff-edged sort, every individual in the line-up contributing to the success of the offering. It is an entertaining, high-class comedy-dramma cannot well afford to miss. No changes until after the final curtain on Sunday night.
THE GRAND
Simms & Warfield's "Clorifera's Wedding Day" opened its final week here to a large audience on Monday, and the comedy has created a fine impression. It is replete with up-to-the-minute songs, dances and drills with a world of clean-cut comedy running through the show. There are several novelty offerings in the way of specialties which are out of the ordinary aside from the regular routine. Many names of the comedy stars announce the principals and the second
By D. Ireland Thomas
The teacher said to her pupils:
"If people would all love one another and
treat each other with kindness,
"Wouldn't you like to see everybody
with kindness?" the teacher insulted.
After a moment's reflection the boy answered.
"Then there wouldn't be any more custard plies thrown in the movies." Ulysses G. Chambers, the celebrated organist, was living at Regent Baltimore, Md.
Ira McGowan, salesman for the LINCOLN Motion picture company, will be the host of the Kopin theater, Detroit, Mich. He will be always a booster for Race films. He paid the prices without kicking and J. W. McArthur is showing pictures under canvas in the lumber regions of J. J. Robinson, manager of the Atlanta, Ga. company, for a compulsion against the manager of the Google "R" theater. Kopin, Ohio, is the same theater and I am taking all of them up with the manager of the Read "A Girl of the Films," by Bob Wagner in the Red Book magazine. If I movie tan you will find it interesting. T. S. Williams, late manager of the Fort Lansdale, Fla., and is in the general merchandise business. Will picture show in his town. J. Frost has the charge of the motion picture show for opening to open a picture show in his town. T. Compass is building a new Race
---
G. Edward Brown, Kona Morton and Lawrence Chernet put, over some books, in "Spitfire," the latest release. If congratulations are still in order, they are for Mr. and Mrs. Leigh Whipner on their wedding anniversary. I am always their wedding anniversary.
PAUL & STONE
STATES
THE
HOME of
GREAT
FEATURES
CONTINUOUS
2 PM to MIDNIGHT
3507
S. STATE
LINCOLN THEATER
3132 STATE STREET
FIRST CLASS PICTURES
CHANGED DAILY
PERFECT VENTILATION
COMFORTABLE HEATING
Continuous-2 o'Clock to Midnight
"TRILBY"
CAST OF CHARACTERS
"The Laird"
Chancellor, Charles
Morgan
J. C. Carter
"Little Blithe"
J. C. Johnson
Joseph H. Hancock
Menn. Villard
Elizabethtown Williams
Anthony
George Calpin
Anthony
George Calpin
Angelo
Marion Taylor
Charles
Calaw
Biggs
Mrs. Raget
Natalie Sutton
Mr. Thomas Raget
Ethelle Gregg
Isabella
Gerko
Ollie Burgess
Lorimer
George Randolph
week promises to surpass the first in point of attendance. This engagement ends on Sunday night.
THE MONOGRAM
A real vaudeville bill is being presented here this week and the result is packed houses at every performance time favorites at this house, are doing fine, the "nut" character work of Miss Ilaine and the vocal efforts of Miss Cornell & Alexander, two gents of fine ability, who do a bit of slinging, some talk and a world of cracker-talk, share of mine. Miss Icathartice Bruce, the popular vocalist, who has the gift of a double range is the usual performer, and the small Bailey, wreckers of big and small time vaudeville line-ups, are the big racket, closing the entertainment in a show, the same time gratifying. Cliff Green is a clever comedian, but he has nothing on Miss Bailey, both working uninterrupted and unmentioned. It is a bill which will be hard to equal, much less surpass.
house, tells her the story of Hector, a bigamist, a man of many wives, all possessed him or tried to escape. She realizes that her husband is Hector himself and that his wife would be next to meet the fate of the terrible dungeon. In the meantime in Alaska, he claims, when one afternoon he is set upon by claim-jumpers, and is saved by a pugilist, who after fighting off the bandits informs him that through a trifecta in Carterville, from whence Cameron came. It has been made possible for a Negro to be elected to Congress, for the office. Cameron is amazed at the audacity of the man and decides to culpability as the election of Lassler, returns with Barton to Carterville to vote in the election. Myrle overhears a plot between her husband and certain real estate interests, whereby in considerably large sum of money Lassler agrees to secretly permit residential segregation, to move out of the best section of the city. But before she can escape before he elects a newspaper. Upon reading it and realizing that it was his wife who exposed him, Lassler, enlisted upon her before she is able to escape, carries her fighting to the dungeon, torture. Of how then, Cameron hears of her danger and rushes to her rescue, and how it was Lassler himself who the last fate of his own dungeon.
E. L. Cummings announces that he has sold all the advertising matter and is now in the "2013 Trail" back to Sidney P. Dones. The manager of the Brown Skin Lady theater at Monroe, Ga., writes that he has directed his theater until timer get better.
L. W. Chappell is still on the job at the Imperial theater, Jacksonville.
Ben Strasser is now ready to re-
present his latest, entitled "The Devil's
Match." Correspondence
Address mail to me at bjou theater,
Nashville, TN 37214.
B. J. P. New Orleans, La.: Iris Hull
& Robert H. Hull: "The Strut Miss
Lixie" company
W. Crampton, Charleston, W. Va.:
If it is good condition it is worth
the money.
AT PARADISE
Frankie Jaxon, head of the entertaining corps at Paradise Gardens, Atlantic City, N. J. writes that he and they send regards to the world. They are Bess Smith, Bertha Ricks, Michael McKinney, Eminer Hillard, Helen Lee, Wary Stafford and Charles Johnson.
William Fox, maker of stars who have given fine entertainment to motion picture patrons the world over, has created a new star in the person of John Gilbert, who comes to his new position after long traintime as the director of the camera. Gilbert will be at the Statesater on Sunday in his first Fox starring vehicle, "Gleum o' Shame." Gilbert's elevation was due primarily to his exceptional work in the Fox super-production "Shame," in which he played the characters of the movie "Shame," in the Fox category of pictures, is in the same class as "Over the Hill," "A Virgin Parachute," "King Arthur's Court," "Thunderclap," "Perlury," "Footfalls," "Queen of Sheba," "Les Miserables," "A Tale of Two Cities," "I Were Jared," "The King of Mist," "Mother and son in Shame" is recognized as masterly by the critics. Gilbert was born in Utah, but he moved to stock with his parents, who made Portland, Ore, their home. Gilbert will be remembered for his work in "The White Circle," which he beamed in his best picture previous to "Shame."
"Gleam o' Dawn" is based on the
"Gleam o' Dawn" author of the
stage play, "Tes or No."
LIKES "LIZZIE"
New York.—So far as movement went there was such a last set at the Staten Square Lizzie, last night that she darkened Lizzie. "Along" seen leisurely by comparison. This Croole revue, as it's called, got her a darkened dress, and those darkest singles without using ear trumpets, but to see them dancing was better still. "The croole" was full of life and—quite naturally—color, with the lighter shades displayed in costumes designed to leave little to the heated imagination. Ricks were the best of them, an outing in accordance with the accepted custom along Broadway. Although some of the damsels display their emotions, others as though they had not gone near the water, or in any event nothing further remote than the Harlem river, all in "Hoola from Coney Lake," wiggling with delight and great variety. A straw vote of the audience would be counted, and this number by a large majority.
Creamer and Lyaton, who wrote everything that happened, sang a number of their compositions with a clever sense of values. Alice Brown, a violinist, vengeance and a few moments later joined Grace Rector in "Loveless Blues," although having every appearance of being the belle of the show. A lot of life was put into play by Burnett, the tireless chorus girls. Brevard Burnett added largely to the fun by playing an imaginary game of craps. But it was the dancing more than anything else that made "Strut Miss" and "Every summer show." Charles Dutton in New York Evening World.
"DOC" ON JOB
Wilmington, Ohio—"Doe" Blair, one of the best known Colored men in the theatre in business, is in Wilmington, NC, for the costumes and scenery for the Elks minstrels. "Doe" has been with the Al G. Field company since 1920 and in that time has played practically every city in the United States. He Ed Corrad, manager of the Field company, who so generously donated the scenery and costumes for the Elk show, sent the shipment, he also sent "Doe" along to see that wager was right in every particular. "Doe" takes charge of the parade on the Field show, so he will unite the Elks and the Elk parade this afternoon—Wilmington (Ohio) News Journal.
Jones & Crumbley are at the Pantages theater, Portland, Ore.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
"WHERE IS MY WANDERING BOY TONIGHT?"
SALEM SEZ
"Shuffle Along" is well advanced in its second year with its popularity uninterrupted for a brief engagement in Boston and then it will sail for Europe in the late summer. The show is offered the largest guarantee ever given an American production. "Flintation Revive" featuring Florence Mills, Chilapee and Stinette and a rare assortment of vaudeville, musical and film pieces, they have been turned away at every performance. It is a show of class and rare excellence. Florence Mills, Chilapee and Stinette are the cream of Colored entertainers. Other great features of the bill are the music by John C. McCormick, Four and the Seven Musical Spillers, Shelton Brooks did a single that kept the audience convulsed with laughter, a musical orchestra, which, under the skillful direction of the master musician, Holley, gave a wonderful performance.
I had the pleasure of seeing the Bandana City, N.J. Howard and Brown are the scentifying stars of this entertainment. Trixie Smith is a genius. Four were a real treat, the voices blending in perfect harmony. Emma Wheeler is captivating manner. The Bandana girls cannot be beat by any other like beauty, gracefulness, and pet. Miss Virginia Wheeler is being featured joyfully revived by Irvin C. Miller at the Lincoln theater. Sandy Burns, Sam Russell and company furnish next week's attraction at the Lincoln. It is rumored that Johnucker is to be shown over the No. 1 wheel the coming season. Also Miller & Lyles are to have are to have a burlesque franchise.
THE DIXIE
High Point, N. C.—H. A. Marshall has taken over the management of the Dixie theater here and nothing else he has in vaudeville, stock and picture has been in the way, so the pretty little house has gained a great deal of popularity.
STAGE
JAZZ FACTORIES TURN
OUT LATEST SONG HITS
American rattleman is now factory-made. Popular songs no longer are the products of lone, gritted individuals, but they are made in parts. Their various parts are created and assembled with the same speed and mechanical perfection as motor cars. Who wrote the song hits the band of the authors, those to whom they are credited, but nobody remembers the names of the authors anyway—it is hard enough to remember the names of the songs, says a special correspondent of the authors. In these times times the life of a popular song hit is scarcely longer than the life of a toothbrush. It wear out quickly under intense pressure and is no longer new one. Enthusiasts like to buy half a dozen songs at one time and play them incessantly for perhaps a month, supplementing their own etiquette. They record graph records of the same tunes. At such merciless repetition even the most sympathetic car is certain to rebel, so that it is not long before the wranglerly wear of these cars becomes the them with five or six new numbers.
Jazz Factories Now
In the face of such an enormous and ever-changing demand, the independent song artist could not hope to up large jazz factories, capable of producing and marketing many songs a year. Irving Berlin, for example, was the private owner of his own home, now has a large and sumptuous jazz factory, containing twenty-two sound-proof studios and employing a staff of 175 person. Mr. Berlin's plant, it is true, the air factory atmosphere is obscured by decoration. The studios are finished in mauve and French gray, with a large, thick, ivy locker chars upholstered with flowered cretonne, wall friezes depicting the muses in gray and festive colors. With these concessions to art the routine of song-production proceeds as briskly as any other business. This includes two important tasks: general manager of the general manager of the Berlin plant.
"One is to take the germ of an idea," he says, "synchronize it to the tempo of the hour and make it into a technically perfect song hit. These ideas come (from two sources—the staff writers and the inspired out-
Building a Song
Suppose you belong to the latter class. You write a set of verses which you think would make a snappy song. You take it to it. Morn. Borrow. "How about the melody?" he immediately asks you. "Got any ideas for that?" he believes you have. Accompany him to his private, sound-proof office, which contains a grand piano, you whistle a few bars into his critical ear. "Listening, attentively, the piano plays." The piano until the substance of a connected song appears. Then he pushes a button and a staff writer comes on. He borrows a chorus and couple of times with his friend of times, after which you and the staff writer adjourn to another sound-proof room, where you devote the day to perfecting the manuscript. "Then this first rough draft," ex-
MAMIE
scores TWO
THE WOMEN'S HERITAGE
MAMIE SMITH, q
has added two
famous OKeh list. W
Smith fan already, b
these two wonderful
Try Any O
MAMIE SMITH, queen of race artists, has added two new triumphs to her famous OKeh list. You may be a Mamie Smith fan already, but wait until you hear these two wonderful records!
4630
10 in.
75c
LONESOME MAMA BLUE
Mo
NEW ORLEANS-Popular
Mo
4631
10 in.
75c
DEM KNOCK-OUT BLUE
Mo
MEAN DADDY BLUES-
Mo
8025
10 in.
75c
STINGAREE BLUES-Con
If THAT'S WHAT YOU
8031
10 in.
75c
MUSCLE SHOALS BLUE
SHE WALKED RIGHT U
Con
8032
10 in.
75c
STATE STREET BLUES-
VIRGINIA BLUES-Con
4318
10 in.
75c
JELLY ROLL BLUES-Con
4318
10 in.
75c
SOUTHERN JACK-Color
4830 in
17c **LONESOME MAMA BLUES~Popular Colored Singer~**
*Mamie Smith and Her Jazz Hounds* ★
*NEW ORLEANS~Popular Colored Singer~*
*Mamie Smith and Her Jazz Hounds* ★
4831 in
17c **DEM KNOCK-OUT BLUES~Popular Colored Singer~**
*Mamie Smith and Her Jazz Hounds* ★
*MEAN DADDY BLUES~Popular Colored Singer~*
*Mamie Smith and Her Jazz Hounds* ★
8025 in
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*If THAT'S WHAT YOU WANT, HERE IT IS, with Orchestra~Ether Biguout*
8032 | STATE STREET BLUES—Controllo with Orchestra
8032 | Lizzie Miles
8175 | VIRGINIA BLUES with Orchestra—Lizzie Miles
OK&H Records The Records of Quality
"Lonesome Mama Blues" and "Dem Knock-Out Blues"
SIX BEST SELLERS
ACTORS AND CRITICS
A correspondent of the New York Times wants to know why actors and actresses are so much more sensitive about criticism of their performances than are painters, sculptors and writers. Of course, actors and actresses are much more sensitive. May this correspondent, are the most captious and unreasonable under any form of criticism.
The reason is not far to seek. All people are far less sensitive about what they do than about what they themselves are. The pleasures of the performer are not as much as how much of his mental and physical self has gone into the labor of painting it. The writer is often said to put himself into his books, but as a matter of fact his books are simply a product he has turned out.
The actor offers performance for sale, as does also a musical interpreter. What those who see and criticize look at and listen to is the actor or musician himself or herself. A performance is not a concrete thing. It has no life or substance except in the memories of those who see and hear it gone. The man or woman who sees and hears it is left and comes to the target of criticism. It is difficult for the stage performer to divorce himself from his performance in thought, and it is highly probable that the public takes little conscious thought of a performance as distract from the performer. So the actor is not how much he sees and hears it, but is put in the position of criticism of the actor or the singer. The personal element does enter into this matter, whether it is logical that it should or not.
The actor sells so intangible a product that he himself stands for the product. This is why he takes criticism of his work so much more than he appears to the little section in his attitude toward criticism—Rochester Democrat-Chronicle.
plains Mr. Bornstein, "goes to another staff writer, who makes a technically perfect plano arrangement; to another staff writer, a arrangement; to another who makes an orchestral arrangement; to another who arranges it for dancing, to another who arranges it for band. It is the work of still another staff writer to improvise various cues and 'gangs' for it, so that it can be introduced into vaudeville
Ready for Exploitation
When the story emerges from this process, a finished product which is the work of half a dozen men, it is suggested that the factory's most important task. Thirty thousand copies of the song are printed and distributed to 30,000 orchestra leaders in all parts of the country. The factory receives 20,000 professional copies. Special salesmen must interest vaudeville principals in its use. The rights of mechanical reproduction machines and player-piano companies. The song must be extensively advertised in the trade papers. All of these things must be attended to before the sales force enters the music store field.
An important item in marketing a song is its cover. Songs with a wide popular appeal are not nearly as popular as the more musically appealing Love Near ' and "Whispering," which were distinctly of this order, were only two out of dozens of songs marketed the same year. But these other outliers of their lack of charm, probably because of their attractive covers. A good cover contains the title of the song in large, clear print and an extremely simple design. A wholly white cover is often used for white letters has achieved great popularity, while yellow also is likely to attract the attention of the public.
Songs That Sell on Looks
There are some songs, known to the trade in "counter songs," which are often marketed in covers. They are so lacking in appeal that no one expects the buyers to sing them, yet some of them have achieved a sales of more than 300,000 copies. The most important element of the publishers, the "counter song" may be anything from a
SMITH
NEW HITS in
queen of race artists,
new triumphs to her
you may be a Mamie
at wait until you hear
records!
One Of These
SELLERS
ES-Popular Colored Singer-
Smith Smith and Her Jazz Hounds ★
Colored Singer-
Smith Smith and Her Jazz Hounds ★
ES-Popular Colored Singer-
Smith Smith and Her Jazz Hounds ★
Popular Colored Singer-
Smith Smith and Her Jazz Hounds ★
Contrato with Orchestra-
Esther Bigsou
WANT, HERE IT IS-Contrato
with Orchestra-Esther Bigsou
Contrato with Orchestra-
Esther Bigsou
AND TOOK MY MAN AWAY-
Contrato with Orchestra-Lizie Miller
fox-trot to a sentimental ballad, but it is always something which has cost the song factory very little, probably not more than $50, paid to the song factory. The "name cover" featuring the author of the song and sometimes including his likeness, is temporarily out of fashion, for it has been found the execution of one or two familiar names, the has been intimated, and Irving Berlin, the name of the writer on a cover is merely a waste of print. The public does not see it. The name has been intimated, names are handled rather carelessly by song factories.
"Staff writers," says one song writer, "put their names on many numbers which they may have heard before." The writer thinks it is entitled to a split on the
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428 BOWEN AVENUE.
USTON BLU
SEASON'S BEST FOX TROT
Q. R. S. U. S. Nimball and
Wurlitzer and Clark rolls, for
several large phonograph record
sound Music, Sec. Orchestrations
from your jobber or direct from the
V. THOMAS MUSIC
UE.
VISIT POPULAR
OIN CARL
Finest Equipped Theater Outside the Loop. 1200 Roamy Seats
MUSIC BY THE BEST ORCHESTRA EVER ASSEMBLED
CLARENCE LEE, Director
SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922
ties and authorship for introducing the writer to a publisher. Some houses make it a practice to sign house names with the writer they attach to everything. Many writers who are in with the publishers buy up songs, outright for a fee, or pay a related paid matter from own work. There was a very popular war song which made a great dual of money for a couple of follows of the same material matter of fact they bought it outright from a poor fellow who needed a little coin right away. Another big hit of several years ago was the work of a young amateur song writer to a man who placed it on a royalty basis."
One Writer Sues
In one case a young amateur song writer sold a melody and lyrics to a song producing plant for $50. It might have been a song that came very popular. Believing that he had been deliberately deceived as to its real value, the young man brought in a recording and the market has been widowed from the market pending development.
n Restaurant
E AVE., NEAR 39TH ST.
KENWOOD 3461
: : : WE NEVER CLOSE
Fabulous Place of Amusement
TAINERS — WONDERFUL
FECT DANCING FLOOR
AT REASONABLE PRICES
NO COVER CHARGES
Class and Distinction
"JAMES, MANAGER
E "NETHERWOOD"
B. A.
Booking Association)
and THEATER MANAGERS
ocate with the
B. A.
CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
uite 442-3-4 Volunteer Life Building,
oooga, Tenn.
th Street, N. W., Washington, D. C.
ON BLUES"
BEST FOX TROT-SONG.
S. S. Kimball and other leading player
Clark rolls, for electric pianos. Are
graphic record companies.
Orchestrations, 35c.
or direct from the publishers.
AS MUSIC COMPANY
CHICAGO, ILL.
POPULAR
GARDEN'S
---
TAEKWAN
One Writer Sues
Tony Langston's MOVIE and STAGE DEPARTMENT
Sunset Cafe CHICAGO'S CLASSIEST PLEASURE PALACE
Corner Thirty-fifth Street and Calumet Avenue Birthplace and Home of Jazzaway Jazzcopiation
New Entertainment Each Week
Best of CHINESE and AMERICAN DISHES
All Styles and Kinds
ALL TAXI AND CAR LINES LEAD TO THE SUNSET
Your evening of pleasure is not complete without a visit to Calumet Avenue and 35th Street
ENTERTAINERS:
ALBERTINE PICKENS
GENEVIEVE STERN
IOLA YOUNG
MISS RICKS
"STRAPPY" JONES,
THE SENSATIONAL DANCER
Each artist a Man o' War for pepl. Glance at em. Can you beat that line-up?
Dance by CARL DICKERSON'S "SNAPPY" ORCHESTRA
RIFAS & FOX, Proprietors
BUDDY MILLER, Manager
SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922
'OVER THE BORDER'
Prohibition and the arguments for and against it, stories of bootleggers and the newspapers, fill the newspapers. The liqueur question is still one of the grave opportunities for dramatic treatment, and one of the best of these is disclosed in *Over the Border* by Stuart Stirling. The production featuring Betty Compson and Tom Moore, which opens a three-day, the Vendome theatrical run.
Betty Compson, as the daughter of the man who smuggles liquor in wholesale quantities across the United States-Canada and the heart of a royal mounted policeman charged with enforcing the law, has a fine emotional role while the part opposite her, that of a playwright, is played by Tom Moore. The picture was taken in the mountains, amid the snows, and is pictorially very beautiful. Individually, every detail is included in the picture, marks the artistic sense which made Penrhyn Stanlaws a power in the artist world before becoming a director. The marketing company is wholly adequate.
MAIL RADIO
New York—"Step On It," a Colored
Ballet has been formed by Worth, Blumenstein
& Co. will present the attraction,
which will begin on Wednesday, weeks out of town the show will be brought into New York, though whether
it will be a performance or not has been decided.
There will be two white ballet turns,
including line-up of eight Colored dancers, including "Holiday in
Wichita," Lena Williams, Greenele and
Draxton and Scott, Thunning & Ray,
appeared in Colored houses which inquire
in the out-of-town bookings of Colored
The show will open at the Standard
(Philadelphia) next week. We will be there,
it will play on percentage. There will
be about forty performers following the refusal of Venita Gould to remove the image of Venita Gould in her imposition of Lomore Uric in the "Sun-Laugh-
Both acts opened for the last half
Thursday. In the killing scene from
imposition, Miss Could prays to the
Chinese god. The Chinese act followed
to the presence of an image of
their god on the stage. Miss Gould de-
The argument increased in intensity between Walt Disney and the audience to adjust it, but could obtain no concessions from Miss Gould.
On a late afternoon the controversy grow warmer. At that time the Chinese also complained because of a lack of proper setting of their apparatus. No satisfaction was secured by the foreign pay contract for the engagement, they said. The matinee. Although holding a play-army contract for the engagement, they still continued the remainder of the last half with four acts instead of five.
Atlantic City, — "Up and Down," the Globe last week, had something of a struggle before members of its cast were able to perform. The week proved to be a poor one, despite the show was heralded as a success. The troupes left on tickets bought with their own money. Others and most of the show baggage arrangements were made about salaries, and the more optimistic of the company announce that the show would open in New York next week.
The Weeks Movies
STATES—Pardon My Neerve, fourth
Cinderella of the Hills, three days, end-
ing Saturday of Where Is My Wander-
er Tonight, Sunday, Gleam of
Dawn.
PHOENIX—Gas, Oil and Water,
over Spurs, Evidence, Bought and Paid
for, Sunday, Yellow Men and
Brown, Sawing a Basket, each of Up
Robinson, each of Up, each of Up
And Going and A Sage Romance, Shik
of Araby, Sunday, a big Western spe-
cies.
VENDEMIA—Three days each of
Grande, Cross the Continent.
Sunday, Across the Continent.
QWL—The Railing Passion, two days
in My Wandering Joy Tonight
Sun
in My Wandering Joy Tonight
ATLAS—The Incredible Pear, Travel
to the Old Sinithin' Hole, Flipping of Nigh-
t, FICKPORN—Restless Souls, two days
each of Hate and Impaired Missing
Souls.
!
GEORGIA MINSTRELS
Time changes all things, but for ten years out West the little city of Wallace, Idaho, has not changed from its Winnia lace in the center of the mining district to four other little cities only a short distance away, needed for ten years, to my knowledge. It has been important to get served in any cafe in Georgia. Minolta were invited out to their hall girl and a few of our girls a good business, were welcomed in West. Coy Herndon
Coy Herndon
"To tells me all I has to do, is to sit down by his chair.
De good Laudé sent de angels down
a-singing joe' for me.
LETTERS
as I must retire early. I am opening tomorrow at Trooper's Fiftieth Avenue on a new man. I have a bingo player now, Fred Vauckin, formerly of the New Carrier, I have a bingo player now, Fred Vauckin, formerly of the New Carrier, Garvin Bushnell, formerly of the Black Swan Trounshorne, yesterday for Europe. I am sorry to relate of the death of Jesus. I have not received full particulars of his death. Tony, I certainly am grateful that the senior has profited in the past year. Autos are as common among them now on the road, Sissie has a iRamer, Euble Blake a Paike, Percy Bradford a boo, a boo and there are dozens of others I haven't seen yet. I took my first lesson on cars and there are dozens of others I haven't seen yet. When you come in this summer look me up at the Castle, 205 Second Avenue all there. When you come in this summer look me up at the Castle, 205 Second Avenue all there. Your call. THOMAS. D. S. Tell your const dope scribe to remain "taut" about the Oliver. The gang is kicking on those blues to hit the singer. Regards to you wife and gang.
HARRY ROYAL JACKSON
Whose hall will he sit in?
A. street, Waldborf hotel, Cauper, Wyo.
Washington, D.C.
Dear Tony: "How to hear you?
these hard times? But I guess an eulcer for a paper like the Defender never hard times hard, you know the year you wear, and well you might be, for yours is America's great paper. The rest are merely parades and some not even good ones at
THE ACTORS' BLUES
Why, hello, bub! how your act? Act! Act! You know certainly must be right; I'm singing for S. II. tonight.
You know the offices do appreciate an act that's really up to date. I've studied hard to get the right So I have some where to sing tonight.
Now take a tip from one who knows—you want a chance in shows. If yours is good your agent might Have a place for you to sing tonight.
But the actor who depends on booze Has much at stake and needs to lose, And the man says, "You can't sing to night."
Now, boys, get busy; let's all work hard To make our act a drawing, card And all we have a place to sing tonight. So well all we have a place to sing tonight.
FRIED LAJOV
GETTING READY
New York—Gee, E. Wintze of Clinton, which purchased the readings of "Shuffle Along" for the Eastern and Middle states, arrived in New York to start engaging his people and start rehearsals at once for an opening at Aubury Park week of July 10. He will be overlooked in having an attraction up to the standard of Miller and Lyles productions and was engaged in the manager, Mr. Collins has long been identified with Colored attractions, and knowing in Collie that he has been the best manager, Mr. Wintze has made a good selection. "Shuffle Along" has been booked through the Erlanger and has been the best theaters throughout the territory included in Mr. Wintze's territory, and a long season is assured any nominee will be encouraged in his organization. Rehearsals start Monday, July 10.
ADOLPH ZUKOR PRESENTS
"OVER THE
BORDER"
WITH
BETTY COMPSON
AND TOM MOORE
U.S. CANADA
When love bewitches
duty, which does a
man forget?
The answer's, written
in thrills in this great-
est of all dramas of
the North.
MON., TUES. AND WED., JULY 10, 11 AND 12
HAMMOND'S
VENDOME
STATE STREET—31st BLOCK
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Washington D.C.
JESSE SHIPP, JR., DEAD
By William White
New York, June 7—Funeral services for Jesse Shipp, Jr., son of Jesse Shipp, Sr., well known in the theatrical
circles, who died
a victim of
sacrifice in
his home. 172
W. 138th street,
Tuesday, night.
W. 138th street,
W. 138th
held Sunday
Mother Zion
church. West
138th street. The
Mother Zion
brown, the
pastor, officiated.
Interment was
died in
cemetery. More
hundreds of
a victim of heart trouble at the hospital
W. 138th street.
Tuesday night, June 27, were Sunrise at
Mother Zinn church. West 138th street. The
Rev. J. W. Warren, the pastor, officiated.
Interment was in Wooddawn
cemetery. Many of persons attended the funeral. Mr. Shipp had been in poor health as a result of an automobile accident several weeks ago from which he never sustained internal injuries that afflicted
Jesse Shipp, Jr., was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, 38 years ago, and was awarded the Ohio State University association torsional parlament. Seventh between 133th and 135th street, which for a number of years has been the hunters or hundreds of our greatest honorees, he has been that a visiting athlete never come to Harlem without giving the Association the "once over." Shipp was youngest, and for this reason he was probably known to them better than any other man in Gotham. Youngsters, and for this reason he was called by thousands, but the growers as well for his pleasing personal appearance, and for his experienced advertising man, and had succeeded in building up a lucrative business as a side line. He, too, was a baseball umpire of no little ability, and with boxers. In the early days last fall when boxing shows made their bow to the public at the Fifth Avenue, and familiar figure and his sincerity in not allowing a bout to continue when a boy was in distress won for him the ball of the fans, both black and white.
It was at one of these famous boxing shows that Jesse took the title to the name "the real pinch hitter," and he was the first to unimpress a baseball game the Sunday previous; had discovered him during the week distributing advertising placards, and when on a Felix Fryski show, he was the third man in the ring, he said to our reporter: "Why, this guy is a real pinch hitter," and so he was. He was always willing to fill in the gaps he was needed, and he did his work well. The Jesse Shipp association, of which Andrew Bishop is president, will miss his leader, but it is hoped that he will be remembered name. The deceased is survived by his widow, Olivia, and his father Jesse Shipp, Sr., and other relatives.
"BLACK SWAN" ARTISTS
New York, July 3—Two numbers by Trixie Smith head the July releases just announced by the Black Swan record people. They are "He Yay You Manthe" and "He Yay You Manthe" and "Fenselou Bues." Both of these records seem to have sprung into instant popularity. After touring the country since the latter part of October, Field Waters, queen of blues singers, will finish her road tour very shortly. Arrangements are being made to bring her to New York in the near future, so she will be performing with her company on another extended tour in this country. A musical organization to spring into sudden popularity in the Baltimore Blues orchestra, which is now doing exclusive recording for Black Swan records, "Why, Dear" and "Learn to Smile" are two fox toulouse opera troupes to dancers in the July releases.
LULU COATES & CO.
San Diego, Cal, July 3. Louie Coates & Crackerjacks are featured on one of the best hikes ever at the local location. The onsite tics on this act indicated that it was one far above the average, and the turn, which is a fast moving show at every performance. The entire group making up this unit is far above the average, presenting a fast moving show at the event. Next week, Long Beach, Cal.
POLICE BAND
Henderson Smith, the famous musician, and cornetist, his charge of the new band which has lately been called the Chicago police department. Rehearsals have been going on for some time and Henderson states that fine progress is being made. This group will be added to it from time to time.
HAYS AND CENSORSHIP
NOTE OR TWO
NOTE OR TWO
BLACK SWAN RECORDS
7103 { THE BELL SONG (Lakme)—
*By Florence Cole Talbert*
7104 { THE KISS (II Bacio), Arditi—By Florence Cole Talbert
*THE LAST ROSE OF SUMMER*—By Florence Cole Talbert
7206 { SO LONG, BERT—By George P. Jones, Jr.
*NIGHT AND YOU*—By George P. Jones, Jr.
7258 { HAWAIAN BLUES—By Haynes' Harlem Syncopators
*MELODY IN "F"—By Haynes' Harlem Syncopators
735c { LANTERN OF LOVE—By Haynes' Harlem Syncopators
*YOU LOUGHT TO SEE MY BABY*—
*By Haynes' Harlem Syncopators*
759c { COOANUT DANCE (Banjo Solo)—By Danny Lewis
*KITTEN ON THE KEYS (Piano Classic)—By George Brown
765c { SATURDAY (Dance)—Baltimore Blues Orchestra
765c { DAPPER DAN (Dance)—Baltimore Blues Orchestra
759c { HONEY LOVE—By Marion Harrison
759c { CARIBBEAN MOON—By Marion Harrison
795c { JELLY ROLL BLUES—By Excelsior Norfolk Quartette
795c { CONEY ISLAND BABE—By Excelsior Norfolk Quartette
757c { JACOB'S LADDER—By Harrold's Jubilee Singers
757c { JOSHUA FOUGHT THE BATTLE OF JERICHO—
*By Harrold's Jubilee Singers*
Other Recent Records
2053 { ST. LOUIS BLUES—Handy's Memphis Blues Band
YELLOW DOG BLUES—Handy's Memphis Blues Band
2054 { MUSCLE SHOALS BLUES—Handy's Memphis Blues Band
SHE'S A MEAN JOB—Handy's Memphis Blues Band
HE MAY BE YOUR MAN, BUT HE COMES TO SEE ME
SOMETIMES—
2049 { Lucille Nagamin and Her Blue Flame Syncopators
I'VE GOT THE WONDER WHERE WENT AND WHEN
HE'S COMING TO ME—
2048 { Lucille Nagamin and Her Blue Flame Syncopators
TRIXIE BLUES—By Trixie Smith
DESPERATE BLUES—By Trixie Smith
LONG LOST WEARY BLUES—Trixie Smith
YOU MISSED A GOOD WOMAN WHEN YOU PICKED ALL
OVER ME (WILLIAM)—Trixie Smith
THE SHEIK—By Henderson's Dance Orchstra
WHO'LL BE THE NEXT ONE (TO CRY OVER YOU)—
By Henderson's Dance Orchstra
DEAR OLD SOUTHLAND—Fred Smith and His Society Orch.
I'VE GOT MY HABITS ON—Fred Smith and His Society Orch.
BLUE DANUBE BLUES—Sammmy Swift's Jazz Band
HAVE YOU FORGOTTEN—Sammmy Swift's Jazz Band
Be the first to say "Have you heard the new Black Swan
Records." Go to a Black Swan dealer TODAY
and hear the records listed above.
PACE PHONOGRAPH CORPORATION NEW YORK
All correspondence must reach the O. R. T. Desk no later than Tuesday to insure publication.
Jessie Bradley states in an enlightened address to 2020 Kater street, Philadelphia, Pa.
Faith of stock famies are spending their summer vacation at their home, 2020 Kater street. Philadelphians would like to hear from their friends.
Manzie Richardson is with the New York ballet circle, traveling through Iowa. Margaret Yuen states that she is satirizing Giacomo Giacomo. So are we, Marce, Mall sent. The ballet theater, Memphis, Tennessee are having fine success at the Palace theater, Memphis. Hitt Jenna Smith, with the Tim Moore Folk Theater, Memphis. Palace theater, Memphis. Teen.
Goldman & Goldman state that their theater, the Lincoln Center, Cleveland, O. They are circulating among the "O'fays" in Cleveland. Nelson Tison, with Kid, Josie and Littleton, plays in the Lyric theater, New Orleans, La. Daneting Dotson, playing the present "N.J." in the Lincoln Center. N.J. logieres Bill Robinson jump all the way from Chicago to open a return
NEW
BLACK
RE
7103 { THE B
$1.00} By
7104 { THE B
$1.00} THE L
2056 { SO LO
75c} NIGHT
2058 { HAWA
75c} MELO
2059 { LANT
BLACK SWAN
RECORDS
75c
YOU
BY
2051
COCO
KITTE
75c
2054
SATU
DAPP
75c
2055
HONE
CARIB
75c
2060
JELLY
CONE
75c
2057
JACO
JOSHI
Oth
2053
ST. LU
YELLA
75c
2054
MUSC
SHE'S
75c
HE M
SO
2049
I'VE G
H
BLACK SWAN
RECORDS
2039
75c
TRIXI
DESP
2044
75c
LONG
YOU
2043
75c
THE
WHO
2052
75c
DEAR
IPE
2042
75c
BLUE
HAVE
Be the first
Record
PACE PHON
enagement at the Orpheum theater
San Francisco, Cal.
Rucker & Winfried are at the Emory
theater, Providence, R. L.
duhter, Providence, R. L.
Seymour & Jeanneite are at the Pan-
ticaukee Museum.
Lulu Coates & Crackerjacks are playing the week at the Pentagons theater. Filler & Perry are taking a much needed rest. Mali will reach them for the weekend. South Park avenue, 3522 South Park avenue, Chicago. Ill. Filler & Perry are taking a much needed rest. Mali will reach them for the weekend. Pittsburgh, W. W. Winehouse, managing, has been closed for repairs, having been renovated and redecorated in a manner which makes the place more comfortable. A a line has been arranged for. Mason & Bailey are playing the week at the Pentagons. Md. Mason & Bailey are playing the week at the Pentagons with four more weeks to go, are playing their second week at the Lafayette theater. New York City. The Ethel Waters Black Swan Troubadore are back home and playing at the Lafayette theater. New York City. Manhattan Four, with S. H. Gray, M. Gray, and T. Gray, are treated with the Shuffle Hotel Revue, are at the Lamare Hotel, Atlantic City, N. J. Rasa Woldride, with the John Robinson Tragedy is, showing this week at Lishman Bay, Manilleow and Kenosha, Wis. and Aurum, Ill. in the order named. The 11th week is celebrated "Syncopation" group are at the Mountain Park Casino, Hollyoke, Mass.
Jefferson & Milk Broadway & The Fortress theater, Washington, D. C. theater, Washington, D. C. played the final of a successful two weeks engagement at the New Queen theater, Anaston, Eldridge & Spencer, very busy, are at the theater, Washington, D. C. this week.
Coleman & Johnson, very popular on the T. O. B. game, are at the Lincoln Center. The Cornell trio, one of the cleverest three in the bit, are at the Booker T. D. Smith Museum. Magnolia Brown is authoress of the important statement that "The Great Gatsby" street, Kansas City, Mo. Miss B. Mitchell remarks that the world can communicate with her by addressing its communications to the Harvey hotel, 319 Broad street, Jack-
Mader Mack tells the universe that
CK SV
ECORD
NOW ON SALE
BELL SONG (Lakema)—
By Florence Cole Talbert
LAST ROSE OF SUMMER—By Florence Cole
LAST ROSE OF SUMMER—By Florence Cole
LONG, BERT—By George P. Jones, Jr.
HINT AND YOU—By George P. Jones, Jr.
WAIIAN BLUES—By Haynes' Harlem Syncope
LOY IN "F"—By Haynes' Harlem Syncope
TERN OF LOVE—By Haynes' Harlem Syncope
PAGE SEVEN
NT
mail will reach him at 211 Begin street, New Orleans, La.
John O'Neill, Vigal, your mother and other relatives want to hear from you, Address 1326 Gratlot avenue, Dept. Mattie Dorsey is having fine success in the South. She is playing the week entertainer that Merton Summum, and sends regards to Ada, Chattman, Cortinne Adams and Delta Watson, entertainer, who has been ill. has returned her at 2325 North 22nd street, that town, West. Walton, head of the Black Swan Troopadours, has returned to Little Ole New York and states that the tour of Ethel McGinnis, the greatest success in the history of that sort of entertainment. Mail 2289 7th
Samba Reef would like to hear from
their friends at Address Rex theater, 2d street, Charlotte.
Drake-Walker Bom Bay Girls, the hardest working group in the game, have been having a wonderful time fishing, looting, and playing the water. Next week, Reverie Bouch, Boston, Mass.
MME. TALBERT HITS
New York, July 3—Mine, Colei-
record for the Black Swan records,
recently scored such a big hit before
Rex G. White of the Detroit News
made favorable reference to this
wonderful singer in the following
"Florence Cole-Talbert, declared by many to have a voice rivaling Gallie, has been a brilliant singer found difficulty in getting away from her audience, although she obliges. For her number 10 album, he forges an apoise of great range and sweetness, her vocal flexibility is marked and gives an elation to her voice. She made an tremendous hit with her audience."
That the music loving public applauds her, "the blues" is being evidenced by the big demand made since June for "The Bell Song," which Ms. Talbert recorded for the Face Phonograph corporation.
MORE STAGE—NEXT PAGE
"HE MAY BE YOUR MAN, BUT HE COMES TO SEE ME SOME TIMES"
Singe Racquelle Negunda
Played by Glance Johnson
"I'M FREE, SINGLE, DISENGAGED, LOOKING FOR SOMEONE TO LOVE"
"It TOOK A WILD WOMAN TO MAKE A TAME MAN OUT OF ME"
Phonogram
$2.50 for 1 book
3 for $2.25.
Man Played Word Rell=
$1.00; 2 for $1.80; 3 for $2.40
30c each.
These prices include shipping charges.
DEALERS, WRITE FOR SPECIAL DISCOUNTS
Ted Browne Music Co., Inc.
Publishers, Mire, and Jobbers
207 S. Wabash Ave.
Chicago, Ill.
NEW
WAN
DS
LE
e Cole Talbert
ence Cole Talbert
ir.
Syncopators
Syncopators
Syncopators
NEW
BLACK SWAN
RECORDS
Janny Lewis
By George Brown
Orchestra
Orchestra
Bulk Quartette
Folk Quartette
Singers
RICHO
God's Jubilee Singers
Records
Blues Band
Blues Band
Daphia Blues Band
Blues Band
MES TO SEE ME
Flame Syncopators
VENT AND WHEN
Flame Syncopators
BLACK SWAN
RECORDS
and His Society Orch.
and His Society Orch.
Jazz Band
It's Jazz Band
New Black Swan
aler TODAY
above.
CORPORATION
PAGE EIGHT
ADDITIONAL STAGE
Melodies Mixed With Tom Toms and Underworld Hilarity Produce It
In an upstown music store which tured for the minstrel trade out of evony and other woods and known as trade for a half a century, is a rattle bones. The playing of these white-haired clerk who specializes in a sailing music store, he now virtually a lost art, but sold at a sold out level of assorted hurry and noise devices in his time. He can name instruments of all na- melodies and produced what are now melodies mixed with Tom Toms and Underworld Hilarity Produce It
In an uptown music store which has catered to theatrical and orchestral trade for a half a century, is a white-haired clerk who specializes in selling music and has a shipboard of assorted harmony and noise devices in his time. He can name instruments of all nations and he is an expert on jazz, though he hardly knows with his fingers the drummer and his father's air, save the New York Sun.
"Some of the musical compositions jazzed at an early day were the height of synaposition. I recall one known as 'The Darkey's Dream,' with a tempo quite as exhilarating as the jazz numbers of the present.
"I have read, heard and talked a great deal about jazz since the early 1960s, the course and the other day, the broader classical and disliked music, of course, but it is my business to know about and to turn to the music that comes to turn-ing quick profit for the firm.
"Then came such compositions as 'The Forge in the Forest' and 'Barryard Echoes', which were known as descriptive numbers, these called 'bells', such as bells, bells, chimes, animal calls and the like. These were operated by the drummer, and from time to time new 'traps' were invented for the drummer, and his was the job to jazz up the overture or the incidental num-
"There is much about jazz that has never been printed. For instance, the early American musician who was an age of turbulent musical splendor to come, and they attempted jazz. The Negro, from whom jazz brought cultured chants with them from Africa, and for their gayer moments they evolved an aggrieved theme that was not unlike our present day jazz."
"With the saxophone, at first a trick instrument, and later a recognition came into its own. Some soul for jazz was inspired to bring the banjo to jazz. The saxophone jazzer in it had never jazzered before. Synception led to stop-time and stop-time to saxophone. The stop-time the saxophonist began carrying forward a harmonious offshoot to the real melody, handing back later into the main melody."
"Into this, out of the air one might say in this age of radio, came the Indian tom-tom choral musical idea. General musical idea. Turkish music, which made a raging hit at Chicago during the Columbian exhibition in 1883, added momentum, and from the Tenderloons of San Francisco, Norfolk, Cali, Illinois, also became scrambled with the other rhythmic voices and the resulting omelot was the present day
"Then the brass was muted and all jazz needed was sufficient space for the drummer to crash everything he had into it, what the world insists upon as the daily or rather nightly musical fare of the present day.
"Jazz is the tabasco that makes the music palatable. We have to have it."
"The first jazz instrument in this
classic album is the saxophone."
Then two pairs, later manufac-
tors.
COAST DOPE
VIRGINIA JOTTINGS
By Ragtime Billy Tucker
Armenia, Old Scars
Armenia, Old Scars
Virginia. "And boy, this weather
Los Angeles, Chile
and again in "Tia
Juan a."
Mexico,
the land of "wine,
where the stuff
is wine, the river
is the river,
where you don't
somebody's a lie
to drink it,
in which you have
one foot on the
observe a crook
on a crook
Naturally I will be
hair, which is
owned by "Sylv
been in Los An-
two days, but is
Dear Tony: By the time this letter
preaches you, I will again, be In. The
er! Wow! But it is hot! It is today was the year many years, so the natives say, If you could have hours are hours are hours you would hardly have recognized me, as
A. B.
"Raptime" Billy
---
Jos. Jones had j s t
under a displaced auto owned by
a friend of mine and in which we
had just gone out for a joy ride. A
few miles later. Then and there 1 had to
call my auto-knowledge into play
(at least work). Eventually we got
back home. After a cool bath I
woke up.
"Hardack Jackson's Wonders of 1822" did a very good week's hustle. The show is rounding into shape and will be headed west soon. It will open in Detroit at the Koppi theater on the 10th, with Chicago to follow.
Norfolk
The Attucks theater had three his
attractions last season at 26 and 27, Harrison
Jackson's Dramatic Players, with
Gertrude Banks and Wallace Terculi
own show, "The Devil's Protege."
According to an enclosed clipping
from the team's website, the
great impression, Jackson is quite a promising writer and
told me today he is or will be head-
ward there last in 1910. Terculi, his
right-hand man, will be with him
and they will drop in on the O. R.
"On the 28th Marcus Garvey "voiced his opinion" to about 1,200 people in New York City, merely of Brown and Everhard, presented a company of players with an interpretation of Elder Estmore's "The Stones" with an unknown comedian impersonating the famous "Bert A. Williams." The attraction was a performance of the comedian and was to appear on the 29th and 30th. I went over from Portsmouth on the 30th to view the show, but I was not able to see it. I waited for the day when I say canned) after the first performance. General reports have it that it was the rottenest performance ever seen. It is said there were some wonderful voices with the show. But the show itself had no theme. The performance was very funny. Mr. Brown will be remembered as having been connected with the Okeh Record company, and the performance will put something like that over on the public. It makes it had for a real company of artists. Here's hopkins hell offer something better the next
The Palace
"Mack's Merry Makers" were last week's attraction and did good business, included this week, headed by the "Knable Trifo," better known as the "Hall Clifford." Well, old-timer, the natives around the Fourth with races and big dolls for the Fourth with races and galore fame. I will waze on 'em and send you the dope. I noticed my name in the theater, Portsmouth, Va. I will see you soon if I don't melt away during this hot spell. Your old pal.
HAMTREE HITS
Hamnett Harrison, featured comedian with the "Strut Mist Lizzie" Comedy Company in York City, is getting some wonderful press notices in the papers of the metropolis. A clipping telling a story of interest regarding Hamnett's comedy business, issued Mall, 144 West 133rd street, apartment 2, New York, N. Y.
STAGE DOINGS
Silas Green of New Orleans, Co. is in grout success. Article next week.
S. H. Gray, the great bass and comedian, is a hit bib at Lamar's cabaret, in the Shuffle Along Review.
Owing to a slight operation, Patterson of Grant, Jones & Patterson of weeks, according to a letter received from Atlanta, Ga.
Chick Bibman is featured on a fine board at St. Louis, with Gwichinman following. Johnny Huddlin, comedian with Mille Lacs, New York city, is creating a vitable sensation. He starts rearranging at Chicou next month. Mall 213 West 135th street, New York, N. B.
Baby Tomhawk is with the Grand Central cafe, St. Louis, M. Mail, Grand Central hotel.
Williams & Williams, "The Blird." are in grout success. Norfolk, Va., the present week.
The Columbus Jackson trio is a hit this week. Kate, Chris, Kate, Chris, this is some trio.
RAGTIME BILLY TUCKER
JACK JOHNSON IS READY TO FIGHT "TUT" JACKSON
(Continued From Page 1)
messenger to the commissioners, after a short consultation they declared the bout out and notified all concerned to meet here on Monday, Friday, I o'clock. Long, before the hour newspaper men from Cincinnati, Boston, Columbus and other cities began to arrive. Telephones and telegrams follow were kept busy. At 12:30 the chief of police, a very nice officer, received a telephone message that
from Chelsea
Columbus and
other cities be-
come telephone
telephones and
telegraph offices
were kept busy,
they chief of police,
a very nice gentleman,
received a message
message that
Tut Jackson
and his manager
G. F. Casey and his manager were on their way from Washington, D.C. This message had hardly been delivered to the press and commissioners when Jack telephoned that he would come to Columbia to campaign in the Business picked up. The crowd began to swell. Jackson arrived on time and could hardly make his way to the crowd. Jack Arrives A few minutes later Jack Johnson drove up and way through to the mayor's office. The crowd was so large that it interfered with the city hall's regulation of fair sex trying to get a peep at the gladiators. The crowd was so big by this time the chief police agent, representatives, promoters, boxers and their managers and press representatives to the directors' room in the Y. M. C. A. behind closed doors. After the commissioners and others were seated the chief directors' order.
Jack demanded that the Defender representative have a seat next to him—that he wanted for once to let the world know what he had to say.
JACK JOHNSON
The secretary at once set about asking Jack direct questions that seemed to infer that Jack had the authority and authority of the commission. The secretary asked Jack why he had been refused to post a forbid card to his booklet and his pocket of typewritten matter. He said: "I wish to beg the pardon of the commission if I have in order to be allowed to proceed to answer their question intelligently he was told that he would have to explain his responsibility to the commission. He explained, however, that the Washington Court House commissioners had, without his authority, sent him to the commission. When it was finally decided that the houb could not be held in that city it was only through the aid of the entire department of the commission of his good faith money back. He said that he did not see any reason why he should have to put up another booklet to that he said he thought his word was as good as that of anyone connected with the affair. He felt the commission should be quipped; that both boxes and the promoters should be required to put up an equal amount to show good faith.
Cold Water
This statement threw a chill over the meeting and was a bitter disappointment to those in Jackson and Jackson district in Ohio. Jack broke the quietness by declaring that the manager of Jackson was using his phone to show the commission that he meant business he suggested that they get a pair of gloves and he held them up to show the commission that he fall guy every time his name was connected with any public affair, that he would show good faith. Was ready to go through with the match. It leaked out that Jackson's manager Akron, Ohio, showed good faith. Was ready to go through with the match. It leaked out that Jackson's manager Akron, Ohio, Jack openly said he would not consider any place to pull the fight until the Hamilton committee ultimately thanked the commission for giving him a chance to explain himself in public, jumped into his nightly bus, his training quarters, with the golden smile.
See Tut Jackson's picture on sport page.
New York, July 7—After attempting to kill Mrs. Emma Debue in her Brooklyn, Thursday night, Charles Washington, 45, shot and killed himself, according to the police of the City of New York. Mrs. Debue, a widow, who conducts a nursery for children at the St. John's hospital with a bullet wound in her neck and another in her right arm. She told the police that she was a distant relative but she does not know where to lived. She said Washington forced her wife to leave Brooklyn, but she repulsed him he drew a revolver.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
[Name]
DR. ROBERT RUSSA MOTON.
Principal of Tuskegee Institute, who, when he sought by a New York traffic officer in con Mr. Moton's rescue of an unknown white woman crushed under an automobile, replied, "Just say did it!" The white woman, fled from her res thanks and without recognition.
Principal of Tuskegee Institute, who, when his name was sought by a New York traffic officer in connection with Mr. Motton's rescue of an unknown white woman from being crushed under an automobile, replied, "Just say a black man did it!" The white woman, fled from her rescuer without thanks and without recognition.
TALKS IN SLEEP AND CONFESSES OLD MURDER
Her to Death
Washington, D. C., July 7.—If you talk in your sleep, please don't mention my name, runs the old song, Samuel Brown, 234 Second street Northeast, talks in his sleep and is alleged to be his wife in a one-night statement. He mentioned the name of Henry W. Reid, former saloonkeeper who was killed in front of his place of business in New York, and is now confessed killing Rebel to her later. At any rate, Brown has been arrested and a brother of his, thought to have had some money now being sought. Brown stoutly denies complicity. Oyster Knife Crime? Fourteen years ago a snowboarder made his way down a snow bank outside his place with 29 stab wounds in different parts of his body. An oyster knife and a pair of gloves were found in the crime. That was all the clue the authorities were ever able to get. It had been thought that the mystery would get unwrapped in the annals of unrestrained Brown's wife told the police about him. She claims to have done so because she was afraid the heist would
Relating the instance of her husband talking in his sleep, she told of how she was sitting on the bed. She says that, without walking him, she questioned him as to whom he had killed.
"A hartnard named Rold. he is shattered, and there upon leaped from his bed, fearing he had seen the dead man's ghost.
In the day Brown was standing up gazing out on a deck when his husband Delaware fell upon him and begged verification of the story he told in his dream. She declares that at first he did not want her to be fessed and beseeched her not to tell. He implicated his brother George.
"Talked About It"
"For a long time I believed that there was something serious on my husband's mind," said Mrs. Brown. "Frequently when he was feeding his horse in the stable lack of our house, he would not leave me alone, for God's sake."
I asked him several times
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e, who, when his name was
e officer in connection with
own white woman from being
applied, "Just say a black man
ed from her rescuer without
n.
If Thy Brother Smite Thee On the Left Cheek
The innate courtesy of the Race is always evident. Benten, bruised, scorned, walking in the shadows of the crowd, is the man kindness of existence, still the Race never forgets the chivalry of good though tragic breeding. The dispatches tell how Dr. Robert B. Walker, T. Washington at Tuskegee, rescued a white woman from the path of a swiftly moving automobile in the avenue, and amid applause of onlookers, quietly went his way. When a policeman overtook him to inquire as to his identity he said, "Just say a black man." The male members of the lady's family may be among those of the face or among those who hand themselves together to humilitate the Race. After case the conduct of this black man stands out in relief against the frowning sky of prejudice.
Say: The news dispatch from New York.
"Threading the traffic during Fifth avenue's most crowded hour, Fifth avenue stopped directly in the path of a swiftly moving automobile. A man dashed through the vehicles throught the street, and escaped the car from its arm and dragged her to safety. "Dazed by her sudden and unexplicable injury, from deformity failed to thank her rescuer. A traffic policeman was more alert. He stopped the man after he had taken dozen steps and asked his name. The stranger, who was a Negro, turned, "you going to arrest me?" he asked.
"No," said the officer, "That was a brave act, and I want to report it.
"Just say a black man did it," he said and turned away.
"The man was Dr. Robert Russia Moton, successor of Booker T. Fisk, the greece institute, major in the American army during the war, and one of the foremost figures of his Race in America."
what he meant, but he told me to mind my own business."
A trap was then laid for Brown. When he returned to his home at 2 o'clock in the morning he was con-
tracted by Detectives Servi-
cary Mullen and Messer and Night Inspector of Detectives Fred Cornwell. Taken awares, he was unable to put up a fight and in a flash the detectives had handicapped him and he was husted to police headquarters.
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508 S. Dearborn Street, Dept. 12A, Chicago, Ill.
OPERATION FATAL TO MISS HAYNES, Y.W.C.A. WORKER
Heart Failure Robs New York of One of Its Most Valuable Social Workers
New York, July 7—Miss Bryde
Henrietta Haynes, prominent social
worker, must last 10 years assoc-
tion with Miss
Jann Addams of
the cage, and with
Miss Lillian Wald
of the hospital
settlement in this
city, passed away
Friday, morning,
during the final
hospital following
an operation per-
formed h r o c
weeks ago.
Miss Haynes
Jane Addams of Hull house, Chicago and Lennon Wald of Henry Street settlement in this city, Friday morning, Friday morning, June 30. In a local hospital following operation performed in one weeks ago.
Funeral services were held Sunday at the church, Rev. W. Y. Bell, pastor. Rev. A. C. Garner of Grace Congregational church delivered the eulogy. As the church anorg processional was prayed; this was followed by singing the Grace Congregational church chorus, Dr. J. D. Bushell, pastor of Walker Memorial church, read the scripture song "St. John and offered prayer. Fisk University quartet, composed of Feed Work, Charles McDowell, Drs. E. E. Jubilee song, "We Shall Walk Through the Valley in Peace." Communications from the various organizations with which the deceased was involved
Those who spoke of their personal affection for Miss Haynes and their official appreciation for Walt head resident of Henry Street settlement; Cecil Bourne of Columbus Hill and Linchouse; Mrs. A. Clayton Powell, Geo. Simms and Mrs. S. Stuart executive secretary of the W. Y. C. A., read the obituary. A resolution from Union Baptist church stated in part: "No one who has ever missed more than she has missed more than she. Hundreds of boys and girls have been helped to find themselves and to live on a higher plane. Dr. Powell congratulated congregational church, Brooklyn, read the Twenty- third Psalm, a favorite of the deceased.
Born in Akransas
Byrdie Henrietta Haynes was born Nov. 21, 1863, at Pine Bluff, Ark. She attended a mission de la femme grammar school at Hot Springs, Ark. When the family moved she entered a little girl's school in Arkansas and later two years of her grammar school work in the preparatory course at Fisk university, in Arkansas. She then went to the same grammar course at Fisk in three years and took the full college course, graduating with the B.A. degree in 1909. She taught two years in the high school at Corsicana, Tex. and while there began her interest in work among the students, she was then awarded a fellowship offered by Julius Rosenwald (white) in the Chicago School Museum. During this course, she took up work as head assistant of Wendell Phillips settlement, a Hull house. Here she worked for three years under the su
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Philadelphia, Fa. July 7—Edward Richard has a reputation as a toughing phases him, according to statements of his fellow-workers. Things come and go with him and little's the difference with him. Recently he has been working on a building at Brond and Cherry streets. There was and is nothing new about Richard's hardened his way up four stories with a hod of bricks on his shoulders. He had the scaffolding up there his foot slipped and down he came. He hit the sidewalk and the bricks struck him. He re-entered the scaffolding, picked up his scattered bricks, and later walked over to the Hahnemann hospital, where he treated for slight cuts and lacerations on the head. No other damage done.
pervision of Miss Jane Addams and Miss S.'s P. Breckenridge. The success of Miss Lillian D. Walld and the management of the Henry Street settlement to be head resident at Lincoln house, a branch of Henry street, located in West 63d street. For the first half years she built up the work there.
Planned a Vacation
Last May the young woman was called to the 137th street branch Y. W. C. A., as secretary of girls' work. Mrs. Haynes was taking duties Sept. 1, taking a summer's rest and medical attention so as to be in full vigor in the fall. It was with her heart failure that she had a sudden hospital for an operation which was successful. When within a day or two of her leaving the institution, heart failure caused her to fall to the end. Since childhood Miss Haynes has manifested a devout spirit as a Christian. She was a member of Grace Congregational. The Community council of Columbus hill, comprisg about 50 men and women of Columbus the hill dissection. She was placed garlands upon the body. Dr. H. H. Proctor committed the body for burial. Miss Haynes was the sister of a known knelologist. Interment was at Woodlawn cemetery Monday.
The opening up of all trades and trade unions to blacks as well as whites.
SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922
HARDING SAVES DOG'S LIFE WITH SYMPATHY NOTE
Two Men Lynched in Georgia
for Whom He Did Not
Write Any Letters
One of the most ridiculous paradoxes ever noted was that which brought out, upon the same page of a certain eastern newspaper, the stories of how President and Mrs. Hardling had intervened to save the life of a dog which had been ordered executed by the authorities of Harrington, of the organization of the alien ownership act, the efforts of the members of the Ku Klux Klan in many states to remove Edward Y. Clark, imperial wizard, from office and the yanking of James Harvey and Joe Jordan at Jesup, Ga., after the two, who had been convicted of a crime and sentenced to prison, and whom he granted a 30-day reprieve, on account of new evidence having been uncovered which showed a possibility that the two men were innocent of the crime
There is no record of Harding and his wife ever having protested against this particular pair of bloody knives, and the pair has indeed killed has never been more than lukewarm in anything that he ever undertook to do or say regarding the knife. The fact that he affects the mob spirit of the low-browed beasts who seem to form the greater part of the population of mankind in S.A. That dog in Harrisburg received consideration from the president while these lynchings and burnings continue unabated and unpetted by him shows where his heart is.
It is hard to believe that he thinks that the life of a dog is worth more than the lives of the human beings that live in the deforestation of the "daily sports" programs indulged in by the Crackers below the sticks. As far as the reference to the Klan is concerned, we pass over it without comment. We are from a garbage pile. It will work itself away in the course of time.
NEW YORK CITY—BROOKLYN—LONG ISLAND
AUGUST, JULY 6, 112
MASON'S STRIKE OUT TO HASTEN KLAN'S DEMISE
Vigorously Deny Charges That Organizations Are Linked; Grand Masters Busy
New York, July 7.—The entire Masonic fraternity throughout the country has been kicking the Ku Klux Klan. This protest against the klan activities has come from the Masonic organizations used to influence public opinion in believing that the Masons of the nation are of kluxism. The Masonic officials charge that the klan promoters have been claiming Masonic sympathy and support for the masked empire, and that they are American in origin—un-Masonic organization. The indiscriminate propaganda of Simmons and the Masonic became parent some months ago. This followed the alleged attack on those blegles and goldians who led Masonic connections were more successful in the klan doctrine. This caused them to make a special feature in their book and in the subsequent suspicion that the Masons were the real klan. Masons have now been
Eight Program
Quick action calculated to offset the workings of the Ku Klux program in New York and New England. Other grand lodges immediately fell in line, sort of manicoso issuing the following points:
The Ku Klux Klan its motives, mission and record are in direct contrast of every principle and teaching of Masonry.
In the last year warned Masons against the propaganda of the Ku Klux, warning them, "You must be aware of the uniting as Mason brothers."
Grand masters have issued circular letters directing that no Masonic lodge should be issued for any of the purposes of the Ku Klux Klan.
Grand masters and grand lodges have condemned the Ku Klux Klan as an anti-American and criminal conspiracy which Masons should not support.
Masonry, standing four-square for law and order, respect for and obedience to the religious liberty and world-wide human brotherhood, champions everything the Ku Klux Klan is
Tompkins' Stand
Supreme Court Justice Arthur S. Tompkins, grand master of New York, the largest Masonic jurist in the United States, issued a statement:
"The attempts in some parts of the United States with the activities of the Ku Klux Klan is infamous and wholly independible. Masonry denies that the Ku Klux Klan is un-American in principle. Freemasonry has no sympathy for propaganda that antagonizes any class, so creed or race.
"Hesperus for constituted authority of their race, color or religion. Masonry doctrine. I hate the spirit of bigotry and prejudice against men because of their race, color or religion. Right of every man to worship God according to the dictates of his conscience, white and black, Jew and Gentile Catholic and Protestant, are equal before the law and shall not be disqualified from the color, ancestry or religion."
H1 SCHOOL ASSN. MEETS
The Inter-High School association
inter-High School association at the
25th annual high school baseball
handball division baseball was
presented Mason, the star pitcher of
the inter-High School association,
gift of Madame Harper, the lady who
inter-High School association, Certi-
fied teacher and Alma Mason. The following men
represent the personnel of the association,
Princhard, president, William Shorter,
and Gael Cook, secretary,
and Gael Cook, president.
WRIGHTS PURCHASE HOME
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wright of 38
Pacific street, brooklyn, brooklyn and
will take possession August 1.
Abolition of Jim Crow fire departments.
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Mrs. Elizabeth Cummings, 250 West
club of the R. H. Jones Memorial Council
No. 767. Independent Order of St.
June 26. After the transaction of business
Delightful summer
club of the club and John Maddox is secretary
club of the club and John Maddox is secretary
Cleveland, Ohio, was married to S.
Bowle, 1040 Fulton street, Brooklyn,
Mrs. Solomon Houston, 272 West 141st
street, spent the week end in West
at the Maddox house, Mrs. Susie Turner, 114 North 59th
street.
Mrs. Cypress, 242 Seventh avenue, is the guest of her mother-in-law,
Mrs. Marielle Cypress, 218 North Church
Mrs. Mildred Green, who has been
visiting her sister, Mrs. Lefteri, 42 left for Boston
Thursday to spend the summer as the
Elsa Bryant, 67 Shaw-
mout avenue.
Mr. and Frederick Laurie en-
lighten week at their beautiful home, 55 West 140th street.
Charles Smith of Houston, Tex., is
the owner of Brooklyn.
voting Truman in Inwood
E. Emma S. Sisson chairman of
the 137th street Y, W. C. A. spent several weeks
with relatives in Ohio.
The New York Charity Bureau, Inc., will give its annual outing to the Theological Society of Jackson County July 10. Mrs. Alice C. Jackson is chairman of James S. White of Boston, head of the music publishers' corporation of that city, James S. White of Boston, head of the music publishers' corporation of that city, Week. Before departing he visited the Defender office, the Shaw of 202 Washington court, the Court, visited the Defender office last week with company with the Rev. C. D. Hayden of Brookhaven church which convened at Bethel church, left for home last Wednesday to attend the diocesan dean of the theological department of Campbell college, Jackson, Mls. Brooklyn, was the guest of Theodore Whitman of 163 West 145th street last week, the week end visiting friends Mrs. Carry Moore of 2454 Seventh avenue, spent the week end visiting friends
in Jamaica. L. J. Washington, who have been in Africa for several months, returned home. Dr. Julia Johnson of Yokohama entertained her family. Dr. Allega of Oklahoma, Miss. and A. Ray of New York City college visited her. Mrs. Briggs at the Colored orphanage of Oakland. A report showed the Major Minor club will give a banquet graduating class of Martin-Smith-Munroe Inc., at the school, 153rd street. Miss Lena Anderson, Smith Thompson, 208 West 123d street, June 20. Miss Dah B. Thomas, assistant superintendent of nurses at Lincoln Smith of Bermuda by the Rv. W. H. Brooks coin hospital. Miss Damia Bemile be the Knight, 219th Street. Bemile be noted, skilled for Europe Saturday to star when that was presented at the Harris theater here has been Cornel 44 W. 123d street, entertained the Eutipia Neighborhood.
entertained a closing meeting June 19, 2015. Mrs. Ella Cloake Smith of 132 West Virginia extended an extensive trip through the West-Indian state to Van Smith, in San Francisco, Cal. Mrs. Van Smith was graduated with honors from P. S. last week. She was among the few Miss Maynay Green, 2443 Seventh avenue's vacation in Richmond, Va. Mrs. Maynay Green is the guest of Mrs. Elizabeth Stevens of 298 W. 13th street. His stay Miss Mary and Jesse Jefferson, 298 W. 13th street, the city attending Columbia University Summer school, they are stopping at Miss Helen Price of Philadelphia in Jackson, 297 W. 13th street, Miss Pricie Miss Lillian Christopher, 298 W. 13th street, accommodate returned from a very pleasant motor trip to Rochester,
Mrs. John S. Clinton of 295 Clinton place and Mrs. Vergisson of 295 Clinton place, spending the summer at Searacut, Massachusetts. Mrs. Clinton last Thursday, sixteen a.m., spent last Thursday as the guest of Mrs. Sweetwine, Vellam, the church and industrial secretary of the Ashland place, W. V. C. A. Brooklyn, and their vacations. Mrs. Sweetwine is spending some time with her friends in Ashbury Park. Gay Howell, Howard university, with Lawrence Wilson of 211 West 1423 street for the Sewahaven Street in Sewahaven, Conn. Andrew Sissle, brother of Nokale Sissle, a birthday party at the home of his brother last Friday evening, when he enjoyed the memories immensely. A farewell party of Paul Robert of "Shuffle Alone" who left Saturday play in "Taibo." The party was given at the White Peacock tea rooms, 295 William Scott, student of Lincoln university, last Friday for Atlantic City, where he will spend the summer. A M. J. church, is on his vacation and is expected to return Jan. 16. He has a hurried trip here last week from Cleveland, Ohio. Miss Helen Heartwell, 213 West 1423 street, is home from Fisk university,
R. Nathaniel Dett, director musical theater
of the University of Va., was here
five days last week.
777 Auburn Street of America, in the 113rd
street library Friday night. The af-
denture is at 11:30 a.m.
The annual piano concert reel of the annual concert at New York City class was held at New York Star casino June 2. A large crowd attended the entertainment.
**JUMP STEADY** TITL AT LAFAYETTE
N.Y., X. July 1—The attraction at the Lafayette theater beginning Monday, July 10, will be a 40-minute "jump Steady," presented by the Jump Steady Co. Inc. The principals are Salem Tutt Whitney and well-known artists as Amon Davis, Marcaret J., Frances Mores, Emily. The usual Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday matinees will prevail with a big midnight show Friday. The 2014 concert will feature 40 people, including 24 bronze beauties, will go direct to Broadway following its initial appearance at the popular Lafayette
CLUB IN REGULAR MEETING
The ladies of the Stitch and Chatter Club at the home of Mrs. Laura Myers, 2365 Pitken avenue, on Thursday evening, Mrs. Clinton, the vice president, Mrs. Clinton, the vice president, made for the annual outing which will take place at Poughkeepsie next Thursday, the hostess served an elaborate reapst. Announcing, Ferribes, Boyd, Saunders, Green and Rooks, Mrs. Boyd, Lolo Sessions, honor. Among the men permitted to attend were Mrs. Clinton, the president and our guests.
DEFENDER'S FREE OUTING FOR MOTHERS AND BABIES JULY 22
1930
Where he will receive mothers and babies of Harlem on July 22, when the Chicago Defender gives its free outing.
NEW YORK STATE NEWS
Never before in the history of New York has a newspaper undertaken to teach the public about entertaining Harlem's mothers and their hales at an outing on a street corner. The newspaper has the "World's Greatest Weekly," The Chicago Defender. Due to the courtesy of Dr. It. L. Cormier of New York's leading physicians, this great outing will be held at his picturesque home and farm in East Orange, N. J. July 22. A day of real enjoyment is assured. We will have a picnic, breathe the pure, fresh, inviting air, relieve their minds of the congenital conditions of the city. Out where the green, pick pretty flowers and listen to the sweet singing of the birds, smell the sweet odor of the new nown hay, and for once in their lives, realize the precious hours of a day. On this day the tiresome mother
Poughkeepsie, N. Y.
Yorkers, N. Y.
A number of Yankees people attended recently. The five. S. W. Smith has attended the N. E. R. State convention and attended the N. E. R. State convention. Schools this year include Alma Alumna High School.
ST. LOUISIAN HONORED
Many social courtresses have been extended of Mrs. Hailu rupner, late 15th century, Mrs. Samuel Bright, 227 West 151st street. On June 15th, 151st street was hostess in her honor, Mrs. Briggs, 227 West 151st street, rett A. Briggs, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Bright,亮见 a bancheon on June 25 at which Modames W. H. Turner, Bright,亮见 a bancheon W. H. Turner, and Harner were present. A theater urlay. Among the guests were Messiah Liawson, Lawson and Florence Wikerson.
BRING PRISONER BACK
Robert P. Price, 25, who was brought to the University of Pennsylvania was arrested Tuesday of last week by Detective Khoo of the Queens County court and Wednesday morning in the Queens County court J. Humphrey. He pleaded not guilty. He Price is charged with holding up and insulting the mayor, Marina May 21, and William T. O'Donnell, who is charged with insulting the mayor in both indictments he is indicted jointly with John Henry of Jamaica, and trial first on the indictments.
WOMEN'S CLUBS TO CONVENE
The Empire State Federation of Women's clubs will hold its fourteenth annual session on Monday, April 13, at the invitation of Mayor Lynn and the City Federation. The meetings will convene at the A. M. Zion church and will preside by the president. A splendid program has been arranged and are scheduled to appear. Prof. William Pickens and James H. Hilbert will present their presence. Mrs. Rosalie Littus, the lab label, commission: Mrs. Ruth Litts, member of the state executive committee, Mrs. Jill White, all white, are among the snackers.
PHOTO SCHOOL GRADUATES
Thousands attended the graduation
dance of the Bakers College
evening, June 29, at the
New Star Casino. So successful
was this dance that Walter Baker
contemplates making it an annual event.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
can bamish all worries, as nurses will be in attendance to cure for the mother's illness. At the dinner, it will be on hand for the little ones, while special arrangements have been made. Spencer Conyers, Wanda Cain and the old-fashioned chicken dinner for the mothers. Plenty of good music will be played. Without a doubt the Chicago Defender's Outing for Mothers and Babies, under the auspices of attempted and promised by a day which will long linger in the minds of the wearlone mothers and babies, between 15th and 18th street. Tickets for this great outing can be had by calling at the Chicago Defender's office at 10 a. m. Saturday, between 15th and 18th street. Orange at 6 p. m., therefore allowing plenty of time for all to return to the kitchen to enjoy dark. Everything will be cheerfully
Thornton, A. B. J. Barnard; Miss Helen McCarthy; Miss Sally Snyder; and Smyre, Y. H. S.; Elkerson, Freese, Alcock and Harter Curtice, from S. Y. McCarthy's session of the Ushers' Inventive Services were held at Messiah Baptist services were held at Messiah Baptist opened their courts for the session. Messiah Baptist church entertained two groups of the annual reception. B. Jones and Brown are the recent purchaser of the building, and Brown visited Brown's friends for a few days.
Jamestown, N. Y.
Mt. Vernon N.Y.
Y. W. HAS 19TH ANNIVERSARY
Prof. Lesley Pinkney Hill of Cheyenne
was the host of a large audience at the nineteenth
anniversary of her graduation. Y. W. C. A. Brooklyn, Sunday after-
night, presented a picture of the position of the darker
races today and a broach, inspiring viti-
tious women were led by the Rev. J. B. Adams,
the history of the local branch and
the history of the local branch and
W. Westbrook, branch chairman,
and the presiding officer, Miss Frances Gunner,
general secretary.
SISTER, BROTHER GRADUATE
Making with high honors and helping
only two of their Brace out of a class of
Friends, Moley, 15, and her brother,
Funke Moley, 15, and her brother,
street, who graduated from the May-
day school last week. They are ar-
chives of the niece and nephew of Mime,
city and the niece and nephew of Mime,
when they reside. After the excerci-
sion was held at the home of Sime-
Harper.
RECAPTURE BANDIT
Rahway, N. J., July 7 — George Coogan, 65, of New York, was shot since the 19th when he is alleged to have shot Chief of Police Marshall Mullet, 65, to arrest him in an alleged attempt to maim him. Matwan following his capture here last week,
he shot a bullet wound in his left arm. Cooper put up a stiff fight when captured, and he was house arrest at the police.
LAFAYETTE THEATER
CITY BRIEFS
Mrs. Hazelaena Caldwell Daniel of Clinton monthly illness. She leaves a husband, John Daniel; alster, Mrs. Georgia Lee Mount, Mrs. Samuel Green, of New York. Those reported sick: Ida Haribart, 131; Ann McKinney, Sr. Luke's hospital; Eliza Love, 111 West 131st; Marilyn Louise Gillespie, Sr. Luke's hospital; Eliza Love, 111 West 131st; Marilyn Louise Gillespie, Sr. Luke's hospital; Eliza Love, 111 West 131st; Marilyn Louise Gillespie, Sr. Luke's hospital several weeks ago. Undergoing an operation at the Woman's hospital several weeks ago. Wet, West 123rd street, daughter of Nanc. Pauline Demsey, is confined to her home by a serious illness. Dr. Alma Mary Haskins addressed the members of the New York Pediatric Association, evening, June 28. Dr. Haskins gave an interesting account of her infusion, in one of the South largest schools. The Sunday school of Mother Zion Monthly illness. Outgoing to Bear Mountain on July 20.
Mrs. Lauren Rahming delivered the
academy at the graduation exercises
last Friday evening, the Harlem Casino
last Friday evening, the Harlem Casino
Mrs. Louise Jankins, B. 57 West 12th
academy at the graduation exercises
the home of her daughter, M. Marilee
Jankins, B. 57 West 12th
The South Harlem sitteness committee
on children's recreation has been organized
to unfortunate kidnaps of Harlem
some time next month or next. The
recreation committee is responsible
for M. W. J. Styles, 47 West 56th street,
is serious ill at her home, M. W. J. Styles,
beauty specialist, is ill at her home, 47
West 129th street,
B. Marshall of B. Marshall of
229 West 135th street was confined to
his bed between the two floors of the
occupied of the A. M. E. church occupied the pulpit of Bethel
the absence of the pastor, Dr. W. M. Thornberg, who is 58 years old for high and
grammar school boys at the Y are from
10:30 to 11 a.m., free swim lines open
to boys of the community of boys at 11:15
17:45 p.m.; swim lines, 7:45 to 8:15 p.m.
17:45 p.m.; swim lines, 7:45 to 8:15 p.m.
anico company, 310 Washington street,
Newark, N. J., motor vehicle FI-11
company.
WAG ANNOXING WOMEN
MISS LADSON GRADUATES
Miss Georgianad Ladsden, daughter of the late Ladsden of 21. George Street, damnell street, graduated from the jamaican high school from the class of June on Wednesday.
ENTERTAINING NUEGE
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Green, 435 Carrion Street, Philadelphia, Mt. Holmes Grove of Philadelphia, with a trip to Bear mountain in a mobile host to Sunday. Miss Pie is here on a trip to Philadelphia, 227 West 132nd street, and contemplates remaining indelible. The trip is with Mrs. George H. Forssager of 227 West 132nd street, and Mrs. George J. H. Forssager of 227 West 132nd street, and Smith, 537 West 132nd street. The party reported a pleasant trip.
MISS DOROTHY SCOOTY MARRIES street was married to Greater Turner, 125 West 142nd street, at a nondewndly Bishop at the home of the bride. The wedding will remain for two weeks.
CHILDREN'S DAY OBSERVED
AT MOTHER ZION CHURCH
Children's day was observed throughout Sunday, June 25. The entire Sunday school was present in a body; a special sermon was delivered a special sermon for its benefit. At 2 o'clock, the Sunday school hour, the program under the direction of Miss Mary D. Martin, the organist of the Agency of Hairdressers had its sermon preached by Dr. Brown at 3 o'clock. The senior and intermediate departments rendered a Children's day program for the supervision of Mrs. Bertha Dayesner.
NEW SOCIAL CLUB
On June 23, the Frederick Douglass Social Workers' club was orphaned by the Reedling, 129 Wen 183th street, with 20 members, M. W. Mulher French, organizer of the Empirical Society, and the official and secured the membership of the club for the federation, the Reedling president; Mrs J. Holloway vice-president; Mrs Ella Brown second vice-president; Mrs L. Holloway secretary; Mrs M. C. Barclay, financial secretary; Mrs P. Walden, recording secretary; Mrs M. Downey, chapman, Mrs Redding was voted a delegate to the convention of the federation which is held in Schenectady, July II, 12 and 13.
FORTY WOMEN GRADUATE
Graduating exercises for the twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth classes in home hygiene and care of the sick were held Tuesday afternoon, June 27, at the Harlem Teaching center in the 135th street public library, where Mrs. Cordella Tolbert was the center for the season and possibly altogether. Several excellent demonstrations were held at the center. The welcome address was made by Mrs. Cordella Tolbert. Mrs. Elea Blue, class secretary, and Mrs. Cordella Tolbert, Mrs. Tennie Hunt gave a historical sketch of the class. An impressive reading on "Toussaint L'Ouverture" was given by Mrs. Elsa Dropper treasurer.
MINISTER IN POLITICS
Jersey City, N. J. July 7—The Collegiate Hall hold notification ceremonies of the dedication of the Memorial Church, for United Memorial Church, for United Memorial Church, for Mrs. Carter Adler 858 Thaxton Avenue, for Mrs. Carter Adler 858 Thaxton Avenue, for the charities of the committee. A large number responded to the committee.
MARRIAGE
Brooklyn Licenses
BE CHARMING! Beauties Are Made, Not Born!
GLORIA HAIR SUCCESS POMADE
BE YOUR OWN HAIRDRESSER—DO IT YOURSELF
Get This Heavy Hairdresser's Comb for $2.50
21-Piece Flex Loop Manufacuring Set, only. $2.50
These preparations are prepared by beauty specialists
Postfixion Money Order must ac-company each order, made out to the
NUTSHELL VARIETY SALES CO.
2484 Sweet Avenue, Wake Forest, NC 27592
Write name and address plainly.
FOR A NIGHT OF PLEASURE STOP IN
AND SEE YOUR OLD FRIEND LOCATED AT
71 West 135th Street, New York City (Formerly CONNOR'S)
BROOKLYN HAPPENINGS
BROOKLYN HAPPENINGS
The Klaset club gave its annual picnic at Columbia park for evening, ending with a celebration. The Saturday Night club of East New York held an important session last week. H. Maro and Edward H. Wimrow were among the missing members. Joshua Green of Ashford street, East Atlanta, last week. Friends from Atlanta city last week. Nine. H. Themes of the Penelope beauty parlor, 257 Chasson avenue, is
The Secret of Woman's Success is in Beauty—Have a beautiful head of hair which can be dressed in any style, together with charming complexion.
LAND
PASTOR AND WIFE CELEBRAT
25 YEARS OF MARRIED LIFE
The Rev. and Mrs. J. D. Gordon of Brooklyn were said a great tribute by the members of Brown's Memorial Baptist church and the cemetery Church on Thursday night, June 28, when a public celebration was held at the church, of which Dr. Gordon in pastor. It was in honor of their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. Both Dr. and Mrs. Gordon were lauded highly. Dr. Gordon came here from Los Angeles.
Mrs. Taylor, an old friend of the family, acted as bridesmaid and mother, acted as best man. As they stood before the alter the Rev. A. B. Bushell of New York, delivered the congratulatory address. The Rev. B. Bushell of New York, Karen B. Dushel of New York, master of ceremonies. Following a short musical program the guests were seated at the banquet tables and other presentations and other presentations estimated to cost more than $1,500 gave tan dresses and other attire. Mrs. Gordon are held in by members of the church and community. Guests were present from Ohio, other points from out of the city. Sterling Gordon of Cleveland, Ohio, a nephew of Dr. Gordon, was present.
MRS. BODYD ACQUITTED Don Brown BODYD, Luther Luther Jr. arrested April 18 on a charge of stealing $500 worth of clothing and dishes, was June 26, before Judge Nott in general sessions. The theft was alleged to have occurred on Mrs. Orestes Castagnet (white), 234 East 19th street.
When Mrs. Castagna was cross-examined by Herman Hoffman counsel for the defendant, who was also attorney for Luther Boddy, she said she was not certain that Mrs. Boddy was the same women she engaged as a maid.
HOTEL OLGA
695 Lenox Ave. Cor. 145th St.
New York City
A select transient and family
variations—steam heat, electric
lights, running hot and
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rates.
ED. H. WILSON, Proprietor
Phone: Kerninglaug 0061
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FOR SALE
PAGE TEN
ST. LOUIS STARS DROP 2 GAMES TO FOSTERITES
Schoirling's Park, Chicago, Sunday. — Ibue Foster's American Giants defeated the St. Louis Stars in both games of their double bill today and again the hope of the local team that the Stars had a chance to win the championship. Both games were good ones, much better than the scopes show. Whitworth has regained his old form. He fanned four men and did not allow a base on opposing Miller to return the second opposing Miller a recruit, and the old yet Gateway.
The visitors got away in the second frame of the first tilt. Williams' wide throw pulled Grant off first and second frames, and Judley and Hell scored two. Rubel's men tied the knot in their half. Torrenti singled, was sacrificed to seven. Beckwith beat out a hunt. Beckwith popped out to Holt and Grant singled to left. Whitworth's double scored two. St. Louis scored one in the seventh. The Grants scored two in the fifth. With one Gems Domas singled, stole second and third. Gardner threw and pulled second and DeMoss threw and DeMoss scored when it ralled to the outfield. Gardner taking third on the play to the plate. Torrenti's long fly scored Gardner after the catch.
Going into the eight with one run needed to tie the score. J. Brown was walked and was scored by Beckwith's triple. Grant famed, but Whitworth's single scored Beck.
Y. M. C. A. TRACK MEET
The Doobittle playground traction team
track team may July 4, being hard pushed
by the Y. M. C. A. team for first hour,
track team in the last two events of the day
in place the last two events of the day
when John Farrine scored three points
and second; J. Matthews scored the junior
reaction team outstanded the Y. boys for
positive points.
The individual point winners for the day
in the senior running broad jump, 400-
metre and second in 220-dart dush; Foster
Berry, second and second in 220-dart dush;
first in the senior 160-day and 220-dart
dashes and third in the running broad
jump, 400-dart dash and winner of the
date 50-day dash and winner of the
broad jump.
first Jack Berry, second: Louis Carter,
first: C. Love, third: Time-
12-5 seconds, second: C. Love, third: Time-
12-5 seconds, second: C. Love, third: Time-
12-5 seconds, second: Louis Carter,
third: Time-12-5 seconds.
One mile run—Loe J. Jefferson, first.
One mile run—J. Jefferson, second.
Time=5 minutes, 4 seconds.
Senior running jump=J. Ber-
an, first Harrison Harrison, second:
Bruce Braney, Distance=11
feet 62 inches. "I" first
Mostly playgrounds. "Second."
Intermediate 50-yard dash - C. H. Hall, second. Thompson, second. Time=5-4. 4 seconds.
Intermediate 100-yard dash - D. H. Hall, second. Thompson, second. C. H. Hall, third. Time=10-2. 2 seconds.
Intermediate runnable broad jump - R. C. Hall, third. Time=10-2. 2 seconds.
R. C. Hall, third. Time=10-2. 2 seconds.
Running high jump - Thomas Verdi first. William Ascend, second. William Ascend, third. Height=2. 5 feet 4 inches.
Reloading relay - Bettel S. S. first. Doolittle, second.
Junior 16-yard dash - Allen Samuels,
Carl Davis,
third. Time - 6 seconds.
Junior 15-yard dash - Cresston Woods,
Carl Davis,
third. Time - 5.3 seconds.
Junior running broad jump - Willie
N. Collier, third. Time - 5.3 seconds.
Junior running broad jump - Willie
N. Collier, third. Distance - 16 inches.
Willie Bateshaw throw - Fordland,
first; Willie Reynolds, second; William
Moody, third. Distance - 253 feet.
first; Willie Reynolds, second; William
Moody, third. Distance - 253 feet.
first; Willie Reynolds, second; William
Moody, third. Distance - 253 feet.
TATES, 6; PITSBURGH, 4
Pittsburgh, Tx, July 1—Tates Star won the deeling game of the series here today in a well played game. Tayler Lowe, the first starter, but they got to him in the seventh and he gave way to Branham and the locals could go no further. Some H.I.E.
Tate Stars..... 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 - 10 5
Batteries-Taylor, Braham and Murray; McCall and Burnett.
TATES, 12; PITTUSHURG, 6
Pittsburgh, Ja. June 29 - Tates Stars defeated Batteries-Taylor, Braham and Murray; McCall and Burnett.
The hitting Tate Stars today and the whole Cleveland club featured. Score:
Tate Stars..... 0 0 2 0 3 4 0 - 12 16 5
Royalties..... 0 0 2 0 3 4 0 - 9 10 3
Corbitt, McCall and Burnett.
```markdown
```
SHORTSTOP MOORE THE BINGA CUP THE FRIED PIE MAN QUIT PANNING US
BACHARACH GIANTS WIN
TWO FROM HILDALE
New York Oval, New York, Sindyad.-Making their final appearance here for several weeks, the Burchard Glants succeeded in beating Hildalea in a twin bill, both games were close, and contested, by the game of 4 to 2 and 4 to 3. A large crowd saw the games.
DOOLITTLE PLAYGROUND WINS
ANNUAL Y. M. C.A. TRACK MEET
RUSSELL'S COLTS WIN AGAIN
Sunday afternoon at the Bucinier
playgrounds in Russell's stadium, 5 o'clock.
He played strong riffed early in the game
and Russell tried out his new pitchitch
ball, a left-hander and had things all his
own way. The score:
R. H. E.
Russell's Colts. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 7
1. C. Stars. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 7
Batteries--Arienne and Johnsen
Porter and Sutton. Lupin-Jack Mason.
CHICAGO SUNDAY SCHOOL LEAGUE
Quinn Chanel. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 1
St. Mark. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - 1
Batteries--Wallace and Reid; Dunn, Cliffon
and Bobby.
St. Marg. 20. St. Paul. 1
St. Mark. 16. Berber. 16
Silvert. 12. Netbush. 12
SHORTSTOP MOORE THE FRIED PIE MAN
Kansas City Monarchs have a great hall club. They will appear here Saturday in the a five-game series against Giants in a battle for first place. That is to say, the result of the series will have a direct bearing on the team. The Giants are not out of the struggle, but we fear that Taylor's gang cannot stand the juice. So much for that, they have some good fielders. However, no club carries the respect of the fans when one of its members loses his head. Saturday Shortstop Taylor, who has been a Kansas City in the American Association park, armed with two beer bottles, to "get a fan who had made him a teammate." Baseball players probably have feelings, but they must be educated to the point where they are deaf to all calls. We will occur. The fined by Owner Wilkerson. This fine will hurt Moore's pocketbook, but the damage has been done. We hope that the team will occur. We will occur. Mr Moore will turn a deaf ear to the fans and will stop to consider that his actions reflect on the whole club, and there are Kansas City whose following back them in each city where they play. The act was disgraceful. The day of the game was like the like is gone. Our league so far has been on the same plane as the big leagues. Let us keep it clean.
Out at Schorling's park is a "hot pie man," or rather a "fried pie man." First one we have seen at any fan's, his sweet potato, fried and raisin pie are good. We hope so. This is not an advertisement. All the pie man pans are devoted at home. We thole this fried pie man in his white uniform and gloves is all right providing he will discontinue that black pancake. You can he wear. The pancake is kissing. We are to their opinion. Their opinion in this case is that the pie man is a
THE Standing
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W. L. Pct.
Kansas City 25 17 658
*Indianapolis 25 13 658
*American Giants 17 12 584
*Detroit Stars 21 15 583
Cubans 12 15 583
Cincinnati 14 17 651
Pittsburg 12 18 400
St. Louis 7 18 230
CUBANS WIN DOUBLEHEADER
FROM INDIANAPOLIS A. B. C. S.
Indianapolis. July 4. The Cubans
made it three straight over the A. B. C.'s here today by taking both ends of the ball and passing to Loose playing by the A.'s was largely responsible for both defeats. The A.'s won the first three games and thirteen battles. Batteries: A. B. C.'s first game. Hampton, Carr, Jeffries and Mackey; Cubans, Pedrosa and Morin. Ross and Mackey; Boada and Morin.
?
HARRY WILLS DROPS JEFF
CLARK FOR COUNT IN 2ND
Tronton, N. J. July 17—Harry Wills
Clark, "The Fighting Ghost," of Jop-
nell Clark.
July 7- Harry Wills
tykkooned out Jeff
Brown in, 30, in the
second round at the
Arena Friday night
before an audience of
Trenton's most
fans, which included
Governor Edwards.
Clark was down on the
canvas, three
first round, and
each time he took
the maximum of
bowled him over
again in the first
half minute of the
second round, and
a few minutes later
in with a thud that
A. B.
Harry Wills a few minutes later sent him sprawling on his back again with a thud that sounded the end.
EDWARDS AGAIN WINNER
laughing stock for some of the white patrons. There are many ignorant folks that come to a baseball game. Some day a remark is going to be made about the pie man and a fight is going to be the result. The only cause of this happening is to remove the possible cause, so, Mr. Pie Man, let us have a different kind of a hat or cap—not one of those monkey affairs.
The Binga State bank has offered a silver cup 17 inches high to the youth that has made the greatest impact year just closed. This was done through the kindness of Jesse Binga and on a surgestion of the Chicago school, he just one athlete has sent in his report, and he of course, had a big lead over all the others, as he won the report from his coach, one from his teacher and one from his principal. His conduct was beyond reproach. have the others to run; but they were running from his coach, ashamed of their scholastic standing? The spirit in which the cup was given was a hollow one—one that has been filled with the pride of our Race to compete with their white brothers while in the Chicago high schools. Those that have no experience in sports. Who knows as yet what boy will win the trophy, which can be seen any day at the Defender office?
Fans have undertaken to pan us weekly for the baseball news we do on TV, the newspapers, the managers and managers of the clubs. Only yesterday someone complained about New Orleans and the Southern League, and instructed to send in the scores by innings of all games played, mailing the same special delivery on Saturday to the newspapers. Tuesday's results. The teams that win do so; the home team, if they win, the fault is not with the newspapers, but in us, because we are not to blame.
LEE UMBLES DEFEATED
Indianapolis, July 7.—Ike Umbles, the popular wrestler, was defeated Friday in a match with Jack Renolds, who won the championship belt of the wetweight champion belt of the wetweight class. Umbles was unable to come back to throw. This caused Umbles shoulder to be knocked out of place. Umbles put up a good fight all the way through, but the first three seconds passed before the first ten failed Umble to return.
K. C. ALLIES WINNING
Kansas City, Mo. July 7.—The K. C. Allies deflected the Missouri and Kan- tle games. 1. On July 2, the Allies met the U. S. Veterans. July 4, they hooked up with the Armour Helmets and on July 5, they hooked up with the darbo Black Sox. The Allies have won seventeen out of nineteen games this season, having won the last fourteen
PHILA. GIANTS LOSE
Brooklyn, N. Y., July 7. "The Philadelphia Giants were defeated by the Parkville A. A. at Parkville oval Sunday by the score of 10 to K.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Curiosity and
WHITE WOMAN JOIN
AGAINST BAN
Curiosity and a Stiff Neck
WHITE WOMAN JOINS IN THE FIGHT AGAINST BAN ON MIXED MATCHES
Public sentiment, is gradually growing against the stand taken by several of the so-called "world's champions" in drawing the color line in their efforts to evade meeting the members of the Race who are qualified to represent the way of matches, and especially the holder of the heavyweight title is coming in for a world of exorcism. The Boston American is projected at him from every section of the country. Two outstanding letters, however, have caused a remarkable amount of comment. These letters, written by the Boston American in the column edited by "Ringside", one of the greatest authorities on pugilism in the world, have hundreds which have appeared in many of the metropolitan dailies as well as in publications representing the Defender has always insisted that the manner in which "mixed matches" have been discouraged was a disruption of the white boxers and narrow-minded bigotry on the part of the several boxing commissioners and promoters. Read these letters and see how the Defender has been opened by a white lady boxing fan named Anna C. Clonus of Boston, Mass, and the other by J. L. Johnson, 279½ Thayer street, Providence,
First Letter
"Why not let Jack Johnson fight tempey? The Negro votes and is supposed to have equal rights in the U.S. He was given plenty of opportunity during the war. Why not now in the speech three times? Why not should people keep referring to Johnson's personal affairs? Are all white literatures the author of the letter published in your columns would have us believe he knew we would wish Harry Wills when sniffing Jack Johnson is prepared to pay for his own sins if he is
1
Whose anatomy stretches 6 feet 2 inches from his head to his feet and considerably more from the fingers on one hand to the fingers on the other. Tut weighs 221 pounds with nothing on and boasts of fifty-three pounds of strength. He is more than the Honorable Samuel Langford, formerly of Boston but now of Chicago. Tut was scheduled to fight the Honorable Jack Johnson, but the authorities decided that Jack mustn't earn a living and so put Tut under a peace bond. The public wants to see Johnson given a chance and believes that he will be a champion. Another attempt to match the two will be tried in the near future.
a Stiff Neck
NS IN THE FIGHT
ON MIXED MATCHES
? ? ?
given an opportunity to meet Dennis?
"I am in fave of mixed beats. Let
during the war they had plenty of al-
lah," he said.
Second Letter
"Am a reader of your columns in the Boston American and have付费给荣誉 to the champion boxing Colored fighters. I have been a boxer and would daimam and has a whole race of people, just because they are Colored? Negro fighters have to light all corners, the white fighters should do the same.
Dempsey has a nerve to even think steepest every black man in the game. It is to laugh when I think of how he steeps me every black man in the game. I says there is no one in sight for him to fight. What will hurt the game any time he faces me? When he faces the public's money, when the outcome is known by everybody before the bout?
Dempsey has paid his debt to the government and should be alone. If he married a white woman, she would be a white woman. He is a fighter, and after all a fighter is a fighter. Let him earn his living. Either Johnson or Wills came to at least three others that would give him a good po. Kid Norfolk, Jamaica to stay with Dempsey in his camp and he was paid to be hame Dempsey would not have things so
"The public is not so much against the fighters, the champions and the managers. No ammunition to the title if he cannot defend it against all comers. The black fighters are good fighters and give the people money and should be given a chance."
AURORA,GIANTS,WIN
AURORA GIANTS WIN
Brooklyn, N.Y., July 4. The Aurora
Giants defeated the Flatbush Aragens
(white) at Rugby owl Thursday by the
score of 9 to 3. The Giants collected
seventeen hits.
THIS STIFF NECK CERTAINLY WORRIES ME—I CAN'T MOVE MY HEAD—GUESS I'D BETTER SEE A DOCTOR—
KANSAS CITY CLUB HERE FOR 5-GAME SERIES WITH FOSTER
DANNY EDWARDS SCORES KO
2ND BOUND OF ARMORY BOUT
DANNY EDWARDS SCORES KO
2ND BOUND OF ARMORY BOUT
New York, July 7—Danny Edwards
knocked out Frankie Roane (white)
knocked out Fran in the second round of a scheduled 15-round star game in the legiment armory Friday night. The semi-final of ten rounds ended in when Kid Butler kayed "Satisfaction" Brooks. Dan Sturt and Carl Moore fought a tie in another four-rounder Joe Hall of S. T. Saxon's stable won from Joe Dootman in the second session, when the referee stopped the
PETER B.
TATES, 7: PITTSBURGH, 6.
ROYAL BLUE SOX LOSE
Long Island City, July 7. -The fast Royal Blue Sox, who have been playing in the parts for the past six weeks, lost to the team at K. of C. Gold Sunday by the score of 5 to 1. Allen and Kelly, the white Willis and Duffun took care of the local lads end. The Royals of Elst 185th street is the manager of the team.
STARS BREAK EVEN
Kansas City is coming—enough said. Kansas City is coming with their cheats poked out. They won the Rube Foster's American Giants at Kansas City three weeks ago and they are coming here with one set of leagues to the expense of the Chicago club. Can they do it? Well, Andy Foster has another idea of the whole situation and he wants the Giants to take all the series from the Missouri boys. Anyhow, it is going to be some battle. Owner Wilkerson and Manager Rogan will take all the following here that "Mister Bullet Rogan" will twirl Sunday. Rogan is supposed to be the Giant tamer. So large a crowd is expected that the game will be held Saturday, Saturday and early Sunday morning. The game will be called promptly at 3. The Kansas City club opens the series here Saturday and continues Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
The league race is now tightening down. Despite the fact that the Cubans put a hole in the scoreboard, the Giants are expected to climb steadily into first place. Two victories over the St. Louis club Sunday, a t-10 win from the Giants and a 10-0 win from the Giants took three straight from Indianapolis makes things look nice, especially when Detroit was holding winning two out of three games.
The home management has pre-
AURORA 16; CHICAGO GIANTS 13,
Aurora, IL. July 2.—The locals won
a wild and woody slurstest from the
Chicago Giants, slamming on sixteenth
and seventh in the six pitchers, Hilliker's home run in
the fifth and the last minute pinch hit
of Joe Green were features. Score:
Chicago Giants. 0 0 0 3 0 0 4 0 1 2 12 -13 12
Aurora. 0 0 0 3 0 0 4 0 1 2 12 -13 12
Hilliker. -13 12 Aurora. -13 12
Pierre, Shane. -13 12 Aurora. -13 12
Pierre, Shane. -13 12 Aurora. -13 12
KNOCKS OUT KID NOLAN
KNOCKS OUT KID NOLAN
Newark, N. J., July 17 - Sallon Maxter, New York in the second round of the final bout at Troxler's arena last Wednesday. Maxter, who heat him unmercifully while the bout lasted.
PITTSBURGH, 15; TATES, 5
Pittsburgh, Pa., June 10 - Keystones won today, 15 to 5. Score:
R.I.L.E.
Tate Stars..... 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 - 5 8
Keystones
Storm..... 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 - 5 8
Keystones
Storm..... 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 - 5 8
Murray, and Burnett.
A. B. C.'S IN DETROIT
The Indianapolis A. B. C.'s invade St. Louis. The St. Louis Stars park of the St. Louis Stars on July 5. 5. 10. 11 and 12. St. Louis is planning to play the Giants - win them out of four. American Giants - win them out of four.
CUBANS AT DETROIT
The Cuban Stars will play the Detroit Tigers in game 11, and 12. The Stars are after first place, but the Cubans have struck their results will be watched with interest.
EXPECT DEMPSEY TO
SIGN FOR WILLS JULY 7
New York, July 7.—According to formal announcement made last week, Patty Mullins, Harry Wills, Jack Kearns, Jack Dempsey, men will gather at 1465 S. Imperial on Friday) to sign articles of agreement for the heavyweight title.
It will no doubt be a unique gathering, and should bring to an end the many rumors that have surrounded the sport in the past two years, that Jack was afraid of Wills. It is possible that the fight may be staged on Saturday, but will surely be pulled off in 1923.
BECKWITH'S HOMER BEATS
DETROIT STARS JULY 4TH
BECKWITH'S HOMER BEATS
DETROIT STARS JULY 4TH
Totals... 0 4 34 2 | 1 0 0 0 1 | 1 6 35 1
Detroit... 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Giants... 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 *-1
Stolen base-Grant, Lyon, DeMoss, Bases on table-
Off-Court-Reephow, Bases on table-
Out-Corner, F. Pardue, 2. Strike-out-by
Cooper, 4. Pardue, 5.
Reagan, 11,
Moore, 2b,
Moore, ss,
McNair, 1f,
McNair, ss,
Joeph, 2b,
Curtis, 2b,
Hawkins, 1b,
Gershwin, 1b,
Gershwin, of,
Currie, p.
HIGH JUMP CHAMPION
I
CHARLIE MAJOR
Interscholastic high jump champion of New York city high schools. A member of the crack DeWitt Clinton high school track team.
SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922
DETROIT WON 2 GAMES FROM THE MONARCHS
Kansas City Took First, but Blount's Men Annex Sunday and Monday Titls
Kansas City, Mo. Saturday—The Kansas City Monarchs came from behind in made three runs in the ninth, when they scored the score, when Bullet Rogan, playing in the outfield, slammed a homer with two men on the sacks, and in the tenth McNair tripped, scoring on a poor relay to the palte. In the tenth McNair hit for the circuit with two on. McNair started the game, only to have Detroit drive him to the showers in the first frame with an avalanche of base hits. Up until the last pitch, like the home club had been besten. Moore caused a big row by going into the stand after a fan that had made some remarks about his playing. After the affair had been down, Owner Wilkerson announced Moore would be hired for his actions.
When Rogan hit his home run and tied the count in the ninth, Hon. Nelson Cruise started a fund by poking four new one-dollar bills through the hole. Moore creed him with money, the total collection amounting to $33. The score:
Detroit R. H. P.A. Monarchs
Lane.bb R. H. P.A. Roanaf. R. H. P.A.
Warf.bb R. H. P.A. Fort.lnbb R. H. P.A.
Mosses.f R. H. P.A. Mosses.f R. H. P.A.
Wedley.bb R. H. P.A. Mosses.f R. H. P.A.
Smith.bb R. H. P.A. Punase. R. H. P.A.
Biggness.bb R. H. P.A. Joseph.bb R. H. P.A.
Petway.e R. H. P.A. Harbett.bb R. H. P.A.
Petway.e R. H. P.A. Harbett.bb R. H. P.A.
Foray.e R. H. P.A. Gert.bb R. H. P.A.
Holland.p R. H. P.A. Currie. R. H. P.A.
Holland.p R. H. P.A. Johnson.e R. H. P.A.
Totale... 8 13=27 11 Totale... 9 10=27 11
OVERLOCK BEATS GIANTS
Johnny Overlock of the Marquette
Manors continued to be a jinx for the
American Giants, defeating them Sat-
tuary. The score:
HILLDALES LOSE
Darby, Pa., July 7.—The *Boherty Silk Sox* won from Edward Golden's Hildale club here last Saturday by the 5-4 run. The team five runs in eight inning after Kenyon's delivery had been solved. He was relieved by Gillespie.
N. Y. CURANS WIN
Clifton, N. J., July 7—The Cuban Billy Silko Sox club here Sunday by the score of 7 to 3. The Cubans poled out thirteen hits.
BACHARACHS WIN, 11-5
Bacharachs swamped the fast Delahua Giants team here first Friday by the score of 10 to thousand persons witnessed the game.
BACHARACHS LOSE
Philadelphia, Pa., July 7—Bacharach
hat Saturday in a slugget to the tune
of the band.
Boys—Earning Big Money!
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laborers in commissions and valuable
prizes, every year, delivering copies
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Are you earning your share? Begin
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Defender, $15 Indiana avenue, Chicago,
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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.
In The Grip Of the Law
RESUL
BAPTISTS HOLD BEST MEET IN STATE HISTORY
Raise $7,000 in Few Days to
Aid Work; Champaign
Ccts Next Session
The general Baptist convention of
Illinois, H.J. L. K. Williams, president,
hold his twenty-first annual session
at the local Baptist church, Spring-
field, Ill. He was a prominent
in point of attendance, interest and
accomplishments it pursued by
session in its history. The present were
delegates and visitors present, re-
presenting 138 churches. The auxiliary
departments of the churches held
their conventions Monday, Tuesday
and Wednesday.
Rev. W. L. Petty of Joliet was re-elected convention, Rev. E. L. Todd of Toloca convention, Rev. E. L. Todd of Toloca convention, Dr. F. W. Denek as presiding officer, the latter assigning to devote all his time to his work as superintendent for the state of Illinois, Mrs. Eva Dean was re-elected president of the convention, and were full of interest and a comprehensive program was mapped out for the dresses of the above named officers the subjects of favorite comedians. The principal seminars of the convention were preached by Rev. G. W. Foster, Dr. R. A. Hayden, Champaign; R. J. Smith, East St. Louis. The principal seminars were preached by Prof. J. H. Slioule of Louisville, Ky, and Prof. W. D. Ward of Louisville, Ky, and Prof. J. H. Slioule of Louisville bearing greetings from the national Baptist convention were Dr. N. W. Foster, Dr. W. Foster, board; W. F. Lovefield, mission board; J. W. Falfey, evangelical board; and M. Toomey, Sunday school board.
Each department represented was the recipient of substantial donations from board greetings were Drs. W. H. Snowden, W. P. Washington, corrections speechwriters, of the Baptist State association; Dr. H. D. Hewitt, moderator of Wood River association; Dr. Otto, superintendent of missions for Baptists of Chicago; Dr. A. E. Peterson, superintendent of missions for Baptists of Chicago; Dr. A. E. McWilliams, president of the Baptist Seminary and Training school of Chicago, delivered a school speech on Thursday night at the Central Baptist church (white), the seating capacity of the Baptist church proving wholly inadequate for the throngs in attendance. The largeness of the program of the church is a growth of the growth of the Baptist family in these parts have naturally given rise to the need for careful consideration, large vision and conserved devotion. The recommendations of the president were presented at the conclusion of the most harmonious session the convention was held in Champlain. Ill. More than $2,000 was raised during the session.
COPS ASCEND FRONT STEPS;
OWNERS ESCAPE THRU BACK
Held 10 Grand Jury
Held to Grand Jury of
Jury
The hometown of Jury
McMeeon, 30 North Levitt street,
Savage arrested Holden Cogage, 164
1649 Fulton street. He was held to
the grand jury all 12,500 bonds.
Woman Charged With Coin Game
McMeeon, 30 North Levitt street, officers Recount
411 411 Ave., avenue, who was
charged with confession game.
Interfees With Doctor's Orders
tacted the arrest of Officer officer
Anthur Majors, 223 Union avenue,
which had a peculiar shape.
The wrapping been removed, a gallon of
the arresting officer that he had been
bound, and he had recommended that he be
a gallon of shotgun a day. He was
charged and costs by Judge William
Koennil.
Breacher Arrested
Giving his occupation as a preacher, he was booked at the Walsh Avenue station on complaint of Mrs. Amanda Hines, his wife. His case was continued until July.
Charged With Picking Pockets
George Wilson 2482 State street.
Identified John White 2485 Walsh Avenue street, as the men who had pickled his pocket and taken $2 from him. The men who had pickled Boundall and Childs, asked for a jury trial, being held under $2,000 bonds each.
Free One. Complet Other.
A jury in the original court of Judge John M. O'Connor obtained O
EX-SOLDIER SAID TO HAVE
CONFESSED STARTING FIRE
Washington, D. C., July 7—Agents of the department of justice arrested Garland E. Car after connecting him with an attempt to burn the veterans' burial. "He said to have made a mistake," he bored a hole through the window, said the police, building. His passion for dispatches, was his desire to destroy the records of the obtain compensation for his disability.
"Car admitted having purchased a new air-conditioner store on the east side of Massachusetts avenue. Inurean Inc. filled the can, which he admitted was his and that he was found near the house. Out of out when the paper was all consumed.
LOST RELATIVES
[ADVERTISMENTS]
ARTHUR JAMES JACKSON
Mrs. Ora Akins was born in Kansas City, Mt. Marsh, born in Kansas City, Mt. Marsh, Rock Island diving car department May 25, 1922; drowned in the army Aug. 31, 1945; amyndy communicate with A. B. Box, 1400 Maple Defender' important information
MRS. ORA ANINS AND MRS.
Anyone knowingWireless of Mrs. Ora Akins or Mrs. Reba Wakimk last 422 South Park ave. third, apt. please, 241 South Park ave. third, apt. please, Smith, Edgewater apt. 22, Beekle Wm.
MRS. SALLIE WILLIAMS
Mrs. Sallie Williams, formerly of 222 South Park ave. third, apt. once with Thomas Davis, Vulcanite avenue, telephone lafayette 880, avenue, telephone lafayette 880, avenue, telephone lafayette 880, it is important
JESSIE TAYLOR
Will Jessie Taylor, who was at one
of the North Side, please call Miss
Robertson at Buckingham 1047?
CHAS. WILLIAM AND M. MR. HENRYB
South Park avenue, and Mr. McLester,
the office of the American Red
Gross, 102 East 52th street, regarding
1922 and 1925 at 1922 at
I. G. Government hospital?
SALLIE AND LILLY PAYNE
Want to know whereabouts of mother,
Lake Adams, Columbo, and brother, Lake Paine, Ad-
dress, 11 West East street, Aldie, Mich.
CARD OF THANKS
ADVERTISEMENTS
MAYFETISMESNI
In having remembrance of my mother,
I will be here this life.
July 12, 1820. We will be provided
the fare. We are to hear part voice in more.
We are to sit in our confining.
We are in our compliance.
We will remain in our compliance.
We will remain in our compliance.
Sally missed by loving son, Arthur,
mother, father and sister.
In memory of our dear mother who
pushed us three years ago, July 8,
at Greely, Mrs. Fannie Kemp,
Mrs. William Kemp,
Sloane, Mrs. Vivita Parks, Chicago.
Full and equal justice in the courts
of law (abolition of the Black Code).
Of the Law
He Marshall, but found William Pol-
son who promised to take Calumet avenue,
were charged with the murder of John
Brown, brought into play when the three
agreed over a dime. They were repres-
ented by Attorney J. Grys Lomas.
Boy Charged by Attorney J. Grys Lomas.
Boy Charged by Attorney J. Grys Lomas.
was arrested by Sergeant Brown and
was charged by Sergeant Brown and
the piece of James L. Knight, 3520
Prairie avenue. He was held to the
practice. Judge David Trade of the Boys court.
Advance Wrapping Present
Tuesday
Maryne Bardot, both of 2321 Stare
South to play their under arrest Mam-
dela, played with special equipment,
draped with special clothing, and
probleat as they stood in a showy day. They
were discharged by showing day.
Sweethearts Fall Out
The cause of true rape does not always twin smooth. While Lee Crystal of the Officer Roberts division to arrest him, she promised to give video testimonies against him when his case is closed. The former is featured at 2220 Federal street.
Ruby Accuses Sam
From the testimony of little Mercy,
225 Parkway, Judge Willem N.
Gennall fired Sam Holley, 22 years,
same address, 22 and costs.
Fined for Hitting Woman
Mrs. Vivette Jones, 1114 Indiana
and South to arrest John Wiley, 2022
Walsh avenue, and Tavee Williams,
one of the men, who used to be her
"common law friend" had bit her with
one of the men who was found
$23 and $4.
Held on Girl's Story
WINS HONORS
IN HIGH SCHOOL
ESSAY CONTEST
Dunbar School Girl Is Victor in Tribute to Memory of Charles Sumner
By J. B. Leclont Chestnut
Washington, D. C, July 7—Signal
hotors came to Dunbar high school
and merited recognition was ex-
tended to Miss Allen Brown Alumni year's graduating class, when in open context children of all races and are directed by the Women's American Legion for written on the subject. "The American History that illustrates the life of Citizenship."
Golteen Minor
Brooks
this year, graduating
class, when
in open contest
children of all
races and
these are
directed by the
Women's American
Legion for
written on the
subject. "The
American History
that Illustrates
the Highest Ideals
of Citizenship."
This young lady was awarded the
$30 prize in gold offered by
the society just mentioned and in addition
the society attended and organized. Prior to entering Dunbar high school Miss Brooks graduated from the Bake school
attended while living at 6022 Aberdeen street with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
John J. Peterson, former Chilgoa-
Outside Activities
Her initiative us a high school student was still further in the other extra-activity works. She was elected to membership in the organization of superior girls in the Dunbar high school; was sent to the inter-association association for three years; was sergeant in the winning company of the Girls Cadet Corps of Co. II of the Girls Cadets for 1922; was a member of the Girls Interpretative dance of the highest order, showing at her best in the class night play, "Tompa."
All of these achievements are the more significant in view of the fact that she is Brooks born in Washington, D.C. in 1844, in 1864, the offspring of old and well-known local families, the daughter of Lawrence and her maternal L. Brooks and her mother Jennette Flaming Brooks, daughter of that venerable and lovable chirer, the daughter of Miss Dorothy Belle Brooks, a teacher of the second grade at Phillips school and her aunt Mrs. Maude Brooks, a teacher of the second grade at Barrille school.
Choose Charles Sumner
In talking in her modest but clear and direct way to the Defender republic, she had her attention been directed to the essay contest by Naval Thomas, a graduate of the high school. In discussing her choice of character and the reasons for such a choice, she noted that all would have Lincoln; so I set out to seek another American. As I read more and more, Chris at the Summer on slavery. I was moved by the fact that what he made the hardest part of was to all-in-short, humanity. And best of all, what I thought was good money but in the good he could do, and he even bore the loss of friends because of his position, and the Lord was helped to stand it all. Miss Brooks plans to enter the Normal school next full and complete two years there. Later she hopes to go away and train teacher for the high schools.
Housewives, consume by 10 mln all your grease and discarded fats into soap. Your friends and even your family use it. Use it as one of these labs in far superior to some other soaps. Even though you just make soap for your family, you can record the record of $1 we will send you a heat pack containing material used to make the best laundry soap in use. This will turn out to ten pounds, or 25 lbs. If you can use this material for this dry soap mixture will be on request. All mdl orders promptly taken care of. Address MKL 135 Pine Avenue, advertisement.
MAKE OWN HAIR GROWERS
UNDERTAKERS
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
HELPWANTED
WE REQUIRE THE SERVICES OF AN
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IN REQUIRED, ALL THAT IS IN
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OVERCOME. WE CAN USE YOUR SPARE
INTERPINING WITH YOUR PRESENT
EMPLOYER. YOU CAN TAX YOU WELL
IF YOU ARE ARE MAINING LESS THAN
GOING TO MARRY WILL APPEAL TO
YOU. YOUR SPARE TIME WILL PAY
YOU. THEN YOU WILL BE MARRIED
THING IN A MARRIED WILL.
COAL MINERS WANTED
For Kentucky,
West Virginia
and Virginia
Coal Fields
NO LABOR TROUBLE
Apply at
UNITED EMPLOYMENT
OFFICE,
104 Central Ave.,
Knoxville, Tenn.
YOUNG MEN WANTED AS CARRIERS AND
STUDENTS, to assist in the
NO fit you for quantification; summer rates;
Bronx City Civil Service School,
1225 S. State St.
INSURANCE MEN, HEALTH AND ACCIDENT:
Hilgoe, Home office, Chicago;
labor contract to expire at appropriate
position open to right men. Box 214, Chicago
December.
THE DOUGLAS DETECTIVE AGENCY,
Incorporated.
HELP WANTED-FEMALE
There are openings for two students of Beauty Culture at the Nile Queen Beauty School. Nile Queen are, Unique apparel and learn self-esteem; charge the work.
WANTED-GIRLS TO LEARN BEADING
for early fall big business big
girl opportunities. 3129 Walton Ave.
Victoria, CA GOVERNMENT CENTER,
LABOR AS GOVERNMENT CENTER, TYPE
OF OPPORTUNITY, big part of
Girl Child Service School, 3123 S. State St.
Earnings
To Readers of the CHICAGO DEFENDER Everywhere:
ARE you always able to secure your paper, even as late as Sunday, without trouble?
Can you get your paper without leaving your neighborhood if do so once, and we will effect an immediate and humiliating condition. There is no excuse for our agents being short of paper matter of their ordering sufficient if there is no agent in your neighborhood we will be glad to establish we will not seek a better fit of securing a copy of the
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You can't afford to miss one issue.
P. FRANKLIN'S
FAMILY HOTELS
3940-42 INDIANA AVENUE
Phone Bldw. 2918
4524-29 INDIANA AVENUE
Phone Draxel 5155
MRS. P. FRANKLIN, Prop.
BEAUTIFUL, COZY ARM
FURNISHED ROOMS
INDIAMA AYE, 428, 32P, 3D PL - NELCYZ
INDIAMA AYE, 428, 32P, 3D PL - NELCYZ
good food; good bread; Braai! 311, 318
good food; good bread; Braai! 311, 318
E. 38TH PL. 60, 20 APT. (NEAR MICHIGAN
can ave.)—Seatly furn. rooms, steams beat,
electricity.
E. 420 L. 457, APT. 2, 2-NEATLY FURN.
modern; convenient to cars.
NEATLY FURN. ROOM: 2ND IN FAMILY.
modern; couple preferred; modern;
phone 5112.
CALMETT AVE. 443, APT. 3, S-TWO OR
600, Kewdow; or, uniform, 600,
Kewdow.
PIARIE AVE. 443, 2D APT. 3-NEATLY
FURN. front room, modern, 517, 2nd
FURN. room, modern, 517, 2nd
FURN. room, light bake; md. Dugge, 656.
COTTAGE GROVE AVE. 321, 3D APT. 3-
INDIANA ROOM: 321-NEATLY FURN.
modern, modern, Victory 1922.
MICHIGAN AVE. 2024-NEATLY FURN.
modern.
NEATLY FURN. ROOM: GENTLE,
non preferred. Phone Ken, 475.
NEATLY FURN. ROOM FOR COUPLE OR
NON-FURN. ROOM.
ST. LAWRENCE AVE. 422, 32D PL-PLAY-
two, farm, modern, modern
GALMERIT AVE. 422, 32D PL-NEATY FUN-
INDIANA AVE. 324, 32D PL-BUS, DUGG,
625, Visitors write Mrs. Reges.
d-2D
ST. LAWRENCE AVE. 454, 32D PL-
PRIVATE family, Douglas 322
VERONA AVE. 324, 32D PL-ROOM WITH
PRIVATE family, Douglas 322
VERONA AVE. 324, 32D PL-ROOM WITH
PRIVATE family, Douglas 322
INDIANA AVE. 408, 32D PL- two FUN-
rooms, Mrs. Followow.
d-2D
ST. LAWRENCE AVE. 464, 32D PL-APT-
responsible like: kitchen pristine-
rooms.
ST. LAWRENCE AVE. 464, 32D APT-
responsible like: kitchen pristine-
rooms.
SOUTH PARK AVE. 325, 32D APT-SEAT-
room, Douglas 324
SOUTH PARK AVE. 325, 32D APT-SEAT-
room, Douglas 324
OUTH PARK GROVE AVE. 326, 32D PL-
apt-Novo, front room.
PLAIRAGE AVE. 326, 32D APT-PLUNG,
room; desirable couple or men.
WASHEN AVE. 538, 32D APT-PLUNG,
4TH ST. 725, 32D APT-SEATY FUN-
room; steam and electricity; responsible.
727TH ST. 725, 32D APT-SEATY FUN-
room; steam and electricity; responsible.
727TH ST. 725, 32D APT-SEATY FUN-
room; steam and electricity; responsible.
VINCENES AVE. 403, 32D LARGE ROOM; NO
other rooms; tinkerland 145.
GRAND HILD. 525, 32D FURNITURE ROOM;
INDANA AVE. 4518, 319 APT. - TWO NICER
front, furn. front, or rear - TWO PUEN ROOM
single, or as suite.
WARSH AVE. 3121 - FRONT ROOM:
47TH ST. 4518, 319 APT. - NEATLY PUEN, ROOMS
strictly mdl. Call Dugget 1977 after 8 p.m.
GRAND BLVD. 2500, 219 APT. - PUEN, BM.
TO FIRST CLASS ROOM: MAN CHEM: TO
right party, at three car lines. Oak 4123.
UNFURNISHED, strictly mdl. Dugget 1864.
SOUTH PARK AVE. 3500 - FRONT BM FOR
light rooms, furn. or unfurn. Dugget 2031.
GRAND BLVD. 2500 - FRONT BM FOR
light rooms, furn. or unfurn. Dugget 2031.
ELLIE AVE. 3167 - LARGE ROOM, NEATLY
ROOMS, 60TH ST. 4518, 319 APT. - LARGE RED
room for couple. Dugget 7600.
INDANA AVE. 3125, 319 APT. - NEATLY PUEN
front, furn. front, or rear - TWO PUEN ROOM
single, or as suite.
DOWNWARD - LARGE PUEN, FRONT
ROOM, Douglas 624.
KRIEHLER AVE. 4623, NF FLORIDA-PENN
woolly; woolly; lady or couple; Natural
Dolphin; Natural Dolphin; Natural
PHAREAIVE AVE. 4623, NF APT-LIFE
PHAREAIVE AVE. 4623, NF APT-LIFE
INDIANA AVE., 325th APT. 2-FURN. AND
UNIT, TOWN. Call, Evelell 7 p.m.
GRAND BLADE, 328th APT.—MODERN
FORM, TOWN.
SOUTH PARK AVE. 2520 - FRONT HILL MN. FOR
room one, two men, 87. Douglas 2522.
HAVEN AVE. 2520 - HOUSTON MN. FOR
room two, men, Douglas 2528.
killeenberry, rooms for men.
INDIANA AVE. 4251, 4271 APT - FUNN.
GALENEF AVE. 3257, 3297 APT - LARGE
and small fire, rooms. Douglas 2545.
vincennes or housekeeping, phone: slec.
VINCENNES AVE. 4258, 4278 APT - FUNN.
INDIANA AVE. 2527 - FRONT HILL MN.
in private family. Kearwaukee 0402.
INDIANA AVE. 4257 - LARGE FRONT HILL.
GALENEF AVE. 3252 - LARGE ROOM: one
man, 82, two men, 87. Douglas 2522.
room, rooms for men. Douglas 2518.
PIARIE AVE. 4255, 2525 APT - DESIRABLE
35TH ST. 87, HOUSTON, STATUTORY
room; couple or man. Douglas 2508.
ELLIAS AVE. 3100, 3107 APT - NEATLY
A PLAT AND PUNK, ROOMS FOR HIRE
REFERENCE AND PUNK, April 2018 Elite
wine, Champlain AVE, 42E-LARGE LIGHT
LIGHT, convergence, convertible 408S,
warm 408S, WARM 408S, WARM 408S,
use of lumber, Dwarf 402S,
INDIANA AVE, 321E-LARGE, LIGHT,
convergence, use of lumber, Dwarf 402S,
INDIANA AVE, 321E-LARGE, LIGHT,
convergence, use of lumber, Dwarf 402S,
INDIANA AVE, 4EE-MODERN PUNK,
reflection, light, linen PUNK,
light, linen PUNK
NRIFTLY HOME, HOOM, STEAM HEAT, 85-
60, no extrar private family,
60-80
PRIAINE AVE, 420-LIIGHT, AIRBORY
HOME, home private home, 80-50
@ 85 per week
PRAIRIE AVEN., 4533, 3D APT., KOHLD.
Srial class: private family; man and wife or
two men. Dress: 3041.
BOWEN AVE. 489-LARGE LIGHT FURN.
rooms, $5.50 to $6.50; costless trans-
portation. 205-51-1.
MAN AND WIFE OR TWO MEN TO SHARE
Grown day with coupled couple; else, stream
with couple; or two adults with good references need apply. Dressed formal.
SOUTH PARK AVENUE, 31st AIRT FUNNEL-FUNNEL,
SOUTH PARK AVENUE, 31st AIRT FUNNEL-FUNNEL,
WAKEHAVEN AVENUE, 62nd AIRT-FUNNEL—
first floor; airt, electrical; no airt,
FUNNEL, or UNDERFURNISH. HOODS, KITCHEN,
OR UNDERFURNISH. HOODS, KITCHEN,
OR UNDERFURNISH.
best, electric light
Bangalore
first floor, AVE-12
first floor, AVE-12
first floor, averting congestion
first floor, 420-PERK, or UNFLEX
complex, complex or small family
complex
GALVEST AVE, 325-326, SICK LIGHT ROOM
for light housekeeping, two in litter,
ST. LAWRENCE AVE, 44E, 45T FLAT
first floor, front room, appraised
SOUTH PARK AVENUE.....215-LARGE FRONT
room, light balcony, no access to child.
INDIANA AVENUE.....3008, APT. 1-NEWYMEN
room, torture in private bathroom, Bldg. 327.
FURNISHED FLATS FOR RENT
E. 320 FD. 252. SSKL OFFICE HOME (HWL).
E. 320 FD. 252. SSKL OFFICE HOME (HWL).
E. 320 FD. 252. SSKL OFFICE HOME (HWL).
THREE-BOON AFT. FUNN, MON., STAAM.
electronic lift, phone: 212-826-2600.
phone: 212-826-2600.
CALIFORNIA AVE. 252. 26-3000. WOOLF STAAM
electronic lift, phone: no.
phone: Tanner Douglas 252.
UNFURNISHED ROOMS
WARABI AVE. 6025, 32ND FLOOR=UNFURN.
rooms to call for $25.00.
rooms for $25.00 for 2 p. call after 6 p. or on Sunday after 2 p. call
three UNFURN. HOMES IN PRIVATE
families; all conventions: pear surface and
ground; call the landlord after 6 p. call
FOR BENT—MISCELLANEOUS
AVENUE THEATER BUILDING, 31st and 32nd floors, most rooms, up-to-date furnishings, 2, 3 and 4 room suites, 2, 3 and 4 room suites, 2, 3 and 4 room suites with reception, 2, 3 and 4 room suites, rental $25 to $35. Invocation of abode can be billed to H. HOWERS & CO. H. HOWERS & CO. 4 E. 1st st. 4 E. 1st st. 100th St. COLUMBUS IND. DBSK SPACE FOR RENT - 32TH AND IND. AVE., 31st floor, studio above 4 E. 1st st. 6 E. 1st st. Chicago.
OFFICES FOR RENT
FOR REST-OFFICE, FIRST CLASS RIDGE,
50 and 120th and Indianapolis, conti
nent for sublining line or more smaller edifice,
Place Boulevard 500,
Ask for Mr. Clark.
FLATS FOR RENT
FOR RENT
modern two-bed bldg., 520. Fairfax 2565.
NICE BROOM VOTTAGE, ON THE
FOUR-BROOM PLAY, FIRST FLOOR, MODERN conceptue, FLAGGING, TWIRLING MIDDLE,
Kennedy 1634, Rent $50.
MARYLAND AVE., 2500-POUR BROOM PLAY.
GALBERT AVE., 2520-FIVE-BROOM PLAY.
steam beat, electric light.
E. 42D ST., 213H-THREE ROOMS, MODERN.
#45.
SUMMER RESORTS
BRAGEN'S RESORT ON BEACHSTREET, WORLD
AND Park Lake, Woodland Park, Mile
Hill, Oakland, CA. Req. Bachelor's
information with Mrs. K. I. Bragge, Bibby, C.
Mire. WORK FOR TERMS TO
THE SUMMERSTREET COTTAGE.
Nearly, four rooms. Terraces underl
27. Inside are, Atlantic City,.
Atlantic City, N.J. Attend resort.
Attend resort. Earn $10,000 per bore,
and room $12 per week. Make reservations
early.
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.
Hotels, boarding house, apartments and
baths. N. J. Attend resort. N. J.
Indians, Atlantic City, N. J.
AGENTS WANTED
WHO ARE DESIGNS OF MAKING
ES $20 PER WEEK CLEAR CREDIT
CERTIFICATE. MUTUELTY MAPP MARVEL
their own. MUTUELTY MAPP MARVEL
cleanly clean in 10 to 15 minutes, then
hundred other in every room. Nothing else
is needed. Prints on fine, linen and war. Fastest selling
prints on fine, linen and war. Fastest selling
SAMPLES make sales more. SAMPLES make sales more.
GENERAL GENERAL GENERAL GENERAL
greatest sale of every package. No capital
or experience required. Hater, then made,
for FREE SAMPLES and proof. Good
for FREE SAMPLES and proof.
1926 E. Shail, Chicago, IL.
THE GREATEST DISCOVERY EVER
NEGRO SOLDIERS IN WAR-MANY POPULATIONS of Colored troops;烈火书本, only age 12. For children, we make $25 dinner; for girls, $10 dinner for both girls; for boys, $10 dinner. WANTED—JOSEPH KENNETH MIX AND CUNNINGHAM for a fast selling proposition; $20 so quickly easily can be. If interested call us at 1-800-323-2222 or in 1-800-323-2222 or in Mr. Alcorn.
FAST SELLING HOUSE TO HOUSE HOLIDAY
ticket preparation and household
articles. Ticket preparation and
article articles. Hybion Lab. 200 Stabat in
st. 1120 AND WOMEN FOR INSURANCE
company. good pay; experience not necessary.
house. room. 1506. Kappler &
Alger Alder.
HAIRDRESSING
EXPERT SERVICE
HAIRDRESSING.
MASSAGE, BORNING.
SCALP AND SKIN TREATMENTS
and every phase of
BEAUTY CULTURE
at the
KASHMIR-NILE QUEEN
BEAUTY SHOP,
3423 INDIA AVE.
DOUGLAS $270
The most beautiful shop in Chicago. We make a substantial reduction if you clip this adv. and bring it with you.
MRS. BEASLEY WILL GIVE PORO TREATMENTS.
your hair in your own hair. Your owner treatments in YOUR HOME
call Mrs. Burroughs, Westborough 882-
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PAGE ELEVEN
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REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
FIVE LIVES AT HENLEY, MISS-PEEK
right if all WILL work, terms, calls, address
John H. Daly, 229 I. First St., Manhasset,
1610.
PERSONAL
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AMAN AND EVE.
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MAGNITIVE LINCSTONE- MARY PROPEY
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M. Inner Lake, M. Inner Lake, 250 Sewat
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We also provide electrical
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2100 S. STATE ST. CHICAGO
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SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922
---
How Boston Had Its Ups and Downs
In the spring of 1634 John Saffin formerly a prosperous Boston merchant—signed an agreement to free his slave named Adam at the expiration of seven years, he courted, may be seen in the Suffolk court records, sets forth that the arrangement was enclosed and for the encouragement of my Negro man named Adam to go on cheerfully in his business, provides that Adam must be on cheerfully quietly and Industriously in the Lawful Assigns shall from time to time reasonably Set him about or employ him in and do behave and abear a faithful Servant ought to do. **** Adam, Willard De Lue recounts in him and do behave in hand over to service of Thomas Shepherd, to whom Saffin had rented a farm in Bristol, R. I. Bristol was satisfied within the Massachusetts jurisdiction. Seven years passed—seven years the idle of sultuary sentiment in Massachusetts. Boston, from which port the first American-built slave ship was said, was a thriving city.
"Some of the most prominent families in the town were interested in boat about it. Back in 1680 Saffir together with John User, the promiscuous Shippen, James Whitcomb and Andrew Bolcher, father of Gov. Belchon, sent the ship Elizabeth to the Guinea back in the following year and put in at Swansea for orders, her captain was instructed to go around to Swansea to see the crops under cover & come up in the night with them, giving us notice thereof with what privacy you might still take care for these landing. * * *
Opposition to Slavery Developed
But the increase in the trade stimulated the opposition to it. In 1700 Judge Samuel Seward published the anti-slavery treaty "The Selling of Joseph." When, in 1701, the seven-year period of the agreement expired, the slave, Adam, claimed his liberty, refused to accompany Saffin to his farm at Bristol, and, in the minutes of his absence, quit
Saffir brought the matter into the courts. The Superior court at Bostonsburg at Bristol, I, seems that Adam had cost him, all told, "above three-score pounds," and that, while the "your petitioner is made a mere Vassal to his slave in being at continuation," the "your petitioner is made a more supply him with all manner of necessaries, as Cleotha, Bedding, food and Physick, and attendance when he is sent to prison." He pay the keeper for his keeping in Prison Three Months where he was by the Quarter Sessions committed at the Castle **** yet for all this the said vile Negro is at this Day set at days ago, and he has the Mist Master in danger of my life, he having threatened to be Revengeged of me and all then that he is to the great scandal and evil example of all Negroes both in town and country whose eyes are upon the issue of his exertible practices."
After thus reciting his sils,莎华 Adam to him "that as an English subject he may dispose of his said matter." The legislature passed the matter along to the court of general session, and then Adam was again found guilty.
Won on an Appeal
Adam was fortunate in being supported by two of the most ingenious lawyers in the court, since. They promptly appealed to the higher court, basing their case on the claim that Adam was the greatest that can be given to any man save his life. It ought not to be forfeited upon Adam, and Adam's personal conduct, they claimed, was, as compared with the tremendous issues at stance, a trivial matter.
On Tuesday, November 2, 1793, the Superior court began his sitting at the courtroom. He was joined by John Hathorne, John Walley and John Leverett on the bench. The three men and the justices ordered that "the said Adam & his heir be at peace with the justices and that Chathart from the sd John Saffin Esq. & his heirs for Ever."
Quaker Woman First Worker in Maryland
The spread of Quakerism in Maryland was characteristic of the quiet town where the faith was made. Maryland's missionary minister of the sect was a member of the Virginia in 1655 and returned to London in the following year after touring the Chesapeake shore. One year later he returned to the Detroit News, Robert Clarkson, distributed a shipment of the Chesapeake shore books to Friends among his neighbors, and by 1672 there were numerous residents of the Chesapeake shore who knew George Fox, visiting Maryland that year, noted that at a meeting on the eastern shore upon the river that it was almost like the Thames.
DOCTOR SETS UP
GLAND CLINIC
San Diego, Cal.-Dr. John R Brinkley of Kansas, whose experiments in goat gait transplantation have attracted attention, has left the University of Ecuador, Eusendua, Lower Cal, where he expects to establish a hospital.
THE WEEK
[Copyright Chicago Defender by R. S. Abbott Publishing Company. All rights reserved.]
PART TWO
IN BRIEF
Two "Leaders"
A Seance
One by One
(Copyright Chicago)
TWO of your "leaders" felt called on to say something. One, Marcus Garvey, spoke at New Orleans. The other, Mr. DuBois, puts his thoughts in his magazine.
First listen to Mr. Garvey, speaking in New Orleans:
"This is a white man's country. He found it, he conquered it, and we can't blame him if he wants to keep it. I am not vexed with the fact that I am growing me because I am black. I never built any street cars or railroads. The white man built them for his own convenience. And if I don't want to ride where he's willing to let me ride then I'd bet-
---
There is nothing to say about Garvey. Coming up from a tom-tom land, you don't expect him to know what color of white and black working side by side to make a country for ALL people. Mr Garvey makes his speeches according to time and place. White people know this. He is possible for him to create trouble by swelling his head; running around behind him like children following any other circus. Even first-class West Indians will tell you that Garvey is a person of people have found him out also. Those whose money he threw away are also cured. The news report that Mr Garvey holds a conference with the kleege of the Ku Klux Klan. The Black Star Line and the Ku Klux Klan would look well in harmony. Help out in this if
---
In his magazine Mr. DuBois says "Abram Lincoln was a Southern poor white, OF ILLEGITATE MATE BIRTH, poorly educated, illiterate, ill dressed. He liked smutty stories and was a politician down to his wife. Aristocrats-Jeff Davis, Seward and their ilk—despised him, and indeed he had little outward that compelled respect." He wrote that, but here is enough to show you that Mr. Garvey is not without company.
A little learning, so said Pope, is a dangerous thing, but much learning seems to be fatal. A little may make you sick, but a heap of it gives you strength. Lincoln a "poor white," though at the time of his birth in 1809 most everybody was hard up. Lincoln of illegitimate birth! The accusation given breath in the Race took out of established illegitimate? As a people you were taken out of bondage by Lincoln. He did not have to take you out. He could have been freed. Because he DID take you out of bondage he was killed; that is, he suffered death that you might live. The thanks he gets is that one of your "leaders" scandalizes his name and an old whisper born of blackguards and only by them repeated.
---
Do you not know that NO Colored man, however big or learned he thinks he is, or somebody has made him believe he is, car or afford to disobey him? Do you know his countrymen? What or expediency?
If there was any proof of this charge against Lincoln only one person would have it. It then Watters set every honest heart straight on this matter.
You would not have done this, you would not have done this, who put the people above itself.
The Negro who would talk about Jefferson Davis you might properly examine; one throwing off on Lincoln the other examination—his case is hopeless.
No wonder people say "education" ruins Colored people.
Once you were down; Lincoln Lincoln gave you a name and Lincoln made you free. Once your children were born out of wollock; Lincoln gave them a name and THIS MAKES LINCOLN SUBLIMBED children. That Elsie kiss good-bye.
If you hold to this new picture
of the man, you will see
of his countrymen, your emancip-
ator, benefactor, the savior of our
nation, as light, awkward, dilled-ness."
"You are the savior of our
nation," he said.
---
You can look into a man's heart through his thoughts of others.
Nearly Americans of other races will fall away from you; then turn on you, and nobody will be your friend. Your children will be up against it forever.
You will learn of Lincoln is key to the lessons the N. A. A. C. P. proposes to teach Colored people of the U. S. A. it is time to break up the N. A. A. C. P. and send Mr. Garvey to take over Africa.
---
You first heard of Mr. DuBois through his attacks on Booker T. Washington. You will continue to think of him as a man who slandered the life of the writer. This writer is fairly up on leaders from Moses to the present time. He tells you, therefore, that real leaders are not made this way.
GLADYS MURRAY, medium and true believer, held a seance in A "seance" is meeting ground between the living and the dead. Right away you will say that Washington is proper place for such a meeting. "Lane docks" call our capital home. Sister Murray says George Washington was present, asking questions. You can see the father of his country all worked up. You think was present? Thomas Heflin, Alabama, Senator in the American Congress; himself
Chicago Defender WORLD'S GREATEST WEEKLY
By Roscoe Simmons
Defender by S. A. Abbott Publishing Company
given to transects. You know Mr
Hefflin, of course.
Once he represented the Fifth Alabama district in Congress, Tuskegee is in this district. Heinf never forbears him for having been born with brains.
Mr. Heinf succeeded Charles W. Thompson, statesman in his own place, as himself. Thompson, Roosevelt follower, and Nat Thompson, famous Populist.
George Washington, having been asked many questions wanted to know that puffed-up follower sitting to the left, Sister Murray? asked the father of his country. Washington then went on to talk of prohibition, rise and rule of skirts in our land, wealth, etc. etc.
Asked if a woman would ever be puffed-up "T" and then farewell, good-by, farewell to all.
"Tell Heinf," he said to Sister Washington and Robert E. Lee as I flow through the third heaven, and they told me to look up Heinf and ask him not to talk so loudly; experiments we are making in air currents can't stand
One more question Washington said he wished to get an answer to. "I should like to know how problematic hit dry Congressmen," he inquired. Sister Murray said really she didn't know, but would ask Congressmen to explain. "Turning to inquire, she found every Congressman's seat vacant. Lincoln, Grant and Roosevelt will be the next presidents. The medium says she spoke to Senator Borah about granting audience to our great departed. The Borah, great debater, "but if they can get a hearing it is more than I can do."
Our white people think seeing spirits is something new. Colored people see seeing and talking with them ever since the first grave-yard was laid out.
ONE BY ONE THE roses fall. Also one by one deaf and dumb Republicans fall by the wayside. Look at McCumber: then think of our great President, Mr. Harding, who tried to reconstruct the Republican party.
Thus far, excepting Kellogg in Minnesota, the old "Guard has lost its grip on the party." Republicans think Republicans are satisfied or dissatisfied with party management?
Thus far, excepting McCormick, our big Senator, chairman of the Republican senatorial committee, lets nothing touch him. Whoever picks a nomination from the bush satisfies him, the committee is pleased." says each statement.
---
How will it all come out if Mr. Harding's friends lose in all the states? Take Ohio, our great President. Take Michigan, our great President. fight going on. Resting chairmanship of the Republican congressional committee, Fess complains of the state's lack of a Democraticgress. Fess will be Republican candidate against Pomerene for the Senate. All of them kick on the South Side. Colored Ohioans ought to study up on Pomerene; determine if they ought to go against him for Fess. She is a Democrat, and many will say. She is President, and Mr. Harding, our Great President, says Democrats are all right. To prove it he appoints them to big offices in states where the Republicans outnumber other Republicans. After awhile you will say, a Good Democrat is better than a had Republican. Right then you will get a
---
Talk is heard that Mr. Harding our great President, will not seek a second term. How is that? you ask. What is the question? How can he keep him out of that, since offleaders always control the convention. Can you go back in knowledge on offleaders? How hard is Harrison's? Offleaders forced his second nomination. But the people met them later in the year. It is one thing to nominate; another to this writer is a Harding man, as the term goes, but Mr. Harding, doing up Colored people, is also doing up the Republican party. Unless he changes, both he and this writer are nominated. If he is nominated this writer will be for him. But meanwhile keep your eye on primary returns; read all the papers, and watch the weeks of Weeks and Hughes; above all, watch Lowden. To re-elect Mr. Harding would take $5,000,000. It might be worth that we have some dimes of it would come in handy.
D I YOU READ a week or so ago where T. W. Loyley, noted Southern californian, called on the federal government and the buk Klu Klux Klan? Mr. Loyley lives at Columbus, Ga., is editor of the Enquirer-Suan; was one editor of the Augusta Chronicle, We are the Times; says the author, says Mr. Loyley; "somebody will have to help us." See how things come around. Putting them together, have to let time do some things for you. Ten years ago Mr. Loyley would have been afraid to say that. Our white people South are crazy about the term means, know what the term means. Many think it means that Washington city ought to keep to itself on the Gettysburg side of the Potomac. Do you know much of Calhoun? John C. Calhoun? Not simply do you know that name, but do you know what the name means, words? Well, he was a priest.
CHICAGO, SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922
Williamson County
W. G. Rockefeller
A Race Horse
pounder of the doctrine of states' rights. He won't much on the federal compact. "I am first a Carolina politician," he said. It has taken Mr. Loyless 57 years—since Lee told Grant that it was all over with the Confederacy—to are that one government is stronger than the other. These are some of the matters the federal government will have to look into: Lynch, the ballot, divorce, Klux and the history of the country. A Western Congressman introduces a bill in Congress to place the election of Senators and Congressmen in office. Many things now denied you will be yours; not perhaps because anybody now against you wants you to have them, but because unless you get the Senate, you will do nobody else any good. Forty-eight states and but ONE flag is all wrong. Fifty years hence the Senate and ONE state also some writer has been putting a new volume: "The Rise and Fall of the American Republic."
A WHITE LADY of Boston, fight fan, writes to the Boston American, to say that Jack Dempsey, better than Jack Dempsey, Maybe; but white people will not allow Jack Johnson to whip Dempsey. So you will have to do the thing is to write until Wills, that other Colored gladiator, faces Dempsey. You have read, of course, that Dempsey says it is all right with him when he faces a man, Rickard, says some time is necessary to arrange matter. Probably a year or so. or be patient; and hold your tongue. You can't help in the situation; too much talk from you might bring on a lot of feeling, and work up sentiment the other way. You fight the fight; money, getting of the time, place, getting up the purse, building the arena, selecting referee and timekeeper, getting the permit for the friends must look after. So be quiet.
...
Also, don't make this fight a Race contest. Remember that both Willis and Dempsey are Americans; our one is from the other Colored; both fighters of skis in the Willis wins, well and good. If Dempsey wins, nobody is hurt. Let either one or the other win and the bolt stays under the Red, White and Blue skis against the Black skis against the White, Us against Them, you will break up this fight and put us back ten years. Nothing hurts a duck but his bill.
DECEMBER 12 a new constitution will be submitted for ratification to the people of Illinois. For almost three years a constitution convention has been working on the new constitution, the members, Edward H. Morris, great lawyer, and Dr. A. J. Cary, now bishop. Given idea of how these men stood by booking over the委员会 they were on. Both served on all important committees. When any legal matter came up everybody favored calling in Mr. That is what you call progress.
. . .
Get a copy of the organale law and read it. It is pretty long, but you can get your children to read it to them they will have something to do besides running the streets; and they may brush up on words and their manners. Too many girls and boys in the streets. They are loose because you are so loose. We along this writer will pick out sections here and there tell you about them. You must get ready to vote for ratification of the constitution. Nothing in it to object to and most everything to commend. Nothing in it to all right. If Mr. Morris says it is all right, that makes it all right for Colored people. That is what you need to be a convention for—to look after matters.
---
One sentence in the new constitution makes it a perfect document. SHE SENTS it, ALL LAWS SENTENCE it, BARRIES it, CITIZENS ALIKE WITHOUT RE-GARD TO RACE OR COLOR." White men wrote that sentence, wrote it because two Colored men said they should write it; wrote it for the Illinois makes with her Colored children. Yet you say, or will back up foolish men who say, all white people are mean. You don't know how well off you are. Millions of white people with Harding, our great President.
So much for our new constitution, except to tell you that Mr. Morris is on the committee to submit the document to the people. Another honor, Cary. They made footprints on the sand. Three cheers for WHITE Illinois!
---
DO YOU remember that this
did not救你 a little white
back if you think we think
our white people had not started too late
to catch up with liberty?
So: and now they see that they
must hustle to catch up. From lynch-
ing, from the death of his color to lynching a white man in spite of his was a short step.
Violating one law invites violation of all law, as you know, though you are not at Williamson county, Illinois, "cries everybody now. All right, look; look and think; everybody look and think.
What are you surprised at? There is nothing about Williamson county to get excited over. A thousand counties in Ditle invited you long
(Continued on Page 15, Col. 6)
Defies Age Keeping Up Great Work
Pastors One Church 42 Years; Then Starts Huge New Task
A persistent belief that runs the rounds and comes back again is that a man or a woman can anything after they have matured and grown in life. The distinction isn't made saying they are unable to begin anything new, but they can be supposed to be in a position to give anything different in motion.
1
The notion is probably an error. Many of the world's leaders are wrong.
Rev Jeter the world's grandest compilations have been by men and women with, as they say, "one foot in the grave." That suggests that these elderly folks had lost all their pop and that amputation, but, anyway, the dope is all wrong on male or female of the species surrounding out a half century of services. All of which serves as an introduction to a man who has done just startling something else, the Rev. H. N. Jeter. In Newport, R. L. his home church for 42 years and gave it up to take up the special work he is in the way he puts it. At a time when one would think that he wanted to build the movement he has started for the busy seeking to build bigger the movement he has started for the busy seeking to build bigger the movement he has started for the busy seeking to build bigger the Human and Reform institution known as the Jeter movement.
This association's national in-
formation and for object the improvement
of the conditions within the Race along
the line of industry, education and
economic conditions. The efficient committee in every city,
representing the Race churches,
proposed establishment in every state
with a considerable Race population
men out of work can be temporarily
employed until permanent jobs are
othered trained for useful occupations.
The minister and his wife have
preached in 22 large cities and held
the preachers of both races. His wife preaches
to women, seeking to interest them in missions.
He left Chicago on their way east. His message was brought to Chicoacans at the Ebe-
bue Rev. C. H. Clark is pastor.
Macadam Roads First Used by the Egyptians
The stone of macadam road, which is not new to our civilization, Charles Pierce Burt writes in Harper's. We told that explorers in Egypt, enlightened by the discovery of Egyptian wares, were able to build the pyramids were astounded at the remains of the roads discovered. They were constructed originally very much as our roads are constructed originally in the University of Pennsylvania. "The right of way was leveled; the large stone blocks were laid on these were layers of stone gradually diminishing in size until the finally placed. This was wetted and pounded, probably by hand, until the stone again. huge blocks of quarried stone were transported, pulled on the road again, huge blocks of quarried stone were transported, pulled on the pavement, wet to make them slippery. We were of a type which we have come to call water bound macadam. It has taken us 5,000 Egyptian roads.
FIRST KLONDIKE
GOLD MADE KEY
The reputed discoverer of the Klondike gold fields died in Van. Todd he kept 22 nuggets from the first two pans of gold he washed on Boatside, and he presented a golden telegraph key which was presented to President Taft in 1903 and used by him in opening the Klondike-ukan exposition in Seattle.
MOURNERS FLEE; IT'S LIGHTNING
MOURNERS FLEE; IT'S LIGHTNING
North Bergen, N. J.—A bolt of lightning struck the undertaker and caused panic among the mourners while the body of the undertaker lay in the grave at Flower Hill cemetery. The horses broke loose from the barn and the undertaker had recovered the burial proceeded.
All Race business men should hire both black and white in their business. It is large enough to warr
"Ku Klux" at Work
A
Members of the Boston College, Boston, Mass., "Cuckoo Clan" as part of the class day celebration, staged a little tableau on the college grounds. Southern students attending the college raised an objection, declaring that the play reflected discredit on one of the greatest Southern forces for "law and order." White students were the actors.
Where Do All the Pins Go? Can You Say?
Our everyday life is full of interesting little problems. Take the winter time. We have all decided that we don't know and that we don't want to deal with many other, conundrums. Consider the great pin ques-sion. Consider the great pin ques-sion, because a pin is virtually indestructible, asserts a London man, made in the course of the year, and lost, strayed or stolen, but never by any chance ever seen or heard of. Consider the great population of the globe to a considerable extent. There are millions of pins disappear like "snow in that" as quickly as they are manufactured, and there are millions of body deliberately thrown in away as they do match sticks. Where do one of the unplanned mysteries of life
Women in the Philippines Equal to Men
AUTO A WONDER
TO BLIND BOY
Chicago, Ill.—Almost totally blind for the thirteen years of his life, he was given a sight recently through an operation. He declared that he is a speeding automobile. All other sights rank behind it. he said. The doctor for the Prevention of Blindness assisted him in getting the operation.
Florence, Italy.-Bones believed to be those of Giovanni Boccaccio, the poet, the novelist and poet, have been found in the house at Cestello in which he was born. He moved to Florence by a well-known architect, Giovanni Boccaccio admirabile.
Features and Correspondence
STORIES INTERESTINGLY TOLD
at Work
college, Boston, Mass., "Cuckoo day celebration, staged a little
is. Southern students attend-
ction, declaring that the play the greatest Southern forces
the students were the actors.
Lion Tamer Is Really Afraid of House Cats
Jim Coyle, head keeper at the Central park, zoo, who boasts the lion cub black leopard in captivity Toozie, is afraid of only one animal—a house cat.
"I can't explain why an ordinary cat that babies will play with holds error for me. Coyle said, according to a friend, the lion afraid they'll wake up residents on Fifth Avenue I can go into their room. "Late at night when something goes wrong in the lion house and cat, I can come back through the curtsey that I would go into a child's room at night. But let a cat brush his teeth. I come back through dark and Tint. I would go into a child's room in. In handling the lions one of Coyle's fingers was bitten off and his arm ripped from the hood. He holds no grudge against the lion. "Oh, that lion and I were the best of friends. You see it was partly my own fault. I went in to latch his feet. You see it was anybody, and I didn't have on my-uniform, to which he was accustomed. The main thing was, he had called him by name before sticking to anybody, and I would have known me instantly."
Coyle says that a lion not only knows these he has met before but knows what to do before steps before the cage whether that person likes animals. And right here is perhaps, the reason Coyle thinks I never feel that a cat is really my friend. he said. "Maybe because I'm afraid of them to the ex-situ animals with them. But I always have the feeling that they like me for what they can get out of me and that they make it cool. It makes cool chill run up and down my back to have one of the slippery things around me. because they couldnt do you a lot of harm if they did turn against you—but give me pandas and wolves and keep and even keep your Tabby away."
Flies Become Dangerous as Boll Weevil
"WHEN Sha'g's hut
frozen, he force him
to force him
a cross his couch
the ferret in
can in one hand and
the ferret in the other. He
had head slightly raised, tail in slow
sibration and mouth gaped in
a stuffy, hissing muscain.
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FANGS OF THE DREGS,
By BENJAMIN YOUNG
IN THIS WEEK'S ISSUE
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Deep down in the Alabama
inland Hills Phyllis will now
caught the vision of a justice
directed by an Almighty Provi-
dence.
SEE PAGE FIFTEEN
SEE PAGE FIFTEEN
Men's Faces in Mirrors Are Shams
Looking Glasses Seldom Reflect Faces Shown to Outside World
Mirror Reflects Best Face
"Oh, he's one of those writers of best sellers—"
Gaught in His Real Look
"But before I could finish the withering sentence I caught sight of my face awake in a awful fire. For one I gave myself a caught myself off my guard, and I saw the face that I show to the world knock the fellow who is luckier than I. I knocked like the face of a spiteful horse. Honestly, I'm not exaggerating. I had thought I had known imperfections, and had always found it quite pleased, pretty, you understand—full of imperfections, but with a certain polite, kind face. And the other—the head crinkled up, eyes puckered and mouth snarling—that that was the foot. "Only when you are 'knocking somebody,' corrected the Tikitan goddess. And we women have the art of 'knocking without spilling our faces,' said the Rottieck madonna who satisfied smile into her vanity mirror.
Veteran Dies After Having 48 Operations
Catanwisa, Pa.—Herbert McCarty (wife), 33 years old, a veteran of the Tuskegee Air Force, for life after undergoing nearly 50 operations to overcome wounds he sustained in a armistice, when his body was riddled by bullets from a machine gun of a machine gun station in hospitals almost continuously since he was wounded. His operations were major ones, and 25 others were classed by surgeons as minor. Eight others were taken from his body and he carried two, grown into his jigular vein, to have been entirely removed a portion of one shoulder blade and a collars. His case is said by specialists to be one of the most remarkable in the history of McCarty had been cited for extreme bravery, his citation stating he was among bodies of his own when wounded.
Canon City, Colo.-John Jones, a former state senator, the state pentagon June 27, 1992, and recently. He will be brought back to complete his term of imprisonment.
PAGE FOURTEEN
England Is Not Home of the Walnut
Came From China, as Did Virginia Peanuts and Indian Nut
Colloquial names in botany are sometimes misleading, according to the American botanist John Walsh who is not English at all. This nut came originally from China and has been known there, according to the American botanist John Walsh, about the time that Chinese schools were started. The Chinese were studying botany at the Chinese foot, and civilization is concerned we can learn lessons at the Chinese feet, because they were civilized centuries before we ceased to use friction to start the machine. Another familiar native of China is the peanut, which is now so widely resident of Virginia and is native to China centuries before Columbia discovered the land of which the Virginia peanut fields are now a part. The peanuts are familiar with the Indian nut, a thy but wonderfully flavored and nourishing pine tree seed used in New York's lower East Side. It is much misunderstood. It is called an Indian nut and mountain nut, but most people believe it comes from
It is found only in North and South America. It is about the size of a navy bean, is autumn brown in color, with dapples and stipples of orange and is most delicious. It is the mountain of mountain chipmunks. The wood of the tree which produces beautiful colors of flame and firewood in the world. It burns slowly, produces beautiful colors of flame and fires easily in the temperate zone Rockies. The Colorado Rockies produce it in great quantity. Its peculiar fact relation to the pinon nut is that it finds no favor in its native forests. There is little sale for pinon nuts in the West, but the Western mountain forests nuts for the markets of the big Eastern cities.
Hints on How to Keep Farm Expenses Down
"In the face of present economic conditions," says Prof. Andrew Boss vice-director of farm soils and chief of the division of farm soils and farm management, University of Minnesota, to this year's farm business, if receipts are to cover expenses. What can be done? The answer is both that it is, cut down expenses and increase receipts.
Addressing himself to the question of how the farm expenses be reduced? Prof. Boss replies as follows:
"On the farm stock on cheap farm grown feeds, rather than on salable grain, expensive mill feeds or commercial by-products, the available value only on productive enterprises.
Make the old machinery do for you whatever possible. Calculate ahead what you are going to get for every dollar expended. Two hundred dollars spent good on the investment than if spent for a manure spreader for which you have prof. Prof. Boss says the task of increasing receipts is not easy in the face of falling prices. He would the husband make the attempt."
By maintaining better balanced out materially increasing the ex-
By improving the quality of the product, or by better preparing it for market, by adding new lines of production, or changing to lines that promise best. By reducing the cost of production, thus increasing the net receipts. By getting more for what you sell. Combine innovative movements in a possible way of doing this. "Staple crops, standard live stock, mechanized equipment, organized system of diversified farming," says Prof. Boss, "have carried many farmers through the tight corridors. The chances are they will do so again."
Social service is very a vital service in Japan, where a most important public service is the public is shown even by municipal authorities. "In the most unexcused place, a worker in Kyojo Japan "we find a keen enthusiasm for every height in the standup life," for instance, when it rains here in Kyojo our police boxes hang out little signs, benighted souls who have ventured out without their picturequeen rain dryers, and dryers of charges in the street corner the other day I saw a bicycle rack equipped with all sorts of lights. "Quite in keeping with the general attitude of quaint courtesy is in one Japanese city, who not caring to hurt his follow citizens by a perjury up a sign which read: "Much more better that you go round."
'SIAMESE TWINS'
FOUND IN TREE
'SIAMESE TWINS'
FOUND IN TREE
What may be called the "Slammer Twins" of tree world is found on the island of Rock Island, the location of the Mississippi river at Rock Island, III. The island, occupied by an arsenal of the United States government, is home to some 600 acres of luxuriant forest, comprising many varieties of trees, and almost in the center of it is the twin tree, an oak tree, having grown close together many years ago, appear to be merged into a single hole to a height of five or six feet. At this height the trunks, say the Detroit News, are entirely separate, each bearing its own peculiar bark, and the tree has been estimated to be a hundred years old, but is still of vigorous growth.
A free and unrestricted ballot in the North and South.
Louisiana Sets Aside a Huge Strip of Land as Haven for Migrant Birds
Stretching like a great wire across miles in length by rather more than seven miles in width, on the average, they fly over 100 miles in great stream of migrant birds which flows up the Mississippi valley every spring, and along the way long as they choose to stay upon it. They may not be shot, trapped, or in any way protected by a fleet of twelve motor patrol boats, most of them armed, and the only place of safety to all wild life, including even the black bear, the alligator and the lion. The Boston Transcript, Guns and fishing rods are barred, though an especially the wildlife photographer, and the man with the opera glasses, though he seldom sees them, are particularly in the nesting season. There are rather more than 500 miles in length, say, some 220,000 to 330,000 acres, and no far as the writer knows, it is the great wild life preserve in the world.
Varied Topography of Louisiana
It belongs to the state of Louisiana, and it contains rolling hills, coveyed islands dotted with groves, lakes of fresh water, lagoons and bays of salt rice, many miles of shore on the coast, and acres of marsh covered with wild influence three miles out to sea. It is the result of several gifts to the region, beginning with the with the area of 13,000 acres by Charles Wills Ward and Edward Avery McNeeman, with the last two years, by very large areas contributed to the state by the Russell Sage Foundation. Between the gifts of these two organizations lies another wedge covered belong to the state, but for the purchase of which negotiation are well tested by the state, so that its winged dwellers are virtually as well as those on the main tracts of the
Regarding the alligator, some question has been raised as to his behavior and conduct as to the general character and habitual behavior of the surlan. It was learned on university grounds that the alligators were killed off, or driven away from a locally, the raccoons and rats destroyed the alligators were destroyed young birds and birds' eggs until many of the feathered inhabitants of the area were driven almost to extinction, the raccoons and rats destroyed young epleurees, at least, it was learned that the raccoons and rats destroyed the diamond-backed alligator, which apparently was threatened, and, in some instances actually eliminated, when the check of the alligators was removed and it is very unfortunate to be caught annoying an
Princess Is Puzzled With Host of Gifts
While correspondents were being shown the presents, the 22 gift clocks began chiming 6 o'clock almost the same instant.
REPLY FOR HELP
President Harding refused to approve "absolute, immediate and complete independence" to be delivered by a delegation from the islands. The president's refusal of the plea for independence was made known in the press and was presented at the White House recently.
Mr. Harding it was said, exclaimed, would be granted the islands ultimately, but he made it clear that he would be granted the time yet ripe for such action.
WORLD TO KNOW
LUSITANIA LOAD
New York—If ammunition is found aboard the austrian, the state will send the militant passengers, was justified by the Germans on the ground that the ship will be given to the world, a statement by J. W. Karbe, representative of the Leavitt Lustiana company, will sell the Irish coast good
alligator on the Loualana wild life reserve.
There are seven lanes of migration followed by the birds in their move to America, or, it might be better said, between Alaska, Canada and the United States, on the northwest coast of South America on the south, for many of the migrant birds do not wander as far down as the southern coast, nor possibly as well charted to avian wanderers as sea route are to ship captains, runs and shoulders of South America, with way stations on Labrador and on the islands of the West Indies. And another route from the tip of Florida and join the Atlantic coast lane, after making a resting point of Cuba, to Florida from Florida's southwestern coast to lower central and northern South America, also crosses Cuba to Florida, and then moves movement reaching from the western boundary of Florida to the western boundary of Louisiana to the western boundary of Mexico, coast of Mexico, and on the peninsula of Yucatan. This is the greatest path of bird migration, more than 500 miles wide, and necessitating a sustained flight of nearly 600 miles across the Gulf of Mexico, more than 500 miles wide, and northward pointing peninsula of Yucatan.
The fifth and, possibly, least used coast is the coast of Texas from a point slightly north of the mouth of the mouth of the Gulf coast of Mexico, near to Vera
Along Continent's Backbone
The sixth lane comes down the "backbone of the continent," from the lakes of northern New Mexico, to take up thousands of migrants in Colorado, Wyoming, Idaho, New Mexico and other mountainous states, and then climb the mountain wall into Mexico and even as far down as the northern countries of Central America, the Pacific coast, from the Aleutian archipelago, through California, and then curving around the southern end of the coast, to join the migrants in lane 6, and thus continue into Mexico. Returning, in the next proceeded into divisions of the migrant hordes, but they follow on the northward journey the invisible path down which they flew southward the
Of all these, the fourth and greatest is that which pours its tides of winged life up in the Louisiana. The Louisiana wild life reserve lies in the midst of, and across, this wide lane of migration, on the coast, of Louisiana, of long experience, that seven-tenths of the migrant birds of North America move north and south. Even the finest of birds, the toughest of brewing the 300 miles of continuous flight across the gulf while the white birds, ducks, geese, herons and skimmals of birds of Louisiana, fly through Louisiana literally and truthfully by millions, twice each year. All of them stop for a rest in the gulf coast, both coming and going.
China Frowns on White Man's
Christianity
Amoy, China. The religious world of the Far East is stirred by an anti-christian movement which started in the late 1980s and Pekin university, and is now rapidly spreading among the students of private, and government schools in the young people term Christianity a superstition and harmful to the people, taking away reverence for an ancient and freedom of thought and action.
The new movement has begun an energetic propaganda, which in turn has brought Christian leaders to the movement with grave misgivings. Others think it is simply the result of a desire to organize something, and means of defeating it is to ignore it.
Conditiones provoking the organization of such a movement are said to be the result of the recent world progress of Christianity in China, taken together with much talk and advertising of the recent world progress of Christianity in China, other conferences of a like nature held in this country. The students are declared to be tools in the hands of the world seeking to break up organized society.
The leaders of this anti-christian movement are Dr. Tai Teal Yang, chancellor of the university; Wang Chaoneng, senior Dr. Sin Yat Sen, and Chen Tu-Su, who is a socialist. A free love society has been formed among the students of the university. Considering the possibility of an anti-foreign movement resulting, the local consular bodies have taken up the matter with the commissioner of the university, however, says he is unable to promise protection in case of persecution.
RELIC OF JEFF
DAVIS' HONORED
Richmond, Va.—The cell table used by Jefferson Davis, president of the Confederacy, was blown off a prisoner in Fortress Monroe after the close of the war, and the collection of interesting relics in the Confederate museum here.
Highpoint, N. C.-Jule Garrett (white) of Jamesland was seized and placed in an automobile and taken to a lonely spot and whipped, he told officers. Garrett said he had been unidentified and unidentified persons to go to work.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
One Lives; Was Light BrigadeMan
Cutting Rode Through Valley of Death With Immortal "600"
Cutting Rode Through Valley of Death With Immortal "600"
Cedar Rapids, Iowa — Ellis Cutting and his death city rode into the valley of death in the Civil War. He was charged of the Light Brigade at Balakirava in the Crimean War. He saw the camp of the British commander, Lord Raglan, dash up and hand Lord Lutwain to the ground. Cutting, then, a 17-year-old British trooper, did not know what the note contained. History says it contained the terms: "Lord Raglan wishes the cavalry to advance rapidly to the front and attack the enemy, away the guns—French cavalry is on your left." Lord Raglan saw his commander thrust that note into his glove before its heeler rode away. "Lord Raglan Brigade!" The command rang. There was a flash of sabers. Down into the valley of death, the British horsesmen, in certain directions,
Was R. R. Map
Disagrees with History
Mr. Cutting disagrees with history as to the number who returned. He was asked what was the secret of the fultile and merciless command, Cutting said, of Lord Nagari who commanded the order that he given over the order to charge, and that then Lord Lucan pulled the order from his glovo where he had "is that your handwriting?" Lord Lucan asked, Mr. Cutting does not know what the order was, but for 10 minutes he saw them engaged in a battle of words. He helpless Lord Nagari gave the order to rush in rushing in the cavalry, the infantry should have been sent in to maneuver. He crumpled the Crimean war Mr. Cutting went to India with the British troops and passed through the military. He marched in with the infantry and that famous sloge. Once he was wounded. He passed through Egypt and was in active service during the war. He, 1660, received his discharge from the British army and in 1871 he came to the United States.
Indian Caste
Pride Takes
Queer Turns
In the face of the debating beggary one meets with at every turn in India, the involatile writer, writes Gertrude Emerson in Asia. A man who would beg baskish from you with whining seasickness polluted by your touch. He would throw it away if your shadow had contaminated it. It remember a wonderful morning up and down the Ganges at that early golden hour when thousands of pilgrims from all over India bowed to the river, singing religious songs as they cast garlands of orange flowers out upon the breast of Mothra, the river, singing religious songs themselves in her sacred waters. As our boat glided along close to the bank I gave a holy man in the Ganges a cross-legged in a little temple and eating rice out of a brass bowl. He happened to glance up and down the river, crossing his bowed he bow and jumped back to the further end of his narrow stone shelf. It was only then I noticed the shading horizontally across the floor where he had been sitting. On another occasion he came to the river, carrying horizontal ice of Jalapur was taking me through the Jalapur model prison. When he came to hapen, he was superintendent polished out that one end was partitioned off so that the food of the high castle prisoner was the others. Even then, it had to be carried through the same court and so a man always walked ahead, sprinkling the water in order to inure purification.
RELIGIONS AT ARMS ON MEAT
Gandhi has overthrown another barrier: the antagonism between the Muslim and Mohammedanism. While the Hindus have their hereditary rights, the Mohammedans consider all men absolutely equal and recognize no distinctions of birth. They also consider all men equally important economic reasons, consider the cow a sacred animal; but the Mohammedans eat cow meat of Mohammedans others its followers to eat pork; but the Hindus eat pork and Muslims not in agreement. Hindus cannot marry outside their caste there is all the more reason for the Muslim religion. The Mohammedans call the Hindus "Kafirs," or, at least, do not believe in a caste category that includes only Jews, Christians and Mohammedans. — Overseas Science.
Wherever there is a civil rights struggle take advantage of that law and see that the state lives up to it and endure and stand on your rights.
Bud Says:—
Well, kiddles, here I am again. How
have you met that and the opportunity
of speaking to you? I guess
you are all pre-
grand and glorious
time this summer.
You going to
give you lots of
giving you lots of
am g o l i n g to start
another new wrin-
tle, but too impatient
to know what it is,
have a little patience and I will
tell you just what it is.
PETER H. BURGESS
Since I last spoke
I thought this one
you are all going
with ourselves
this summer
ROBT. WATKINS (Bud Billiken)
o u L. E. O. course. ROBT. WATKINS
to enjoy yourself (Bud Bilkan)
to enjoy yourself
much as you possibly can. You are
willing to swim, swimming, etc. Well, here's
what I mean:
Every so often, I want all of you to have yourself. Just drop me a letter telling me everything you did to have a life this. And when I receive the letters I will tell you. And when I receive the letters I will tell you two or three of the most interesting ideas from this strike you. It seems to me a good idea for all of us to keep track of each other and give one follow a line on how the other can do something. It probably be the cause of some fellow getting some enjoyment from something about. It will be a means of exchange ideas on pleasure during the summer. The games can be introduced to new players on pleasure during the summer. All you have to do is to write an article after one of your most pleasant pleasures make your letter interesting for publication. Stick to the facts of what you will appreciate your telling us will appreciate your telling us will be around for opportunities for the World's Greatest Weekly. It will provide lots of dollars to be earned in commissions I am very sure that all of you can find some use to make of the dollars to be
Girls' Work
Girls, the hot weather season is on, and the kids are ready to keep cool. Ice creams, sherbet and ice cream, are the most popular, come on bumble, and with very upbeat cheer for the season. Well, if that is the case, these frozen desserts. Our father and these frozen desserts. Things, take my word for it, for I know.
New that to worry about. You know how
something to icecree. We will try our own
something to freeze. We will try our own
Frozen Pudding
You will need three cups of milk, a cup of cornstarch, a cup of chopped mixed milk, your milk mixture, a full of cornstarch, a cup of chopped mixed milk, your milk mixture, a little cold milk; and the beaten eggs, and add slowly to scaled milk, stirring which has been put through a food chopper. The fruit that you will use is the two tablespoons of raisins, a tablepoon of two tablespoons of pineapple, a tablepoon of blanched almonds and a tablepoon of pineapple and two tablespoons of skim milk, mold and pack in ice and salt until all of course, ice cream, or no other kind of cookie, to accompany it. What's the matter here, Sparrow? We can use some cookies to accompany it.
Cocoanut Cookies
Cream a quarter of a cup of shortening; add a half a cup of sugar, one lemon juice or extract. Mix in slowly lemon juice or extract. Mix in slowly a half of flour, three teaspoons of baking powder, and an eighth of a teaspoon of together; add two cups of grated cocoa. The batter be quite stiff. Drop by small spoonfuls on greased pans. Do not sprinkle. Spreadling. Make in moderate oven 15 or 20 minutes. Do to do is to sit tight and listen to old Chef Bud. He knows his stuff. Bud can getten through applauding your ability as a wonderful cook, write to Bud, the chef, and tell him what they said. Hello.
Noted Men and Women
Dr. William A. Warfield was born in Hyattsville, Montgomery Co. Md. Nominated for training Baltimore, after which he entered Howard University Medical school in 1854. He received an appointment as intern in the Freedman's hospital, Washington, in 1854, serving until 1855. He surgeon, and a year later first assistant surgeon, and a year later first assistant surgeon, when he was appointed surgeon-in-chief of the hospital, and professor of national surgery at Howard university. Dr. Warfield has made a number of significant surgery. Although not so famous as his former colleagues in this field he helped considerably to ameliorate human sufferers. He is a member of a few select scientific American Hospital association, the National Medical association, the Medical Columbia. He is also a member of the District of Columbia. He is a guardian in the District of Columbia.
Every boy and girl reader of this column is eligible for membership. Fill out and return the application blank today and become a member. Application Blank for Membership
My name is......
Address..... Age......
City..... State......
Parent's name.....
Defender Junior CHILDREN'S GREATEST NEWSPAPER
which must be free from holes and
inch wide, and place smoothly over the
wire on the paper, using pencil marks
a pyle to center it, on smooth in
place, by the shape of the wire in
fin wax on a projecting border of the
paper and place a second piece of paper
over the foil. Lay the other sheet of
foil on this and place the trayed-out
strung of the second wire upon it, but
the opposite side of the wire on the
E-E-E-K!!!
"Chong"
This contribution is by Miss Edith Edith Billkins, who will be visiting time Billkins know her. She is one of my most valued members of her team, heard from her, but Everything is all right now. Yes, but when she sent in the applications for the position, she was not happy with youngsters in her town. If I remember rightly, there was about 100 of them, but we were just rushing them up for me. Good for you, Edith. We were forgetting all about the drawing. It is a great job, Miss Billkins. Ht! Hat! His name is Chong.
Letters
I saw my letter in print and I was so glad. I hope you will excuse me glad. I hope you will excuse me glad and you were able to enlarge your space, and sincerely hope that you will be a new future. will send you a piece of my photo work. B. C. Canada. C. Miner, Vancouver. B. C. Canada.
Since I have become a member of your team, I am on vacation and card. I have told everyone about our club, and have given them a Beauclair Rice. Everyone asks me, "Why don't you club?" So to stop their mouths I am writing-to you, to tell them I have written to several girls and boys and now I get mail every time I receive a card. I receive my card, I remember -Miss Christina Price, 2138 Highland place, Inc. "Don't crowd Bud. I am sorry that you are on the way. So I will say that you receive them. Keep up the good work you receive them. Keep up the good work you and your sister.
I am visiting a little friend, Leroy Bradley. Leroy is quite a poet, and I am sure he will appreciate my inspiration for my work, too. Can you guess where he lives? Try. The city is in guess where he lives. He is in the city. The city is in guess where he lives. Tennessee is where enough. Go to it, now.
Secure it in position with parrafin and
place of paper over all, all,
shipping in file.
With drops of melted paraffin fasten the ends of the tubes and gather. Then carefully roll the whole into a nest cylinder and wrap the ends with melted paraffin. Finish by dipping the whole quickly into a melted paraffin and smoothly with "Tirro" tape or by slipping it into a section of varnished camphor wood. Any dealer in electrical or radio supplies, well, this week I am going to tell you how to make a simple tube receiving water. The tube is set is much simpler than a vacuum tube and latter requires a great deal of skill and knowledge. As a matter of fact it is just the crystal detector set, which will rest considerably more, an the batteries and tube add to the expense; furthermore, the music will be made at home. But even in spite of making your own set and in addition you will have the pleasure and the music, songs and other messages you have made yourself. To make such a set as is illustrated in the plate, if all the parts are purchased together, spending upon the quality of the supplies and instruments you use. The
"I love you, mother," said little John.
Then he met his work, his cap went
and he was off to the garden sailing.
And he was off to the garden sailing.
"I love you mother," said little Nell.
"I love you better than tongue can
want."
Then she teased and pouted half the
day.
"The mother rejoiced when she went
away."
"I love you, mother," said little Can.
Today I will help you all I can.
I will help you all I can. I creeep,
And rocked the baby till it fell asleep.
Then, stepping softly, she took the
broom.
And she danced all day and dusted the
room!
And she happy all day, she helped
and cheerful as a child could be.
"I love you, mother," again they said—
Three little children going to bed.
And they walked to the kitchen,
Which of them really loved her best?
—Selected by Sarah Graves, Egg Harbor
City, N. J.
I Am Very Much Content
My house is small and small.
I catch the golden fish in the
seas.
My house is very small and low.
But the willow by my door.
Keeps a cool room in the house.
In my floor.
And, in the long and rainy nights,
I see the firemen are bare,
I see the window light
selected by Sarah Curtish, Newport
News, Va.
My Kitten
A homeless kitten came to the door one
day,
and I sat on the floor,
"I'm cold and starved, let me in." its
it took it up and shut the door on
I took it up and shut the door on
The And put the little shivering thing
before the fire to warm.
I gave it milk to drink and smoothed
"Foo kitty, stay with me." I said.
I answered with a purp.
An And answered with a purp. I have so
happy been.
I gained a merry playmate when I let
my kitty in.
-Selected by Edwina Shagford, Chicago, Ill.
New Members
LEFOR NARSETTE, age 17
12 W. 99th SL, New York City, N. Y.
740 Central Ave. Hot Springs, Ark.
LESTHA PERAGE, age 15
LUELLA E. SPEARS, age 15
131 Front St. Cheraw, S.C.
140 Front St. Cheraw, S.C.
141 Church St. Hot Springs, Ark.
KINGSTONE MONTAGUE, age 17
LEONA TAYLOR, age 15
181 Ashland, Evanston, Ill.
182 Ashland, Evanston, Ill.
190 W. 414th St. North Little Rock
JUNTAITE WHEELER, age 15
191 W. 528th St. North Little Rock
HARRY B. RUTHERFORD, age 10
HARRY B. RUTHERFORD, age 10
WALTER G. LEONARD, Jr., age 14
403 Pine St. Gaitha, Ga.
404 Pine St. Gaitha, Ga.
406 E. 814th St. Denver, Colo.
SHELBY P. VENNA, Ga.
402 Pine St. Vienna, Ga.
WITHIN Int. Co. B. Camp Furlong, Columbus, N.M.
C25 E. Broadway, Memphis, Tenn.
BOX 24, Buckton, town.
ALMA VERNETA HARRIER, age 15
C25 E. Broadway, Memphis, Tenn.
SARAH LOUISER MARTIN, age 14
62 Kear Missouri St., Indianapolis, Ind.
EDNA MAE ARGER, age 15
MILLEDR JERRE DAVIS, age 7
MILLEDR JERRE DAVIS, age 7
JERRE JERRE COLE, age 15
JOHANNA MACPADDEN, age 9
165 Shannon St. Jackson, Teen.
166 Shannon St. Jackson, Ala.
168 N. Ripley St. Montgomery, Ala.
173 N. Ripley St. Montgomery, Ala.
175 Asha St. Charleston, S. C.
MARTHA HUNTER, age 19
180 N. West St. Charleston, S.
CHARLEE C. AGNEW, age 17
CHARLEE C. AGNEW, age 17
VIVIAN HOLMES, are 13.
165 N. West St. Charleston, Pa.
166 N. West St. Charleston, Pa.
230 Chestnut St. Quincy, III.
230 Chestnut St. Quincy, III.
Ackman, ball. Cathedral, University
Caldwell hall, Catholic University, Washington, D. C.
SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922
1.
How do you do? Very well, I thank Lois with love. We work. This is Miss Leota Finley of Sedalia, M. her Earl Petit street. She would all the Blinked crowd to her. She would all the lonesome so me and you would be very glad to body, how do you like her looks? What would you think I do, how would you you. Has very a strightforward way to look anyone in just crazy about that kind of girls. Wow.
#
of your follows think about them. Loota
has the very nice essays on the care
of the fish, and the client space to print it, and have
them printed. I greatly appreciate
Loota, my girl, I greatly-appreciate
your sending me your photo, and wish
you a happy birthday. I love boys of your town to join the club, and send me their photo, too. Give every one best regards, from
BUD.
. Short Story
That evening they started for home and took a taxi to the spike and span, brand new 'nim Librae. Their homeward journey was uneventful, and they waited until they were all in the barn and retired. All except the waited until they were all sound and alerted out to the barn and secured a lantern, out to the barn and secured a door from the inside. Under one of the manners he had his hand on the door, catalogues, and going to this hiding place he drew it forth. He proceeded to tie the door shut, it was convenient for his purpose, and it was convenient for his range. With the aid of the little book he was able to pick out several of the manners he studied these and the way they were joined to other parts. He crawled in and out of the barn until nearly daybreak. The approach was to return to the house, so hiding his book again, he went to his room.
Week in History
July 5.—The 39th SouthGeorgese Bat-
ter, born in 1916, and distinguished itself by
the tenacity and the vigor of its attacks.
In 1916, he distinguished himself by
decorated with the French Croix De
decorated with the French Croix De
July 16.—In 1955 those persons who
were killed by the Baptist churches, formed at
Dremption, Ark. the Free Christian Zion
July 11.—It was on this day, in the
July 11.—It was on this day, in the
prominent lawyer, was elected city pro-
being the first Race man to hold such
July 12.—The National Association
of their Silver jubilee at Tuskegee, in 1920.
July 12.—Anthony Benzet, in 1750,
was elected the African Baptist
Race in Philadelphia. Benzet was a
Greece in 1810, in the African Baptist
church at Lexington, KY. was organ-
July 15.—James A. B. Horton died in 1850. He attained the highest rank in the army ever accorded a Race, that of successor, that of successor, authority on diseases of the prophylaxis.
Truth About Us
Billiken Wit
According to Huequest
An innaesthetician in his
rest in the middle of the night by some
people, he asked, "A friend," was the
answer. "What do you want?" "I want
to stay there, by all means," was the reply.
What a Change
Leutenant (angrily to steward)—
you to put those flowers on the
table?
Steward--"The commander, "slr."
"They're not the they?" Henry Fox, Detroit, MIch.
Billions wanted in
every corner of the
hamblet in the
country—a change
in real money
BILLIKEN SALES LEAGUE
3485 Indiana Ave.
CHICAGO
PAGE SIXTEEN
UNDER THE CAPITOL DOME.
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
All news should reach this office not later than Monday morning of each week. Copy received after that, but not appear until the following week.
By J. Le COUNT CHESTNUT
1908 18th Street, N. W.
---
Howard Year Book
One of the most interesting extracurricular activities during the school year just closed was the appearance of the book put out by the professional schools of the university. The class cuts and the individual photoshoots are attractive and durable and the print is very colorful. editor-in-chief, Eric J. Mason, phi-charis, instructs the advertising manager; James Abraham Hayward, the editorial manager. Mr. Cawson was the emblematic photoshoot named by the judges of the summer school and another term of three years on the board of the University to the Normal school was awarded the Base elementary schools of the District of Columbia graduated 45 pills this year.
Personal Profferings
Walter Pinchbach, manager, Lois Lois
Republic Browns, former Washingtonian,
now living in Philadelphia. W. Erwin,
who previously lost his wife, W. Erwin,
and mother, has gone on
Powell, 21 N. street Northwest,
the mother of Cast. A very few
mother of Cast. A very few
thomas. Harry Daven, Harry Ollie Winters
and his wife, Tina, have very
tips to the Pacific Coast.
WANTED!
Boy Representatives
TO ESTABLISH
NEW ROUTES
A FINE opportunity to
make sure money
during vacation -months.
Hundreds are applying.
SEND NOW FOR PLAN
FILL OUT THIS COUPON:
Chicago Designer:
I please read me your "plan."
Name
Address
Town State
John West and William Warfield, both of New York, are in charge of secondary, Fasthamton, Muskegon. They are here by the college carpenter examination booth of the Midway Film Company, 285 West 135th street, New York City. Wright and her little daughter, Jennifer Wright and her little daughter, are on a visit. They are to be joined later when Wright is visiting the college. Washington boy, is planning to spend the summer at Dr. John Hunter Brooks, 1818 Tenth street, Dr. O. Dr. Joseph N. J. Dr. M. C. E. (Puruy) Howard has been the floor of the Imperial Heraldship wives are now living in the apartment on 227 West Works, Eleventh and Twenty
Section Simmerings
seller of the Defender at his store, has been a longtime partner of V. Va. Blue Bill, who is Dr. J. T. Blue, who has offices on her award university, where he is now studying church, preached his farewell sermon the day he retired the board to look around for the board are Deacon William Minor, chairman; Garrett, Williams, Lomax.
Organization Offerings
Deanwood Polngs
Good Morning, Judge!
SAVED FROM AN OPERATION
WHAT I HONESTLY BELIEVE
NOT ONLY SAVED ME
FROM MY WONDER
BOTH ALSO SAVED
MY LIFE
Chataquus, N. Y.-I just want to tell
me done for me. I not only saved me
from my wondrous wonders, I honestly
that it saved my life.
I was in a terrible condition when I
went to work. I was in bed most of the time and was
not even in bed at all. I was been in this condition about
two years and was forced to give up a good
job. I tried everything I heard of and several
things I did. That an operation was my only hope.
I began to improve a condition after
seemed as though it had been made just
now. I went to my own house work again and, now, thanks
to your position that I did before my
health failed. I only cured me of female
problems of the worst kind, but has
also helped with my health and appearance.
You have my permission to publish
wish, as I want every woman who suffers
as I do. Sincerely yours, (Signed) MRS.
JANNE DENE, P. O. Box 835, Chai
This is just one of the $24,000 letters that have been given to grateful women who have been made a part of the lily peculiar to women in Con. Memphis, Tenn. by many with any of the lily peculiar to women in Con. Memphis, Tenn. by many with information to send.
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
Beauty Aids for Dark Complexions
If you want to be respected, admired and loved by everybody, see that you have a beautiful complexion, free of bumps and splotches, and that your hair is smooth and properly dressed. Your best friend is your "looks"—here's how to keep them.
TO WHITEN THE SKIN, no matter how dark your complexion, is an easy and simple matter if you will use Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Ointment—it quickly bleaches, is perfectly safe and delightful to use. At your druggist or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c
OILY, SHINY, BUMPY COMPLEXIONS soon give way to a soft, smooth, velvety skin after using Dr. Fred Palmer's Skin Whitener Soap, followed with his delicately perfumed Face Powder. Try this and watch your skin improve. At your druggist or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c each
YOU MUST HAVE SMOOTH, LUXURIANT HAIR and the best and safest way to get it is by using Dr. Fred Palmer's Hair Dresser—it makes the hair straight, promotes its growth and cleans the scalp. At your druggist or sent postpaid upon receipt of price, 25c
DR. FRED PALMER'S LABORATORIES
Dept. DS, ATLANTA, GA.
Whitens, purifies and beautifies the skin without irritating.
Softens, beautifies and makes the hair grow and cleans the scalp.
AGENTS WANTED
for this line of exquisite beauty aids. Write for our liberal agents' proposition, addressing as above.
A powder that takes off the shine and will not streak.
Dr. Fred Palmer's
SKIN WHITENER PREPARATIONS
wife, Mrs. Lettia Bryan, and a six-week-old baby on June 25, 1921. Last week, the family received a greetings street Northwest, was inducted on a charge of assault to commit robbery.
Theatrical Thoughts
The Howard theater is to close for the month of July to undergo re装修, and the rest of the buildings are to be put in. J. i. Davidson, the director of the 2013 manager, for the week end July 2. The theater has been featuring Lucien Hughie, a headline演员 direct from the big West Side headline演员 direct from the big West Side minis an expert defender of the blues and a supreme record artist. The print public was Norm Talmudge, in "The Public," a Norm Talmudge print in "Heatless Souls." The supreme offering of the Lincoln theater was Betty Wheeler and Theodore Kosoff, in "The Green Choirs of the Paris underworld and a crowning romance were all in this."
Hotel Happenings
Births of the Week
Deaths of the Week
Marcigas of the Week
Keep your lawn clean. Have the children remove newspapers from in front of the home. Clean surround- surround the interior a clean, fine character.
MICHIGAN
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
All news should reach this office
on Monday, March 15, each week.
Copy received after that
and not appear until the
following week.
Athletics Mich
The Rev. S. S. Hartis, Detroit, Mich., was the guest of Mr. and Mr. Ester preached the Masonic sermon with much credit and also preached at the Woods. Windsor, Can., is in Albion for the purpose of carrying on the work
Niles, Mich.
Jackson, Mich.
MISSISSIPPI
CALIFORNIA
The Ladies Aid Missionary society had an old-fashioned quilting and candy shop, and they had a Thursday afternoon, quite a few attendants, their host guest Mr. Reeves sister from St. Louis. Mo. Jr. Iulius Jones, a student at St. Louis, is still unable to devote any time to his quilting business, almost after three weeks of sickness. Miss Lennon Scott was very ill last week, and she had a suspicious. There were a number of ladies in the Ladera ranch, taking large baskets of food for plenticing. They had lost a lot of their shupa shade. For five days a large forest camp to the Masons on Sunday, Allie preached to the Masons on Sunday. Allie were three to enjoy it.
SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922
Hair
Grower
50c
Tumble
Grower
25c
Tatter
Grower
50c
Salve
Grower
50c
Peeling
Grower
50c
Beauty
Grower
50c
Tweaking
Grower
Cream
50c
Hair
Grower
50c
Powerer
HOR-TRON-A Hair Grower grew
his men and women of the race can
man and woman of the race can
ful preparations. Send $1.60 for
six weeks trial treatment.
Laboratory at the Hair Grower
System of Hair Culture by mail or at college.
Diplomas awarded. For further partic
ularity write
MORTON MED. CO.
EVELYN HORTON AFD. CO.
Dept. A
St. Louis, Mo.
Grand Opera
PEARLS
SINGING
WATER
CASSE
A Lift with Beauty!
Free
$2
Jewel Case
Made in the USA
Made in the United States
Made in the United States
Never Before Under $15
Sale! Vary Case, Case, 12
Free Jewel Case, Case, 12
Don't Send a Penny!
SUN WATCH CO. Dept. 64
308 W. Michigan Ave., Chicago
SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922
MISSOURI
NOTICE TO ORRESPONDENTS
All news to reach this office
will be posted on the
weekly. Copy received after
the following week.
St. Joseph No
Mrs. J. B. Jones has as her husband J. B. Jones, and as her mother L. L. Lewis, Mr. M. Georgia Gebeshar left Tuesday for St. Paul, Minn., to meet, where he at this writing is ill. He stood, with his arms outstretched, Iowa, with her son, Dr. Hurston Gebeshar, Mrs. Mattie Hicks of St. Paul, where a reception was given Thursday afternoon to her husband, present. The K. of J. Court of Calanthe had its annual trolley ride. Thursday evening she outing. The competitive drill field held by Knights Templar Tuesday at Patee Dancing to the strains of the Best Jazz orchestra till the wee hours of the morning. An excellent sermon was given to the young boys and girls of the congregation. The services all day were held between the ages of 14 and 18. Jas. is improving.
Cape Glardeau, Mo.
Jev and Mrs J. N. Curry, Daniel A. Lumberg, and Sally Summers attended the annual Capra Giraudocan P. J. E. district meeting at the University of Chicago, and the editor of the Western Recorder, was a pleasant visitor Thursday after a scheduled barbecue for Wednesday of the King are planning to paint the purposure in August. George Lane is Mary Wiley roll out of a window and sustained injuries. Joseph Pergoum is
Clinton, Ma.
9
Poplar Bluff, Mn.
S. B. Townsend, state grand master
has returned home after a tour of the
state, visiting lodges. The District
Missouri Society & A. C. E. leaguing
which convened in 1915, attended the Rev.
C. W. Newton, presiding elder, preached
of Fostus M. succeeded herself as
superintendent of S. A. schools.
schools, superintendent of S. A.
Bluff and J. H. Young of Charlestown
conference. Dr. Crane of the C. S. E.
conference. Dr. Crane of the C. S. E.
successful quarter at Mr. Calvary at the
Bunner Sunday school convention con-
ducted by Mamie Garner, the district
visited the Sunday school of Brown A.
Rev. W. H. Spurrock of Fostus M.,
Rev. W. H. Spurrock of Fostus M.
successful Friday in company with Mrs. Orca
Spencer, who will spend the summer
of 1915 at Mrs. Garner, Mrs. G.
Garner, Mrs. Larch Leach, Miss G.
Garner, J. Farchow were guests of Mrs.
Loe were guests of Mr. and Mrs. C.
Loe were guests of Mrs. M. R. Wyatt was
the guest of Mrs. M. R. Wyatt
MINNESOTA
RHODE ISLAND
YOU CAN HAVE
STRAIGHT, SILK HAIR
By using "Suaveline," the delicate-
ly perfumed silk straightens and strengthens the hair, makes it soft, silky and brilliant; removes dandruff; cleanses the scalp; does not discolor the hair or injure the scalp; no ironing nothing to wash or condition no greater guaranteed absolutely harmless!
At your Dugget, or write to us.
SIAVELINE MFG. CO.
150 Massau Street, New York, N.Y.
Deken Supplier—Agem Wanted
THE PRAIRIE STATE
Menmouth, IL
Harvey, III
Canton, Ill.
Stmator III:
Everbody had a slice time at the picnic given by derry. The picnic was a graduate of the Streater high ind. is making his brother, J. C. Moore, his graduate. In Teorica, Gahriel Ellis has moved to Poorla. His long sick leg, Mr. Marcie Powell is sick at her home. Y. Mainlin William Guess were held at Bethel A.M. Paul Brenno have purchased a new house. William Guess were being written in Chicago for some time have returned. The supper given at the picnic was tended. The Masonic service held at Bethel A.M. attended. Sermon by the Rev. Carter McGee. Residence Tuesday morning.
Oswene III
The Mother's school is still active in the city school in Kansas City, Kansas, where she school in Kansas City, Kansas, was in the city on business. Clifford has joined the league team of Coiffers from Chanute for a brief visit with relatives and friends of Olathe, Kans., are home on a visit with relatives. Mrs. Klassen expected to be here soon to conduct a visit to Berry visited her daughter a few days ago in the northwestern part of the city.
Search Engine
The Rev. Samuel Smith was visiting
Houston on Friday. Dr. J. Hov, Surv. of the A. M. R. church
preached here Sunday, the 11th of June,
daughter. Elizabeth Cahill, raised
lady (Cahill) are home from St. Louis.
Mo. Mrs. Adams has returned from
Houston.
Jerseyville, IL
Grand Chain. Ill.
Father Joseph P. Price came home on Wednesday of last week and visited the village until Friday. The Rev. George Wilson of Mount Zion and pastor of the Free Church prescribed the fourth Sunday and had a rally, employed as principal of the Mounds high school for the next incoming year. Young settlers with her glistening were visitors of their uncle, Carter B. Week, Rev. John W. Washum and his sister, Rev. John W. Washum and his sister, attending the rally. The Rev. R. I. Miller of Olmstead came through Sunday at Levines at M. E. Church. Mrs. Mattle Howard has been home from Yila Ridge since Saturday, the village last Saturday. Mrs. Mary Johnson has sold her dower right to the home with States Virginia.
Joppa. III.
Mrs. Hazel Howard arrived home
from New York on Friday. The Sir Knights have organized a temple at Joppa. Mrs. Clara Blyf left for relatives. Mrs. Kex Heshen is slick. Mrs. Kex Heshen is part team again the second Saturday in July. Mrs. Ellen Barnett and daughter Mormon preached Sunday. Mrs. McDonald is slick.
Jacksonville, Ill.
Mrs. Elizabeth N. Assailant superintendent of nurses, was called to the serious illness of her mother, who has since died. Dr. R. H. Jackson, a college has been selected as the next member of Joppa. Dr. R. G. Richardson, lec-
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
do not later than Monday morning of
each week. Copy received after that
following week. Copy appear until the
following week.
on mental and nervous diseases to
nurse, spent several days at the new
hospital, and received special care
operations, including that of Miss Ione
Bone of Louisiana, Mrs. Cora F.
Mo, open Sunday and Monday as a
nurse, open Sunday and Monday as a
sanitary nurse, samule of Dr. George R.
Samsule of Alison, and the institute last
week. The baby clinic conducted by
a nurse is open to 10 a.m. is growing and doing much
to 10 a.m. Among the patient able to leave
the hospital during the baby clinic, Marilyn
Rochelle of Valley City, IL; Mr. Harte
secretary of Jacksonville; Mrs.
Nancy Sturge of Jacksonville.
The Social Improvement club met with Mrs. J. E. Williams, the club chairperson, and Mrs. M. W. Carrion, the club merger. This final meeting was in the form of a lawn social. Eight in the club met to discuss the hostess in serving a three-course lunchroom. M. W. Mair, Carrion, the club manager. Namiani Aston, Metropolis, Ill.; Mrs. Mariante Grace Taylor, Collis, Ill.; Mrs. Mivian Cross, Carbondale; Mrs. Jeanne Woods Pueblo, Col.; Mrs. Miquenada Pueblo, Col.; Mrs. Amarina and Mia McCracken, Carbondale, Ill.; Mrs. Gretal, secretary, Mrs. Thos. Nichols.
Lawrenceville, Ill.
Mrs. Malatza Dodson of Washington, Mrs. and Mrs. Marcel Nickels, Mrs. and Mrs. Robert Johnson and son left Kyle, Ky., to spend a week with rela- tions to Kyle, Ky., and James A. M. E. church, Rev. Huches, pastor, praises morning news of the morning news, preached at 3 o'clock service and Rev. D. M. Smith gave a surprise party on his wife's birthday. She received a number of presents. The evening was spent caking cake were served. All departed at a cake were served. Mrs. Smith many return of the day.
Mt. Vernon, Ill.
Miss. Milen Mill, wife of Rev. Mihan, demanded this midday morning mourning the death of his brother, the late Baptist church, Rev. Sharves and the late R. Wilson returned from Caledonia Tuesday. Miss Molle Smith left last week to make her home future, Mr. Smith of Clarkville Town, who is en route to with his wife, Miss Nollie Smith, Her. Mrs. Nollie Smith, Her. Whitfield. Those on the sick list are: Miss Hlinton, Mrs. Pearlie Sysle, Mrs. Evelyn Green and Mrs. J. E. Telm. Duquette. Masonite led the eastern Star chapter hold their annual sermon at the Olympic band, R. C. Spinches and Hazel Trench attended the Baptist shybrhoon. Mrs. Laura Roberts, who has been sick, is in Sunday in Elkville. Glinda Trench has returned home from school, Mrs. C. W. Coll is visiting in Arkansas this week. Mrs. F. W. Alarcon, Glinda Trench has returned home in St. Louis this week. Mrs. Mary Pleasant have married Wednesday. Those on the sick list are Colleen Tillman and Lulan Cuny Pleasant have married Wednesday. June 28. Mrs. Wm. Hoxe and daughter outstreet.
STOP EX
THE WORLD
8th WONDER
POSITIVELY GROWS HI
VICTIMS' HAIR, RESTOR
In the great course you will pursue, ar
you always win. It is but natu
rally the best doctor, the best
fokke hesitate, experiment, lose
a living example such as "Fulte
believe what your eyes behold,
"Fulto" is just as sure to grow
UP EXIT
WORLD'
WONDER I
GROWS' HAIR
HAIR RESTORED.
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it will pursue, and the
it will pursue, and the
experiment, lose times,
such as "Fulto" before
ur eyes behold, and
sure to grow hair
STOP EXPERIMENTING! THE WORLD'S "FULTO" 8th WONDER IS
POSITIVELY GROWS HAIR AND CURES DISEASED SCALPS. "FLU" VICTIMS HAIR RESTORED. AGENTS REAPING A HARVEST. WRITE.
In the great battle for supremacy in life one's success lies in arriving at a conclusion as to what you will pursue, and then with a grim determination stick to that course, and you always win. It is but natural, as we go through life, to desire the best. When in need you want the best doctor, the best dentist, the best dressmaker, the best milliner, etc. Then why be fickle, hesitate, experiment, lose time, money and patience when you wish to grow your hair, with which you can do well. You can be happy, and you can believe what your eyes behold, and you can go and see in person, as hundreds are doing daily. "Fulto" is just as sure to grow hair as the sun is to shine. STOP! THINK! THEN BUY!
(RETAIL PRICE)
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Fullo Hair Food (plain) ..... 50c
Fullo Temple Oil ..... 50c
Fullo Pressing Oil ..... 50c
It keeps the Skin healthy, free from dandruff, thickens,
and promotes an abundant growth of hair.
One 50c box convnzies; 5c extra for postage.
Fulto Hair Food (double strength)
Fulto Hair Food (plain)
Fulto Temple Oil
Fulto Pressing Oil
It keeps the Scalp healthy, free of
gives color and promotes an
One 80c box convictions; 8c exit
Did "Flu" leave your scalp
DOUBLE S
Diplomas given. A
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4808 Prairie Ave., Apt. 2
(double strength)
(plain)
]]
healthy, free from
promotes an abundant
advices. ex extra for
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as given. A thou
address M
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Did "Flu" leave your scalp dry and your hair thin? IF SO, send for "FULTO
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Address MRS. E. G. FULTON
4808 Prairie Ave., Apt. 2 Phone, Oakland 2439 CHICAGO, ILLINOIS
Carbondale. III.
Duguelo III
COLORADO
ARKANSAS
The HOOSIER CAPITAL
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
All news should reach this office
capital no later than each week.
Copy received after that
does not appear until the following week.
EXPERIMENT
D'S "FUL
IS
AIR AND CURES DISEASED.
ACENTS REAPING A H
ey in life one's success lies in arriving
with a determination st
and we go through life, does he
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
B. ALVIN D. SMITH
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Name
Address
Town
State
This organization will be for the purpose of providing information to the nurses. A meeting was called Wednesday of the week in the offices of F. I. K. and the nurses of which Dr. L. H. J. H. david is superintendent. reports that many patients within the last few weeks.
Births
William and Nora Henderson, Ward's sanitation girl; Leonard and Edwinina street girl; Jessie and Blanche girl; Gis S. Murrell street girl; Joseph and Josephine street girl; Joseph and Minnie Fero, City hospital, girl; Jerry and Destroite Fero, city hospital, boy.
Deaths
Lafayette, Ind.
Fort Wayne, Ind.
The state B, Y, P, U, and Sunday School convention of the Ranks church were representatives from the M. Olive Church in New York. Mr. Leslie Warfield, Herman Curry, Mr. Leslie Smith has returned from a very pleasant trip to India. Ramsay Biddle was a welcome guest to Bertha Poindexter and Miss Elma Alba were the guests of Mr. and Mr. Walter S. T. Byrd, pastor of the Turner School. S. T. Byrd, serene and seriously ill for the last two weeks, is invincible. Mrs. Ruby Levi is visiting Miss Minnie Taylor is visiting in Jack's summer with her grandfather the summer with her grandfather and Mrs. G. Lester entertained with a plate at Swinney park in honor of Miss Normal, Terre Haute. The after-享受了 this delightful outing were the following: Messmer W. H. Connell Warfield, Jr. Ellis Taylor, Olive Lee Warfield, Jr. Ellis Taylor, Olive Lee and Blena Elma Alasp. The message
convention of the Michigan conference
young delegates are representing Turner
Chauel A. M. k. church; Mrs. Eula
Brown; Mrs. A. J. Browne; Mrs. A. Young for the
Javenee Row; Mrs. W. Winters; Mrs. A.
Brown; the North Winters church
preached at the North Winters church
quarter sang in Van Wort, Ohio, Sunday.
The Pleasure Club club members
attended at the Mr. O'Meara church
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jones, in
honor of Mrs. O'Meara.
Miss Friar Crawford, national recreational worker of the con-
ference local worker of the local worker,
Mrs. W. J. Jefferson, has here last week on board to his
new charge in the Louisville conference
have returned from a visit in Chicago,
Mr. and Mrs. J. Earlhough, of Chicago,
Mrs. W. J. Jefferson has recently built a four-o-
cottage, and always the buller at the news stands on Lafayette street and
have formed a tennis club under the
directorships in the city gone to Chicago.
He plans to enter Northwestern university
English entertained at dinner recently in
honor of the love of his mother.
He mother's mother of Jackson, Ohio. Frank Crismon has re-
tained from a three weeks' stay at Norfolk,
and Mrs. John Casey entertained at dinner recently at their home north
returned from a three weeks' stay at Norfolk,
and friends. John Henry Venable
has returned from a yearlong visit in
milial weeks. Mrs Thelma Frazier and
Mrs Minnie Prima are waiting to meet
her husband and friends. Mrs Sola Smith. Barl Mern is in the
hospital his mother, Mrs Emma Robison.
Marine Jod
Logansport, Ind.
A very enjoyable picnic was held Wednesday at Snapper park, when Mrs. Jake Snapper, Dana Johnney Snackford and son of Terro Tituate. During the foreground the children were interested games, which were conducted by Mrs. Snackford, who is a teacher at Mrs. Snackford, Mrs. Mabry entertained at a 8 o'clock dinner at her home. Mrs. Jake Snackford, who is the guest of her mother, After Mrs. Snackford, the Street Methodist church, where they enjoyed a program which was Turtleskueq quintet of Turtleskueq, Ala.
Wahash, Ind.
Mary. Anna P. Jujon of Marion sponge
Sunday, April 16, 2015. Patterson, W. Market street, Mrs.
W. H. Robertson and son, Solan, of
Maryville, M. Robertson, of
Maryville, M. Millon, Jefferson, and
Mary, Alberta, Vicka and Ruth
and Patterson, Foster, Pera,
Sunday afternoon.
Newcastle, Ind
Eugene Glover spent Sunday in Indianapolis. Bishop Jones of St. Louis gave an address at Willy chapel. He was present at the funeral of K. M. K. in behalf of his family.
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State
THE LADY OF THE
MARRIAGE
MRS. E. G. FULTON
Elkhart, Ind.
Rev. C. J. Cebres evangelic work-*
*with the congregation of Baptist church, J. P. Robinson*
*showing the pictures of the Holy Land,*
*showing at 425 Sli Joe street. Chircure*
*July 10 to Dyersburg, Tenn. J. Wils*
*July 10 to Dyersburg, Tenn. home after*
*in Covington, Tenn.*
Mineola, Texas
Andrew Davis, Jr, and his brother, Beverly, reported that all of the churches in town. At St. Paul's Epiphany church run a few days' meeting this week. All of the churches are invited the 19th of June by having a picnic. George Waltona is dead. He was 82. B. F. B., Carm Mathes and her little daughter left June 19 for Duncan.
NORTH CAROLINA
Children's day was observed at Kesler's Chapel A. M. E. church. Earl Lewis has just recovered from a work's illness.
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LEARN
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A Standard $60 Man
Recognizing the educational value
knowledge of SHORTHAND to all
adults, the National Institute of Shorthand
its full correspondence course will
1. The wonder manual, "Me!
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2. The Handy Shorthand Di
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First letter of lesson by mail, consisting of
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examination for the diploma.
A letter of advice, how to reach
words a minute, and will be personally directed by Mr. Oliver K
the system, and perhaps the greatest living
to avail themselves of this wonderful op
application at once, enclosing a post
Recognizing the educational value and money earning power of a knowledge of SHORTHAND to all men and women who have to make their way in the world, the school provides an engagement with the curriculum made possible by Shorewood's Chicago Defender readers its full correspondence course which consists of:
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ENDORSEMENT
as opportunity to book through and Colored Calefit Site
compliation, not only because of its completeness as
curious, but also because of its completeness as
C. A. BARNETT, Director, ASSOCIATED N
ACE, FRIED FAMILY SHOULD HAVE THIS BOOK IN
WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON, JR.
STREET
BETHLEHEM.
Kakome, Ind.
TEYAS
LEARN
KENTUCKY
The Rev. S. E. Lack of Burgin
Sunday, Sunday, Bible reading at Christian
church Sunday afternoon. Prof. M.
Sunday night to take charge of the McKin-
don band played at Danville July 4. M.
Baptist church Sunday at St. John
Baptist church Sunday
Somerset, Ky.
The pastor of the A. M. B. church, Mr. C. W. Church, on his vacation for 10 days, Rev. B. W. Wood, the pastor of the First Baptist Convention, which met in Clinton, Ky., and slew them in back from Kansas City, Kan. Mr. Willie Mae Hughes, pastor of the Church Green, were in Chicago's Jubilee Sunday.
Danyille, Ky.
Mrs. Elizabeth Segar has gone to Waukegan for the summer. She is been seriously ill, has gone to West Baden for the summer. Brier Turpin, an old city girl, was born East Walnut street Thursday. Everybody was at the A. M. E. picnic July 4.
Madisonville, Ky.
The First District, B. Y. P. N., met at Providence, KY, was shot at sunday by Phil Vanler. He died. Curry and his two few months and the attention paid to the tragedy, Vanler was arrested and led in the city. Jail Sunday night and the county jail. Leo Moody and Allen charged as being implicated in the murder of Curry. Meddamer Helen Johnson and Maggie Meddamer attended the week, Jr. Wilme Rose was killed at Lynch, Jr. Wilme Rose was shipped to Providence, her former home, for burial. Prof. Jenn, Tenn, was in Providence last week.
an Lost!
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Agents Wanted—Write
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me and money earning power of a man and women who have to make a donation to give Chicago Defender readers which consists of:
Ewan's Easy Shorthand."
dictation."
written by mail, consisting of the correct-identified correspondence to help and maintain the and the student passes the diploma.
of advice, how to reach a speed of
directed by Mr. Oliver McEwan, the ps the greatest living authority on us of this wonderful opportunity as once, enclosing a postoffice money
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Profit for Their Churches by Selling Us United States History"
for their congregations. Four chapters denominations. 400 other Colored MEMBERMENT
Colored Called States History. It is aware of its completeness and unique style but
Director, ASSOCIATED NEGO FRES.
SULLO. HAVE THIS BOOK IN THE BOOK
Y HARRISON, JR.
PAGE SEVENTEEN
PAGE EIGHTEEN
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
you have not later than Monday morning of each week. Copy received after this time may not appear until the fol-
Birmingham, Ala.
---
Woodlawn, Ala.
How to Have a Cool Kitchen All Summer
Every housewife dreads having her hot range going on every time she cooks. The THINKS she must do that: But I discovered a way that gives plenty of heat and leaves and leaves the kitchen cool when you need heat. This wonderful idea inspires and drudgery that comes with coal and wood. Turn a little heat to turn a little heat to turn a little heat to turn a little heat. Turn the valve again and the heat is off. Do red-hot stoves do better, or do not, enough already.
THE BUCKEYE STATE
BY ALEXANDER O. TAYLOR
to H. Weaver. East 43d street, who suffered a paralytic stroke last week, is Mr. Weaver was in Columbus to attend the funeral of John H. Bowles, the well-known man when nuanced of the suddens of his wife, H. P. Harrison, 247 East 29th street and head water at the Lake Peoria City is planning a trip to Chicago to visit his mother, 3115 A. T. Abbott, vice A. O. Taylor
A.
Present Day Reception
Improved Woodmen Meet
Miss Taylor a Debutante
Starlight Building Beacon
"Stork Special" Busy
Judge Jamison Here
Judge W. I. Jamison, prominent attorney and one of the most eminent men in the country, presides several days ago and has located the location where Judge Jamison takes pleasure in welcoming Judge Jamison to the fifth city and wishes him a happy birthday. He hosts of host friends and clients here who will join with the Defender in extend his services to the Geraldine hotel, 2212 East, 4th floor, 100 North, 41st street, north mouth, Ohio, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Hattie Hughes, 224th East 49th street.
Walker-Mountain Nuptlals
At the Churches
the Churches
The next Willowville for education will be held at St. John's church the first Sunday in August at St. James's A. M. E. church, under the direction of St. James's A. M. E. church, music at St. James's A. M. E. church, Zion Church Sunday afternoon. Rev. John Evans, Sr. E. D. W. Bell. The service was very impatient. The Michigan conference, sang several numbers at St. John's church the annual union Sunday school picnic will be held at Garfield park Monday, St. James's Second Emmanuel. St. James, Second Emmanuel. St. James will participate. Watch next issue for particulars. Russell Scott, chairman of a big athletic team. An interline feature will be the Rusholm exam prep superintendents. The Christian church will be the week and on Sunday
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
U. B. F. Grand Lodge
Refuses Extradition
Middleport, Ohio
Rev. Freeman of Rutland, Ohio, married Mariah Church church Sunday and was called as pastor in the church. He is also with Mrs. Kathryn Payne as president, Mrs. M. Joy Moore, Miss Phyllis Payne spent the summer at Jackson, Miss Pondy Mouthy is visiter. Bertha Jackson took seriously ill Monica Jackson took seriously ill. Sunday with Florence Payne. Sunday with Florence Payne. Sunday by putting on a new porch. Mrs. Lazelle Jackson is ill.
Delaware, Ohio
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Dr. W.C. Wilsen, formerly Wies President of the American Institute of Health, has been appointed by each of them to be Dr. Siegert's Assistant in his practice as a automatic, an anti-psychiatric doctor. He is also an ophthalmic corrective acute ophthalmologist, and from such an authority is high praise indeed. With any other one, Twenty-five international students in every part of the world have awarded him a degree. He has ever received a like number of awards or honors, and he is the most well-known leading governments and creations from the world. Dr. Siegert's August Bitters publicly endorsed Dr. Siegert's August Bitters. This bitters contains only the most benign and most delicate stomach. In fact, the combination of these aromatic and bitter assays has the appetite, promoting the digestion and the appetite, promoting the digestion and the appetite, promoting the digestion and the blood.
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Frank Hall of Yountown called on friends Sunday, Mrs. W. Burton of Burton Sunday, Mrs. J. Jefferson, who has been visiting her son, has been visiting her in Kane, Pa. Monday, motoring with her son, after a week's visit in Cleveland.
Wilmington, Ohio
The community was shocked Saturday, June 12, when Miss Mile Martin was received from Kansas City. The beekeepers from Kansas City were held at the Second Baptist church, conducted by the Rev. R. V. M. Burnsides of Carnegie, Dr. and Mrs. E. L. Harris, Springfield, Dr. and Mrs. E. L. Harris, Springfield, sophomore Martin, Kansas City, Mo. F. G. Martin, Chicago, Mrs. J. K. Hornsby, Mrs. J. K. Hornsby, Bertha Freeman and Mrs. Lourie Martin, Kansas City, Mo. and Rev. W. H. Young, Topeka, Green Burton, Friday June 10. Please send all news of Friday with a fifteen avenue before Friday of each week.
Men who appeal to the white race to place light complexioned Colored people in this or that place because of some plea in societies and lodges to make committees light are a detrimental force to white men as to Race's ambition.
Will You Stake
On A Chance
Here's Your Opportunity to
to Become One of Oklahoma
MILLIONS Are Expecte
THE purpose of this announcement
duce to the readers of the "Defen
we believed to be one of the greatest m
ing oil investment opportunities ever pro
an opportunity by means of which a
sum of money may mean a big, quick
No man or women ever got rich by
alone. High wages may enable you to o
thing out of your pay check each week
won't bring independent wealth up
put your sayings to work for you by
them where they have a chance to win
more than ordinary interest. A wise
Own An Oil Lease—Play
Profit Way! Oil's Great
Won From Le
Will You Stake As Little As $5
On A Chance To Win A Fortune?
Here's Your Opportunity to Buy an Oil Lease In What Promises Quickly to Become One of Oklahoma's GREATEST GUSHER FIELDS Where MILLIONS Are Expected to Be Made By Lucky Lease Owners!
THE purpose of this announcement is to introduce to the readers of the "Defender" what we believed to be one of the greatest money making oil investment opportunities ever presented—an opportunity by means of which a very small sum of money may mean a big, quick fortune.
No man or women ever got rich by hard work alone. High wages may enable you to save something out of your pay check each week—but saving won't bring independent wealth unless you put your sayings to work for you by investing them where they have a chance to win something more than ordinary interest. A wise man once said, "If you want a chance you must take a chance." In other words, you have to take some risk if you hope to win big profits.
The oil business offers greater money making possibilities today than ever before. It is about the only legitimate business in which the small investor has a chance to win a fortune. Our proposition is for the small investor. It provides a real wealth-winning opportunity. We want to tell you about it.
Own An Oil Lease—Play The Oil Game The Big Profit Way! Oil's Greatest Fortunes Have Been Won From Lease Ownership!
Send no money now. Just your name and
name on the cover, opportunity by which you about
avery see the opportunity, by which you about a
few dollars in your pocket. Pay the bill for a
fortune. Remember. If you write a chance you
take one. Many are willing to risk a few dollars in
the effort to pay many thousands, sign and mail the
coupon without delay.
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Want a chance you must take a
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Success offers greater money making
than ever before. It is about
create business in which the small
take As Little As
chance To Win A F
city to Buy an Oil Lease In What Pro-
vince Ohio's GREATEST GUSHER F
expected to Be Made By Lucky Lease
eement is to intro-
"Defender" what
latest money mak-
ever presented
which a very small
quick fortune.
said, "If you want a chance
chance". In other words, you
risk if you hope to win big g
The oil business offers gr
possibilities today than ever
the only legitimate business
ment is to intro-
"Defender" what
latest money mak-
ever presented—
which a very small
quick fortune.
Rich by hard work
you to save some-
week—but sav-
wealth unless you
you by investing
to win something
A wise man once
said, "If you want a chance you must take a
chance." In other words, you must take some
risk if you hope to win big profits.
The oil business offers greater money making
possibilities today than ever before. It is about
the only legitimate business in which the small
investor has a chance to win a fortune. Our proposition
is for the small investor. It provides a real wealth-win-
ning opportunity. We want
to tell you about it.
—Play The Oil Game The Big
Greatest Fortunes Have Been
on Lease Ownership!
I will find $45,000 per acre was the price reported paid
in oil for the Hughes tract at Merlin.
The Big
ve Been
no reported paid
NEY Just Write Your Name and Address on this "Opportunity
are Presenting to "Defender" Readers!
Your Opportunity
OKLAHOMA LEASING CO.
American Bank Building, Kansas City, Mo.
Tell me about your oil lease proposition and advertised in the "Defender." If you can show thing exceptionally good I am willing to stake in a fortune.
MY NAME
STREET OR R.F.D.
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PLEASE WRITE OR PRINT NAME.
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the proposition and your easy payment plan
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PRINT NAME VERY PLAINLY
Tell me about your oil lease proposition and your easy payment plan advertised in the "Defender." If you can show me that you have something exceptionally good I am willing to stake a few dollars on a chance to win a fortune.
TENNESSEE
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
news should reach the office
not later than 10:00 a.m.
each week. Copy received after that
week. Copy appear until the
following week.
Pyersburg, Tenn.
Fourth Avenue, Tenn.
Springfield, Tenn.
Mrs. Eureen H. H. Woodard and Mrs. Edward Smith were the guests of the meeting in that room last Saturday at the A. &. J. Inn back last Saturday at the A. &. J. leaving the city they visited relatives in the city of Columbia, was the guest of her daughters, Mrs. Dr. C. B. Sneed and Mrs. Dr. E. B. Sneed.
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SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922
AROUND THE HUB
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
All news should reach this office
not later than the morning of
each week. Copy received after that
time may not appear until the fol-
lowing week.
Bv CHARLES E. FREEMAN. JR.
Vigor of Youth In A New Discovery
Science Produces a Vitalizer Superior to Famous Gland Treatment—Magic Power of a Bark From Africa.
Have you lost your youth, vipor and "pep"? Do life seem dull and work a grind? Don't worry. Science has discovered a new vitalizer superior even to the much discussed "goat gland" and "monkey gland" treatment. Anyone can now quickly and easily vitalize and eager of youth and do it in the privacy of the home.
The principal ingredient is an extract from the most amazing investigator ever discovered. Combined with it are other toxic and vitalizing compounds produced greater improvement in a healthy population. The circulation improves and the glow of the laboratories producing this new vitalizer, which is called Re-Bil-Daba, is so confident that large $25 supply for only $1 and guarantee to result in one week of results in one week. The laboratory may test the discovery without risk. Seed no money, but just your name and address to the Re-Bil-Daba City. Mo, and a full $2 treatment of Re-Bil-Daba person one $1 and package. If not delighted with the laboratories and your money will be refunded in full. This is fully guaranteed.
Miss Helen M. Powell of 39 Windsor street. The Forget-Me-Not club of the successful social and whist party at the evening. The winners of the prizes were James Hawkins of Cambridge, John Hall of North Cambridge, second prize of a $250 gold piece, and H. H. Homer, Orlando S. Jordan, age 12, son of the late Robert S. Jordan, second street, Roxbury, graduated from the Dudley grammar school June 22. It was the best player in the school orchestra. His aunt and godmother, Miss Deborah Reynolds of the fine corner and outfit. His aunt, Mrs. Deborah Reynolds of the fine gold funeral pen. He is the youngest cornetist school in the fall.
North Cambridge, Mass.
fort worth bridge
Mrs. M. McGraw and Mrs. M. Hargrave of 13 Worcester street and Hargrave of 12 Pleasant holy matrimony last Thursday evening
low Dr. B. N. Swain at the Colquhoun linston street. Boston. The wedding
Traynham of Concord avenue, a clerk at Sargent School of Physical Culture, Parkston, Boston, were married last week at parkston. Boston, were married last week at left for Intervale, N. H., where they Me-No club will give a lawn party and watermelon at the residence of Me-No club. Tremont street, next Monday evening.
Haverhill, Mass.
IOWA
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
All news should reach this office
on Monday, March 15, each week.
Copy received after that
appear until the following
week.
Keokuk, Iowa
Folsfeld Jews
Iowa's favorite reader in the person of Madam Jerrison Morton of枯桐 Boretal A. M. E. church, Evangelist L. A. P. Jones, spent Sunday in Miles, where Mrs. Jones filled the room. Turner attended the grand session of the K. P. Iodine held in Waterloo, Iowa, where the quarterly meeting for this conference year will be held in Fairfield, Iowa. Rev. A. W. Hackley, presiding elder, Mrs. Lettie Green, presiding Mrs. Lettie Green, Evangelist L. A. P. Jones and Pastor C. P. Jones attended the annual conference, which will be held in Burton, Iowa, L. P. Quin, district steward of Fairfield, was elected the first of the annual conference, which will be held in Ottumwa, Iowa, S. P. Quin, Green was elected the first vice president of the Moline district, Lettie Green was elected the first vice president of the Moline district, Evangelist L. A. P. Jones, who so faithfully led the Norfolk assistant superintendent, was elected assistant superintendent.
The Ion Iowa
The regular meeting of the Joly Set
club at the club house Wednesday. Mrs. Pearl
Jennings, Mrs. Mattie Dillard and Mrs.
hostesses, cards and dancing formed
hostesses. Cards and dancing formed
prices went to Mrs. Hudiah Garner; see
prior. Mrs. Laura Henderson; booby,
prior. Mrs. Laura Henderson.
GEORGIA
Mrs. Sarah Hines, and daughter, Lillie M. Louis of Louisville, Ky., are visit- ting Private Parker was discharged from the Washington, D. C. Sergei, Blue, gave a dinner, Dr. and Mrs. Sergei, and Mrs. Simmons, Mrs. Tounsel, Sergei, and Mrs. Ecton and Sergei. Finton. It would pay a lot of us not to know so much about the color of this shirt, does not know, as smart as he thinks he is, then you do not know. Many a good job account of your tithlism.
THE QUAKER
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
All stories should reach this office
not later than Monday morning
of each week. Copy received after that
time may not appear until the fol-
lowing day.
BY J. H. GRAY
In Every Community As Our Direct REPRESENTATIVES
AN OPPORTUNITY to make real money easily and certainly. No former experience necessary. APPLY-NOW
Name .....
Address .....
Town..... State.....
THE CHICAGO DEFENDER
VIRGINIA
“Goes Over
the Top”
Straightens any he
desired, soft and p
that will not wear
highly perfumed, s
It is a straightene
going easy for the
Looks better after
jar, enough to last
two together sent
"Goes Over the Top"
Straightens any head of rigid, desired, soft and pliable. Does that will not wear off, with or highly perfumed, soft lathering. It is a straightener, shampooing easy for the comb. Wax Looks better after each washin jar, until to last from six mo two together sent anywhere. No C. O.
Straighten any head of rigid, stubborn or harsh hair in 15 minutes. Makes the hair straight or wavy as desired, soft and pliable. Does not make the hair "Red," but makes a jet black "MALAGASY" finish that will not wear off, with only one application. Will last from 4 to 7 weeks. MADAGASCO is a highly perfumed, soft lathering cream. Easy to wash out, to spread. Makes a rich, foamy lather. It is a straightener, shampoo and dandruff remover. It does not gum or tangle the hair; makes going easy for the comb. Wash the hair any time without fear of it turning back to former state. Looks better after each washing. MADAGASCO is simply "different from the rest." Price: $1.00 a large jar, enough to last from six months to a year. NOIR-OL, a native perfumed jet black dressing, 35c. The two together sent anywhere, postpaid, $1.35. Special prices to druggists, barbers and hairdressers.
No C. O. D. Sent. All goods sent immediately on receipt of Order.
Dealers in Chicago and Elsewhere
Stubball & Hudson, 800 E. 33th St.
Wm. F. Taylor, 800 E. 37th St.
Wm. J. Taylor, 800 E. 38th St.
Reral Pharmacy, 8301 Indiana Ave.
Reral Pharmacy, 8301 Indiana Ave.
Sherry Dr. Co., N.E. Cor. 31st and Indiana
Sherry Dr. Co., N.E. Cor. 31st and Indiana
Maiol Pharmacy, 8308 State St.
Gender Dr. Store, 307 State St.
Gender Dr. Store, 307 State St.
Sohte Pharmacy, 4966 State St.
Sohte Pharmacy, 4966 State St.
Epring Dr. Store, 204 State St.
Epring Dr. Store, 204 State St.
Gerald Pharmacy, 2004 State St.
Community Drug Store, 7801 Rhodes Ave.
Community Drug Store, 7801 Rhodes Ave.
Kevin Calhoun, 6891 State St.
Geo. M. Porter, 3310 State St.
Geo. M. Porter, 3310 State St.
J. Sue, 47th and Vienna
J. Sue, 47th and Vienna
Griffith Road Pharmacy, S.E. Cor. 31st and Indiana
Thompson Pharmacy, 710 E. Perching Road
Thompson Pharmacy, 710 E. Perching Road
State St. Dr. Store, 300 and State St.
State St. Dr. Store, 300 and State St.
Gerald Pharmacy, 2004 State St.
7 O'NEALL
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CANADA
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
All news should reach this office
on Monday, February 15, each
week. Copy received after that
week, and appear until the
following week.
Edmonton, Canada
TO WOMEN ONLY 25 ROUND-TRIP TICKETS TO CHICAGO ONE WEEK'S HOTEL EXPENSES IN CHICAGO FREE! HERE'S HOW-To the 25 women whose sales of that wonderful remedy
Are the highest for their state between May 20th and July 31st, 1922, will be forwarded round-trip tickets from their home city to Chicago; also while in Chicago one week's hotel expenses will be paid by us. In case of a tie additional tickets will be forwarded to each tying contest.
Three hours a day in congenial work easily can make two thousand women a good living In 25 different states.
We want women representatives in the states of Alabama, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Texas, Mississippi, Tennessee, Georgia, Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, Missouri, Iowa, Minnesota, Michigan, who in addition to earning liberal commissions will qualify for the FREE VACATIONS IN CHICAGO to be given as bonuses to the women having the highest sales record in their states on July 31, 1922, as per the easy terms of the contest. We will be here at the HOME TO CHICAGO AT THE EXPENSE OF THE DISTRIBUTOR OF THE REMEDY "KUR-U"? This offer open to any woman. For full particulars fill out Coupon below:
AMERICAN TRADING COMPANY, Distributors. Suite 8. 3451 K. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill.
All full particulars concerning the distribution and sale of the remedy "KUR-U" and the terms of the contest by women agents whereby free round-trip tickets to Chicago will be furnished the winning agents. I can candidate for one of the free or bonus round-trip tickets to Chicago.
Reply immediately, enclosing two-cent stamp. Write name and address plainly
THE SOONER YOU BEGIN, THE SURER YOU ARE TO WIN!!
AMERICAN TRADING COMPANY (Not Inc.), Distributors
3151 S. Michigan Avenue
Franklin State Bank Building
CHICAGO, ILL.
CHEMICAL CO
Phone
A A D A
O WOM
5 ROUND-TRIP TICKETS
ONE WEEK'S HOTEL EXP
E'S HOW—To the 25 women
the highest for their state between
and round-trip tickets from their home
hotel expenses will be paid by us
united to each tying contestant.
KUR-U is a Test
Sufferers of Lumbago,
free hours a day in congenial work easily
states,
mississippi women representatives in the state
Mississippi, Tennessee, Georgia, Florida
L. Maryland, New York, Pennsylvania,
Minnesota, Michigan who in addition to e-
mployees in CHICAGO to be given as ho-
states on July 31, 1922, as per the eas-
YOU WANT TO COME TO CHICAGO
is offer open to any woman. For full
CAN TRADING COMPANY, Distributors,
conserving the distribution and sale of
agents whoby free round-trip tickets
of entering the company as an agent
or on the list or bonus round-trip t
(Miss or Mrs).
set and No.
Reply immediately, enclosing two-cen-
THE SOONER YOU BEGIN, T
AMERICAN TRADING CO
Michigan Avenue Franklin St
XDAGAS
THE ONLY STRAIGHT W
stubborn or harsh hair in 15 minutes,
not make the hair "Red," but may
only one application. Will last from
cream. Easy to wash out, easy t
and dandruff remover. It does
with the hair any time without fea-
tions to a year. NOIR-OL, a native
postpaid, $1.35. Special prices to
D. Sent, all goods Sent immediately on
Dealers in Chicago and Elsew
KUR-U Is a Testified Relief to Chronic Surprise of Lumbago, Rheumatism and Nauritis
Community Drug Store, 7011 Rhoden Ave.
Edwin K. Caldwell, 4009 State St.
Edwin K. Caldwell, 4009 State St.
Goldman-Franklin Pharmacy, 334 E. Stat St.
Goldman-Franklin Pharmacy, 334 E. Stat St.
Goldman-Franklin Pharmacy, 334 E. Stat St.
Sanders Pharmacy, 800 E. Parling Road
Grivold Pharmacy, E. K. Parling Road
Grivold Pharmacy, E. K. Parling Road
Metrow Pharmacy, 710 E. Parling Road
Metrow Pharmacy, 710 E. Parling Road
Roseberg Pharmacy, 345 State St.
Gerald Pharmacy, 2004 State St.
ICAL CO., 2927 S
Phone Calumet 3704
ADAGAS
It looked like State street for a while this week, as so many of the boys were those among them were Nobles except Georgia and exas. Banks, George, Shearce, Perry and Banks. A number of others were aunt and uncle. Our friend, Trusty, Kansas City, is here with a private car. Miss Virgina was spending her vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Clark of Cincinnati and Spencer of Kansas City, be around to get your news for the Defender. She is spending her operation at the General Hospital. She is doing fine at this writing. deliver an address on the street in the liberation in Everett, Wash. August 1. Governor L. H. Hart is to chief speaker on the
Miss Foster - Indianapolis, ind., is visiting Miss Osceola. The Red Arrow Pickaninna quartet, composed of Josephine Victor and Gisle, Victor and Gisle, of Des Moines, Iowa injected real, real music into the Little Fingers and Ten Little Toes, and "Ain't Got the Radio concert for the Harmony Kings preparation." The program was sent from the Omaha Grain exchange. The Bluet Trio last meeting at Elmwood park. A large number of the Male Cadets Roberts is president and Clement Mocklin, secretary. Ida Ma Jackson, the girls. Miss Mildred Turner left last Tuesday, June 11, from Elmwood park. A E. Sunday school and Christian Endeavor league.
That the American boy and girl they work at it or not.
BIL
Celes
Removes
Absolute
or acid-
CE
3523 Cal
WOMEN
UP TICKETS TO CHIC
S HOTEL EXPENSES IN CH
the 25 women whose sales o
KUR-U
Our state between May 20th and
us from their home city to Chicago
will be paid by us. In case of a
ag contestant.
U-1 is a Testified Relief
tars of Lumbago, Rheumatism and
genital work easily can make two thou-
scentatives in the states of Alabama,
Georgia, Florida, North Carolina,
ork, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, Indi-
nation to add in earning liberal income
to be given as banked to the women
322, us per the easy terms of the com-
woman. For full particulars fill out
PANY, Distributors, Suite 8, 3451 K, M
business to be given as banked to the women
round-trip tickets to Chicago will be
enclosed two-cent Write n
R YOU BEGIN, THE SURER YOU
RADING COMPANY
Franklin State Bank Building
GASCO
STRAIGHT WAY
chair in 15 minutes. Makes the h
"Red," but makes a jet black
wash out, easy to spread. Make
over. It does not gum or take
one without fear of it turning to
simply "different from the rest
IR-OL, a native perfumed jet bla
Special prices to druggists, bar-
nief immediately on Receipt of Order.
Cago and Elsewhere
2927 State St.,
Calumet 3704
CASCO
"BEAUTY RESTORED
Blemish Removed in A Fe
Celestial Bleaching
WHITENS THE SKIN AT O
Removes Liver Spots. Freckles. Tans
Absolutely pure and harmless. No tra
or acid.—Ask your druggist or by mail
Manufactured by the
CELESTIAL CHEMICAL CO.
3523 Calumet Ave. CH
Live Agents Wanted
EN ONLY
TO CHICAGO
ENSES IN CHICAGO FRE
whose sales of that wonderful re
"BEAUTY RESTORED"
Blemishes Removed in A Few Days
Celestial Bleaching Cream
WHITENS THE SKIN AT ONCE
Removes Liver Spots. Freckles. Tan and Sunburn.
Absolutely pure and harmless. No trace of mercury or acid.—Ask your drugist or by mail 686.
Manufactured by the
CELESTIAL CHEMICAL COMPANY
3523 Calumet Ave.
CHICAGO, ILL.
Live Agents Wanted
May 20th and July 31st, 1922, will be the city to Chicago; also while in Chicago, in case of a tie additional tickets to
Refined Relief to Chronic Rheumatism and Neuritis
can make two thousand women a good living of Alabama, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Missouri, among liberal commissions will qualify for the contract to the women having the highest sales terms of the content.
AT THE EXPENSE OF THE DISTRIBUTOR
Particulars fill out Coupon below:
Suite 8, 3451 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Illinois. Write right on largest thank you message of the contract to the women having the highest sales terms of the content.
City..... State.....
stamp. Write name and address plainly.
THE SURER YOU ARE TO WIN!
COMPANY (Not Inc.), Distributor
Bank Building..... CHICAGO
CO and Makes Your Hair Behave
s. Makes the hair straight or wavy as makes a jet black "MALAGASY" finish 4 to 7 weeks. MADAGASCO is a spread. Makes a rich, foamy lather, not gum or tangle the hair; makes of it turning back to former state from the rest." Price: $1.00 a large perfumed jet black dressing, 35c. The druggists, barbers and hairdressers receipt of Order.
J. R. Keveritt Drug Store, N.M. Co., 55th and Indiana.
R. J. Stubbs Drug Store, 376 Cottage Grove
R. J. Stubbs Drug Store, 376 Cottage Grove
William T. Bowden, 19 W. Stt. St.
Safety Drug Store, W. Stt. St.
Safety Drug Store, W. Stt.
Apollo Drug Co., 1528 Broadway, Gary, Ind.
K. D. Roberts, 43 W. 8th St., Dayton, Ohio
Fannie Mae Dell, 61 W. 8th St., Dayton, Ohio
L. Wahabah Bar, Shop, 384 N. 51st St., Terry Hante, In.
G. W. Leary, 119 Front St., Grand Rapids, Mich.
Vancouver, B. C.
NEBRASKA
CONNECTICUT
NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS
All news should reach this office not later than Monday morning of each week. Copy received after that time may not appear until the following week.
Hartford, Conn.
The Union Baptist church gave a recital on Friday, class of 1922 from the various schools of the city. The Rev. M. B. W. who attended a most excellent program, to her home in Pine Street after a successful year as principal of Miss Johnnie Fowler, a teacher in Spellman seminary, Atlanta. Miss Johnnie Fowler, a teacher in Tuskegee is visiting in the city. Miss Sunday, in New Haven and Savin Rock, Frank Thomas, a teacher is spending some time in Baltimore. The teacher a successful year at Harvard university, home in North Carolina. Monday
Vinif Foster, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Foster, died at Westford, Conn., graduated from the North-East Grammar school Wednesday, June 22, and from the North-East School will be laid in school in September, Mr. and Mrs. J. Babbitt, both blessed with a daughter, Miss Willemina Louise Foster June 19. Mother Louise Foster under the special care of Dr. P. H. C. Arms.
The promotion of Colored men in the police department as sergeants and captains for bravery and efficiency on the same basis as those given to white.
Your Hair, Soft, Wavy & Lustrous
One application of WAVO ends all dandruff, stops itching and falling hair, and in a few moments enhances marvel at its immediate appearance, a mass so soft, wavy, lustrous and smooth, uses of use encourage a new hair fine, hair at first, but really new hair, that needs the nourishment WAVO gives, imitates the life of the blood is to the body-Life. It penetrates to the roots, invigorates and strengthens them. This delightful stimulating tonic helps thin, lifelike hair, thickens the waxy thick, waxy and luxurant. Buy at your local drug store at 506 the bot- tiful order direct to the WavO Products Co. 506 South State street, Chicago, Ill.
"BEAUTY RESTORED"
Remissions Removed to A Few Days
Trial Bleaching Cream
WHITENS THE SKIN ONCE
Liver Spots. Freckles. Tan and Sunburn
pure and harmless. No trace of mercury.
Ask your druggist or by mail 58¢.
Manufactured by the
LESTIAL CHEMICAL COMPANY
Camnet Ave. CHICAGO, ILL.
ONLY
CHICAGO FREE!
of that wonderful remedy
July 31st, 1922, will be for-
o; also while in Chicago one
tie additional tickets will be
Chronic
And Neuritis
and women a good living in 25
Arkansas, Oklahoma, Louisiana,
South Carolina, Virginia, West
iana, Kentucky, Missouri, Kansas,
missions will qualify for the FREE
having the highest sales record
USE OF THE DISTRIBUTOR OF
Coupon below:
Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill.
request that you send me full par-
ment and the terms of the content by
furnished the winning agents. I
KUR-U" and as a prospective can-
State.
name and address plainly
ARE TO WIN!
(Not Inc.), Distributors
CHICAGO, ILL.
and Makes Your
Hair Behave
hair straight or wavy as
"MALAGASY" finish.
MADAGASCO is a
as a rich, foamy lather.
angle the hair; makes
back to former state.
Price, $1.00 a large
back dressing, 35¢. The
帽 and hairdressers.
Chicago, Ill.
ت 7.电园
PAGE NINETEEN
337 W. MADISON STREET
CHICAGO, ILL.
The Most Wonderful Discovery of the Age
It clears the hair of dandruff, stops itching, stops the hair from falling out or breaking off, feeds the roots fully guaranteed to into it. Everybody fully guaranteed.
Regional Cocoa Balm Salm. Shampoo Jilly Soap Tail Salm. Tail Soap Tail. Special Grower Pre-Spring Oil Soap. ALL SIX BY MAIL $19.99
You can take the Reginall Perfect System in Hair Dressing by mail. Write for Special Terms to Agents. Address The Reginall Laboratory Atlanta, Ga.
Worth Remembering
Tyree's Antiseptic Powder
One Pinch Makes a Pint
A POWDER FOR PERSONAL USE.
A marvelous germ destroyer—yet so pleasant that it may be used as a mouth wash
AT ALL DRUGGISTS
SONG WRITERS!
ANSWER THE CALL OF THE DANCE-SONG CRAZE
Learn of the public's demand for songs suitable for dancing and the finer options available in the book. The suit of greatly changed conditions available only in our booklet, "Song-Writer's Manual and Guide," SENT FREE on us to at once for free criticism and advice. We revise poems, compose musica and guide us to at once for free criticism and advice. We distribute free publication or sale of songs.
KNICKERBOCKER STUDIOS
323 Caley Bldg. NEW YORK
BOYS EVERYWHERE
TO SELL THE
CHICAGO DEFENDER
PREFARE NOW TO
MAKE SURE YOU HUMBING
YOUR SUMMER VACATION
Write Immediately
CHICAGO DEFENDER
Circulation Dept.
3435 INDANA AV., CHICAGO, ILL
D'ANDRUFF REMOVER
GLOVER'S MANGE MEDICINE
Sol1 to 35 Years. Punish on the scalp mallet
on application.
D'ANDRUFF REMOVER
Aeneas
See What PUREST SOAP STRAINOIER SOAP Will do. Cleanses grip, tans gray saline black, harms hair, burns skin. Send today for Pomade and wanted. MARK PERELL 4046 Indiana Ave. Chicago.
DROPSY TREATED ONE BREATH SHORT REILER in a few days. Relieves in a few days. Supplies the Liver. Reduces in a few days. Purifies the blood. Strengthens the entire system. Write for Free Trial Treatment. Callus Dropsy Romady Co., Dept. OD, Atlanta, Ga.
EDITORIAL
PAGE OF THE
Chicago Defender
WORLD'S GREATEST GOD WEEKLY
THE
Chicago Defender
WORLD'S GREATEST DODG WEEKLY
Founded May 6, 1805, by ROBERT S. ABBOTT, LL. B.
Published by
ROBERT S. ABBOTT PUBLISHING COMM.
(INCORPORATED)
On second-class matter, Feb. 1, 1866, at the Posto
Ill., under charter of March 6, 1878.
OX-12 Green St., Charing Cross Road, London, England.
CHICAGO-4433 Indiana Avenue, telephone Douglas 6087.
DEFENDER'S PLATFORM FOR AMERICA
The Opening Up of All Trades and Trai
Unions to Blacks as Well as Whites.
The Appointment of a Member of
Race to the President's Cabinet.
TODAY
Today is here; the bridges that were crossed
in yesterdays forever now are lost.
Let all the joys, the hopes, likewise the fears
that were a part of those eventful years
Vere saved to fill some castles built of alf
that are to be some time, some place, somehow
tomorrow's fall, and yesterdays have passed;
today is here, enjoy it to the last.
Entered as second class matter, Feb. 1, 1966, at the Postoffice in Chicago, IL, under order of March 6, 1958.
LONDON - 12 Green St. charing Cross Road, London, England, W. C.
CHICAGO - 3433 Indiana Ave. Telephone Douglas 0687.
TODAY
Today is here; the bridges that were crossed
in yesteryears forever now are lost.
Yet all the joys, the hopes, likewise the fears
That were a part of those eventful years
Were saved to fill more castles built of air
That are to be some time, some place, somewhere.
Tomorrows fall, and yesteryears have passed;
Today is here, enjoy it to the last.
HON. EDWARD F. DUNNE
THE PRESENT political situation in our country today renders it absolutely essential that a man of the type of Edward F. Dunne should place his great ability, wonderful experience and valuable services at the disposal of his fellow countrymen. Mr. Dunne has been subjected to the acid test on several occasions, on each of which he measured up to punishations. He has served the people of community as mayor of the city of Escalope, as a judge upon our bench, and as governor of the great and important state of Illinois.
TO EACH OF THESE POSITIONS he was elected as a Democrat, but his success was due, not to his party affiliations, but in spite of that fact. He proved to be greater than and superior to the party, which he was thus homogeneous and not a spurious and counterfeit democracy. He always put patriotism above party, and proved to the satisfaction of the public that he is a believer in and an advocate of national supremacy, equal rights, fair play and a square deal for everyone. He is an advocate of life, liberty and property without the slightest discrimination or distinction growing out of racial or religious differences.
THIS IS THE TYPE of man that the country stands ready in need of today. So far as we are concerned out votes, especially in national elections, have been cast practically solid for the candidates of the Republican party. With thousands of us this way from a standpoint of being right, we then choose the Democratic party as responsible for the existential necessity. What we need, therefore, is political emancipation, so that we can feel and know that the enjoyment by us of our constitutional rights will not be contingent upon the results of an election. Men of the type of Edward F. Dunne can bring about this result.
SUCH MEN can be to us in this day and generation what men of the type of Abraham Lincoln were in their day and generation. We were indebted to those for our physical emancipation; we were grateful to those who were our political emancipations; we were in truth and in fact full-Independent American citizens.
UNTIL RECENT YEARS the party of Abraham Lincoln not only received but merited the support of the vast majority of our people because of its championship of the fundamental principles and doctrines deemed by us to be vital and paramount. But in recent years there is evident retrogradation along the line. If not by the party of Warren, it has been selected as the party's heirs. If, for example, the national administration typlifies the attitude of the party, then this administration marks the political decadence and moral degeneracy of that party. But we hope and believe that the party as a whole is not thus typlified, in which event the blighting effects of the present administration will be thrown off and new and better leaders chosen. BUT IF THE COUNTY should be compelled to choose between the problem of the type of Warren he will be a Democrat, the Democrat, whoever he will be, will be chosen; but we hope the one thus chosen will be of the type of Edward F. Dunne, because in that event there will be a vast improvement in present conditions.
STEALING OUR THUNDER
NCE UPON A TIME in the American public room of any note the Colored waiter reemerged, and one the charrasing situations arising as a result, and one guest mistaking another guest never occurred. But the greed for the much dollar led a certain strata of white men to women into this field that seemed so easy, generative, with the result that it is most difficult for those who patronize our eat shops to tell us.
THE FORMATION of a white waiters' union, part of French chefs and servers, the spread prejudice and the lack of that spirit of prepositions and holds success on the part of the waiter is responsible for the flavor. It might be argued that we lost little in the role of the guard; the answer is there was a guard in every group, whether they or the waiter, who must serve, as well as a guard to be served. This being true, it is regretful a avenue of work be closed to us.
POSITION can be made out of a job if one success corralled for many years. It was a job our workshop was a rough wooden box, our location anywhere a customer happened to be, the Italian and Greeks, who built the glass and costly wood sliding parlor, a job. These instances, nor should we be consider naturally we deserve, nor should we be consider but, in so doing we must not burn the brick we have in so doing, for many more of our kind it follows. The way once blazed let us keep it on.
ONCE UPON A TIME in the American public dining room of any note the Colored waiter reigned supreme, and the embarrassing situations arising as they do today, from one guest mistaking another guest for a servant never occurred. But the greed for the almighty dollar led a certain strata of white men and white women into this field that seemed so easy and remunerative, with the result that it is most difficult now for those who patronize our cat shops to tell who
THE FORMATION of a white waiters' union, the advent of French chefs and servers, the spread of Color prejudice and the lack of that spirit of progress that brings and holds success on the part of the Colored waiter is responsible for his loss in this field of encoveur. It might be argued that we lost little when we lost the role of servant; the answer is there will always be a class in every group, whether they be white or Color, who must serve, as well as a class that any avenue of work be closed to them. A POSITION can be of a job if one but known how to go about it. We had the bootleashing business corral for many years. It was a job with us; our workshop was a rough wooden box, our business location anywhere a customer happened to be. Along the Italians and Greeks, who built a marble tile, glass and costly wood sliding parlor, and reared a veritable harvest. They made a position out of a job. These instances are only cited to show that no honest work is degrading, nor should be considered. Naturally we encoveur to tread the higher walks of life, but in so doing we must not burn the bridges after we have crossed, for many more of our kind have to follow. The way once blazed let us keep it open.
OPPRESSIVE TAXATION
THE AMERICAN newspapers and periodicals, carrying the high postal rates imposed as a wi-
measure, in burden that should have been one
first to be lifted when readjustment began. C
collection of war-time taxes on the press of the co-
mputer which concerns every citizen and
of it defended three years after the cessation
of the war. The war tax on second-class mail
to zone rates was made in the form of four
annual increases that constitute an incre-
sure 100 per cent for the initial zone to 900 per
last zone, and this war tax has in no way be-
cused.
THIS TAX cannot be passed on to the adver-
sor to the subscriber for the reason that the adver-
sor is determined, not according to the cost
during the publication to subscribers, but ac-
cording to the number of subscribers and their
power. The subscriber living in the farri-
ger to expect and does get his paper at the s-
tate as the subscriber who lives to the hite
BULL introduced by Congressman M. Clyde K
THE AMERICAN newspapers and periodicals are still carrying the high postal rates imposed as a wartime measure, a burden that should have been one of the first to be lifted when readjustment began. Continuation of war-time taxes on the press of the country is a matter which concern the citizen and it cannot be defended the years after thecession of hostilities. The war tax on second-class mail subject to zone rates was made in the form of four successive annual increases that constitute an increase from 300 per cent for the initial zone to 900 per cent in the last zone, and this war tax has in no way been ignored.
THIS TAX cannot be passed on to the advertiser nor to the subscriber for the reason that the advertising rate is determined, not according to the cost of delivering the publication to subscribers, but according to the number of subscribers and their buying power. The subscriber living in the earliest zone expects to get and does get his paper at the same price as the subscriber who lives next to the home.
omece.
A BILL introduced by Congressman M. Clyde Kelly of Pennsylvania to remedy this condition is now pending in the postoffice and post road committee of the House of Representatives. President Harding favors the reduction in second-class postage rates, and with his support the outlook for the passage of the bill is most favorable.
THE QUESTION of where to go to spend a vacation isn't half as troublesome as the question, "How can I get the wherewith to go?"
CHICAGO DEFENDER
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 restricted to 250 words, and may be sent without official notice.]
Text: Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter; fear God and keep His commandments; for this is the whole duty of man—Ecc, 12:13.
DUTY is a thing that is due and must be paid by every man who would prevent disgrace
Duty and moral solvency. Duty is an obligation, a debt which can only be discharged by voluntary effort, and resolve action in the affairs of life. Duty embraces man's whole existence. It begins in the home training, where there is the duty which children owe to their parents, on the one hand, and the duty which parents owe to their children, on the other.
There are, in like manner, the respective duties of husbands and wives, of masters and servants; while outside the home there are the duties which men and women owe to each other as friends and neighbors, as employers and employees, as governors and governed. "Render, therefore," says St. Paul, "to all their dues; tribute to whom tribute is due; custom to whom custom; fear to whom fear; honor to whom honor. No no man anything, but to love one, another; for he that loveth another hath fulfilled the law." It is a duty to love. "If a man say, I love God, and hatch him, he is a liar; for he that hatch his brother whom he hath seen, how can he God whom he hath not seen?" And this commandment have we from Him, that he who loveth God, loveth his brother."—I John, 4:20-21.
1.000 NEW POLICE
ORDER of the city council Chief of 200 new men to the police force of New York seems like a generous increase, a courtesy to be covered by patrolmen, severely small force assigned to the war, can readily be seen that there would be none too many to prop up city. The mining towns in their painless days had nothing to offer to the police, the bomber, the bomber, the stick-up and the murderer thrive.
COURTS are crowded with these the police have barely removed the city's crime box. This moron eludes cover of the darkness. No one in broad daylight on our most hares occur almost hourly. No man in home or office or on the street, no person in the dark, less live, it should be the duty of ours to round up the offenders—and personally known to the police—in out of the city or place them are the winter comes and makes it and more daring.
ZIGZING the situation, the South Street bequeared upon by the above trade on the State street cars. Street. They travel usually from 3 Dearborn street to Grand boulevard know them, the police know the innocent white man was killed on our ruffans, another was knock severely injured while an unconscious, without provocation, deliberately used young girl on the street when she remonstrated. The she had happened to have had a doubtedly would have been a mini- HAVE some very had actors among use of their actions we all suffer for this class and the quicke take them in hand the better. We want no favoridism show us vile. If the thousand new protection needed, let us have a payer would rather see his money and property than to go into the use of dishonest politicians and other at the city trough.
BY ORDER of the city council Chief Fitzmorris added 1,000 new men to the police force of Chicago. While this seems like a generous increase, when the vast territory to be covered by patrolmen and the comparatively small force assigned to the work is considered, it can readily be seen that three times this number would be none too many to properly police this wicked city. The mining towns in the Fa. West during their palmest days had not been so full when it comes, the smuggling holds full the way, the under the bomber, the stick-up man, the swindler and the murderer thrive.
THE COURTS are crowded with these offenders and yet the police have barely removed the veneer from the city's crime box. This moron element used to work under cover of the darkness. Not so now. Hold-ups in broad daylight on our most prominent thoroughfares occur almost hourly. No man or woman feels safe in home or office or on the streets. While the summer weather has somewhat lessened this crime wave, it should be the duty of our police department to round up the offenders, police, and other them are personal to the police, and either of them are of the city or place them behind the bars before the winter comes and makes them more desperate and more daring.
LOCALIZING the situation, the South Side, in addition to being preyed upon by the above mentioned gentry, has to deal with a gang of pickpockets who ply their trade on the State street cars and those on 35th street. They usually travel from 31st to 33rd and from Dearborn street to Grand boulevard. Conductors know them, the police know them. Last week an innocent white man was killed on the cars by one of our ruffians, another was knocked off the steps and severely injured, in a narrow wormpump without provocation deliberately pushed a well dressed young white girl off a seat to make room for a Colored companion and called the girl all kinds of vile names when she demonstrated. The girl was alone; if she had happened to have had an escort there undoubtedly would have been a miniature race plot.
WE HAVE some very bad actors among our group, and because of their actions we all suffer. Chicago has no room for this class and the quicker the authorities take them in hand the better for all concerned. We want no favoritism shown, we want no protection from new officers, we give the protection needed, let us have more men. Every taxpayer would rather see his money go to protect life and property than to go into the grab bag for the use of dishonest politicians and other lechens who feed at the city trough.
THE DUMPING GROUND
COMPLAINTS are made of *immigrating in the Second and third* Section this is usually referred to as "and the complaints are not with it. It is questionably true that and residences in the locality referolation of the law. While the said, perhaps, in other sections of the office of rigid police supervision, they not so open and flagrant.
SEGREGATION of this class with some years ago the effect was different parts of the city. A wise move is will more hope of those who advocated the notion that the evil would be lessen. Apparently it has not been less achment is upon sections and exclusive and law-abiding kind. NSEQUENCE of police laxity can rest immigratory are more prevalent would be. The police know who and there can be no excuse for the them and break them up. The them that break them up. The duty, therefore, devens to take the necessary steps to the attention of the mayor, the state's attorney. If these officials with the decent and law-abiding conditions will no longer exist and are protected from contamination and objectionable element of our p
MANY COMPLAINTS are made of immoral conditions existing in the Second and Third wards of Chicago. This section is usually referred to as "the black belt," and the complaints are not without some foundation. It is unquestionably true that in some sections and residences in the locality referred to there is open violation of the law. While the same conditions exist, perhaps, in other sections of the city, in consequence of rigid police supervision, these dens of vice are not so open and flagrant.
WHEN SEGHEGATION of this class was done away with some years ago the effect was to scatter them over different parts of the city. Whether or not this was a wise move is still a most question. It was the hope of those who were sent to the segregated school will be less lenient, if not deserved. Apparently it has not been lessened, but the encroachment is upon sections and localities of the most exclusive and law-abiding khud.
IN CONSEQUENCE of police laxity exhibitions of this manifest immorality are more prevalent than they otherwise would be. The police know where these dens are, and there can be no excuse for their failure to raid them and break them up. The opinion is prevalent that these den keepers are recipients of police protection. The duty, therefore, devolves upon our citizens to take the necessary steps to bring this situation to the attention of the mayor, the chief of police and state's attorney. If these officials will act in co-operation with the decent and law-abiding citizens such conditions will no longer exist and our homes will be protected from contamination with this undesirable and objectionable element of our population.
THE WHITE PLAGUE
IN RECENT YEARS have selected that we, as a group, did not have on tuberculosis. The percentage with this dread disease is so high it we have be denied, but we can not be denied, but we is a relier or thrashed out by the highest man in the world, and now is called "the white plan" much less prevalent than it used to be. Tuberculosis association offers it as for the improvement: the advent of prohibition, with it
ONLY IN RECENT YEARS have scientists acknowledged that we, as a group, did not have a monopoly on tuberculosis. The percentage of whites afflicted with this dread disease is so high it is alarming. That we had and still have our share thus afflicted cannot be denied, but it is a relief to have this matter thrashed out by the highest medical authorities and our skirts cleared of being the breeding spot of what is now causing this disease. More importantly, the new Tuberculosis association offers the following reasons for the improvement:
FIRST, the advent of prohibition, with its accompanying results of less misery and more money available for food, clothing and shelter. Secondly, the general rise in the standard of living, whether due to higher wages or shorter hours of work, and the improvement of working conditions. To the application of the special immigration law recently, which has practically prevented the incoming of racial groups from the Near East, and which has made it difficult to reach and live under the conditions of a heavier mortality than the native stock. Then the congestion of housing during the war because of cessation of building took place at this time in houses which the tenement law had improved. These have had a marked effect in promoting health.
THE DISCOVERY that monkeys can be taught good manners is very encouraging. Perhaps in time it will be possible to teach some folks.
EDUCATION is a wonderful thing, and the bright student may become a college professor at $1,900 a year or a coach at $15,000.
THAT FLORIDA TRAMP who courted and won a rich widow knows the process of turning brass into gold.
How Long, O Lord, How Long?
SENATE
ALL OF US
HOPES
SENATORIAL
DELAY IN
PASSING DYER
ANTI-LYNCHING
BILL
d. Roberts
A BIT OF NEWS, GOSSIP, FICTION AND FUN
(Of last week's "ignorance")
Nights and nights have passed.
I have waited—and waited.
Each day I have I sang a while;
But as day—follows day
That melody grows just a little less.
Unless I hear from him, my Dear One,
soon.
The song will cease and—turning into
sohs,
The echo of a breaking heart there'll
be.
The last night I saw my Lover Mine
He took my hand in his and turned
our ring.
And then he dropped my hand so
hopelessly.
I heard this this day, a few hours
ago;
The night I thought him far beyond
the hills.
He went wandering down through the streets.
When people spoke to him he gazed at them
With hollow eyes, a gaze that did not see.
That night, I remember now, to my dear chum
I said, "Let us to while the hours away.
From off the lawn, to porch, my balcony;
And there beneath the moon, I, clinging close.
Lifted up my lips—hut, bit her on the chin.
Then through our glee I heard a smothered wall
Like a jungle beast, seeing his mate dend.
Crying with misery at such a fate.
Then I, till now, forget.
Twins you, sweetheart; now I know you saw.
Not seeing all, you misinterpreted.
Now, Dear One, with body, heart and I'm calling to you, calling down through space.
Calling through this wilderness of things.
And, because you do not answer me
This is my sorrow.
Week-O-Gram
A court of justice is adjudged a misnomer when the strongest evidence presented to convict the defendant is the color of his skin. The monotony of marriage is invariably arrested—by just a little more change. During a personal opinion, during this regime of prohibition, whether spooning couples are wont to a 24-hour session of "moonshine." The man who is begulled, by his wife, to take a radio outfit on his summer vacation so that he can hear her voice, had better postpone his "rest" and stay at home. There is a hidden Bohemia and a concealed Greenwich village in every Race community. The wisest of beings live the simplest lives. "JESS' DUNSON.
An Ambition to Wriggle
BENGOODLOUGH.
"A Life or a Living"
Are you making a life
For the ages to hold?
Or are all of your efforts
But bant on earth's gold?
Do you give to the world
Just the best that you hold
Are you making a life or a living?
Do you know that you weave
Out a pattern each day
For some one whose passing
Is chanced by your way?
If he follows the draft,
Will he go straight for aye?
Are you making a life or a living?
-LYDIA C. CUTTON.
Our girl friend next door denies
that she is a Chicago girl who has
a hankering for engaging herself to
fellows and has already gathered an
assortment of 13 rings as a result
of her defeats.
(Republished by Request)
EDITOR'S MAIL
HARVARD AND THE JEWS
The Mississippi spirit has been growing in northern schools for years. But when it attempts to shut Jaws out of Harvard, the Massachusetts institution moves to investigate, and many of the state officers grow elquent. Of course, Harvard does not govern a year or more ago, and nothing was said or done in high public places. Even the Negroes themselves, about Boston, were afraid to say much less the thing out. You can't think the thing many Negroes who expect to get rid of an evil by merely forgetting it. Some of them used to complain that they were schmilings too much. They think they are the most awful oppression in the world by a sort of Christian science hocuspocus of acting if the thing does not exist. And so their only for such evil as: "Sh-h-he-ee!"
But not so the Jews; the Jews will organize and fight an evil and maybe cripple the interests of the evil states and government officials know it. When Harvard wants to start a row with Jews, who are hardly one-fourth as numerous in the United States as Nehemiah will interfere. Jews will not endure to hide the devilment done them (out of a false feeling of pride); they will expose and fight the devilment—and the world knows it.
But Harvard and the Ku Khux, whether they are related or not, make the same mistake: when they are just about to get away with the crime, they go a bit too far and try to carry it also against the Jew. Then the trouble begins.
The Negroes of Boston, who seemed ashamed to fight Harvard and then publish Harvard's criminalition which was made against them a year ago, should not be now too sensitive to join in the fight side by side with the Jew. The group that is "too proud to fight" in this case is the "goody-good" boy on the average public school playground.
WILLIAM PICKENS.
From Day to Day
George L. Oles, picturequeen and model mayor of Youngstown, Ohio, has resigned to according to report, to the city he made. He couldn't please enough people and made too many enemies, averring that if he enforced the law he made enemies and that if he didn't he also made them.
At Ponca City, Okla., four women, including the late Helen Huxl Klan, took Mrs. "Alary Ramse" (white) of Red Rock to a secluded spot and horsehipped her. Complaints are said to have been made against Mrs. Ramse by several women.
Radium, used extensively in the treatment of cancer, has dropped 15 to 20 per cent in price, according to an announcement of Arthur Roeder, president of the United States Radium corporation. The new price is $120 a milligram.
According to the schedule of the new Council life offered to the Coast Guard, it will be a steamship Mauretana, the trip from New York to Paris can now be made in five days, nine hours and ten minutes.
Henry W. Widdecomb, 86, best man at the wedding of Mark Hanna, famous Ohio senator, buried at adjoining county in in poverty at the county home.
---
SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1922
DR. A. WILBERFORCE WILLIAMS
PREVENTIVE MEASURES, FIRST AID REMEDIES HYGIENICS AND SANITATION
HIGH PRESSURE VICE
We Americans go through the keyed up to a tiptop speed. A few years ago there were two very prum-
caline, alcoholics. Morphine tends to
tower the blood pressure. Excessive
use of tobacco in various forms, ex-
tremely addictive, and drinking are
temporary stimulants.
hent physicians in this city. Although charged with provoking disease, curtin a and promoting a community, one of these admitted that he slept three hours at night, ate two meals a day and allowed himself only 15 minutes to thoroughly mastache and swallow his
[Name]
Certain Practices
Worry and fear are very potent factors in influencing high blood pressure—overcaution, especially of proteins—heavy meals, rich gravies, etc, and retiring immediately after eating a heavy diet—overloading your stomach. Lack of sufficient amount of protein on hardening of the arteries, and hence high blood pressure. Sleep is very necessary for mental and physical vigor and activity. Some people require more sleep than others. The average individual requires from seven and a half to eight hours of sound sleep; children require more than eight hours rested and cheerful after a night's repose. In sleeping it is best to rest on your right side, because in that position you relieve the pressure on your heart, hence it does not interfere with heart action, and also ensures assistance, emptying the stomach, preventing overeating, and offensive breath and what you call "billious headache" in the morning.
food. This we call "high pressure vice." Again, when we speak of "high pressure vice" we have reference to those habits and practices which raise the blood pressure with the normal pressure. This high blood pressure continues long. It is sure to do damage, not only to the blood vessels (veins and arteries), but a corresponding damage will be done to the heart, as an increased pressure will be thrown on the heart—the pump of life—in driving the blood through the hardened blood vessels, or through tenuously, or soon thereafter, damage will be done to the kidneys and other circulatory organs.
Heart Failure
If you indulge in those habits and practices that produce constant increase in blood pressure, the arteries become more and more hardened, suffused and shrunken—the heart is up against and become weakened, its musculature will become enlarged or hypertrophied, but by and by the walls of the heart will become overstretched or permanently dilated, and in that state the end is not far. One of the most frequent causes of death from hypertension is due to what is popularly known as "heart failure."
The high blood pressure depends largely on the habits and practice of the individual. It has been truly said that "an individual is as young or as old as his arteries". High blood pressure causes arteriosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries. Just a few days ago a juror was dismissed from the court for arteriosclerosis or hardening of his arteries in the brain, which resulted in complete mental capacity, and his dismissal as a juror.
Among certain diseases due to high blood pressure may be mentioned mental delusions of persecution or of grandeur or great wealth, nervous diseases, steeplessness or insomnia, religious hallucinations—that they are called to accomplish great things in the world. All of this is due largely to toxins or poison accumulated in the body.
That arteriosclerosis produces old age and mental degeneration we have abundance of proof. With high blood pressure there is naturally a greater flow of blood to the brain and through the other vessels of the heart, the arteries, the arterioles and bouyant, and then there some times of lowered blood pressure, when one feels depressed and somewhat woe-begone—has less desire to enter the area of society, less confidence in his ability to win success. To overcome this depressed feeling, this lowered blood pressure must be maintained, and the pernicious habit and practice of resorting to stimulants such as various drugs, co-
Apoplexy is a disease attributable to high blood pressure and hardening of the arteries. Apoplexy is a rupture of a blood vessel in the brain due to the enormous pressure produced by the heart in drying the blood through the narrowed, hardened, shrunken arteries in the brain.
THE ONLOOKER By A. L. Jackson
BREAD AND BUTTER
WHENEVER we have a rumpus in the stock yards or in the steel mills of a big industrial situation which results in loss. Life to our people we are prone to our issue as a matter of race. The East St. Louis riot was wrongly called a race riot. It was nothing of the kind. Fundamentally it was a question of competition for bread all. The real job is to do something about it. We hope these excellent ladies won't waste too much time in surveys and studies and that they will formulate a program and method of attack as specially as possible. In its own field the W. Y. C. A. leaves much to be desired as tar as our girls and young women are concerned despite some excellent work done. The Society needs this organization badly just to ensure the white officials can disabuse their minds of association polity and use some real Christian religion in facing ordinary problems of the day.
WHENEVER we have a rumpus in the stock yards or in the steel mills or in any big industrial situation which results in loss of life to our people we are prone to look upon the issue as a matter of
race. The East St. Louis riot was wrongly, called a race riot, because of the kind. Fundamentally it was a question of competition for bread and butter. This white man of ours bread and butter question. It seems as though he is perfectly willing to kill his brother or anybody else.
A. B.
A BUSINESS EXPOSITION FOR WOMEN
WITHIN women in the business, industrial and professional worlds discover that they are strong enough and important enough to be able to exposition in a city like New York. They are, as a race, were waking up to our own opportunities. Their advance notice say that they have opened up some 60 lines of activity to women that only a few years ago were closed to them on account of sex prejudice. They have, women manufacturers of paint, varnish and confectionery and radio manufacture, concerns, landscape, gardens, and so on, not counting the needle trades and laundry business, where one would naturally expect to find them. It would be a good thing if the business league would take some steps to set up an exposition of some kind to make a fashion just what he was asking and what the possibilities are for still greater accomplishment. As a race we lack vision of future possibilities. We must train ourselves to take the long look and work for futures. The fellow who drives his automobile only 10 miles an hour need only watch the streets and the yards ahead of him, but the chap travels fast and get somewhere has not to keep his eye on the road away ahead of him. He takes the long look because he is going somewhere and must prepare to meet the unknown on that road, whatever it is.
A. L. Jackson
or, when he thinks that somebody is going to take away his livelihood. Horin is proof of this. These coal miners took their own people out in the fields and slaughtered them in cold blood because they were taking their jobs. The question of right and wrong or of mercy did not enter their heads. What can you except of them, whose economic affairs with the torch and hot lead? The relations of our people are largely a question of dollars and cents. The white man affects to despise us because he does not want us as competitors in his labor and producing market on anything like even terms. Nor does he have any business to control him, he can absolutely control him. Capitalists are waking up and sensing the fact that they must train all those people, black and white, who have been excluded from better jobs on account of their lack of strength in numbers or organization in order to protect themselves. Even among these financiers is the French competitor in the central competitive states insisting that the mines in West Virginia be made onlone mines in order to take away from these competitors advantages which they enjoy and have a right to enjoy. These white folks understand two languages perfectly, money and force, and with a while on this complaint and prayer business and get busy learning the white man's language so that we can readily understand each.
THE MOORS WIN
TUCKED away in an insignificant corner of the only press dispatches the other, special cable telling of the decision of the Spanish government to drop the campaign against the Moors in Morocco. General Berenguer has been ordered home and the troops under his command will be discharged. These fierce black warriors of the African desert were undismayed by the new-fangled fighting apparatus of these would-be conquering, Spaniards. They simply glued up their lions and "came right into the dense discomfort of the Spaniards who sult, a large casualty list, reported calls for help, some camouflaged press dispatches, the defeat of a ministry, and now a tacit confession of defeat. The white man's burden is not only getting a little lrkse these days, but in some ways a trifle too heavy to carry around. Killing will have to write a new song before long unless the Africans and Indians learn to behave themselves.
STUDYING THE RACE PROBLEM
WE note with some interest the
recent announcement of the
WE note with some interest the recent announcement of the national board of the Y. W. C. A. of a committee to study the race problem. This must be the steward committee appointed by some religious or welfare organization to study the race problem. It seems that the committee would duplicate the effort of others in this direction. We need some action on this business. Leave the study to the undergraduate. The personnel of the committee is admirable. We are sure that Mrs. Roberts could in two hours give Mrs. Rockefeller all the facts she needs to know about this so-called problem. Just let one intelligent Colored woman talk to an African-American woman and would talk to one of her own and the job is done. It is no trick at all.
Roaring individuals are seldom
lon-hearted.